HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011 A&M Women's Basketball National ChampionshipWednesday, April 6, 2011
Anew chapter?
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NCAA Basketball
Connecticut and Tennessee
have combined to win 12 of
the past 16 championships,
including the last four.
On the men's side, it's not
unusual to see powerhouse
programs like Duke, Kansas,
North Carolina, UCLA and
Kentucky in the Final Four.
But the title game has been
won by teams seeded third,
fourth, sixth and even eighth
(Villanova). No. 8 seed Butler
A &M Notre Dame mark change in women's basketball
By Dolt FEINBERG
Assoc4ed Press
DIANA'
�JLIS — Why
read a bol-I if you already
know ho, it ends?
Over the last 16 years,
Women's co)'ge basketball
has bee m(� like a pre-
dictable, ac orn- packed
drama than suspenseful
thriller. Raj:y has there
been a surV ,,e ending.
Notre Daf and Texas
A&N1 n that this year,
knockiuig or+i1 four top
seeds on thi' Way to the
national cb ipionship game.
It means C �alecticut or
Tenne� ,ee y n't be playing
for the tid,,)r the first time
in fig ind the consen-
sus ar seems
to be; Good
"It's so,Aing new and
fresh. %Vjlicj a good sign,"
UCQnn coa ,.Geno
Auriem `A
If this se" unusual, it is,
but AurievA isn't alone is
sug ge,A game will ben-
efit fry �t of new blood.
il
Ar Nvlhile seem
shoe t .none of the tra-
ditio� Ix Ios are playing
for a title ,ge Dame and
Te_xs A&fAn t come out
of e ighty ranked
all ,overen't the
teams ., was picking to
win a a romship before
the. ` _" A , mament —
evie - :.bol;' oth were No. 2
se
"-it th ,kiat was a good
th. xw bec we were able
to fiv Uri I °e radar," Irish
coach Muffet McGraw said.
"I don't think that anybody
was talking about us. They
were talking about the top
four seeds the whole time. So
it made it a little bit easier to
come in and be the underdog,
and to maybe get the upsets
that we've had."
Notre Dame, which won a
championship in 2001 in its
last trip to the Final Four,
became the first team ever to
knock off both Tennessee and
Connecticut in the same tour-
nament. A &M bounced out
sophomore phenom Brittney
Griner and Baylor before the
Aggies took out Stanford in
the semifinals.
"Having two teams like
Notre Dame and Texas A &M
— given the teams they've
beaten to get there — makes
it even more compelling,"
Auriemma said. "It's not like
they just snuck in and don't
deserve to be there."
The plot for any good
championship always seems
to include a superstar like
Griner or UConn's Maya
Moore, but this year's
matchup has that, too. Irish
point guard Skylar Diggins is
a dynamic leader on the
court and an entertaining,
well- spoken ambassador off
the court, even though she's
just a sophomore. She gained
nearly 20,000 Twitter follow-
ers overnight after her Irish
beat UConn.
Still, this year was only the
second time no top seed made
the title game and the first
since No. 3 seed North
Carolina beat No. 4
Louisiana Tech in 1994.
"Sometimes, you have to
go through growing pains to
get to where we want to be —
parity — where people would
be excited where a Butler
and a VCU. are playing for
the national championship
on the men's side," A &M
coach Gary Blair said. "We
need that on the women's
side as well."
Still, the question remains
whether the women's tourna-
ment, which is in its 30th
year, is ready to support that.
There were roughly 2,000
empty seats at Sunday's
semifinals and fewer people
were expected at the title
game even with Notre Dame
playing only a few hours
from campus.
"Can a good women's bas-
ketball game that's going to be
played between the ears and
below the rim excite the peo-
ple out there enough to watch
this thing?" Blair mused.
The answer could be yes.
ESPN has been covering
the women's tournament
exclusively for the past 16
years. Surprisingly, it's most
watched game had neither
Tennessee or Connecticut in
it.
"Our highest rated game
was the Purdue game in
1999," ESPN Vice president
of programming and acquisi-
tions Carol Stiff said. "It's an
event for us. We just pick up
the pieces and run with who-
ever plays."
