Olympics: U.S. women’s basketball beats host nation Japan to claim 7th straight gold

US women's basketball Olympics
Breanna Stewart of the United States and A’Ja Wilson with Chelsea Gray celebrate after winning the gold medal match against Japan.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Team USA extended its historic run of championships in Olympic women’s basketball on Sunday, winning the gold against host-nation Japan in their first-ever medal match.

The United States’ women earned their seventh-straight gold in the 90-75 victory at the Saitama Super Arena, north of Tokyo. Brittney Griner, who plays for the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury, led Team USA with 30 points.

“Seven in a row, that’s pretty amazing,” Griner said, cradling her newly won medal, her second after claiming gold in Rio de Janeiro in 2016.

“COVID and everything that we’ve had to get through, to finally get to the gold game, get the gold, it’s like the icing on the cake,” she said. “It just washes away everything.”

The U.S. women’s victory on Sunday was their 55th straight win at the Olympics and earned them a ninth championship since 1976. Japan took the silver, their first, while France beat Serbia in the bronze medal match on Saturday.

In the absence of fans due to infection controls, blue and pink-clad Japanese volunteers in the arena clapped in unison for the home team. Some of the U.S. men’s basketball team, who on Saturday claimed their 16th gold, were also in attendance.

Packed with WNBA talent, the U.S. women’s team has been even more dominant in basketball in recent Olympics than the men’s squad. Sue Bird, the team captain, and Diana Taurasi have now claimed their fifth gold medals.

“Hopefully, we’ve left some sort of legacy with the younger players, where they now can carry that torch,” said Bird, who was cheered on by her soccer superstar wife Megan Rapinoe in the stands. “I’m just really, really happy. And this is my last one.”

Japan was the Cinderella story of the tournament, fighting their way into the quarterfinals for the first time and then battling to the final.

Throughout the tournament, the undersized Japan team bedeviled opponents with constant running for the 40 minutes of game time.

Offensively, Japan employed a potent three-point arsenal, abetted by rocket passes from Rui Machina, who set an Olympic record with 18 assists against France in the semifinals.

“Seeing the players with a silver medal and a look of pride on their faces was worth everything that we’ve been through,” head coach Tom Hovasse said. “This is a new era of women’s basketball in Japan.”