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Nikki McCray-Penson, Olympic champion basketball player, dies at 51

Nikki McCray-Penson

SYDNEY - SEPTEMBER 20: Nikki McCray #15 of the United States dribbles the ball against Russia during the Women’s Basketball competition, part of the 2000 Sydney Summer Olympics at the Sydney Superdome on September 20, 2000 in Sydney, Australia. The United States defeated Russia 88-77. (Photo by: Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

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Nikki McCray-Penson, a two-time Olympic gold medalist basketball player, has died at age 51.

Rutgers, where McCray-Penson was an assistant coach, confirmed her death. A cause was not given.

McCray-Penson was on gold-medal teams at the Olympics in 1996 and 2000 and world championship in 1998.

While at the University of Tennessee, she made the national team and developed a reputation as a defensive stopper.

In a world championship qualifying tournament in 1993, future Hall of Famer Hortencia scored 37 points as Brazil beat the U.S. in a preliminary game.

Coach Tara VanDerveer then called on the 21-year-old McCray-Penson to defend Hortencia in the final. She limited Hortencia to two points (the Brazilian scored 15 overall) as the U.S. won.

“I think that earned her a spot on the Olympic team,” Pat Summitt, her coach at Tennessee, said, according to the Washington Post in 1998 .

McCray-Penson was the sixth woman on the 1996 Olympic team, then the starting shooting guard at the 2000 Sydney Games.

After making three All-Star teams as a WNBA player, she retired and went into coaching. She was an assistant for Olympic teammate Dawn Staley at South Carolina from 2008-17, then was a head coach at Old Dominion and at Mississippi State, stepping down from the latter post after one season for health reasons. Last year was her first season at Rutgers.

McCray-Penson was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2013.

NBC Olympic research contributed to this report.