The Boilermakers beat
Duke that year in what turned
out to be a rare matchup:
tried again this year, falling
short to UConn but giving
the little guys everywhere
hope.
It might still be a while
before that happens regularly
on the women's side, where
the talent pool isn't deep
enough for widespread parity
and top programs tend to
have their great players for
four years.
Auriemma knows that hav-
C3
ing someone else win keeps
people interested, comparing
it to golf.
"There's got to be hope," he
said. "Everyone was sick of
Tiger [Woods] winning all
those tournaments. Once he
shows up, everyone is com-
ing in second or third. Now
he shows up and people
think, `We can beat this guy.'
I think the more that hap-
pens, the better it is."
AP photo
Texas A &M's Danielle Adams and Notre Dame's Devereaux Peters tip off to begin the women's national championship
game In Indianapolis on Tuesday night. For a change, neither Tennessee nor Connecticut will win this year's title.
C6
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NCAA National Champions
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Wednesday, AprIl 6, 2011
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A4 The Eagle • theeagle.com Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Aggie Women
Winning women becoming an A &M tradition.
I NDIANAPOLIS — Tyra
White stuck a dagger in
Notre Dame, striking the
biggest blow in the history of
Texas A &M women's basket-
ball — again.
The Aggies,
who had gal
lantly fought
back from a
seven -point
deficit to take
the lead, were
teetering when
the quiet, con-
fident White Sports
stepped up and p
hit a 3- pointer Robert Cessna
that sealed
A &M's 76-70 victory.
Gritty Notre Dame seemed
to put itself in position to tie
or regain the lead with a solid
defensive effort. The Fighting
Irish smothered A &M's
Danielle Adams, which
allowed them to easily block
her shot attempt out of
bounds with only 68 seconds
left. The Aggies retained the
ball, but had only 2 seconds
left on the shot clock.
Of course, the Aggies want-
ed to get the ball to the 6- foot -1
Adams, who had a game -high
30 points. But Notre Dame also
knew that and blanketed her.
A &M inbounded to White,
who also was closely guarded.
She turned and line - drived a
20- footer. It didn't look pretty
— then again, her shots
always have a low trajectory.
It became the prettiest shot
of her life, hitting nothing but
net as the shot clock went off.
That made it 73-68 with just
over a minute left.
Notre Dame was done.
"That was a knife right in
my heart," Notre Dame head
coach Muffet McGraw said
later.
"That was the game. That
was the game. I thought that
was an amazing play on
White's part. And it was an
unbelievable shot."
McGraw couldn't get that
shot out of her head, because
a few moments later, she
added: "That was the game."
It was much more than that
for A &M, which has been
playing women's basketball
for 36 seasons, more than a
third of them losing ones.
It made A &M the nation's
best in a major sport. Yes, the
Aggies have had a ton of suc-
cess in the last decade, win-
ning national titles in eques-
trian, golf and track along
with a runner -up in softball.
But this is a biggie, the most
recognized women's sport.
And now the Aggies are the
best in the country.
White might have been an
unlikely hero, but she handle,
the spotlight well.
"I really didn't know the
ball was coming to me," she
said. "I knew [Sydney] Colson
was going to pass me the ball.
[A defender] hit my elbow,
too, so I didn't really think it
was going to go in, but it did."
Colson and White also
teamed up for the game -win-
ner against Stanford.
Colson dashed the length of
the court, then had a perfect
bounce pass that the hustling
White banked home with
3.3 seconds left.
Two Aggies, doing some-
thing great for the second
straight time? What a great
AGGIES: Byrne calls win `emotional'
Continued from Al
More than 3,000 Aggies
started partying with a few
seconds left in A &M's 76-70
victory over Notre Dame, and
more than 30 minutes after
the final buzzer they were still
cheering as the Hullabaloo
Band played on.
A &M, which had rallied
from a 10 -point deficit to beat
Stanford in an electrifying
6362 semifinal victory, this
time came back from a seven -
point deficit, setting off a wild,
well-earned celebration.
Senior point guard Sydney
Colson and junior wing Tyra
White hugged as Final Four
most valuable player Danielle
Adams shot free throws with
2.8 seconds left.
Confetti fell from the rafters
at the buzzer as the players
reveled in victory.
