II - The Michigan Daily - Women'sBaskebaI'99 - Monday, November 15, 1999 PURDUE 0 Coach: Kristen Curry 1998-99 Record: 34-1, 16-0 (1st, NCAA Champions) Starters Returning: Camille Cooper 9.7 ppg, 4.9 rpg; Katie Douglas 14. 1 ppg, 6.2 RPG Make or Break: Purdue lost 50 per- cent of its scoring, so the new front line needs to make more shots. "We're always in the mood for a repeat," said first-year Purdue coach Kristen Curry, as though the thought of her team not winning the NCAA title- two years in a row was impossible. "Who wouldn't be?" Purdue, after stealing the title from Duke 62-45 this past March, is starving for another championship. "Our hopes and goals and dreams are just to build on the success of the past," Curry said "We need to maintain where we're at and consistently compete to be the best there is" The Boilermakers just might be able to have a season very similar to last year's astonishing 34-1 blowout. But just like any championship team, they have a few minor setbacks to over- come. A new coach, for one. "I think Coach Curry has been great in the transition as a new coach," Purdue junior point guard Katie Douglas said. "She provides a lot of enthusiasm and energy into the system, and it's been great so far." As for Curry, taking control over the team that beat her own Louisiana Tech in the Final Four last year, it's a little dis- concerting. "There are so many mixed emotions," Curry said. "Louisiana Tech will always have a very special place in my heart, but Purdue has a big part of my heart right now, and that's just how I'm approaching it." The loss of last season's Big Ten Player of the Year Stephanie White McCarty (20.2 ppg, 156 assists), for another. "That's 40 points right there," Douglas said. "We have to make up for that somewhere, either offensively or defensively. We're going to have a dif- ferent style of play this year." Not to mention losing the 1999 Final Four's most outstanding player, Ukari Figgs (16.3 ppg, 147 assists). "Steph and Ukari will be a huge loss to us," Curry said. "That's 50% of our scoring" Then the heart-wrenching loss of teammate Tiffany Young, who was killed in an alcohol-related accident this past summer. "We still think about and talk about her every day," Douglas said. It brought our team closer together - even closer than it already was." Purdue must also devise a game plan in order to defeat Illinois and Penn State - both assumed by the coaches to be the top two teams in the Big Ten. But the rankings aren't going to downplay the hope to maintain its 'still the one' attitude. It didn't matter last year, why should it matter now? "I think there were a lot of people who thought we didn't have the most tal- ented team or the most athletic team" Douglas said. "When it comes down to it, you have to have the intangibles on the court, like chemistry. They play a vital role in the championships." The Boilermakers are looking to cre- ate a new leader out of Douglas, who lead the team with 217 rebounds and 91 steals per game last year. How do they think they'll fare against Michigan? "There's nobody in the country that I have more respect for than Sue Guevara," Curry said. "She's done a great job at Michigan and will continue to. I certainly think that they have just as much an opportunity to win the Big Ten this year as anyone." THE OPPOSITION -Dena Beth Krischer ' _ ' ILLINOIS PENN STATE Coach: Rene Portland 1998-99 Record: 22-8, 12-4 (2nd, lost in second round of NCAA) Starters Returning: Andrea Garner 14.4 ppg, 8.5 rpg; Helen Darling 12.4 ppg, 226 assists; Lisa Shepherd 12.4 ppg, .768 FT% Make or Break: The Nittany Lions can win the Big Ten Title if it doesn't let revenge get the best of them. "Purdue, Purdue, Purdue," Penn State senior guard Helen Darling said with a vengeful edge in her voice. Last February, then-No. 18 Penn State lost to then-No. 2 Purdue by a single basket in the final seconds of an over- time game. The Nittany Lions want those two points back, and it plans on doing just that and then some. "We know what we have to do," Darling said. The Nittany Lions are back, the Big Ten coaches have ranked them above their nemesis Purdue, and to them, there's only one thing left to do: win. To put it bluntly. "It really gives you confidence know- ing that you were this close," senior cen- ter Andrea Gasrner said. "Especially to National Champions like Purdue." Only this year, although a vengeful victory would be more than accepted, Purdue is not expected to be the team to beat. Illinois is. Penn State and Illinois are of equal caliber, and only time will tell which is the better of the two. Its only fitting that the two teams so 'closely matched are lead by two coach- es that are so closely linked. As Illinois coach Theresa Grentz and Penn State coach Rene Portland - for- mer teammates back in '71 -- compete for the top spot in the Big Ten, they refuse to 'ready, aim, fire' at each other. "Theresa and I both chuckle about it," Portland said as she begins her 21st sea- son as Penn State's head coach. "Here we are again. She said she doesn't