Association Intercollegiate Athletics Women
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All-Time Coaching Ledger
all-time coaching ledger JILL HUTCHISON GOOCH FOSTER JENNY YOPP Years Active: 1971-73, 1974-99 Years Active: 1973-74 Years Active: 1999-2003 Record: 461-323 (.588) [28 seasons] Record: 17-4 (.810) [One season] Record: 25-83 (.231) [Four seasons] • Redbird basketball all-time wins • 1974 AIAW State Champions YOPP YEAR-BY-YEAR leader (men’s and women’s). • 1974 AIAW Regional 1999-2000 ..................................6-20 • Three NCAA Tournament bids. Champions 2000-01 ......................................5-22 • Six WNIT bids. • Finished the season ranked 2001-02 ......................................7-20 • Three-time conference coach of No. 12 in the nation 2002-03 ......................................7-21 the year (1985, 1988, 1996). • Coached 13 first-team FOSTER YEAR-BY-YEAR all-conference players, two All- 1973-74 ......................................17-4 Americans and two Olympians. • Illinois State Athletics Hall of Fame member (1984). • Missouri Valley Conference Hall of Fame member (2008). • Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame member (2009). HUTCHISON YEAR-BY-YEAR *1970-71 .....................................13-9 1971-72 ...................................... 11-6 ROBIN PINGETON Years Active: 2003-10 1972-73 ......................................17-5 Record: 144-81 (.640) [Seven seasons] 1974-75 ......................................14-9 MELINDA FISCHER 1975-76 ....................................18-12 Years Active: 1980-85 • Two NCAA Tournament bids 1976-77 ......................................20-6 Record: 113-47 (.810) [Five -
2010-11 Women's Basketball Game Notes
BRADLEY 2010-11 Women’s Basketball Game Notes Jim Rea, Associate Director of Communications • O: (309) 677-3869 • C: (309) 256-4379 • F: (309) 677-2626 • E-Mail: [email protected] • www.BradleyBraves.com Bradley University Quick Facts This Week In Bradley Women’s Basketball General Information Game #10 Location Peoria, Ill. Bradley Braves (6-3 overall) Founded 1897 vs. Northern Illinois Huskies (5-5 overall) Enrollment 5,801 Renaissance Coliseum (4,200) • Peoria, Ill. Type Co-educational, private Saturday, December 18, 2010 • 7:05 p.m. Affiliation NCAA Division I-AAA Television: None vs. Conference Missouri Valley Radio: 1290 AM WIRL Athletics Nickname Braves Internet: Live video & audio streams at http://www.bradleybraves.com/liveEvents/liveEvents.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=3400 Colors Red (PMS 186) and White Live Stats: http://www.bubraves.com/liveStats/liveStats.dbml?&DB_OEM_ID=3400 President Joanne K. Glasser, Esq. Series History: NIU leads 7-4 Director of Athletics Michael Cross, PhD Last Meeting: NIU won 86-73 in DeKalb, Ill., on Nov. 13, 2009 Executive Associate A.D./SWA Virnette House-Browning For Starters three starters from last year’s squad which finished 10-19 Bradley (6-3 overall) plays its first game after finals at home overall and was fifth in the West Division of the Mid-American Basketball Information Saturday against Northern Illinois before kicking off a three- Conference (4-12). Bradley and NIU have one common opponent Home Arena Renaissance Coliseum game road swing next week. The Braves bring a three-game to date in Western Illinois, with both teams picking up road Capacity 4,200 win streak into the contest with the Huskies and have won five wins in Macomb against the Leathernecks. -
Interview with Lorene Ramsey # DGB-V-D-2004-013 Interview Date: October 18, 2004 Interviewer: Ellyn Bartges
