Saturday, 12 Jul 2025
  • Contact
  • About Us
New York Interest
  • Local News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Music
Font ResizerAa
New York InterestNew York Interest
  • Local News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Music
Search
  • Local News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Music
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Copyright © 2024 NewYork Interest. All Rights Reserved.
New York Interest > Blog > Sports > For Diana Taurasi, one last Olympic hurrah to cap a one-of-a-kind career
Sports

For Diana Taurasi, one last Olympic hurrah to cap a one-of-a-kind career

NewYork Interest Team
Last updated: August 10, 2024 5:06 pm
NewYork Interest Team
Share
For Diana Taurasi, one last Olympic hurrah to cap a one-of-a-kind career
SHARE


PARIS — Van Chancellor knew he wanted Diana Taurasi on the 2004 Olympic team in Athens. She was young, skilled, confident, brash. He expected she would be a centerpiece of American basketball in the years to come, but he also knew that she would still be able to contribute on the squad of superstars that had been selected for his team — “Dream On” members who had helped re-center the world of women’s basketball by retaking the gold in 1996 in Atlanta.

On Taurasi’s first day with Team USA that year, just the morning after she had helped UConn to a national title over Tennessee, she sat down on the bus next to Chancellor and asked him a very straightforward question: What do you need out of me, Coach?

“I need for you to act like a rookie,” he told her.

“Coach Chancellor,” she said, “if that’s all you need, I’m ready to roll. I’m ready to help this team.”

That was Diana 20 years ago. It was her four days ago, too, when after 33 consecutive Olympic starts for Team USA, coach Cheryl Reeve moved her to the bench in their quarterfinal game against Nigeria in favor of 26-year-old Jackie Young, the second-youngest player on the roster. When the team broke the huddle, Taurasi bounded back to the bench as if it were where the ball would be tipped. She sat down, rubbed her hands together and locked in.

What did the team need from her in that game? To do exactly that. Be the best leader and teammate, to pass the torch a bit and light everyone else’s fires on the way.

On Sunday, Taurasi will play in her final Olympic basketball game. It’s hard to imagine a USA Basketball world in which Taurasi doesn’t play a part. Of the 60-consecutive wins the program has had, she has been a part of 43.

“She has defined USA Basketball,” Reeve said. “I don’t know that there’s a greater competitor. … Dee is Mount Rushmore in that way.”

Diana Taurasi


“She has defined USA Basketball,” USA coach Cheryl Reeve says of Diana Taurasi. “I don’t know that there’s a greater competitor.” (Marvin Ibo Guengoer – GES Sportfoto / Getty Images)

After the team won gold in 2021 in Tokyo, Taurasi, then 39, surprised everyone when she stared into the NBC camera and ended her postgame interview by yelling, “See you in Paris!” before she walked off. Sue Bird, who had been in on the interview, too, looked back at the camera with a laugh and remarked, “She said what she said.”

While many assumed the statement was in jest, she did not. She said what she said. And then, she did it. She came to Paris and led this team. First from the starting lineup, and then from the end of the bench.

Against Nigeria, she didn’t enter the game in the first half, and instead was the first to jump out of her seat with good plays from her teammates and coached people up when they came to the bench.

After the semifinal win over Australia, Reeve said that when this is all over, she could speak more truthfully about the burden of carrying the legacy of eight straight gold medals and the expectations of this program. She hasn’t slept much and instead has toiled in the film room imagining all the ways basketball could be unfair to one of the greatest rosters ever assembled. She said she received a message from Dawn Staley, who coached the team in Tokyo to its seventh consecutive gold medal, that read: “There’s nothing I can say to you. I know what you’re feeling. You just have to go through it.”

What do you need out of me, Coach? You can imagine Taurasi saying.

To take a benching, as competitive Taurasi is, in a way speaks to the unselfish nature of this team. To be as steady as possible in a world where Reeve must feel like Atlas at every corner. To be someone who Reeve doesn’t have to worry about when she looks down the bench. Because they have Dee. She has seen everything. Nothing rattles her.

OK, would be Taurasi’s response, if that’s all you need, I’m ready to roll. I’m ready to help this team.

In her sixth and final Olympics (that part is fact — she quipped to reporters in London ahead of the Olympics that they would see her in Los Angeles … “on the beach with a beer”), her inclusion in this roster has been argued by keyboard jockeys who couldn’t name three players on the team.

But as she was in 2004, she is in 2024 — she’s here to help this team. It looks different now than it did a decade ago, two decades ago, but it’s the same Diana. Still, at 42, she leads the guards and wings through every drill. She’s the first to stand up and clap from the bench. First to high-five teammates. First to pull players into the huddle, and first in those huddles to speak.

Diana Taurasi


Diana Taurasi has embraced the mentor’s role on this U.S. team, coming off the bench in each of the Americans’ last two games. (Sarah Stier / Getty Images)

If that sounds cliché and unimportant, then perhaps it’s because the pressure this team exists underneath is entirely its own. Other teams don’t need a Dee because other teams don’t operate in this unique space of perfection.

