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.
Contributors
Tuesday, November 29, 2022
Monday, November 28, 2022
The Guru National Report: UConn Rallies Over Iowa; Big Wins From UNC; Towson and Columbia
The Guru Local Report: Siegrist Reaches 2000 Points as ‘Nova Handles South Florida; Temple, Saint Joseph’s, Drexel, and Rutgers Also Pick Up Victories
Gabriela Marginean – Drexel -2581
Diana Caramanico – Penn 2415
Shelly Pennefather – Villanova 2408
Mia Davis — Temple 2376
Sue Moran – Saint Joseph’s 2340
Marilyn Stephens – Temple 2194
Nancy Bernhardt – Villanova 2018
Maddy Siegrist – Villanova 2007
Other area followed 2000 point club high scorers
Sue Wicks – Rutgers 2655
Elena Delle Donne – Delaware 3039
Kelly Mazzante – Penn State 2919
Saint Joseph’s Stays Unbeaten With Lopsided Win at North Florida: The Hawks continue to fly high, the latest victim downed 79-56 to run the season start to 6-0. It’s the longest season-starting win streak under veteran coach Cindy Griffin since a 7-0 start in 2005-06. It’s the third best start in program history — the best 10-0 in 1984-85 under Jim Foster.
Saint Joseph’s took off with a 22-7 lead in the first quarter and was never threatened by a squad that recently lost a close one to Rider in the MAAC/ASUN Challenge in Dublin, Ireland.
Laura Ziegler scored 15 points and grabbed eight rebounds for the Hawks, while Katie Jekot scored 11, Talya Brugler scored nine as did Olivia Mullins, who also grabbed eight rebounds.
Kaylie Griffin, who sat out her freshman season, made her debut, getting an assist in eight minutes of action.
Lyric Swan scored 20 for North Florida (1-4), while Emma Broermann had 16 points and nine rebounds in the game in Jacksonville.
Saint Joseph’s next comes home and hosts Patriot League favorite Boston U. At Hagan Arena, Thursday, at 7 p.m. on ESPN+.
Drexel Conquers Buffalo: The Dragons continued to breathe fire, this time on the road in topping the Bulls 53-35 in Amherst, N.Y., as Grace O’Neill rang three categories with career highs of 12 points, nine rebounds, and three steals.
Keishana Washington scored 15, her 39th straight in double figures, while freshman Kylie Lavelle had 11 points, and Maura Hendrixson dealt eight assists.
Drexel (4-1) limited Buffalo (1-3) to 10-for-39 from the field through the first three quarters.
Kayla Salmons was the only Bulls player in double figures, scoring 10 points and completing the double double with 10 rebounds.
From travel north, the Dragons next head south, visiting Longwood in Farmville, Va., at 6 p.m. On Sunday afternoon, they return to the area for a local Philly Six showdown at Saint Joseph’s.
Temple Gets First Road Win for Richardson: New Owls coach Diana Richardson, who collected plenty at Towson, picked up her first road win at Temple, a 77-62 triumph at Patriot League contender Bucknell in Lewisburg, Pa., to snap a three-game losing streak, two at the hands of Big Five rivals.
Aleah Nelson, who earlier in the week said the starting losses did not dismay her, had 23 points, fueled by six shots from deep, while Jasha Clinton scored 17 for the Owls (2-4) She was 7-for-11 from the field.
Jaylynn Holmes had nine points off the bench and reserve Caranda Perea scored eight with six rebounds.
Bucknell (2-5) got 16 points from Isabella King, fueled by four shots from beyond the arc, while Cecelia Collins also scored 16, and Remi Sisselman scored 11.
Temple has another road stop this week, heading to Old Dominion at 6:30 p.m. in Norfolk, Va., on ESPN+. Since the two teams met last season here, the Lady Monarchs have moved from Conference-USA to the Sun Belt Conference.
On Saturday the Owls will host UMBC at 3:30 p.m. in the Liacouras Center on ESPN+.
