Irish Close Out Non-Conference Slate At #4 Tennessee
Dec. 29, 2006
Game Notes in PDF Format
2006-07 ND Women's Basketball: Game 13
Storylines
Irish Close Out Non-Conference Slate At No. 4 Tennessee The Irish returned from the Christmas break in a big way on Thursday, leading right from the opening tip in a 94-55 rout of Prairie View A&M at the Joyce Center. Notre Dame used a 26-5 early in the first half to push its lead well past 20 points, with the final margin being its largest in nearly four years.
For the most part, the Irish looked sharp at both ends with a .516 field goal percentage while forcing 28 PVAMU turnovers (including a season-high 18 steals).
Freshman guard Ashley Barlow led five Notre Dame players in double figures, tossing in a career-high 21 points to go along with a game-best nine rebounds.
Junior center Melissa D'Amico turned in another efficient outing, adding 17 points in 18 minutes of court time.
Rankings Web Sites Setting The Standard
Under the guidance of 20th-year head coach Muffet McGraw, Notre Dame has evolved into one of the country's leading women's basketball powers. The Irish have appeared in 13 NCAA Tournaments (including a current streak of 11 in a row) and advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16 six times in the previous 10 years. Notre Dame also has reached the NCAA Women's Final Four twice, winning college basketball's ultimate prize with the 2001 national championship.
In its history, Notre Dame has developed eight All-Americans, nine WNBA players (including six draft picks in the past six years) and four USA Basketball veterans (eight medals won). Now in their 30th season in 2006-07, the Irish own an all-time record of 602-269 (.691).
Notre Dame Head Coach Muffet McGraw A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish With a young and inexperienced roster that has only two seniors and is missing its top returning scorer from a year ago, the Irish have had to learn on the run -- and run is exactly what they have done this season. Notre Dame is averaging 71.8 points per game thus far, a significant improvement over the previous five Irish squads, none of which has averaged better than 66.3 points per night.
Of course, the Irish have traditionally hung their hat on their defense, a trait that is much harder to master and takes a bit longer. On the one hand, Notre Dame's aggressive style has rattled opponents, causing 22.5 turnovers per game (including a BIG EAST-best 12.6 steals per night). However, the flip side has seen the Irish allow opponents to shoot .412 from the floor (.376 from the three-point line), while the Irish claim just a 1.6 rpg. edge on the boards), two areas Notre Dame will continue to focus on as it closes out its non-conference schedule.
Junior guard Charel Allen has been one of the main offensive catalysts for the Irish to this point, averaging a team-high 14.1 ppg., while scoring in double figures in 10 of 12 outings to date. The Monessen, Pa., native, who was limited last year while recovering from knee surgery in the summer of 2005, also is collecting 5.7 rebounds per game (second on the team) and was named to the BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll on Dec. 4 after averaging 18.0 ppg. and 6.0 rpg. against Richmond, Michigan and Indiana.
Allen's classmate and backcourt running partner, Tulyah Gaines, is an early candidate as one of the conference's most improved players. The speedy Gaines has assumed the large footprint left at the point by All-American (and WNBA Draft pick) Megan Duffy and has stoked the Notre Dame offensive fire to an even hotter level, averaging 10.7 points and 3.3 assists per game with a .524 field goal percentage. Gaines, who came into the season with a 3.7 ppg. career scoring average, has twice score 20 points in a game this year, including a career-high 25 points in a Nov. 13 overtime win vs. Bowling Green.
Another Irish junior, 6-foot-5 center Melissa D'Amico, continues to make strides in the post. The second-year starter is averaging 11.2 points and 5.2 rebounds per game with a .571 field goal percentage, and has looked even better of late, averaging 14.4 points and 6.8 rebounds with a .615 field goal percentage in the past five games. She also earned a spot on the BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll on Dec. 18.
The most pleasing contributions of the year for Notre Dame to this point have come from its freshmen, three of whom have seen significant playing time. Guard Ashley Barlow is second on the team in scoring (11.3 ppg.) and tops in steals
(2.4 spg.), and came up with a career-high 21-points and nine rebounds Thursday vs. Prairie View A&M. Center Erica Williamson (6.5 ppg., 5.2 rpg., 1.5 bpg.) is proving to be a capable understudy to D'Amico, amassing a season-high 15 points vs. Prairie View A&M. And, guard Melissa Lechlitner (4.5 ppg., 2.8 apg.) has shown little drop off at the point behind Gaines, registering at least five assists in a game twice this year, and carding a season-high 11 points (3-of-4
3FG) at Penn State.
