#21/22 Notre Dame Battles #10/9 Rutgers Tuesday
Jan. 23, 2006
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After squaring its BIG EAST Conference record and picking up its third win in four games, the road doesn't get any easier for the No. 21/22 Notre Dame women's basketball team as the Irish visit No. 10/9 Rutgers Tuesday for a 7:30 p.m. (ET) contest. The game will be broadcast to a nationwide cable audience by College Sports Television (CSTV) as part of the BIG EAST Game of the Week package.
Notre Dame (12-5, 3-3 BIG EAST) earned back-to-back wins for the first time since Dec. 17-18 when it held on for a 54-52 victory at Georgetown on Saturday. The Irish led by as many as 17 points three times in the second half, but let things get interesting down the stretch, as the Hoyas mounted a 19-4 run and had a look at a game-winning three-pointer in the final seconds. Senior guard Megan Duffy led Notre Dame with 16 points and five assists, while sophomore center Melissa D'Amico matched her career high with 10 rebounds.
Rankings Web Sites Setting The Standard In its history, Notre Dame has developed eight All-Americans, eight WNBA players (including five draft picks in the past five years) and four USA Basketball veterans (eight medals won). Now in their 29th season in 2005-06, the Irish own an all-time record of 587-259 (.694).
Notre Dame Head Coach Muffet McGraw NOTES A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish However, Notre Dame then saw its fortunes reversed, as the Irish dropped four of their next five, including their first three-game losing streak in eight years. Then, as quickly as the misfortune arrived, it disappeared, with Notre Dame wining three of its last four games, including its third win over a ranked opponent this season (78-75 over No. 10 DePaul on Jan. 17).
One of the keys for the Irish this season has been their offensive balance. On 12 occasions, Notre Dame has had at least three players scoring in double figures, and eight separate players have cracked double digits at least twice this year. Additionally, five 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 herself 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 15.9 points, 4.3 assists and 2.2 steals per game, with a 1.70 assist/turnover ratio, ranking among the top 15 in the BIG EAST in all four categories. In addition, she leads the league and is 13th in the nation in foul shooting (.923). She also has led the team in scoring 10 times and in assists 12 times this year. Duffy was named BIG EAST Conference Player of the Week on Monday, following a superb week that saw her average 19.5 points, 7.0 assists and 6.5 rebounds with a .550 field goal percentage in wins over 10th-ranked DePaul and Georgetown. Duffy also has been tapped for the BIG EAST Conference Weekly Honor Roll three times this season, and she earned a spot on the Duel in the Desert All-Tournament Team after averaging 12.5 points and 7.0 assists in piloting the Irish to the tourney title.
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 averaged 13.5 points per game and shot 80 percent from the field (12-of-15) in wins over Iona and Wisconsin, going 6-of-6 in the latter contest. Those marks earned Schrader a spot on the Dec. 5 BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll, the first freshman to appear on that list this season. She also tacked on her second double-double of the year with 10 points and 10 rebounds in Notre Dame's win over No. 22/21 Utah at the Duel in the Desert, before leading all players with 13 points and seven rebounds against Valparaiso. Schrader is second on the team in scoring (8.5 ppg.) and leads in rebounding (6.0 rpg.).
Sophomore center Melissa D'Amico has
proven to be a solid complement in the post to
the perimeter presence of Duffy and Schrader.
D'Amico is third on the team in scoring (8.4
ppg.) and rebounding (5.5 rpg.), while setting
the pace in both blocked shots (1.35 bpg.,
tied-fifth in the BIG EAST) and field goal
percentage (.500). Those figures are a far cry
from her rookie season, when she logged 1.9 ppg.
and 1.4 rpg. with a .438 field goal percentage in
26 games. The pre-Christmas Duel in the Desert
was D'Amico's best showing to date, as she
averaged 16.0 points and 6.5 rebounds per game
with an .824 field goal percentage (14-of-17) en
route to tournament Most Valuable Player and BIG
EAST Player of the Week honors.
