Womhoops Guru

Mel Greenberg covered college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he worked for 40 plus 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.

Saturday, April 30, 2022

The Guru Report: Third Rutgers Era Coming Next Season

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

First, obviously your Guru has a million C Viv and me tales in the wake of the longtime Cheyney/Iowa/Rutgers C. Vivian Stringer retirement announcement Saturday morning but since the formal move will come at the end of the summer those will be put on hold in the interim other than involving other projects that were in place or under consideration.

Secondly, just want to squeeze in that Guru attended the last USciences Hall of Fame dinner Friday night as the D2 Devils athletics program along with the whole school moves to merger at the end of the semester with D-1 Saint Joseph’s University. 

Former coach Nate Ware, current coach Jackie Hartzell and longtime sports information director Bob Heller, now at Chestnut Hill, were among the 30-plus inductees across all sports and due to the size of the class, other than Hartzell, who goes out on top with one final CACC title, speeches were banned, which still didn't deprive of a nice event that was done in streamline fashion.

And the Devils’ alum contingent will live on in one or two teams in the upcoming Philly Summer League (registration info several posts below).

So following the original Theresa Grentz era (the former Immaculata and coaching great recently announced as a Naismith Hall of Famer will be a speaker at the Philly Sports dinner at the Doubletree formerly Crown Plaza on Route 70 over in Cherry Hill, N.J. Monday nite btw public sale still on, tickets available at the door or online depending when reading this), and the concluding Stringer era, what lies ahead for the Scarlet Knights into what will be the name on the next era and will it be a spinoff or brand new direction?

The first call more as a courtesy than anticipation because the interest is not considered existing is to UConn associate head coach Chris Dailey, a member of the 1982 AIAW National Champion contingent under Grentz.

The name in recent years that many in Scarlet Knights nation thought could be lured back East is Michigan’s Kim Barnes Arico, who previously was at St. John’s.

Given the Wolverine success, the two questions are, would she have interest and is Rutgers prepared to pay the price that would likely be involved and before you point to the Stringer salaries you also likely have a buyout of sum on top of that to deal.

But as Villanova athletic director Mark Jackson said as he and your Guru (well ahead of the Jay Wright shocker) shot the breeze in a Michigan hotel bar when the women were coincidentally in Ann Arbor for the NCAA tourney, on several topics and over the search to replace legend Harry Perretta even though a runaway favorite existed, “You explore and do diligence.”

So yes you don’t know it’s negative on the comeback from Arico until it actually is.

Next stop on this tour is back in-house.

Two key pieces off the best of the Stringer/Rutgers era with an Iowa waggle for one are Jolette Law, who was a player on the Hawkeyes and aide on The Banks, and Chelsea Newton, who starred at Rutgers and was on Stringer’s staff a long time before joining Joni Taylor at Georgia and now doing likewise at Texas A&M.

Law had a brief turn as head coach that didn’t go well at Illinois and while that could be a problem, you are directed for Exhibit A on second chances to look to the alum at Syracuse coming out of success at Buffalo when it previously didn't go well at Indiana following turning around Hofstra.

Currently, she’s on Dawn Staley’s staff at two-time NCAA champion South Carolina.

While recently laughing off the idea of filling a Rutgers vacancy in chitter chatter during the NCAA tourney, considering no one believed it was imminent, Newton is still worth an interview.

And Carlene Mitchell, who moved up to recruiting coordinator when Law left and rankings were still the norm, recently had the interim label removed after stepping in out west at CSUN.

In considering today’s world, one very highly respected agent said to your Guru on Saturday, this whole new (naming) thing is evolving and the candidate in today’s world that can show they have ability to figure it out will have something very valuable.

Another person familiar with the women’s scene noted, “lt’s going to be more about the Rutgers job. Show you can be a fundraiser, excite and tap the fan and donor base to make the program Big Ten competitive without touching the football money there.’’

Which brings us to the Grentz spinoff in one Mary Klinger, nee, part of the fabled Coyle twins, the other being Pat, who coached in the WNBA. It will sound off the wall to the unknowledgeable but she’s the longtime coach of mighty Rutgers Prep, connected everywhere in America.

The fact that the news just broke Saturday morning, many have yet to learn Rutgers opened and agents are saying interest will become more knowledgeable in the next several days.

While it’s unlikely a male will be hired, two East Coast success stories Big Ten ready are Seton Hall’s Tony Bozzella and Penn’s Mike McLaughlin. Forget bringing Joe McKeown home from Northwestern, he’s with a new deal currently in hand.

It might be difficult to grab Princeton’s Carla Berube, but if money can trump alumni consideration and if wanting a new direction, then Columbia’s Megan Griffith showed how to build. 

And when it comes to Jersey roots with a little more seasoning, all Delran native Trish Sacca-Fabbri does at Quinnipiac is win and was a finalist in the last Penn State opening.

Well, that’s it for the moment. Stay tuned. 