Interview with Lorene Ramsey # DGB-V-D-2004-013 Interview Date: October 18, 2004 Interviewer: Ellyn Bartges COPYRIGHT The following material can be used for educational and other non-commercial purposes without the written permission of either Ellyn Bartges (Interviewer) or the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library. “Fair use” criteria of Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 must be followed. These materials are not to be deposited in other repositories, nor used for resale or commercial purposes without the authorization from the Audio-Visual Curator at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, 112 N. 6th Street, Springfield, Illinois 62701. Telephone (217) 785-7955 A Note to the Reader This transcript is based on an interview recorded by Ellyn Bartges. Readers are reminded that the interview of record is the original video or audio file, and are encouraged to listen to portions of the original recording to get a better sense of the interviewee's personality and state of mind. The interview has been transcribed in near-verbatim format, then edited for clarity and readability, and reviewed by the interviewee. For many interviews, the ALPL Oral History Program retains substantial files with further information about the interviewee and the interview itself. Please contact us for information about accessing these materials. This is a copy of the interview that I had with Lorene Ramsey from Illinois Central College, former basketball and head softball coach there for thirty-four years. The interview took place on October 18, 2004, and I'm transferring it over from an RCA recorder for sound quality. Bartges: It is October eighteenth here at Illinois Central College, and I am interviewing Lorene Ramsey, former head women's basketball and softball coach at ICC [Illinois Central College], and she currently resides in Arizona. -
0809-Wbb-Mg-Sec02-Preview.Pdf
Stanford Basketball Roster 2008-09 Basketball Team: Front Row (L-R) - Rosalyn Gold-Onwude, Grace Mashore, Jillian Harmon, Jeanette Pohlen, JJ Hones, Lindy La Rocque, Melanie Murphy, Hannah Donaghe. Back Row (l-r): Team manager Kerry Blake, assistant coach Kate Paye, associate head coach Amy Tucker, Nnemkadi Ogwumike, Morgan Clyburn, Kayla Pedersen, Sarah Boothe, Jayne Appel, Ashley Cimino, Michelle Harrison, assistant coach Bobbie Kelsey, head coach Tara VanDerveer, athletic trainer Marcella Shorty, team manager Dorothy Boakye-Donkor. 2008-09 Stanford Women’s Basketball Roster Pronunciation Guide No Name Pos Ht Yr Hometown (High School) Jayne Appel Uh-pell 0 Melanie Murphy G 5-9 R-So. Brooklyn, NY (Midwood HS) Ashley Cimino sih-mih-no 1 Grace Mashore G 5-10 Fr. Washington, D.C. (National Cathedral) Hannah Donaghe DON-ah-gee 2 Jayne Appel F/C 6-4 Jr. Pleasant Hill, Calif. (Carondelet HS) Rosalyn Gold-Onwude on-woo-DAY 5 Michelle Harrison F 6-3 R-So. Orem, Utah (Mountain View HS) JJ Hones Hones (rhymes with cones) 10 JJ Hones G 5-10 Jr. Beaverton, Ore. (Southridge HS) Lindy La Rocque Luh-ROCK 14 Kayla Pedersen F 6-4 So. Fountain Hills, Ariz. (Red Mountain HS) Grace Mashore MAY-shore 15 Lindy La Rocque G 5-8 Fr. Las Vegas, Nev. (Durango HS) Nnemkadi Ogwumike nem-KA-dee oh-GWOOM-i-kay 20 Hannah Donaghe G 5-11 So. Atascadero, Calif. (Atascadero HS) Jeanette Pohlen PO-lin 21 Rosalyn Gold-Onwude G 5-10 R-Jr. Queens, NY (Archbishop Molloy HS) Tara VanDerveer TAR-uh van-DER-veer 23 Jeanette Pohlen G 6-0 So. -
2003 NCAA Women's Basketball Records Book
AwWin_WB02 10/31/02 4:47 PM Page 99 Award Winners All-American Selections ................................... 100 Annual Awards ............................................... 103 Division I First-Team All-Americans by Team..... 106 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by Team ....................................................... 108 First-Team Academic All-Americans by Team.... 110 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by Team ....................................................... 