Turkey and Slovenia power into quarter-finals

ISTANBUL, (Reuters) – World championship hosts Turkey  and the tournament’s crowd pleasers Slovenia set up what should be a fascinating quarter-final after impressive wins over their rivals in the last 16 yesterday. 
 
The Turks, roared on by the home crowd, romped to a 95-77  win over France while the Slovenians, who are looking for their  first medal in any major event, blew away Australia 87-58.  

Slovenia, the smallest nation in the 24-team event with a  population of just over two million, demonstrated trademark  flair and talent in a one-sided contest. 
 
“We have become contenders among the top eight teams, first  in Europe and now the world,” Slovenia forward Uros Slokar said  after their fifth win in six matches.
  
“It is true that we are a small country but on the court the  size of a country doesn’t matter; what matters is how the  players perform and how the coach works with the players. 
 
“We have a very good system which helps talents develop and  grow as basketball players,” added Slokar.
  
Slovenia never looked back after racing into an early 12-0  lead, limiting Australia to just six field goals from 27  attempts in the first half while they sank eight three-pointers  at the other end.  

The winners finished with 16 three-pointers from 33  attempts, guard Jaka Lakovic leading the way with 19 points  while centre Primoz Brezec added 12 and playmaker Goran Dragic  scored 10 with eight assists. 
 
“The game was easier than we expected and I think we can  make another step forward,” said Lakovic, who was part of the  side that finished fourth in last year’s European Championship.  

UNSTOPPABLE TURKS  

Turkey are looking for a second podium finish on home soil  after winning the 2001 European Championship silver medal in  Istanbul and they were unstoppable against France, who faded  away after winning their opening three games.  
The French lost their final two group matches and went down  with a whimper against Turkey, who scored almost at will from  inside the paint and behind the three-point arc.  

Phoenix Suns forward Hidayet Turkoglu put his patchy group  stage form behind with a brilliant individual performance capped  by a game-high 20 points, while Sinan Guler added 17 after  making all seven shots from two-point range.
  
A flexible and mobile Turkish defence forced seven French  turnovers in the first quarter and 17 in the match, having shot  an impressive 72 percent from inside the arc.  

“The 10-0 run at the start of the second half was crucial  and the aggressive half-court zone was the best defence any of  my teams have ever played,” Turkey’s Serbian coach Bogdan  Tanjevic told a news conference.
  
“I hope (guard) Kerem Tunceri’s ankle injury is not too  serious and that he will be fit to play against Slovenia on  Wednesday,” he added.   

Tournament favourites the U.S. take on rank outsiders Angola  and Russia meet equally unfancied New Zealand today, while  Lithuania play China and Argentina clash with traditional rivals  Brazil tomorrow for the remaining quarter-final berths