March 15, 2006
Complete Notes (PDF)
2006 NCAA Albuquerque Region - First Round
#9 seed Notre Dame Fighting Irish (18-11 / 8-8 BIG EAST) vs.
#8 seed Boston College Eagles (19-11 / 6-8 ACC)
| DATE: | March 19, 2006 |
| TIME: | 7:00 p.m. ET |
| AT: | West Lafayette, Ind. |
| Mackey Arena (14,123) |
| SERIES: | Notre Dame leads 10-4 |
| LAST MTG: | 2/15/05 (ND 54-47) |
| NCAA: | First meeting |
| RADIO: | ESPN Radio 1490/1580 AM |
| Sean Stires, p-b-p |
| TV: | ESPN2 (live) |
| Dave Barnett, p-b-p |
| Brenda VanLengen, color |
| Wendi Nix, sideline |
| TICKETS: | (800) 497-7678 |
Storylines
Notre Dame has earned a berth in the NCAA
Tournament for the 11th consecutive season and
13th time in school history. However, the Irish
will be facing Boston College for the first time
in the postseason.
Notre Dame has won 10 consecutive NCAA
first-round games, coinciding exactly with its
membership in the BIG EAST Conference (1995-96 to
present).
Following a stirring late-season charge
that featured wins in four of the final five
games, Notre Dame (18-11) will play in the NCAA
Tournament for the 11th consecutive year when it
takes on Boston College Sunday at 7 p.m. (ET) at
Mackey Arena in West Lafayette, Ind. The Irish
are the No. 9 seed in the Albuquerque Region,
while BC has been seeded eighth for the contest,
which will be televised nationally by ESPN2.
Notre Dame last took the floor on March
5, falling to No. 7 Connecticut, 71-60 in the
quarterfinals of the BIG EAST Conference
Championship at the Hartford Civic Center. The
Irish trimmed a 21-point deficit to 11 points in
the second half, but couldn't catch the eventual
league champion Huskies.
Senior guard Megan Duffy scored a
game-high 20 points and grabbed a team-best six
rebounds, while senior forward Courtney LaVere
had 15 points of 7-of-11 shooting for the Irish.
Rankings
Notre Dame is not ranked.
Boston College received votes in the final
Associated Press poll of the season.
Web Sites
Notre Dame: http://www.und.com
Boston College: http://www.bceagles.com
BIG EAST: http://www.bigeast.org
ACC: http://www.theacc.com
Setting The Standard
Under the guidance of 19th-year head coach Muffet
McGraw, Notre Dame has evolved into one of the
country's leading women's basketball powers. The
Irish have appeared in 13 NCAA Tournaments
(including a current streak of 11 in a row) and
advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16 six times in the
previous nine years. Notre Dame also has reached
the NCAA Women's Final Four twice, winning
college basketball's ultimate prize with the 2001
national championship.
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 593-265
(.691).
Notre Dame Head Coach Muffet McGraw
Saint Joseph's '77
19th season at Notre Dame
429-166 (.721) at Notre Dame.
517-207 (.714) in 24 years as head coach.
NOTES
2001 consensus National Coach of the Year
Four-time Naismith Coach of the Year finalist
Four-time conference Coach of the Year
BIG EAST Conference (2001)
Midwestern Collegiate Conference (1991)
North Star Conference (1988)
East Coast Conference (@ Lehigh) (1983)
A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish
One of the more famous movie quotes of the past
20 years came from a simple Alabama man named
Forrest Gump, who recalled his mother's advice
that "life is like a box of chocolates - you
never know what you're going to get."
In some ways, that philosophy would be
appropriate when it comes to describing the
2005-06 season for Notre Dame. On the one hand,
there is the Irish squad that bolted to a 9-1
record, has defeated three Top 25 teams this
season (USC, Utah and DePaul), was ranked in
every AP and ESPN/USA Today coaches' poll for the
first two months of the season (peaking at No.
10), and won the Gray Division championship at
the Duel in the Desert in Las Vegas.
At the same time, there's the darker side
to Notre Dame's season, the face that appeared
early in the BIG EAST Conference campaign and led
to eight losses in 13 games, including the
program's first two three-game losing streak in
eight years.
However, it now appears the Irish are
returning to their earlier form, having ended the
season by winning four of its final five games.
Notre Dame also has discovered a rejuvenated
offensive attack of late, averaging 70.0 ppg.
with a .450 field goal percentage (.400 from
three-point range) in its last five outings.
One of the critical elements for the
Irish to be successful this season has been
offensive balance. On 22 occasions (including 10
of the past 11 games), Notre Dame has had at
least three players scoring in double figures
(going 16-6), and eight separate players have
cracked double digits at least four times 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 15.7
points, 4.1 assists and 2.03 steals per game,
with a 1.68 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 (.888).
She also has led the team in scoring 16 times and
in assists 19 times this year.
Among her many honors this year, Duffy is
the Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award winner, a
first-team Academic All-American (second in the
program's history and eighth in BIG EAST annals),
a unanimous first-team all-BIG EAST pick, one of
11 nominees for the Nancy Lieberman Award (top
point guard in the nation) and a candidate for
the Naismith Trophy and John R. Wooden Women's
Award. She has scored in double figures in her
last 14 games, the longest such streak by a Notre
Dame player in five seasons.
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
(9.9 ppg.) and tops in rebounding (5.4 rpg.), and
has scored in double figures seven times in the
past 11 games. She also has notched her first two
career 20-point games down the stretch this year,
tallying a season-high 24 points at Syracuse on
Jan. 31, and adding a game-high 20 points against
Pittsburgh on Feb. 28.
