Womhoops Guru

Mel Greenberg covers college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he has worked for 38 years. Greenberg pioneered national coverage of the game, including the original Top 25 women's college poll. His knowledge has earned him nicknames such as "The Guru" and "The Godfather," as well as induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Happy New Year and Celebrate at Women's Hoops Guru

(Guru note to blogging team: A senior moment caused us to forget our sign-in here since it's been a while. So ignore emails the system generated to all of you.)

By Mel Greenberg

Happy New Year everyone. Just to give you a link closer to talking in current events, we greet 2008 today over at Women's Hoops Guru with a year-in-review award, some ap poll trivia, and Acacia's feature on Syracuse.

Enjoy.

-- Mel

Monday, December 03, 2007

Maryland at Rutgers: Monday Madness

By Mel Greenberg

That certainly fits when it comes to two teams in the hunt for No. 1 seeds and Final Four glory when Maryland travels to Rutgers Monday night for the annual Jimmy V Classic game -- women's edition.

It's the first time since the front end of the 98-99 season these two former AIAW Eastern rivals have met. For the past and present, drop by where most of the writing now gets done -- at women's hoops guru.

Thanks for stopping by.

--Mel

Friday, November 23, 2007

Moore's Not The Same at UConn

By Mel Greenberg

"Moore Moore Moore."

"How Do You Like Her? How Do You Like Her?"

-- With Apologies to the Andrea True Connection.

Oops. Hi there.

Your Guru was downloading some ancient disco music from the internet for a future road trip and after Maya Moore's performance against Stanford carving the Cardinal instead of the turkey on Thursday night, we began humming music in our mind to envision UConn's all-America promotional video for its fabulous freshman.

Anyhow, it's not the same in Huskies land since Moore's arrival off her play to date. Bonafide expectations of another NCAA title are the result, even though the expectations of an unbonafide nature, themselves, never go away.

And now that you've been entertained, if you haven't been down the block to women's hoops guru, you can take a break from your Black Friday shopping to read how Rutgers has become a barrier to the potential of three teams going unbeaten into the Women's Final Four.

-- Mel

Monday, November 19, 2007

That's The Rutgers We Saw Last Spring

By Mel Greenberg

Now that you've been sufficiently teased, a roundup of Sunday action, including the Beltway romp of Rutgers at George Washington and Maryland's triumph over LSU in College Park, can be found by hitting this link to get to women's hoops guru.

The AP voting site apparently has finally updated the current list of voters which offers how each cast their ballot. A link is listed somewhere at this site in the last month. We'll put up the link again over at philly.com Monday night after the next poll is released.

Also, Kathleen Radebaugh has a Big Five feature on Ashley Morris.

-- Mel

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Sunday Morning Down The Street

By Mel Greenberg

Unless it's the middle of Saturday night elsewhere on the planet, this morning (Nov. 18), the link to women's hoops guru offers exciting news about team member Acacia O'Connor in a separate post, while also setting up the Beltway clashes of LSU-Maryland and Rutgers-George Washington, along with other items.

-- Mel

Friday, November 16, 2007

Catching Up With the Newer (Cyber) Neighborhood

By Mel Greenberg

As usual, thanks for stopping here. If this is your visit in a while or initial visit today, recent posts over at women's hoops guru include a recap of Thursday's USA-Stanford and Tennessee-Oklahoma games, a Stephen K. Lee's report on Rutgers' big signing haul, some odds and ends from us, including news about a new postseason tournament that will bring 32 more teams into the March Madness mix.

You know the drill. And if not, just hit the link referencing the Philly.com site.

-- Mel

Monday, November 12, 2007

City Series Notebook: `Nova Grabs Opener

(Guru's Note: Some timing issues and technologial glitches have sent Kathleen Radebaugh's first City Series/ Big Five-Drexel coverage over here. An account of the closely-fought Rutgers-Stanford showdown up north can be found over at women's hoops guru.)

-- Mel

By Kathleen Radebaugh

PHILADELPHIA _ This is a different Villanova team. This is a different team that brings new athleticism and new names to remember to the Big 5.