Potent Notables About The Irish
A Quick Look At Tennessee The No. 4 Lady Vols are off to an 11-1 start this season and have won five in a row since suffering their only loss of the year to date (7-57 at second-ranked North Carolina on Dec. 3). Most recently, UT went into the Christmas break with a 75-59 victory at Old Dominion on Dec. 22. Redshirt sophomore forward Candace Parker tallied a game-high 32 points and 10 rebounds and Tennessee shot 50.9 percent from the floor in the win.
Parker is the Lady Vols' leader in most statistical categories this season, logging 19.9 points, 8.9 rebounds and 2.3 blocks per contestwith a .562 field goal percentage (second on the squad). Senior forward Sidney Spencer follows behind Parker with 11.9 ppg., while also ranking among the national leaders in three-point percentage (.578). Junior point guard Alexis Hornbuckle is the third Lady Vol scoring in double figures this year (10.1 ppg.), while also contributing 3.5 assists and 3.4 steals a night.
Head coach Pat Summitt is the winningest coach in NCAA history, sporting a
924-178 (.838) record in her 33rd season at Tennessee. She is 17-0 all-time against Notre Dame.
The Notre Dame-Tennessee Series The Irish began playing Tennessee on an annual basis early in the
1983-84
season and continued facing one another at alternating home sites for the next 10 years. Following a one-year break, the teams met twice in 1996-97, with the Lady Vols handing Notre Dame its first and last losses of the season -- 72-59 in the semifinals of the preseason WNIT at Ruston, La., and 80-66 at the NCAA Final Four in Cincinnati.
The Irish and Lady Vols would not play again until the second round of the 2002 NCAA Tournament in Knoxville, when UT roughed up Notre Dame, 89-50. The two sides then opened a five-year contract the following December at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis (home of the WNBA's Indiana Fever) with Tennessee emerging with a 77-61 victory. The Lady Vols won 83-59 in Knoxville in 2003-04, and after a year hiatus, UT held on for a 62-51 victory at the Joyce Center last season.
Other Notre Dame-Tennessee Series Tidbits The Last Time Notre Dame and Tennessee Met The only thing normal about Tennessee's victory over Notre Dame was the fact that the Lady Vols won. Top-ranked Tennessee shot 33 percent from the field and was outscored in the second half, but beat No. 12 Notre Dame 62-51 on Dec. 31,
2005 at the Joyce Center.
Tennessee (12-0), which entered the game averaging 83 points, won by outrebounding the Irish 50-35 and holding Notre Dame to 31 percent shooting.
Alexis Hornbuckle had 15 points and eight rebounds, Nicky Anosike added nine points and Candace Parker had eight points and 11 rebounds for the Lady Vols.
Megan Duffy led Notre Dame (9-2) with 19 points, including eight points in the last four minutes.
Tennessee led 47-25 with 13:09 left, but Notre Dame went on a 16-4 run to cut the lead to 51-41 with 6:16 remaining. Duffy's jumper trimmed the deficit to
57-51 with 2 minutes left, but Tennessee went 5-of-8 from the free-throw line to end the game.
Tennessee's Shanna Zolman, the Lady Vols' top scorer with 17 points per game, was held to five on 1-of-7 shooting.
Duffy struggled until late in the game. She shot 5-for-18 from the field and 3-for-10 from 3-point range, but scored 14 points in the second half.
The Lady Vols forced 15 first-half turnovers to take a 29-14 lead. The Irish
(9-2) barely avoided their lowest-scoring half of the season, thanks to a three-pointer by Courtney LaVere with 1:09 left before the break. LaVere had 10 points before fouling out.
The Last Time Notre Dame and Tennessee Met In Knoxville Shyra Ely scored 20 points and Ashley Robinson added 14 in third-ranked Tennessee's 83-59 win over No. 17 Notre Dame on Nov. 30, 2003 in Knoxville.
The Lady Vols (2-0) led from the beginning while the Irish (2-3) struggled with shooting and defense. Tennessee was ahead 20-7 with 11:35 left in the first half. Notre Dame cut the lead to 10, but the Lady Vols had a 13-2 run to push the lead to 21.