Sophomore guard Charel Allen and senior
forward Courtney LaVere also have shown signs of
being dependable options for the Irish. LaVere
ranks third on the team in scoring (9.1 ppg.),
with Allen fourth (8.7 ppg.), while Allen is
third in rebounding (4.4 rpg.) and LaVere is
fourth (4.2 rpg.). In addition, LaVere is tops in
both field goal percentage (.515) and blocks
(1.69 bpg.), placing fourth 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 eight double-figure scoring games in
her last 11 outings, highlighted by a 16-point
effort in the regular-season finale vs.
Pittsburgh. Meanwhile, LaVere is averaging 10.8
ppg., 4.6 rebounds and 2.4 blocks per night with
a .560 field goal percentage returning to the
starting lineup 12 games ago (Jan. 24 at Rutgers).
Potent Notables About The Fighting Irish
Notre Dame's departure from the Jan. 30
Associated Press poll snapped a string of 30
consecutive appearances for the Irish in that
survey, dating back to the start of the 2004-05
season. All told, Notre Dame has appeared in 139
Associated Press polls since the balloting
debuted 30 years ago, with their first AP ranking
(No. 25) coming on Dec. 31, 1990.
With its No. 10 AP ranking on Dec. 5, the
Irish have appeared in the top 10 of the media
balloting at some point in seven of the past 10
years (including three of the past four seasons).
Notre Dame has spent a total of 73 weeks in the
AP top 10 during the program's 29-year history
and owns a 110-21 (.840) record when it's ranked
in the top 10.
The Irish have won 57 of their last 61
non-conference home games, dating back to the
1994-95 season. Three of the losses in that span
have come against Big Ten Conference opponents
(Wisconsin in 1996, Purdue in 2003, Michigan
State in 2004), with the other coming back on
Dec. 31 vs. No. 1 Tennessee.
The Irish defense continues to be its
calling card. In each of the past six seasons,
Notre Dame has held its opponents to an average
of less than 62 points per game, including a 56.8
ppg. mark last year, which ranked as the
third-lowest opponent scoring average in school
history and second-best of the Muffet McGraw era
(55.8 ppg. in 2000-01). Thus far in 2005-06, the
Irish are a bit over their six-year average,
allowing opponents to score 63.3 ppg.
The Irish are 3-6 against ranked teams
this season and have posted 40 wins over Top 25
opponents in the past eight seasons (1998-99 to
present), most recently knocking off No. 10/10
DePaul, 78-75 on Jan. 17 at the Joyce Center. In
each of the past two years, Notre Dame has set a
school record with seven regular-season wins over
ranked opponents. Furthermore, since the start of
the 2003-04 season, the Irish are 12-4 (.750) at
home against Top 25 competition (2-2 this year).
Drawing 5,632 fans to their Feb. 28
Senior Night game vs. Pittsburgh, the Irish now
have welcomed crowds of 5,000 or more fans to 78
of their last 80 home games. The only two
blemishes on that mark came in the semifinals and
finals of last year's Preseason WNIT, because
tickets for those games could not be included in
the Notre Dame season ticket package and had to
be purchased separately.
The capacity crowd of 11,418 for the Dec.
31 home game vs. top-ranked Tennessee was the
third sellout in program history and the 19-day
advance sellout was the quickest in the 29-year
history of Irish women's basketball. As of March
13, Notre Dame ranks 11th in the country in
average home attendance with 6,601 fans per game.
Senior guard Megan Duffy was named a
preseason All-American by three sources, was
cited on the preseason watch lists for both the
State Farm/WBCA Wade Trophy and the John R.
Wooden Women's Award, and was tabbed as one of
the top five point guards in the nation by
ESPN.com. Duffy also was a preseason all-BIG EAST
Conference selection, following up her first-team
all-league citation last year.
With a 55-45 victory over Michigan on
Nov. 18, Irish head coach Muffet McGraw became
the 27th coach in NCAA Division I women's
basketball history to reach the 500-win mark. She
also is the 10th Division I coach to earn her
500th victory prior to age 50. McGraw reached
another milestone on Nov. 29 vs. Iona with her
700th career game as a head coach.
A Quick Look At Boston College
In its first season as a member of the Atlantic
Coast Conference (ACC), Boston College has gone
through its share of highs and lows. The Eagles,
who have risen through the ranks to become a
major player on the women's basketball scene in
recent years, enter this weekend's NCAA
Tournament with a 19-11 record and a 6-8 mark in
their inaugural ACC campaign.
Hidden in that record is a 12-2 start for
BC that was highlighted by a win over Stanford
and a five-point overtime loss to Big Ten
Conference champion Ohio State. However, with the
start of ACC play, the Eagles dropped four in a
row, starting a roller-coaster ride that led to
seven consecutive wins, but a season-ending
five-game losing streak.
Boston College has been off since March
2, when the Eagles dropped a 57-54 decision to
Virginia in the opening round of the ACC
Tournament in Greensboro, N.C. Senior forward
Brooke Queenan, a second-team all-ACC selection,
tallied 11 points and eight rebounds, while
senior guard/forward Aja Parham collected 10
points and six rebounds for BC.
Queenan leads the Eagles in scoring (14.6
ppg.) and rebounding (8.0 rpg.) this season,
coupled with a sharp .496 field goal percentage.
Junior sharpshooting guard Kindyll Dorsey is
second on the team in scoring (11.3 ppg.) and
owns a team-best .387 three-point percentage (65
treys). Parham averages 9.7 points and 5.8
rebounds per game with a .529 field goal ratio,
while junior forward Kathrin Ress is logging 9.1
ppg. with a team-high .590 shooting mark.
