THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 26, 2021 at 12:45 JST
Las Vegas Aces’ Liz Cambage (8) shoots over Seattle Storm’s Ezi Magbegor in the first half of a WNBA basketball game May 15, in Everett, Wash. (AP Photo)
BRISBANE, Australia--Liz Cambage was included Wednesday in the 12-women Australian basketball team for the Tokyo Olympics, ending an earlier saga in which she first threatened to boycott the games but later changed her mind.
Cambage will play in her third Olympics for Australia. Two-time Olympian Jenna O’Hea will captain the squad and Rio Olympians Katie Ebzery, Cayla George, Tessa Lavey, Leilani Mitchell, Stephanie Talbot and Marianna Tolo return for their second games.
Rebecca Allen, Tess Madgen, Ezi Magbegor and Alanna Smith were selected for their Olympic debuts.
Allen (New York Liberty), Cambage (Las Vegas Aces), Magbegor (Seattle Storm), Mitchell (Washington Mystics), Smith (Phoenix Mercury) and Talbot (Seattle Storm) are all currently playing in the WNBA.
The Tokyo Olympics, already delayed a year because of the COVID-19 pandemic, is scheduled to open July 23.
Earlier this month, Cambage criticized promotional photos of Australian Olympians and Paralympians as “whitewashed” and said there was a lack of diversity in Australian media. The photos contained mostly white athletes.
In a series of social media posts, Cambage criticized two photos--one from the team’s official underwear supplier, and another from the Australian Olympic team. The underwear advertisement featured athletes from the Olympics and Paralympics.
“If I’ve said it once I’ve said it a million times. HOW AM I MEANT TO REPRESENT A COUNTRY THAT DOESN’T EVEN REPRESENT ME. #whitewashedaustralia,” Cambage wrote. “Until I see y’all doin more @ausolympicteam imma sit this one out.”
A week later, she changed her mind.
“For everyone wondering so desperately what my decision is for the Opals, I’m in baby… I’m in,” she posted.
Cambage was also in the news this past weekend after Connecticut Sun coach Curt Miller was fined $10,000 and suspended a game by the WNBA for making a disparaging remark about the 29-year-old Australian center to a referee on Sunday.
In a social media post following the Aces’ 72-65 loss to the Sun on Sunday, Cambage said Miller showed a lack of respect. The coach, while arguing whether a call should have gone the Sun’s way, told the official Cambage weighed 300 pounds (138 kilograms).
Miller issued a statement Monday apologizing to Cambage and the Aces and later re-iterated his apology.
“As a leader, words matter. It was inappropriate,” he said. “In a league where we empower women, and I’ve spent 31 years empowering women, (those words were) just not acceptable.”
Former Opals point guard and four-time Olympian Sandy Brondello will lead the Australian team in her first Olympics as coach.
“Every selection process is a difficult one as we have so many quality players in our squad, but I feel we have named a very balanced team that will be able to adapt to any style of play we will confront in Tokyo,” Brondello said on a conference call from Phoenix, Arizona, where she coaches the WNBA’s Mercury.
“We have good size, speed, toughness, versatility and experience which will all be required in a high-pressure situation as the Olympics.”
Australia has three silver medals at the Olympics--losing to the United States in the final at Sydney in 2000, Athens in 2004 and Beijing in 2008. The Opals won bronze medals at Atlanta in 1996 and London in 2012 but lost in the quarterfinals at Rio in 2016.
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