Team USA Men’s Olympic basketball dismantled the Argentine Nationals in a not-so-friendly exhibition opener with a score of 111-74 Friday night. Team USA set an early dominant tone by outscoring their 2004 Athens Olympic conquerors 32-14 in the first quarter.

Kevin Durant led all scorers with 23 points. In so doing, the two-time Olympian showcased no ill effects from a contentiously received recent free-agency decision. On July 4, Durant infamously agreed to spurn Oklahoma City in favor of creating a mega-power in All-Star laden Golden State. While this accord hasn’t fared well in many NBA circles, Durant’s on-court potency indicates he’s all business once the ball’s in play.

The new Warriors forward was buttressed throughout the landslide victory by teammates Carmelo Anthony (17 points, seven rebounds), DeMarcus Cousins (14 points, 15 rebounds in 16 minutes of play), and Paul George (18 points as reserve). While 32-year-old Carmelo Anthony is set to become the only U.S. Olympian to compete in four Olympiads, Paul George is triumphantly returning from a gruesome injury suffered in 2014.

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It’s a small miracle George regained his status among the league’s elite following a destructive setback during 2014’s Team USA training camp. The three-time All Star missed 76 of Indiana’s 82 regular-season contests two seasons ago. However, in 15′-16′, George bounced back in emphatic fashion, averaging a career-best 23.1 ppg, 7.0 rpg, 4.1 apg, and 1.9 spg.

While a rejuvenated George is certainly the feel-good storyline of Team USA’s camp, departing U.S. Olympic Head Coach Mike Krzyzewski praised his third Olympic team’s collective performance.

“Overall I thought it was good for our team. We got to play everybody double-figure minutes, a lot of different combinations. A huge thing for us during these five exhibition games is to try to be in game shape by the time we get to Rio.”

Coach K alluded to Team USA’s superior depth and versatility. One of those aforementioned combinations provided NBA fans worldwide a glimpse of things to come. In the second quarter, for a two-minute stretch, three of the Warriors’ celebrated “big four” briefly shared the court. Kevin Durant, Klay Thompson, and reserve Draymond Green helped Team USA build a decisive 56-33 halftime advantage.

While the 2004 Olympic Gold-Medal winning Argentines fought valiantly during the penultimate period of play, Team USA’s 31-17 fourth-quarter run put the game conclusively out of reach.

The proud Argentinian National Team was led by accomplished Olympic and NBA veterans Andres Nocioni (15 points, seven rebounds), Manu Ginobili (11 points), Luis Scola (10 points), and the returning Carlos Delfino (3 points).

Delfino, once a touted NBA-level swingman, hasn’t played an NBA contest in three seasons due to a broken foot. The 32-year-old Argentinian last suited up state-side with the 12′-13′ Houston Rockets. That year, Delfino averaged 10.6 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 2.0 apg, and 1.0 spg in 25.3 minutes of action.

Conversely, Delfino’s compatriot Manu Ginobili, 37, just re-upped with the Spurs to the tune of a one-year $14 million contract. Meanwhile, former Bulls standout Andres Nocioni has played in Europe over the past several seasons. And rugged 36-year-old Luis Scola’s NBA career is slowly finding its conclusion.

While Argentina’s core is aging, many prognosticators feel as though the team is still a legitimate medal contender.

As seen Friday night, however, the competitive chasm between medal-contending Argentina and gold-medal favorite United States is stark indeed.

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Not only did Team USA dominate on the perimeter and break, the two-time defending Olympic champions obliterated an over-matched Argentine team on the glass, 53-30.

Team USA’s top rebounder DeMarcus Cousins had the following statements regarding his squad’s overall performance for ESPN.

“We have some pretty good rebounding on this team, a versatile team as well, we got guards that can rebound at a high rate as well, so if we commit to it on a nightly basis I think we can dominate a lot of teams on the boards.”

While Team USA’s opening exhibition contest was a whitewash, the defending Olympic champions take center stage again tonight at the Staples Center.

Team USA Basketball’s official Olympic opener will take place August 6 against Australia.

[Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images]