Women's wheelchair basketball was first played at the
1968 Summer Paralympics in
Tel Aviv, but Australia did not have a team that competed until
1992 in Barcelona. The
1996 Summer Paralympics were the first Paralympics basketball tournament to feature the three-wheeled wheelchair. Most of the women on the Australian team opted to use the traditional four-wheeled wheelchair.
Competition history Prior to the start of the 1996 Paralympics, Australia was ranked third in the world after their bronze medal at the 1994
Wheelchair Basketball World Championship, behind first placed Canada and United States. In lead up preparations for the games, the team toured Canada. Australia's women's team beat the American team at the Paralympics in pool play. This was viewed as extremely significant by Australian women's wheelchair basketball fans and the Australian Paralympic Federation because the game was invented in America. Also, it was the first time that the Australian women had defeated the Americans. The match had even more significance because Australia needed to win it in order to stay in contention for a medal. Australia was down 21–16 at halftime. Australia went up with seven minutes left in the second half. The match finished with a score of 31–27 in Australia's favour. American
Sharon Herbst was their team's start performer and she caused a number of problems for Australia's defence. During the game, several players were knocked out of their wheelchairs, including Australia's
Melissa Ferrett. Australia beat Brazil 67–8, beat the USA 31–27 and lost to Germany 34–26 in pool play. In April and May 1999, the team was invited by the
Kinki Wheelchair Basketball Association and the
Japanese Wheelchair Basketball Federation to compete in a tournament in Japan to celebrate twenty-five years of wheelchair basketball in that country. The Australian team won every game they competed in, including three test matches against the
Japanese team. The last test was played before Japan's royalty, and Australia won 61–25. The team had an official team dinner with
Emperor Akihito of Japan during this tour. In 2008, the team competed in the
Osaka Cup. They earned a silver medal, only losing to the
United States in the final. The Gliders lost to the United States 20–52. After the Osaka Cup, the team competed in the
Goodluck Beijing Test Event, where they won three matches and lost one against
China. The team then competed in the
Joseph F. Lyttle World Basketball Challenge, where they finished third. They then went to the United States and competed in the
North America Cup, where they finished fourth. The team then went back to China where they played five matches against China, where they went undefeated. The
Australia women's national wheelchair basketball team at the 2012 Summer Paralympics consisted of twelve included nine veterans with 15 Paralympic Games between them:
Bridie Kean,
Amanda Carter,
Sarah Stewart,
Tina McKenzie,
Kylie Gauci,
Katie Hill,
Cobi Crispin,
Clare Nott and
Shelley Chaplin; and three newcomers:
Amber Merritt,
Sarah Vinci and
Leanne Del Toso. The Gliders, who had won silver in the
2000 Summer Paralympics in
Sydney and the
2004 Summer Paralympics in
Athens, but had never won gold, finished at the top of their pool in the group stage of the competition with victories over Brazil, Great Britain and the Netherlands. They then went on to win in the quarter-final against Mexico and the semi-final against the United States, only to lose to Germany in the final. ==Major tournament record==