The Guru’s AP Women’s Basketball Poll Coach Appearance History Update After Retirement of C. Vivian Stringer and Several Other Legends

By Mel Greenberg @womhoops guru

Quick hits on AP poll (week 19 for coaches’ appearances week No. 19-Final)  
(This is 824th poll after week 19 for 2021-22). (Records on pages through Season 2021-22 W19F)

Coaches with Four Ranked Teams

Jim Foster (St. Joe-35), (Vanderbilt-164), (Ohio St.-171), (Chattanooga-10), 380

Coaches with Three Ranked Teams  

C. Vivian Stringer (Cheyney-85), (Iowa-155), (Rutgers-199), 439
Gary Blair (Stephen F. Austin-79), (Arkansas-67), (Texas A&M-274) 420
Marianne Stanley (Old Dominion-141), (Southern Cal-24), (Stanford*-18), 183
Lin Dunn (Miami-2), (Mississippi-1), (Purdue-130), 133
Joe McKeown (New Mexico St.-6), (George Washington-110), (Northwestern-36) 152
Don Perrelli (Northwestern-52), (S. Conn.-20), (St. John’s-1), 73
Tom Collen (Colorado St.-34), (Louisville-17), (Arkansas-9), 60
Sharon Fanning-Otis (Kentucky-4), (Miss. St.-48), (Chattanooga-4), 56
Nell Fortner (Purdue 29) (Auburn 1) (Georgia Tech 14), 44
Debbie Yow (Florida-2), (Kentucky-21), (Oral Roberts-1), 24 

*- Filled in for Tara Vanderveer 1995-96 during Olympic Year 

Co-Coaches
Kittie Blakemore, Scott Harrelson – West Virginia 8 
Sonja Hogg, Leon Barmore – Louisiana Tech 51
Jill Hutchison, Linda Fischer – Illinois St. 3
Jim Jarrett, Joyce Patterson – Georgia St. 1
Marianne Stanley, Amy Tucker – Stanford 18
Jim Bolla, Sheila Strike – UNLV 18

Coaches All Time Ranking Appearances

1.**- Pat Summitt, Tennessee – 618 (missed just 14 polls in entire AP history as existed in 2012)
2.  Tara VanDerveer (2 schools – Ohio St., Stanford) – 614
3.  Geno Auriemma, Connecticut – 578
4. **-Andy Landers, Georgia – 522
5. **-C. Vivian Stringer (3 schools – Cheyney, Iowa, Rutgers) – 439
6. **-Gary Blair (3 schools – Stephen F. Austin, Arkansas, Texas A&M) – 420
7. **-Jody Conradt, Texas – 395
8. **- Sylvia Hatchell, North Carolina 384
9. **-Jim Foster (4 schools – St. Joseph’s, Vanderbilt, Ohio St., Chattanooga) – 380
10. Kim Mulkey (2 schools — Baylor 364, LSU 15) - 379
11. **-Muffet McGraw, Notre Dame 373
12. **-Rene Portland (2 schools – St. Joseph, Penn St.) – 336
13. Brenda Frese (2 schools – Minnesota -8 , Maryland 324) – 332
14.  **-Debbie Ryan, Virginia – 329
15. **- Kay Yow, North Caro. St. – 326
16. **-Leon Barmore, Louisiana Tech (51-shared with Sonja Hogg) – 325
17.**- Gail Goestenkors (2 schools – Duke, Texas) – 295
18. **-Joe Ciampi, Auburn – 290
19. **-Sue Gunter (2 schools – Stephen F. Austin, LSU) – 270
19. **-Joanne P. McCallie (2 schools – Michigan St., Duke) – 270
21. **-Joan Bonvicini (2 schools – Long Beach, Arizona) – 267
22. **- Sherri Coale, Oklahoma – 264
22. **-Marsha Sharp, Texas Tech – 264
24. **-Van Chancellor (2 schools – Mississippi, LSU) – 261
25. Jeff Walz, Louisville – 230
26. **-Chris Weller, Maryland – 227
27. Doug Bruno, DePaul – 226
28. **-Theresa Grentz (2 schools – Rutgers, Illinois) – 225
29. Dawn Staley (2 schools — Temple, South Carolina) — 218
30. Bill Fennelly (2 schools — Toledo, Iowa State 190
31. **-Marianne Stanley (3 schools – Old Dominion, Southern Cal, Stanford*) – 183
32. **-Paul Sanderford (2 schools – W. Kentucky, Nebraska) – 182
**-Not on the College Division I active head coaches list

