|
Women's Basketball
Irish Battle Bearcats In Cincinnati
Feb. 24, 2006
Complete Release in PDF Format
2005-06 ND Women's Basketball: Game 26
Storylines
Now that its place in next week's BIG EAST Championship is secure, Notre Dame looks to improve on its current No. 11 seed when it travels to Cincinnati Saturday for a 2 p.m. (ET) contest with the Bearcats. The Irish will be facing UC for the first time in more than 14 years and just the second time overall. Notre Dame (15-10, 6-8 BIG EAST) put together one of its best halves of the year Wednesday at West Virginia, shooting 62.1 percent from the floor in the final 20 minutes to surge past the Mountaineers, 70-58. The Irish also rang up a season-high 46 second-half points and made a season-best seven three-pointers in the game. For the seventh consecutive game, Notre Dame had three double-figure scorers, led by senior All-America guard Megan Duffy (22 points). Sophomore guard Charel Allen and junior forward Crystal Erwin came off the bench to add 12 and 10 points, respectively. Rankings Web Sites Setting The Standard In its history, Notre Dame has developed eight All-Americans, eight WNBA players (including five draft picks in the past five years) and four USA Basketball veterans (eight medals won). Now in their 29th season in 2005-06, the Irish own an all-time record of 590-264 (.691). Notre Dame Head Coach Muffet McGraw NOTES A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish In some ways, that philosophy would be appropriate when it comes to describing the 2005-06 season for Notre Dame. Despite losing two of their top three scorers and two primary rebounders from a year ago, the Irish bolted to a 9-1 record, highlighted by two wins over Top 25 teams (USC and Utah) as well as the championship at the Duel in the Desert in Las Vegas. Since that time, Notre Dame has seen its fortunes turn south, losing nine of its last 15 games, including the program's first three-game losing streaks in eight seasons. However, the Irish also did log an key third win over a ranked opponent (78-75 vs. #10 DePaul on Jan. 17) and were ranked in every AP and ESPN/USA Today coaches' poll for the first two months of the season. One of the critical elements for the Irish to be successful this season has been offensive balance. On 19 occasions (including each of the past seven games), Notre Dame has had at least three players scoring in double figures (going 13-6), and eight separate players have cracked double digits at least twice this year. Additionally, six different players have led the team in scoring at some point. The Irish also have the benefit of strong leadership in senior All-America point guard and two-year team captain Megan Duffy. The 5-foot-7 Dayton, Ohio, native spent last summer as a co-captain and starter on the United States World University Games Team that rolled to the gold medal with a 7-0 record. Duffy directed an American offense that averaged 97.4 points per game and set a USA World University Games record with a scoring margin of +43.1 ppg. Back stateside, Duffy continues to make improvements in her game each night out and has been a strong all-around contributor and leader for Notre Dame once again this year. The veteran floor general is averaging a team-best 15.6 points, 4.24 assists and 2.08 steals per game, with a 1.77 assist/turnover ratio, ranking among the top 10 in the BIG EAST in all four categories. In addition, she leads the league and ranks 11th in the nation in foul shooting (.887). She also has led the team in scoring 13 times and in assists 18 times this year. Among her many honors this year, Duffy is one of 11 nominees for the Nancy Lieberman Award (top point guard in the nation), a mid-season candidate for the Naismith Trophy, a first-team academic all-district honoree, a BIG EAST Player of the Week selection (Jan. 23), a three-time BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll choice, and was named to the Duel in the Desert (Gray Division) All-Tournament Team. She has scored in double figures in her last 10 games, the longest such streak of her career. Freshman guard Lindsay Schrader has shown tremendous promise in her first season with the Irish. The former McDonald's All-American already has been named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week once (Nov. 21) after turning in an impressive 10-point, 14-rebound effort in her debut outing against Michigan, becoming just the second player in school history (first since 1979) to record a double-double in her first game. She also earned a spot on the Dec. 5 BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll, the first freshman to appear on that list this season. Schrader is second on the team in scoring (9.4 ppg.) and tops in rebounding (5.6 rpg.), and has scored in double figures four times in the past seven games (11.6 ppg. in that time), including a season-high 24 points at Syracuse on Jan. 31. Sophomore guard Charel Allen and senior forward Courtney LaVere also have shown signs of being dependable options for the Irish. Allen ranks third on the team in scoring (8.5 ppg.), with LaVere fourth (8.3 ppg.), while Allen is third in rebounding (4.4 rpg.), and