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The Los Angeles Lakers returned to the court tonight to take on the Atlanta Hawks in NBA Summer League action. That meant Bronny James – the No. 55 overall pick in the 2024 NBA Draft – was back on the court for the fifth time this summer.

The Lakers’ first game this week was an 88-74 loss to Boston, the team’s fifth loss in a row, to continue their Summer League schedule. James missed the second Lakers game in Summer League due to a knee injury.

Ahead of Wednesday’s game, James had totaled 17 points on 7-of-31 shooting as well as 15 rebounds, five steals, and three blocks.

Here’s his stat line from tonight’s game against Atlanta. Stats will be updated occasionally throughout the game.

Bronny James stats tonight vs. Hawks

Points: 12FG: 5-for-11Rebounds: 1Assists: 0Steals: 1Blocks: 0Turnovers: 1Fouls: 1

Los Angeles Lakers Summer League schedule

Thursday, July 18: Lakers vs. Cleveland Cavaliers, 9 p.m. ET, ESPN/ESPN+Future games TBD

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Kai Trump, the eldest grandchild of former President Donald Trump, spoke on day three of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where she shared the side of her grandpa that ‘people don’t often see.’

‘To me, he’s just a normal grandpa. He gives us candy and soda when our parents aren’t looking, he always wants to know how we’re doing in school,’ she said.

‘When I made the high honor roll, he printed it out to show his friends how proud he was of me,’ she added. ‘He calls me during the middle of the school day to ask how my golf game is going, and tells me all about his. But then I have to remind him that I’m in school and I’ll have to call him back later.’

Kai, 17, also reflected on the attempted assassination of her grandfather last Saturday at a rally in Pennsylvania, saying she was ‘shocked’ and found it to be ‘heartbreaking.’

‘On Saturday, I was shocked when I heard that he had been shot, and I just wanted to know if he was okay. It was heartbreaking that someone would do that to another person,’ she said.

Kai – who was welcomed to the stage by her father, Donald Trump Jr. – noted that ‘a lot of people have put my grandfather through hell,’ but that ‘he’s still standing.’

‘Grandpa, you are such an inspiration and I love you,’ she said. ‘The media makes my grandpa seem like a different person, but I know him for who he is. He’s very caring and loving. He truly wants the best for this country, and he will fight every single day to make America great again.’

‘Even when he’s going through all these court cases, he always asks me how I’m doing. He always encourages me to push myself to be the most successful person I can be. Obviously, he sets the bar pretty high, but who knows, maybe one day I’ll catch him,’ she added.

Kai, the daughter of Don Jr. and Vanessa Trump, now divorced, was recently a regaled guest of Dana White’s at the UFC 303 fight, which she attended opposite her dad. The Florida teen posed for photographs with White, the president of the UFC, former NFL superstar Aaron Rodgers and country music star Jelly Roll, among other A-listers.

Kai, born May 12, 2007, is an enthusiastic golfer. She is active on social media and regularly posts about her golf skills.

Kai also reflected during her speech on instances when she played golf with her grandfather, times when she had to remind him that she’s a ‘Trump, too.’

‘When we play golf together, if I’m not his team, he’ll try to get inside of my head. And he’s always surprised that I don’t let him get to me. But I have to remind him I’m a Trump, too,’ she said.

Last year, the Florida native started a YouTube channel. She kickstarted the outreach social media page with a video titled, ‘Get to know Kai Trump!’

‘It should overall be a fun channel,’ Kai said in the clip.

As Kai scampers around a golf course, her friend asks questions, and she gives viewers insight into some of her favorite things, which includes pumpkin spice lattes from Starbucks, proscuitto meat and ricotta cheese, and playing pickleball and tennis.

In March, Kai won the ladies’ club championship at the private Trump Golf Club in West Palm Beach. She has posted photographs and clips in the past playing with golf professional and PGA player Bryson DeChambeau.

Mixed into her fitness reels, Kai reminds social media users that she is an undoubted supporter of her grandpa.

Fox News’ Gabriele Regalbuto contributed to this report.

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Republican senators confronted Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday over the attempted assassination of former President Trump on Saturday, telling her that they owe the people and the president ‘answers.’

