Alice Kunek (right) of Australia attempts to block Pan Zhenqi of China during the semifinal at the 2023 FIBA Women's Asia Cup in Sydney, Australia, July 1, 2023. (PHOTO / XINHUA)
SYDNEY - World number two China overcame hosts Australia 74-60 on Saturday to set up a mouth-watering final against Japan at the FIBA Women's Basketball Asia Cup in Sydney.
China had all the answers in a gripping semifinal and finished strongly to defy the home fans as Han Xu, arguably the Player of The Tournament, starred with 17 points and 15 rebounds.
There was a concern for China when captain Yang Liwei hobbled off in the dying stages of the contest with what appeared to be a leg injury.
World number three Australia were led by Alice Kunek's 16 points, but once again fell short to rival China who prevailed 61-59 in a thrilling semifinal between the teams at last year's World Cup
World number three Australia were led by Alice Kunek's 16 points, but once again fell short to rival China who prevailed 61-59 in a thrilling semifinal between the teams at last year's World Cup.
China started slowly and was scoreless in the opening four and a half minutes, missing its first nine field goal attempts.
But China settled into the game and went on an 18-6 run to lead by seven points after the first quarter.
Australia hit back in the second quarter and trimmed the deficit to 35-32 by halftime.
The see-saw of a contest continued with buckets hard to find in a nerve-jangling contest, but a three-pointer from Han Xu powered China to a 44-36 edge midway through the third quarter.
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China started wearing down Australia and stretched their lead to 10 points entering the fourth quarter before overpowering their tiring opponents to storm into the final.
China will be out to end five-time defending champion Japan's stranglehold of the tournament in a blockbuster final on Sunday.
They will also be aiming to revenge after losing to Japan in the final of the last two Asia Cup finals, including a tense 78-73 defeat two years ago.
Japan arrived in Sydney looking to make amends for a lackluster World Cup finish of ninth last year.
They've done that so far and made a statement with a crushing 88-52 victory over New Zealand, who struggled in their first-ever Asia Cup semifinal.
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World number nine Japan again proved their proficiency from beyond the arc, nailing 14 three-pointers compared to New Zealand, who shot just 2 of 9.
Eleven players hit the scoreboard for Japan, who were paced by Stephanie Mawuli's 17 points in just 19 minutes.
The freewheeling Japan started fast in trademark fashion to lead 24-11 after the first quarter and didn't relent to stretch its advantage to 47-25 at half-time.