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Join Karen Hunter with Kevin Powell for an inspiring discussion featuring Olympic silver medalist Gail Marquis as she reflects on her historic basketball career, and her lifelong commitment to advocacy and leadership.
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Welcome to Karen Houghley's Awesome. I'm Karen Hunter, and it is March Madness.
We are in the midst of the NCAA final four this weekend. We're going to find out who will go
to the final four next weekend. And I am really excited because Women's Basketball is on the rise.
And several years ago, I, well, I want to say, it's like 30 years ago, while I was at the New
York Daily News, I started a Women's Basketball magazine. The very first cover featured Cheryl Swoops,
and we had Rebecca Lobo on a cover and Nikki McCray, Reston Power. The magazine was called
Neck Zone. And I was committed to reimagining the images of women in sport, you know,
much like women's tennis that had its own thing. And it gave rise to Venus and Serena and others
now co-cogoff and Naomi Asaka for particularly black women. There were very few role models,
very few people that they could look to because basketball wasn't televised. Today, young girls
have NIL deals. You have millionaires playing in college basketball, shout out to the South Carolina
team and Flougey and all the folks that are out there making money, all the quirks and everyone.
And it is exciting. The WNBA just agreed to a deal that will make, I think the salary increases
like 400% is the largest salary jump in the history of sport. And what they're saying is not just
that you matter, but that we're paying attention. We're paying attention to women's basketball
in a way that we have not paid attention to it before. And I'm excited. I'm excited for all
the little girls who are going to be tuning in who can aspire to make a living and make a life
in a sport that has really grown, the unrivaled league, all of this. And women can now stay home.
They don't have to go to Russia and Israel and other places to play a sport that they love.
They can stay home and still make money and have dignity. And I got to interview one of the first
pioneers of women's basketball. Gail Marquis, she won a medal in the Olympics. And when no one was
really looking at women's basketball, none of these women could be doing the things they're doing
now without the Gail Marquis of the world. And so when I got a chance to talk with her,
here's the interview. When I got a chance to talk with her, I was really excited because
we all stand on the shoulders of other people. Nobody who's successful today made it there
without somebody making that road smooth, making it a little less bumpy, a little less rocky.
And Gail Marquis is one of those people for women in college basketball and beyond. All right,
stay tuned to my interview with the great Gail Marquis. If you care anything about basketball,
any kind of basketball, this woman's name should be a household name. She is a Hall of Famer.
Believe the first black woman to win an Olympic gold medal. I believe that silver medal.
Silver medal. I'm going to give you the gold. And time out. Wait, you have it with you.
I just happened to have it on. You better come on. No. Oh, she brought the silver.
That's incredible. That is beautiful. 1976 Montreal, Canada.
That's right. It's the first time the women ever played basketball at the Olympic Games.
That's right. I got it. And I happened to be in town. And you know, you wear earrings. I wear my
medal. You better say that. She has a medal around her deck. As I said, my goal was never to be the
first. Well, 47 years later when the Hall of Fame. Did I show you this? No, she got a Hall of Fame.
Wait, come on. The Hall of Fame finally recognizes our team. 47 years later. That's right.
Then I realize all the different firsts. Everything I've been through. Well, let me properly introduce
Hall of Fame silver medalist, legend of basketball. The one and only. The great Gail Marquis.
Yeah. Oh, so happy to reconnect here. Yeah. Miss Karen Hunter. Always listen to you.
Huge stories about our history together. You know, it's so nice to be on the show.
Nice to see you. Nice to be in community with you. A little sister. A little sister.
Sister doesn't experience this. Okay. She needs to experience it. She does. Everyone should.
Be in the studio. Not being seen is all people want. People want to exist and to be seen.
Say my name. You know, we want to be. What was the biggest challenge in obstacle for you playing
basketball in a time when women weren't seen at all? That was it being seen. Take us seriously.
It was so frustrating to see what was given to men and boys from court time to air time to
possibilities. If you can imagine after basketball, here I am one of the top 12 women in the
country on the Olympic team. We finish it. We come from with a silver beat up the Russians.
And that's it. Thank you very much. Wow. Meanwhile, my male counterparts still four and Mitch
Cup check. They got NBA first round picks. Yeah. You know, the apocalypse of fall and me is thank
you very much. And that was it. And it's so frustrating. So that started me that launched me into playing
internationally. I ended up going to France with on contract and the French took very good
care of me from apartment to car to French Riviera. Wow. Now I tell people, if you're going to be
on a bad team, be on a bad team in the South of France. That's right. And that's why I was before
years. And I went to the University of Nice. I learned French, fluid. In fact, I remember my
sister came to visit me one time. And after being there, something came up and I was excited.