Video shows Sens. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and John Barrasso, R-Wyo., confronting Cheatle in Milwaukee. Sens. James Lankford, R-Okla., and Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., were also involved.

‘Stonewalling,’ Barrasso can be heard yelling at Cheatle as she moves through the convention center.

‘This was an assassination attempt, you owe the people answers, you owe President Trump answers,’ Blackburn said.

In a separate longer video, the senators can be seen questioning Cheatle. In response to their questions, she says that it isn’t an appropriate place to have the discussion, but says she is happy to answer questions, before leaving the suite. It is at that point she is yelled at by the lawmakers.

It comes amid furious criticism of the agency by Republicans and some Democrats over the circumstances surrounding the attempt on Trump’s life in Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday. The shooter has been identified as Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, and the FBI is investigating his specific motive.

Trump was shot in the ear, but one attendee was killed and two others injured. Lawmakers have questioned how the gunman was able to get so close and fire off multiple shots, as details have emerged of people seeing him climb up the building.

FBI Director Christopher Wray held member-wide briefings with both the House and Senate on Wednesday to discuss lawmakers’ questions and concerns. Barrasso told Fox News earlier that the meeting was a ‘100% cover-your-a—briefing.’

Cheatle has agreed to comply with a subpoena from House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer. She has called the shooting ‘unacceptable’ and ‘something that shouldn’t happen again.’

‘The buck stops with me,’ she told ABC News. ‘I am the director of the Secret Service, and I need to make sure that we are performing a review and that we are giving resources to our personnel as necessary.’

But she has come under criticism for comments she made talking about a ‘sloped roof’ that caused a safety issue.

‘That building in particular has a sloped roof, at its highest point. And so, there’s a safety factor that would be considered there that we wouldn’t want to put somebody up on a sloped roof. And so, the decision was made to secure the building, from inside,’ she said.

Her answers have so far failed to satisfy many Republican lawmakers, including Barrasso and Blackburn.

‘It is appalling that the Secret Service Director refused to answer our questions. This is one of the greatest security failures in the history of the agency. She can run but she cannot hide. She is a failed leader and she needs to immediately step down from her position,’ Blackburn said in a statement.

Fox News’ Liz Elkind and Aishah Hasnie contributed to this report.
 

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The current national media contracts, though the 2025 season, average about $50 million annually. The WNBA’s new deal with ESPN, Amazon and NBC, approved Tuesday, will pay the league about $2.2 billion over the next 11 years for an average of $200 million a year — and it could be even more lucrative, The Athletic reported.

Call it part of the Caitlin Clark Effect. Engelbert made her comment in anticipation of a huge growth in popularity for the WNBA on the eve of the league draft, when the Indiana Fever made the college phenom out of Iowa the No. 1 pick.

The WNBA partnered with the NBA, which negotiated the contracts as part of its own rights talks resulting in an agreement with Disney, NBC and Amazon on approximately $75 billion over 11 years. The NBA’s board of governors approved the new terms, which are still pending.

The WNBA’s current media partners are Disney, Ion, CBS and Amazon. The Athletic reported that in addition to the next deal, the WNBA could negotiate with new partners on two other separate rights packages to total another $60 million annually.

That new total could pay the WNBA more than six times its current fees. The league and its media partners also have agreed to revisit the rights contracts in three years to measure the value against the league’s growth, The Athletic reported.

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The Chicago Sky is switching up its roster ahead of the 2024 WNBA All-Star Weekend.

The Sky announced that they acquired Rachel Banham, Moriah Jefferson, a 2025 first-round draft pick and the rights to swap 2026 first-round picks with the Connecticut Sun, in exchange for Marina Mabrey and the Sky’s 2025 second-round draft pick.

“Marina has made a significant impact over the past two seasons with the Sky behind her scoring ability, playmaking, competitiveness and commitment to the community,” Sky general manager Jeff Pagliocca said in a statement on Wednesday. “We appreciate all of her contributions to the organization and wish her continued success in the league.”

The Sun are currently second in the Eastern Conference standings at 18-6, trailing only the New York Liberty (21-4) at the 2024 WNBA All-Star break. Connecticut has its defense on lock, but the Sun’s offense has room for improvement to compete with top teams. Connecticut averages 79.8 points per game, which ranks eighth out of 12 teams.

