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.

Monday, September 30, 2024

The Guru’s WNBA Report: New York Tops Las Vegas While Connecticut Upsets Minnesota in Best-of-Five Semifinals Openers

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

With Caitlin Clark’s sensational rookie season and its myriad of records now in the rear-view mirror in the wake of the Indiana Fever’s 2-0 elimination, the WNBA opened semifinal play Sunday in the two best-of-five series with suspense ahead the rest of the way.

Holding home court advantage the top-seed New York Liberty began its revenge tour in the afternoon bill on the two-time defending champion and fourth seed Las Vegas Aces by taking a big lead early and then turning aside a late rally to go up 1-0 with an 87-77 victory at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

Then Sunday night the perfect string of 2-0 home court victories from the four opening rounds plus the Liberty win over the Aces got stuffed in stunning style by the third-seed Connecticut Sun winning 73-70 over the second-seed Minnesota Lynx in the Target Center in Minneapolis, ruining a celebratory day earlier with the Lynx headlining the latest set of postseason awards voted by the WNBA national media panel.

Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve, the La Salle grad from South Jersey who earlier this month was similarly honored by the Associated Press was named Coach of the Year while a separate panel of the team front office leaders named her Basketball Executive of the Year.

The coaching honor sets a record for Reeve, the gold-medal winning USA Olympic coach in Paris in August, with her fourth award, snapping a tie with Van Chancellor (1997-99) and Mike Thibault (2006, 2008, 2013).

Reeve, who has won four WNBA crowns with Minnesota, won in 2011, 2016 and 2020.

She also joins Dan Padover as a two-team winner of the executive award.

Lynx forward and former UConn star Napheesa Collier, also on the Olympians, was named defensive player of the year in the voting completed at the end of the regular season though her headlines in the 2-0 first-round sweep of Phoenix occurred with 38 points and then tying a playoff record with 42.

Collier was joined on the all-defensive first team by the Aces’ A’ja Wilson, the unanimous choice for MVP; Seattle’s Ezi Magbegor, the Connecticut Sun’s DiJonai Carrington, and New York’s Breanna Stewart, a former UConn standout who joined the Liberty from Seattle last season.

Broomall and Saint Joseph’s alum Natasha Cloud, who joined Phoenix from Washington this season, was named to the second team along with Seattle and former Stanford star Nneka Ogwumike, Connecticut’s Alyssa Thomas, the Maryland alum out of Harrisburg; New York’s Jonquel Jones, who played at George Washington; and Minnesota’s Alanna Smith, another former Stanford star.

Stewart Leads New York Over ‘Vegas

In New York’s win Stewart had 34 points, while former Oregon star Sabrina Ionescu had had 21, and Jones double doubled with 13 points and 12 boards.

Wilson scored 21 for the visitors but was held to six boards; Kelsey Plum, who held the NCAA Division I women’s career scoring record at Washington broken by Clark last winter at Iowa, led the Aces with 24 and former Notre Dame standout Jackie Young scored 17.

Stewart, last season’s MVP ahead of the finals, spoke of how she wasn’t her best last year when New York fell 3-1 in the title round.

“I think I've just kind of grown from it, had a lot of time to reflect on it,” she said. “How can I be better. How to handle things collectively better. I don't forget who I am and what I can do. That wasn't my most proudest, but I'll continue to be better now.”

Game 2 in Brooklyn is Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m. on ESPN2, followed by the Lynx-Sun game at 9:30 p.m. on the same platform.

The series both shift to Connecticut and Vegas Sunday, times and platforms to be determined.

“Do or die, you have to win Game 2,” said Vegas coach Becky Hammon. “No other way around it.”

New York won all three Vegas games this past summer opposed to a year ago when the Liberty started West at 0-2 and could not fully bounce back though they took Game 3.

In this one they jumped to a 28-21 lead after one quarter then fell to just three up before taking a 10-point lead to the break, with Stewart already collecting 20 points.

“I think I wanted to come out and set the tone, be aggressive and take what the defense was giving me,” she said.

The Liberty rolled to a 62-44 advantage in the third before being slimmed by the Aces, coming within six.

But New York would not break in front of its sellout crowd in a series first where the previous season’s finalists met in the semifinals.

Connecticut Opens Upsetting Minnesota

New York, one of the original eight charter teams, has never won a title. Neither has Connecticut, which came along as Orlando a few years later before the Mohegan tribe purchased the franchise in 2003.

It’s a long way to go yet before there’s the chance the two could turn the final into a Northeast Amtrak series but after the Liberty prevailed the Sun followed up against Minnesota.