112 AwWin_WB02 10/31/02 4:47 PM Page 100 100 ALL-AMERICAN SELECTIONS All-American Selections Annette Smith, Texas; Marilyn Stephens, Temple; Joyce Division II: Jennifer DiMaggio, Pace; Jackie Dolberry, Kodak Walker, LSU. Hampton; Cathy Gooden, Cal Poly Pomona; Jill Halapin, Division II: Carla Eades, Central Mo. St.; Francine Pitt.-Johnstown; Joy Jeter, New Haven; Mary Naughton, Note: First selected in 1975. Voted on by the Women’s Perry, Quinnipiac; Stacey Cunningham, Shippensburg; Stonehill; Julie Wells, Northern Ky.; Vanessa Wells, West Basketball Coaches Association. Claudia Schleyer, Abilene Christian; Lorena Legarde, Port- Tex. A&M; Shannon Williams, Valdosta St.; Tammy Wil- son, Central Mo. St. 1975 land; Janice Washington, Valdosta St.; Donna Burks, Carolyn Bush, Wayland Baptist; Marianne Crawford, Dayton; Beth Couture, Erskine; Candy Crosby, Northeast Division III: Jessica Beachy, Concordia-M’head; Catie Immaculata; Nancy Dunkle, Cal St. Fullerton; Lusia Harris, Ill.; Kelli Litsch, Southwestern Okla. Cleary, Pine Manor; Lesa Dennis, Emmanuel (Mass.); Delta St.; Jan Irby, William Penn; Ann Meyers, UCLA; Division III: Evelyn Oquendo, Salem St.; Kaye Cross, Kimm Lacken, Col. of New Jersey; Louise MacDonald, St. Brenda Moeller, Wayland Baptist; Debbie Oing, Indiana; Colby; Sallie Maxwell, Kean; Page Lutz, Elizabethtown; John Fisher; Linda Mason, Rust; Patti McCrudden, New Sue Rojcewicz, Southern Conn. St.; Susan Yow, Elon. -
Good Drafting Makes Good Contracts
Good Drafting Makes Good Contracts by Martin J. Greenberg, Greenberg & Hoeschen, LLC, Milwaukee, WI Sports contracts deserve the same precision of draftsmanship as any other legal document. When drafting sports contracts, our goal as lawyers should be precision and expression conferring a singular meaning. The document should be clear on its face so that it is not subject to third-party intervention. In essence, when drafting sports contracts we should adopt the principle of S.U.C.S. (Simplicity – Martin Greenberg Understanding – Clarity - Standardization) or K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Stupid).1 Although the principles of S.U.C.S. have been promoted for over a decade, parties today continue to violate them while drafting sports contracts. Mistakes particular to sports contracts are repeated, resulting in mediation or arbitration between the parties.2 Recently, Louisiana State University learned first hand why sports contracts, perhaps even more than others, must be drafted with particular attention to the principles of S.U.C.S. Pokey Chatman (Chatman) was an integral part of the Louisiana State University (LSU) women’s basketball program as a player and a coach for 17 years. Chatman was a point guard for LSU from 1988 until 1991 and in 1991 received Kodak All-American honors in her senior year.3 During the 2003-04 basketball season, Chatman was appointed LSU’s interim head coach replacing the legendary Sue Gunter. As acting head coach, the Lady Tigers finished the 2003-04 regular season with a 15-5 record and ended the season in the women’s Final Four. -
The NCAA News
Official Publication of the National Collegiate Athletic Association March 18,1992, Volume 29 Number 12 Gender-equity task force to go on a fast track A proposed genderequity task force is contain nine to 12 individuals. expected to work on an accelerated timetable Diversity in order to meet the NCAA’s legislative “That would include people within the Title IX only part of gender equity deadline, according to NCAA Executive membership who represent divergent Director Richard D. Schultz. groups from excellent athletics administra- When the NCAA announced the results equity is a philosophical consideration “I want this committee to conclude its tors to strong women’s rights advocates,” of the gender-equity survey March 11, the while Title IX is strictly legal. Member work so that any required legislation can be Schultz said. “Also, I