Carolina Meets Old Dominion University Saturday After- 2000-01 Schedule and Results Noon at 2 at the Dean E
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THE CHRONICLE Cameron Indoor Stadium
Sports Snow boots and Tar Heels The ninth-ranked women's basketball team hosts arch-rival North Carolina tonight in THE CHRONICLE Cameron Indoor Stadium. See page 13 THURSDAY, JANUARY 27,2000 CIRCULATION 15,000 THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU DUKE ON ICE Slick coating keeps campus closed shift Thursday and canceled Thursday morn ing classes. The light, white snow that blanketed the Tri Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said angle Tuesday has hardened into thick, slick ice, he will probably extend the severe weather poli transforming a beautiful wintry scene into a cy throughout the day Thursday, and he expects nasty travel hazard. to make a decision by 9 a.m. "We don't know Like a once-welcome dinner guest unwilling enough yet," he said. Tt depends how cold it gets." to leave, the ice will linger indefinitely, sitting on An extension through Friday is "certainly a sidewalks and roadways and frustrating drivers possibility," he added. and pedestrians. Trask called the campus' icy sidewalks "a big On campus, several inches of ice buried the problem," one that will not be solved quickly by sidewalks, and the Bryan Center walkway could breaking up chunks or laying sand. have been used for speed skating. The roads on campus are navigable, enough As the temperature threatened to head so that buses could run. But Trask said he is con below 10 degrees, Duke administrators contin cerned about employees making it to Duke. ued the severe weather policy through the first Sec DUKE on page 7 VICTOR CHANG/THE CHRONICLE JENNIFER ANDERSON/THE CHRONICLE FRANCISCO RODRIGUEZ, left, performs the arduous task of chopping ice. -
BIG Eastconference
BIG EAST Conference Notre Dame won the BIG EAST Conference Commissioner’s Trophy for women’s athletics, signifying the league’s top all-around athletics program, every year from 1997-2003. The league has long been considered a BIG EAST leader in innovative concepts in promotion and Conference publicity, particularly regarding television. Those efforts have resulted in unparalleled vis- After celebrating its 25th anniversary ibility for BIG EAST student-athletes. The con- a year ago, the BIG EAST Conference ference has long-range television contracts moves forward in 2004-05 with new with CBS, ESPN and ABC. members poised to join a conference While BIG EAST basketball games are regu- that gives unequivocal importance to lar sellouts at campus and major public are- providing student-athletes with oppor- nas, including the annual BIG EAST tunities to excel against the nation’s Championship in Madison Square Garden, best. attendance figures also are significant at BIG In 2005-06, the league will add five new EAST soccer, women’s basketball and baseball members: the University of Cincinnati, games. DePaul University, the University of More than 500 BIG EAST athletes have Louisville, Marquette University and the earned All-America recognition and dozens University of South Florida. have won individual NCAA national champi- Since opening its doors in 1979, the league onships. The BIG EAST has been well repre- has won 24 national championships in six dif- sented in U.S. or foreign national and Olympic ferent sports and 122 student-athletes have teams. Several athletes earned gold medals in won individual national titles. -
Georgia Southern Women's Basketball Primary Media Outlets