Potent Notables About The Fighting Irish A Quick Look At Rutgers The Scarlet Knights are coming off an
80-55 victory over Louisville at home on
Saturday. RU used a 27-1 first-half run to seize
control of the contest and never let the
Cardinals get closer than 14 points the rest of
the way.
Senior guard Cappie Pondexter connected
on 11-of-17 shots and finished with a game-high
27 points for Rutgers. Freshman center Kia Vaughn
was solid off the bench with 13 points, 15
rebounds and four blocks, while sophomore guard
Matee Ajavon also produced in a reserve role with
14 points and seven assists.
Pondexter leads the Scarlet Knights and
ranks second in the BIG EAST in scoring (22.0
ppg.), while also placing among the league
leaders in field goal percentage (.528),
three-point percentage (.481) and assists (3.94
apg.). Ajavon is second on the team in scoring
(11.0 ppg.) and tops in steals (2.31 spg.), while
senior forward Michelle Campbell, last year's BIG
EAST Most Improved Player, is logging 9.3 ppg.
with a team-best .582 field goal percentage.
C. Vivian Stringer is in her 11th season
as the head coach at Rutgers, owning a 216-114
(.655) record with the Scarlet Knights. Stringer
is in the 34th season of her legendary coaching
career, having made prior stops at Cheyney and
Iowa, and piling up a 736-249 (.747) record. She
is 9-9 all-time vs. Notre Dame.
The Notre Dame-Rutgers Series Notre Dame and Rutgers first played early
in the 1982-83 season at the Orange Crush Classic
in Chicago, with RU coming away with an 81-74
victory. The Scarlet Knights went on to claim the
first three series matchups, all of which came
prior to the teams entering the BIG EAST.
Following a nine-year layoff, the Irish
faced Rutgers in the first-ever BIG EAST game for
both schools, and Notre Dame earned a 66-54 win
at the Joyce Center. That touched off a stretch
that would see the Irish win eight of 13 series
games between 1996 and 2002, capped by a 57-52
Notre Dame win at the Louis Brown Athletic Center
on Feb. 16, 2002 - the last time the Irish won a
road game in the series.
Since then, Rutgers has had the upper
hand against the Irish, winning four of the past
five meetings. The two sides split a pair of
games last season, with each successfully
defending their home court. Notre Dame won 63-47
on Jan. 23, 2005, behind a 23-0 second-half run,
before Rutgers logged a 59-48 win on Feb. 19,
2005, to help RU win the BIG EAST regular-season
title.
Other Notre Dame-Rutgers Series Tidbits The Last Time Notre Dame And Rutgers Met Cappie Pondexter added 13 points as the
Scarlet Knights (20-5, 11-2 BIG EAST) stayed
unbeaten at home (12-0) and moved into first
place in the league.
Jacqueline Batteast and Megan Duffy had
14 points apiece to lead Notre Dame, which was
held to a season-low point total by Rutgers'
tenacious and physical defense. The previous low
was 50 in a loss to Connecticut and a win over
Marquette.
Rutgers forced 23 turnovers, including 10
by Duffy, Notre Dame's usually reliable point
guard. The Irish didn't find enough open room to
attempt a three-pointer until Duffy launched an
NBA-length trey with 4:17 to play.
Still, Notre Dame had a chance. Trailing
32-19 at the half after hitting only five field
goals and shooting 25 percent, the Irish opened
the second half with an 11-1 spurt. A layup by
Courtney LaVere got the Irish to 33-31 with 15:05
to play, and it seemed they would get a chance to
tie the game when Rutgers fumbled the ball in the
final seconds of the next possession.
However, Matee Ajavon managed to pick up
the loose ball and threw in an off-balance
floater. The basket started a 12-2 run that
featured a steal and layup by Ajavon and a basket
and three-pointer by Newton, who had 12 points in
the second half.