anticipate there will be question arose as to the distinction between institutions may meet compliance stand- considered at the 1993 Convention,” Schultz people from outside advocacy groups, pos- Title 1X compliance and gender equity. ards for Title IX, Schultz said, but they said. “That means by the middle of August.” sibly a Congressman. We need to be very “Gender equity is not Title IX, and Title may not have gender equity in their pro- The idea of the task force was announced careful to come up with the right group.” IX is not gender equity,” Executive Direc- grams. at a March 1 I news conference at which the The formation of the task force is on the tor Richard D. Schultz said at the news For example, Schultz cited a common results of the NCAA’s gender-equity survey March 25 agenda of the NCAA Administra- conference announcing the results of the misconception: that the primary thrust of were revealed. -
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. -
Women in Higher Education, 1996. REPORT NO ISSN-1060-8303 PUB DATE 96 NOTE 280P
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 401 855 HE 029 708 AUTHOR Wenniger, Mary Dee, Ed. TITLE Women in Higher Education, 1996. REPORT NO ISSN-1060-8303 PUB DATE 96 NOTE 280p. AVAILABLE FROMWenniger Company, 1934 Monroe Street, Madison, WI 53711-2027 (yearly subscription, $79; $89 Canada [U.S. funds]; $99 elsewhere). PUB TYPE Collected Works Serials (022) JOURNAL CIT Women in Higher Education; v5 n1-2 1996 EDRS PRICE MFO1 /PC12 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Affirmative Action; College Administration; College Athletics; College Faculty; Comparable Worth; *Educational Environment; *Females; Feminism; *Higher Education; Leadership; Newsletters; *Organizational Change; *Sex Discrimination; Women Administrators; Womens Athletics; Womens Education IDENTIFIERS Bennington College VT; Ohio State University; University of Akron OH; University of Michigan ABSTRACT This document consists of the issues of a 1996 newsletter on women students, teachers, and administrators in higher education. Each issue includes feature articles, news on higher education, profiles of significant people in the field, and job announcements. The issues' main articles concern:(1) a successful campaign to increase female representation throughout the University of Michigan campus;(2) how downsizing integrated work/family issues on the Ohio State University campus;(3) American Bar Association suggestions on how to end law school sexism;(4) Bennington Coll'ege's efforts to link student and academic services;(5) how leaders can create ethical campus climate;(6) the stir caused by a poster of women artists 24 years after its creation;(7) how homophobia intimidates women athletes;(8) organizations' need for the human spirit;(9) campuses joining to "right the standard" that waivers; (10) maintaining diversity amid threats to affirmative action; (11) University of Akron women fighting back after gender purge; and (12) a consultant's prediction that in 10 years, half of Higher Education Chief Executive Officers will be women. -
West Chester's Deirdre Kane to Receive WBCA's Carol Eckman Award
West Chester's Deirdre Kane to Receive WBCA's Carol Eckman Award ATLANTA, Ga. (March 10, 2004) -- The Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) has announced Deirdre Kane as the winner of its Carol Eckman Award. The Carol Eckman Award is presented annually to an active WBCA coach who exemplifies Eckman's spirit, integrity and character through sportsmanship, commitment to the student-athlete, honesty, ethical behavior, courage and dedication to purpose. The award is named in honor of the late Carol Eckman, the former West Chester State College coach who is considered the "Mother of the Women's Collegiate Basketball Championship." Eckman organized the first women's