SYDNEY—The names on the U.S. team have changed, the Americans’ dominance has not.
A'ja Wilson scored 19 points, Kelsey Plum added 17 and the United States beat China 83–61 on Saturday to win its fourth consecutive gold medal at the women’s basketball World Cup.
“It feels great,” said Wilson, who was selected as the tournament’s MVP. “We came here on a mission, we got it. We got gold. Now we’re going home with some hardware. It feels great to us. Australia was great to us. I didn’t see any kangaroos, but it’s OK because we are leaving with a gold.”
This was one of the most dominant teams in the Americans’ storied history in the World Cup that now has won 11 gold medals. They’ve won four straight gold medals for the first time. This also was the biggest win in a gold-medal game, surpassing the 20-point wins that the Americans had done twice.
“Everybody wants to beat us. Everybody wants what we have and that’s gold medals and victories,” Breanna Stewart said.
What started with Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi has now been passed down to Wilson and Stewart. With Alyssa Thomas the oldest player at 30, the domination could continue for years to come.
“It’s been an incredible journey just to continue to lay that foundation down like so many of the greats in front of us have,” Wilson said. “Now it’s our turn to step up and be in that situation.”
Host Australia defeated Canada 95–65 to win the bronze medal, led by 41-year-old Lauren Jackson’s 30 points.
As they’ve done all tournament, the Americans did it on both ends of the court, playing stellar defense as well as using a high-powered offense.
The U.S. (8–0) finished the World Cup averaging 98.8 points—just short of the mark held by the 1994 team that averaged 99.1. They won by an average of 40.8 points, topping the mark held by the 2010 team.
The game was a sellout with nearly 16,000 fans—the biggest crowd to attend a women’s World Cup game since the inaugural tournament in 1953 in Chile.
Led by Li Yueru and Wu Tongtong, China hung around. The Chinese team trailed 33–28 late in the second quarter before the U.S. went on a 10–2 run highlighted by fast-break layups by Stewart and Wilson to extend the advantage to double-digits.
Jin Weina hit a 3-pointer just before the halftime buzzer to get China back to within 10.
The U.S. was just too good to let the upset happen, outscoring China 25–14 in the third. The Americans did have one scary moment when Thomas went down after a collision with Li in the lane. She was helped off the court, but returned a few minutes later.
“It was a tough game as we expected,” Thomas said. “By no means is this game easy. We stuck to it and pulled out a win.”
China won its first medal since the 1994 World Cup when the team also took the silver and are a rising power in women’s basketball.
Li finished with 19 points and Wu added 13 before leaving the game in the fourth quarter after her knee gave out driving to the basket. She had to be carried off the court.
The victory was the 30th in a row in World Cup play for the Americans, who haven’t lost since the 2006 semifinals against Russia. The Soviet Union holds the World Cup record with 56 straight wins from 1959–86. This is only the second time in the Americans’ storied history they’ve reached four consecutive gold medal contests. They also did it from 1979–90, winning three times.
This U.S. team, which has so many new faces, continued to dominate the paint even without 6-foot-8 Brittney Griner, outscoring its opponents by an average of 55–24.
The teams met in pool play and China gave the U.S. its toughest game, losing by 14 points.