Turkey, my late father's home country, is sending 105 athletes to the 2012 London Olympics, which start on July 27th. For the first time, the delegation includes more female than male athletes. In total, 59 female athletes will be representing Turkey as will 46 men.
Among the impressive stories is that of women's gymnast Gokce Uctas, 21, (pictured above). The young woman from Gaziantep province in southern central Turkey is the first woman to qualify as a gymnast for Turkey. Uctas won a silver medal on vault at the 2009 Mediterranean Games in Pescara, Italy.
But, perhaps the most surprising athlete competing for Turkey is American women's basketball player Quaintra Hollingsworth, an African-American who played for Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Va. Hollingsworth, who plays professional basketball in Turkey, acquired Turkish citizenship to play for the national team.
Other women's basketball players for Turkey, include Esmeral Tucluer (we believe she is the one pictured in blue), Birsel Vardarli and Nilay Kataltepe.
Turkey will face the United States in women's basketball during the Olympics. Interestingly enough, four American players for the Team USA squad have played or are playing for Turkish professional teams. These players include Diane Taurasi, one of the best women's basketball players in the world, as well as Tamika Catchings and Angel McCoughtry.
The two countries will also face each other in indoor women's volleyball on August 5th. The Turkish volleyball team is ranked ninth in the world; the squad consists of several strong players, including Gizem Guresen, Eda Erdem, Naz Aydemir and Esra Gumus.
The American team features one player in Logan Tom, a Stanford alumni, who plays professionally for Fenerbahce (Istanbul) in Turkey. Other American volleyball players of note include Kim Glass, Alisha Glass and Stacy Sykora.
http://www.olimpiyakometisi.org.tr
http://www.usavolleyball.org
Showing posts with label women's basketball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's basketball. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Quote of the Day/Week-Cheryl Miller
Today, we conclude our series of quotes from Americans who won either or both gold and silver medals at the summer games in honor of the upcoming 2012 London Olympics.
Cheryl Miller, 48, a graduate of the University of Southern California, was the star player on the gold medal-winning women's basketball team at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
In 1995, Miller was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass. As a high school senior for Riverside Polytechnic High School in Riverside, Calif., she scored 105 points in one game.
Her younger brother Reggie Miller, who was a standout at UCLA and the Indiana Pacers, said he was flabbergasted when he found out that she had scored some 40 points more than him on a night when he assumed he would be the member of the family making headlines in the local paper the next day.
Here is Cheryl Miller's quote:
"Every plant has to look good for at least two seasons."
Cheryl Miller, 48, a graduate of the University of Southern California, was the star player on the gold medal-winning women's basketball team at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
In 1995, Miller was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass. As a high school senior for Riverside Polytechnic High School in Riverside, Calif., she scored 105 points in one game.
Her younger brother Reggie Miller, who was a standout at UCLA and the Indiana Pacers, said he was flabbergasted when he found out that she had scored some 40 points more than him on a night when he assumed he would be the member of the family making headlines in the local paper the next day.
Here is Cheryl Miller's quote:
"Every plant has to look good for at least two seasons."
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