Head coach Cathy Inglese is winding down
her 13th season at Boston College, sporting a
237-150 (.612) record in Chestnut Hill. She has
been coaching at the college level for 20 seasons
and currently sports a career record of 357-224
(.614). Inglese is 3-10 in her coaching career
against Notre Dame.
Head coach Cathy Inglese is winding down
her 13th season at Boston College, sporting a
237-150 (.612) record in Chestnut Hill. She has
been coaching at the college level for 20 seasons
and currently sports a career record of 357-224
(.614). Inglese is 3-10 in her coaching career
against Notre Dame.
The Notre Dame-Boston College Series
As members of the BIG EAST Conference from
1995-96 to 2004-05, Notre Dame and Boston College
developed one of the more intense rivalries in
college basketball. With both squads regularly
competing for the conference title, not to
mention deep runs in the NCAA Tournament, the
annual matchups between the Irish and Eagles were
spirited, if not thrilling in nature. Notre Dame
leads the all-time series, 10-4, although
Sunday's game will mark the first time the two
sides have met in postseason play (BIG EAST or
NCAA Tournament).
Notre Dame and BC first met on Dec. 30,
1983, when the Irish paid a visit to Chestnut
Hill for the Nike Christmas Classic. The Eagles
won that initial game, 59-55, before the series
went dormant for the next 11 seasons. It wouldn't
resume until Notre Dame joined the BIG EAST in
time for the 1995-96 campaign.
The Irish won the first three conference
games between the teams before Boston College
picked up a pair of victories in 1998 to even the
series at three games apiece. However, beginning
with the second half of the 1998-99 season, Notre
Dame has won seven of the past eight games in the
series, with five of those victories coming at
the Joyce Center. The Eagles continued to
maintain the upper hand in Chestnut Hill, earning
their most recent win on Jan. 29, 2003, with a
76-48 rout at Conte Forum.
Sunday's game will be the first between
the Irish and Boston College since the Eagles
left the BIG EAST to join the Atlantic Coast
Conference (ACC) last summer.
Other Notre Dame-Boston CollegeSeries Tidbits
Notre Dame is a perfect 7-0 against
Boston College in the state of Indiana, with all
seven prior matchups coming in South Bend at the
Joyce Center.
The Irish have never faced an ACC school in the NCAA Tournament.
Only five times in 14 previous meetings
has Boston College scored more than 60 points in
a game against Notre Dame (four coming at Conte
Forum). Conversely, the Irish have topped the
60-point mark 10 times against BC, including four
of their seven visits to Chestnut Hill.
Sunday's Notre Dame-Boston College
contest will mark just the second time in the
past 13 series games that neither one of the
teams is ranked at tipoff. The 1997-98 matchup (a
78-76 BC win on Feb. 12) was the only other time
in the past 10 seasons ('96-97 to present) that
neither the Irish nor the Eagles appeared in the
top 25 of one of the major national polls prior
to the game.
Notre Dame senior guard Megan Duffy and
Boston College head coach Cathy Inglese had a
chance to get to know one another this past
summer as members of the USA World University
Games Team. Inglese was an assistant coach, while
Duffy was the starting point guard and a
co-captain for Team USA, which went 7-0 and
earned the gold medal in Izmir, Turkey.
The Last Time Notre Dame And Boston College Met
Megan Duffy had all 14 of her points in the
second half as fifth-ranked Notre Dame overcame a
15-point deficit to beat No. 25 Boston College
54-47 on Feb. 15, 2005 at Conte Forum in Chestnut
Hill, Mass.
Jacqueline Batteast scored 15 points for
the Irish, who dropped the Eagles (16-7, 7-5) to
0-6 in 2004-05 against ranked opponents. Clare
Droesch paced BC with 10 points.
Duffy's two free throws gave the Irish a
44-43 lead with 2:22 to go. After a BC turnover,
Charel Allen's baseline drive pushed Notre Dame's
edge to three points.
The Eagles closed to 46-45 on Lisa
Macchia's layup with 1:08 to go, but Teresa
Borton's offensive rebound and layup off a
desperation three-point attempt by Duffy made it
48-45 with 33 seconds left. Duffy then hit four
free throws and Breona Gray added two in the
final 24 seconds to secure the victory.
The Irish took a 42-41 lead on Allen's
putback with 4:03 left, but BC regained the edge
on Kathrin Ress' foul-line jumper 13 seconds
later. It was the Eagles' first basket in 9:01.
After Notre Dame sliced an 11-point
halftime deficit to six, BC opened a 39-28 lead
on Aja Parham's baseline jumper with 13:51 left.
But the Irish scored 12 of the next 14 points,
cutting it to 41-40 on Batteast's putback with
5:23 left.
The Eagles held the Irish to their lowest
scoring half of the season, leading 26-11 with
1:57 left in the period before taking a 26-15
edge at the break. BC held Notre Dame to
21.7-percent shooting from in the half (5-of-23),
mainly double-teaming leading scorer Batteast
nearly every time she touched the ball in the low
post to disrupt the offensive rhythm.
BC dropped its fourth game in five
outings since leading scorer Jessalyn Deveny was
lost for the season with a ruptured right
Achilles' tendon.
Other Tidbits On The West Lafayette Pod
Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw and
Ohio State head coach Jim Foster have developed a
strong friendship that dates back more than 25
years. McGraw served as an assistant coach on
Foster's staff at her alma mater, Saint Joseph's
(Pa.), from 1980-82 and still calls him her
mentor in the coaching profession. Foster also is
the godfather to the McGraw's 15-year-old son,
Murphy.