Although Chicago (10-14) is losing its second-leading scorer in Mabrey, Connecticut (18-6) had landed an offensive threat that can space the floor and make opposing team’s pay beyond the arc. Mabrey is averaging 14 points, 4.9 rebounds and 4.5 assists through 24 games this season, while shooting 35% from the 3-point line.

Mabrey finished with 15 points (5-of-14 FG, 3-of-7 3PT), four assists and three steals in the Sky’s 93-85 victory over the Las Vegas Aces on Tuesday, the team’s last game before the 2024 WNBA All-Star break. Mabrey and the team celebrated postgame by meeting Usher in the locker room.

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Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., had just completed a quasi-clandestine meeting with President Biden at Rehoboth Beach, Del., late Saturday afternoon.

An alarming number of House and Senate Democrats were growing increasingly uneasy with Mr. Biden as the prospective Democratic standard-bearer this fall. No one knew that Schumer made the pilgrimage to Rehoboth to huddle with the president – and have a frank conversation about what Democratic senators felt about him staying in the race. The number of Democrats who wanted him out likely increased after Biden lieutenants met with Democratic senators on Capitol Hill Thursday afternoon.

Schumer’s meeting with President Biden wasn’t entirely a surprise. After all, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., met with the president on Thursday night. Both men served as emissaries from their respective caucuses, carrying messages of concern from rank-and-file members about Mr. Biden forging ahead with his campaign.

The announcement that Schumer huddled with the president hit reporter in-boxes at 6:05 pm ET Saturday.

The message offered no details or specifics. But it didn’t need to. Just the fact that Schumer made a sojourn to communicate those messages from fellow Democrats to the President of the United States spoke volumes.

‘I sat with President Biden this afternoon in Delaware; we had a good meeting,’ read a statement from Schumer.

Such news would have rattled the political landscape.

But not on this Saturday night.

A gunman nearly assassinated former President Trump at 6:11 pm et, just five minutes after the Schumer statement.

Any conversation about President Biden and schisms inside the Democratic Party would wait.

The shooting bought Mr. Biden more time. Keep in mind that the debate where the president’s performance so rattled Democrats came on June 27. The shooting allowed President Biden to continue to hold the ball and drain the clock.

The political world was agog Saturday, watching to see if more Democrats would demand President Biden step aside. Mr. Biden conducted two conference calls Saturday afternoon. One with the House Progressive Caucus. The other with the House ‘New Dems’ Coalition. At that point, 19 Democrats had called on the president to stand down in his re-election bid. 13 were members of the New Dems. Fox is told that the call did little to buoy the confidence of skittish members. One source forecast that the number of Democrats calling for the president to bow out of the race may have spiked to 50 later that night or Sunday morning.

As we have written in this space before, late British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan opined that ‘events’ were the most important factors in politics.

Well, there was a seismic political event over the weekend. And that immediately arrested any effort by Democrats to potentially bounce the president from the race.

The inertia to sideline Mr. Biden which built for weeks suddenly froze.

And it helped President Biden stay put.

‘He’s dug in,’ said one senior House Democrat to Fox of the president. ‘We can’t have this circular firing squad.’

In fact, the ‘event’ of the Trump shooting highlighted the recent fractures in the party over Mr. Biden – while it actually brought Republicans closer together.

One senior House Democratic source told Fox that in recent years, ‘unity’ was the Democrats’ calling card. But the president’s poor debate in late June challenged that alliance.

‘That armor has been exposed,’ said one senior House Democratic aide. ‘And now Republicans are using their unity against us.’

That’s why Democrats are freaking out. Again.

Fox is told that Democrats know that the former President Trump’s survival and iconic photo after the shooting bolstered his standing with voters. Democrats were already down on their chances after the debate. Now they are even more worried. Especially as it pertains to House and Senate contests in battleground districts and states.

So conversations are again intensifying about President Biden’s political viability. It started with a letter from some Congressional Democrats asking the DNC to delay the virtual roll call on August 7. Schumer and Jeffries also spoke. They requested the DNC move back the nomination.

For Democrats, it’s probably a good thing that a week of the Republican convention in Milwaukee is shrouding the Democratic disarray. Most of the news cycle is dominated by the investigation into the shooting, the introduction of Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, as former President Trump’s running mate. Even discussion about Project 2025 is probably good cover for the Democrats right now. That’s because the internal schisms are real. And the party isn’t much further along from extracting President Biden from the ticket than it was a few weeks ago.