I flipped and I started speaking French to my sister. You know, that ain't right.
And that's what she said. What? What? I said, okay, okay. I'll be home soon.
hilarious. I think about the Ben Proudfoot documentary on Luchia Harris.
Yeah. Yeah. All right. And your team made my team made my friend. Let's talk about because
that came out and then she passed shortly after and it won the Academy Award and it was a short
short. And it was in her voice. Yes. She did the narrative. That's true. So important. And she
unveiled some stories that I didn't know. Imagine black woman in Mississippi period. All right.
That's the title right there. And then for Lucy to lead that Delta State team as the only black
person on that team and lead them to three national championships in a row. And then when she
comes back and asked to be a coach or an assistant coach, we have no room for you. Wow.
You know, we have nothing for you after that. It took her into a breakdown and she had to fight back
and get her body back in shape and get back to the Lucy, the champion that we know she went through
a lot. And just as she was passing, she was getting back in shape so she could get out of the wheelchair
and attend her youngest son, Christopher's, his wedding in America in New York as well as he married.
I think a Nigerian or a Japanese woman. And she wanted to be able to get on the plane and go to
Africa and see her youngest son get married. And she was getting in shape. And you know, her heart
took her too soon. Gail Marquis is here. Queens College legend as well. Born racing Queens.
Yes. Ron, my business partner over there went to Queens College. He's always so proud of
because he said it was free to go. You just had to pay for the books and it was very, you could
afford it and came out of there with no debt. Yeah. No debt. Yeah. That's a day as ridiculous.
The best part about playing and representing this country for you in the worst part.
Best part was representing my people. My people because when I would go to France,
they just see a United States as a monolithic. And she would say, do you know Michael Jackson?
Does he live near you? Listen, I live in Queens and Michael might be in Gary, Indiana or California.
You know, we don't all live together, but I had to explain that to them or not Luther Vandros.
Some other singers would come out, you lay family, you lay godson. Is he a woman? Is he a man?
I don't know. But still, I had to kind of bridge the gap. And as I told the story today,
we went to a town. We were playing basketball. We landed in a town and we're walking the streets
to the arena and people are hanging out of their houses looking at us. And you know,
when you're staring at someone, if they catch your eye, you tend to look away.
Those folks was hanging out the window like with a bag of popcorn. Look at what is coming
down the street now. So I asked my teammate, I'm friends, Jessica said, what's going on here?
She said, yeah, they have never seen a negris before. I said, oh my gosh, I'm a negris.
So I just waved, you know, I just waved and kept walking, we were walking to the stadium.
But what I liked about it was being an ambassador thrust into the position of being an ambassador
because they hadn't seen. And they had so many stories about Black people, African American
brown skin. And here I was with the opportunity to rectify, to explain it. No, it's not like that.
No, this is how it go. And the music, they're listening to music to music,
Sylvester, L.A. Family Godstone, Sylvester. I said, Jennifer, say,
I don't know what Sylvester is at that time. I didn't know. I didn't want to call them out
or her out. I didn't know he should maybe they didn't have a, we didn't have a word for
what Sylvester, but that's part of that reinvention too. That's right. That's right. Exactly.
And I didn't want to, you know, LGBTQ community, you don't call people out. You don't claim them.
You don't tag them. I don't want to do that. Sylvester, he'll tell you who he is,
but enjoy the music. But the culture was good, especially for the young people.
There were other times the worst of it was maybe the police didn't understand, you know.
I'm a BMOC, I'm a big man on campus, you know. I'm in France, in the South of France,
small village. I won't even say there's not many, just only one. And if you would read
the Nice, Mattan, or Les Gernas, the newspaper, you would know who I am. Okay, so that got me thrown
in the jail. But listen, wait, wait. I'm just not gonna just say you got thrown in jail and keep
going. We need to know the details. What happened? Because I spoke up, because three of us were walking
in Monte Carlo. We had just come from the casinos and it was about let's say 11 o'clock. I don't know.
Though patrol car rolls up and asked if we know anything about a robbery or something. I'm six feet.