Ely had two easy baskets during the spurt, which was capped by Loree Moore's layup off a clever play by LaToya Davis. Davis went for a steal off Irish guard Le'Tania Severe, and came up with the ball as they raced to the basket. Davis had to stop to get control of the ball and swiftly passed it to Moore, who was running toward the basket.
Severe scored three straight baskets, but they didn't help the Irish much because Ely blew by defenders for two more layups.
The Lady Vols went up 56-30 with 14:58 left after Tennessee's Shanna Zolman hit two free throws. Zolman scored 13 points and Tasha Butts added 10 for the Lady Vols.
Notre Dame forward Jacqueline Batteast finished had 16 points to lead the Irish, while Megan Duffy had two late 3-pointers to finish with 14 points and Severe added 13. Batteast fouled out after scoring just two points in the teams' prior meeting, a 77-61 victory for Tennessee on December 28, 2002 in Indianapolis.
Notre Dame vs. The Southeastern Conference The Irish are 6-27 (.182) all-time against the Southeastern Conference, although they are 3-4 in their last seven meetings with SEC schools. Last year's 62-51 Tennessee victory at the Joyce Center was the last time Notre Dame faced an SEC team. The most recent Irish win over an SEC opponent was Nov. 14, 2003 at the WBCA Classic in Boulder, Colo., when Notre Dame defeated No. 22/25 Auburn, 77-64.
The Irish have never defeated an SEC squad in its home floor, going 0-13 all-time in such contests. However, Notre Dame has previously won four times in SEC arenas, with all four coming in NCAA Tournament play -- vs. Alabama and George Washington in 1997 (East Regional at South Carolina's Frank McGuire Center), Saint Mary's (Calif.) in 1999 (West Region first round at LSU's Pete Maravich Assembly Center) and New Mexico in 2002 (Midwest Region first round at Tennessee's Thompson-Boling Arena).
Poise Under Pressure Four times this season, the Irish have sent a player to the free throw line with less than four seconds remaining in regulation or overtime and the game hanging in the balance. In those clutch situations, Notre Dame is 7-for-8 at the charity stripe, with the only miss being a semi-intentional one by senior guard Breona Gray on the second of two tries with 1.2 seconds to go in a 60-59 win at Valparaiso on Dec. 19.
Clutch When It Counts Upon closer inspection, the Irish have gotten some of their most critical free throw production from their freshmen -- guards Ashley Barlow and Melissa Lechlitner are a combined 17-of-18 (.944) at the charity stripe down the stretch.
Junior Achievement Three of the top four Irish scorers this season are juniors and all three are posting the best scoring averages of their careers -- guard Charel Allen (14.1 ppg.), center Melissa D'Amico (11.2 ppg.) and guard Tulyah Gaines (10.7 ppg.).
Allen came into the year with an 8.1 ppg. career average, while D'Amico had a two-year ratio of 4.0 ppg., and Gaines was averaging 3.7 ppg. Between them, the junior trio had a combined 37 double-figure scoring games in two seasons entering the 2006-07 campaign -- so far through this year, they have 23 double-digit efforts.
Spread The Wealth Keeping The Home Fires Burning Riding The Long Island Express D'Amico has been particularly sharp of late, averaging 14.4 points and
6.8
rebounds per game with a .615 field goal percentage (32-of-52) in Notre Dame's last five outings. She also has scored in double digits four times in that span (including a career-high-tying 20-point effort vs. IUPUI) and logged her first double-double of the year with 15 points and 10 rebounds against Indiana.
Contribute Early, Contribute Often Barlow also is second on the team in scoring (11.3 ppg.) and ranks among the BIG EAST Conference leaders in both free throw percentage (first at .944, also 11th in NCAA) and steals (fifth at 2.4 spg.). Williamson is carding 6.5 points,
5.2 rebounds and 1.5 blocks per game. And, Lechlitner is logging 4.5 points and
2.8 assists per night with six three-pointers (tied for third on the squad).
The Five-Finger Discount The Irish also lead the BIG EAST Conference (and rank 20th in the
nation) with
12.6 steals per night. In fact, Notre Dame has posted double-digit steal totals in nine of 12 games this season (and never fewer than seven in one game), with junior guard Charel Allen and freshman guard Ashley Barlow committing the most larcenies to date (29 each, 2.4 per game, fifth in BIG EAST) and leading five Irish players with at least 20 steals this season.
