SAITAMA, Japan - The European champions are playing for a much bigger prize. 
The best the United States can hope for is yet another bronze medal. 
Greece used a sizzling stretch of shooting across the middle two quarters to 
turn a 12-point deficit into a 14-point lead, and beat the Americans 101-95 
Friday in the semifinals of the world championships.
 
 
 |  Greeces Vasilis Spanoulis, 7, drives for the 
 basket as USAs Shane Battier, 8, and Elton Brand defend on the play during 
 semi-final action Friday, Sept. 1, 2006, at the world basketball 
 championships in Saitama, Japan. [AP]
 | 
The Greeks 
(8-0) can add a world title to the European championship they won in 2005 with a 
victory over either Spain or Argentina in Sunday's gold medal game. Those teams, 
also undefeated, met in Friday's second game.
The Greeks - with no current NBA players on their roster - danced 
in a circle at halfcourt after their victory over an American team put together 
after a series of recent failures.
Done in again by their inept 3-point shooting - and they weren't much 
better from the foul line - the Americans will fall short of a championship 
in a major international tournament for the third straight time.
The US (7-1) will return to the court Saturday against the loser of the 
Argentina-Spain game, hoping to match the bronze medal it left Athens with in 
2004.
Carmelo Anthony scored 27 points for the Americans, who couldn't overcome 
their 32 percent shooting from 3-point range or 59 percent from the foul line. 
Dwyane Wade added 19 and LeBron James had 17, but the three US captains were 
unable to avenge their disappointment from Athens.
Vassilis Spanoulis, bound for the Houston Rockets, scored 22 points for 
Greece. Mihalis Kakiouzis added 15 and 6-foot-10 Sofoklis Schortsianitis - 
nicknamed "Baby Shaq" ¡ª added 14, shooting 6-of-7. The Greeks shot 63 percent 
(35-of-56) from the field and made 31 of 44 shots across the final three 
periods.
The US hasn't even played for a world championship since winning the last of 
its three titles in Toronto in 1994. Mike Krzyzewski - who was looking for 
gold after winning bronze with the 1990 team - and a few American players 
walked to midcourt to congratulate the Greeks, while most of the U.S. quickly 
headed to the locker room.
The Americans, who put together a national team program this year for the 
first time after their recent failures, now will be forced to qualify for the 
2008 Olympics next summer in the FIBA Americas tournament in Venezuela.
The US seemed in control after Joe Johnson's 3-pointer gave the Americans a 
33-21 lead with about 6 1/2 minutes left in the second quarter. It was around 
then that James told his teammates on the bench: "They don't know what to do."
Well, they figured it out in a hurry.
Greece scored nine straight points, pulling within three on Theodoros 
Papaloukas' drive with 3:51 left and forcing Krzyzewski to call timeout. Dwight 
Howard converted a three-point play, but the Greeks answered with a 13-2 surge, 
featuring eight points from Schortsianitis, to open a 43-38 advantage and force 
Krzyzewski to call a second timeout.
Greece hit nine straight shots - its only miss in the last 5 minutes was 
a heave from halfcourt as time expired - and led 45-41 at halftime. The 
Greeks shot 56 percent (15-of-27) in the half.
The Americans were 2-of-10 from behind the arc - after going 10-for-40 
in their quarterfinal victory over Germany - and trailed at the break for 
only the second time in the tournament. Italy had a nine-point cushion in a 
group play game.
The U.S. also had nine turnovers - about two below their tournament 
average for a game ¡ª and was 11-of-17 (65 percent) at the foul line.
Greece kept it up in the third quarter, hitting 14 of its 18 shots, including 
all four 3-pointers in the first 5 minutes. Kostas Tsartsaris' 3-pointer with 
5:45 left in the period gave the Greeks a 65-51 lead - the biggest deficit 
the U.S. faced in the tournament.
After shooting 4-of-12 in the first quarter, Greece was 25-of-33 (76 percent) 
in the second and third and led 77-65 heading to the final period. 
Anthony, Wade and James combined for the first 18 US points in the quarter, 
and the Americans eventually got as close as 95-91 on Kirk Hinrich's 3 with 36 
seconds to play. But the US missed its final two attempts from behind the arc, 
capping a 9-of-28 night.