Aussie teen stars push USA to limit in U19 World Cup basketball final
Twelve teens — one just 16 — combined to push the mighty USA, winners of 10 of 15 U19 Women's World Cup gold medals, including the past three, to an 88-76 result.
The 12-point margin was in no way indicative of the tightness of the clash. The Aussies were within 2 points at quarter time, fell behind by 10 at the long break and then reeled it back to just 4 on tournament All-Star Five Gem Bonnie Deas' trey with nine to go in the last.
The four premier players at the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup in 2025, featuring Australian Bonnie Deas. Picture: FIBA
From there, the USA had just enough physical supremacy to hold the plucky Australians off.
But even tournament MVP Saniyah Hall and fellow All-Star Five member Sienna Betts felt it was a great escape.
'I was so scared,' one was heard to say on the mic, post-game.
'They made every three,' another said, before the FIBA live feed was cut and set to private.
The Gems continued to spread the load as they've done throughout the tournament, with five players in double figures and nine of the 10 players to take the floor scoring.
Led by the elite Deas' 13, 11 points and 7 boards from Monique Bobongie and 11 and 5 assists out of Sienna Harvey, the Gems kept on keeping on.
The Gems celebrate their silver medal at the 2025 FIBA U19 World Cup. Picture: FIBA
But they just lacked an explosive scorer who could truly get theirs when they needed to — unlike the Americans.
Hall plundered the Aussies for 25 points, 9 rebounds and 7 assists, underlining why she is ESPN's top-rated college prospect for the class of 2026, while long and lean Jasmine Davidson provided the perfect foil, punching in 21 points to go with 6 rebounds and 3 dimes.
The Aussie girls will be super proud to collect silver, particularly after their predecessors, in 2023, failed to make it out of the round of 16, giving rise to new hope the gap continues to close in women's basketball.
Team America's dominant Saniyah Hall, who won the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup tournament MVP award. Picture: FIBA
THE 12 AUSSIE TEENS WHO GAVE TEAM USA AN ALMIGHTY SCARE
4 RUBY PERKINS
dob: November 21, 2007 (17)
State: New South Wales
Height: 172cm
Club/college: California Berkeley (NCAA)
Australian Gem Ruby Perkins threads the needle with stunning dish against Team USA in the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup gold medal game. Picture: FIBA
Low down: An elite scoring guard who has developed into a supreme floor general. The key cog in the Gems share-at-all-costs gamestyle who marshalls her teammates with military precision and finds them in perfect positions to maximise their skills. And, if that doesn't work, she'll take you to the cup or hit a three in your face. Battled against the length, athleticism and blitzing of Team USA in the final but the unflappable Perkins will take those learnings and make the necessary adjustments through her obsessive work ethic and drive to be the best.
5 SIENNA HARVEY
dob: January 20, 2006 (19)
State: Victoria
Height: 174cm
Club/college: Washington (NCAA)
Australian Gem Sienna Harvey spots an opening during the gold medal clash with Team USA at the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup. Picture: FIBA
Low down: If Deas is Victoria's 1a guard, then Harvey is 1b, the two southern state dynamos having enjoyed a running battle for supremacy throughout their development pathway. Harvey's trickery lies in her proficiency with both hands and off both feet. There's not much to scout for defenders when Harvey is equally adept at going left or right — and a devastating finisher with either hand. Spent the NBL1 South season with Melbourne Tigers and will begin the next step in her basketball journey in the US.
6 BONNIE DEAS
dob: May 18, 2006 (19)
State: Victoria
Height: 178cm
Club/college: Arkansas (NCAA)
Bonnie Deas was the only Australian Gem named in the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup Tournament All-Star Five. Picture: FIBA
Low down: Named in the U19 World Cup All-Star Five, Deas is the do-it-all leader of the Gems who might be the best rebounder at her size in her age group in the country. Spent last season as a development player under Guy Molloy at the Sydney Flames and is committed to Arkansas. Pound-for-pound, one of the toughest players in the country, the Frankston product is simply relentless. A future Opals captain in the making.
7 PRASAYUS NOTOA
dob: August 20, 2007 (17)
State: Queensland
Height: 183cm
Club/college: Logan (NBL1)
Prasayus Notoa has emerged in the green and gold over the past 18 months. Picture: IBA
Low down: Dominant at nationals level, always thereabouts with junior national teams, Notoa has displayed drastic improvement over the past 18 months. Is she a big rebounding forward? A playmaking tall point guard? A scoring combo guard? It doesn't really matter — she's a damn fine basketball player, tailor made for today's world of position-less hoops. Just give her the rock and let her cook.
