Cynthia Cooper-Dyke relishes memories of Houston’s golden basketball era

Four WNBA championship banners for the Houston Comets still reside in the Toyota Center rafters, and Cynthia Cooper-Dyke (@AllDecade14) is a big reason why.

It is not easy to become an icon in the city of Houston, especially in the sports world. The fans are very strict on whom they call a Houston sports legend, especially in basketball.

That elite moniker is reserved for individuals such as former Rockets center Hakeem Olajuwon, who led his team to two NBA championships in 1994 and 1995. An example from a different sport is Astros second baseman Jose Altuve, who has helped bring two recent World Series titles to the fourth largest city in North America.

Yet, another name falls right in line with those icons. It’s a woman who is largely responsible for the four WNBA championship banners that still hang inside the Toyota Center, home of the Rockets.

In this case, she is so legendary throughout Houston that people seldom call her by her full name. They simply yell, “Coop!”

Long before former Houston Comets player Cynthia Cooper-Dyke was winning WNBA titles and multiple finals MVPs, she perfected her skills at the University of Southern California in rigorous practices versus players such as 1995 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame inductee Cheryl Miller, and  Pam and Paula McGee.

“I didn’t start at USC, I came off the bench, so I had to practice against Cheryl Miller every single day,” Cooper-Dyke said via Zoom. “Those practices were tough. To try to get to the rim against Cheryl and the McGee twins, I had to step my game up a little bit.”

Her contributions helped USC win two NCAA championships. Those playing days, along with helping lead Locke High School in Los Angeles to their first and only state championship, were recognized by the Southern California Basketball Hall of Fame in 2020 as they enshrined Cooper-Dyke into their inaugural 2020 class of inductees.

Due to COVID-19 restrictions, individuals could not attend in person, so the ceremony was postponed. This month, the inductees were finally able to have an official induction ceremony.

“I am incredibly honored,” Cooper-Dyke said about being recognized for her on- and off-court accomplishments. “There is a lot of talent that comes out of California. That puts me in good company. I grew up in Los Angeles, and to have success with the amount of talent that comes out of that city and really state, I feel very fortunate. To be recognized for my accomplishments is just an amazing honor.”

After spending a decade playing professional basketball overseas, Cooper-Dyke finally showcased her talent with the Comets in the newly formed WNBA in 1997. This challenge would be more difficult for her than the practices at USC against Miller, since she was turning 34 in her rookie season. Making matters more challenging was her star teammate, Sheryl Swoopes, missed a significant amount of time due to her pregnancy.

If you have been around “Coop” for any time, you know obstacles never deterred her from getting the job done. That’s exactly she did. She was named league MVP for leading the Comets to the inaugural WNBA championship in 1997. She also earned the WNBA Finals MVP honor.

Three more titles over the next three years helped set a foundation for the WNBA and solidified her place among basketball royalty. She became the first WNBA player to be enshrined into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010. It also made for a golden era in Houston basketball, since those four championships by the now-defunct Comets came shortly after the Rockets’ two titles.

“I knew when I started playing in the WNBA, the work I put in, the effort we put in, the games we won, the championships we won, would help lay the foundation for a stronger WNBA,” Cooper-Dyke said. “Hopefully, I left a legacy of hard work, winning championships, not settling, but continuing to grow and get better every single year. I love the state of the WNBA now, because you see talent all over the place.”

After her playing career, Cooper-Dyke became a head coach and helped rebuild the women’s basketball programs at Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern, two historically black colleges in Texas.

Giving back to the sport she loves so much did not stop after her coaching days ended. Within a few weeks, Cooper-Dyke will be reunited with her former teammate, Sheryl Swoopes, when they will host the “Legends Tournament” in June for girls between the ages of 9 through 17, followed by a basketball camp in Houston.

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How JaVale and Pam McGee made awesome mother-son Olympic history

This is the coolest.

With Team USA’s victory over France in the men’s basketball gold-medal game Saturday at the Tokyo Olympics, JaVale McGee became an Olympic champion for the first time and made some awesome history with his mom, Pam McGee.

Pam is a Women’s Basketball Hall of Famer who helped lead USA Basketball to its first-ever gold medal in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. And now with the Denver Nuggets center’s gold medal, they’re the first American mother-son duo to win Olympic gold and the first overall to do it in Olympic basketball.

Winning any medal at the Olympics is an incredible accomplishment, but this is an extra cool achievement and moment for the McGee family.

But the McGees are not the first mother-son combo to win Olympic gold medals.

The only other known time this has happened was when the Soviet Union’s Valentina Rastvorova won gold in fencing at the 1960 Rome Games, and then her son, Yevgeny Grishin, won gold in water polo in 1980 in Moscow, according to the Associated Press and Olympic historian Bill Mallon.

More from the Associated Press:

“It’s an amazing feeling, man,” said [JaVale] McGee, who adds gold to his three NBA titles. “I’ve got a gold medal. My mother has a gold medal. We’re the first to do it, mother-son duo. It’s an amazing feeling. You can’t really explain it. Just knowing you’re the best in the world, amazing, man.”

JaVale was a late addition to the U.S. men’s basketball Olympic lineup after Kevin Love withdrew about a week before the Tokyo Games began. Pam said she felt an overwhelming sense of pride when her son was added to the Olympic team and added, via The Orange County Register:

“I always tell him, “We don’t care how we got in the door – front door, back door, side door – as long as we get to the table.’” she said in a phone interview with Southern California News Group. “I got cut from several teams before the Pan American team (in 1983) and then the Olympic team. Eventually, people will recognize the work, those hours you’re putting in the gym.”

A gold medal-winning mom and son is absolutely the coolest.

And once JaVale had his Olympic gold medal, he celebrated it and his mom’s achievements with a couple great Instagram posts showing off their hardware.

He wrote in one caption:

The originator, the woman who sacrificed, the standard to live up too! LOVE YOU MA!

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