Wildcat senior Stacie Witman is likely to be the Big Five player of the week, although she was limited to nine points in a 49-47 loss at Loyola, Md., Sunday, as Villanova's shooting went cold in the second half.

On a very chilly Friday afternoon, Witman, a starting forward, scored a career-high 31 points against La Salle at the Explorers' Tom Gola Arena.

It was the season opener for both teams.

In what is the norm in Big 5 competition, the outcome was still in question towards the remaining minutes of the game, but it was Witman’s open threes that secured the win for the Wildcats, 64-58.

“Towards the end, Wit[man] was so hot,” said teammate Laura Kurz, a junior transfer from Duke “We just tried to give her the ball and make sure we knew where she was on the court at all times.”

At first, nobody was making shots. Almost midway through the first half, LaSalle led 13-6. For the first eight minutes, the Explorers were ahead by seven points. Senior Carlene Hightower scored seven of the Explorers’ first nine points.

Hwever, Villanova started making threes and then went on a 26-6 run til four minutes into the second half. At 16:33, the Wildcats led 44-27.

Head Coach Harry Perretta’s ethic to always keep shooting started to work in favor of the Wildcats.

“Our shots were not falling in the beginning, but Coach always tells us to keep shooting because they are eventually going to fall and that is what we did,” said Kurz.

In the second half, the shots stopped connecting at a time when Villanova reverted to its patience on offense and LaSalle was successful in chipping away the differential to only two points with nine minutes remaining in the game.

First home game, LaSalle wants a win.

First away game for Nova, they want to prove they can win on the road against notable basketball teams.

“We knew we had to dig ourselves out of this, and we were not going to go home with a loss,” said Witman. “Once my shots started to fall again and everyone was playing better defense-it just happened. Last year, we would not have dug ourselves out of the hole, but this year we will.”

Witman scored back-to-back three pointers with less than two minutes remaining in the game, pushing the lead back up to eight points for the Wildcats. Witman then completed 4-of-4 throws in the game’s final seconds.

Villanova did exceptionally well always finding Witman on the court.

LaSalle had to foul Witman, an exceptional free throw shooter, in order to be back on offense, but Witman made her shots at the charity strip.

“It was a team effort tonight, with getting passes and getting one more rebound and helping on defense,” said Witman. “My numbers might have shown on the board, but it was team effort, especially on defense.”

Witman went 6-for-6 from the line in the game, hit five three-point baskets, and added a team-high seven rebounds. Witman was the only player to score in double figures. For her first time playing as a Wildcat, Kurz (Lower Gwynedd, Pa.) contributed nine points. Kruz, starting junior forward, transferred from Duke University. Struggling with injuries at Duke, this was Kruz first big game as a starter in four years.

Kurz, along with her teammate Witman, look in shape and have more of an athletic build in comparison to their competition.

Kurz just has more nerves with her game right, especially with her shooting, because she is coming off of consecutive seasons of injuries.

“This is her first game when what she does is going to affect the outcome of the game,” said Perretta. “Now she is in a pressured situation and its been four years since then. At Duke, she was not in a pressured situation. She has to work her way back in.”

“I missed a lot of shots I should have made,” said Kurz “I am a little disappointed in how I played, but we won and that is the most important thing. It was a big win for us. They are a good team and it is tough to win on the road against LaSalle."

Witman was the only Villanova player to score in double figures. Perretta wants his players to be constantly shooting and taking advantage of those open looks not just for practice, but for the win.

“Laura, Lisa [Karcic], and Stacie are our three primary scorers,” said Perretta. “When they get shots, they cannot pass them up, especially Stacie because she is playing well in the beginning of the season. One time she did not shoot the ball, she turned it over. I told her I would rather her shoot it because if she goes 1-for-5 that is still three points. If she hesitates and doesn’t shoot, we might not win the game.”

Next Big 5 game for Villanova is a home game on Dec. 1 against Penn followed by another home against Saint Joseph’s on Dec. 5.