want the bull's eye on her back. I don't think it's a bull's eye, I just think it's a natural progression of what we're looking for." It's simply a 'friendly' competition between old buddies. "We'd rather walk out of here being in the top than being on the bottom. It's going to make practice interesting, and it makes you more aware of something you need to value. We need to value the Big Ten - the Big Ten is your ticket to the NCAA tournament." Penn State hopes to breeze through the Big Ten under the tutelage of Portland and the leadership of Darling. "I have a lot of goals for myself and the team," Darling said. "For the team, I want to go undefeated and win the Big Ten, win the National Championship. I can't do that alone - I also need my teammates. Sometimes I have to sit back and just observe and let someone else lead. I'm not always the leader." She's got all the support in the world from Garner. "There's really nothing personal that I want to do," Garner said. "Not as much as get the team back to Philadelphia in March and win the final four and the National Championship." - Dena Beth Krischer Coach: Theresa Grentz 1998-99 Record: 19-12, 10-6 (3rd, NCAA 2nd Round) Starters Returning: Susan Blauser 17.1 ppg, 7.3 rpg; Tauja Cummings 13.1 ppg, 7.9 rpg; Allison Curtin 12.9 ppg, 4.0 rpg Make or Break: How the young backcourt meshes with the older frontcourt? Going home in March has always been fun for Illinois women's basketball coach Theresa Grentz, but this March the Glenolden, Pennsylvania native hopes that her trip home has an addi- tional purpose other than just seeing her friends and family. Grentz is hoping - and expecting - that her Fighting Illini will be playing in the Final Four in Philadelphia. And this year, Grentz has the team to do it. "The good part about that would be all my players and fans would hear that there is a whole place that talks just like me, because I don't think they under- stand that." Grentz joked. "It would be very special" Illinois returns seven players that started a game last year including two All-America candidates: forwards Tauja Catchings and Susan Blauser, who transferred from Rutgers two years ago. Last year, the pair lit Illini opponents up for a combined 30.3 points per game. Expect more of the same this year from the duo. "They both have aspirations to play in the WNBA," Grentz said. "We've had scouts in everyday that we've had prac- tice and they know that. They know what they have to do, Tauja has to be more offensive minded, and Susan has to be one of the great defensive position players." But Illinois' fate will rest in an outside presence stepping up and preventing defenses from challenging the Illini guards to shoot from the perimeter. The two most likely to fill that role are sophomores Allison Curtin and Cindy Dallas. As freshmen the two averaged 12.9 and 8.7 points per game, respec- tively. "I've got a unique team," Grentz said. "I've got four seniors, all four 22 or older. And then I've got eight little ones, living in the dorms having the time of their life doing the 'Chief Illiniwek,' doing the 'Oskee-wow-wow.' The older ones are 23 and the younger ones 17. That's half a generation. So if we can put that together, it will be pretty interest- ing." her high school teammates in Iowa, towering over the competition en route to being named the 1999 High School Player of the Year by USA Today and Parade Magazine. "Nina is the real deal," Wisconsin coach Jane Albright said. "She's only 18 years old, and with all the hype you would think that she would sit back and think that she is all that, but she is a hard worker. Smith led her team to the Class 4A state finals, averaging 28.5 points and 11.3 rebounds while shooting 78 per- cent from the field. The center was so dominant that she consistently drew double- and triple-teams. "I think Nina is in heaven because it is going to be a one-on-one thing or one-on-two;" Albright said. "I saw her in Iowa, and one team played one per- son in front of her, one behind her, and the other three in a triangle." Smith will join a frontcourt at Wisconsin that already boasts the last two Big Ten freshmen of the year in Jessie Stomski and LaTonya Sims. Combined, the three will make up the most formidable frontcourt in the Big Ten, if not the nation. "We have to prove that we have other weapons," Albright said, "because I've seen a lot of front lines where people couldn't get them the ball or they got in foul trouble." Last season, despite a fourth place finish in the Big Ten, Wisconsin was denied a bid to the NCAA Tournament after falling to Ohio State in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament, hav- ing to settle instead for the WNIT. But the Badgers made the most of postsea- son play, going all the way to the WNIT finals before bowing to Arkansas 67- 64. "As long as I've been coaching, that was probably the most positive experi- ence total;' Albright said. "We got to play five more games and it was in a situation that if you lose you go home, so there was pressure. You couldn't put a price