Active Coaches-All Time AP Ranking Appearances

1. Tara VanDerveer (2 schools – Ohio St., Stanford) – 614
2. Geno Auriemma, Connecticut – 578 
3. Kim Mulkey, (2 schools — Baylor 364, LSU -15) – 379
4. Brenda Frese (2 schools, Minnesota, 8 Maryland 324) – 332
5. Jeff Walz, Louisville – 230
6. Doug Bruno, DePaul – 226
7. Dawn Staley (2 schools —Temple - 26, South Carolina 192) – 218
8. Bill Fennelly, (2 schools – Toledo, Iowa St.) – 190
9. Joe McKeown, (3 schools – New Mexico St., George Washington, Northwestern) – 152
10.  Kevin McGuff, (2 schools -- Xavier, Ohio State) – 142
11. Vic Schaefer, (2 schools — Mississippi State, Texas) – 140
12. @!@!-Kristy Curry (2 schools – Purdue, Texas Tech) – 136
13. Scott Rueck, Oregon State – 124
14. Kelly Graves, (2 schools — Gonzaga, Oregon) – 123
15. Cori Close, UCLA—120
16. Lisa Bluder (2 schools – Iowa, Drake) – 111
17.)))-Chris Gobrecht,Washington - 104 
18. Wes Moore, North Caro. St. 103
19. !!@@ Karen Aston, Texas 101
19. Suzy Merchant, Michigan St. — 101
21. Katie Meier, Miami –90
22. Kim Barnes Arico (2 schools – St. John’s, Michigan) – 87
23. Jose Fernandez, South Florida – 75
24. Teri Moren, Indiana — 59
25. - $$$ - Bonnie Henrickson ( 2 schools — Virginia Tech, Kansas) – 54
26.  Adia Barnes — 53
26. Lisa Fortier, Gonzaga — 53 
28. Jeff  Mittie, (TCU, Kansas St.) – 50
29. Kevin Borseth, Wis.-Green Bay – 46
30. Nell Fortner (Auburn, Purdue, Georgia Tech) – 44
31.  %=%= Matt Bollant, Wis.-Green Bay – 35
32. Lisa Stockton, Tulane – 34

)))-Active at Air Force; $$$-Active at UCSB;  %=%= Active at Eastern Illinois; @!@!-Active at Alabama; !!@@-Active at UTSA



Friday, April 29, 2022

Philly Summer League Sign-Up Process

Guru’s note: Below is a straight cut-and-paste on info needed for the Philly Summer League Sign-Up:

THE PHILA/SUBURBAN WOMEN’S SUMMER BASKETBALL LEAGUE WILL BE PLAYED AT THE AAU RENEGADES’ KELLY BOLISH GYM LOCATED AT:

                       2950 TURNPIKE DRIVE

                       HATBORO, PA 19040

IF WE SECURE ENOUGH PLAYERS AND TEAMS, GAMES WILL BE PLAYED ON TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS BEGINNING TUESDAY JUNE 14. GAME TIMES ARE 6:30 AND 7:45. IF WE DON’T HAVE AT LEAST 10 TEAMS, GAMES WILL ONLY BE PLAYED ON THURSDAYS BEGINNING JUNE 16.

 

2022 TIMELINE:

 THURSDAY 5/12   ENTRY DEADLINE

 THURSDAY 5/19   PLAYER DRAFT – 7:30 AT KELLY BOLISH GYM

 THURSDAY 5/26   SHIRTS ORDERED

 THURSDAY 6/2     ROSTERS, SCHEDULE EMAILED TO PLAYERS AND WILL BE POSTED ON:                            

                                                                  PHILA/SUBURBAN WOMEN’S SUMMER BASKETBALL LEAGUE AND

                                                                               RENEGADES’ WEBSITE

TUESDAY 6/14 OR THURS 6/14 – SHIRTS DISTRIBUTED. LEAGUE BEGINS 

PLAYOFFS BEGIN: THURS. 7/28 (TENTATIVE) 

 

QUESTIONS? CONTACT LEAGUE DIRECTOR, DAVID KESSLER, AT – deucedbk@comcast.net OR TEXT TO:

                                                                                                                                                                        215 518-7877

 

NAME:

 

ADDRESS:

 

TELEPHONE:

 

EMAIL ADDRESS:

 

SCHOOL AND YEAR OF GRADUATION:

PLEASE INDICATE D-2 OR D-3 (CURRENT D-1 STUDENT-ATHLETES ARE INELIGIBLE):

 

HEIGHT AND POSITION:

 

SHIRT SIZE:

 

ARE YOU ENTERING WITH YOUR SCHOOL TEAM?

 

ENTERING THE DRAFT?

 

ENTERING THE DRAFT WITH SOME OTHER PLAYERS? PLEASE LIST THEM:

 

FEE OF $160.00 AND REGISTRATION INFO MUST BE RECEIVED BY THURSDAY MAY 12:

  PAYMENT CAN ONLY BE MADE VIA CREDIT CARD THROUGH THE AAU RENEGADES’ WEBSITE.

  PLEASE REGISTER BY THURSDAY MAY 12 AS IT BECOMES DIFFICULT TO DRAFT PLAYERS ONTO 

TEAMS, ORDER SHIRTS WITH PLAYER NAMES ON THE BACK, AND SEND ROSTERS AND A  

  SCHEDULE IF ALL PLAYERS DON’T REGISTER IN A TIMELY FASHION.

 

GOOD LUCK TO ALL FOR A SUCCESSFUL SEASON!

