PHOTOS BY DAVID BRADSHAW-UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE 25,000 seats sold and 3,000 wanting to get in at Tennessee: Coach Pat Summitt (left) and a shaken-up player officials tried to find room for an extra 3,000 fans clamoring outside the sold-out, 25,000-seat arena. So who are these newfound fans of the women's game? Oddly, it's not fellow stu- dents who are leading the charge to the arena, but college-town adults and their families. Consider Iowa fan John Roesler, 36. Not only does he attend every home game, but last year he took his wife and three kids on an 181/2-hour bus ride to watch Iowa play at Louisiana Tech. Iowa lost, but that didn't keep Roesler and fam- ily from traveling all the way to Miami last December to watch their team win the Bur- ger King Classic. Roesler says that the women are just as exciting to watch as the men-once you get used to the different style. "Don't believe for one moment that women's basketball is boring," he says. "Comparing women's to men's is like com- paring apples to oranges." In fact, there are those who say the women's game, with its emphasis on play-making, precision passing and ac- curate shooting, is a "purer" form than the elbow-flinging, skyscraper competition that dominates the men's contests. "It's an exciting brand of basketball," says Linda Sharp, head coach of Southern Cal's Tro- jans. "It's a game of more finesse, better ball handling and more accurate shoot- ing than men's basketball. That's be- cause it's played entirely below the rim- there are no sure points by dunking." Still, at most schools, fewer than half the fans are students. "Attendance has defi- nitely gotten stronger over the past few years," says Sharp. "But I'm still not seeing enough students. It's really too bad. They're usually the most vocal." Only a few hundred students typically show up to watch the Trojans-the team that spawned 1984 Olympic hero Cheryl Miller and that has won two national championships. Some universities have resorted to gim- micks to boost enthusiasm. Iowa promotes the family-entertainment value of wom- en's basketball with its "coach for a day" contest. Children enter drawings at Wen- dy's restaurants and, if they win, get an MATT BRUNWORTH Show of hands: Iowa jump shot (left), Texas Tech Bleacher Creatures NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 19