tag on those five extra games for us." With the added experience of post- season play and a top-ranked freshman class, Wisconsin now finds itself with the talent and potential that have people in Badger country talking about a Big Ten title. As far as Albright is concerned, nothing is out of the realm of possibili- ty. "I don't know what realism is," Albright said. "I know potential and talent, and that's why we are excited." -Michael Kern waves in the Big Ten. The Buckeyes' goals, though, are light years away from a run at a Big Ten title, Ohio State coach Beth Burns said. "We have six first year players, so its hard for them to be comfortable with anything because they just got here," Burns said. "It's teaching time. We are starting from square one with a group of excited, enthusiastic young people. We are a work in progress and are going to be that way for quite some time" One player that will have to step up and take a major leadership role for the Buckeyes to be successful this season is senior forward Michaela Moua. As the only senior on the team, the Buckeyes' Most Improved Player and co-Defensive Player of the Year will have to step up and become the team's on-floor leader. "As the older players we feel the responsibility to be leaders," Moua said of herself and junior Courtney Bale. "The veteran players help (the freshmen) on the court. We're kind of like assistant coaches that way." The Buckeyes will also rely on the three-point wizardry of sophomore Lauren Shenk who was among the best players in the league last season with a .382 three-point field goal per- centage. "The advent of the three-point line makes someone who has that as a strength integral to what you are try- ing to do," Burns said. "We spent the whole offseason getting her strong and getting her release quicker and trying to get her to understand that we need her to shoot the ball. We are going to depend on Lauren for 20 points a game in some shape or form." Despite the talent of Moua and Shenk, Ohio State realizes that a Big Ten championship this season is not a tangible goal. Instead, the Buckeyes want to develop their young talent so that they can make a run at the title the next few years down the line. "Our goal is just to be better every- day," Burns said. "I have great com- fort in our talent level. We have some players who can play, but they need to learn how to play with each other." - Michael Kern MICHIGAN STATE Coach: Karen Langeland 1998-99 Record: 17-14, 8-8, (T-6th, lost in WNIT quarterfinals) Starters Returning: Maxann Reese 17.6 ppg 3.6 rpg, Kristen Rasmussen 15.2 ppg 9.2 rpg, Becky Cummings 11.5 ppg 7.4 rpg Make or Break: How far can Reese and Rasmussen take the Spartans? Seven of Michigan State's 14 losses last season were by six points or less, including the Spartans' 70-69 overtime loss to Wisconsin in the WNIT's third round. But the Spartans were one sec- ond away from not making the quarter- finals. Three days earlier sophomore Becky Cummings made a put-back to beat Michigan, 69-68. That shot redeemed a one-point overtime loss to the Wolverines in January, which was also the Spartans' sole loss they suffered when they led at the half. "I'm tired of being tied with Michigan," Michigan State coach Karen Langeland said. "Where we're picked in preseason doesn't concern me a whole lot. Obviously, I'm more concerned about where we're finished at the end of the season." Though they return four starters, the Spartans were expected to tie for fifth this season in the Big Ten coaches' poll. Though the Spartans are expecting more, the tough Big Ten will force Michigan State to play well every game. During crunch time, the Spartans will turn to senior Maxann Reese. The guard made the coaches' all-Big Ten first-team last season and was the Spartans' lead- ing scorer, averaging 17.6 points per game. But the Spartans will need another player to emerge if they are to finish in the Big Ten's top half and make the NCAA Tournament. The player most likely to step up is Kristen Rasmussen. The forward averaged 15.2 points and 9.2 rebounds per game last season, good enough for second-team all-Big Ten. Reese's outside game is complement- ed by Rasmussen's low-post game, but ;n the nation's best conference, the IOWA Spartans will have no margin for error -- a lesson they learned last year. "For us, having two players coming off reconstructive knee surgery (Nikki Davis and Vnemina Reese) it was the first time they could compete and prac- tice. We basically had practice for a month beforehand." - Raphy Goodsteir O.AW Coach: Angie Lee 1998-99 Record: 12-15, 7-9 (8th, no postseason action) Starters Returning: Lindsey Meder 13.9 ppg, .708 FT%; Cara Consuegra 11.4 ppg, .682 FT%; Randi Peterson 9.6 ppg, 6.8 rpg Make or Break: Iowa's young team has to make up for Herrig's absence in the front line in order to do any damage in the Big Ten. The future is bright for Iowa, for the only way it can go is up. Last season, Iowa's 12-15 overall record may have been meager, but it was far from disappointing. "It wasn't at all;' Iowa coach