A &M head coach Gary Blair
and associate head coach Vic
Schaefer hugged their wives
at midcourt, then, along with
their family members, formed
a second row behind the play-
ers to do the Aggie War Hymn
in front of the Aggie fans, who
all seemed to be snapping pic-
tures.
It capped one of the most
remarkable turnarounds in
women's basketball. A &M
was the Big 12's worst pro-
gram eight years ago when it
hired Gary Blair. The Aggies
were 22 -90 in league play.
The national champions
were 33 -5.
"It has to be one of the most
emotional wins I've ever felt,"
said A &M athletics director
Bill Byrne, who hired Blair.
"We put this thing in motion
eight years ago and we set a
goal to win a national cham-
pionship, and we did it. It's
been fantastic. It's just been
fantastic."
The smiling Byrne was wear-
ing a national championship
hat and carrying a national
championship T -shirt and cele-
Fans encouraged to greet Aggie women
Texas A &M University's
women's basketball team will
arrive back in town Wednesday
afternoon and plans to immedi-
ately greet fans.
The team is expected to
arrive at Easterwood Airport at
around 1:50 p.m., be loaded
brating along with A &M
President R. Bowen Loftin.
"You just saw a great basket-
ball game between two great
teams who played their hearts
out," Loftin said. "And this
ought to do a lot to tell people
how important women's bas-
ketball is and how important
women's sports are."
Loftin, sporting his typical
bow tie, is a regular at the
women's games.
"They're No. 1 in the coun-
try, what more could you ask
for ?" he smiled. "Gary's
earned it. He's worked a life-
time for it, and Vic has too.
Don't forget Vic Schaefer, the
greatest assistant coach I've
ever seen."
The team got a champi-
onship send -off 90 minutes
before the tip -off at its hotel,
which was four blocks away.
The crowd was so loud that
Blair gave one of his shortest
onto buses and arrive at 2 p.rT
at Reed Arena, where fans will
be gathered outside the south-
west corner.
Fans are encouraged to
attend. Free parking will be
available in the Reed lots.
— Staff report
speeches — 80 seconds.
"Howdy Ags," he said, as he
looked down from an over-
flowing balcony of Aggies intq
a sea of more maroon -clad
well- wishers.
"We've got a little chore in
front of us today," he said.
"We've gotta go over there to
that little fieldhouse ... we're
in the state of Indiana. Notre
Dame is from Indiana. There's
a lot of Catholics from there,
but there's a few Catholics in
here."
The noise got so deafening,
he had to pause.
"How can you multiply that
noise because, number -wise,
we might be outnumbered
five or 10 to one ?"
The fans got even louder.
"I appreciate the support," 11e
said. "But more than any",
I just appreciate Texas A &M.
"Let's go beat the hell out cf
'em."
Danielle Adams Rachel Mitchell of Humble
is embraced Atoscocita, who, along with
Tuesday
6 -5 sophomore -to -be Karla
following the
Gilbert, will give the Aggies
Aggies' victory
one of the country's tallest
in Indianapolis.
frontcourts.
Throw in highly recruited
Eagle photo by
guards Tori Scott of Marrero,
La., and Alexia Standish of
Stuart Villanueva
Colleyville Heritage, and
Aggie fans should get used to
missing most of spring foot-
ball drills.
This is so much more fun.
• Email Robert Cessna at
robert.cessna@theeagle.com
new tradition.
And you can thank head
coach Gary Blair. This was
the culmination of his work
and, like Connecticut,
Tennessee and Stanford, he
plans to keep the A &M pro-
gram at the top of the moun-
tain until he retires, which
won't be any time soon.
A &M loses Adams and
Colson along with sixth man
Maryann Baker, but the
incoming group will be more
talented, led by 6-5 Kelsey
Bone. She's joined by 6-7
► MORE INSIDE
• Adams leads Aggies in win
over Notre Dame /C1
• Fans in College Station
enjoy win /C1
• National Championship in
brief /C1
• A &M -ND signal change in
women's basketball /C3
For more photos from the
game, go to
theeagle 777-v
Eagle photo by Stuart Villanueva
Painted Aggie fans cheer on their team Tuesday in Indianapolis.