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Trailblazers are rarely forgotten, but sometimes they’re overshadowed. Lost among Mary Lou Retton, Greg Louganis, Carl Lewis and Michael Jordan at the 1984 Olympics were the stars of the first gold medal-winning U.S. women’s basketball team.

“Everybody on that team was a star in their own right,” said forward Janice Lawrence Braxton.  “We had a team full of stars.”

Legendary Tennessee coach Pat Summitt, who died in 2016 at 64, five years after being diagnosed with early onset dementia in the form of Alzheimer’s, constructed a roster of phenoms, including USC’s Cheryl Miller and Pamela McGee, Louisiana Tech’s Kim Mulkey and Lawrence Braxton, Tennessee’s Lea Henry and Georgia’s Teresa Edwards.

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Barred from contention because of her involvement in professional basketball was former Olympian Nancy Lieberman, who also missed the 1980 Olympics because of the U.S. boycott. But Summitt shifted her sights overseas, bringing in recently graduated talent such as Anne Donovan, Cathy Boswell, Carol Menken-Schaudt, Denise Curry, Cindy Noble and Lynette Woodard, who were competing internationally for U.S. national teams. 


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