8 ZARA RUSSELL
dob: June 23, 2007 (18)
Territory: Australian Capital Territory
Height: 185cm
Club/college: Centre of Excellence
Zara Russell has been a long-time dependable performer for Australia at junior national level. Picture: FIBA
Low down: A mainstay of the junior national team program, Russell's poise, leadership and powerful frame make her a blue chip Opals prospect of the future. Hard not to think of London Olympian and green and gold three-and-D mainstay Rachel Jarry when you watch the ACT product operate. Big, strong, uncompromising and positionally versatile. Coach's dream.
9 MONIQUE BOBONGIE
dob: December 27, 2006 (18)
State: Queensland
Height: 178cm
Experience:
Club/college: Canberra Capitals (WNBL)
Australian Gem Monique Bobongie spots up from deep during the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup gold medal decider. Picture: FIBA
Low down: Queensland's back-to-back female athlete of the year in 2023 and 2024, Bobongie is an athlete with maturity well beyond her tender years. At just 17, the young Indigenous starlet carved out a starting role in the WNBL with Canberra last season and will soon jump into pre-season training with the Caps on her return from the Czech Republic. And she's won the admiration of Opals assistant Paul Goriss, who has ordained her a national team lock: 'I see her as being a future Opal and not that far in the future. She most definitely has the attributes. She can handle the ball, she shoots the ball really well and is a smart decision maker with her passing.'
10 EMILIJA DAKIC
dob: February 6, 2007 (18)
State: Victoria
Height: 178cm
Club/college: Florida (NCAA)
Emilija Dakic has committed her basketball future to the US college system. Picture: FIBA
Low down: Scoring point guard with great defensive instincts, Dakic can switch on talls and smalls and loves the physical challenge of trying to stop the big units. Heads to the mighty Gators this year as a graduate of the Centre of Excellence after spending time as a training player at WNBL club Southside.
11 MADISON RYAN
dob: March 31, 2009 (16)
State: Victoria
Height: 185cm
Club/college: Sandringham (NBL1)
Victorian Madison Ryan, just 16, was the youngest member of the silver-medal winning Gems squad at the FIBA U19 Women's World Cup. Picture: FIBA
Low down: The baby of the bunch who doesn't take a back seat. The rangy 16-year -old wing started the Gems' tournament opener and shredded Brazil for 22 points on a wildly efficient 9-11 shooting. The 4-6 from deep in that game is an indicator of the offensive weaponry at the Victorian's command. There will be no rest for Ryan, who will just about go straight into prep for September's FIBA U17 Asia Cup with the Sapphires — led by Tom Garlepp, husband of Gems' coach Renae.
12 SITAYA FAGAN
dob: March 24, 2008 (17)
State: Victoria
Height: 189cm
Club/college: Centre of Excellence
Sitaya Fagan is arguably the most talented young prospect in the Australian basketball system. Picture: FIBA
Low down: Highest-potential junior in the country who possesses remarkable physical gifts and a game that is quickly catching up. With the wingspan of an eagle and the speed of a cheetah, it's no wonder the 17-year-old has 18 of the best NCAA college programs fighting each other to secure a commitment from her. Fagan is an excitement machine with the tools to one day be the best basketballer in the country, period.
13 MANUELA PUOCH
dob: October 5, 2006 (18)
State: Victoria
Height: 184cm
Club/college: Southside Flyers (WNBL)
Manuela Puoch is an imposing presence in the middle for the Australian Gems and WNBL club Southside. Picture: FIBA
Low down: Little big sister of WNBA draftee Nyadiew Puoch, Manuela is sublimely skilled but still working on her motor and mobility. A powerhouse in the post who eats glass for a living and loves to stretch out to the three-point line where she has no fear launching. An exciting frontline prospect who is skilled beyond her 18 years and will only get better from here.