Marina Mabrey, who came to the Sun from the Chicago Sky in a mid-summer deal, had 20 points, while Thomas had a near triple-double with 17 points, 10 rebounds, and nine assists.

Carrington had 13 points, while Bonner had 10 points and 11 caroms.

Defensively, the visitors held Collier to 19 points and nine rebounds, while Carleton had 13 and Kayla McBride scored 12.

Carleton shook off the loss.

“It's a long series for a reason. We have all the faith in the world that will perform better on Tuesday night and hopefully come out with a win,” she said.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Thursday, September 26, 2024

Guru’s WNBA Report: Opening Series Sweeps Completed as Connecticut Tops Indiana Ending Clark’s Rookie Season While Minnesota Finishes Phoenix and Likely Taurasi

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

The low seeds never got to return home in all four opening rounds as the WNBA play completed Wednesday night with the third-seed Connecticut Sun in Uncasville edging the sixth-seed Indiana Fever 87-71 and are heading to their sixth-straight semifinals, which expand to best-of-5 series and stays in that format for the title round.

The second-seed Minnesota Lynx likely brought and end to the 20-year storied career of Diana Taurasi by beating the seventh-seeded Phoenix Mercury 101-88 in Minneapolis as former UConn star Napheesa Collier bested her 38-point performance in Sunday’s opener by tying a postseason record with 42.

The wins followed Tuesday’s 2-0 close outs by the top-seeded New York Liberty over the eighth-seed Atlanta Dream and the fourth-seed and two-time defending champion Las Vegas Aces over the fifth-seed Seattle Storm.

On Sunday, the Liberty will begin seeking revenge for last season’s 3-1 championship round loss to Las Vegas hosting the first of two games in the Barclay Center in Brooklyn at 3 p.m. on ABC while Minnesota will host Connecticut in the first of two at the Target Center at 8:30 p.m. on ESPN.

Tuesday’s Game 2 times and viewing platforms aren’t posted yet but next Friday’s potential clinchers when the sites switch to the other cities, if teams started 2-0, will air on ESPN2.

Connecticut Turns Indiana Aside and Out

Olympian and Maryland alum Alyssa Thomas out of Harrisburg was at it again Wednesday night at the Mohegan Sun Arena in this one scoring 19 points and dealing 13 assists to lead Connecticut to its first 2-0 opener round in three tries without having to close out on the road after the league changed the format in 2022.

"Finally locked in and took advantage of home court advantage,“ said Thomas, who had a triple-double Sunday in her previous game. “We’re ready. Tested tonight and it wasn’t pretty, but that’s the nature of playoffs.

“We pulled out a gutsy win. We are hungry and ready. We’re ready for what the playoff journey is going to unfold.“

Clark, who was controlled in her playoffs debut Sunday, improved with 25 points and nine assists but not enough for the folks to see her at least one more time in uniform back in the Midwest.

“ Obviously, it’s a tough one,” she said. “Especially as we climbed all the way back in and just to have our opportunities late.”

Aliyah Boston, last season’s No. 1 overall pick, coming out of South Carolina, had 16 points and 19 rebounds. She gave Indiana fans new hope on a layup with 2:05 left in regulation for a 77-75 lead that was short-lived when DeWanna Bonner scored from deep to regain the lead.

Bonner, out of Auburn, tied a league playoff record held by former Lynx and previously Sun star Lindsey Whalen with her 82nd postseason appearance.

A few possessions later Marina Mabrey, who came to the Sun in a midseason deal with Chicago, fired a three, Kelsey Mitchell missed on the Fever’s next possession, and Connecticut wrapped it up in the final minute on the foul line.

Indiana jumped to a 14-6 lead in the game but the Sun went up with  the last 11 points of the first quarter to move ahead by three. 

Clark has been non-stop in the center of the sport dating to a year ago selling out Iowa’s football stadium outdoors to a record crowd in a preseason game with DePaul and then became the centerpiece in the college run to a return to the NCAA title game pulverizing every scoring record while also drawing explosive numbers from TV viewers and in-arena attendance wherever she played.

She has not said if she’ll play in the new winter league in January being started by New York’s Breanna Stewart and Minnesota’s Collier to play the month in Florida or the recent other startup that will compete in February.

 TV could be expected to grab her for broadcast work when the collegiate season returns in November.

Iowa on Wednesday even with Clark gone announced another season ticket sellout where former Villanova star Lucy Olsen transferred after the season.

Minnesota Win Keeps Reeve on Track to Add Another Title to her Olympic Coaching Gold Medal

After leading USA to its eighth straight Olympic gold in Paris in August former La Salle star Cheryl Reeve remains in the hunt for a fifth WNBA crown following Wednesday’s win over Phoenix.