Pondexter was the difference in the first
half, hitting all five of her field goals,
including two three-pointers, in helping Rutgers
jump to an early lead it never lost.
Batteast, the BIG EAST's second-leading
scorer, was 3-of-14 from the field. She also was
cut above the right eye in the game.
Beasts Of The BIG EAST When including postseason competition
(BIG EAST and NCAA tournaments), Notre Dame is
154-44 (.778) vs. league opponents - factoring in
23 postseason tilts, the Irish are 78-9 (.897) at
home, 62-28 (.689) on the road and 14-7 (.667) at
neutral sites all-time vs. BIG EAST foes.
Duffy Named BIG EAST Player Of The Week Last week, Duffy averaged 19.5 points,
7.0 assists, 6.5 rebounds and 2.5 steals per game
with a .550 field goal percentage (11-of-20) and
a perfect 1.000 free throw percentage (13-of-13)
as Notre Dame picked up victories over No. 10
DePaul and Georgetown. Against DePaul, Duffy
nearly registered the second triple-double in
school history (and first in 16 years), finishing
with 23 points, nine assists and eight rebounds
as the Irish earned their third win over a ranked
opponent in five tries this season. Then, at
Georgetown, she came back with team highs of 16
points and five assists, along with five
rebounds, as Notre Dame carded its third victory
in the past four games.
Duffy is the second Irish women's
basketball player to be named BIG EAST Player of
the Week this year, following the selection of
sophomore center Melissa D'Amico (Manorville,
N.Y./William Floyd HS) on Dec. 19. In addition,
freshman guard Lindsay Schrader (Bartlett,
Ill./Bartlett HS) garnered the first BIG EAST
Freshman of the Week citation of the season back
on Nov. 21.
Finding A Way It's Clear As Glass When The Game Is On The Line... History On The Horizon With those two thefts, Duffy would join
Karen Robinson (1987-91), Krissi Davis (1987-91),
Katryna Gaither (1993-97) and Niele Ivey
(1996-2001) in that elite club.
What's more, Duffy has 449 career
assists, putting her just 51 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.
Second-Half Sizzle Game #17 Recap: Georgetown Sophomore center Melissa D'Amico had 10
rebounds for the Irish (12-5, 3-3 BIG EAST), who
scored only one field goal in the last 10 minutes
as late-charging Georgetown put together a 19-4
run.
Bethany LeSueur scored 19 points and
Kieraah Marlow added 12 for the Hoyas (8-9, 1-5).
Kate Carlin's off-balance three-pointer from the
right wing fell short at the buzzer, sending
Georgetown to its third straight defeat.
Junior guard Breona Gray, who had missed
only one foul shot all season, had the chance to
seal the game, but she couldn't convert on the
front end of a 1-and-1 with 14.9 seconds to play.
She got to the line after stealing Nikki
Bozeman's pass on the previous possession.
The Irish led 32-18 at halftime. They
extended the lead to 17 three times, the last
coming on sophomore guard Charel Allen's layup
with 10:07 left.
Notre Dame led 19-6 early as the Hoyas
shot 1-of-11 from the floor in the opening
six-plus minutes.
Noting The Georgetown Win Duffy Joins Irish 1,000-Point Club... Duffy now has 1,092 career points, 14 shy
of Danielle Green (1995-2000) for 17th on the
Irish career scoring chart.
...And LaVere Follows Suit 10 Days Later 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) Here's a closer look at how that
milestone victory breaks down for McGraw:
Join The Club In addition, all six of Notre Dame's fall
sports teams advanced at least as far as the
round of 16 (or its equivalent) in the NCAA
Tournament. The Irish cross country teams both
finished among the top 10 at the NCAA
Championships (men - 3rd; women - 7th), while the
women's soccer team advanced to the NCAA
quarterfinals (lost at eventual champion
Portland), and the men's soccer squad made its
first-ever trip to the Sweet 16 before bowing by
a 1-0 count at College Cup participant Clemson.