        

                                                                                           DAVID KESSLER, LEAGUE DIRECTOR

                                                                                           deucedbk@comcast.net

                                                                                           TEXT: 215 518-7877

Thursday, April 21, 2022

The Guru Report: After Villanova’sJay Wright - The Next Face of College Basketball Is? —

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

Villanova - Yes, this is a women’s hoops place primarily but unwittingly your Guru was at Ground Zero Wednesday night for the Wildcats women postseason awards listening at the opening to several administrators who shortly were about to confirm a leaking report and stunning news outside Finneran Pavilion that Hall of Fame men’s coach Jay Wright was retiring.

In fact that they pulled this off can be akin to the scientists who worked on the atom bomb under the 50-yard line of Chicago Stadium.

I know Jay well and vice versa, even had the honor of being on the same Hall of Fame weekend docket last September with him in my receiving the Gowdy Media Award for Print.

As Wednesday coverage of the Wright move exploded, you will find a noteworthy reference to another well-known Philadelphian given by Nicole Auerbach off a roundtable with a series of questions in The Athletic - the one here on who will be the new face of college basketball.

Auerbach: I agree with Dana — I’m not sure that Jay necessarily wanted to be the face of the sport, even if so many of his peers would have nominated him to be it, if they could. But his voice has long carried weight, and I know based on messages I received Wednesday night from other coaches that there’s a lot of sadness that he’s leaving the profession. As we think about the idea of the voice of a sport, there’s something to be said for being someone everyone wants to talk to. And someone everyone wants to listen to.

We do still have Tom Izzo (though I’ll predict he’s our next HOF coach to retire), John Calipari (who will always be one of the faces of the sport in the one-and-done era) and Bill Self (fresh off a title).

But let’s be honest. The face of college basketball is (NCAA champion South Carolina women’s coach) Dawn Staley. I know the question meant *men’s* college basketball … but I’d make the case she transcends the women’s game. When she speaks up, we listen. And she’s never afraid to speak up about the sport, her worth, athlete rights, social issues. The face of a sport needs to promote it but also be ready to air its dirty laundry; Staley does that. Plus, she’s just so cool. I’d like to be her when I grow up.

Another option? Let’s just say the face of the sport is the player. Not any particular player — but all of them. As power in college sports shifts from coaches to players, it’s only fitting that we think about them. They can move freely from school to school. They can make money, finally. This era of college athletics is, actually, theirs.


Wednesday, April 06, 2022

The Guru Report: Richardson Takes the Helm at Temple - “The Cupboard Not Bare; They Brought Me Here to Return to the Tradition of Winning”

6By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PHILADELPHIA - Former Towson coach Diane Richardson was welcomed Wednesday morning as Temple’s new women’s basketball leader to a place that was no stranger to her, considering the annual trips to West Philadelphia to visit Drexel in the Colonial Athletic Association wars as well other local schools in those private preseason scrimmages.

But with the opening that occurred just over two weeks ago when athletic director Arthur Johnson, nearly newly arrived himself from Texas in late fall, decided to not retain 14-year-veteran Tonya Cardoza, the question Wednesday immediately popped, who made the first move that brought the 63-year-old Richardson to take control.

“I’ve eyed this program for a long, long time,” Richardson said. “But you can’t get anywhere unless they call you. 

“Once I got that call, I was really elated. It was a goal of mine, and I was just happy to get the call and happy to go through the process.”

She humorously referred to the process included a major grilling by the search committee under Executive Senior Associate AD/SWA Jessica Reo firing questions to fly like tennis balls.

That process also included Johnson dialing for perspectives of the job former Temple coach Dawn Staley, who was at the outset of what became the road to leading South Carolina to its second NCAA title Sunday night in Minneapolis, handing Connecticut it’s first loss in the championship game after a previous 11-0 success rate.

Staley, who after eight seasons at Temple was followed by her Virginia teammate Cardoza, then a longtime member of the UConn staff under Geno Auriemma, said it was no disruption to continue communications while she was otherwise focused on powering through the Greensboro Regional and ultimately Women’s Final Four.

“She called Diane, Queen of the DMV,” Johnson said, referring to the suburban Baltimore University located in the recruiting hotbed of the Delaware, Maryland, Virginia triangle.

As for the mission, Richardson, whose husband Larry of 40 years was in the Liacouras Athletic Center room full of Temple coaches, staff, spirit squad and band, besides media, had no problem with its articulation.

“Temple had a history of success. Don’t get it twisted,” Richardson said. “They have a history of success. They didn’t bring me here to do anything new.

“They brought me here to take us back to the tradition of winning. 

“And I met with the team this morning and we have a core group of some dynamic, smart, very good basketball players. 

“We got two returning that were all-conference (American Athletic Conference), so the cupboard is not bare, believe me. But we’re going to use that core group to bring pieces in to bring this program back up to where it’s been.”

When Temple left the Atlantic 10, the Owls and the rest of the conference were dominated by UConn, which never lost in the AAC the first seven years. After the Huskies departed two seasons ago, returning to the reconfigured Big East, the top was taken over by South Florida and UCF, with Temple and several others just below the Florida schools.