Barlow recorded a combined 11 steals vs. Western Michigan (six) and at USC (five). That made her the first Notre Dame player with back-to-back five-steal games since March 30-April 1, 2001, when Niele Ivey did so against Connecticut
(five) and Purdue (six) at the NCAA Women's Final Four in St. Louis.
Defense Wins Championships The Irish also hold a special distinction, as they held the nation's leading scorer (Western Michigan's Carrie Moore) to her second-lowest output of the season, limiting her to 18 points in an 87-67 Notre Dame win on Nov. 19. In fact, it is one of only three times all season Moore has been held below 20 points -- the others were vs. Marquette (19) and Temple (2). Moore currently is averaging 27.9 ppg. this season.
Game #12 Recap: Prairie View A&M Junior center Melissa D'Amico turned in an efficient performance with 17 points in 18 minutes, while freshman center Erica Williamson collected a career-high 15 points, eight rebounds and four blocks in a reserve role. Junior guard Tulyah Gaines charted 13 points and junior guard Charel Allen symbolized Notre Dame's balanced performance with 11 points, eight rebounds, a career-high-tying five steals and four assists.
Having played only twice in the past three weeks, but coming off a slim one-point victory at Valparaiso in its last outing, Notre Dame left little to chance with Thursday's game. After a brief 3-3 tie in the game's first two minutes, the Irish surged out to a double-digit lead when D'Amico converted a layup for a 13-3 edge at the 14:41 mark. That was just part of a massive 26-5 run that boosted the Notre Dame edge past 20 points before the game was even 10 minutes old. An 11-3 run to close out the first half gave the hosts their largest lead to that point at 48-19 going to the locker room.
Prairie View A&M regrouped during halftime and made a brief charge during the first four minutes of the second half, outscoring the Irish, 14-7 to get within
22 points (55-33). However, Notre Dame's freshman second unit of Barlow, Williamson and guard Melissa Lechlitner came on to calm the waters, sparking the Irish on a 14-5 run that pushed their lead over 30 points for the first time. The Lady Panthers never got closer than 28 points the rest of the way, with Notre Dame hiking its advantage to a game-high 41 points on two occasions down the stretch.
Noting The Prairie View A&M Win
Injury Bug Bites Irish Early Schrader was to be Notre Dame's top returning scorer and rebounder this season, after averaging 10.5 points and 5.4 rebounds per game during her rookie campaign in 2005-06.
2006-07: The Anniversary Season Notre Dame Ranked 11th In
Preseason BIG EAST Coaches' Poll
The Irish are beginning their 12th season as a member of the BIG EAST Conference in 2006-07. The Irish have gone 145-39 (.788) all-time in regular-season conference games, posting the best winning percentage in league history. Connecticut is second with a .783 success rate. Notre Dame also has finished among the top three in the final BIG EAST regular-season standings nine times in its first 11 seasons in the conference, including a share of the BIG EAST title in 2000-01.
Half And Half The Best Offense Is A Good Defense... ...But Sometimes You Have To Score If You Want To Win Not resting solely on its defensive laurels, Notre Dame also seemingly has found the magic mark when it comes to outscoring its opponents. During the past 12 seasons (1995-96 to present), the Irish are 96-3 (.970) when they score at least 80 points in a game. The only blemishes on that record are a pair of overtime losses to Texas A&M (88-84) and Michigan State (87-83) in 1995 and a
106-81 loss to Connecticut in 1998. Notre Dame has topped the 80-point mark five times this season, winning on each occasion (Central Michigan, Bowling Green, Western Michigan, Richmond and Prairie View A&M).
The five 80-point games are the most for the Irish in a single season since 2000-01, when Notre Dame reached that level 15 times during its run to the national championship.
Now That's A Home Court Advantage The Irish have been particularly strong when it comes to non-conference games at home, winning 64 of their last 69 non-BIG EAST contests (.928) at the Joyce Center, dating back to the 1994-95 season. Four of the losses in that span came at the hands of Big Ten Conference opponents -- Wisconsin in 1996 (81-69), Purdue in 2003 (71-54), Michigan State in 2004 (82-73 OT) and Indiana this year (54-51), with the fifth defeat coming to Tennessee last year (62-51). The Purdue loss also 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 292-78 (.789) record at the venerable facility.