The Irish volleyball team reached the
round of 16 for the first time since 1997,
falling to Wisconsin in five games down in
College Station, Texas.
Meanwhile, the Notre Dame football team
advanced to its first Bowl Championship Series
game since 2000, dropping a 34-20 decision to No.
4 Ohio State in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.
On the strength of their success to date,
the Irish were first in the final fall standings
for the NACDA/USSA Directors' Cup (released Jan.
10) with 412 points, outpacing Penn State (308.5)
and Stanford (282).
This marks the second consecutive year
that Notre Dame has ranked atop the final fall
standings, and its 412 points are its
highest-ever fall total.
Half And Half The Best Offense Is A Good Defense... ...But Sometimes You Have To Score If You Want To Win Sweet Success The Gold Standard Now That's A Home Court Advantage The Irish have been particularly strong
when it comes to non-conference games at home,
winning 57 of their last 61 non-BIG EAST contests
(.934) at the Joyce Center, dating back to the
1994-95 season. The only three losses in that
span all came at the hands of Big Ten Conference
opponents - Wisconsin in 1996 (81-69), Purdue in
2003 (71-54) and Michigan State in 2004 (82-73
OT). The Purdue loss snapped a 33-game
non-conference home winning streak which began
after the UW setback.
Since its inaugural season in 1977-78,
Notre Dame has played all of its games at the
Joyce Center, posting a 283-74 (.793) record at
the venerable facility. In three of the previous
six seasons (1999-2000, 2000-01 and 2003-04), the
Irish were a perfect 15-0 at home, setting a
school record for home wins in a season.
Jammin' The Joyce What's more, each of the top 20 women's
basketball crowds in Joyce Center history have
occurred during the 19-year tenure of head coach
Muffet McGraw (1987-present), with 19 of those 20
occurring in the past six seasons (2000-01 to
present). Lastly, the Irish have attracted at
least 5,000 fans to 73 of their last 75 home
games, including 13 contests with at least 8,000
fans and the first three sellouts in the
program's history.
The most recent sellout in Notre Dame
women's basketball history took place on Dec 31,
when 11,418 fans packed the Joyce Center for the
Irish matchup with No. 1 Tennessee, the
23rd-largest crowd in the nation this season (as
of Jan. 23). The game sold out 19 days in
advance, making its the fastest sellout in the
29-year history of the program.
Oh Captain, My Captain They've Got The Know-How Besides Notre Dame, Virginia Commonwealth
is the other school with multiple WNBA veterans
on its staff. VCU assistant coach Wendy
Palmer-Daniel currently plays for the San Antonio
Silver Stars, while the Rams' head coach is a
familiar name to Irish women's basketball fans -
Beth (Morgan) Cunningham, who played for the
WNBA's Washington Mystics in 2000 after an
All-America career at Notre Dame from 1993-97.
Special thanks to Virginia Commonwealth
women's basketball SID Chris Kowalczyk for
compiling this information.
Notre Dame On The Small Screen This year's TV slate continues a recent
trend that has seen the Irish become a regular
fixture on television. Beginning with the NCAA
championship season of 2000-01 (and including
games to date this year), Notre Dame has played
in 64 televised games, including 39 that were
broadcast nationally. Last year, the Irish had 17
games televised, with 10 being national
broadcasts.
Notre Dame is 3-1 in televised games this
season. The Irish defeated Western Michigan
(71-68 on Nov. 20) and No. 24/21 USC (73-62 on
Nov. 27) in contests broadcast live to a regional
audience by Comcast Local (based in Detroit).
Notre Dame's last two TV games both were aired
nationally by College Sports Television (CSTV),
with the Irish falling to top-ranked Tennessee,
62-51 on Dec. 31, but defeating No. 10 DePaul,
78-75 on Jan. 17.
Four of the remaining five televised
games on the '05-06 Notre Dame schedule also are
slated for national broadcasts. The last of three
Irish appearances on CSTV will be part of the BIG
EAST/CSTV Tuesday Game of the Week package, as
Notre Dame visits Rutgers Tuesday for a 7:30 p.m.
