Sat. Oct 5th, 2024
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At a team-bonding culture night before the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games, Australia’s men’s basketball team was shown historical footage of their previous campaigns, and it wasn’t all glittering.

For as much pain as the Boomers endured in the 2010s before breaking through for their famous bronze, Australian basketball fans had seen this movie before.

Sparked by the NBL’s boom years in the 1980s, the Boomers reached the Olympic semifinals in 1988, 1996 and 2000, albeit missing out on a medal every time.

As the generation of Luc Longley, Andrew Gaze, Mark Bradtke and Andrew Vlahov grew grey and old, the days of falling agonisingly short of medals started being looked back on as the glory years.

In 2001, the Boomers missed out on World Cup qualification when they lost to rivals New Zealand for just the second time in their history, kicking off a dark period for the team.

Andrew Gaze stands in a Boomers huddle after the bronze medal game at the Sydney Olympics in 2000.
Andrew Gaze (centre) played in four straight Olympics, finishing fourth on three occasions.(Getty Images: Darren McNamara/ALLSPORT)

They finished ninth at the 2004 Olympics in Athens — their worst finish since the 1972 Munich Olympics — and couldn’t get past the quarters at Beijing 2008 and London 2012.

“The balance of a national team, you want to win now, but you’ve also got to look for the next tournament and the tournament after and make sure you have a core group staying together,” Andrew Bogut said in Rose Gold, a new ABC TV documentary on the Boomers.



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