THE GUIDE INSIDE THE GUIDE MiMi DuBose ....................................................46 Table of Contents ...............................................1 Lacie Dowling ..................................................47 2009-2010 Quick Facts ....................................2 Danielle Spencer .............................................47 Media Information .............................................3 Aishya Wofford ............................................... 47 2010-2011 Roster ...........................................4-5 Hanner Fieldhouse ........................................48 TV/Radio Chart ....................................................6 2009-10 REVIEW THE UNIVERSITY Final Notes .........................................................50 Georgia Southern University ..................7-11 Final Stats/Individual Highs ........................51 Iron Works .........................................................12 Superlatives/Game-by-Game Highs ......52 Sports Medicine/Academic Services ......13 Box Scores ....................................................53-58 Athletic Foundation ......................................14 SoCon Final Statistics ...............................59-60 Administration .................................................. 15 Surrounding Statesboro ........................16-17 RECORD BOOK Coaches & Staff ............................................... 18 Points ..............................................................62-63 Rebounds .......................................................... -
Women's Basketball Award Winners
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS All-America Teams 2 National Award Winners 15 Coaching Awards 20 Other Honors 22 First Team All-Americans By School 25 First Team Academic All-Americans By School 34 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners By School 39 ALL-AMERICA TEAMS 1980 Denise Curry, UCLA; Tina Division II Carla Eades, Central Mo.; Gunn, BYU; Pam Kelly, Francine Perry, Quinnipiac; WBCA COACHES’ Louisiana Tech; Nancy Stacey Cunningham, First selected in 1975. Voted on by the Wom en’s Lieberman, Old Dominion; Shippensburg; Claudia Basket ball Coaches Association. Was sponsored Inge Nissen, Old Dominion; Schleyer, Abilene Christian; by Kodak through 2006-07 season and State Jill Rankin, Tennessee; Lorena Legarde, Portland; Farm through 2010-11. Susan Taylor, Valdosta St.; Janice Washington, Valdosta Rosie Walker, SFA; Holly St.; Donna Burks, Dayton; 1975 Carolyn Bush, Wayland Warlick, Tennessee; Lynette Beth Couture, Erskine; Baptist; Marianne Crawford, Woodard, Kansas. Candy Crosby, Northern Ill.; Immaculata; Nancy Dunkle, 1981 Denise Curry, UCLA; Anne Kelli Litsch, Southwestern Cal St. Fullerton; Lusia Donovan, Old Dominion; Okla. Harris, Delta St.; Jan Pam Kelly, Louisiana Tech; Division III Evelyn Oquendo, Salem St.; Irby, William Penn; Ann Kris Kirchner, Rutgers; Kaye Cross, Colby; Sallie Meyers, UCLA; Brenda Carol Menken, Oregon St.; Maxwell, Kean; Page Lutz, Moeller, Wayland Baptist; Cindy Noble, Tennessee; Elizabethtown; Deanna Debbie Oing, Indiana; Sue LaTaunya Pollard, Long Kyle, Wilkes; Laurie Sankey, Rojcewicz, Southern Conn. Beach St.; Bev Smith, Simpson; Eva Marie St.; Susan Yow, Elon. Oregon; Valerie Walker, Pittman, St. Andrews; Lois 1976 Carol Blazejowski, Montclair Cheyney; Lynette Woodard, Salto, New Rochelle; Sally St.; Cindy Brogdon, Mercer; Kansas. -
A All-Time USA Basketball Women's Alphabetical Roster with Affiliation & Results Through February 2020
All-Time USA Basketball Women’s Alphabetical Roster With Affiliation & Results Through February 2020 A NAME AFFILIATION EVENT RECORD / FINISH Katie Abrahamson Georgia 1985 USOF-North 1-3 / Bronze Karna Abram Indiana 1983 USOF-North 1-3 / Fourth Demetra Adams Florida C.C. 1987 USOF-South 2-2 / Silver Jayda Adams Mater Dei H.S. (CA) 2015 U16 4-1 / Bronze Jody Adams Tennessee 1990 JNT 2-2 / N/A 1990 USOF-South 0-4 / Fourth Jordan Adams Mater Dei H.S. (CA) 2011 U19 8-1 / Gold 2010 U17 8-0 / Gold 2009 U16 5-0 / Gold Candice Agee Penn State 2013 U19 9-0 / Gold Silverado H.S. (CA) 2012 U18 5-0 / Gold Valerie Agee Hawaii 1991 USOF-West 1-3 / Bronze Matee Ajavon Rutgers 2007 PAG 5-0 / Gold Malcom X Shabazz H.S. (NJ) 2003 YDF-East 5-0 / Gold Bella Alarie Princeton 2019 PAG 4-1 / Silver 2017 U19 6-1 / Silver Tawona