(ET) tip. CSTV has aired 10 Notre Dame women's
basketball games during the past four seasons
(2002-03 to present), with the first being that
network's inaugural broadcast of any sport (a
Feb. 2003 game at Connecticut).
The Irish then make three consecutive
appearances on the ESPN family of networks,
beginning with a Feb. 7 home game against
Villanova that will be broadcast live on ESPNU.
That game will tip off at 6 p.m. (ET), one hour
earlier than previously listed on some schedules.
The following Sunday (Feb. 12), Notre Dame will
travel to DePaul for a 4:40 p.m. CT (5:40 p.m.
ET) game that will air on ESPN2 as part of that
network's "February Frenzy" split-national
coverage designed to preview a similar coverage
pattern for the NCAA Tournament. The Irish are
back on ESPN2 on Feb. 19, when they play host to
Connecticut in a 7 p.m. (ET) prime-time BIG EAST
showdown at the Joyce Center. During the past
five seasons, Notre Dame has appeared on the ESPN
family of networks 24 times, averaging nearly
five telecasts per year on "The Worldwide Leader
in Sports".
Notre Dame will make its final
regular-season television appearance on Feb. 25,
when it travels to new conference member
Cincinnati for a 2 p.m. (ET) game that will air
as part of the BIG EAST-Regional Sports Network
(RSN) package. Among the outlets scheduled to
televise the game live are WHME-TV (Channel 46 in
South Bend), Comcast Chicago, Comcast Local,
Comcast Philadelphia and Madison Square Garden
Network.
Notre Dame On The Airwaves Check Out The New Digs The new women's basketball offices are
part of a series of relocations and renovations
of office space within the Joyce Center. The
Irish men's basketball program - which previously
filled the space where the women now reside - has
moved to the opposite corner of the first-floor
west wing offices, taking over the Gate 2 area
formerly occupied by the Notre Dame football
program (which now operates out of the
95,840-square foot Guglielmino Athletics Complex
that opened last summer and is located northeast
of the Joyce Center).
Riley Named One Of ESPN.com's Top 25 Players Of The Past 25 Years A native of Macy, Ind., Riley was tapped
as one of the legends of the sport in part
because of her contributions in the NCAA
Tournament, where she led Notre Dame to three
NCAA Sweet 16 appearances and the 2001 national
championship. In the '01 NCAA title game vs.
Purdue, Riley tallied 28 points (on 9-of-13
shooting), 13 rebounds and seven blocks, not to
mention the two game-winning free throws with 5.8
seconds remaining which snapped a 66-66 tie. It
was an effort that ESPN.com termed as "the
third-best all-time championship game performance
in NCAA history." That outing capped a six-game
NCAA tourney stretch in which the 6-foot-5 post
averaged 23.2 points and 9.0 rebounds per game
while shooting at a .632 clip (48-of-76).
Riley was a two-time first-team
Associated Press All-America selection and
two-time CoSIDA Academic All-America choice,
earning Academic All-America Team Member of the
Year honors in 2001. In addition, she was a
three-time first team all-BIG EAST selection,
earning the league's Player of the Year award in
2001 and the conference Defensive Player of the
Year hardware three consecutive years. The only
player in school history to amass 2,000 points
and 1,000 rebounds in her career (2,072
points/1,007 rebounds), Riley also is the Irish
all-time leader in seven statistical categories,
including blocked shots (370 - fifth in NCAA
history) and field goal percentage (.632 - 11th
in NCAA history).
Next Game: South Florida USF (13-6, 3-3) has made a seamless
transition to the BIG EAST, thanks in part to the
play of junior guard Jessica Dickson, who leads
the nation in scoring at 24.7 points per game.
The Bulls have won their last two games, and will
pay a visit to fifth-ranked Connecticut Tuesday
night before traveling to South Bend for their
weekend matinee with the Irish.
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