Napheesa Collier matched the 42-point single game playoff record held by New York’s Breanna Stewart previously playing for Seattle and Angel McCoughtry.

Coupled with Sunday’s performance Collier became the first WNBA player gaining at least 38 points in consecutive games.

Kayla McBride added 15 points, while Bridget Carlton and Alanna Smith scored 12, just a point ahead of 11 from Courtney Williams.

Phoenix got 24 from Brittney Griner while Taurasi fouled out after her 10th point with 2:34 left in regulation as the Minnesota fans gave her a standing ovation.

Taurasi, who earned a record sixth Olympic gold in Paris, has not formally said this is it but Phoenix held a special night for her at the last Mercury home game on Thursday.

Collier scored a third-straight over 30 that is dating to last season’s loss to Connecticut, tying Las Vegas’ A’ja Wilson, this season’s MVP in separate unanimous votes by the Associated Press and league’s nation awards media panel.






















Wednesday, September 25, 2024

The Guru Collegiate Report: Start Your Local Big Five Women’s Planning for the Front End of the Season

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PHILADELPHIA - Though it’s only a few days from another local baseball Phillies Redoctober, here in Guru land it also means the annual personal Dreadoctober is setting in once more.

That’s when also the behind-the-scenes prep things get done such as building the master local/national collegiate schedule to guide day-to-day cover, attend media preview days, because of the lateness of the WNBA overall season conclusion caused by the break for the Olympics, it also means an overlap of the semifinals and finals to occur the next few weeks.

There’s also the prep function for running the women’s board of USBWA - the national collegiate basketball writers and sitting on the board of the Phila. Sportswriters Association planning the big dinner which will be Thursday, Jan. 16, over at the usual Doubletree at Hilton on Route 70 across the river in Cherry Hill in South Jersey. Tickets are on sale.

The colleges have their act together much earlier now in terms of playing dates, some even have their tip times ready.

So since this season could be even better than last winter - yes even without Caitlin Clark around at Iowa having graduated into the pros.

Off the local websites for starters here’s a composite team by team of the Big 5, which now has the Drexel women officially on board as they too migrate to the pod setup leading to the Women’s Classic, Friday, Dec. 6, at Villanova, the day before men’s Classic at the Wells Fargo Center.

We’ll be back with more detail as we get closer - not all the non-conference nights are here but the schools have them - the addition of our regional side - Princeton, Rider, Penn State, Rutgers, Delaware, Lehigh, and Lafayette.

And this season locally, the Guru is partnering with Aaron Bracy, who has already started writing some men’s teasers over at Big 5 Hoops.com.

So for now here’s your local schedule with everyone’s key non-conference dates home and away with some commentary.

Big Five Women’s (Mostly) Non-Conference Highlights

 

Drexel

Nov. 7 Thurs. vs. Marist – season and home opener play a MAAC power.

Nov. 13 Wed vs. La Salle – first official Big Five game for Dragons

Nov. 20 Wed vs. UC Irvine – Anteaters make neighborhood swing playing at Penn next night

Nov. 23 Sat at Temple – will complete pod play for Big Five classic for home team

Nov. 27 Wed at Penn State – visiting Big Ten budding power

Dec. 4 Wed vs. Lehigh – second local visit to city for the Patriot contender from Bethlehem

Dec. 6 Friday – Big 5 Classic at Villanova

Dec. 15 Sun – at Florida State visiting an ACC power

Jan. 3 Friday – CAA opener vs. longtime rival Delaware which is heading to C-USA in 2005.

 

La Salle

Nov. 4 Mon at Maine – season opener

Nov. 9 Sat vs. Delaware -home opener

Nov. 13 Wed at Drexel — ongoing rivalry, first official Big 5 in series

Nov. 17 Sun at Virginia — visit to an ACC member

Nov. 20 Wed vs. Rider — area rival from the MAAC

Nov. 26 Tues vs. Lehigh – area rival from the Patriot

Dec. 1 Sun vs Temple – second of two pod games for the Explorers

Dec. 6 Friday – Big 5 Classic at Villanova

Dec. 17 Tues at Texas — very high Quad 1 game against a national power

Dec. 20/21 Fri meets Northern Kentucky at UC San Diego Tourney

Meets host team second day.

