ND Women's BB '18 -'19 Season

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Score by Period
TEAM 1 2 3 4 T
ND 32 17 34 0 83
CU 18 19 13 2 52

Comparison
STATISTIC
FG% 57% 47%
FGs 30-53 24-51
3FG% 46% 40%
3FGs 6-13 4-10
FT% 68% 0%
FTs 17-25 0-3
TOs 15 23
PtsOffTO 28 14
TotReb 33 25
DefReb 19 15
Off Reb 14 10
2ndChPts 16 8
BenchPts 1 23
PtsPaint 46 28
FstBkPt 12 12
Blocks 3 2
Steals 14 8
Assts 21 11
Times Tied: 0
Time Tied: 0:16
Lead Chg: 1
LeadTime 29:22 0:45
 

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Full Box Score
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#	Player	PTS	FG	3FG	FT	OR	DR	REB	A	PF	TO	BL	ST	MIN	+/-
03*	MABREY	19	7-13	5-8	0-0	1	2	3	4	1	2	0	0	28	28
05*	YOUNG	14	5-6	0-0	4-7	3	1	4	5	2	2	0	2	27	37
11*	TURNER	12	5-10	0-0	2-4	6	2	8	4	2	1	3	6	23	23
24*	OGUNBO	23	7-15	1-5	8-10	0	6	6	7	0	2	0	3	31	33
32*	SHEPARD	16	7-9	0-0	2-2	2	4	6	1	2	3	0	3	27	33
00	NIXON	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	0	0	0	1	1	0	0	7	1
30	VAUGHN	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	3	4
33	PATTERS	1	0-1	0-0	1-2	0	1	1	0	0	3	0	0	9	6
TM	TEAM		-	-	-	2	4	6		0	1				0
TOTALS	       85     31-54	6-13	17-25	14	20	34	21	8	15	3	14		0
GAME PCT	        57.4	46.2	68.0				0
THIS HALF	36	15-18	2-4	4-6	1	6	7	13	2	2	2	7		0
HALF PCT	        83.3	50.0	66.7				0


ND Top Performers
HTML:
PLAYER	PTS	REB	FG	AST	EFF
24 OGUNBOWALE	23	6	7-15	7	27
11 TURNER	12	8	5-10	4	25
32 SHEPARD	16	6	7-9	1	21
05 YOUNG	14	4	5-6	5	19
 

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TIMEOUT ND 94 CU 59 4:59 To Play


54.7 seconds to Play

CT 61
UL 74
 

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ND 9-0 RUN OVER 2:28
ND 11-1 RUN OVER 3:28
ND FGs: 5 OF LAST 5
CU FGs: 0 OF LAST 5
CU FGs: 1 OF LAST 8
CU SCORING DROUGHT 2:40


Mabrey Trey #6, 22 pts, 6 assists

ND 101 58
 

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DOWN GOES CT

DOWN GOES CT

FINAL

#2 CT 69
#3 UL 78
 
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FINAL ND 101 CU 63

FINAL ND 101 CU 63

Score by Period
HTML:
TEAM	1	2	3	4	T
ND	32	17	34	18	101
CU	18	19	13	13	63


STATS ND CU
HTML:
FG%	58%	44%
FGs	38-65	28-64
3FG%	44%	35%
3FGs	7-16	6-17
FT%	62%	20%
FTs	18-29	1-5
TOs	18	28
PtsOffTO	34	17
TotReb	40	33
DefReb	25	20
Off Reb	15	13
2ndChPts	18	11
BenchPts	11	32
PtsPaint	58	30
FstBkPt	14	12
Blocks	5	2
Steals	17	10
Assts	25	15
Times Tied:	0
Time Tied:	0:16
Lead Chg:	1
LeadTime	38:59	0:45
 

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Full Box Score
HTML:
#	Player	PTS	FG	3FG	FT	OR	DR	REB	A	PF	TO	BL	ST	MIN	+/-
03*	MABREY	22	8-15	6-10	0-0	1	3	4	6	1	3	0	1	34	38
05*	YOUNG	14	5-6	0-0	4-7	3	1	4	5	2	2	0	2	27	37
11*	TURNER	15	6-13	0-0	3-6	7	2	9	4	2	1	3	6	26	25
24*	OGUNBO	23	7-15	1-5	8-10	0	6	6	7	0	2	0	3	33	34
32*	SHEPARD	16	7-9	0-0	2-2	2	4	6	1	2	3	0	3	27	33
00	NIXON	2	1-1	0-0	0-0	0	0	0	0	1	2	0	0	16	6
12	PROHAS	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	2	2	0	1	0	0	2	7	4
20	BENZ	0	0-1	0-1	0-0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	3	-5
22	COSGRO	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	3	-5
30	VAUGHN	6	3-3	0-0	0-2	0	0	0	1	0	1	2	0	12	9
33	PATTERS	3	1-2	0-0	1-2	0	2	2	1	0	3	0	0	12	14
TM	TEAM		-	-	-	2	5	7		0	1				0
TOTALS	       101	38-65	7-16	18-29	15	25	40	25	9	18	5	17		0
GAME PCT	        58.5	43.8	62.1				0
THIS HALF	52	22-29	3-7	5-10	2	11	13	17	3	5	4	10		0
HALF PCT	        75.9	42.9	50.0				0
THIS QTR        18	8-12	1-3	1-4	1	6	7	4	1	3	2	3		0
QTR PCT	                66.7	33.3	25.0
 

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#	Player	PTS	FG	3FG	FT	OR	DR	REB	A	PF	TO	BL	ST	MIN	+/-
01*	THOMAS	5	2-5	1-3	0-2	2	1	3	1	3	2	0	3	24	-25
05*	EDWARDS	4	2-6	0-1	0-0	2	1	3	2	1	3	0	0	23	-31
20*	WESTBRO	4	2-7	0-1	0-0	0	3	3	4	1	5	1	3	25	-28
44*	THORNTO	16	8-11	0-0	0-1	1	2	3	0	2	1	0	0	22	-25
55*	BENNETT	2	1-5	0-0	0-0	2	0	2	0	2	5	1	2	29	-36
10	CLEGG	3	1-6	1-6	0-0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	7	-3
11	HOSENDO	2	1-2	0-0	0-0	0	1	1	1	5	3	0	0	8	-10
12	COLLIER	22	9-17	4-6	0-0	2	6	8	3	4	5	0	2	25	-22
21	BLACKST	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	1	1	0	1	1	0	0	4	3
22	PURVIS	3	1-2	0-0	1-2	0	2	2	2	1	0	0	0	16	-6
32	COTTON	2	1-3	0-0	0-0	1	2	3	2	1	3	0	0	18	-7
TM	TEAM		-	-	-	3	1	4		0	0				0
TOTALS	       63	28-64	6-17	1-5	13	20	33	15	21	28	2	10		0
GAME PCT	        43.8	35.3	20.0				0
THIS HALF      26	11-28	3-11	1-5	8	8	16	7	9	15	0	3		0
HALF PCT	        39.3	27.3	20.0				0
THIS QTR       13	5-15	2-8	1-2	4	5	9	4	4	5	0	2		0
QTR PCT	                33.3	25.0	50.0