As Harold MacMillan would say this ‘event’ temporarily muted public calls to dump the president. But that’s all it did. It suppressed those conversations. However, the Democrats’ worry never really dissipated.

Some of that shroud may even continue when Democrats return to Capitol Hill next week. That’s because everyone will train so much focus on a scheduled hearing with Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle on Monday before the House Oversight Committee. That’s to say nothing of a hearing planned by the House Homeland Security Committee on Tuesday. Even a pre-scheduled hearing with FBI Director Christopher Wray on Wednesday.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., will likely roll out his bipartisan task force to investigate the assassination attempt. And there will be all sorts of reactions from lawmakers as other details dribble out. Keep in mind this is the first time Congress has been back in Washington since the shooting.

Don’t forget that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a Joint Meeting of Congress on Wednesday. Surely the controversy over that won’t garner any attention.

Perhaps all the other ‘events’ help Democrats who want to remove President Biden from the ticket. Any such operation is messy at best. All the other things might shroud such extraordinary political gymnastics.

But that doesn’t mean those efforts aren’t going on behind the scenes. And because it involves the sitting President of the United States, all of this will eventually gurgle back to the top of the news cycle.

And that will be an event unto itself.

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The UFL’s Arlington Renegades could potentially have a Stoops reunion during the 2025 season.

The Renegades, coached by former Oklahoma football coach Bob Stoops, drafted former Sooners receiver Drake Stoops, Bob’s son, in the 10th round of the 2024 UFL (United Football League) draft on Wednesday.

Drake, along with other NFL undrafted free agent signees, were selected in the UFL draft on Wednesday. The Sooners’ leading receiver in 2023 is currently aiming to make the Los Angeles Rams’ roster after signing with the team after the 2024 NFL draft, but being drafted into the UFL likely indicates a backup plan.

Drake had a career season in 2023, finishing the year with a team-leading 84 receptions, 962 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns in his sixth season in Norman.

Drake has played for his dad once his career, when Bob served as the Sooners’ interim head coach following Lincoln Riley’s departure ahead of the 2021 Alamo Bowl against Oregon. Drake caught one pass for six yards in the game, but it was a second-quarter touchdown that resulted in a big celebration between the father-son duo on the sideline.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Drake, a former walk-on, earned a scholarship in 2021 and emerged into one of OU’s most trusted receivers in his final two seasons in 2022 and 2023. The Norman native was a three-star recruit out of high school, according to 247Sports’ Composite rankings, holding scholarship offers from Iowa, Ohio, Memphis and others before opting to join the Sooners.

Bob and the Renegades won the XFL championship in 2023, but competed in the UFL this season after the XFL and USFL merged to create the new spring league.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The UFL’s Arlington Renegades could potentially have a Stoops reunion during the 2025 season.

The Renegades, coached by former Oklahoma football coach Bob Stoops, drafted former Sooners receiver Drake Stoops, Bob’s son, in the 10th round of the 2024 UFL (United Football League) draft on Wednesday.

Drake, along with other NFL undrafted free agent signees, were selected in the UFL draft on Wednesday. The Sooners’ leading receiver in 2023 is currently aiming to make the Los Angeles Rams’ roster after signing with the team after the 2024 NFL draft, but being drafted into the UFL likely indicates a backup plan.

Drake had a career season in 2023, finishing the year with a team-leading 84 receptions, 962 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns in his sixth season in Norman.

Drake has played for his dad once his career, when Bob served as the Sooners’ interim head coach following Lincoln Riley’s departure ahead of the 2021 Alamo Bowl against Oregon. Drake caught one pass for six yards in the game, but it was a second-quarter touchdown that resulted in a big celebration between the father-son duo on the sideline.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Drake, a former walk-on, earned a scholarship in 2021 and emerged into one of OU’s most trusted receivers in his final two seasons in 2022 and 2023. The Norman native was a three-star recruit out of high school, according to 247Sports’ Composite rankings, holding scholarship offers from Iowa, Ohio, Memphis and others before opting to join the Sooners.

