-inspired "Skully" tie-dyed T-shirt which he designed and became a symbol of Lithuanian basketball Lithuanian basketball players, notably
Arvydas Sabonis and
Šarūnas Marčiulionis, played for the
Soviet Union national basketball team in the
1988 Olympics in Seoul. There were four starters from Lithuania who were on the Soviet team. The players were promised that they would be permitted to play on western teams if they won gold, which they did with a 76–63 victory over
Yugoslavia. Marčiulionis became the first Soviet player to join the
NBA. Sabonis was actually the first Lithuanian to be drafted onto an American team, but because of the
Iron Curtain he was not allowed to leave by the Soviet authorities that wanted to keep him as part of their senior national team. The Lithuanian team had little money allocated to them for the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. Because of an article written in a local newspaper, the
Grateful Dead was moved by the team's plight and funded their trip to the Olympics. Artist Greg Speirs from New York was also moved by the team's plight and created the iconic Slam-Dunking Skeleton on
tie-dye shirts which were made in the colors of the
Lithuanian flag. The skeleton slam-dunking a basketball symbolized a
phoenix rising from the ashes, according to the artist who created it. The Lithuanian team had no illusions of beating the American Dream Team in the semifinals, and the U.S. ended up winning 127–76. In the bronze medal game, however, Lithuania was pitted against the
Unified Team, made up of all of the post-Soviet states except the Baltic states of Lithuania,
Estonia and
Latvia. The game became a larger symbol of a reborn Lithuania fighting for its freedom and recognition. It was a close, nerve-wracking game that the Lithuanians desperately wanted to win. In the end, the Lithuanians defeated the Unified Team 82–78. The team wore their slam dunking skeleton tie-dye uniforms to accept their bronze medals. ==Reception==