14 MONIQUE WILLIAMS
dob: August 11, 2006 (18)
State: Western Australia
Height: 190cm
Club/college: Vanderbilt (NCAA)
Monique Williams combines and intriguing basketball skillset with a highly intelligent focus on study off the floor. Picture: FIBA
Low down: WA's only Gems World Cup representative is a tower of strength who has fought back from a shocking Anterior Cruciate Ligament tear, aged just 14. Williams is developing into a stretch big, showing a penchant for a sweet mid-range jumpshot, along with a desire to mix it with the tall timber under the hoop. And her on-court talents are more-than matched by her off-court smarts, the disciplined student graduated with high honours and chose Vanderbilt as much for its basketball program as its academic pursuits.
15 CALLIE HINDER
dob: August 16, 2007 (17)
State: New South Wales
Height: 198cm
Club/college: Mountain West Premier (Nike Elite Youth Basketball League, USA)
Young giant Caillie Hinder looms as a future force in the middle for the Australian Opals. Picture: FIBA
Low down: Only recently bobbed up on Australian junior talent radars — owing to the fact she's lived in the USA most of her life as the daughter of former Boomer and Sydney King Russell Hinder, who packed his bags for the US following the end of his playing career. Still shy of her 18th birthday and already standing nearly 200cm, Hinder casts an imposing figure over Australian basketball. With multiple division I NCAA offers to choose from, the shot-blocking machine will hone her craft in the US college system.
Michael Randall
Basketball journalist
Michael Randall is a basketball reporter for the Herald Sun and CODE Sports, covering the NBL, WNBL, NBA and Australian senior and junior international and representative teams.
@MickRandallHS
Michael Randall

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ABC News
24 minutes ago
- ABC News
Australian rugby looks for pride and soul in the mud and the rain of a Lions dead rubber
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Taniela Tupou, whose best football has been so hard to come by in recent times, played with a spirit that was clear from the moment the tears fell from his eyes during the national anthem and Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i, of whom so much is always expected and demanded, had his best game of the series. Will Skelton was as powerful as the lightning that forced the delay in the second half and man of the match Tom Hooper would have fought a starving dog for the last bone if that's what it took to win. It was not the highest-quality Test of the series, but it was the meanest and the Lions were not poor, but they weren't as sharp as they'd been in Brisbane and Melbourne. That's to be expected — as dearly as they wanted the clean-sweep, that motivation pales in comparison to the Wallabies' fear of being swept which, properly channelled, is as powerful a force as exists in sport. But to the Wallabies' credit they didn't win on desperation alone — they were smarter than they were in the first two Tests, and steadier with the lead. There's a slight bitter aftertaste to the win, because if Australia played like that the whole way through — and especially if they had Skelton for all three Tests — so many things could have been different but what's already happened can't change and all the Wallabies have now is the future. What that future looks like is harder to parse. This win will not save Australian rugby, just like the series defeat will not condemn it. Australian rugby's glory days were never going to come again based on the result of one game, or one series or one moment of brilliance or brutality. The game's weaknesses are too complex and deep-seated to vanish overnight. But by the same token, losing one game, or one series, even one as big as this Lions tour has felt, will never be enough to condemn the sport. Even after the difficult decade it's endured there are too many diehards, too much love for the game at a grassroots and community level for that to happen and that's come to the fore at all three Tests where the crowd has been thick with local club jerseys on children and adults alike. What this series has done is make rugby feel prominent and important in Australia's crowded sporting scene again. It has made the game vital in a way it hasn't been in years and the sense of occasion has been enormous. People were invested. Pubs and stadiums were filled, as were column word counts and television segments and podcast hours. It's reactivated old fans, who remember the glorious times, and in a world addicted to nostalgia that's a powerful force. It might inspire a few new ones as well, which can still happen in defeat — just ask Max Jorgensen, one of rugby's brightest stars, who might not have been here at all had he not attended the 2015 World Cup final as an 11-year-old. 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ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Five quick hits: Wallabies vs British and Irish Lions, third Test from Stadium Australia