Bob and the Renegades won the XFL championship in 2023, but competed in the UFL this season after the XFL and USFL merged to create the new spring league.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Milwaukee Bucks forward Khris Middleton had arthroscopic surgeries on his left and right ankles in the offseason, the Journal Sentinel confirmed Wednesday. Bucks head coach Doc Rivers announced on a broadcast of the team’s summer league game Tuesday that the three-time All-Star had surgery this summer.

“He was injured, you know, through the playoffs,” Rivers said. “And just played because, you know, no one else was playing. He played terrific. He had surgery in the summer, but he’ll be fine by the beginning of camp, which is good for us.”

The left ankle was addressed shortly after the season and the right ankle was operated on in June. Middleton is already back on the court and ‘doing great,’ per a person familiar with the situation.

The Athletic initially reported the details of the procedures.

Middleton suffered what he called the worst ankle sprain of his Bucks career on Feb. 6 when Phoenix’s Kevin Durant committed a flagrant foul by sliding his foot into Middleton’s landing area on a jump shot. Middleton turned his left ankle on the play and missed 16 games.

All things Bucks: Latest Milwaukee Bucks news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Then during the Bucks’ first-round playoff loss to Indiana, Middleton sprained his right ankle in Game 2 on April 23. He remained in the game and finished the series.

Middleton has dealt with a bevy of injuries the last few years, beginning with a knee sprain in the 2022 playoffs that ended his season in the first round. He then had an offseason left wrist surgery in 2022 and then had right knee surgery in the summer of 2023.

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Trailblazers are rarely forgotten, but sometimes they’re overshadowed. Lost among Mary Lou Retton, Greg Louganis, Carl Lewis and Michael Jordan at the 1984 Olympics were the stars of the first gold medal-winning U.S. women’s basketball team.

“Everybody on that team was a star in their own right,” said forward Janice Lawrence Braxton.  “We had a team full of stars.”

Legendary Tennessee coach Pat Summitt, who died in 2016 at 64, five years after being diagnosed with early onset dementia in the form of Alzheimer’s, constructed a roster of phenoms, including USC’s Cheryl Miller and Pamela McGee, Louisiana Tech’s Kim Mulkey and Lawrence Braxton, Tennessee’s Lea Henry and Georgia’s Teresa Edwards.

Barred from contention because of her involvement in professional basketball was former Olympian Nancy Lieberman, who also missed the 1980 Olympics because of the U.S. boycott. But Summitt shifted her sights overseas, bringing in recently graduated talent such as Anne Donovan, Cathy Boswell, Carol Menken-Schaudt, Denise Curry, Cindy Noble and Lynette Woodard, who were competing internationally for U.S. national teams. 

Summitt, just 31 at the time, was establishing herself as a successful coach at Tennessee. What was yet to come was a legendary coaching career, during which she amassed eight NCAA national titles, 16 SEC tournament and conference championships, 18 Final Four appearances and a 1,098-208 record. She is now widely regarded as one of the best basketball coaches of all time and was responsible for molding the U.S. team into a dominant force at the 1984 Games. 

Miller was a marquee talent on a team brimming with legendary standouts and starred as the primary scoring option. Completing her sophomore season at USC before the Olympic trials, she already was a two-time NCAA Tournament champion and Naismith Player of the Year. She would go on to win two more Naismith Awards before beginning her career in coaching. 

Miller and Summitt were heated rivals in the collegiate game, regularly competing on the biggest stages before joining forces. One was the face of a new generation of basketball players, the other an old-school coach. Together, after putting their differences aside, they led the loaded national team to its first Olympic gold medal.

The final roster dominated the field at the Olympics. Summitt instilled a relentless mentality that prevented any moment of weakness. Her coaching, along with the otherworldly talent she assembled, combined to form an unstoppable force. The team led the tournament in every statistical category, and its smallest margin of victory was a 28-point opening-game demolition of Yugoslavia. The Americans crushed South Korea in the gold-medal game, 85-55.

These are the stories from the players, who 40 years later are shining a light on their journey to immortality:

“Passionate Pat”: The hard-driving style of Summitt, and how her players bought in

How do you turn a collection of talented individuals into a team? Pat Summitt did it through intensity, exhaustion and a touch of nausea. 

