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Las Vegas Aces point guard Chelsea Gray dribbles the ball in a game against the Washington Mystics on Jun. 5, 2021. She and her defender, Mystics guard Ariel Atkins, will be teammates at the Tokyo Olympics. (Photo credit: Domenic Allegra)

On a U.S. Olympic team that is half debutants, Chelsea Gray might have been the most unlikely prospect to make the team. While seven of her teammates were No. 1 overall WNBA Draft picks and all participated on junior national teams in their younger days, Gray was the No. 11 pick in 2014 after an injury-hobbled career at Duke and had no USA Basketball experience. Now, the versatile 5โ€™11 guard will head to Tokyo with the ambition to capture a seventh consecutive gold medal for the U.S.

โ€œIโ€™m excited to be selected onto this Olympic team,โ€ Gray said. โ€œIf you think about it, to be one of 12, itโ€™s a great honor. There are a lot of players who were told, โ€˜No.โ€™ Iโ€™m extremely blessed and happy to be on this Olympic team with this group of women.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to have fun and achieve greatness, while having fun with each other. The goal is to bring home the gold medal, and everything weโ€™ve done since training camp has been going towards that goal. Iโ€™m excited to be joining them and to be able to have a couple of [exhibition] games here in Vegas so our families and fans here can watch and cheer us on because they are not going to be able to do that in Tokyo. So Iโ€™m excited and ready to get started.โ€

Gray is averaging 11.8 points and a career-high 6.3 assists per game in her first season with the Las Vegas Aces after five seasons with the Los Angeles Sparks that saw her continually improve into one of the leagueโ€™s top players.

The Northern California native said she realized she could be an Olympian one day when she was invited to go on the national teamโ€™s tour against U.S. colleges in 2019.

โ€œI was excited about that opportunity,โ€ the 28-year-old Gray said. โ€œThis has been a goal of mine and a dream, the top of the top pinnacle. So I am excited to compete and be one of 12 on this Olympic roster.โ€

Gray, who will become the first Duke female basketball alum to play in the Olympics, will join a backcourt that includes Skylar Diggins-Smith, Jewell Loyd, Ariel Atkins and the timeless duo of Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi.

โ€œTheir accolades speak for themselves,โ€ Gray said of Bird and Taurasi. โ€œThey achieve gold medals, so I am excited to go and experience this with them because it could be their last time going for the gold medal, so you canโ€™t take it for granted, these moments. I am just excited to start competing towards that goal.โ€

The U.S. will open play in Tokyo at 12:40 a.m. ET on Jul. 27 (9:40 p.m. PT on Jul. 26) against African champion Nigeria and will have group-stage games against Japan and France later in the week. Gray believes that having such a short training camp period before flying to Tokyo will be a hurdle for her team and unlike the practice time that WNBA teams have.

โ€œOne of the challenges is knowing each other,โ€ Gray said. โ€œโ€ฆ I think learning on the fly, even throughout games, learning through conversation and films is going to be huge. There are a lot of new faces as well for these Olympic Games, so itโ€™s going to be [difficult] to incorporate [our individual strengths] and also learn each otherโ€™s strengths at a quick pace.โ€

Scott Mammoser covered the Paris 2024 Olympics for The IX Basketball. He has also covered major international events for FIBA, World Athletics and the International Skating Union. He has attended six other...

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