The Wallabies have achieved just their seventh Test win over the British and Irish Lions, in a match that finished well beyond its listed time. Lightning stopped a gripping Test match that was physically demanding, and had the biggest and smallest players unafraid to muscle up. Here are the five quick hits from Stadium Australia. Any fears the Wallabies were going to come out of the sheds flat for the third Test, scarred by the heartbreak of last week, were extinguished in the opening minutes. Desperate for a fast start, Australia chanced its arm, showing little regard for the wet and miserable conditions. The up-tempo style of play was working for the Wallabies, who earned a five-metre scrum after driving Lions winger Tommy Freeman into his own in-goal. The Wallabies scrum, put under pressure in Melbourne, held firm at the first time of asking in Sydney. The Wallabies were patient on the Lions' goal line, hammering the defence with runs from the big forwards. When the moment was right, Nic White spun the ball out to the left. Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii held the ball as long as he dared, drawing in two defenders, before passing to an unmarked Dylan Pietsch on the wing. With cover defence scampering across, Pietsch held his nerve and scored well, diving for the line and showing terrific ball control despite the conditions. Wallabies scrum half Nic White was allowed to have a farewell Test against rugby's most special team. But the number nine had no interest in exiting Test rugby quietly. White was in the thick of the action from the early moments, being the focal point of two melees. The first came in the 22nd minute when White chose to pick a fight with Lions hooker Dan Sheehan. That skirmish set off a chain reaction, with three spot fires emerging. White was the focus of Lion-fury in the 43rd minute, when Tadhg Beirne took exception to a shove from White. That led to more melees on the pitch, as medics came to the aid of Lions lock James Ryan, left motionless on the ground after copping an accidental knee from Will Skelton. James Ryan's injury early in the second half paused the match for several minutes. But while there was concern for the Irishman on the ground, another problem was forming in the skies. The players and officials walked off with the medical cart, as lightning around Homebush forced play to be suspended. Fans in the first 19 rows of the lower tier were encouraged to seek shelter in the concourse, while the players and coaching staff were thrown into the unknown. Fans around Stadium Australia remained upbeat during the near-45-minute delay, while some took it too far and ran onto the field. Four times, security was forced to enter a paying surface deemed unsafe because of lightning, just to escort patrons who wanted 15 seconds of notoriety from anyone who was watching. How the teams handled the break was different once the match had a restart time. The Wallabies were on the pitch 10 minutes before the resumption, going through warm-ups. The Lions, however, did not emerge from the sheds until five minutes before play resumed. That five-minute difference likely had little impact on the outcome, but served as an interesting point about how each side handled the same problem. The opening minutes of the second half saw Test rugby at its best. Coming off a 45-minute delay for lightning, the Wallabies and Lions waged a battle in the middle of the field. With the Wallabies lead just eight points, whoever could score first in the second half was going to have a tremendous chance of winning. Fortunately for Australia, the Lions blinked first. Trying to pass quickly down the left flank, the Lions were unable to handle the wet ball that went to ground. The ball popped into the arms of Max Jorgensen, who latched onto the footy like it was his most cherished possession. Once he had the ball in his arms, Jorgensen made the Lions pay. He broke one tackle and then was sprinting down the sideline, never to be caught. His try gave the Wallabies a 15-point lead and had Australian fans believing in a win. It was the second time in this series that Jorgensen's brilliance caught the Lions off guard. The winger scored Australia's opening try in the first Test, snatching a ball out of the air and sprinting away for the score. That try gave Australians hope in the first Test, and his try in Sydney put the Wallabies on the cusp of victory. Queensland Reds player Tate McDermott came off the bench in all three Tests, but was one of the Wallabies' best in the series. His introduction into the first Test sparked the Wallabies' fightback. He held his own for 60 minutes in Melbourne as a makeshift winger, after Harry Potter succumbed to a hamstring injury. With the match on the line in Sydney, it was McDermott again who made his presence felt. Jac Morgan's try in the 62nd minute reduced the Wallabies' lead back to eight points, hoping to spark another comeback like they did seven days earlier. But the Wallabies were not going to let another potential win slip through their grasp. Camped on the Lions' goal line for five minutes, the Wallabies battled and toiled against a dogged defence. Repeated infringements led to the Lions being reduced to 14- men when reserve hooker Ronan Kelleher was sent to the sin bin in the 69th minute. Two attempted driving mauls had been stopped. More than 10 drives from around the breakdown had been repelled. But amid the big forwards hammering away, it was one of the smallest men on the pitch to break through. McDertmott saw tired defenders next to the breakdown, so darted from the back and ducked under their arms. The scrum half then reached out and slammed the ball on the ground, sending the large contingent of Wallabies fans into hysteria. The Wallabies had a 15-point lead again and they were not going to give it up. History had been achieved for a side so often written off.


