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Aussies qualify for Olympics after last-second drama

Aussies qualify for Olympics after last-second drama

Australia’s Gangurrus have taken their “one shot” to join the Opals in Paris, the women’s 3×3 basketball team earning an Olympic debut by winning a qualification tournament in Japan.

Basketball’s high-octane half-court version made its debut at the Tokyo Games in 2021 but neither Australia’s men or women qualified.

The women at least will be there for the second instalment, the Gangurrus beating Canada 19-16 late on Sunday in Utsunomiya to clinch the FIBA Universality Olympic Qualifying Tournament.

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The Asia Cup champions and Commonwealth Games bronze medallists topped their group before beating Brazil 18-16 to reach the final.

The team included WNBL Perth Lynx captain Anneli Maley, Adelaide’s Lauren Mansfield, Bendigo Spirit’s Alex Wilson and Spain-based Marena Whittle.

Aussie women celebrate making the Paris Olympics.Aussie women celebrate making the Paris Olympics.
Aussie women celebrate making the Paris Olympics. Credit: Getty Images

China, France, Azerbaijan, and the USA have already qualified, while Australia were not eligible to compete in the final play-in tournament in Hungary.

“This was our only shot,” Maley said

“We don’t get to go on the tours, we don’t get to do any of that stuff.

“And to come out here and play the way we did, I’m so, so proud.”

Meanwhile, rising teen sprint star Sebastian Sultana will get to live the dream in Paris after Australia qualified both blue-riband 4x100m relay teams at an Olympics for the first time in 24 years.

A youthful quartet of newly crowned Australian individual 100m champ Sultana, Jacob Despard, Calab Law and Joshua Azzopardi finished second behind South Africa in their repechage heat in 38.46 seconds at the World Relays in the Bahamas on Sunday (Monday AEST).

The top two in each of the three repechage races joined the eight finalists in getting automatic starts at the Paris Games in early August.

Australia’s women’s team had booked their spot 24 hours earlier and backed that up by finishing fifth in the final on Sunday.

Sultana, 19, shot to prominence last month in Adelaide when he took down long-time Australian sprint standard bearer Rohan Browning to win a first national 100m title.

Browning will be available to bolster the relay squad in Paris and is also well placed to again contest the individual 100m at the Games.

“The race was really smooth, I was very confident after the heat yesterday and knew we could get it done,” said Sultana.

“It feels absolutely incredible to have qualified for the Paris Olympics, fulfilling a childhood dream.”

After breaking the national record for the second time this year with a flying effort of 42.83 in the heats on Saturday, the women’s squad of Ebony Lane, Bree Masters, Ella Connolly and Torrie Lewis couldn’t quite match that time in the final.

But a fifth-placed finish in 43.02 behind gold medallists and perennial relay powerhouse the United States (41.85) still bodes well for a potential Olympic podium finish.

“We’re a definite medal chance in Paris,” said Masters.

“There’s a lot that we can do to improve upon that race so that we can be one per cent better, so we are really confident.”

Not since the home Sydney Games in 2000 has Australia claimed spots in both Olympic sprint relays.

The inexperienced Australian 4x400m squads were unable to match those efforts in Nassau, although the women were somewhat unlucky to be drawn in the fastest of the three repechage heats.

Their time of three minutes 28.05 seconds would have been enough to finish in the top two in either of the other heats.

There are still two vacancies to be filled in the men’s and women’s 4x400m fields for the Paris Games by the June 30 cut-off.

– AAP

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