Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. streak grows to 25 after victory over China

UNITED STATES 77, CHINA 63

- DOUG FEINBERG

SYDNEY — A’ja Wilson admitted she was tired.

The WNBA MVP had just gotten to Australia less than 24 hours ago, fresh off a championsh­ip and the U.S. was playing its toughest opponent of the World Cup.

After a slow start, Wilson was clutch in the fourth quarter, finishing with 20 points to help the U.S. beat China 77-63 on Saturday.

“I don’t know how I’m doing it,” Wilson said. “You just put things aside … It’s like riding a bike. I am exhausted, I’m not going to lie about it. At this point I don’t even think about it. I’m surrounded by greatness. I really lean on them. I don’t even know which way is up. I see it’s daylight and feel I need to go to sleep.”

The U.S. now has won 25 consecutiv­e World Cup games since losing in the

2006 semifinals to Russia. The Americans advanced to the quarterfin­als and are one win away from matching their

record 26-game run from 1998-2006.

The teams came into the game unbeaten in the tournament.

The U.S. (3-0) led 2520 with 6:23 left in the first half before outscoring China 19-5 the rest of the second quarter, including the final 13 points. Alyssa Thomas and Breanna Stewart combined for seven of the 13 points during the game-changing burst.

Wilson closed the half with a putback that made it 44-25. She and Las Vegas teammates Chelsea Gray and Kelsey Plum were playing in their first game in Australia. The trio were in Las Vegas celebratin­g the franchise’s first WNBA championsh­ip before arriving in Sydney.

The U.S. led 56-40 with 2:18 left in the third before China scored the final seven points of the period to get within nine. The Aces trio scored the first nine points of the fourth quarter to make it a 16-point game again.

“They put me in the best position to score the basketball,” Wilson said of her teammates finding her in the fourth quarter.

However, China would not go away. Trailing 67-51, Li Meng scored four points in a 9-0 burst to get her team to 69-60 with 2 minutes left.

Wilson ended the drought with two free throws and a reverse layup to seal the win.

Li finished with 21 points to lead China (2-1).

China had cruised to wins in its first two games, routing both South Korea and Bosnia and Herzegovin­a by an average of 55 points. The Chinese team hadn’t faced a defense like the U.S., which had been solid in its first two games.

There was a big pro-Chinese crowd of roughly 9,400 fans for the game, including Hall of Famer Yao Ming, who is the chairman of the Chinese Basketball Associatio­n. He was shown on the video board and received a huge ovation from the crowd.

“The China fan base, whether it was the local fan base here or they came from abroad, was just tremendous,” U.S. Coach Cheryl Reeve said. “Their support made for a fun environmen­t. I heard some USA people. This is what you want.”

 ?? (AP/Mark Baker) ?? United States forward Alyssa Thomas looks to take the ball from China’s Pan Zhenqi during the Americans’ 77-63 victory on Saturday at the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup in Sydney, Australia. Thomas scored 12 points on 50% shooting to help the U.S. to its 25th consecutiv­e World Cup victory.
(AP/Mark Baker) United States forward Alyssa Thomas looks to take the ball from China’s Pan Zhenqi during the Americans’ 77-63 victory on Saturday at the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup in Sydney, Australia. Thomas scored 12 points on 50% shooting to help the U.S. to its 25th consecutiv­e World Cup victory.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States