Notre Dame has two California natives -
senior forward Courtney LaVere and junior forward
Crystal Erwin - who have either played with or
against nearly every member of the UCLA roster at
some point during their high school/AAU days in
southern California. One could also add Irish
sophomore guard Tulyah Gaines to that list, as
she grew up in Burbank, Calif., and attended John
Burroughs High School before moving to Las Vegas
prior to her senior year of high school.
Notre Dame senior guard Megan Duffy could
get another chance to square off with one of her
best friends in Ohio State junior guard Brandie
Hoskins. Duffy and Hoskins were teammates at
Chaminade-Julienne High School in Dayton, Ohio,
helping that team soar to No. 1 in the USA Today
Super 25 national rankings in 2001-02 before
Duffy was sidelined with a knee injury. Although
the pair chose to attend different colleges, they
still talk regularly by phone.
Duffy actually is quite familiar with
almost the entire Ohio State squad, having played
either with or against virtually every Buckeye
player during her high school career. Among her
more notable opponents were OSU junior center
Jessica Davenport (Columbus, Ohio/Independence
HS) and sophomore guard Marscilla Packer
(Pickerington, Ohio/Pickerington HS). In fact,
Davenport and Hoskins joined Duffy as teammates
on last summer's USA World University Games Team
that won the gold medal in Izmir, Turkey.
Duffy is not the only native of the
Buckeye State on the Notre Dame roster this
season. Sophomore guard Amanda Tsipis was a
four-year letterwinner at Perry High School in
Perry, Ohio, finishing as the second-leading
scorer in that school's history. Third-year Notre
Dame assistant coach Jonathan Tsipis (Amanda's
uncle) also is an Ohio product, having grown up
in Cleveland.
Bowling Green freshman guard Lindsey
Goldsberry is the daughter of Frank Goldsberry,
who coached Duffy and Hoskins (among many others)
at Chaminade-Julienne High School in Dayton.
Irish In The NCAA Tournament
Notre Dame is set to make its 13th appearance in
the NCAA Tournament, and 11th in a row, when it
takes the court Sunday night against Boston
College. The Irish have a .667 winning percentage
(22-11) in NCAA Tournament play, which ranks
eighth all-time (minimum of 20 games played).
In addition, Notre Dame's current streak
of 11 consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances
ranks ninth in the record books.
Here are some other facts about the Irish
in the "Big Dance" (see page 6 sidebar for Notre
Dame's year-by-year NCAA Tournament results):
Every one of Notre Dame's NCAA Tournament
appearances has come under the guidance of
19th-year head coach Muffet McGraw.
The Irish have won their NCAA Tournament
first-round game in each of the past 10 seasons,
corresponding exactly with both their current
NCAA Tournament appearance streak, as well as
their membership in the BIG EAST Conference
(1995-96 to present).
Notre Dame is one of nine schools in the
country to have appeared in the NCAA Sweet 16 six
times in the past nine seasons (1997-2005). The
others are: Connecticut and Tennessee (nine
times), Duke (eight times), Louisiana Tech (seven
times), and Georgia, LSU, North Carolina and
Texas Tech (six times).
Notre Dame is one of nine schools to make
multiple appearances at the NCAA Final Four and
win at least one national championship. The
others are: Connecticut (eight trips, five
titles), Louisiana Tech (10 trips, two titles),
Old Dominion (three trips, one title), Purdue
(three trips, one title), USC (three trips, two
titles), Stanford (six trips, two titles),
Tennessee (16 trips, six titles) and Texas (three
trips, one title).
Sowing The Seeds
Notre Dame has been seeded ninth for the second
time in 13 NCAA Tournament appearances. The only
other time the Irish acquired a No. 9 seed was
1998, and they promptly defeated both
eighth-seeded Southwest Missouri State (now
Missouri State), 78-64, and No. 1 seed Texas
Tech, 74-59, on the Lady Raiders' home court at
the Lubbock (Texas) Municipal Coliseum, to
advance to the Sweet 16. Notre Dame then returned
to Lubbock the following week and dropped a 70-65
decision to fourth-seeded Purdue in the Midwest
Regional semifinals.
The Irish have played 16 NCAA Tournament
as a lower seed and have posted an 8-8 record.
Notre Dame also has twice advanced to the Sweet
16 as a ninth seed or lower. In addition to the
afore-mentioned 1998 run, the Irish turned the
trick in 2003 as a No. 11 seed, ousting
sixth-seeded Arizona (59-47) and No. 3 seed
Kansas State (59-53) in Manhattan, Kan.
Against The NCAA Field
Notre Dame has played 13 of its 29 games this
season against teams that were invited to the
2006 NCAA Tournament. The Irish registered a 4-9
(.308) record vs. the rest of this year's NCAA
Tournament field. Here's a rundown of Notre
Dame's performance against the teams that
advanced to the 2006 NCAA Tournament:
| | Team (Seed) | Region | Record |
| | Connecticut (2) | Bridgeport | 0-2 |
| | DePaul (4) | San Antonio | 1-1 |
| | Louisville (9) | Cleveland | 0-1 |
| | Purdue (4) | Cleveland | 0-1 |
| | Rutgers (3) | Cleveland | 0-1 |
| | St. John's (7) | Albuquerque | 0-1 |
| | USC (8) | Bridgeport | 1-0 |
| | South Florida (9) | Bridgeport | 1-1 |
| | Tennessee (2) | Cleveland | 0-1 |
| | Utah (5) | Albuquerque | 1-0 |
| | TOTALS | | 4-9 |
The Not-So-Friendly Confines
The Irish will be playing at Mackey Arena for the
eighth time and are 0-7 all-time in the facility
(all seven losses vs. Purdue).