The other guy I was with was 65 another one was seven foot all of us African
American we're robbing nothing okay we're the biggest things in your town
everyone knows us when we go into the bakery is how are you you know they just
know us and so me with the smart mouth here the police rolled up and in French
and I speak French I understand what they were saying and I said to him in
French if you read the local newspaper the knees matan like the daily news if
you read the newspaper you would know who we are let's go for a ride so we
get thrown in jail but it was a nice jail it was in Monte Carlo
if you don't get thrown in jail get thrown in the jail in Monte Carlo and they
ended up calling back to auntie but the small village yes we know her
later I'll send her home she got a game tomorrow you know it kind of thing and
they released it three of us so that could have been the ugly side of it but I
look at the positive side that this is my chance to be an ambassador of the
game not only of the game but of our country because so many people have
ideals about Lenegris the browns can the docks and the mysterious who are
they can they talk do they have tails okay so all of that you want to change
you just change about the way you act Bonjour Commissar on how are you good day
every day every day and so they can say yeah okay not bad when did you start
playing basketball how did you fall in love with basketball in Queens how old let's
say ninth grade so what is that about 13 years old and my sister is here with us
in the studio and I told her what's her name what's your name
John John John Portland Oregon are you important Oregon yeah she did
been in like 40 years I love it I love it so it's she's a transplant and she
didn't like this past life me I just handled it you know I keep going you
don't stay on that curve like that wave just stay above the curve don't get
caught up in the curve because then you rumble and tumble to the shore just
stay on that curve Joan likes the comma life which I like for her comma life
of Portland Oregon but I told her because if we didn't share a bedroom the bedroom
where I said I do not like going to school in the ninth grade we were going to
a teacher strike it was just the transition from middle school to high school I
didn't like it I'm going to drop out I'm not going to school anymore and she
said daddy when I like that you know you know a black father ain't gonna like
that so I got involved with sports with the local basketball team at St.
Catherine of Sienna in Queens and St. Olvins and I liked it and settled me
down and then I basketball a little bit at the high school Andrew Jackson high
school they didn't have a team but I just started to they didn't have a
girls team they did not have a girls team they had plenty of boys team a
history of boys basketball but it was in the 60s 70s yeah they didn't have
anything for girls I'm on that cusp I'm that person who wears the girls team
why don't we gonna play at Madison Square Garden how come we're not on the court
you know I'm that person and that was my role the Lord gave me that role make
that noise you be that noise from ninth grade to 12th grade to freshman sophomore
college that's my voice that's why I kept the push you go to college right
around time title nine was created yes wow yes I was in there for title I was
in there and it came the next year two years so it wasn't quite accepted but
then I was playing against this college and that college four years later
those colleges were out because the money was going to universities university
Connecticut University of Michigan Tennessee University things like that
that's where the shift came where more the colleges and the colleges dropped
down to what then became division two and three but I was on that cusp I remember
asking my coach Lucille Cavallis how come are we not playing at Madison
Square Garden it was sort of like a natty kid you know if you have a child
who's natty mommy why mommy why how come how come and it got them thinking it got
them thinking so I was that push I was that pebble in your shoe so to speak
yes how great were you don't hold back she won't hold back
I don't know I don't know you know I had to compare myself against other people
to see how good and I often tell people there are three phases to my game the
one phase playing at Queens College under the great Lucille Cavallis who was
I could say I love hate but mostly love now but I remember just you know the
yelling the intimidation the pressures she wanting to win and wanting you to
win and wanting you to do better and understand what I'm saying you for you to
do and do better and I said that you know that at you at you at you that what
was something I had to have well that was one part of my game another part was
playing the city ball playing the street ball Rucker Park Rucker you played at
the Rucker I went up to Rucker to play didn't know what I was doing but they
took care of me I would play they put me on whatever team I play sometimes I'd
get in on the fast break other times the girl would look me off you know hog the
ball and go right to the hoop but as I kept playing rebounding starting the
fast break quick next the creativity of the sport that's what I got playing in
Rucker and then I talk about the third phase was going away to pencil
venue to the Pokemon invitation or to those basketball camps Lucille Cavallis
after my freshman sent you said you need to go to basketball camp I didn't know
where is she sending me now what is the best what is a basketball can we were
girl Scouts we can pitch a tent we can whittle we can cook on fire now she
sent a mutual a basketball camp okay all right okay so I went and that's where