Al-Haleem John A. Logan College 1993 USOF-North 2-2 / Bronze Moniquee Alexander IMG Academy (FL) 2005 YDF-Red 3-2 / Bronze Rita Alexander Hutcherson Flying Queens / 1957 WC 8-1 / Gold Wayland Baptist College 1955 PAG 8-0 / Gold Danielle Allen Harrison H.S. (AR) 2002 YDF-South 2-3 / Silver Lindsay Allen St. John's College H.S. (DC) 2012 U17 8-0 / Gold Sha'Ronda Allen Western Kentucky 1995 USOF-North 2-2 / Bronze Starretta Allen Independence H.S. (OH) 2004 YDF-North 2-3 / Silver Britney Anderson Meadowbrook H.S. (VA) 2002 YDF-East 3-2 / Bronze Chantelle Anderson Vanderbilt 2001 WUG 7-1 / Gold 2000 JCUP 4-0 / Gold 2000 SEL Lost / 97-31 Hudson Bay H.S. -
Records Section
1994 NCAA Championship game: UNC 60, Louisiana Tech 59 Charlotte Smith had to wait for the again in Charlottesville on Feb. 9, 83-74. replay to watch the biggest shot in North There were a few other close calls, Carolina women’s basketball history fall though. At the ACC Tournament in Rock through the net. She was the one who Hill, S.C., the defense stiffened to beat released it, just before time expired in the Clemson 65-64 and advance to the final. 1994 NCAA Championship game, but Having survived that scare, Carolina final- ultimately her line of vision was blocked. ly got the better of Virginia, 77-60 in the “I didn’t look at it,” Smith said. “And championship game, to claim its first con- the mob got me before I knew it had gone ference crown since 1984. in.” After advancing through first and sec- That mob, made of her teammates, had ond-round NCAA Tournament games in good reason to be excited. Just three years Chapel Hill, UNC traveled to the East earlier, when the seniors on that team were Regional at Rutgers. There, the Tar Heels freshmen, North Carolina had finished at beat Vanderbilt 73-69, despite playing the bottom of the Atlantic Coast without Smith, who served a one-game Conference. So to have hit those heights, suspension for fighting during the second 1994 NCAA Champions earning the program’s–and the confer- round win against Old Dominion. ence’s–first NCAA title, was almost too Nathan Darling Crawley picked up the slack with a sea- much to be believed. -
1999-00 NCAA Women's Basketball Championships Records
Bsktball_W (99-00) 11/28/00 12:03 PM Page 368 36 8 DIVISION I Ba s k e t b a l l DIVISION I 2000 Championship Hi g h l i g h t s Huskie Hustle: Pressure defense and quick hands helped Connecticut steal an early, insur- mountable lead over Tennessee and claim the Division I Women’s Basketball Championship April 2 in Philadelphia, 71-52. The Huskies built a 15-point lead a little more than 12 minutes into the first half, and Tennessee could never recover. The Lady Vols, who had been averaging 80 points per game, took 13 min- utes to reach 10 points in the national title game. The Huskies were led by the Final Four’s most outstanding player, Shea Ralph, who set the tone for her team defensively with six steals and added 15 points and seven assists to the victory. Connecticut earned its second national title five years to the day after its first championship win in 1995. The Huskies finished the season with a 36-1 record and avenged their only loss of the sea- son at the hands of the Lady Vols, February 2, 72-71. All-Tournament Team: Ralph was joined on the all-tournament team by teammates Sue Bird, Svetlana Abrosimova and Asjha Jones. Tennessee’s Tamika Catchings was also honored. TOURNAMENT SCORING LEADERS Player, Team G FG FG A Pc t . FT FT A Pc t . Rb . Av g . As t . Pt s . Av g . LaNeisha Caufield, Oklahoma.. 3 26 43 .6 0 5 18 22 .8 1 8 18 6. -
WBCA and Kodak Announce NCAA Division I Kodak/WBCA All-America Honorable Mention Finalists