Summitt’s practices were highly competitive. Perfection was a requirement, and the team had to be overprepared to deliver gold in Los Angeles. Sprints were the coach’s favorite tool to accentuate a point.

“All we did was run,” Teresa Edwards said. “Almost the whole team threw up. Trash cans were at the corners. I don’t know why we were running, and I can’t figure it out for the life of me.” 

Summitt’s coaching style was new to some players, and there was an adjustment period. Janice Lawrence Braxton, who played at Louisiana Tech under coach Leon Barmore, recalls getting a steal in practice and running the court to make an easy layup. Summitt blew the play dead and screamed at Braxton. 

“ ‘Janice Lawrence, I know Leon Barmore didn’t let you play defense like that,’ ” Braxton recalls Summitt yelling at her. 

There was a reason for Summitt’s coaching style, however. Through shared pain and countless sprints, a group of rivals became a team.

“Because coach was so hard on us, we had to forge a bond with each other,” Cheryl Miller said. “It had to be us against them, the coaching staff. That united us.”  

The passion, the intensity, the cardio, the pain — it all worked.

But as they put the finishing touches on the historic moment, the players couldn’t help but spend their crowning achievement recalling the unremitting practices that helped get them there.

“I remember getting our gold medals, and we were able to raise our hands that we had finished,” Braxton said. “That summer was the most grueling summer. Pat gave us T-shirts that said, ‘We Survived the Summitt.’ When she said that, she was not lying.”

“The anchor”: The once-in-a-generation talent of Cheryl Miller

Summitt tried to bring the intensity out of her players. But with Cheryl Miller, she tried to rein it in.

“My enthusiasm for the game, she thought, was showboating,” Miller said. “The animation just irked her. It bugged her.”

During a meeting after one of their pre-Olympic practices, Summitt asked Miller why she was always being so dramatic on the court.

“Because the game is dramatic,” Miller replied. “I’m just the exclamation point in the sentence.”

Summitt would learn to accept Miller’s personality, mainly because she didn’t have much choice as Miller was inarguably the best all-around player on the team.

The 6-foot-2 inch forward from USC, who had just come off a national championship run in which she was named the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, led the Olympic team in points, assists, rebounds and steals.

“She was so far ahead of her time,” said Debbie Antonelli, a women’s basketball commentator who played for North Carolina State in 1984. “She was long and athletic. She could handle [the ball] and she was strong. She could dunk, she could play at the rim, she could guard anybody. Until Caitlin [Clark] came along, I thought Cheryl Miller was the best college player ever.”

It’s impossible not to wonder what Miller would have looked like in today’s game. But according to Hall of Fame player Ann Meyers-Drysdale, who played on the 1976 silver medal-winning U.S. Olympic team and called the 1984 team’s games for ABC, we don’t need to think too hard.

“Could Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson and Jerry West play today? You’re a great player no matter the generation,” Meyers-Drysdale said. “Absolutely Cheryl Miller would have been great in today’s game.”

Miller doesn’t lack confidence in how she would perform in the modern era.

“It’s not being braggadocious,” Miller said. “But there’s no one in the game [today] where I’m like, ‘She would have been a challenge.’ ”

Fighting for their spot: The Olympic trials in Colorado Springs

Braxton, a senior forward from Louisiana Tech, vividly remembers watching Georgeann Wells at the 1984 Olympic trials. A 6-foot-7 inch sophomore from West Virginia who would become the first woman to dunk in a college game, Wells was one of the most talented players Braxton had seen.

“This girl had arms and legs for days,” Braxton said. “She was blocking everybody’s shot in the trials.”

But Wells’ defensive dominance throughout tryouts wasn’t enough to earn her a spot on the Olympic roster. In Braxton’s eyes, Wells’ failure to make the cut represented how difficult it was to gain one of the 12 spots. 

“When you play in a certain [college] conference, you don’t really get to see some of the other teams around the country play,” Braxton said. “When we went to the Olympic trials, then you had these people coming from everywhere. And you’d be like, ‘Oh man, dang.’ ”

Collegiate and professional players competing overseas combined to form a more competitive tryout than in 1980, said Curry, who made the Olympic roster in ’80 but was denied the chance to compete in Moscow because of the U.S. boycott.