LaVere is tops in both field goal percentage (.503) and blocks (1.36 bpg.), fifth in the BIG EAST in the latter category. LaVere was named to the BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll on Feb. 6, and both players have come alive in recent games. Allen is on a run of five consecutive double-figure scoring games, averaging 12.6 ppg. in that stretch. Meanwhile, LaVere has four double-digit games in her last six, scoring 10.8 ppg. in that period. Potent Notables About The Fighting Irish A Quick Look At Cincinnati The Bearcats (17-8, 7-7) looked particularly sharp during the non-conference season, winning 10 of 11 games, with only a loss at crosstown rival Xavier dotting their resume. Since opening its inaugural BIG EAST campaign, Cincinnati has had mixed success, registering impressive wins over South Florida (89-87) and Louisville (76-65), but also going through a pair of three-game conference losing streaks. The bulk of UC's progress has come at home, where the Bearcats are 12-3 this season. Cincinnati is in the midst of a three-game winning streak following a 63-47 victory at Georgetown on Tuesday night. Junior sharpshooter Karen Twehues came off the bench to score a game-high 19 points for the Bearcats, knocking down 7 of 11 shots, including 5-of-8 three-pointers. Senior center Anne Stephens tacked on 12 points for UC, which led comfortably most of the way after spotting the Hoyas an early four-point lead. The Bearcats also capitalized on a 42-28 rebounding edge, including 20 offensive caroms and 25 second-chance points. Junior guard Treasure Humphries leads a balanced Cincinnati offensive attack with 12.8 points per game, while also setting the pace in assists (3.76 apg.) and steals (2.36 spg.), ranking third in the BIG EAST in the latter department. Freshman guard/forward Shelly Bellman, a two-time BIG EAST Freshman of the Week selection (including the reigning choice), is averaging 10.6 points per game and a team-high 6.1 rebounds per game. Twehues also can't be overlooked, as she owns a team-best .463 three-point percentage and a .500 mark in BIG EAST games (leading the conference). Head coach Laurie Pirtle has been the face of Cincinnati basketball for two decades, owning a 295-283 (.510) record in the Queen City. Pirtle started her coaching career with a four-year stint at Division III power Capital (based in Bexley, Ohio), and has amassed a career record of 378-299 (.558) in 24 seasons on the sidelines. However, Saturday will mark her first-ever meeting with Notre Dame. The Notre Dame-Cincinnati Series Other Notre Dame-CincinnatiSeries Tidbits The Last Time Notre Dame And Cincinnati Met Mary Beth Schueth scored 17 points and Laura Dougherty came off the bench to add 15 points as Notre Dame posted a 67-58 victory over Cincinnati on Feb. 13, 1982 at the Joyce Center. Schueth and Dougherty combined to go 12-of-20 from the field, highlighted a .587 team field goal percentage for the Irish. Schueth tacked on eight rebounds, Dougherty had a team-best six assists and five steals, and Shari Matvey almost recorded a double-double for the hosts, finishing with 10 points and a game-best nine rebounds. Joy Roberts led Cincinnati with 16 points and Cheryl Cook chipped in with 10 points in a reserve role. The Bearcats also shot well from the floor in the contest, connecting at a .482 clip. UC had control for much of the first half, opening up a 22-14 lead on a driving layup by Deona Jennings with 6:11 left in the period. However, Notre Dame responded with a 19-7 run to close out the frame and take a four-point lead to the locker room. The Irish continued their surge in the opening five minutes of the second half, scoring 12 of the first 16 points (a combined 31-11 run between periods) and taking a 45-33 lead when Schueth converted off a pass from Ruth Kaiser at the 13:39 mark. Cincinnati then made a charge of its own with a 19-10 rally, punctuated by Barb Jaksa's layup that made it 55-52, Notre Dame with 5:04 remaining. But, Dougherty answered with a pair of long jumpers on the next two Irish possessions and UC could not get closer than five points the rest of the way. Welcome To The Family This season, the Irish are 2-2 in the first time around with the five new BIG EAST Conference members. On Jan. 10, Notre Dame outlasted Marquette, 67-65 in overtime at the Joyce Center behind a career-high 32 points and the game-winning layup at the OT horn by senior guard Megan Duffy. Four days later, Louisville claimed its aforementioned win at Freedom Hall. Notre Dame came back on Jan. 17 with a 78-75 victory over No. 10 DePaul at the Joyce Center, before bowing to South Florida at home in overtime, 68-64 on Jan. 28. Don't Count Us Out In 13 games this season, Notre Dame has used a significant second-half run to either take control or battle back into contention. Included in that total are four games against Top 25 opponents (USC, Utah, Tennessee and DePaul), with three of those second-half charges leading to Irish wins (all but Tennessee). What's more, six times the Irish have been tied or trailed at some point in the final 11 minutes, but on the strength of their second-half run, they rallied to take