Back Home Again In Indiana
Notre Dame has played seven NCAA Tournament games
in the state of Indiana (all on its home floor at
the Joyce Center), going 6-1 (.857) in those
contests. In fact, the Irish lost their first
NCAA Tournament game at home in 1994 (81-76 vs.
Minnesota) and have since won their last six
tournament games in the Hoosier State. Most
recently in 2004, Notre Dame defeated Southwest
Missouri State (now Missouri State), 69-65 in
overtime, and Middle Tennessee, 59-46, at the
Joyce Center to advance to the Sweet 16.
Ladies Night
Notre Dame is one of just three schools in the
country (along with North Carolina and Stanford)
to qualify for 2005-06 NCAA postseason
competition in all seven fall/winter sports the
Irish sponsor (soccer, volleyball, cross country,
basketball, indoor track & field, swimming &
diving and fencing).
A BIG EAST Bonanza
Notre Dame is one of seven BIG EAST Conference
schools that earned invitations to the 2006 NCAA
Tournament, joining a club that includes
five-time national champion Connecticut, as well
as St. John's (making its first appearance since
1988) and first-time participant South Florida.
The BIG EAST tied the Atlantic Coast
Conference (ACC) for the most bids received to
this year's NCAA Tournament. The record for the
highest number of teams from one conference
invited to a single NCAA Tournament is eight,
first set by the Southeastern Conference in 1999,
and repeated twice since then (SEC in 2002; BIG
EAST in 2004).
The BIG EAST also has four teams
participating in the Women's National Invitation
Tournament (WNIT), meaning a conference-record 11
schools have advanced to postseason play in
2005-06 (the old record was nine in 2004).
In fact, of the 12 teams who participated
in this year's BIG EAST Championship, 11 of them
earned either an NCAA or WNIT berth. The only
team left out was West Virginia, which made
national headlines with a Cinderella run to the
title game of the conference tournament before
dropping a narrow 50-44 decision to Connecticut.
The Mountaineers failed to qualify for the
postseason only because they wound up with a
losing record (15-16).
Don't Mess With Tradition
The Irish have developed two traditions that
should be quite evident at this weekend's NCAA
Tournament.
Green nails - this tradition started for
Notre Dame at the 1997 NCAA Tournament. The Irish
chose to wear green nail polish on their fingers
prior to their second-round St. Patrick's Day
game at Texas, which Notre Dame won, 86-83. The
Irish ended up going all the way to the NCAA
Final Four that season and the green nail polish
was here to stay.
Irish jig - although not reserved simply
for NCAA Tournament play, this unique pre-game
ritual has become one of the widely-recognized
traditions of Notre Dame women's basketball. Just
prior to the introduction of starting lineups,
the Irish players will circle up in the lane with
a basketball at their feet. As the Notre Dame pep
band plays, the team will perform the Irish Jig
(a popular step with Notre Dame fans, especially
the student body) with the ball bouncing around
in the midst of their dance. This tradition is
believed to have started during the 1999-2000
season, but picked up steam during Notre Dame's
2000-01 national championship run and has been
part of the Irish pre-game ritual ever since.
The Greenhouse Effect
Notre Dame has won three of four games this
season while sporting its seldom-used green
alternate uniforms. Prior to their Feb. 22 game
at West Virginia, the Irish had not worn their
green duds since March 27, 2004, when they
dropped a 55-49 decision to No. 5/7 Penn State in
the NCAA East Regional semifinals (Sweet 16) at
the Hartford Civic Center.
Notre Dame is 8-5 (.615) all-time when
playing in the greens, but only 4-4 in postseason
play (BIG EAST and NCAA Tournament).
Bonus Basketball
The Irish have played a school-record four
overtime games this season, breaking the old mark
of three held by the 1995-96 club. Notre Dame
also has established a new BIG EAST record for OT
games in regular-season conference play,
surpassing the three overtime games played by
three teams (most recently in 1990-91 by Boston
College and St. John's).
Prior to this season, the Irish had
played only two BIG EAST regular-season OT games,
winning both (88-79 vs. Seton Hall in 1996; 78-74
at Rutgers in 2000).
When The Game Is On The Lines
The Irish have posted a .699 free throw
percentage (93-of-133) in the final two minutes
and overtime of games this season, including a
combined 25-of-29 (.862) effort in their last
four games.
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. South Florida, and senior
guard Megan Duffy, who has made 48 of 50 foul
shots (.960) in crunch time.
Everyone Gets Into The Act,br>
The Irish have had at least three players score
in double figures in 10 of their last 11 games
and have pulled off that feat 22 times in 29
games this season. Notre Dame is 16-6 when it
gets that kind of offensive balance, including a
7-2 record when at least four players reach
double digits. The Irish have even had two games
this season (wins over Utah and South Florida)
where five players topped the 10-point mark.
Double-Digit Duffy
Senior All-America guard Megan Duffy has scored
in double figures in the past 14 games, the
longest streak by an Irish player in a single
season since 2000-01, when Ruth Riley had 22
consecutive double-digit scoring games during
Notre Dame's NCAA championship season. More
recently, Jacqueline Batteast had a 16-game
streak that spanned between the 2003-04 and
2004-05 season.
The school record for consecutive
double-figure scoring games in one season is 31,
established by Katryna Gaither in 1996-97, Notre
Dame's first NCAA Final Four season.