“They were really intense,” Curry said. “The number of quality players had increased significantly between the 1980 trials and 1984 trials.”

Making the 1984 roster is a moment Curry said she will never forget.

“I remember pure elation, just like in 1980,” Curry said. “In 1980, they posted the team on the wall in the dorms at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, whereas this time, Pat [Summitt] had us come into a room and she told us individually. In 1984, it obviously was before cell phones and things like that, so then you’re hustling to try to find one of those dorm phones down the hall to call your family and let them know what happened. To some extent, there was some relief, but mostly just proud and excited.”

“Dominance”: How good was this U.S. team?

After months of training under Summitt as if they were entering as underdogs, the team dominated like the favorites they were.

With a high-pressure defense and an up-tempo offense, the Americans overwhelmed every team they played in the group stage, cruising to a 33-point average margin of victory.

“I know we had the expectations that we were going to go out and pressure the heck out of people, make it miserable for them, not allow them to get comfortable, not allow them, ideally, to even get into their offense so that they’re taking any kind of high-percentage shot,” said forward Curry. 

“We did that in every game.”

The U.S. concluded its Olympic run with the gold-medal game against South Korea, where players entered ready to crush their final opponent.

“Five of us were dunking in warm-ups, and you could hear the ‘clack ’ [of the rim],” guard Boswell said. “The [South Korean] players were looking out of the corner of their eyes. And we were all looking at each other like, ‘Hey, we’re playing at home in front of our crowd, so let’s get this.’ ”

The U.S. cruised to a 30-point win to secure the first Olympic gold medal in U.S. women’s basketball history. Three players, including Miller, scored in double figures, while every other player on the team contributed at least one basket. The performance was emblematic of the collection of individual stars that had melded to become a historic team.

“Being able to come together, knowing that any of us could take over a game at any time but sacrificing whatever it took,” said Edwards, “that’s one thing that made us special. We all wanted to win. Period.”

The six games to gold

Game 1: The U.S. began its road to gold on July 30 with a matchup against Yugoslavia. The 9 a.m. tipoff initially had the Americans sluggish, trailing 25-23 at one point in the first half. Miller and McGee eventually provided the jolt their team needed. Miller ended the game as the leading scorer with 23 points, eight rebounds and five assists, while McGee added 13 points, four rebounds and one assist. The U.S. led 43-29 at halftime and coasted to an 83-55 victory.  

Game 2: The U.S. faced Australia on July 31, and this time the Americans were ready for the 9 a.m. tipoff. They led by 20 points after 15 minutes and were up 51-28 at halftime. Noble had her best game of the tournament, posting 13 points and three rebounds while shooting 6-for-6 from the field. Curry chipped in with 12 points, two rebounds and three assists. The U.S. improved to 2-0 in round-robin play with an 81-47 win.

Game 3: After a day off, the U.S. met South Korea on Aug. 2. The Americans once again dominated from the opening tip and led 40-20 at the half. Braxton stuffed the stat sheet with 13 points and seven rebounds while shooting a team-high nine free throws. Boswell turned in her best performance with 10 points, three rebounds and three assists. The U.S.  continued its demolition of the field with an 84-47 win.

Game 4: The U.S. faced China on Aug. 3 and continued proving itself as the tournament favorite. The team led 38-26 after the first half and widened its margin of victory in the second, outscoring China 53-29 to complete a 91-55 victory. Woodard was the leading scorer with 16 points, four assists, three rebounds and two steals. Braxton followed with 14 points, seven rebounds, two steals and one block. Two Chinese players registered 10 or more points, while four Americans reached the 10-point threshold.

Game 5: The U.S. met Canada on Aug. 5 and forced its will upon yet another opponent. Donovan played her best game of the tournament, recording 14 points, six rebounds, one assist, one steal and one block. The American team outrebounded Canada 42-29 en route to a 92-61 final. The U.S. led by 10 at the half and outscored Canada 51-30 in the second half.

Game 6: In the tournament’s biggest game – the gold medal final – the U.S. leaned upon its superstar, who shined against South Korea. Miller recorded 16 points and had 11 rebounds, five assists and two steals to lead the Americans to an 85-55 victory. The team ended the tournament the way it started it – with suffocating defense. Four players on the South Korean team recorded a single point.

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