CU Top Performers
HTML:
PLAYER	PTS	REB	FG	AST	EFF
12 COLLIER	22	8	9-17	3	22
44 THORNTON	16	3	8-11	0	14
01 THOMAS	5	3	2-5	1	5
20 WESTBROOK	4	3	2-7	4	5
 
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Game Recap: Women's Basketball | 1/31/2019 9:35:00 PM

#5 Irish Bounce Back with 101-63 Win at Clemson
Mabrey connects on a season high six threes for a season best 22 points

CLEMSON, S.C. – The No. 5 Notre Dame women's basketball team bounced back in a major way on Thursday night, rolling to a decisive 101-63 victory over Clemson (14-7, 5-3) inside Littlejohn Coliseum. All five Fighting Irish (20-2, 7-1) starters reached double figures for the seventh time this season, which included a pair of 20-point scoring performances from seniors Arike Ogunbowale and Marina Mabrey.

Ogunbowale led all players with 23 points on 7-of-15 shooting, including a 8-for-10 effort from the free-throw line. Mabrey connected on a season high six three-pointers to finish with a season best 22 points. The duo also combined for 13 assists.

"I was really pleased with the way we came out starting the game," Karen & Kevin Keyes Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw said. "I really thought we were focused and looking for each other. I thought we passed the ball well. It was great to have Jackie Young back. She really changes things for us."

How It Happened
Clemson got on the board first at 9:44, but Notre Dame's defense didn't allow another field goal for nearly five minutes. In fact, the Irish forced six turnovers in that span, spurring an 18-0 run.

Mabrey went 3-of-4 from three-point range in the first to lead the Irish in the quarter with nine points, as the senior's third trey built Notre Dame a 21-6 advantage. However, the Tigers fought back, narrowing the deficit to 32-18 at the end of the first.

Notre Dame and Clemson traded baskets in the second, until halfway through the period when the Tigers benefited from Irish turnovers to net a 9-0 run to cut it to 44-37. Young put the Irish back on track at the 1:44 mark with a mid-range jumper before three Irish free throws brought the game to its halftime score of 49-37.

Young led the Irish in the second with eight points and at the half with a total of 14. In addition, Ogunbowale boasted double digits as well with 11 points.

Mabrey caught fire to start the third, tallying 10 of the team's first 15 points behind two more threes. In fact, Mabrey, Shepard and Ogunbowale powered a 20-7 scoring spree, giving the Irish a 69-44 advantage by the third quarter media timeout at the 4:50 mark.

Notre Dame went on to outscore Clemson 34-13 in the third. In addition to Mabrey's 10 points, Ogunbowale poured in 12 in the quarter while Shepard added eight. Furthermore, all five starters were in double digits heading into the fourth, up 83-50.

The Irish then outscored the Tigers 18-13 in the fourth, surpassing 100 points for the sixth time this season and the second in ACC play.

Notes
With the win, Notre Dame leads the overall series, 6-0, against Clemson, with a 3-0 mark inside Littlejohn Coliseum.
Irish move to 84-4 all-time within ACC play since joining the league for the 2013-14 season.
Jackie Young, who missed Sunday's game due to a right ankle sprain, returned with a 14-point, 5-assist performance.
With 15 points tonight, Turner has reached double digit points in seven of the last eight games.
Turner collected a career high six steals.
With three blocks, Turner has earned 17 blocks over the last five games.
Ogunbowale led the Irish with 23 points on 7-for-15 shooting. It marked her ACC leading 14th 20-point scoring performance on the year.
Mabrey connected on a season high six three-pointers, finishing 6-for-10 from beyond the arc. Mabrey has connected on three or more treys in five of the past six games, tallying double-digit points in the five said games as well.
For the fifth time of her career, Mabrey has recorded back-to-back games with 20 or more points, finishing with a season high 22 points on Thursday.
With five assists tonight, Mabrey has dished out four or more assists in six straight games.
Shepard has achieved seven straight games with double digit points, tallying 16 tonight.
All five Irish starters scored in double figures for the seventh time this season.
With the 101-63 victory, the Irish have now reached triple digits in six games this season and for the second time in ACC play.

Up Next
The Irish wrapped their three-game road swing Thursday night and finally return home for a Sunday, Feb. 3, bout with Georgia Tech. Tip is set for Noon EST inside Purcell Pavilion, airing live on Raycom Sports Network.

--ND--​
 

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Sunday Noon ET WatchESPN ND v GT @ Purcell

Sunday Noon ET WatchESPN ND v GT @ Purcell

Women's Basketball 2/2/2019 5:18:00 PM

Game 23 Preview: Georgia Tech
Irish and Yellow Jackets complete home-and-home this Sunday
Story Links
Game 23: #5/5 Notre Dame (20-2, 7-1) vs. Georgia Tech (13-8, 3-5)
When: Sunday, Feb. 3 | Noon ET
Where: Notre Dame, Ind. | Purcell Pavilion (9,149)
Watch: Raycom Sports Network | WatchESPN | Full list of how to watch

Listen: Pulse FM 96.9/92.1/103.1 | Bob Nagle (PxP) | Listen Online
Live Scoring: StatBroadcast
Notes: Notre Dame | Georgia Tech
Social: @NDWBB
Promotion: Girls & Women in Sports Day | Bingo in Heritage Hall after the game
Reminder: Irish have a clear bag policy for the 2018-19 season and moving forward

NOTRE DAME, Ind. - The No. 5 University of Notre Dame women's basketball team completes its home-and-home series with Georgia Tech with the Yellow Jackets visit Purcell Pavilion on Sunday, Feb. 3. Tip is set for Noon EST, airing on Raycom Sports Network and WatchESPN.

Back on Jan. 6, the Irish defeated Georgia Tech, 76-55, in Atlanta, recording a season high 30 assists on 34 made field goals. All five Irish starters finished in double figures, led by Jessica Shepard's 19 points.

TURNER SHOOTING IN ACC PLAY
Over the course of ACC play, Turner has raised her shooting percentage from .585 to .600, moving her national ranking from 26th to 15th. Turner is shooting 62.3 percent in league games, which leads all players in the ACC.

Thus, it should come as no surprise that Turner has garnered double-digit points in seven of the last eight games.