“I’m following Dawn Staley, who’s the two-time national champion, and Tonya Cardoza, who is the winningest coach in Temple athletics women’s basketball, so I got a road ahead of me, but I’m prepared,” Richardson, who also has two sons and two daughters, said. 

“I have my high heels on today. Normally I have on my boots. We’re going to do things and do things the right way. 

“We’re going to defend. We’re going to push the ball in transition. We’re going to press. We’re going to press from the bus. As soon as they open the door, we’re going to be right there. And we’re going to be monsters on the board.

“But more importantly, we’re going to have young ladies that are confident. And confident to win. Confident in themselves. Confident that they have the tools to be great, to be great in basketball, to be great in basketball. To be great on and off the court,” she continued.

“I like to follow President (Jason) Wingard’s lead, when he talks about academic excellence. When he talks about brand excellence. We he talks about community excellence. Those are three of the tools that we’re going to use so that we instill in our young ladies a strong foundation when they leave here.

“So we’re going to get back to winning, again winning is not new, and we want to see you all in the stands, hoopin’ and a hollerin’. 

“I want to be in the postseason every year and I think we have the tools and resources to do that.”

In short, now that all-time scorer Mia Davis is gone, Richardson is looking to instill an equal-opportunity offense, wanting each player to be involved with the offense consistently.

“Everybody is going to have that same opportunity to score,” she said. “I am not a half-court coach. I am an up-tempo coach.”

In introducing Richardson, athletic director Johnson made reference to the portal, which has been overloaded with transfers, such as Maryland starters Angel Reese and Ashley Owusu earlier this week, and the fact the Temple squad held firm waiting to see who would be named as the new coach.

“I want to thank you for staying committed to Temple and for trusting us while we went through this process over the last two weeks,” Johnson said. “We’re fully aware that you had the ability to go into the transfer portal.”

Richardson was a successful corporate executive in the 1990s when she decided to become involved and chase her passion of coaching.

Stops along her collegiate career path included assistant positions at American University, Maryland, George Washington, when reigning WNBA MVP Jonquel Jones was with the Colonials, and West Virginia, before becoming head coach at Towson, where in her second season, the Tigers rallied in the last five minutes to beat Drexel for the CAA title.

Ironically, just less than a month ago, Richardson was nearby in Drexel’s Daskalakis Athletic Center designing a nitty three-point shot from the corner to go ahead of Delaware in the CAA semifinals at before the Blue Hens went the other way and Towson was called for a foul within the end of the game allowing Delaware to regain the lead and outcome.

“In every aspect of her professional career, Coach Rich has been a leader and pioneer,” said Jonathan Tsipis, as part of a long paragraph of laudatory comments.

Tsipis, a former assistant to Muffet McGraw at Notre Dame, was head coach at George Washington when Richardson was with the Colonials on his staff, and he later became head coach at Wisconsin.

McGraw, in a text to your Guru, called Richardson “a great hire.”

Tsipis was in the Fox-Gittis room here Wednesday and it is believed will become a member of her staff.

She mentioned two Towson assistants she will bring north in Cheyenne Curley and Myles Jackson, and director of basketball operations Jasmine Allen. Associate head coach Zach Kancher, a native of Philadelphia, is seeking to move up and follow her with the Tigers, though he could land here if he isn’t tabbed by the Tigers. It’s possible some staff of Cardoza’s could be retained.

Richardson at the high school level at Riverdale Baptist in Maryland won five national titles and she was named national coach of the year in 2005.

“All the things I’ve learned throughout my career, whether it be in business, in life, or raising children, she said, “all of those things have helped me to build championship teams.”

Jalynn Holmes, a Temple grad student, played for Richardson’s 2019 CAA champions. The new Temple coach met with Holmes separately in a reunion to discuss expectations with the new program and previous accomplishments.

“That’s going to be crucial with her experience,” Richardson said. “Helping the younger players understand how important it is to win.”

Cardoza, in her final press conference after Temple’s second round elimination in the AAC tournament, said she felt the Owls, fourth in the regular season standings, had underachieved. She also said the squad on the offensive end relied too much on Davis, who on Wednesday was on the WNBA’s latest list of collegians renouncing NCAA eligibility to be available for Monday’s annual draft.

   That’s your report.

Monday, April 04, 2022

Guru’s NCAAW Report: Dawn Staley’s South Carolina Gamecocks Doom Geno Auriemma’s UConn Perfection in National Title Games

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

MINNEAPOLIS, Mainn. _ The Philly Special returned here Sunday night not as a trick football scoring play in the Super Bowl but rather in the form of a battle in front of a sellout crowd  of 18,304 energized fans between two enormously successful collegiate women’s basketball coaches from the City of Brotherly Love.

And when the 40 minutes of action concluded here in the Target Center the tenacious defense of the South Carolina team on top of The Associated Press women’s rankings wire-to-wire was too much to handle in a 64-49 triumph depriving No. 5 Connecticut of extending its perfect run in NCAA title games to 12-0.

“The 11 times that we won, I would say — maybe all ll but at least 10, we had the better team,” said Norristown’s Geno Auriemma of the Huskies (30-6). “I told Dawn (Staley) after the game, they were the best team in the country all year.

