Team USA celebrates their victory over Canada in the women's wheelchair basketball quarterfinal during the Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020 on Aug. 31, 2021 in Tokyo.
The U.S. women’s wheelchair basketball team led its quarterfinal against Canada for all but 17 seconds on Tuesday at the Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020, easing its way into the semifinals with a 63-48 victory at Ariake Arena.
Behind 19 points from three-time Paralympian Rose Hollermann and 18 from four-time Paralympian Natalie Schneider, Team USA moved one spot closer to defending its Paralympic title from Rio after an unsettling 2-2 record in the Tokyo preliminary round had left a bitter taste in its mouth and a third-place finish in Group B.
“If you want to leave ‘Hot Mom Nat’ in the paint, she’s going to make you pay,” remarked Lindsey Zurbrugg, who bucketed 10 points herself in 40 minutes on the court to add to Schneider and Hollermann’s performances.
As a team, the U.S. converted on 71 percent of its chances in the paint, with Schneider going 7-for-10 inside.
“It’s because my teammates are such strong outside shooters that I was able to get open inside,” added Schneider, the lone holdover from the team that won Paralympic gold in 2008. “We’re really just one unit and whatever the defense gives us is what we’re looking at.”
The U.S. created a 10-point gap entering halftime of the contest to take a commanding lead early on and converted on 75 percent of its free-throw attempts to make quick work of its North American rivals. All of Team USA’s points came from its five starters, which also included Courtney Ryan (10 points) and Darlene Hunter (6 points). Ryan tallied seven rebounds and 13 assists as well.