No. 22/24 Irish Continue Homestand Tuesday Against Canisius
Nov. 26, 2007
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DATE: November 27, 2007 Storylines No. 22/24 Irish Continue Homestand Tuesday Against Canisius Notre Dame is coming off its third home win in as many tries this season, rolling past Boston College, 88-58 this past Saturday at the Joyce Center. The Irish opened the game on an 18-4 run and never looked back in handing the Eagles their worst loss in the 16-game series. Notre Dame also rang up a season-high 21 steals, its largest total in nearly a decade.
Junior guard Lindsay Schrader led another balanced offensive attack for the Irish with team highs of 16 points and eight rebounds. Senior guard Charel Allen added 15 points, a career-high eight assists and five steals for Notre Dame, which had five players score in double figures for the second consecutive game.
Rankings A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish Last year, the Irish learned quickly that respect is something that isn't handed to you, but rather earned on the court. It's also a quality that takes time to develop and doesn't come from trophy cases or record books. So although Notre Dame was tabbed fifth in the preseason BIG EAST Conference balloting, it's not a great concern to McGraw and her charges. Instead, they focus on the things they can control and prefer to let the outside world judge them when the season is over.
This year could prove to be unlike any in recent memory for Notre Dame. For one, the Irish will roll out some impressive depth, going virtually two-deep at every floor position. In addition, Notre Dame's new offensive system (a Princeton-based set with four guards and a post) continues to evolve, building upon last year's 70.1 point-per-game average that was its highest since the 2000-01 NCAA national championship season.
Senior guard Charel Allen is the top returning scorer and rebounder for the Irish, leading the team in both categories last year (17.0 ppg., 6.2 rpg.). She also was a first-team all-BIG EAST and WBCA honorable mention All-America selection, and was a finalist for the 2007 USA U21 World Championship Team that struck gold this past summer in Moscow.
Allen's backcourt partner and classmate is point guard Tulyah Gaines. Now in her second full season at the helm of the Notre Dame offense, the speedy Gaines averaged 9.6 points per game along with team highs of 3.9 assists and 2.0 steals per contest. She also is a two-year team captain who commands instant respect from teammates, coaches and opponents.
The Irish will benefit from the return of junior guard Lindsay Schrader, who missed the entire 2006-07 season with a torn ACL in her right knee. Schrader, who retains three years of athletic eligibility, was Notre Dame's second-leading scorer (10.5 ppg.) and top rebounder (5.4 rpg.) as a rookie in 2005-06 and will look to regain that form this season.
Last year saw Notre Dame break new ground by becoming the first school ever to put three players on the BIG EAST All-Freshman Team. Guards Ashley Barlow (10.3 ppg., 5.4 rpg.) and Melissa Lechlitner (6.3 ppg., 2.7 apg.) will provide a superb complement to the veteran Allen-Gaines tandem, while center Erica Williamson (6.1 ppg., 5.3 rpg., 1.3 bpg.) showed flashes of potential throughout her rookie season and is poised for increased development this year.
Headlining a three-player freshman class (ranked 11th nationally by Blue Star Basketball) is Devereaux Peters, a smooth 6-2 forward who was a consensus All-American as a senior last year at national powerhouse Fenwick High School in Oak Park, Ill. Fellow post Becca Bruszewski (Valparaiso, Ind.) finished third in last season's Indiana Miss Basketball voting and was a perennial all-state pick. And, guard Brittany Mallory (Baltimore, Md.) offers a perimeter shooting threat, as well as a cerebral player who will mesh well in the Irish offensive system.
A Quick Look At Canisius Canisius is off to a 3-1 start this season, coming back from an opening-night loss at nationally-ranked West Virginia (76-49), with three consecutive victories over Colgate, Binghamton and Buffalo. The latter contest (a 70-62 CC win) was the first of a five-game road trip for the Golden Griffins, who will visit Wright State this weekend before opening MAAC play at Rider and Loyola (Md.) next week.
Canisius has made its living at the three-point line and this season appears to be no exception. The Golden Griffins have made at least one three-point field goal in 394 consecutive games (dating back to Jan. 1994), owning the longest active three-point streak in the nation and only 14 games shy of Cleveland State's record of 408 games that ended in February 2007.
Junior guard Amanda Cavo has been the top player for Canisius this season, averaging 14.8 points per game with a .364 field goal percentage (including a team-high 12 three-pointers). The 2006 MAAC Rookie of the Year, Cavo tossed in a game-high 16 points (5-of-8 3FG) in last Saturday's win at Buffalo.
Sophomore guard Brittane Russell is second on the team in scoring (12.3 ppg.) while setting the pace for the Golden Griffins with 4.5 assists and a staggering 5.75 steals per game. Russell had nine steals in the win over Colgate, before chalking up 15 points and seven steals against Buffalo.
Head coach Terry Zeh is in his fourth season at Canisius, sporting a 58-36 (.617) record with the Golden Griffins. Tuesday will be his first-ever matchup with Notre Dame as a head coach, although he did see the Irish men's basketball team three times while an assistant coach at Canisius from 1997-2004 (ND won all three games in that time, two of which were played at the Joyce Center).
The Notre Dame-Canisius Series Other Notre Dame-Canisius Series Tidbits Notre Dame vs. The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Canisius is the third MAAC team ever to play at the Joyce Center, but the second in three seasons. On Nov. 29, 2005, the Irish downed Iona, 74-55, in what was head coach Muffet McGraw's 700th game at Notre Dame (although she missed that contest due to illness).
