Ruthie Bolton. | NBAE via Getty Images The WNBA is ready to begin its 30th season—a feat arguably made possible by a band of collegiate and international elites turned Hall of Famers on the world stage: the 1996 United States Women’s Olympic Basketball Team. Their 60-0 record, combined with a grueling exhibition tour and eight dominating wins at the Atlanta Olympics, led them to win the gold medal. Not only that, but their triump opened the floodgates to the possibility that women’s professional basketball could thrive in the United States.And so it did.

And for that, they will cement their place in Springfield, MA, this August 14-15 as part of the 2026 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Class, a class that will also include Candace Parker, Chamique Holdsclaw and Elena Delle Donne.The team, led by legendary Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer, featured a who’s who of greatness. Sheryl Swoopes, Lisa Leslie, Dawn Staley, Rebecca Lobo, Katrina McLain, Carla McGhee, Venus Lacey, Teresa Edwards, Nikki McCray, Katy Steding, Jennifer Azzi and Ruthie Bolton.There is an endless stream of superlatives and adjectives applicable to “Mighty” Ruthie Bolton. One of the most fierce, courageous, resilient and spiritual basketball players of all time.She has done and seen it all, and has come out each and every time, as Maya Angelou would say, “as one, but stands as 10,000”.On the court, she was a standout at Auburn University, won two Olympic gold medals (1996, 2004), played for the Sacramento Monarchs from 1997 to 2004 and became a two-time WNBA All-Star.

Off the court, Bolton served her country proudly as a first lieutenant in the United States Army Reserves and is a published author, public speaker, and advocate for survivors of domestic violence. All the while, she has kept family and faith close to her heart.Already, Bolton was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame as an individual in 2011. Now she goes in again, her sisters in tow.

It is an honor she doesn’t take for granted, given the impact the 1996 team had on women’s basketball for years to come. On how she and her soon-to-be Hall of Fame team set the foundation for women’s basketball in the US, Bolton told Swish Appeal:I’m starting to feel like it’s here; it’s a huge milestone for women’s basketball. I want to humbly say that we were part of that foundation, and what we did in ‘96 changed the trajectory and changed the narrative for women’s basketball.”What we got for a whole year with the national team, $50,000, these girls get for one appearance.

We celebrate each other. This needs to be a way to say thank you for paving the way.For Bolton, playing basketball wasn’t just about playing the game in its pure simplicity; it was about playing for something greater.At the time, the US women’s basketball team was on shaky ground. In 1992, they won the bronze medal at the Barcelona Olympics.

Two years later, they won another bronze medal at the FIBA World Championship in Australia, with Brazil winning the gold.Bolton was cut from the 1992 team, but did play in 1994.Going into Atlanta, things needed to turn around. Then-NBA Commissioner David Stern assigned player-turned-attorney Val Ackerman to oversee the development of the 1996 team, comprised of the top American players at the collegiate and international levels—all with the endgame of using resources to build a women’s professional basketball league.As Bolton explained:Everything is for a purpose bigger than myself. We knew there was a lot at stake.

We are only taking players who want to win gold. We want a group of women that is gold or nothing. I wouldn’t have imagined, I knew it would be huge, but I didn’t know it would magnify this way.Beginning in late 1995, the team embarked on a global exhibition tour.

The caveat was they had to win; one loss would derail the whole experiment. Fortunately, the Americans went 52-0 on their exhibition tour and set their sights on Atlanta.One day, Vanderveer assembled the team at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta in an effort to experience the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat before anything happened. They gathered together, and Vanderveer showed them two tapes.

One of the teams that lost and one that won.At the same time, she and Teresa Edwards, who had won an Olympic gold medal in 1988 in Seoul, wanted the team to experience the feeling of having a gold medal wrapped around their neck, standing on the victory podium, and hearing the national anthem playing in the background.Recalling the whole experience, Bolton told Swish Appeal:This ain’t made for everybody.We want to win. We want to be a part of the victory. I would like everybody to put a medal on their neck.

All of you agreed that you want to go for gold, and it won’t be easy at times, but if you lock in. This is exactly where the gold medal podium will be. Before it was even built, and to see ourselves a year later, do you want to be standing here? I feel like that was a profound gesture to be able to stand there a