“They were No. 1 in the country in November when we saw them down in the Bahamas (the Gamecocks trounced UConn 73-57), and they’re the best team in the country today.”

The game took place where UConn won its first NCAA crown in 1995, beating Tennessee a second time the same season for the national title with an unbeaten record.

Following a heartbreaking loss a year ago in the bubble configuration in the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, in the national semifinals on a Aliyah Boston missed shot against eventual champion Stanford, this time South Carolina’s 6-foot-5 junior scored 11 points and grabbed 16 rebounds with a pair of blocks to earn most outstanding player honors.

That came after spending the last several weeks picking up trophies as a consensus national player of the year.

The team of destiny for this season also was aided by Destinee Henderson, who scored a career-high 26 points, tops for both teams, and dealt four assists.

“I just found open gaps, and when they collapsed in the paint, Aliyah or whoever it was who was passing the ball just found me out on the perimeter, and I just let it fly,” Henderson said.

Staley, following South Carolina’s second NCAA crown and first since 2017 under her, called this edition the best of her era.

The title won by the Gamecocks (35-2) makes Staley, who guided the USA Olympic Squad to a gold medal in China last August, the first Black men’s or women’s coach to win two championships.

Social media was all agog over her Louis Vuitton varsity jacket.

“Our team had the fight of champions all season long,” Staley said during the presentation of the team trophy she danced with to the delight of the Gamecocks.  “We weren’t going to be denied — we were going to play every possession like it was our last possession. I know our players are super-exhausted, but they were determined to be champions today.”

Zia Cooke added 11 points to South Carolina’s attack.

The key to the win, as Auriemma noted, was the 49-24 differential in rebounding as well as the Gamecocks scoring 22 second-chance points.

Paige Bueckers, the Minneapolis hometown star here and national player of the year 12 months ago as a freshman, had 14 points for UConn. 

“Nobody in my position would be happy right now,” Bueckers said. “Super proud of this team for how far we’ve come and all the adversity we’ve dealt with and all we’ve dealt with  and all we’ve overcome to get to this point.

“But at UConn, it’s national championship or nothing, so obviously upset, frustrated, disappointed. Just wish things could have gone different for the seniors.”

A season that held great promise had a wakeup call early with the first Gamecocks rout quickly followed by Bueckers at the end of a win at home over Notre Dame in early December that sidelined her until late February.

Star freshman Azzi Fudd missed time and Saturday the flu bug caught up with her making her a non-factor.

“The first five minutes I thought they came out and set the tone right then and there for how the game was going to be played,” Auriemma said. “We were pretty much even the rest of the time, gave ourselves a chance, cut it to five, but we didn’t have enough.

“I’m proud of our guys just to get here, just to be in this situation; it’s just tonight we just didn’t have enough. They were too good for us.”

Citing the large collection of trophies by UConn, Staley refrained by labelling her squad a dynasty.

“I mean, UConn is not only a great team, they’re a great tradition,” Staley said. “They’re part of our women’s basketball history and you can’t really take that away from them.”

This season, the Gamecocks beat 14 ranked teams in the AP poll.

And in Staley’s short time first at Temple near her home in North Philadelphia compared to the longevity of other greats of the game, she quickly turned the Gamecocks into a force.

Staley, herself, is now 28th on the all-time list with 218 appearances and seventh on the active list pending the return of C. Vivian Stringer to active duty at Rutgers.

The Gamecocks are 12th on the all-time Top 5 list at 126, first on the current decade list at 44th. They are 15th on the all-time Top 10 list at 178 just two behind Old Dominion.

They are 20th on the total appearance list at 322 and as for being No. 1, the Gamecocks are sixth at 44th just behind the tie of Baylor and Texas at 47th. Then it’s a leap behind the domination of UConn at 250, Tennessee at 112, and Louisiana Tech at 83.

For UConn, eight of 12 players missed multiple games because of injuries and illness, primarily COVID.

It almost seemed the way the year went appropriate that the last big streak record, the 11-0 in this game, would fall, as did the long periods between losing to unranked teams, and the 169 straight conference wins until Villanova got them.

“I think it was a remarkable effort by them to stay together as well as they did throughout the entire year and to be in this game,” Auriemma said. “But then once you get in this game, you want to win this game. You’re not happy just to be here.

“But I think when this wears off, I think they’ll appreciate the effort it took to get here.”

That said, when asked to look 12 months from now when the tournament is played in Dallas, Auriemma said he expects to be back.

And that’s the blog with more to come.

  





Saturday, April 02, 2022

Guru’s NCAAW Report: Staley Guides South Carolina and Auriemma Guides UConn to Philly Special Championship Final

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. —   It’s the number one team all season versus the number one team at being number one.

That’s your NCAA women’s basketball tournament championship final Sunday night at 8 p.m. on ESPN.

