Leslie's Legacy Is Secure

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By Sally Jenkins
Sunday, August 24, 2008

BEIJING

The next time some fool argues that Title IX should be rewritten, just show them the highlights of the U.S. women's basketball team at this Olympics, and of Lisa Leslie in particular. Twelve years of playing for her country, not a single loss and four gold medals. Think she was worth the funding?

You could hear Leslie coming down the hallway of Wukesong Arena from the noise of the gold medals clanking around her neck. They dangled from a medley of ribbons, rattling like a woman wearing too much jewelry as she walked. She had come to Beijing with a snapshot in her mind of how she wanted to look when she ended her Olympic career, and had packed her three previous medallions from Atlanta, Sydney and Athens. "My vision was to have four gold medals around my neck," she said. Now that she had made the picture a reality, with the United States' 92-65 rout of Australia on Saturday, it didn't just look great, it sounded great.

Leslie's final numerical contribution will be marked down in the record books as 14 points, 7 rebounds and 2 blocked shots. But that doesn't begin to describe what the 36-year-old towering centerpiece of the U.S. women's team has given to the program over the years, and especially in this one as she returned from maternity leave in 2007 and shepherded a brilliant new brigade of young American players in her final season of international play. America's ultimate Title IX baby did a little of everything. She hit whirlaround jumpers, including her first five shots of the game, snagged rebounds out of the air, defensively smothered Lauren Jackson, Australia's star center, and basically altered everything in her circumference.

"I'm exhausted," she said. "It's been hard-fought to get all these medals, no lie."

But most importantly, Leslie set the tone for the team every moment she was on the floor -- and there were times when she literally was on the floor, mopping it with her body chasing loose balls. "She's in on every shot," said U.S. assistant coach Dawn Staley, her former Olympic teammate. "Lisa sets the example of how your best player has to be your hardest worker."

It was the first time in four Olympics that Leslie wasn't the team's leading scorer, but she delivered a totally characteristic display of basketball-as-ethic that will be her real legacy. Her bequest to the United States is a class of superbly talented but also dedicated athletes led by the 22-year-olds Candace Parker (14 points) and Sylvia Fowles (13 points), who can shape-shift up around the rim and whom she took obvious pride in influencing.

"It's about giving back what you learn," Parker said.

Based on their overwhelming displays throughout the Olympic tournament, they will have every chance of winning four more gold medals. "Showed 'em the way," Leslie said. "I'm handing it over to 'em. They have to keep it going now."

When Leslie won her first gold medal in 1996 in Atlanta -- with teammates such as Sheryl Swoopes and Ruthie Bolton-Holifield, who helped her establish the WNBA -- Parker was just 10 years old. No one back then believed that women ever would be able to play at the rim consistently. A dozen years later, the girls who idolized Leslie have grown into arguably the greatest class of female players ever, led by Parker and Fowles, both of whom can dunk with something approaching ease, and both of whom clearly pay homage to her, and not just as ballplayers. "It's the way she's carried herself off the court," Fowles said. "As a woman, a teacher, a listener, all of that."

Throughout the Olympics, it seemed that every one of Leslie's younger teammates had a story about how they had watched her on TV, about how they had attended a summer camp where she appeared, how they had gotten her autograph. "I don't look old, but I'm feeling it the more I hear these stories," she said.

Parker, Leslie's rookie teammate on the Los Angeles Sparks, made a pact with her not to leave China without the gold. She kidded that if they had lost, she would have had to move to China. "We weren't going to be the team to let Lisa lose," Parker said. "We wouldn't let her Olympic career end that way."

The last offensive play of Leslie's career gave the Americans their final bit of separation from Australia. With 6 minutes 52 seconds to go, she caught a lob under the basket and shook off Jackson for the lay-in. It gave the USA a 77-56 lead and drained the Australians of any hope. Leslie left the game just a few seconds later with her fifth foul. She came to the bench and slapped hands all the way down the line. Then she took a chair and sat, her chin in her hands, almost pensively as she watched the future of American women's basketball run out the clock without her.

When the final seconds ticked off, Leslie rose and skipped up and down on the balls of her feet. She danced onto the floor to embrace Parker, and as she patted the younger player's face, she was weeping. Then the moment she envisioned came: She stepped onto the medal podium and accepted her beribboned decoration. But as "The Star-Spangled Banner" struck up, perhaps the real reward wasn't hanging around Leslie's neck, but standing next to her, swaying back and forth and singing the anthem with her.



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