I learned the fundamentals the breakdown of the game you know going left
going right how to shoot how to hold the ball how to pet just so much it all
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cards are issued by JPMorgan chase bank and a member FTIC I wonder as the game
evolved because I started covering sports when I got to the daily news started
the star ledger and I remember there was red you I think you played with red
count against against red cow blaze jazz got that you're on her team yes exactly
leave them in my come through that was Teresa Edwards and you know this before
the the liberty and all that and I thought that the the game was so amazing the
kinds of things you would see I'd never seen before that's a present she
Lynn Kennedy played it Iowa under Vivian Strinder for a while so I you know I
knew great basketball but the level of play even today there's some kids I
don't know do you compare then to now because it felt like a concentration of
greatness that I just now it's feel feels very commercial well I feel I had a
concentration of greatness when I played if you look at the Teresa Shanks Teresa
Grants Mary and Stanley's you I could call those names Nancy Liebman was on the
cusp of it Carol blaze Jowski any Myers I see Harris he's a people that I had
to play it against and I tell folks you cannot be a champion until you beat a
champion you have to go through them they're not gonna give it up all right I
had to beat Carol blaze Jowski I had to beat red I had to keep going through
them to get where I wanted to be when they named me I went to the trials for
the Olympic team and it was regional tryouts they took five of us then we went
to the national tryouts and it was about 50 girls and women there and you played
played play you had to get through those champions from Pat head summit to
Lucy Harris to Carolyn Bush from Wayland Baptist oh schools you never heard of
you had to get through those champions and I tell people when I was named to
the Olympic team I was in my room packing my bags to go home or go to Portland
maybe I wouldn't go home because my mother was always at the airport telling
everybody oh you didn't make the team but we love you so I said I'm gonna go to
Portland my sister lives in Portland I go that way so I was throwing stuff in
the bag and Nancy Lieberman comes in here with her goofy self she now three
ball coach and she's done so many great things building courts and all and you
know key me and you Queens far rock away we made the team and goofball with the
flaming red hair I think it's out of my face I'm sticking you messing with me
all the time because she was always goofy character but then in the same
token next came in Carol blaze jalski you know I mean premier shooter to this
day face all red from crying tears and cussing people out and you know
gal congratulations you made the team I was like oh my gosh wow so I talk about
the champions that you have to go through because they're not gonna give it up
Carol ain't gonna lay down and you go grints is not gonna lay down shank ain't
gonna lay down Mary they're not gonna lay down let you go you have got to beat
these champions and when you beat these champions you take something with you
why could I go to Wall Street with a degree in psychology and physical
education why cuz I beat champions that's right I'm a champion that's right and
I'm gonna stand up there against them and learn this Wall Street what you're
doing here making money and I'm gonna learn it and take it back to the black
community so they can understand stocks bonds government bonds issued they're
gonna understand that they're gonna set up their own financials you're not
gonna just gonna get a paycheck and run through it you've got to put 10% on
the side and you got to pay you first so all of that is the bundle yes all of
that is the bundle you didn't have the opportunity there were no NIL deals
coming up when you were around and there were no contracts to get a lot of
endorsements right there were a million dollar salaries is you know the young
ladies got when they first started the WNBA you were playing for the passion but
to make it into a career as you said you didn't just say okay I'm gonna give
up you use that basketball to build an empire for yourself talk a little bit
about that well well playing basketball and a bit of the frustration was that
I wasn't making money or they were reneg on contracts I did play for the WBL
women's basketball league and my coach did you know my coach was Dean the
dream manager Dean manager was your manager was my coach my first year my
only year with that New York team did you did you know him I know you know Dean
Jr. Oh Dean Jr. Yeah yeah from from from TV yeah that's his father that's
right yeah and he's not Dean Jr. He's like Dean the fourth that's right I have a
dozen of those deans over there well Dean was my coach that first year and
only year and if you can imagine Dean manager a great player rice market New
York Knicks Dean was coached by Red Holtzman that's right okay so when we
would practice at Long Island City LaGuardia College we would come in after the
Knicks and Red Holtzman would hang around and Red is whispering in Dean's air you
know so next year you know we run in place from the New York Knicks and then
another time Dean played at Marquette University Al McGuire comes up in there
great coach as well Al McGuire is was all up in his ear up in his ear so I feel
like I had been coached by Dean by Red Holtzman by Al McGuire we ran a play
called 10 9 8 10 98 and it was a play that as the shot clock went down when it
got to 10 just all hell break that just health the shelters just run all over the