Philly teams may no longer be in contention heading into Sunday night’s closeout of the 2021-22 season but the matchup of top-ranked and number one overall seeded South Carolina versus No. 5 and second-seeded UConn here at the Target Center, home of the WNBA Minnesota Lynx whose Olympic coach Cheryl Reeve is a former La Salle star out of South Jersey, has set up a new meaning of Philly Special, the famed play several seasons ago in football that was key to the NFL Eagles winning their first Super Bowl.

And super is what this one is expected to be after the national semifinals Friday night saw South Carolina take down their 13th ranked team in another top seed in Louisville 72-59 followed by what seemed improbable several months ago and perhaps appropriately executed on April Fool’s Day as Connecticut short-circuited second-ranked and top seed Stanford’s rein as champions to one day less than a year with a grind out 63-58 twist and turned adventure whose outcome remained undetermined until the nightcap reached its final minute.

So second thing first in discussing the Huskies ending their championship game drought to five years after completing a unprecedented run of four consecutive seasons, a span also known as the Breanna Stewart era.

That triumph extended UConn’s record number of championships to 11, best-ever for men or women.

And then after Stewie graduated to be part of two WNBA title squads with the Seattle Storm and a pair of USA Basketball Olympic Gold Medalists in 2016 and a pandemic-delayed followup in 2021, instead of continued annual confetti tossed celebrations, the gateway to feel-good summers soured.

In 2017 it was Mississippi State ending the record run of 111 victories with a buzzer beater in overtime 66-64 that two days later led to Philly’s own basketball daughter Dawn Staley finally being an NCAA champion through her Gamecocks prevailing in a battle of Southeastern Conference rivals.

One year later, it was another Philly coaches clash, Big Five Hall of Famer and former Saint Joseph’s star Muffet McGraw at the helm of Notre Dame as the Irish on the way to their second title and first since 2001 repeat the Mississippi State style as Arike Ogubowale bopped the Huskies 91-89 in overtime at the buzzer and then beat the clock again one night later in dispatching Mississippi State 60-58.

In the 2019 semifinal it was Baylor rallying to put away the Huskies before becoming the champion when Ogwumike missed a free throw that would have sent the championship game into overtime.

The string of Final Fours seemed doomed in 2020 but the NCAA tournament was cancelled at the outset of the pandemic left UConn’s streak in tact.

Last year, in a controversial Elite Eight no-call toward the finish in a game with Baylor played in the bubble affair for the entire tournament in one place in San Antonio it was Arizona in its first semifinals handling the Huskies. That result created an all-Pac-12 final in which the Wildcats couldn’t connect at the finish leaving Stanford, which had played a major portion of its season away from home because of pandemic  restrictions in Northern California.

Thus came this season, one which off the result of a high-power recruiting group led to great expectations.

But what is now full circle instead of the most dominant UConn run in the winter, the Huskies got decimated in the fourth quarter by South Carolina in a championship holiday tournament 1 vs 2 matchup final on Thanksgiving weekend in the tropics.

Soon thereafter it all quickly slipped off the rails.

Paige Bueckers, the reigning national player of the year off her freshman season, suffered a knee injury in the close of a lopsided win at home over Notre Dame in early December and was lost until a little over a month ago.

No. 1 freshman recruit Azzi Fudd was also lost for a large period and others missed time due to injuries and illness creating endings to long impressive streaks such as losing to unranked teams and  Villanova in a Big East visit in Hartford snapping a Huskies conference win streak at 169.

But then players became healthy following the loss to Villanova and less than a week ago, UConn (30-5) kept its final four streak alive at 14 winning a thrilling double overtime game against top seed NC State in Bridgeport.

That set the stage for what became a low scoring affair here in the Target Center against the Cardinal (32-4) that in the fourth quarter turned the outcome in UConn’s direction.

“Points are hard to come by in this tournament —today was certainly no different,”Auriemma said. “You’re going to have to win some other way than thinking you’re just going to come out here and it’s going to be nicey-nicey, and they’re going to let you shoot whatever shot you want to shoot … We didn’t exactly play our A-game on the offensive end, but the things we needed to do when we had to do them, we came up big.

The game also featured Bueckers performing in her home town — win or go home she said last Monday night — “We won, and we’re still going home.”

Bueckers did not disappoint, scoring14 points against a squad that was No. 2 most of the season behind a South Carolina team that was allowed by the voters in the Associated Press media poll to stay number one, despite the Gamecocks’ two losses to unranked Southeastern Conference rivals — Missouri during the regular season and Kentucky in the SEC championship.

Until the Huskies began to inch ahead down the stretch it would be easy to cut the tension among the jammed crowd of 18,268 with a knife.

Going in, Stanford with a balanced offense highlighted by a backcourt guard tandem of Lexie Hull and Haley Jones along with forward Cameron Brink, and UConn with its inside/outside attack, the expectation was for a high scoring game.

But defense and struggles both ways led to a UConn lead of 12-9 after the first quarter among the two winningest Division I women’s coaches of all-time in Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer at 1,157 and Auriemma at 1,149 with a chance to move within seven when the title game tips at 8 Sunday night on ESPN.

In the second quarter the lead grew to 25-19 thanks to consecutive three-balls from Tennessee transfer Evina Westbrook with 2 minutes, 47 seconds remaining until the half.