 

Penn

Nov. 8 Fri vs. Merrimack – season and home opener at The Palestra

Nov. 10 Sun at Maine like La Salle a week earlier visiting an America East contender

Nov. 15 Fri vs. Saint Joseph’s – First Big 5 pod game at The Palestra

Nov. 20 Wed at Villanova – completes Big 5 pod play

Nov. 21 Thurs vs. UC Irvine – Anteaters finish swing after visit to Drexel previous night

Nov. 26 Tues vs. Immaculata — playing a great in the area from yesteryear.

Nov. 29-30 Fri/Sat playing Chattanooga and Cal Baptist in Fla. Gulf Coast’s tourney

Dec. 6 Fri – Big Five Classic at Villanova

Dec. 30 Mon – at Arizona State newly moved to the Big 12 from PAC-12

Jan. 4 Sat vs. Columbia – Ivy opener against defending regular season co-champs

 

Saint Joseph’s

Nov. 6 Wed vs Goldey-Beacom – season and home opener against area D-3 team

Nov. 10 Sun at Syracuse — visit to an ACC contender

Nov. 15 at Penn – first Big 5 pod game

Nov. 20 Wed at Southern Utah — a swing to the Rockies

Nov. 22 Fri at Utah — The PAC-12 national power of last year now in the Big 12

Dec. 1 Sun vs. Villanova – ends pod play involving Hawks with Cats and Penn

Dec. 6 Fri — Big Five Classic at Villanova

Dec. 9 Mon vs Maine — visit from America East Power

Dec. 20/21 Fri/Sun Hawk Classic — vs. Howard then either Northwestern or Charleston

 

Temple

Nov. 4 Mon vs. Richmond — home and season opener against A-10 defending champs

Nov. 12 Tue at Delaware – returning last season’s visit from down in Newark

Nov. 15 Fri at VCU visit to another A-10 power

Nov. 19 Tue at Georgetown – trip to a Big East up and comer

Nov. 23 Sat vs. Drexel - first Big 5 pod game for the Owls

Nov. 26 Tue vs. Princeton – hosting Ivy champs and regular season co-champs

Dec. 1 Sun at La Salle – sets Big 5 pod standings involving Dragons, Owls and Explorers

Dec. 6 Fri – Big Five Classic at Villanova

Dec.  14 Sat vs. West Virginia – a Big 12 power that years ago was in the Big East and A-10

Dec. 21/22 Sat-Sun Raising B.A.R tourney playing Xavier then Fordham or host Cal.

 

Villanova

Nov. 10 Sun vs. Wake Forest – return visit from ACC school for ‘Cats season/home opener

Nov. 13 Wed at Princeton – visit to Ivy tourney champs and regular season co-champs

Nov. 16 Sat vs. Columbia - and quickly host the Ivy regular season co-champs

Nov. 20 Wed vs. Penn – First Big 5 pod game

Nov. 23-24 Sat/Sun – meet Texas A&M and either UNC or Ball State at Battle 4 Atlantis

Dec. 1 Sun at Saint Joseph’s – completes Cats, Penn, and Hawks pod standings

Dec. 6 Fri – hosts Big 5 Classic

Dec. 8 Sun at Fairfield — visiting defending MAAC champs

Dec. 11 Wed at Delaware — near neighborhood rivalry

Dec. 15 vs. James Madison — former CAA power now in the Sun Belt

 

Big Five Breakout Format

Pod Groups – Saint Joseph’s, Villanova, Penn; Drexel, La Salle, Temple

 

Nov. 13 Wed– La Salle at Drexel

Nov. 15 Fri – Saint Joseph’s at Penn

Nov. 20 Wed – Penn at Villanova

Nov. 23 Sat – Drexel at Temple

Dec 1 Sun 2 p.m. - Villanova at Saint Joseph’s

Dec 1 Sun (Time TBA) - Temple at La Salle

Dec 6 Fri – Big 5 Classic at Villanova 5th, 3rd, and 1st Place

 



The Guru’s WNBA Report: New York and Las Vegas Complete 2-0 Sweep into the Semifinals: Los Angeles Ousts Curt Miller

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

A season after the Las Vegas Aces blunted the New York Liberty in Brooklyn for a 3-1 series sweep to repeat as consecutive champions in the WNBA, keeping one of the few survivors of the original eight charter teams from 1997 still without ever lifting the holy grail, the two talent-loaded teams are set to lock horns again, but it will be in a semifinals best-of-five with New York as the top seed and Las Vegas as the four.

The two underdogs Tuesday night went down fighting but the record books now contain New York with a 91-82 win over the eighth-seeded Atlanta Dream who had an extended stay up North having clinched the final playoff spot Thursday on the final night of the regular season by beating the Liberty.

Out West, the host Aces turned aside the fifth seeded Seattle Storm 83-76.

