Trailblazer Mills taps heartland for Rio inspiration
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[July 11, 2016]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Basketballer
Patty Mills will don the green and gold of Australia at the Rio de
Janeiro Games but gained inspiration for his third Olympics in the
red dust of his country's vast, empty heartland.
The first indigenous Australian to win an NBA title, the San
Antonio Spurs point guard will hope to blaze a new trail in Rio by
becoming the first to win an Olympic medal in the sport.
But for 27-year-old Mills, last week's trip out to Uluru, the
massive red rock that rises improbably out of the central Australian
desert, was all about the team.
Mills took the Olympic squad on a tour of the rock which is sacred
to local Aboriginals and was the first Australian stop of the torch
relay for the 2000 Sydney Games.
The 'Boomers' players helped open a basketball court at Mutitjulu, a
remote community in the shadow of the 348-metre monolith.
The idea for the team bonding trip was born out of a team ceremony
last year where Sydney track champion Cathy Freeman and Lydia
Lassila, a Winter Olympic skiing gold medalist, gave rousing
speeches.
A hero to Mills, Freeman lit the cauldron at the Games' opening
ceremony and became the first Aboriginal to win a track gold medal
with her emotional victory in the 400 meters.
"Once they were done with their speeches, the whole room was so
inspired and motivated that we all wanted to jump on a plane right
then and start playing," Mills told Reuters in an interview on
Monday after he was named in the final 12-man squad for Rio.
 "We really wanted to capture that feeling and sense that we had at
that time a lot closer to the Olympic Games because we’re all
scattered across the world, obviously, so it would be hard to
capture that again.
"What better way to start this campaign, as a team, as a group
starting in the heart of Australia? It was a heartfelt trip and one
that was appreciated by all the guys."
TITLE-WINNING EXPERIENCE
Mills is one of five NBA-playing Australians in a tight-knit squad
who have high hopes of ending the nation's Olympic medal drought
after a number of agonizing near-misses.
Four have NBA title-winning experience, with Mills and former Spurs
team mate Aron Baynes celebrating theirs in 2014, and center Andrew
Bogut clinching his with the Golden State Warriors last year.
Guard Matthew Dellavedova toasted his championship with the
Cleveland Cavaliers last month.
Australia lost Olympic bronze medal deciders at Seoul (1988),
Atlanta (1996) and Sydney and the almighty United States have played
the villain in many of their campaigns.
But drawn in the same Group A at Rio, the Boomers can avoid the U.S.
until at least the semi-finals.
"There’s no question that the goal (of a medal) that we’ve set for
ourselves is one that will take a lot of hard work but it’s one that
we really all believe that we can get done," said Mills.
"But for us to get there we need to beat great teams and that’s what
the Olympics is about, achieving greatness by beating great teams."
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
Spurs guard Patty Mills
(8) celebrates after a basket against the Sacramento Kings during
the third quarter at Sleep Train Arena. The San Antonio Spurs
defeated the Sacramento Kings 108-92. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L
Cox-USA TODAY Sports

STOLEN GENERATIONS
A diverse squad of players, the Boomers are a cross-section of
modern, multi-cultural Australia, but only Mills will be competing
under the nation's three officially recognized flags.
His Aboriginal mother, born in the rural western edge of South
Australia state, is a member of the Stolen Generations, the
indigenous children who were forcibly removed from their families to
be raised by white families as part of a government-sanctioned
program.
His father is a Torres Strait Islander, from the tropical
archipelago between the country's northwestern Cape York and Papua
New Guinea.
Both his parents are active in supporting indigenous programs, with
his father helping to establish a basketball team for disadvantaged
youth.
In a country where the indigenous population lags behind the
mainstream in human development indicators including infant
mortality and life expectancy, Mills's ascent to the NBA made him a
powerful role model.
Indigenous athletes play starring roles in rugby and the home-grown
football code Australian Rules, but elite basketballers are rare.
Mills is one of only a handful to represent Australia at the
Olympics.
The second to do so was his uncle Danny Morseu, a Torres Strait
Islander who played at the 1980 Moscow Olympics and again at Los
Angeles in 1984.
Mills said he hoped to inspire more indigenous players to take up
the game after his playing career winds down.
"I definitely feel (the indigenous community) is an untapped place,"
he said.

"Obviously between me, as the third indigenous player to play
basketball for Australia, and my uncle Danny, there’s a 30-odd year
gap or so, and that's embarrassingly too long.
"Hopefully we can shrink that down."
(Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
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