Angie Lee said. "We had eight freshman, two sophomores, and one senior. So really, when 70% of your team is freshman, and you finish 8-8 in the Big Ten con- ference, I see that as not necessarily a losing season, because it is on paper, but it isn't when you're looking into your future." Now, with a relatively older, more experienced team, Iowa can expect to somehow get 'back in the groove.' Possibly even make it back to the top five, although that might be a stretch. "I think by getting back into the top five, then you're going to go to the NCAA tournament;' Lee said. "That is our goal we want to achieve this year. According to junior guard Cara Consuegra, it's not a stretch. In fact, Iowa was only three games under 500, and of those losses, five of them were within six points. The most heartbreak- ing: a two-point loss in overtime against National Champions Purdue. "I think there's a lot of games that were just so close that it still hurts us inside,' Consuegra said. "We just want to come back against everyone. We want to show that we weren't a fluke, that those games were close and now that we've improved enough, we can win those games." Since it only lost two seniors, there isn't much Iowa needs to rebuild on. But who could possibly fill the giant void left by Amy Herrig, who led the team in points (504), free throws (78.7 percent), rebounds (306) and blocks (18) in the entire 98-99 season. "Obviously Amy Herrig is somebody that everybody is going to be asking 'how are you going to replace her?"' Lee said. "I don't think you replace her. I think that this team is goingto lend' itself to more balance. Last year, we really had to rely on Herrig to be there every game, and if she wasn't going to be there every game, that was going to be a lot of trouble for us. This year, we can see a lot more people getting into the mix, spreading it out, and having more balance. The freshman are going to figure in, they're going to get in some time.' In a way, the Hawkeyes sort of have that luxury again in sophomore guard0 Linsey Meder - a player they can rely on for the next three years. "Meder is a great player; Lee said. "She's really a 'gamer,' there's no doubt about it. We rely a lot on Lindsey, and are going to look to her even more this year." Along with Meder comes a new atmosphere - that feeling of actually being a part of something that can jump start. "I think there's a whole attitude that's different," Consuegra said. "I think we kind of feel like we belong. Last year, with all of the freshman that we had, they felt so out of place, like they didn't, necessarily belong here in the Big Ten. This year, everybody feels like they're ready to play and that we can compete, here. There's a whole other intensity level that we never had before." Iowa will be able to maintain that same intensity next season, since it has no seniors, so the only thing it can do is improve that much more this year and come back even stronger the next. - Dena Beth Krischer OHIO STATE « . : <.. , - Raphv Goodstein IF WISCONSIN Coach: Jane Albright 1998-99 Record: 18-14, 9-7 (5th, lost in NIT Finals) Starters Returning: Tamara Moore 10.8 ppg, 4.9 rpg; LaTonya Sims 18.0 ppg, 6.7 rpg; Jessie Stomski 14.3 ppg, 6.7 rpg Make or Break: With opponents focusing on one of the nation's top front courts, the guards will have to step up to knock down the outside shot. .. .. .. . . .... . .... .............. College basketball has seen "Big Country" Bryant Reeves and "Big Continent" Brad Millard, now it wel- comes "Big Nina." Nina Smith, a 6-4 freshman center at Wisconsin, earned that nickname from Coach: Beth Burns 1998-99 Record: 17-12, 9-7 (tie 4th lost in first round of NCAA) Starters Returning: Michaela Moua 9.0 ppg, 4.5 rpg; Lauren Shenk 9.3 ppg, 2.1 rpg Make or Break: With the loss of four seniors, the Buckeyes will rely on a second-ranked recruiting class to step in and perform right away. .... ... ..... .... ..... .... ..... .... .... ... ... .. ..... .. ... A learning process. That's what the 1999-2000 season will be for an Ohio State women's basketball team that has six new play- ers and graduated four seniors from last year. And with nine first or sec- ond-year players, the Buckeyes, a team short on experience in a confer- ence loaded with veteran teams, may find themselves looking up at the rest of the Big Ten in the standings come March. But with the second-ranked recruiting class in the nation, Ohio State does have the potential to make $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ Easy Money $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ Looking for some extra Spending cash? >' Work in a relaxed environment > A campus job so close it can't be more convenient! > Flexible schedules around your classes > $7 per hour to start Plus Nightly Bonuses Nw * ? A i 1{::? ii: i:t~". ' C 1T SENIOR HISTORY CONCENTRATO S Colloquium sign-up for winter term 2000 is Monday, November 15.9:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. in 1024 Tisch Hall. e U ! Does Morality Need God? A public lecture by 'I ~ -. ; 11n