court on defense and the opposing team was to get this ball at my hand they
coming after me and it would push the game such that they would make terrible
shots we had one like 20 in a row at one point you know we were just clicking
and I felt I was being coached by Red Holtzman by Al McGuire in addition to Dean
and his craziness he was quite a sort as well what year was that the women's
basketball league that one was 79 to 80 I went to that because you talk about the
foundation of women's pro game yes I played women's pro salaries were very low
and I tell people that it is a day they still owe me money that's right they didn't
finish out the contracts and all and I often wanted to stop in the middle
because they had stopped paying us or couldn't and in my ear is that this is women's
basketball this is the legacy this is you know if it folds it's really going to be
ugly we went through we won the championship the team folded even after a
championship and I went on to play for another team and then the league folded
after that and I was an amateur I tried to hold on to my amateur standing
because from 76 being amateur I went to Europe I was still an amateur I could
come back and and try out for the 1980 Olympic team make that team but
unfortunately we were knowing that was the boycott that's right and I could not
wait until 84 so even the contracts even the endorsements the Dan and
yogurts you're not gonna get a lot of money yeah we just did not it just was
not there when did you know what we're doing we're pioneers did you just
knew this we're pioneers or something special we didn't call it pioneers we
just knew we were grinding it out Janice Thomas was on my team a great point guard
you know she could barely do college but you get her with a ball on the court
it was a string she had a string on that ball could see the court see it so
well we all knew we didn't call it pioneers we knew we were the startups and
then from there maybe we went back to France I went back to out there when one of
my other teammates was passed away went to Spain with Kim Hampton they went to
other countries and just kept playing they just kept playing we were in our
20s how can you stop when you love and was supposed to and the other countries
are taking better care of us they paid us they gave you a house they give you a
car take care of the insurance I got sick in France I never saw I broke my
nose I was in a single room sweet overlooking the Mediterranean Eaton
Strawberry Tarts I wish I was sick for a week they took care of you I never saw
a bill for health care you know I went to school to learn the language so
even with a education I didn't come back and you know was able to talk with
people and it has the frustration when you get back again I look back at my
Olympic counterparts on the men's side yeah all with first round draft picks
Gotti May Kent Benson Phil Ford Mitch Cup check you know great players Tommy
Lagoy friends of mine to this day why can talk to these guys it went right in so
that frustration that I don't want to say anger that's what fueled me to go
to the biggest arena in New York City Wall Street I just went through with my
pe education in psychology what y'all doing down here and got into the Dean
Witter Reynolds the pain Webber's the Merrill Lynch's and the JP Morgan
Chases legend legend Gail Marquise the accolades are great the medals are
wonderful but the legacy allows for so many people to enjoy a sport that is
growing by leaps and bounds right now do they pay homage do these young girls
know do they know you when you walk in the room you know I went 2016 it was
about our 40 year anniversary of this Olympic team and they invited us to
Madison Square Garden because the 2016 Olympic team was playing so we got to
meet those girls the Diana Tarosses and the Brittany grinders and see Don
Staley again and then they brought in other legends they brought in Teresa
Edwards you know all right just just a great great person Teresa understood
Teresa was marveling because again I wear my medal the way you put it on I'm
going out you know and I had it and Teresa Edwards five time Olympian she got
four gold one bronze she's Gail what I mean T you already got what you
worried about this one for because Gail you had the first you said to stand it
we can never let it go down that's right she she come back I can't remember the
last team that didn't win gold so if they don't know we tell them I ran into
Brittany Griner at that time I told her I'm tighter you to be in on the social
pages that was when she was going to hold that drama with this girlfriend and
that one and beat number I want you back on the sports pages I only want to
read about rebounds block shots and points that's all I want that's all I
want to read about you she said yeah you're right you're right I said you want
to let me in well come on back anytime nice to meet you Miss Jones nice to meet
you thank you so much you can follow her where do you want people to go to your
website let me see Facebook I'm on Facebook okay Gail M-A-R-Q-U-I-S the legend legendary
thank you for everything you've done for us you're welcome and bringing those
girls along standing on the shoulders up wasn't that awesome well please make
sure to make Aaron Hunter is awesome your favorite podcast and feel free to
share it on social media with someone who needs to hear it and check out the
other amazing podcasts on the women's empowerment network thank you for being
a part of this family till next time
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switch to Walmart and manage your prescriptions in the app the Walmart you
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exclusions apply
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