the win. Spine-Chiller Supremes Packing For Hartford With two games left in the regular season, still none of the 12 tourney seeds have been locked up. The Irish are one game behind a three-way logjam at 7-7 (Cincinnati, South Florida and Villanova) and two games behind 8-6 Louisville and Marquette. Notre Dame can finish no lower than the No. 11 seed, since the only team that can tie them for 11th place (West Virginia) would lose a tiebreak to the Irish by virtue of Notre Dame's win in Morgantown Wednesday night. They Say It's Your Birthday A History Lesson Duffy joins Karen Robinson (1987-91), Krissi Davis (1987-91), Katryna Gaither (1993-97) and Niele Ivey (1996-2001) as the only Irish players in that elite 1,000-point/200-steal club. What's more, Duffy has 482 career assists, putting her just 18 handouts short of pairing with Robinson and Ivey as the only Notre Dame players ever to amass 1,000 points, 500 assists and 200 steals in their careers. Among The Best In The Business The award is named after Hall of Famer and two-time Wade Trophy winner Nancy Lieberman, who guided Old Dominion to the 1978 and 1980 AIAW national titles and now serves as a broadcaster for ESPN. The trophy goes to the player who possesses the floor leadership, play-making and ball-handling skills that personified Lieberman during her career. Duffy also is one of 30 players who have been designated as mid-season candidates for the Naismith Trophy, it was announced Feb. 17 by the Atlanta Tipoff Club. The award is presented annually to the nation's top women's college basketball player, with the top 30 mid-season candidates chosen from a preseason group of 50 based upon player performance during the season. More Than A Passing Grade For Duffy Duffy currently holds a 3.555 cumulative grade-point average in the College of Arts and Letters, where she is pursuing a double major in psychology and computer applications. She has earned Dean's List honors in each of the past four semesters, including a 3.917 GPA in the spring 2005 term and a 3.821 GPA in the recently-completed fall 2005 semester. When The Game Is On The LineŠ Leading the way are junior forward Crystal Erwin, who made her only two late-game free throws of the year with 41 seconds left in regulation Jan. 28 vs. USF, and senior guard Megan Duffy, who has made 30 of 32 foul shots (.938) in crunch time. Game #25 Recap: West Virginia Duffy missed a good portion of the first half with a rare bout of foul trouble, but when she returned to the court, she was sensational, knocking down 5-of-7 shots, including 4-of-6 three-pointers in the final 20 minutes. Sophomore guard Charel Allen came off the bench to score 12 points, playing in front of a hearty band of supporters who made the hour-long drive south from her hometown of Monessen, Pa. Junior forward Crystal Erwin also provided strong support as a reserve with 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting. Chakhia Cole led three West Virginia players in double figures with 16 points. Olayinka Sanni and LaQuita Owens each tossed in 12 points for the Mountaineers, who dropped their sixth consecutive game and seventh in the past eight outings. The difference for Notre Dame in Wednesday's contest was its second-half performance. As a team, the Irish shot 62.1 percent from the floor (18-of-29) in the final stanza and posted their highest scoring half of the season with 46 points. In addition, Notre Dame's defense rose up and held West Virginia to one field goal over an eight-minute stretch late in the period, going on a 15-5 run during that same span to pull away for the victory. The Irish found themselves trailing for a large portion of the first half, falling behind by as many as nine points when WVU's Britney Davis-White canned two free throws to give her team a 19-10 lead with nine minutes left in the period. However, Notre Dame responded with a 10-0 run of its own, capped by a three-pointers from junior guard Breona Gray at the 5:20 mark. The teams traded baskets before Cole scored six of the Mountaineers' last seven points and helped give West Virginia a 28-24 halftime lead. That margin lasted all of 64 seconds in the second half, as senior forward Courtney LaVere hit a transition layup and Duffy followed with the opening salvo in her three-point barrage to put Notre Dame in front, 29-28. From there, the lead changed hands three times and the game was tied twice, with WVU going ahead for the final time when Sarah Bucar made a layup and was fouled by Gray with 13:22 left. But, Bucar missed her foul shot, Allen answered four seconds later with a three-pointer and the Irish never trailed again. Noting The West Virginia Win Duffy, LaVere Join ND 1,000-Point Club Duffy currently has 1,211 career points, good for 15th on the Irish career scoring chart. LaVere is 19th all-time with 1,092 points. The Duffy-LaVere 1,000-point tandem marks just the fifth time in school history have teammates reached the 1,000-point plateau in the same season, with Niele Ivey and Kelley Siemon the last to do so in 2000-01. Duffy and LaVere also have recorded the shortest span between hitting the mark (three games). The previous school record