Rutgers Snaps Skid Beating Cornell: Following a tough three-game slide last weekend in the Battle4Atlantis in the Bahamas, the Scarlet Knights returned home in their Jersey Mike’s Arena in Piscataway, N.J., and gained an easy 71-52 triumph over the Big Red (3-4) of the Ivy League.
Rutgers (4-4) controlled the boards 53-30 as Kaylene scored Smikle scored 25 points and grabbed eight rebounds. Awa Sidibe scored 16 and dealt four assists, while Chyna Cornwell had nine points and 16 rebounds. Reserve Abby Streeter scored 12.
“I thought we did a good job of pursuing the ball,” said first-year coach Coquese Washington. “There were a few times where we had two or three of our players fighting over the ball. That’s something we definitely want to use our aggressiveness to come down with the ball and I thought we did that.”
Kaya Ingram and Mia Beam each scored 11 points for Cornell.
As a conference school, Rutgers on Wednesday will travel to Chestnut Hill, Mass., to participate in the annual Big Ten/ACC challenge this week being held Wednesday and Thursday.
Next Sunday, besides hosting conference powerhouse Ohio State, the school will officially dedicate naming the court in honor of retired Hall of Fame coach C. Vivian Stringer.
Princeton Shot Down by Texas: The Tigers returned last season’s Texas visit to Jadwin Gym, venturing into the No. 19 Longhorns’ new Moody Center suffering a 74-50 wipeout.
Star guard Rori Harmon, who had been sidelined with an injury made her season debut for Texas (3-3) and in 22 minutes scored 11 points and shot 4-for-8 from the field.
Sonya Morris scored 15 points, while Taylor Jones had 12 points and ten rebounds, and Aaliyah Moore scored 10.
The Tigers (3-2), whose other loss is a home setback to Villanova, got 15 point from Kaitlyn Chen, while Julia Cunningham scored 10, and Ellie Mitchell grabbed seven rebounds.
Princeton is off until Friday when Carla Berube’s squad travels north to play Maine at 7 p.m.
Lehigh Edged by Quinnipiac While Lafayette Downed by Marist: After losing its opener Saturday to Southern Illinois in its own tourney, Lehigh suffered a tough 67-64 outcome to the Bobcats, the preseason pick of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference.
With 33 seconds left in regulation, Frannie Hottinger got the host Mountain Hawks up by two with a pair of free throws in the third place game.
However, with 16 seconds remaining, Rose Caverly made an old fashioned three point play to put the visitors up 63-62.
Lehigh then missed a shot coming the other way and Jackie Grisdale went to the line for Quinnipiac and sank both opportunities.
Hottinger went back to the line for the Mountain Hawks and was 1-for-2. Quinnipiac then did likewise the other end holding a three-point lead. Rookie Lily Fandre went for the tie from deep but the shot rimmed in and out ending the game at Stabler Arena in Bethlehem, Pa.
“I think we are learning to play versus different styles of defenses, which is exactly what we have scheduled this for,” said Lehigh first-year coach Addie Micir.
Caverly had 15 points for Quinnipiac (3-3) in the third place game of the Christmas City Classic, while Ella O’Donnell scored 14, Cur’Tiera Haywood scored 11, and Mikala Morris scored 10.
Hottinger and Fandre each scored 12 for Lehigh (2-5), while reserve Kayla Van Eps scored 13 off the bench.
In the championship, Kent State beat Southern Illinois, 72-66, as Lindsey Thall scored 20 points for the Golden Flashes (4-2).
Tyranny Brown had 15 points for the Salukis (1-5), who also got 14 points and seven rebounds from Promise Taylor, while Ashley Jones scored 12.
Lehigh next visits Rider at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Broncs’ Alumni Gym in Lawrenceville, N.J.
In the other local in action, a single game, out of the Patriot League’s Lafayette, the Leopards visited Marist in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and stayed competitive for a half before the Red Foxes out of the break launched a 10-2 run and went on to a 52-42 victory.
Jackie Piddock paced nine different scorers for Marist (3-3), collecting 12 points, while Halee Smith of Lafayette (1-6) had a team high 11 points.
The Leopards next host UMBC Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the Kirby Sports Center in Easton, Pa.