WBCA and Kodak Announce NCAA Division I Kodak/WBCA All-America Honorable Mention Finalists ATLANTA, Ga. (March 12, 2003) -- The Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) and The Eastman Kodak Company today announced the finalists for the 2003 NCAA Division I Kodak/WBCA All-America Women's Basketball Team. WBCA member coaches of the Kodak/WBCA All-America Selection Committee in each of the eight WBCA geographical regions select the Kodak/WBCA All-America Team. The NCAA Division I Kodak/WBCA Honorable Mention Finalists are listed below by region: Region Name Institution Year Pos. Hgt. Region 1 Jennifer Butler University of Massachusetts SR G 6'3" Molly Creamer Bucknell University SR G 5'10" Becky Gottstein Boston College SR F/P 6'1" Tamara James University of Miami FR G/F 5'9" Trish Juhline Villanova University SR G 5'10" Cappie Pondester Rutgers University SO G 5'9" Diana Taurasi University of Connecticut JR G 6'0" Region 2 Gunto Basko Siena College SR F 6'0" Alana Beard Duke University JR G 5'11" Coretta Brown University of North Carolina SR G 5'8" Chrissy Floyd Clemson University SR G 5'9" Sonja Mallory Georgia Institute of Technology SR C 6'5" Iciss Tillis Duke University JR F 6'4" Region 3 Chantelle Anderson Vanderbilt University SR C 6'6" Seimone Augustus Louisiana State University FR G/F 6'1" Gwen Jackson University of Tennessee, Knoxville SR F 6'2" Kara Lawson University of Tennessee, Knoxville SR G 5'8" Jocelyn Penn University of South Carolina SR F 6'0" LaToya Thomas Mississippi State University SR F 6'2" Region 4 Tamara Bowie -
2011-Indiana-Fever-Media-Guide.Pdf
There is a MedCheck IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. Open every day, evenings and weekends, affordable medical care for minor illness or injury for adults and children at a lower cost than that of an emergency room visit. Introducing our new WebAhead online appointment scheduling using a smartphone or any internet connected computer. This new, free online scheduling service speeds up registration so you can avoid wait times for your urgent care visit. Choose from one of six locations to get in and out quicker. Try it at MedCheckWebAhead.com. eCommunity.com/medcheck SIX CONSECUTIVE WNBA PLAYOFF APPEARANCES TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION..................................................................... 2-10 PLAYOFF HISTORY AND RECORDS.............................. 103-118 2011 Indiana Fever Schedule........................................................3 All-Time Playoff Summary, Coaching & Attendance Records ... 104 Quick Facts ...................................................................................3 All-Time Playoff Results............................................................ 105 Media Information...................................................................... 4-5 Fever Team Playoff Records ............................................. 106-110 Conseco Fieldhouse.................................................................. 6-8 Fever Individual Playoff Records ....................................... 110-114 Welcome to Indianapolis ...............................................................9 Fever & Opponent Top -
Talk Denounces Sex Trafficking Panelists
---------- ---- Tuesdav, March 4, 2003 Irish THE ~ salute sentors• tonight The Independent Newspaper Seroing Notre Dame and Saint Mary's Insider VOL XXXVII NO. 107 HTTP://OBSERVER.ND.EDU Talk denounces sex trafficking Panelists employment. It also involves By JOE TROMBELLO vulnerable victims; they don't speak out News Writer speak the language, they don't know the country and they In a lecture entitled "Sexual don't know the culture," on KKK Slavery: The Problem of the Mattar said. Trafficking of Women in an A co-director of the The International Context," interna Protection Project, a legal By JULIE MILLER-LEMON tional law scholar Mohamed human rights research insti News Writer Mattar educated the audience tute at Johns Hopkins Monday evening in DeBartolo University that records and Faculty, students, and community Hall about the problem of sex spreads information about the members gathered yesterday and labor trallicking that victim scope of person trafficking, evening in a packed Debartolo