was eight games, the term between Mary Beth Schueth and Carrie Bates scoring their 1,000th points in the 1984-85 season. Peaking When It Counts In the 19-year Muffet McGraw era (1987-present), the Irish are 111-32 (.776) in the month of February, including a 58-9 (.866) home record. In that time, Notre Dame has not had a losing February, and only once did the Irish end the month at .500 (4-4 in 1988-89, McGraw's second season in South Bend). Give Her Five (Hundred) Here's a closer look at how that milestone victory breaks down for McGraw: Half And Half The Best Offense Is A Good DefenseŠ ...But Sometimes You Have To Score If You Want To Win Sweet Success The Gold Standard Now That's A Home Court Advantage The Irish have been particularly strong when it comes to non-conference games at home, winning 57 of their last 61 non-BIG EAST contests (.934) at the Joyce Center, dating back to the 1994-95 season. The only three losses in that span all came at the hands of Big Ten Conference opponents - Wisconsin in 1996 (81-69), Purdue in 2003 (71-54) and Michigan State in 2004 (82-73 OT). The Purdue loss snapped a 33-game non-conference home winning streak which began after the UW setback. Since its inaugural season in 1977-78, Notre Dame has played all of its games at the Joyce Center, posting a 284-77 (.787) record at the venerable facility. In three of the previous six seasons (1999-2000, 2000-01 and 2003-04), the Irish were a perfect 15-0 at home, setting a school record for home wins in a season. Jammin' The Joyce What's more, each of the top 20 women's basketball crowds in Joyce Center history have occurred during the 19-year tenure of head coach Muffet McGraw (1987-present), with 19 of those 20 occurring in the past six seasons (2000-01 to present). Lastly, the Irish have attracted at least 5,000 fans to 77 of their last 79 home games, including 14 contests with at least 8,000 fans and the first three sellouts in the program's history. The most recent sellout in Notre Dame women's basketball history took place on Dec 31, when 11,418 fans packed the Joyce Center for the Irish matchup with No. 1 Tennessee. The game sold out 19 days in advance, the fastest sellout in the 29-year history of the program. Oh Captain, My Captain They've Got The Know-How Besides Notre Dame, Virginia Commonwealth is the other school with multiple WNBA veterans on its staff. VCU assistant coach Wendy Palmer-Daniel currently plays for the San Antonio Silver Stars, while the Rams' head coach is a familiar name to Irish women's basketball fans - Beth (Morgan) Cunningham, who played for the WNBA's Washington Mystics in 2000 after an All-America career at Notre Dame from 1993-97. Notre Dame On The Small Screen This year's TV slate continues a recent trend that has seen the Irish become a regular fixture on television. Beginning with the NCAA championship season of 2000-01 (and including games to date this year), Notre Dame has played in 68 televised games, including 43 that were broadcast nationally. Last year, the Irish had 17 games televised, with 10 being national broadcasts. The Irish will play their final televised game of the regular season Saturday at Cincinnati, with the 2 p.m. (ET) contest slated to air as part of the BIG EAST-Regional Sports Network (RSN) package. Among the outlets that will televise the game live are WHME-TV (Channel 46 in South Bend), Comcast Chicago, Comcast Local and Madison Square Garden Network. Riley Named One Of ESPN.com's Top 25 Players Of The Past 25 Years A native of Macy, Ind., Riley was tapped as one of the legends of the sport in part because of her contributions in the NCAA Tournament, where she led Notre Dame to three NCAA Sweet 16 appearances and the 2001 national championship. In the '01 NCAA title game vs. Purdue, Riley tallied 28 points (on 9-of-13 shooting), 13 rebounds and seven blocks, not to mention the two game-winning free throws with 5.8 seconds remaining which snapped a 66-66 tie. It was an effort that ESPN.com termed as "the third-best all-time championship game performance in NCAA history." That outing capped a six-game NCAA tourney stretch in which the 6-foot-5 post averaged 23.2 points and 9.0 rebounds per game while shooting at a .632 clip (48-of-76). Riley was a two-time first-team Associated Press All-America selection and two-time CoSIDA Academic All-America choice, earning Academic All-America Team Member of the Year honors in 2001. In addition, she was a three-time first team all-BIG EAST selection, earning the league's Player of the Year award in 2001 and the conference Defensive Player of the Year hardware three consecutive years. The only player in school history to amass 2,000 points and 1,000 rebounds in her career (2,072 points/1,007 rebounds), Riley also is the Irish all-time leader in seven statistical categories, including blocked shots (370 - fifth in NCAA history) and field goal percentage (.632 - 11th in NCAA history). Next Game: Pittsburgh Pittsburgh (18-7. 9-5) in among three
teams tied for third place in the BIG EAST
standings heading into the final two games of the
regular season. The Panthers will play host to
Rutgers Saturday before heading to South Bend.
|
|