MABREY STEPPING UP
Despite missing the first five games due to injury, Mabrey ranks second on the team in the amount of times she's led the Irish in scoring this season. With her 20-point outburst at North Carolina (1/27), Mabrey led the squad for the fifth time this year. Then, for the fifth time of her career, Mabrey produced back-to-back games of 20 or more points, pouring in 22 at Clemson behind a season high six made threes.

Over the last two games, Mabrey has shot a combined 15-for-26 from the field and 10-for-16 from beyond the arc, totaling 42 points.

THREE FROM NO. 3
Mabrey has connected on three or more treys in five of the past six games and has tallied double digits points in the five said games. As a result, the senior has raised her three-point shooting percentage from .404 to .458, which ranks 3rd the ACC and 13th in the nation. Mabrey is averaging 2.6 threes/game, which ranks 5th in the league.

Furthermore, with her four-trey performance at UNC (1/27), Mabrey surpassed her position coach, Beth (Morgan) Cunningham, for No. 3 all-time. Mabrey now boasts 238 in her career. Up next is Sheila McMillen with 249.

ARIKE, PREPARING FOR TAKEOFF
Arike has certainly found her moments lately to take off in a quarter of a game:
- Dec. 22 at Marquette - Arike scored 15 of her 32 points in the third quarter alone.
- Jan. 10 vs Louisville - scored 19 of her 30 points in the fourth, including 12 in the final 40 seconds.
- Jan. 16 at Virginia Tech - scored 12 of her 19 points in the third quarter.
- Jan. 20 vs Boston College - scored 13 of her 24 points in the first quarter, going 3-for-3 from deep in the period.
- Jan. 24 at Tennessee - scored 16 of her 28 points in the third.
- Jan. 31 at Clemson - scored 12 of her 23 points in the third

Thus, four big instances in the 3rd quarter.

YOUNG ONE OF NATION'S BEST SHOOTING GUARDS
Junior guard Jackie Young has been highly efficient from the field this season, shooting 54.4 percent. That number ranks 9th in the ACC and 34th nationally, but more impressively, 3rd nationally among just guards.

SPREADING THE WEALTH

When you mix the high percentage shooting with the high assist total, you get our next stat. All five starters have reached double-digit points in seven separate games this season. Instances include Iowa, UConn, Binghamton, Lehigh, Georgia Tech, Boston College and most recently, Clemson.


GETTING TO THE LINE

The Irish continue to attack the basket and reach the charity stripe, ranking first in the country in made free-throws with 367 and first in attempts with 509.

Arike currently ranks 15th nationally in made free throws (104) and 14th in attempts (134). Against No. 2 Louisville on Jan. 10, Arike went a perfect 12-for-12 from the free-throw line, which stood as the second best single-game performance in ND history, trailing just Ruth Riley & Ashley Barlow (13-for-13).

REACHING THE CENTURY MARK
When the Irish defeated Clemson, it marked the sixth time in which the Irish reached triple digits in a win:
101-63 win at Clemson on Jan. 31
100-44 win vs Pitt on Jan. 3
103-53 win vs Binghamton on Dec. 16
105-71 win vs No. 14 Iowa on Nov. 29
101-77 win vs No. 15 DePaul on Nov. 17
103-58 win vs Harvard on Nov. 9

PROTECTING THE HOUSE
Purcell Pavilion continues to be one of the toughest venues to play in women's hoops. Over the last 108 games at home, the Irish have only lost three times, with all three coming against UConn.

Notre Dame is 476-93 all-time inside Purcell Pavilion. The Irish have sold out Purcell Pavilion 55 times and boasts a 45-10 record in those instances.

Most notably, however, has been how dominant the Irish have been in league play at home. Notre Dame has won a school-record 54 consecutive home conference games, beginning with a 66-47 win over Providence on Feb. 14, 2012, in BIG EAST play.
 

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FINAL ND 90 GT 50

FINAL ND 90 GT 50

Score by Period
HTML:
TEAM	1	2	3	4	T
GAT	10	3	17	20	50
UND	28	26	20	16	90


STATS GT ND
HTML:
FG%	22%	56%
FGs	18-83	33-59
3FG%	13%	67%
3FGs	4-30	8-12
FT%	77%	70%
FTs	10-13	16-23
TOs	19	20
PtsOffTO	13	17
TotReb	48	45
DefReb	19	35
Off Reb	29	10
2ndChPts	27	8
BenchPts	15	19
PtsPaint	26	40
FstBkPt	3	16
Blocks	7	7
Steals	11	12
Assts	10	21
Times Tied:	2
Time Tied:	1:31
Lead Chg:	2
LeadTime	0:41	37:47
 

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#	Player	PTS	FG	3FG	FT	OR	DR	REB	A	PF	TO	BL	ST	MIN	+/-
3*	MABREY	20	7-10	6-7	0-1	0	3	3	5	0	5	0	1	25	33
5*	YOUNG	18	8-11	0-0	2-2	2	6	8	4	1	2	0	1	29	45
11*	TURNER	8	3-6	0-0	2-2	1	6	7	1	1	1	5	1	19	24
24*	OGUNBO	12	4-10	1-3	3-4	0	5	5	4	1	2	0	1	23	35
32*	SHEPARD	13	5-7	0-0	3-4	1	4	5	0	1	1	0	4	21	35
0	NIXON	8	2-3	0-1	4-4	1	2	3	3	3	2	0	1	24	13
12	PROHASK	2	1-4	0-0	0-0	1	2	3	2	3	2	0	2	18	-2
20	BENZ	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	1	1	0	0	1	0	0	3	-3
22	COSGROV	3	1-2	1-1	0-0	0	1	1	0	2	1	0	0	10	-4
30	VAUGHN	3	1-2	0-0	1-2	1	2	3	1	1	0	2	0	11	17
33	PATTERS	3	1-3	0-0	1-2	0	0	0	0	0	3	0	1	14	4
40	BUTLER	0	0-1	0-0	0-2	1	1	2	1	0	0	0	0	5	3
TM	TEAM		-	-	-	2	2	4		0	0				
TOTALS	       90	33-59	8-12	16-23	10	35	45	21	13	20	7	12		
GAME PCT	          55.9	66.7	69.6				
THIS HALF 36	13-26	5-9	5-8	4	16	20	9	9	14	2	4		
HALF PCT	          57.1	57.1	0				
THIS QTR 16	5-12	1-2	5-8	2	8	10	3	5	7	0	2		
QTR PCT	                  41.7	50.0	62.5

UND Top Performers
HTML:
PLAYER	PTS	REB	FG	AST	EFF
5 YOUNG	18	8	8-11	4	26
3 MABREY	20	3	7-10	5	20
11 TURNER	8	7	3-6	1	18
32 SHEPARD	13	5	5-7	0	18
 