Rising To The Challenge
Following its Feb. 19 loss to #8/6 Connecticut,
Notre Dame found itself with a 14-10 record (5-8
in the BIG EAST Conference) and virtually in a
must-win situation for the rest of the regular
season if they hoped to have any chance for an
NCAA Tournament berth (not to mention a .500
record in league play).
However, the Irish came through with
flying colors, winning their final three
regular-season contests, including two on the
road, and then pulled out a 73-66 win over South
Florida in the first round of the BIG EAST
Championship before falling to Connecticut in the
quarterfinals. In that five-game run to end the
season, the Irish averaged 70.0 ppg., shot .450
from the floor (.400 from three-point range) and
posted a 1.19 assist/turnover ratio.
One Play Can Make A Season
Baseball historians may recall the Chicago Cubs'
famed double-play combination from the turn of
the 20th century, known simply as "Tinker to
Evers to Chance." For Notre Dame women's
basketball fans, they now have their own magical
connection - "LaVere to Schrader to Gaines" - and
it's no exaggeration to say this combination
saved the 2005-06 season for the Irish.
Trailing 57-55 with 2.4 seconds remaining
at Cincinnati on Feb. 25, senior forward Courtney
LaVere wound up and hurled a 65-foot baseball
pass that dropped perfectly into the hands of
leaping freshman guard Lindsay Schrader. While
still in mid-air, the Notre Dame rookie deftly
delivered a touch pass to sophomore Tulyah Gaines
on the right wing, and the speedy point guard
drove all the way to the basket for the
game-tying layup as the horn sounded in
regulation.
Riding a huge wave of momentum, Notre
Dame went on to outscore the stunned Bearcats in
overtime, 18-9, and keep their hopes of an NCAA
Tournament berth on track.
Protecting The Pill
Part of the reason for Notre Dame's late-season
charge has been its ability to take care of the
basketball. In their last 10 games, the Irish are
averaging a mere 11.9 turnovers per game and have
had 15 or fewer turnovers nine times during that
stretch. The only blemish was a 16-turnover night
vs. #8/6 Connecticut on Feb. 19.
Spine-Chiller Supremes
Former Oakland Raiders cornerback (and noted
quote machine) Lester Hayes used to refer to
close, exciting games as "spine-chiller
supremes." Lester probably would have used the
same phrase to describe Notre Dame's season to
date.
The Irish have played 14 games decided by
10 points or less, going 10-4 in those contests.
A school-record four games have gone into
overtime, and three of the losses were in doubt
heading into the final minute of regulation (two
occurring in OT).
Don't Count Us Out
While Notre Dame has gotten into an unfortunate
habit of falling behind by double-digit margins
this season, the Irish have also found a way to
claw back into the contest with dramatic
second-half rallies.
In 15 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).
In addition, eight 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.
A History Lesson
With one steal vs. South Florida on Jan. 28,
senior All-America guard Megan Duffy became only
the fifth player in school history to record
1,000 points and 200 steals in her career. Duffy
has 1,275 points and 220 steals since arriving in
South Bend in 2002.
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 495 career
assists, putting her just five 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.
Duffy's Trophy Case Overflowing
On March 9, senior guard Megan Duffy was
named the recipient of the 2006 Frances Pomeroy
Naismith Award, which is presented annually to
the nation's top senior player standing 5-foot-8
or under. Duffy is the second Irish player to
earn the honor after Niele Ivey (2001). Notre
Dame also becomes one of three schools in the
23-year history of the award to have multiple
winners, joining Penn State and Johns Hopkins.
On March 14, Duffy was tapped as one of
48 finalists for the Kodak/WBCA All-America Team,
marking the second consecutive season she has
achieved that status. Duffy is the fifth two-time
Kodak/WBCA All-America Team finalist in school
history, putting her alongside the likes of Beth
Morgan (1996, 1997), Katryna Gaither (1996,
1997), Ruth Riley (1999, 2000, 2001) and
Jacqueline Batteast (2002, 2004, 2005). Riley
(2001) and Batteast (2005) both went on to make
the prestigious 10-member Kodak/WBCA All-America
Team.
Duffy is a finalist for three major
national player-of-the-year awards - the Naismith
Trophy, John R. Wooden Women's Award and the
Senior CLASS Award. She also is one of 11
nominees for the seventh annual Nancy Lieberman
Award, which is presented to the nation's top
point guard.
All-Conference Accolades
Senior guard Megan Duffy was a unanimous
first-team all-BIG EAST Conference selection,
joining South Florida's Jessica Dickson and
DePaul's Khara Smith as unanimous picks on this
year's all-league first team. Duffy is the
seventh player in school history to be a two-time
first-team all-BIG EAST selection.
Duffy also was tapped as the BIG
EAST/Aeropostale Women's Basketball
Scholar-Athlete of the Year. She is the third
Notre Dame player in the past six seasons to earn
that distinction, following Ruth Riley (2001) and
Alicia Ratay (2003).
Duffy Making The Grade Off The Court
Senior guard Megan Duffy became the second Irish
women's basketball player ever to be named a
first-team Academic All-American when she was
tapped for the ESPN The Magazine Academic
All-America® Women's Basketball University
Division First Team, it was announced Feb. 28.
Duffy joins Ruth Riley as the program's two
first-team selections - Riley was a two-time pick
in 2000 and 2001, garnering Academic All-America®
Team Member of the Year status the latter season.
Three other Notre Dame female cagers have earned
second-team Academic All-America® status - Maggie
Lally (1980, 1981), Shari Matvey (1981) and Mary
Beth Schueth (1983). In addition, Duffy is the
eighth women's basketball player in BIG EAST
Conference history to be accorded first-team
Academic All-America® distinction (first since
Riley in 2001).
