Hortência Marcari
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Olympic medalist | |||
Hortência Marcari |
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Medal record | |||
Women’s Basketball | |||
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Silver | Atlanta 1996 | Team Competition | |
Pan American Games | |||
Gold | Havana 1991 | Team Competition | |
Silver | Indianapolis 1987 | Team Competition | |
Bronze | Caracas 1983 | Team Competition | |
World Championship | |||
Gold | Australia 1994 | Team Competition | |
Competitor for Brazil |
Hortência Maria de Fátima Marcari (born September 23, 1959 in Potirendaba, São Paulo, Brazil) is a former basketball player who is often considered to be Brazil's greatest women's basketball player, along with Jenny Arcain and Magic Paula. Marcari is a member of the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame (enshrined in 2002), the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (enshrined in 2005) and FIBA Hall of Fame (enshrined in 2007). She is known in her country as Hortência, and her nickname is The Queen.
[edit] Biography
Hortência is of Italian background, her grandparents having moved to Brazil from that European nation. Hortência's father was a laborer.
When Hortência was ten years old, her family moved to São Paulo, and Hortência became interested in sports. Her family dissaproved of her choice to play sports-her father had been disabled on the field and they wanted her to work and earn some money to substitute part of the earnings her father used to get- but they eventually gave up on trying to prevent her from doing her favorite activity.
At the age of thirteen, in 1972, Hortência began to play street basketball on her school gym. One year later, she was spotted by Waldir Paga Perez, coach of Brazil women's national basketball team. Hortência was playing for the national team at age fifteen.
Hortência began to play as a professional with the São Caetano Esporte Clube, becoming a celebrity over Brazil instantly. Over the years, she played for Associação Prudentina, C.A Minercal, C.A Consteca/Sedox, NCNB Ponte Preta and ADC Seara, until she retired from professional basketball in 1996, one year before Arcain began playing in the United States' WNBA. Hortência was an idol to many female basketball fans in the cities she played at, particularly at Prudentina, where, during an interview with Jeremy Larner, she was stopped many times by autograph seekers on her way from her house to a game.
Hortência's first international experience came in 1976, when Brazil's women's national basketball team won the South American juvenile championship in Paraguay. In 1979, she helped her team to a fourth place at the Pan American Games, held in Puerto Rico. In 1983, Hortência and the national team improved their previous Pan American performance by winning a bronze medal at the Venezuela games, and, in 1987, Hortência and the Brazilian Women's national team went yet one more step further by winning a silver medal at the 1987 Indianapolis Pan Americans. In 1991, Hortência and the Brazilian women's national basketball team won the gold medal at that year's Pan American tournament, held in Cuba. In 1992, Hortência helped her team to a bronze medal at the Pre-Olympic competition, held in Spain, returning later that year to that country to play in the Olympic Games for the first time. Brazil arrived in seventh place at the Barcelona Olympics.
In 1994, Hortência won the women's world basketball championship in Australia, making Brazil only country other than the Soviet Union or the United States to win the title (Australia became the fourth in 2006). In 1996, she retired from international competition with a silver medal at the Atlanta Olympics.
Apart from those competitions, she also played in Peru, Singapore, Malaysia, Bulgaria and South Korea.
Despite the fact her team did not qualify for the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, Hortência was featured on those games' official program, in an article named The Queen.