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UND Specialty Stats
HTML:
Bench Points	19
Points In Paint	40
Points off Turns	17
Opp Turnovers	19
2nd Chance Points	8
Off Rebounds	10
Fastbreak Points	16
Layups	19-28
Dunks	0-0
Times Tied	1
Times Taken Lead	1
Possessions	78
Scores	41
Avg Poss Time (sec)	0
Pts Per Possession	1.154
Scoring %	52.6
Turnover %	25.6
Time Leading	37:47
Time Trailing	0:41
Time Tied	1:31
 

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#	Player	PTS	FG	3FG	FT	OR	DR	REB	A	PF	TO	BL	ST	MIN	+/-
5*	BALOGUN	7	3-15	1-9	0-0	3	2	5	1	1	3	0	2	31	-45
13*	CUBAJ	7	3-12	0-0	1-2	5	2	7	2	4	2	2	3	27	-33
22*	DIXON	12	6-12	0-0	0-0	3	2	5	0	3	1	0	0	19	-8
33*	PAN	3	1-7	0-4	1-2	1	1	2	1	2	1	0	2	18	-22
41*	FLETCHER	6	1-8	0-2	4-4	3	1	4	2	1	0	3	1	33	-45
00	JEFFERSO	0	0-5	0-1	0-0	4	2	6	2	0	1	1	0	13	-3
2	CARSON	4	1-6	1-6	1-2	0	2	2	1	0	1	0	2	13	-1
4	DIOUF	3	1-2	0-0	1-1	3	1	4	0	2	3	1	0	6	-11
12	MONTGO	0	0-1	0-0	0-0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	1	1
23	GREGG	0	0-5	0-2	0-0	0	0	0	0	2	2	0	0	7	-9
24	SCOTT	2	0-1	0-0	2-2	0	1	1	0	3	1	0	0	9	-7
31	LAHTINEN	6	2-9	2-6	0-0	3	3	6	1	2	3	0	1	22	-15
44	FORTUNE	0	0-0	0-0	0-0	0	0	0	0	0	1	0	0	1	-2
TM	TEAM		-	-	-	4	2	6		0	0				
TOTALS	       50	18-83	4-30	10-13	29	19	48	10	20	19	7	11		
GAME PCT	          21.7	13.3	76.9				
THIS HALF	37	13-49	3-16	8-11	20	10	30	7	7	7	3	6		
HALF PCT	          28.0	14.3	100.0				
THIS QTR	20	6-24	2-9	6-9	10	6	16	5	5	3	2	2		
QTR PCT	                25.0	22.2	66.7

GAT Top Performers

HTML:
PLAYER	PTS	REB	FG	AST	EFF
22 DIXON	12	5	6-12	0	10
13 CUBAJ	7	7	3-12	2	9
41 FLETCHER	6	4	1-8	2	9
31 LAHTINEN	6	6	2-9	1	4
 

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29 ORebs but they did take 83 shots making only 18

29 ORebs but they did take 83 shots making only 18

GAT Specialty Stats
HTML:
Bench Points	15
Points In Paint	26
Points off Turns	13
Opp Turnovers	20
2nd Chance Points	27
Off Rebounds	29
Fastbreak Points	3
Layups	5-13
Dunks	0-0
Times Tied	1
Times Taken Lead	1
Possessions	79
Scores	23
Avg Poss Time (sec)	0
Pts Per Possession	.633
Scoring %	29.1
Turnover %	24.1
Time Leading	0:41
Time Trailing	37:47
Time Tied	1:31
 

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Game Recap: Women's Basketball | 2/3/2019 3:00:00 PM

Defense Leads #5 Irish to 90-50 Victory over Georgia Tech
Mabrey drops 20 points behind six made threes



NOTRE DAME, Ind. – The No. 5 Notre Dame women's basketball team limited Georgia Tech to 30 points through the first three quarters before rolling to a 90-50 victory over the Yellow Jackets (13-9, 3-6). Senior guard Marina Mabrey led the Fighting Irish (21-2, 8-1) with 20 points on a 6-for-7 shooting performance from three-point range. It marked her third straight game with 20 or more points.

"I thought our defense in the first half was really terrific," Karen & Kevin Keyes Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw said. "Defensively, we found the shooters, rebounded, ran -- we did everything. We held them to 13 points (in the first half) and that was really something to be happy with."​

How It Happened
Notre Dame's first five field goals were each made by a different starter, as they shot out to 12-6 lead, which was later extended to 28-10 by the end of the quarter. Irish dished out nine assists on 11 made field goals in the opening period, led by 10 points from Jackie Young and eight from Jessica Shepard.

However, it was Notre Dame's defense which stole the headline of the first half. The Irish held Georgia Tech without a field goal for a 13 minute and 31 second stretch, spanning from 6:23 in the first to 2:52 in the second. In fact, the Yellow Jackets were limited to just one field goal, a three-pointer, in the second, as the Irish boasted a 54-13 advantage at the half. It marked both Notre Dame's best defensive quarter and half of the season.

Marina Mabrey powered the offense in the third, scoring 12 of the team's 20 points behind four made three-pointers. In fact, Mabrey connected on three treys in three straight possessions.

"It's really nice that my teammates are finding me in transition, that they're looking for," Mabrey said. "The whole team has confidence that I can knock it down. It's a good feeling."

Young, Shepard and Ogunbowale joined Mabrey in double figures. Young shot 8-for-11 from the field to finish with 18 points and eight rebounds. Shepard tallied 13 points to go with her season high tying four steals. Ogunbowale added 12 points and four assists, while Brianna Turner turned up the defensive pressure with a season high tying five blocks to go with her eight points.

Player of the Game
For the second time of her career, Mabrey has recorded three straight games with 20 or more points. In addition, Mabrey tied her season high of six made treys for the second consecutive game. Her career high is seven, set vs Texas A&M in last year's NCAA Tournament.

Stat of the Game
Notre Dame posted a 24-0 run in the first half, marking its longest of the season.

Notes
  • With the win, Notre Dame leads the overall series, 12-0, with an 8-0 mark at home.
  • Irish move to 85-4 all-time in ACC play since joining the league for the 2013-14 season.
  • Irish win their 55th consecutive league game at home, which dates back to their Big East days in 2012.
  • The Irish defense posted its best defensive half of the season, holding Georgia Tech to 13 first half points. In addition, Notre Dame earned its best defensive quarter as well, limiting the Yellow Jackets to three points on one made field in the second.
  • Irish recorded their longest run of the season, scoring 24 straight in the first half.
  • For the second time of her career, Mabrey has recorded three consecutive games with 20 or more points, finishing with 20 today.
  • Mabrey connected on a season-high-tying six threes, ultimately shooting 6-for-7 from beyond the arc. This also marked the second straight game in which she's hit six threes. Mabrey's career high is seven set against Texas A&M in last year's NCAA Tournament.
  • Turner tied her season high of five blocks for the second time this year.
  • Shepard tied her season high in steals with four. Shepard also reached double-digit points for the seventh straight game.
  • Mabrey has dished out four or more assists in seven straight games.
  • Last three games - Mabrey has shot 16-of-23 from three.