Then Stanford asserted itself on a 7-0 run for a 26-25 edge with 1:20 left until halftime, which came with a recovered lead of 27-26.

The Cardinal offensive struggle continued in the third, shooting 4-of-12 from the field, though Jones reached a doubledouble at 12 points and 10 rebounds.

With 10 minutes left at the outset of the final quarter, the storylines were still yet to be set, 39-37.

Stanford was able to find life in the paint, though the score was close, and Brink had 12 points.

But UConn started gaining traction courtesy of Christyn Williams shot from deep for a 49-41 lead with 8:30 left, the largest separation at that moment.

“I knew it was going to be a very competitive, sort of sluggish game,”Bueckers said, being asked about the pressures of wanting to perform well with the home folks looking on. “It’s awesome that’s it’s awesome that its at my hometown, but that’s not really our team’s focus, my focus. 

“We’re all just trying to win, and whatever we have to do to do it, I think we’re going to keep doing that.”

Stanford wouldn’t quit, however, and when Jones inserted a layup in the hoop, the Cardinal pulled within a basket 58-56 with 23 seconds left.

 She finished with a game-high 20 points.

Unfortunately for Stanford’s situation, the Cardinal was forced to keep fouling and UConn answered by keep connecting on the line and Fudd got it back to a four-point spread to answer Jones.

“This is a really, really hard game to win —“ Auriemma said of the championship semifinal. “Stanford is the defending national champions and they have everybody back, and they’re not playing Sunday night.

“Sometimes you don’t have to have the best team to win this game, either. Sometimes you just have to play the best that night, and you have to make some big plays in big moments, and you do just enough with what you have.”

UConn is a perfect 11-11 in title games and is in the city the Huskies claimed their first crown in 1995, topping Tennessee with a late rally after beating Stanford in that semifinal.

Auriemma also addressed the luck factor — the opposing team not playing well.

VanDerveer added credence to that saying in her opening remarks, “We did not play our best game tonight.”

South Carolina Atones for Loss a Year Later Beating Louisville

Just 12 months later following a missed shot by Aliyah Boston in the national semifinal at the finish allowing Stanford to move on and beat Pac-12 rival Arizona, that too on a closing shot, to end the Cardinal’s title drought.

On Friday night, the Gamecocks’ quest to return and get to the title game was fulfilled, looking like the nation’s top team in beating Louisville 72-59 in the national semifinals opener at the Target Center before UConn and Stanford played for the right to oppose South Carolina (34-2).

Boston, the consensus national player of the year, had 23 points and 18 rebounds while dishing four assists.

Staley’s squad bolted to a 7-0 lead and at the end of the first quarter was holding it at 17-10.

The Cardinals (29-5) coached by Jeff Walz got back into it in the second quarter with a 6-0 run though Louisville star Hailey Van Lith didn’t get on the scoreboard till near the end of the half.

It got to within a bucket at 30-28 but Louisville fired up and was not going to let the Gamecocks get away.

Nice goal but Boston had other ideas and brushed aside the early threat passing out of a triple team to Brea Beal for a 34-28 advantage at the end of the half.

Staley said a timeout could have been called but “when you know why it’s happening and you’ve got an experienced team like we have, we just let the game settle in and we corrected it on the fly.”

The game kept getting more dominant and matters were not helpful to Louisville when Emily Engstler fouled out in the middle of the period.

Brea Beal had 12 points, a pair of blocks and and a pair of steals for the winners, while Destanni Henderson scored 11 with four assists, and Zia Cooke and Victaria Saxton each scored 12.

Before fouling out, Engstler had 18 points, nine rebounds, and 4 steals, Olivia Cochran and Kianna Smith each scored 14, while Van Lith was held to nine, shooting 4-for-11.

“This is the hump we needed to get over the hump,” Boston said. “And we got over that tonight, and we’re on to the national championship game. So really excited about that.”

Local Famers

Philadelphia is also expected to be represented Saturday when the new Basketball Hall of Fame is excited.

In a year that Immaculata’s first championship is being celebrated for its 50th anniversary of winning the first national championship its dominant star of the day Theresa Grentz, who later became a successful championship coach at Rutgers and Illinois, and had a brief turn at Lafayette, is expected to be part of the class. She was considered under the relatively new women’s veterans committee which deliberates on people considered to have gone through the cracks.

The committee’s choice goes directly into the hall.

Minnesota coach Lindsay Whalen, who was considered as a player for all-star WNBA status and playing on champion Minnesota Lynx WNBA champions as well as Olympic gold medal squads for USA, is on the local organizing committee here for the Final Four but has not been seen in town the past three days.

With just two exceptions the women have always been brought to the men’s Final Four for the announcement, which this year is in New Orleans.

The Athletic and several other sources have reported former UConn great Swin Cash to make it on her second year on the ballot, though former Immaculata star Marianne Stanley, considered as a coach with titles at Old Dominion, did not, nor did Leta Andrews, a high school coach in Texas.

And that’s your report.