West Australian
2 hours ago
- West Australian
Mitchell Johnson: Brisbane 2032 must resurrect karate if the Olympic Games are to stand by their ideals
Recently, my 12-year-old daughter looked at my wife and I and asked us if we think karate will be in the Brisbane Olympics in 2032. Rubika competes in kumite, the fighting component of karate. She trains hard. Competes with pride. She's done the maths and knows that if karate makes it to Brisbane 2032, she'd be 19 — prime age to chase the Olympic dream that her mother, former karate world championships bronze medallist and winner of 17 national titles Jess Bratich Johnson, never got the chance to. But that dream is still just a 'maybe'. And I saw it in her eyes — that little spark of hope that her sport might finally be seen as Olympic-worthy. That hope is why this matters. It could also sway her into taking on karate as her main sport, as she has other interests. Karate finally got its moment at Tokyo 2021, at the birthplace of the sport. For the millions around the world who train in it, compete in it and live by its values, it was a long-overdue spotlight. And then just like that — it was gone again. Not included in Paris 2024. Now, the fight is on to get karate back for Brisbane. And frankly, it deserves more than a cameo. It deserves a permanent place at the Olympics. Why? Because karate reflects everything the Olympics claims to represent: discipline, respect, tradition, global reach and the pursuit of excellence. Yet, despite being practised by millions in over 190 countries, karate continues to be overlooked. I still find it strange. With so many people training in karate — from little kids in local halls to elite athletes on international mats — you'd expect it to have a bigger profile. Sport karate today, especially in kumite and kata, has evolved into a highly dynamic and competitive discipline. Big leagues in Europe, world-class athletes from all over the globe, including Oceania — there's a deep pool of talent. A hunger. A thriving culture. What's missing is the stage and the financial support. Here in Australia, karate survives largely on passion, not funding. The athletes don't do it for money or do it because they love it. But love alone doesn't build high-performance programs. It doesn't pay for international competition. And it doesn't create the visibility that helps young athletes dream bigger. When certain sports walk away from the likes of Gina Rinehart's sponsorships, I remember thinking karate would be the kind of sport that would truly appreciate that level of backing. Not out of desperation, but because it's a sport that's still building. Still fighting for recognition. And with proper investment, it could become something Australia is proud to stand behind. And what better time than Brisbane 2032? This isn't just about medals. It's about meaning. Karate gives young people something few sports can: a deep sense of self-respect, focus, emotional control and cultural appreciation. It's not just about who can punch fastest or score the most ippon (although that is part of it) — it's about who can carry themselves with honour before, during and after the match. I've seen how much it gives my daughter. The way she walks taller after training. The way she bows before stepping on the mat. The way she handles pressure — calm, calculated, composed. And I know she's not alone. Across the country, kids are training in silence, learning discipline through kata and control through kumite. They're not just learning to fight. They're learning to grow. Young girls and boys come in shy and nervous, but they grow and become confident and disciplined. Karate should never have to beg for a seat at the Olympic table. It's a sport built on thousands of years of tradition, with a modern competitive scene that is fast, technical, and global. The argument that it's 'too similar' to other combat sports doesn't hold. By that logic, freestyle and butterfly swimming shouldn't coexist. BMX and track cycling should cancel each other out. Each has its rhythm, its own culture, its own story. Karate is no different. The Olympics are meant to evolve to include the sports that shape cultures and communities around the world. Karate isn't a trend. It's embedded in the lives of millions. It's part of schools, families, and neighbourhoods. And it has the power to connect us, especially in multicultural countries like ours. Let Brisbane be the Games that gives karate its rightful place — not just because it fits the host nation's identity, but because it represents something we should all value: honour, discipline, and legacy. I saw that recently at the nationals in Adelaide — athletes of all ages from all over the country competing with passion. Western Australia sent a team of over 100 athletes, competing in kumite, kata, or both. They finished second overall in the national medal count — a huge result and one that speaks to the resilience and rising standard of karate in WA. But behind the medals was something even more powerful — a community effort. Volunteers, referees, coaches, and families all played their part, and that's what karate is. A sport built on shared values. So to the decision makers, the sporting bodies, and the International Olympic Committee — don't let another generation of karate kids grow up like Jess did — believing their sport wasn't seen, valued, or supported on the world's biggest stage. Karate doesn't just belong in the Olympics. The Olympics needs karate — now more than ever.