Up Next
The Irish return to life on the road when they travel to Coral Gables on Thursday, Feb. 7, to take on Miami. Tip is set for 7 pm EST on ACCN Extra.

--ND--​
 

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UNC tops nation's last unbeaten, beats No. 7 NC State 64-51
4:23 PM CT
Associated Press

RALEIGH, N.C. -- A week after upending a No. 1-ranked team, North Carolina's surging women have another big upset: this one against the nation's last unbeaten team in seventh-ranked rival North Carolina State.

Stephanie Watts scored 20 points to help the Tar Heels beat the Wolfpack 64-51 on Sunday, ending N.C. State's 21-game winning streak to start the season.

N.C. State (21-1, 8-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) came in leading the league standings and as the only unbeaten team in Division I on the men's or women's side. But that program-record start ended as the Tar Heels (14-9, 5-4) took over after halftime while the Wolfpack struggled to knock down shots.

"I don't feel like there was pressure," said N.C. State's Erika Cassell, who had 12 rebounds. "Of course everyone was wondering how long the streak is going to go on. It's just something for us to bounce back from."

As for the Tar Heels, it was exactly a week ago that hey earned their first win against a No. 1-ranked team in nearly 13 years when they beat Notre Dame at home. Then, after edging Georgia Tech on Thursday, the Tar Heels went on the road against a longtime rival in front of a sellout crowd and earned another huge win.

That's four in a row overall for a team that has gone from one game above .500 to surging with confidence in a short time.

"It's been exciting for us," Watts said. "The team, like (coach Sylvia Hatchell) said, is playing great basketball. ... We've just been really excited but we're never satisfied. We want more. We want to keep it rolling."

Janelle Bailey added 16 points and 13 rebounds for the Tar Heels, who shot 39 percent and made a season-low four 3-pointers. But they scored 18 points off 14 turnovers by the Wolfpack.

Kiara Leslie had 17 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Wolfpack, who shot 30 percent.

BIG PICTURE

UNC: The Tar Heels shocked everybody with their win against the Fighting Irish last Sunday, with Watts proclaiming afterward: "We're a better team than what our record shows." It's hard to argue now after the past week.

"I kept telling them," Hatchell said. "I said, `Guys, y'all have just got to understand, I've been doing this 44 years. Y'all are good. We've just got to get over the hump a little bit."

N.C. State: The Wolfpack had savored a remarkable start that stood as the best start in school history and the program's highest ranking since January 2000. That had come despite injury concerns that included the loss of top scorer Grace Hunter to a knee injury. Leslie, Aislinn Konig and the rest of the Wolfpack had kept winning but now must regroup with a tough schedule ahead.

"We've been a little stagnant," Wolfpack coach Wes Moore said. "I've been disappointed in practice the last week or so. And again, it's tough, because you don't have a lot of subs and depth in practice, so you're tempted to pace yourself. But we've got to get back a little more urgency in practice."

BETTER KEA

UNC's Paris Kea scored 13 of her 17 points after halftime, shaking off a 2-for-12 shooting start in the first half. That came after she had 30 points and 10 assists against the Fighting Irish.

SHOOTING STRUGGLES

N.C. State led 32-31 at halftime, but it wasn't long into the third quarter when the shots stopped falling. The Wolfpack went more than 10 minutes without a basket and missed 12 straight shots at one point.

A FAMILIAR SIGHT

It was a rough shooting weekend for both nationally ranked N.C. State basketball programs.

On Saturday, the 23rd-ranked men's team managed just 24 points in a loss to Virginia Tech for the lowest point total by any ACC team in the shot-clock era. The Wolfpack men -- who also shot an ACC-record-low 16.7 percent -- made 3 of 23 shots after halftime in that game, then the Wolfpack women nearly matched that by making 4 of 23 shots after halftime against the Tar Heels on Sunday.

UP NEXT

UNC: The Tar Heels host rival Duke on Thursday.

N.C. State: The Wolfpack will get plenty of travel miles in February, starting with Thursday's game at No. 24 Florida State.
 

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ND #4

ND #4

Despite CT losing 74 points ND only picked up 4 points this week. #3 Oregon picked up 26. UL was the big gainer picking up 1 First Place Vote and 38 points. BU picked up 1 First Place Vote and 2 points. #6 MSSt picked up 13 votes.

Top 10 Killer UNC is knocking at the Top 25 door at #27.

AP Top 25
HTML:
RK	TEAM REC PTS TREND
1 Baylor (25) 19-1 697 -
2 Louisville (3) 21-1 668 1
3 Oregon 21-1 632 1
4 Notre Dame 21-2 608 1
5 UConn 19-2 596 -3
6 Mississippi State 21-1 578 -
7 Oregon State 19-3 513 2
8 Marquette 19-3 483 2
9 NC State 21-1 470 -2
10 Maryland 19-2 459 1
11 Stanford 18-3 447 -3
12 South Carolina 16-5 352 4
13 Gonzaga 21-2 316 2 
14 Texas 18-4 313 -2
15 Syracuse 17-4 303 3
16 Iowa 17-5 279 -3
17 Utah 18-3 209 -3
18 Texas A&M 18-4 206 2
19 Kentucky 18-5 173 -
20 Arizona State 15-6 160 1 
20 Rutgers 17-5 160 -3
22 Iowa State 17-5 150 1
23 Michigan State 16-5 130 -1
24 Florida State 19-3 111 -
25 Miami 19-5 20 1

Others receiving votes: South Dakota 17, UNC 13, UCF 10, Missouri 7, WVU 5, New Mexico 4, Drake 3, CAL 2, MIN 2, Rice 2, BYU 1, CMU 1

Dropped from rankings: BYU 25
 

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Massey ND #3

Massey ND #3

Massey has
1 MSSt
2 BU
3 ND
4 UL
5 OR
6 CT
 

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Strangely enough, Miss State looked to me like a team that can't play defense against any really good O-Team. Just don't lazily mess with their giant and score like crazy.
 

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https://www.southbendtribune.com/sports/ruth-riley-among-hof-selections/article_850c16a7-5b2e-518f-a451-4e2c2c8bb1f3.html

Ruth Riley among HOF selections
By Doug Feinberg Associated Press

NEW YORK — Ticha Penicheiro, Ruth Riley and Valerie Still are headed to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.

The trio of former college stars headline a seven-person class that was announced Monday night. Joining them are longtime women’s basketball contributors Beth Bass (CEO of the women’s basketball coaches association), Nora Lynn Finch (inaugural chair of the NCAA selection committee) and Joan Cronan (former Tennessee athletic director).

Carolyn Bush Roddy, who starred for Wayland Baptist, rounds out the class that will be enshrined in June.