Also a two-time Academic All-District V
choice (2004, 2005), 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 fall 2005 semester.
One day after Duffy's honor, men's
basketball senior guard Chris Quinn also garnered
first-team Academic All-America® status, making
Notre Dame the only school in the country to
place both a men's and women's player on the
elite first team.
Duffy and Quinn are two of six Notre Dame
student-athletes to earn Academic All-America®
honors in 2005-06. The others include: Erika Bohn
(women's soccer - first team), Annie Schefter
(women's soccer - first team), John Stephens
(men's soccer - second team) and Lauren Brewster
(volleyball - second team). Since the program's
inception in 1952, a total of 164 Irish
student-athletes have been named Academic
All-Americans, the second-highest total in the
nation.
Hey Now, You're An All-Star
Senior guard Megan Duffy is one of 17 NCAA
Division I seniors who have been chosen to take
part in the WBCA All-Star Challenge on Saturday,
April 1 at Matthews Arena on the Northeastern
University campus in Boston, site of this year's
NCAA Final Four. Participants whose teams are
playing in the Final Four will be recused from
the all-star game.
Duffy would be the third departing Notre
Dame player to compete in the WBCA All-Star
Challenge, joining Alicia Ratay (2003) and
Jacqueline Batteast (2005). The game is the
nightcap in the "WBCA Night of All-Stars," which
begins at 4:30 p.m. (ET) with the WBCA High
School All-America Game. One of the participants
in that contest will be incoming Irish freshman
guard Ashley Barlow (Indianapolis, Ind./Pike HS).
LaVere Earns WBCA Broadcasting Award
Senior forward and co-captain Courtney LaVere has
been chosen as this year's recipient of the
Women's Basketball Coaches Association's Robin
Roberts/WBCA Broadcasting Scholarship Award, it
was announced March 9. The $4,500 honor is
presented annually to one women's college
basketball player who intends to pursue graduate
work and a career in sports
communications/journalism. LaVere is the first
Irish player ever to be chosen for the award.
The Ventura, Calif., native maintains a
3.1 cumulative grade-point average in the College
of Arts and Letters, where she is pursuing a
double major in film, television & theater and
computer applications. She was a BIG EAST
Academic All-Star Team selection last year and is
poised to be a repeat choice this season. In the
summer of 2004, LaVere broke into the
broadcasting industry with an internship in the
sports department at WNDU-TV, the NBC affiliate
in South Bend.
LaVere will be honored at the WBCA Awards
Luncheon, presented by State Farm and Jostens, at
12:30 p.m. (ET) on Sunday, April 2 at the Hynes
Convention Center Ballroom in Boston. LaVere's
classmate, All-America guard Megan Duffy, also
will be recognized at the luncheon, receiving the
Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award as the nation's
top senior player standing 5-foot-8 or under.
This banquet is part of the 25th annual WBCA
National Convention and is held in conjunction
with the NCAA Women's Final Four, scheduled for
April 2 & 4 at the TD Banknorth Garden in Boston.
Game #29 Recap: Connecticut
Barbara Turner scored 19 points and Ketia Swanier
added a career-high 11 to lead No. 7 Connecticut
to a 71-60 win over Notre Dame on March 5 in the
BIG EAST Championship quarterfinals at the
Hartford Civic Center.
Senior All-America guard Megan Duffy had
14 of her game-high 20 points in the final 10
minutes of the game as the Irish tried to rally
from 21 down.
Willnett Crockett had a team-high 11
boards for UConn (27-4), which finished with a
36-23 advantage on the glass and outscored the
10th-seeded Irish 34-20 in the paint. The
Huskies' 27 defensive rebounds afforded the Irish
few second chances and helped UConn get out in
transition quickly. Guards Renee Mongtomery and
Swanier directed UConn's uptempo attack with a
combined 10 assists as the Huskies shot 58
percent from the floor.
Senior forward Courtney LaVere finished
with 15 points and two blocked shots for Notre
Dame (18-11).
The Huskies relied on their post game
early to take control. Fifteen of their 19
first-half boards were on the defensive end
resulted in several breakaway layups.
Turner and Charde Houston muscled their
way inside for two layups in a 9-0 UConn run.
Turner capped the spurt with an up-and-under
around 6-foot-5 sophomore center Melissa D'Amico
with 10:38 left in the period for an 18-11 lead.
The Huskies led by as many as 18 in the
period and led 38-24 at the break. UConn
stretched the lead to 52-31 in the first seven
minutes of the second half. The Irish got as
close as 11 points three times down the stretch,
but couldn't whittle the gap any further.
Noting The Connecticut Game
Notre Dame saw its four-game winning
streak snapped, as well as its four-game run of
70+ point games.
The Irish are 14-11 all-time in BIG EAST
Championship play (0-7 vs. Connecticut, 14-4 vs.
the rest of the league).
Notre Dame is 2-6 all-time at the
Hartford Civic Center, having won its opening
game at the facility in each of the past two BIG
EAST Championships (West Virginia in 2005, South
Florida in 2006).
The UConn loss was the third this season
for Notre Dame vs. a Top 25 opponent by exactly
11 points (also #24/23 Purdue and #1 Tennessee).
Six of Notre Dame's 11 losses this season
have come at the hands of ranked opponents,
including each of its last three setbacks.
The Irish are 10-6 away from home this season.
Notre Dame lost for the first time in
four outings this season when wearing its green
uniforms.
Senior All-America guard Megan Duffy
extended her streak of double-figure scoring
games to 14 in a row, picking up her eighth
20-point game of the season in the process.
Duffy ranks second in the Irish record
books with 4,148 minutes played, trailing only
Alicia Ratay (4,231 minutes from 1999-2003).