basketball championship at West Chester in 1969 and continued to garner recognition and support for the women's game until her death from cancer in 1985. "It's quite amazing to see the legacy of Coach Eckman's spirit live on through one of her successors," said WBCA CEO, Beth Bass. "Deirdre has done an outstanding job maintaining the integrity of the West Chester women's basketball program." Kane is the head women's basketball coach at West Chester University. She has won over 200 games, more than any women's basketball coach in the school's history. Last season, she led the team to the program's first PSAC Championship game and their first NCAA Division II Tournament win. Kane's past honors include WBCA District II Coach of the Year and PSAC Eastern Division Coach of the Year, an honor she received for two consecutive seasons. Kane will receive her award at the State Farm Wade Trophy and State Farm/WBCA Player of the Year Luncheon, presented by Jostens. -
Championship Game Notes
2013 NCAAÒ WOMEN’S FINAL FOURÒ National Championship - #1 Connecticut 93, #5 Louisville 60 New Orleans Arena · New Orleans, La. Tuesday, April 9 CHAMPIONSHIP GAME NOTES • The Big East won its ninth women’s basketball national championship tonight. The nine national titles surpass the SEC, who has eight, for the most all-time. • This marks just the fifth time that conference schools have met for the national title: 1989 (Tennessee over Auburn), 1996 (Tennessee over Georgia), 2006 (Maryland over Duke) and 2009 (Connecticut over Louisville). • With Louisville holding a 14-10 lead at the 13:51 mark of the first half, UConn exploded for 19 straight points to take a 29-14 lead with 8:48 left in the half. Louisville got as close as 11 (29-18) with 7:55 left but UConn outscored the Cardinals 19-11 the rest of the way to take a 48-29 lead into the locker room. UConn Notes: • With the win, UConn improves to 35-4 overall and wins its first national championship since claiming back-to-back titles in 2009 and 2010. • Tonight’s win gives UConn its eighth women’s basketball national championship. • Connecticut ties Tennessee for the most NCAA titles in history with its eighth (1995, 2000, ’02, ’03, ’04, ’09, ’10, and ’13). All eight titles have come under Geno Auriemma and he is now tied with Tennessee’s Pat Summit for the most all time for a head coach in women’s basketball history. • The Huskies have an 8-0 record in national championship games with wins over Tennessee (1995, 2000. -
2001-02 Arizona State Women's Basketball
2001-02 SCHEDULE/RESULTS 2001-02 ARIZONA STATE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL 4-2 OVERALL, 0-0 PAC-10 ASU Holiday Women’s Basketball Classic NOVEMBER Dec. 1 & 2, 2001 • Wells Fargo Arena • Tempe, Ariz. 4 TEAM CONCEPT# W, 67-53 9 DELTA KOSICE # W, 77-48 Arizona State Sun Devils (4-2) vs. Fordham Rams (1-3) • 5 p.m. MST 17 ST. PETER'S W, 72-67 Northwestern State (1-1) vs. Rutgers (1-1) • 7 p.m. MST 19 DELAWARE STATE W, 62-42 21 LOYOLA MARYMOUNT L, 63-70 (All of ASU’s games on XTRA 910 AM) 24-26 Paradise Jam (St. Thomas, Virgin Islands) Coming off winning the Paradise Jam last week in St. Thomas, the Arizona State Sun 24 Western Michigan L, 63-77 Devils return home to play host to the 22nd annual ASU Holiday Classic this weekend at 25 Kansas State W, 76-58 Wells Fargo Arena. The host Sun Devils will be looking to reclaim the title in their own 26 Richmond W, 68-57 event after falling to UCSB in the championship game last year. ASU, now 4-2 on the year DECEMBER and on a two-game winning streak, will take on Fordham (1-3) in the first game of the tour- 1-2 ASU HOLIDAY CLASSIC nament at 5 p.m. on Saturday, while Northwestern State (1-1) will face Rutgers (1-1 with 1 FORDHAM 5 p.m. a game at Pacific on Thursday) in the nightcap at 7 p.m. On Sunday, the consolation game Northwestern State 7 p.m.