Penicheiro won the Wade Trophy in 1998 while starring for Old Dominion. She went on to hold the WNBA career assist record until it was broken by Sue Bird.

Riley helped Notre Dame win its first national championship in 2001 and was the AP Player of the Year that season. She went on to become a two-time WNBA champion with the Detroit Shock (2003, 2006) and was a 2004 Olympic gold medalist.

Still was the all-time leading scorer and rebounder at Kentucky and helped the Columbus Quest win back-to-back ABL titles in 1997 and 1998.

Other finalists this year were Debbie Brock (veteran player), Lucille Kyvallos (veteran coach), Paul Sanderford (coach), Bob Schneider (coach) and Amy Tucker (contributor — assistant coach).

This is the first time in the hall’s history that they didn’t elect a coach as part of a class.

The Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women will also be honored by the hall for being a trailblazer of the game.
 

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http://www.espn.com/espnw/blogs/news/article/6084219/working-change-negative-women-college-basketball-recruiting-top

Changing negative recruiting from the top
By Amanda Rykoff | Feb 2, 2011

As a follow to ESPN The Magazine's fascinating examination of homophobia in women's college basketball recruiting, espnW spoke with two women who are actually taking action to help change negative recruiting (homophobic or otherwise) throughout women's collegiate sports. Beth Bass, CEO of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association, has set up an ethics committee that is working on establishing "best practices" in the hopes that coaches will halt these tactics in the highest-profile women's collegiate sport. Celia Slater is the executive director of the NCAA Women Coaches Academy, an organization started in 2003 that works to keep female college coaches on the field and on the court through courses focusing on philosophy development, management strategies, communication, conflict resolution and other issues.

Both Bass, who was quoted in the original magazine story, and Slater affirmed that negative recruiting, including homophobic practices, is unfortunately alive and well at the collegiate level, particularly in basketball.

"As far as negative recruiting, I can tell you, [from] working with coaches, that it very much does exist, and it's very harsh," Slater says. "It is probably more prevalent in some sports than others, but it's there, regardless of sport."

Both Slater and Bass are committed to education and policy change to help reduce, if not eliminate, negative recruiting. Slater hopes to continue to challenge negative recruiting through the Alliance of Women's Coaches, an organization she has co-founded and which will launch this year.

Bass says that for the past two-and-a-half years, as women's basketball has become more visible and lucrative, the WBCA had been putting together an ethics committee and discussing a revamped code of ethics for coaches. The goal of the revamped code, which took effect on Sept. 1, 2010, is not to turn the WBCA into an enforcer but instead to "help facilitate and enhance communications between our coaches, their institutions, their conferences and the NCAA system." The co-chairs of the ethics committee are retired University of Texas basketball coach and Naismith Hall of Fame member Jody Conradt and current Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer. Bass did not get into specifics regarding the new code of ethics but said it does address negative recruiting.

The WBCA also planned a new leadership academy for 60 coaches this May and June at Columbia University. These two-and-a-half-day sessions will focus on "reflection, perspective, your leadership philosophy, your ethics, your ethical practices talking about best recruiting practices, what is a violation, what is your tipping point of doing that dance." If the WBCA can continue to secure funding, the goal is to have all NCAA women's Division I basketball coaches attend these leadership academies in the next three to five years. Bass says that when it looked like the WBCA might be short on funds for this year's inaugural academy, Connecticut head coach Geno Auriemma personally wrote a check for "well over six figures" to ensure it would take place as planned.

Slater addresses the issue of negative recruiting directly in several aspects of the coaches' academy curriculum. For starters, every coach who attends the academy signs a document pledging that he or she won't engage in such tactics.

"I ask the academy graduates to make a commitment to not participate in negative recruiting in any of its forms," Slater says. With respect to homophobic negative recruiting tactics specifically, Slater said, "I feel very passionate about this because I've seen how harsh it can be to be attacked personally, and how it can break a coach's spirit, so they get out of the profession." Slater has addressed homophobic recruiting tactics by incorporating the issue into the curriculum for at least one of the academy's courses.

In "Finding Your Voice," a public speaking class that Slater teaches, here is one of the questions posed to the class: "A parent on a recruiting visit asks you, Do you allow lesbians on your team? If you do, how do you feel about that?" Slater says coaches have confirmed that this does happen, and they do get asked this question. Many coaches have shared that "they disagree with being asked this question ... and how much they look forward to the day when this is not an issue." Slater also said that sometimes "coaches are asked this question more and more because [the questioner's] child is gay, and they want to make sure it's a safe environment for the child. So it goes both ways. It's not always antagonistic."

Slater is particularly concerned with how all of this affects the players themselves. "The part that's missing in this whole dialogue is the student-athletes," Slater says. "I've heard coaches tell me, 'I feel badly that I want to be a positive role model for my gay student-athletes.' We forget a lot of this. We're forgetting about a lot of the student-athletes that are kind of in the mix here. What about them? How does this feel to them? How does this affect their world on a day-to-day basis? Because supposedly we're in the business because we care about student-athletes -- all student-athletes."

Despite negative recruiting's continued existence, both women also expressed optimism that with changes being made institutionally and in society generally, these tactics will start to wane. "Moving forward, negative recruiting will, I think, take care of itself," Bass says. "You've got to be careful about negative recruiting because it will go against you. I think that's what people will find out. [A student-athlete might say] 'It turned me off that they were saying that we have this kind of atmosphere or that coach is this way or that coach is that way' ... Do we have empirical data? No. But anecdotal, that's my gut."

Slater agrees. "I really do believe that as the society changes and our younger generation continues to move into the athletic world, it's less of an issue for them. More and more student-athletes don't have a problem with it."
Slater believes that the coaches' academy is making a difference by addressing the issue head-on and fostering open and honest dialogue.

"A coach stands in front of her class and starts bawling because she really wants to have children, but she's afraid to have children because she's afraid she'll lose her job when her partner becomes pregnant," Slater said. "When a coach does that in front of a class, things change. More and more coaches are sharing their personal stories, and when people hear those stories, it helps change things. I can see the shift happening. The momentum is shifting to where it's getting better. But there's a long way to go for sure."
 

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"Uncomfortable" issue to be sure. Some commentator, I don't remember where, made a statement that the WNBA was 80% or so lesbian. (Number not precisely remembered but it was way up there.) I of course have no clue where the factual number would be, but even if the comment was in the ballpark, it sheds a different light on the above article. Lesbianism in women's basketball (and somewhat in women's soccer) seems well past any early stage issue, but instead is the norm in many places.

The "good" or "bad" of this is another matter, but it would seem that some programs will already be lesbian majority personnel, which will include coaching staffs. (There was an issue long ago now at WMU where some athletes felt that they were getting less playing opportunities because they were NOT lesbian. And there, athletic-opportunity-wise, would be where the current article probably should have at least as much focus as what it emphasizes.)
 