The fight for the other two semifinals slots will continue Wednesday night in must-see viewing on ESPN where the signature rookie of the league’s future in former Iowa sensation Caitlin Clark will try to  extend the sixth-seeded Indiana Fever to an upset of the third-seeded Connecticut Sun and a trip back to Indianapolis Friday night while at the second-seeded Minnesota Lynx in Minneapolis the signature star among some others of the same ilk in the 28-year glorious past history of the WNBA in former UConn great Diana Taurasi, the all-time career scorer likely heading to retirement, will try to keep the seventh seeded Phoenix Mercury alive for a Friday night trip back to the Arizona desert.

And off-court news continued a day after Indiana’s Kelly Krauskopf, who had been in the NBA-brother Pacers front office, was announced she will return as president of basketball and business operations once the Fever season ends. the Los Angeles Sparks, which finished last, parted ways with coach Curt Miller after his arrival two seasons ago from success but no titles with the Sun.

More on that in a bit.

Ionescu Lights Up New York

As for Tuesday’s action first, at the soldout Barclays Center in Brooklyn, Olympian and former Oregon star Sabrina Ionescu, a past overall No. 1 pick, tied a franchise playoff record with 36 points for New York, which loaded its roster a season ago to join Las Vegas as a designated super team. The other mark is held by former Rutgers star Cappie Pondexter.

“The ultimate goal is what it is,” she said. ‘But you know, it’s every single game is a championship game to get to the final goal.

“And obviously our goal is to not lose at home. So this was really important for us to come out, take these two and have a couple days off and kind of rest, recharge and get ready for whatever it is we’re going to play.”

Jonquel Jones, a former George Washington star whose Temple coach Diane Richardson is her guardian, had 20 points and 13 rebounds. She came as a free agent from Connecticut last season.

The New York/Las Vegas series opens in Brooklyn Sunday and Game 2 stays in the East before moving to Sin City.

The Liberty were up by a point starting the fourth quarter, and then Courtney Vandersloot, another 2003 superstar addition, upped it to 75-72 with 5:41 left in regulation, sparking a 12-2 run to douse Atlanta hopes.

Olympian and former UConn standout Breanna Stewart, yet another talent great who came back East from Seattle in 2003, did go through a drought from the second quarter to the third in this one.

‘ I don’t think it was any theme they did different,“ Rhyne Howard said of the late N.Y. outburst. “We fought pretty hard, laid it out there. ‘Coach (former Penn State star Tanisha Wright) told us to not go home with any regrets and we did that.” 

Gray had 26 points for the dream, and Howard, a member of the 3 x 3 USA Olympic contingent in Paris, had 19 points.

Aces Prevail

Las Vegas, which returned to form late in the season, is looking to become the first three-peat since the former Houston Comets won the league’s first four crowns (1997-2000).

Kelsey Plum, an Olympian and former University of Washington star who held the NCAA career scoring record for Division I women until Indiana’s Clark destroyed it last winter, had 29 points for Las Vegas, while also Olympic teammate and former South Carolina star, the league’s unanimous 2004 NVP, had 24 points and 13 rebounds.

Clark passed former greats Tamika Catchings and Candace Parker setting a WNBA playoff record with 20-plus points and at least 10 boards in 13 career games in the postseason.

Seattle was alive with its first lead early in the fourth quarter and then the Aces went on a 7-0 run.

Olympian Chelsea Gray had 12 points for Vegas, whose Plum was 11-15 from the field.

Seattle’s Gabby Williams, the former UConn star who joined the Storm after starring for France in the games in Paris, scored 20, Nneka Ogwumike, a past Stanford great, had 16 points and 10 rebounds, while Ezi Magbegor scored 14, and former Notre Dame great Skylar Diggins-Smith had 13.

LA. Fires Miller

A slew of injuries, including a season-ender early to former Stanford Cameron Brink, sent the Sparks to the worst record in the league and while that gives the team the best shot at landing UConn star Paige Bueckers, Magic Johnson, yes that one, pulled the trigger on Curt Miller, who was one of Cheryl Reeve’s assistants on the Olympics.

Names being speculated in media reporting are former WNBA and Olympic star Katie Smith, an assistant in Minnesota and past New York coach; Dallas Aide Brandi Poole, and Seattle assistant Pokey Chatman, a past Chicago head coach.

But just as the Washington Mystics benefitted years ago off the surprise dismissal of Mike Thibault from the Connecticut Sun, Miller is now a nice catch for the new Golden State Valkyries, coming online next summer, or the new Portland and Toronto groups, which become active in 2026.