Clutch Cayla George buckets in a seven-point defeat of France have steered the Opals from oblivion, into the Paris Games women’s basketball quarterfinals and away from an early United States meeting.
Australia’s Olympic revival in Lille continued on Sunday with a 79-72 defeat of previously-unbeaten France.
The victory, after a shock first-up loss to Nigeria and defeat of Canada, ensured they progressed to the last eight when competition moves to Paris.
But crucially the margin of victory boosted them to second in their pool and away from a potential quarter-final against eight-time defending champions USA when the draw is completed later on Sunday.
The US haven’t lost an Olympic game since 1992, currently riding a 58-game winning streak.
Needing to win by six points to jump Nigeria and finish second in the pool, they had built an 11-point lead in the final quarter but had it cut to one with four minutes to play.
The margin then danced around the magical figure, Sami Whitcomb’s superb drive to the bucket cancelled out by a Marine Johannes triple.
Up four with 33 seconds to play George rescued a broken offensive play, her off-balance mid-range shot on target.
Johannes’s next three-pointer rimmed out, Steph Talbot hit two foul shots and Australia were up eight and happy to give up a lay-up rather than concede another three-pointer.
George, who had earlier hit a corner three, then sealed it from the line.
Sami Whitcomb, 36 and in her Olympic debut, continued her terrific form with 12 points, seven assists and one turnover.
Steph Talbot had seven points, six rebounds and five assists, Tess Madgen (18 points) and Alanna Smith (12 points) all fired but Lauren Jackson wasn’t used.
An Australian loss would have meant they failed to make the quarter-finals for the first time since 1992, when they didn’t qualify for the Games.
They medalled in five straight Games but have missed the semi-finals in the last two editions.
France won both their first two games by 20 points and had beaten Australia in three of their last four encounters.
“We knew we would get better every day,” captain Madgen said.
“We laid a big egg on that first day but we’re Australians. When the going gets tough we fight.”