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Women's Basketball 2/5/2019 9:40:00 AM

Ruth Riley Named to 2019 Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame Class
Induction held June 8 in Knoxville



NOTRE DAME, Ind. – The Women's Basketball Hall of Fame announced Notre Dame alumna Ruth Riley as part of its 2019 induction class on Monday night. Riley and the rest of the 2019 class will be introduced at the Women's Final Four in Tampa in April, while the induction ceremony will take place June 8 in Knoxville, Tennessee.

The 21st Class of Inductees include: Beth Bass (Contributor), Joan Cronan (Contributor), Nora Lynn Finch (Contributor), Ticha Penicheiro (International Player), Carolyn Bush Roddy (Veteran Player), Valerie Still (Player) and Ruth Riley (Player).

Riley was a three-time All-American at Notre Dame, spearheading the Irish to their first national championship in 2001. Riley hit the game-winning free throws with 5.8 seconds left in the national title game on her way to earning Most Outstanding Player honors at the Final Four.

Riley accumulated plenty of other honors along the way: Winner of the 2001 Naismith Award, two-time First Team CoSIDA Academic All-American, three-time First Team All-BIG EAST selection and 2001 BIG EAST Player of the Year - just to name a few.

She remains the only player in program history to surpass both 2,000 career points and 1,000 rebounds all while in an Irish uniform. Furthermore, Riley was the program's all-time career leader in seven categories at time of her graduation and still holds the top spot in shooting percentage (.632), rebounds (1,007) and blocks (370).

Riley was selected by the Miami Sol in the first round (fifth overall) of the 2001 WNBA Draft, and went on to have a prolific career which included 2003 WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player honors after leading Detroit to its first title (Shock won second crown in 2006).

Riley remains in elite company as one of few players who have been named Finals MVP at both the NCAA and WNBA levels. In addition, she remains in a select few who have won an NCAA title, WNBA title and an Olympic Gold Medal.

-- ND --​
 

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https://und.com/news/2019/2/5/womens-basketball-shepard-and-ogunbowale-make-wooden-late-season-top-20-watch-list.aspx

Women's Basketball 2/5/2019 11:16:00 AM

Shepard and Ogunbowale Make Wooden Late Season Top 20 Watch List
Duo combine for 36 points/game


NOTRE DAME, Ind. – The John R. Wooden Award announced its Late Season Top 20 Watch List for women's basketball late last Monday night, with a pair of Irish women's players making the cut. Notre Dame's Arike Ogunbowale and Jessica Shepard moved on, making up half of the ACC's representatives.

Ogunbowale continues to be Notre Dame's dynamic scoring threat, averaging 21.0 points per game this season. The senior boasts 2,261 career points heading into the team's next matchup at Miami, just 96 points off from Skylar Diggins-Smith's all-time scoring record.

Ogunbowale continues to lead the ACC in overall scoring average and 20-point scoring performances with 14. Furthermore, since the turn of the year at 2019, Ogunbowale has recorded five instances in which she's scored double digit points in a quarter.

Shepard's stellar senior year is exemplified by the fact that she's nearly averaging a double-double with 15.0 points and 9.3 rebounds per game. Shepard is shooting an efficient 61.2 percent from the field, which ranks ninth in the country.

The Nebraska native has notched seven consecutive games with double-digit points, has posted seven double-doubles on the year and recently surpassed the 2,000 career point/1,000 rebound milestone.

Lastly, a list of 15 finalists will later be revealed ahead of the NCAA tournament. The Wooden Award winner will be announced at the College Basketball Awards on April 12.

Women's Wooden Award Late-Season Top 20
HTML:
PLAYER	SCHOOL	POSITION	CLASS
Kristine Anigwe	California	C	So.
Kalani Brown	Baylor	F	Sr.
Bridget Carleton	Iowa State	G	Fr.
Chennedy Carter	Texas A&M	G	Fr.
Napheesa Collier	UConn	F	Sr.
Lauren Cox	Baylor	F	Jr.
Sophie Cunningham	Missouri	G	Jr.
Crystal Dangerfield	Connecticut	G	Jr.
Asia Durr	Louisville	G	Jr.
Megan Gustafson	Iowa	F	Jr.
Ruthy Hebard	Oregon	F	Fr.
Sabrina Ionescu	Oregon	G	Fr.
Tiana Mangakahia	Syracuse	G	So.
Teaira McCowan	Mississippi State	C	So.
Arike Ogunbowale	Notre Dame	G	Sr.
Katie Lou Samuelson	UConn	F	Sr.
Jessica Shepard	Notre Dame	F	Sr.
Destiny Slocum	Oregon State	G	So.
Alanna Smith	Stanford	F	Fr.

-- ND --​
 
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Coaches Poll Week 14

Coaches Poll Week 14

#4 ND picked up 1 First Place vote and 17 points overall while CT lost 11 First Place Votes and 86 votes. BU picked up 8 Firsts and 15 points. UL picked up 3 Firsts and 42 votes. ORE picked up 1 First and 19 votes.


RK TEAM REC PTS TREND
HTML:
1 Baylor (27) 20-1 794 -
2 Lou'ville (3) 21-1 763 1
3 Oregon (1) 21-1 711 1
4 Notre Dame (1) 21-2 702 1 
5 UCT 19-2 688 -3
6 Miss St 21-1 661 -
7 Marquette 19-3 556 2
8 Maryland 20-2 553 2
9 NC State 21-1 527 -2
10 Ore St 19-3 519 1
11 Stanford 18-3 478 -3 
12 Gonzaga 21-2 411 1
13 So. Car 16-5 350 5
14 Syracuse 17-4 348 2
15 Texas 18-5 331 -1
16 Iowa 17-5 322 -4
17 Kentucky 18-5 246 -2
18 Az State 15-6 238 2
19 Fl State 19-3 218 2
20 Utah 18-3 196 -3
21 Michigan St 16-5 179 1
22 Texas A&M 18-4 168 2
23 Iowa State 17-5 131 2
24 Rutgers 17-5 126 -5
25 Miami 19-5 76 -2
Others receiving votes: South Dakota 22, New Mexico 18, UCF 16, CAL 15, UNC 12, Drake 11, Missouri 8, DePaul 3, WVU 2, South Alabama 1
 

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Creme 2.4.19 Brackets ND a #1, back in Chicago

Creme 2.4.19 Brackets ND a #1, back in Chicago

ND is 10 (green)-2 (red) against the Projected Field.
ND is still scheduled to play 4 of the Projected Field.
ND will likely play 2 maybe 3 of the Projected Field in the ACC Tourney.
That could be 19 of the 63, 30.2%

LAST UPDATED: 2/4/19 12:45 AM ET | Automatic bids are in CAPS.

