No, I don't. But I do think it's an insult and the guy is kind of an ass and being so in an official American capacity. Now the overwhelming majority of Americans in this thread have been quick to immediately jump to the conclusion that it was obviously an insult to ask somebody about the country of their opponent because there was no motive other than European snootiness and trying to fabricate evidence that Americans are stupid. The thread was only ever created based on the assumption that the original question was an insult and neither stumbling English, a poor translation or an inaccurate paraphrase or came in a context and a lot of people, most notably Reverent One, has been quick to say that Slovenia is literally irrelevant and therefore it's perfectly fair to compare it to Alabama, which is a rather heavy insult to Slovenians.

Overall, the whole thing, both the answer to that question and how the Americans in the thread have reacted to it is pretty insulting, really, as well as quite a good argument that, yes, Americans are insensitive and self-centered. It's nothing to cause a diplomatic incident over, but it is pretty insulting to immediately assume that a non-native English speaker must be so obsessed with your country that he creates a special interview just to make you look bad and then treating them as representative of an entire continent. It is quite insulting to say that a country is completely irrelevant and therefore you shouldn't show the courtesy of at least feigning minimal interest in it. For that matter, it is quite insulting not to even dignify comments about European customs surrounding sports and sports interviews with an answer, instead steadfastedly maintaining your posture of being picked upon in the face of it. For that matter it is pretty insulting to engage in insane hyperbole.

And, yes, Europeans do in fact expect each other to know what their country is and where it is. Just like the general expectation over here isn't to react to people being curious about whether you know about their country by immediately acting as if it is rude to ask. You don't need an atlas for it, if you don't know, just say that you unfortunately don't instead of getting in a huff.