Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. women’s basketball will face challenges to its run of Olympic dominance

- — Dan Woike, L.A. Times

TOKYO — You can find the history in the details, the design stitched into the collars on their red uniforms, the six stars cascading down each side of the U.S. women’s basketball jerseys.

It’s an homage to the 12 players on the team in 1996 — and the U.S. response to bronze in the previous Games — when women who would become icons in their sport recaptured gold. Lisa Leslie. Rebecca Lobo. Sheryl Swoopes. Dawn Staley.

Since losing in the quarterfin­als of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, the U.S. women have dominated. Forty-nine times, they’ve taken the court as Olympians. Forty-nine times, they’ve left as winners.

Tuesday when they try to win their 50th straight, they’ll do so with a pair of players set to one day have their legacies sewn onto the uniforms of future generation­s. For the fifth time, Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi, two of women’s basketball’s most recognizab­le ambassador­s, will try to win gold.

And pulling it off seems like it’ll be harder than ever.

The U.S. women enter Olympic play on a two-game losing streak, having been beaten in exhibition­s by a group of WNBA All-Stars and the Australian national team.

“This isn’t rocket science,” said Staley, now the national team coach. “You have to give the players space to be great and make plays, and not get in the way — but also get in the way when it’s time for you as coach to make decisions out there on the floor.”

While Bird, who was a flag bearer for the U.S., is still a key piece, the U.S. is led by center Britney Griner and reigning WNBA most valuable player A’ja Wilson. The team’s size and depth are its most pronounced strengths.

Just as the U.S. men’s dominance with an iconic group spawned the global growth of the game, so did the ‘96 women. Their gold helped propel the WNBA during its inaugural season, and this year women from the WNBA are on eight of the 12 teams in the tournament.

And just like in the men’s competitio­n, Australia could be the biggest obstacle.

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