lec izes thousands of women each Mattar focused on the ture hall to hear three local women year. Trafficking Victims Protection advocate a message of "no hate in "I believe that trafficking in Act signed by President Bill America" as they recounted their persons is an issue that should Clinton in 2000. experiences of hate moving into be addressed by all, by universi "I think that it [the their Osceola County neighborhood ties and especially by law Trafficking Victims Protection in the form of the Klu Klux Klan. schools," he said. Act] is the most important Alvin Tillery, assistant professor Mattar. an adjunct professor of human rights legislation in the of Political Science, headed the law at Johns Hopkins University, history of the United States," panel discussion in an effort to Georgetown University and he said. -
East Side News Issued Friday Serving Larchmere- Woodland, Shaker Square, Buckeye, Woodland, East Side Daily News Mt
Salute To EAST SIDE NEWS ISSUED FRIDAY SERVING LARCHMERE- WOODLAND, SHAKER SQUARE, BUCKEYE, WOODLAND, EAST SIDE DAILY NEWS MT. PLEASANT, LEE & AVALON, HARVARD - LEE, MILES - UNION, UNIVERSITY CIRCLE AREA, WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS, VILLAGE OF - For 21 Years - FREE HIGHLAND HILLS AND CITY. OF EAST CLEVELAND OfReporting Our Community News READ ON- WRITE ON Thesday, July 10,2001- Friday, July 13,2001 VOL.22No.l9 "COVERING THE NEWS TODAY FOR A BETTER TOMORROW" *July 10, 1980- July 10, 2001 * Raymond Pierce meets with publishers SPORTS News Bulletin MENU TIPS Raymond C. Pierce to the· people in attendence recently met with Greater that the citizens of Cleveland Merlakia Jones of the Cleveland Minority Publish are his first priority. City To Host Cleveland Rockers was recently Nutrition Adds ers to discuss key elements of He is nationally her assigned to the WNBA All-Star NCAA Women To Taste his ·campaign for mayor of alded as an innovator in pub team for the Eastern Conference. Cleveland at Morning Star lic education policy. Jones is a guard. The All-Star Baptist Church, 10250 Shaker Pierce is the former Game will be held on July 16th, See Page 7 See Page 8 Blvd. deputy assistant secretary of in Orlando. Pierce answered the U.S. Department of Edu questions and provided fore cation in the Clinton adminis sight to ways in which the tration. Papis Job graduates from Benedictine qualities oflife can be greatly He is a practicing at torney with considerable expe Papis Joh recently improved in Cleveland. rience in business and gov received his diploma and con Pierce graduated ernment affairs. -
CAROLINA UNC WOMEN's BASKETBALL the Tar Heels Travel To
UNCC WAROLINAOMEN’S BASKETBALL The Tar Heels travel to NC State • Feb. 21, 2001 • 7:00 p.m. Tipoff North Carolina will wrap up the 2000-01 regular season with 2000-01 Schedule and Results road games against its Triangle rivals. On Feb. 21, Carolina plays 14-11 (7-7 ACC) at NC State with a 7 p.m. tipoff. On Feb. 26, UNC plays at Duke Nov. 17 At Buffalo L, 95-89 with a 7:30 p.m. tipoff. Nov. 19 At Syracuse W, 81-68 Nov. 21 North Carolina A&T W, 101-33 Quick facts on the Tar Heels Nov. 25 Old Dominion ** L, 91-77 2000-01 Record: 14-11 overall (7-7 ACC) Nov. 27 East Tennessee State W, 84-63 Head Coach: Sylvia Hatchell Dec. 3 Notre Dame L, 78-55 Hatchell’s Career Record: 575-237 (26th year) (Honda Elite 4 Holiday Classic, Orlando, Fla) Hatchell’s Record at UNC: 303-157 (15th year) Assistant Head Coach: Andrew Calder Dec. 9 Maryland W, 87-69 Assistant Coaches: Tracey Williams, Sylvia Crawley Dec. 16 Winthrop W, 71-48 Team Captains: LaQuanda Barksdale, Juana Brown, Leah Sharp Dec. 21 South Carolina W, 74-68 National Rankings: Not ranked in either poll (Carolina Classic, Myrtle Beach, S.C.) Sports information contact: Dana Gelin Dec. 28 Elon W, 77-58 Phone/email: (919) 962-0083/[email protected] Jan. 2 Georgia Tech L, 82-75 UNC website: www.TarHeelBlue.com Jan. 4 At Wake Forest L, 73-71 Jan. 8 At Clemson W, 71-70 On the air Jan.