Three times (1999-2000, 2000-01 and 2003-04), the Irish went a perfect 15-0 at home, setting a school record for home wins in a season. The 2006-07 campaign will tie for the most regular-season home games (16) in school history, although in 2004-05, the Irish played host to all four rounds of the Preseason WNIT before its regular 12-game home slate began.
Jammin' The Joyce What's more, each of the top 20 women's basketball crowds in Joyce Center history have occurred during the 20-year tenure of head coach Muffet McGraw (1987-present), with 19 of those 20 occurring in the past seven seasons
(2000-01 to present). Lastly, the Irish have attracted at least 5,000 fans to
86 of their last 88 home games, including 15 contests with at least 8,000 fans and the first three sellouts in the program's history (two in 2000-01, one in 2005-06).
Oh Captain, My Captain States of Grace 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 continuing through this year, Notre Dame has played in 74 televised games, including 46 that were broadcast nationally.
Notre Dame made its 2006-07 television debut Nov. 16 when its road opener at Penn State aired live on College Sports Television (CSTV). That was the first of three Irish women's basketball broadcasts for the national cable network, with the second coming Jan. 23 at Marquette (8 p.m. CT tip) and the third coming in the regular-season finale on Feb. 26 at DePaul (8 p.m. CT). The latter two contests are part of the BIG EAST-CSTV Game of the Week package, now in its second season. Counting the Penn State contest, CSTV now has aired 12 Notre Dame women's basketball games during the past five seasons, with the first being that network's inaugural broadcast of any sport (a Feb. 2003 game at Connecticut).
The Irish also are scheduled to make two appearances on the ESPN family of networks, beginning with a Feb. 4 home game against West Virginia that will be broadcast live on ESPNU and will start at 5:30 p.m. (ET). The following Sunday (Feb. 11), Notre Dame will play host to DePaul for a 5:30 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. During the past six seasons, Notre Dame has appeared on the ESPN family of networks 28 times, averaging nearly five telecasts per year on "The Worldwide Leader in Sports".
In addition, Notre Dame will play in five regionally-televised games this season. The first of those took place Dec. 6, when the Irish defeated No. 10/9 Purdue at the Joyce Center in a game seen live on Comcast Local (based in Detroit). On Saturday, Notre Dame will visit fourth-ranked Tennessee for a 2 p.m. (ET) contest at Thompson-Boling Arena that can be seen live on Comcast/Charter Sports Southeast. And, on Jan. 27, the Irish will visit Connecticut for a 7 p.m. (ET) matchup that will be carried live on Connecticut Public Television (CPTV).
Notre Dame will appear twice on the BIG EAST-Regional Sports Network
(RSN)
package this season with contests at South Florida (Jan. 13, noon ET) and home against Rutgers (Feb. 24, noon ET). SportsNet New York will serve as the flagship for the BIG EAST package, with additional clearances to be announced at a later date.
The other televised game for the Irish was a local broadcast (WHME-TV in South Bend/Lakeshore Public Television in Chicagoland) of the Dec. 19 contest at Valparaiso.
Notre Dame On The Airwaves Irish Debut Free Video Coverage This free service is limited to those home games that have not been selected for broadcast by other TV outlets. The Irish have been televised on und.com twice this season (Indiana and IUPUI), with the remainder of this year's Internet video broadcast schedule to be announced at a later date.
Joyce Center Arena Renovation On Tap The $24.7 million renovation project has been underwritten with a $12.5 million leadership gift from Philip J. Purcell III, a Notre Dame alumnus and Trustee, and the retired chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley. Upon completion, the arena will be known as Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Center. The Purcell gift, combined with other benefactions, including a $5 million gift from 1959 Notre Dame graduate and Tampa Bay Devil Rays owner Vince Naimoli, brings the total contributions to the project to $22 million.
In accordance with University policies for new construction, work on the renovation will begin after the project is fully funded and designed. The University is actively seeking additional contributions.
Promotional Corner Next Game: Seton Hall Like Notre Dame, Seton Hall (7-3, 1-0) has won five of its last six games, including its conference opener at Providence (66-52) on Dec. 5. The Pirates are playing in Lehigh's Christmas City Classic this weekend (vs. Central Michigan and Lehigh/Gardner-Webb) before returning home to await the Irish.
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