Perhaps there’s no better endorsement of Taurasi than the fact that the two best players in the world — A’ja Wilson and Breanna Stewart — cede their space, their speaking time, their ability to “be first” to someone else.

“The biggest thing that I love about DT is that she does not change,” Wilson said. “She is always so consistent in what she does — that is a sign of greatness.”

Taurasi’s greatness has been on display through these Games. In moments big and small. In how she has handled herself. In her graciousness in understanding her role, and how it has changed. In how she has remained constant in who she is not just in these six games, but in her last 43.

“Think about that — two decades not two Olympics,” said Geno Auriemma, former U.S. national team coach and Taurasi’s college coach at UConn. “The commitment and passion, the love of the game — all these in and of itself would be monumental. But add in that for two decades she was the face of the team, the best player, best teammate and the greatest winner in the history of the game.”

With that commitment and that time has come age. For several years now, Taurasi has made efforts to take care of her body in a different, more focused, way — went vegan, did lengthier pre- and post-practice stretching and treatment regimens longer than the practice itself. She has sacrificed to continue to play, to continue to be here for not just herself but her teammates.

On Sunday, Taurasi will put on her No. 12 USA jersey one final time in an Olympic setting. No athlete has done what she has done before, and it’s hard to imagine it happening again. Nearly half of her life has been spent representing the U.S. on an international stage. But before Taurasi came around, it was hard to imagine 60-straight wins or eight-straight gold medals. Now, Team USA is on the precipice of just that.

Her legacy is cemented, and has been, but in these final Games for her, she has shown what’s possible to both her teammates and the next generation of players. Stewart calls her the “gold standard” of USA Basketball, and she’s just that. And not just because she already has five gold medals to her name.

Every Olympic coach she has had has asked her to do something different for her team — be a rookie, be a scorer, be an elite passer, be a leader, be a veteran, come off the bench, use your voice more than your passing skills. In short: Be Dee.

“I’m here to compete. I’m here to play at a high level. I’m here to give to my teammates and I’m here to win a gold medal — that’s it,” Taurasi said when she arrived in Paris. “I don’t care about the last 20 years. I’m worried about the next 20 years.”

The next 20 years of Team USA are in good hands. Taurasi has made sure of it. Just ask Young. Or Wilson. Or Kahleah Copper. Or Sabrina Ionescu.

And four years from now, when this group is going for a gold medal in Los Angeles, she’ll hopefully be on a beach somewhere, drinking a cold one. She has more than earned it.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Can the rest of the world catch up to Team USA? Our women’s basketball experts debate.

(Top photo of Diana Taurasi during Friday’s semifinal game against Australia: Daniela Porcelli / Eurasia Sport Images / Getty Images)

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Legendary Olympic marathoner exits race, hints at retiring Legendary Olympic marathoner exits race, hints at retiring
Next Article Dodgers end shortstop experiment, will move Mookie Betts to right field, after all Dodgers end shortstop experiment, will move Mookie Betts to right field, after all

Your Trusted Source for Accurate and Timely Updates!

Our commitment to delivering trending news consistently has earned us the trust of a vast audience! Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events & trends by following us on social media.
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
LinkedInFollow

Popular Posts

Amazon shares plummet on weak revenue forecast

Amazon forecast current quarter sales below estimates, and shares fell sharply after hours even though…

By NewYork Interest Team

Amazon Prime Day 2024 breaks record, US online sales hit $14.2B

US shoppers shelled out a record $14.2 billion across online retailers during the two-day Amazon…

By NewYork Interest Team

NBC’s Peacock 33% price hike to take effect ahead of 2024 Summer Olympics — here’s what to know

NBC’s Peacock streaming service implemented a major price hike for new subscribers this week —…

By NewYork Interest Team

You Might Also Like

NFL should be terrified that Chiefs haven’t even hit their stride yet
Sports

NFL should be terrified that Chiefs haven’t even hit their stride yet

By NewYork Interest Team
F1’s Sergio Pérez is having a ‘terrible’ season. Can he break through at home in Mexico?
Sports

F1’s Sergio Pérez is having a ‘terrible’ season. Can he break through at home in Mexico?

By NewYork Interest Team
Derek Jeter rips Aaron Boone for costly Yankees decision
Sports

Derek Jeter rips Aaron Boone for costly Yankees decision

By NewYork Interest Team
A Yankees-Dodgers World Series fits, especially in the realm of baseball caps
Sports

A Yankees-Dodgers World Series fits, especially in the realm of baseball caps

By NewYork Interest Team
New York Interest
Facebook Instagram Twitter Tiktok Youtube Linkedin

About US

New York Interest: Your go-to source for the latest news, events, and insights about New York. We are dedicated to providing in-depth coverage and captivating stories that highlight the essence of the city that never sleeps.

Categories
  • Local News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Music
Useful Links
  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Copyright © 2024 New York Interest. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?