Daily Breeze (Torrance)

The U.S. women roll past Australia and into the semifinals.

- By Doug Feinberg

SAITAMA, JAPAN >> Breanna Stewart and the U.S. women played their best basketball of the Tokyo Games, putting on a dominant performanc­e that team has been known for over the years en route to winning six consecutiv­e Olympic gold medals.

The Seattle Storm star was a main reason the Americans were so impressive, scoring 20 of her 23 points in the first half as the U.S. routed the Aussies 7955 Wednesday in the quarterfin­als.

“We wanted to come out and set the tone on both ends of the floor,” Stewart said. “We haven’t had great starts to the games so far. This is the quarterfin­als and it’s win or go home.”

The Americans will face Serbia on Friday in the semifinals, looking to advance to their seventh consecutiv­e gold medal game. The Serbians, who won the bronze medal in the 2016 Rio Games, rallied to beat China 77-70 in the quarterfin­als.

For the first time since getting together about three weeks ago, the U.S. looked like the team that’s won 53 consecutiv­e games in the Olympics dating back to the 1992 Barcelona Games.

“Knockout rounds brings out a certain intensity about a team and that played a huge role in it,” said Sue Bird, who had nine points and five assists. “It’s do or die at this point. That helps. I do think we subtly have been taking steps in the right direction and getting better. We’re trending in the right direction and getting more comfortabl­e.”

During the pool games, the U.S. got off to slow starts, trailing after the first quarter in each contest. Stewart made sure that wouldn’t happen against Australia. With the U.S. trailing 5-2, she scored seven consecutiv­e points to start a 19-1 run. The Americans led 2612 after the opening quarter as Australia had 10 turnovers in the period.

“The way she did it inside-outside, she was unconsciou­s,” U.S. coach Dawn Staley said. “She took great shots and was efficient. We knew Stewie can score, but it was her defensive effort. She chased those guards around, something she doesn’t do a whole lot. Deflection­s, blocked shots, made plays. Super proud of the all-around effort she gave us.”

Australia was able to get within nine in the second quarter before the U.S. closed the half with a 20-8 run to go up 48-27.

The Opals never threatened in the second half as the lead ballooned behind Brittney Griner, who scored 10 of her 15 points in the third quarter.

The U.S. and Australia are ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in the world and usually meet later in the Olympics, but the Aussies barely qualified for the quarters. They needed at least a 24-point victory over Puerto Rico in the last game of pool play to advance.

The Opals have never beaten the U.S. in the Olympics, losing to the Americans in the gold medal game in 2000, ’04 and ’08. The Australian­s also lost in the semifinals of the 1996 and 2012 Olympics to the U.S.

They were looking for a different outcome in Japan. The teams played in Las Vegas last month in an exhibition game and Australia pulled off an upset victory. But the Americans wanted to ensure what happened in Vegas, stayed in Vegas.

“Haven’t had one of these in a while,” Diana Taurasi, who didn’t play in that game as she was recovering from a hip injury, said of the comfortabl­e win.

Leilani Mitchell scored 14 points to lead Australia, which played without center Liz Cambage and will host the World Championsh­ip next year in Sydney. The 6-foot-8 Cambage abruptly left the team before training camp, citing mental health issues.

“I think we can improve a lot,” Australia coach Sandy Brondello said.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Breanna Stewart scored 23points in a victory over world No. 2Australia, 20in the first half.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Breanna Stewart scored 23points in a victory over world No. 2Australia, 20in the first half.

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