The U.S. women’s basketball team’s quest for an eighth straight gold medal got off to a strong start Monday.
Team USA made quick, easy work of Japan to open group play, cruising to a 102-76 win. The relatively supersized frontcourt of Breanna Stewart and A’ja Wilson led the way — combining for 46 points on 21-of-31 shooting. Brittney Griner, Kelsey Plum and Sabrina Ionescu each added 11, while Chelsea Gray dished out 13 assists.
Japan was overmatched from the opening tip. The U.S.’s size advantage was glaringly obvious. The States scooped up 56 rebounds compared to only 27 for Japan. The U.S. especially dominated the offensive glass, scooping up 19 of their 35 misses. USA had more offensive rebounds than Japan had defensive ones. The law office of Wilson, Griner and Stewart combined for 30 boards — more than the entire Japan squad’s total.
The Japanese did their best to hang around. Maki Takada was a flamethrower off the bench, hitting 10 of her 11 shots for 24 points. Mai Yamamoto paced Japan’s starters with 17 points, draining 5-of-11 from 3-point range. The 3-point arc was the only place Japan had some success Monday. They connected on 15 of 38 from deep, which kept the game somewhat in shouting distance for about 20 minutes.
If the U.S. had one issue, it was its outside shooting. The States shot only 4 of 20 from beyond the arc, but it simply didn’t matter. More importantly, USA shot 38 of 57 on 2-pointers, a blistering 66.7%. The offensive game plan was incredibly simple: Get the ball into the paint, shoot over undersized defenders, and rebound any misses. Japan was at such a deficit inside, it made no difference they were +33 from 3-point range.
For all the discussion leading up to the games on who was left off the team, Monday was a reminder how much talent remains on the squad in Paris. The U.S. is loaded, and it’s going to be difficult for the competition to keep up.
The post Breanna Stewart, A’ja Wilson help Team USA dominate Japan in women’s hoops appeared first on NBC News.