Senior forward Courtney LaVere scored in
double figures for the eighth time in 10 games
(12.1 ppg. in that time); she also had two more
blocked shots and is averaging 3.0 blocks in her
last seven games.
Duffy, LaVere Join ND 1,000-Point Club
Senior co-captains Megan Duffy and Courtney
LaVere became the 21st and 22nd members of Notre
Dame's 1,000-Point Club earlier this season.
Duffy did so at St. John's on Jan. 4, with LaVere
following suit 10 days (and three games) later on
Jan. 14 at Louisville.
Duffy currently has 1,275 career points,
good for 13th on the Irish career scoring chart.
LaVere is 18th all-time with 1,148 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.
Give Her Five (Hundred)
With Notre Dame's 55-45 victory over Michigan on
Nov. 18, head coach Muffet McGraw became the 27th
women's basketball coach in NCAA Division I
history to reach the 500-win mark. McGraw now has
a career record of 517-207 (.714) in 24 years of
coaching, including 19 seasons at Notre Dame
(429-166, .721).
Here's a closer look at how that
milestone victory breaks down for McGraw:
She is the 10th NCAA Division I women's
basketball coach to register her 500th victory
before turning 50 (her birthday was Dec. 5).
McGraw is the fourth active coach in the
BIG EAST Conference to reach the career 500-win
mark, joining Rutgers' C. Vivian Stringer,
Connecticut's Geno Auriemma and Villanova's Harry
Perretta.
She is the third BIG EAST coach in as
many seasons to celebrate her 500th win. Auriemma
hit the milestone late in the 2002-03 campaign,
while Perretta joined the club with his landmark
victory midway through last season.
Half And Half
During the past six seasons, Notre Dame has been
nearly unbeatable when it has the lead at
halftime. The Irish are 109-10 (.916) since the
start of the 2000-01 campaign when they go into
the dressing room with the lead, including wins
in 37 of their last 41 such contests. Notre Dame
has won 12 games this season when it led at the
break (the Irish were tied at halftime of their
wins over No. 24/21 USC and South Florida).
The Best Offense Is A Good Defenses
During the past 11 seasons, Notre Dame has
discovered that a solid defensive effort can
almost certainly guarantee a victory. In fact,
since the beginning of the 1995-96 season (Notre
Dame's first in the BIG EAST Conference), the
Irish have an amazing 159-9 (.946) record when
they hold their opponents to less than 60 points
in a game. Notre Dame is 9-0 in such games this
season.
But Sometimes You Have To Score If You Want To Win
Not resting solely on its defensive laurels,
Notre Dame also seemingly has found the magic
mark when it comes to outscoring its opponents.
During the past decade (1995-96 to present), the
Irish are 91-3 (.968) when they score at least 80
points in a game. The only blemishes on that
record are a pair of overtime losses to Texas A&M
(88-84) and Michigan State (87-83) in 1995 and a
106-81 loss to Connecticut in 1998.
The Gold Standard
The Irish are one of six teams nationwide to have
an active streak of 12 consecutive 20-win
seasons. The others in this club are Tennessee
(29), Texas Tech (16), Louisiana Tech (14), Old
Dominion (14) and Connecticut (12).
Now That's A Home Court Advantage
One of the hallmarks of Notre Dame's success has
been its stellar play at home. In fact, the Irish
have been virtually untouchable at home in recent
years, winning 135 of their last 151 games (.894)
at the 11,418-seat Joyce Center, including
winning streaks of 51 and 25 games in that span.
Notre Dame also has a 80-12 (.870) record in BIG
EAST Conference play at the Joyce Center,
sporting a 31-game league winning streak at home
before it ended with a 48-45 loss to Villanova in
the '02 home finale.
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 285-77 (.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.
They've Got The Know-How
Notre Dame is one of only two schools in the
country that have two or more WNBA veterans on
their coaching staffs. Associate head coach
Coquese Washington played six seasons (1998-2003)
in the league with three different clubs, and
also served as the first-ever president of the
WNBA Players Association. Meanwhile, assistant
coach Angie Potthoff spent the 2000 season as a
starter with the Minnesota Lynx after two years
in the now-defunct American Basketball League
(ABL) with the two-time champion Columbus Quest.
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.
Riley Named One Of ESPN.com's Top 25 Players Of The Past 25 Years
Former Notre Dame All-America center and 2001
consensus National Player of the Year Ruth Riley
has been selected as one of the top 25 women's
college basketball players of the past 25 years,
according to ESPN.com. The list of all-time
greats was released Jan. 10 in conjunction with
the silver anniversary celebration of the
inaugural NCAA women's basketball season in
1981-82.
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: NCAA Second Round
Should Notre Dame defeat Boston College in the
first round of the NCAA Tournament on Sunday
night, the Irish would advance to a second-round
contest on Tuesday against either No. 1 seed (and
second-ranked) Ohio State or 16th-seeded Oakland
(Mich.). The game time and broadcast outlet (ESPN
or ESPN2) will be announced at a later date.
The Irish are 1-1 all-time against Ohio
State and faced the Buckeyes just last season,
winning 66-62 in the championship game of the
Preseason WNIT at the Joyce Center. Notre Dame
has not played OSU in the postseason.
The only prior matchup between the Irish
and Oakland took place on Dec. 9, 1987 in South
Bend, with Notre Dame posting a 100-51 victory
over the Golden Grizzlies. That meeting came
early in Muffet McGraw's first season as the
Irish head coach and was her fourth win at Notre
Dame - she has since tacked on 425 additional
victories, entering this weekend's action.