MIES (Switzerland) – Nic Batum, a star with France for nearly two decades, retired from the international game after doing his thing one last time in the Paris Olympic Final against the USA.
His main role was to guard the opponent’s best player, soar through the air for dunks, rebound, block shots, or when in doubt, do whatever coach Vincent Collet asked of him.
“It was my last one with this jersey,” Batum said after France’s 98-87 defeat. “I spent 15 years playing four World Cups, four EuroBaskets, and four Olympics. I did what I had to do: Seven medals. I’m happy.”
Batum’s last two medals were silver, at the Summer Games in Tokyo, and three years later in Paris.
Here are his Top 10 FIBA games.
At the age of 17, Batum won the U18 EuroBasket 2006 with France and he had his tournament-high of 24 points to lead France past Spain, Ricky Rubio and Victor Claver, 80-67 for the second game of the competition. The 2.03M (6’8″) forward also had 9 rebounds as the French prevailed before going on to win the U18 Final.
In his first-ever game at a World Cup in 2010, Batum had 14 points, 2 blocks and 1 steal as France upset defending champions Spain, 72-66, in Izmir.
At FIBA EuroBasket 2011, the teams that reached the Final qualified for the London Olympics. When Batum poured in 19 points and also had 7 rebounds, 4 assists, 2 blocked shots and a steal, France won 79-71 win over Russia. Batum hit 3 of 5 from deep and 6 of 8 overall from the field.
In just his third game as an Olympian, Batum erupted for 21 points and corralled 6 rebounds to lead France past Lithuania in the Group Phase of the London 2012 Olympics. Batum showed his importance on both ends of the court, also swatting 3 shots and coming up with 2 steals.
From strictly a statistical point of view, this tournament was Batum’s best ever in the national team jersey.
In the EuroBasket 2013 title game against Lithuania, Batum erupted for 17 points on 6 of 13 shooting, including 3 three-pointers, and also had 6 rebounds and 3 steals as France won the FIBA EuroBasket for the first time. He was the best scorer for France in the Final and played 37 minutes.
Batum was the best player on the floor in the 2014 World Cup Semi-Final against Serbia, drilling an eye-popping 8 of 12 shots from behind the arc en route to 35 points! He had 11 of 17 from the floor overall, 5 of 6 at the free-throw line and finished with game-high 32 EFF.
Serbia held on for a 90-85 win after a furious comeback from France, led by Batum. On that day, he underlined his status as one of the best players in international basketball. His 35 points were the highest total he’d score in his 177-game national team career.
Jolly Saint Nic had 27 points and France hit back from an eight-point deficit in the fourth quarter to stun Lithuania in the Third-Place Game at the World Cup in Madrid. France reached the podium at the event for the first time. Batum was 8 of 12 from the floor, including 2 of 5 from deep, and also had 3 rebounds, 1 assists, 3 steals and a team-best 26 EFF.
Sometimes the greats show brilliance in defeat, which Batum did in France’s 80-75 overtime setback to Spain in their EuroBasket 2015 Semi-Final. Batum’s 3-pointer made while falling out of bounds forced overtime. He ended up with 14 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists and 2 steals.
Batum was indispensable as France came from behind to beat Australia in the Third-Place Game in the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019. If his scoring helped the team five years earlier, it was his defense and toughness in Beijing. He had 6 assists, 3 rebounds and 3 steals to go with his 9 points in 32 minutes and 29 seconds.
With France trying to reach the Olympic Semi-Finals for the first time since Sydney 2000, Batum turned in a solid performance – 15 points, 14 rebounds and 3 steals – in an 84-75 triumph over Italy at the Tokyo Olympics. Batum, who was 2 of 4 from long range in that Quarter-Final, finished with a game-high 28 EFF.
Though he scored only 3 points, Batum came up with the biggest play of his international career, a swat of Klemen Preprelic’s layup at the buzzer, to preserve France’s 90-89 victory over Slovenia. Batum came out of nowhere and pinned the ball on the backboard. It was his fourth block of the game! Batum also had 5 rebounds, 3 assists and a steal.
To this day, this might still be the most iconic play in the history of French basketball.
FIBA