The only other MAAC team to visit South Bend was Loyola (Md.), which dropped an 84-49 decision to the Irish on Dec. 21, 1991. Notre Dame is 2-0 all-time against both the Greyhounds and Iona, as well as 1-0 against Fairfield. Curiously, of the five previous Irish encounters with the MAAC, only the first Iona contest (Dec. 19, 1980 -- a 69-65 Irish win in Philadelphia) took place prior to the arrival of head coach Muffet McGraw in 1987.
A November To Remember Thirty Deeds It's also the first time since the 2003-04 season that the Irish have logged at least three 30-point wins in a single season. And, the back-to-back 30-point wins over Central Michigan (94-41) and Boston College (88-58) are the first for Notre Dame since March 17 & 19, 2001, when it defeated Alcorn State (98-49) and Michigan (88-54) at the Joyce Center in the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament.
That 2000-01 Irish squad -- which went on to win the program's first national championship -- holds the school record with 10 30-point victories.
Put A Tiger In Your Tank The Irish currently lead the BIG EAST Conference in scoring at 83.4 points per game, having tallied at least 78 points in each of their four wins. What's more, Notre Dame also has the second-highest scoring average after five games in program history, topped only by the 1998-99 squad (85.8 ppg.), which went on to post a single-season school record with an 81.0-ppg. scoring average.
Notre Dame also ranks second in the conference in scoring margin, outpointing its opposition by 26.8 points per night.
Spreading The Wealth Sophomore center Erica Williamson set the pace in the exhibition opener vs. Southern Indiana, before senior point guard Tulyah Gaines shouldered the scoring load in the second exhibition vs. Hillsdale. Junior 3-guard Lindsay Schrader claimed top scoring honors in the season opener against Miami (Ohio), while sophomore shooting guard Ashley Barlow was the leading scorer in the win over Western Kentucky. Senior shooting guard Charel Allen took her turn at the front of the Irish scoring train with 16 points at No. 3 Maryland before freshman power forward Becca Bruszewski dropped in a game-high 13 points at Central Michigan. Schrader became the first repeat team scoring leader with her 16 points against Boston College this past Saturday.
This trend also extends to the rebounding column, where five different Notre Dame players have led the club in rebounding thus far -- senior center Melissa D'Amico (USI), freshman forward Devereaux Peters (Hillsdale/WKU), Williamson (Miami-Ohio), Schrader (Maryland/Boston College) and Barlow (Central Michigan).
Double Trouble Protecting The Pill The Irish took ball protection to a new level in their loss at No. 3 Maryland on Nov. 16. Notre Dame set a school record with only three turnovers against the Terrapins, with two of those giveaways coming on offensive fouls. The previous school record for fewest turnovers was six, set on Feb. 12, 2006 at DePaul.
With only three turnovers, it's probably comes as no surprise that Maryland did not register a steal against Notre Dame. However, what is surprising is that it was the first time in the 31-year history of the Irish program that an opponent did not record a steal against Notre Dame. Several opponents had only one steal vs. the Irish, with the most recent being Boston College on March 19, 2006 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament (played at West Lafayette, Ind.).
Keeping It On The Plus Side For the year, the Irish rank second in the BIG EAST with a 1.47 assist-to-turnover ratio, trailing only second-ranked Connecticut (1.64). Notre Dame also has assisted on exactly half of its 170 field goals this year, ranking fifth in the conference with 17.00 assists per game.
Off And Running Even in its lone defeat at third-ranked Maryland, Notre Dame made a statement early with a 10-0 run in the first five minutes of action and led by as many as five points in the first half before the Terrapins rallied back for the win.
(Nearly) Crowded House Even if not another ticket is sold for the Michigan game, it already will go down as the fourth-largest crowd in school history and the fourth audience of 10,000 fans in the Notre Dame women's basketball record books.
Polling Station Notre Dame now has been ranked in the AP poll for 143 weeks during the program's history, with every one of those appearances coming in the Muffet McGraw era. McGraw now ranks 14th among all active NCAA Division I head coaches for weeks in the AP poll, and with this week's poll selection, she moves into sole possession of 25th place all-time in that category, breaking a tie with retired Colorado mentor Ceal Barry.
The Irish also appeared in the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll for the second consecutive week on Nov. 20, checking in at No. 24 after debuting 25th in the previous poll. The newest edition of that poll will debut hours before Notre Dame tips off with Canisius Tuesday night.
No Easy Road With the addition of third-ranked Maryland to the docket in the Preseason WNIT semifinals, the Irish now will face four of the top five teams (including the top three) in the latest Associated Press poll. Still to come this season are No. 1 Tennessee (Jan. 5 at the Joyce Center), No. 2 Connecticut (Jan. 27 at the Joyce Center) and No. 5 Rutgers (Feb. 19 in Piscataway, N.J.). The top three teams in the poll have combined to win three of the past four national championships, with Tennessee currently holding the hardware.
Leave The Driving To Us Irish Fans Crave A Big Mac Attack This season's burger watch already is at four, as the Irish have hit the 88-point mark in exhibition wins over Southern Indiana and Hillsdale, as well as regular-season victories over Miami (Ohio) and Boston College.
Promotional Corner Next Game: Michigan Michigan (4-1) is coming off a third-place finish at the Vanderbilt Thanksgiving Tournament last weekend. After a 67-43 loss to Iowa State in their tourney opener, the Wolverines bounced back with an 80-43 win over Belmont in the consolation game. UM will travel to No. 13 Texas A&M Thursday night before venturing to South Bend.
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