Looking ahead to Tuesday, Penn visits La Salle at Tom Gola Arena at 7 p.m. on ESPN+ the Quakers, who are going to be either home or in the general area for a long stretch, playing their third Big Five game at 0-2 so far while the host Explorers will be playing their first.
Right now, Villanova, Saint Joseph’s, and La Salle are the remaining three teams who can still complete the City Series with a 4-0 run for local bragging rights. The Hawks (Penn, Temple) and Wildcats (also Penn, Temple) are each 2-0.
And that’s your local report.
Sunday, November 27, 2022
Whalen and Peck Highlight Five-Member Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2023
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru
The Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame Induction Class of 2023 was announced Sunday afternoon during the Connecticut-Iowa Phil Knight Legacy championship highlighted by the selection of University of Minnesota coach and former WNBA star Lindsay Whalen and former Purdue coach and now ESPN analyst Carolyn Peck.
Also named were Donna Lopiano, former Texas women’s athletics director and chief executive officer of the Women’s Sports Foundation; Referee Lisa Mattingly; and Cathy Boswell, former Illinois State all-American and 1984 member of the first USA Olympic Gold medalist squad.
Whalen, who also starred at her alma mater she now coaches and played on the WNBA multi-championship Minnesota Lynx, was an inductee into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame class in Springfield, Mass., this past September.
She is also an Olympic gold medalist.
Peck was a head coach at Purdue University (1997-99), the WNBA Orlando Miracle (1999-01), and the University of Florida (2002-07) and her 1999 NCAA national championship Boilermakers squad is still is the only Big Ten team to win a title in the sport.
She was the only Black coach to win an NCAA title until Dawn Staley guided South Carolina to its two championships in 2017 and last spring.
Additionally, the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) was named recipient of the Trailblazers of the game award while for the first time since its inception as the Love of the Game Award, the honorees are the Dust Bowl Girls.
Lopiano earned her nod as a contributor; Mattingly as an official; and Boswell as a veteran player.
Though this year’s class seems smaller than recent seasons, the organization bylaws allow a 4-7 class size each year. Several sources confirmed this will be the smallest class since the reduction to groups of six or seven following the mass sizes honored in the early years of the ceremony.
The Love of the Game Award was created in 2015 in memory and awarded to the late Lauren Hill, the Mount St. Joseph’s player, whose story captured the nation’s attention the previous winter.
Diagnosed just prior to her freshman season with pediatric brain cancer and given a short life span she was able to play in her team’s first game in front of a sellout crowd of 10,000 in Xavier’s Cintas Center in Cincinnati where the game was moved to accommodate the ticket demand.
At halftime she received the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) Pat Summitt Most Courageous Award.
Summitt, the late legendary Tennessee coach herself battling Alzheimer’s Disease at the time, made a surprise appearance to help with the presentation.
At the height of the Great Depression, Sam Babb, the charismatic basketball coach of tiny Oklahoma Presbyterian College, began dreaming. Like so many others, he wanted a reason to have hope.
Traveling from farm to farm, he recruited talented, hardworking young women and offered them a chance at a better life: a free college education if they would come play for his basketball team, the Cardinals.
Despite their fears of leaving home and the sacrifices that would be faced by their families, the women followed Babb and his dream.
He shaped the Cardinals into a formidable team, and something extraordinary began to happen. With passion for the game and heartfelt loyalty to one another and their coach, they won every game.
The team’s improbable journey leads to an epic showdown with the prevailing national champions, helmed by the legendary Babe Didrikson.
DUST BOWL GIRLS captures a moment in American history when female athletes faced incredible scrutiny, and when a struggling nation most needed inspiration and hope.
Through sacrifice, determination, teamwork, and heart, this unlikely group led by a resourceful coach beat the odds, achieving much more than a championship season.
This year the induction ceremony in Knoxville, Tenn., the home of the WBHOF, has been moved up from what has been an early June weekend date to April 29, allowing greater attendance from WNBA individuals who in the past have had difficult attending due to conflicts with the season schedule.national champions, helmed by the legendary Babe Didrikso