ALBANY/B]

Louisville
1 Louisville
16 NORTH CAROLINA A&T/MEAC
8 DePaul
9 UCF

College Station
5 Arizona State
12 BELMONT/OVC
4 Texas A&M
13 UC DAVIS/BIG WEST

Corvallis
6 Miami (Fla.) - SCHEDULED OPPONENT 2/7/19
11 NEW MEXICO/MWC
3 Oregon State
14 IDAHO STATE/BIG SKY

Storrs
7 Missouri
10 Indiana
2 UCONN/AAC
15 FLORIDA GULF COAST/A-SUN


GREENSBORO

Waco
1 BAYLOR/BIG 12
16 SOUTHERN/SWAC
8 North Carolina
9 South Dakota State

Iowa City
5 Kentucky
12 BUCKNELL/PATRIOT
4 Iowa
13 LAMAR/SOUTHLAND

Milwaukee
6 Utah
11 OHIO/MAC
3 MARQUETTE/BIG EAST
14 MISSOURI STATE/MVC

Raleigh
7 Texas
10 Purdue
2 NC State - SCHEDULED OPPONENT 2/18/19
15 VCU/ATLANTIC 10


CHICAGO

South Bend
1 NOTRE DAME/ACC
16 ROBERT MORRIS/NEC
8 Central Michigan
9 UCLA

Piscataway*
5 RUTGERS/BIG TEN
12 QUINNIPIAC/MAAC
4 South Carolina
13 HARTFORD/AMERICA EAST

College Park
6 Florida State - SCHEDULED OPPONENT 2/10/19
11 Tennessee
3 Maryland
14 LITTLE ROCK/SUN BELT

Stanford
7 Drake
10 West Virginia
2 Stanford
15 MERCER/SOUTHERN


PORTLAND

Eugene
1 OREGON/PAC-12
16 NEW MEXICO STATE/WAC
8 SOUTH DAKOTA/SUMMIT
9 Clemson

Ames
5 GONZAGA/WCC
12 JAMES MADISON/CAA
4 Iowa State
13 PENN/IVY

Syracuse
6 California
11 RICE/C-USA
3 Syracuse - SCHEDULED OPPONENT 2/25/19
14 WRIGHT STATE/HORIZON

Starkville
7 Michigan State
10 Buffalo
2 MISSISSIPPI STATE/SEC
15 RADFORD/BIG SOUTH
 

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If the above was true, UCONN would have to get through both Oregon State and Louisville and this year they might not do that.

Oregon's bracket would look pretty easy for them; Baylor's too.

Ours would have snakes in the grass in several areas. ... but there's no way that such a guess will be accurate.
 

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Game 24: #4/4 Notre Dame (21-2, 8-1) vs. #25/25 Miami (19-5, 7-2)
When: Thursday, Feb. 7 | 7 pm ET
Where: Coral Gables, Fla. | Watsco Center (8,000)
Watch: ACCN Extra
Listen: Pulse FM 96.9/92.1/103.1 | Bob Nagle & Ruth Riley Hunter | Listen Online
Live Scoring: Click Here
Notes: Notre Dame | Miami
Social: @NDWBB
Reminder: Irish have a clear bag policy for the 2018-19 season and moving forward
NOTRE DAME, Ind. - The Notre Dame women's basketball team jets south for a top-25 matchup on Thursday, Feb. 7. The No. 4 Fighting Irish (21-2, 8-1) challenge No. 25 Miami (19-5, 7-2) at 7 p.m. EST inside Watsco Center, streaming live on ACCN Extra. The Irish and Hurricanes are two-of-six teams with just two or fewer losses in ACC play.

Notre Dame leads the all-time series, 20-4, with an 8-2 mark at Miami. Last season, the Irish emerged with a hard fought 83-76 victory at home.

CAREER BEST STRETCH FOR MABREY
For the first time since the 2016-17 season and the second time of her career, Marina Mabrey has recorded three straight games of 20 or more points. Mabrey has led the Irish in that span, averaging 20.7 points.

NO. 3 ON FIRE FROM THREE
Over the last three games, Mabrey has shot a blazing 16-of-23 from three as her .696 three-point shooting percentage actually sits higher higher than her .611 field goal percentage for that span. Furthermore, Mabrey has converted a season high six threes in back-to-back games.

As a result, the New Jersey native has raised her season three-point shooting percentage from .425 to .485 over the last three games. That number ranks third in the country, only behind her sister Dara (.487) at Virginia Tech and Eastern Illinois' Carmen Tellez (.506). That percentage is also on pace to finish second all-time at Notre Dame.

In addition, Mabrey has also raised her three-point field goals made per game from 2.3 to 2.8, which ranks third in the ACC.

Lastly, Mabrey has officially surpassed her position coach, Beth (Morgan) Cunningham, for No. 3 all-time in career treys. moving up to 244 in her career. Up next is Sheila McMillen with 249, while Alicia Ratay holds the top spot at 262.

YOUNG ONE OF NATION'S BEST SHOOTING GUARDS
Since returning from injury that resulted in one missed game, Young has converted 13-of-17 from the field. The junior now shoots an impressive 55.3 percent on the year, which ranks ninth in the ACC and 28th in the nation. More impressively, that shooting percentage ranks 4th nationally among just guards.

BEST IRISH PLAYER IN ACC PLAY ONLY?
Only one Irish player ranks in the top 10 in five different statistical categories in ACC play only. The answer: Marina Mabrey.

The senior ranks fifth in field goal percentage (.561), fourth in assists (4.6), second in three-point field goal percentage (.561), first in threes/game (3.6) and eighth in assist-to-turnover ratio (1.5).

TURNER TIDBITS
The block party continues to roll on for Brianna Turner, who's defensive production has ramped up. She's collected 22 blocks over the last six games, including a season high of five twice.

In addition, on Jan. 31 at Clemson, Turner notched her sixth double-double on the year with 17 points and 10 rebounds - also earned a career high six steals.

NAISMITH DEFENSIVE POTY MIDSEASON LIST
No surprise that the two-time ACC Defensive Player of the Year found herself on the Naismith Women's Defensive Player of the Year Award Midseason Watch List.

Turner is averaging 2.5 blocks per game, which leads all players in the ACC and ranks 16th in the nation.

Turner is currently chasing Notre Dame great Ruth Riley for the all-time mark (370 career blocks), sitting with 321 blocks heading into Thursday's matchup at Miami.

RUTH RILEY - WBB HALL OF FAMER
The Women's Basketball Hall of Fame announced Notre Dame alumna Ruth Riley Hunter as part of its 2019 induction class on Feb. 4. Riley and the rest of the 2019 class will be introduced at the Women's Final Four in Tampa in April, while the induction ceremony will take place June 8 in Knoxville, Tennessee.
 
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