No. 10 Irish Head To Hartford For 2005 BIG EAST Championship
March 3, 2005
BIG EAST Championship Notes
2005 BIG EAST Championship - Quarterfinal
(#10 AP/#10 ESPN/USA Today) Notre Dame Fighting Irish (25-4) vs. West Virginia (16-11)/Pittsburgh (13-14)
The Date and Time: Sunday, March 6, 2005, at 6 p.m. ET.
The Site: Hartford Civic Center (16,294) in Hartford, Conn.
The Tickets: Tournament ticket packages and
single-session tickets are still available at the
Hartford Civic Center box office or by calling
Ticketmaster (860-525-4500). Tickets also may be
purchased on-line at www.hartfordciviccenter.com
and www.ticketmaster.com.
The TV Plans: College Sports Television (CSTV)
national broadcast with Eric Frede
(play-by-play), Ann Schatz (analysis), Lori
Mancini (producer) and Chris Glass (director).
The game also is available nationally on DirecTV
(Channel 610).
The Radio Plans: Sunday's game will be broadcast
live on WDND-AM (ESPN Radio 1580) and WNDV-AM
(1490) in South Bend with Sean Stires
(play-by-play) calling the action. These
broadcasts also are available through the Notre
Dame athletics web site at www.und.com.
Real-Time Statistics: Live in-game statistics are
available for all games at the BIG EAST
Championship via the BIG EAST Championship web
site (www.bigeast.org/sports/wbball/champs).
Web Sites: Notre Dame (www.und.com), BIG EAST Conference (www.bigeast.org).
#10 NOTRE DAME PREPARES FOR BIG EAST CHAMPIONSHIP QUARTERFINAL SUNDAY Notre Dame (25-4, 13-3 BIG EAST) closed
out the regular season with a hard-fought 41-35
victory at Seton Hall Tuesday night. The Irish
tied a school record for the fewest points
allowed in a BIG EAST road game, as well as
points scored in a road game. However, a 7-0
second-half run helped push Notre Dame clear of
Seton Hall and propel the Irish to their 12th
victory in the past 13 games.
Freshman guard Charel Allen led Notre
Dame with 14 points and a career-high tying nine
rebounds off the bench against the Pirates.
Senior All-America forward Jacqueline Batteast
added 11 points and six rebounds for the Irish,
who ended up tied for second place in the BIG
EAST standings. That marks the ninth time in
Notre Dame's 10-year conference affiliation that
they have finished among the top two in the final
regular-season standings.
A QUICK LOOK AT THE FIGHTING IRISH Below the surface, it's apparent the
Irish have been strong in nearly all facets of
their game. They are 11-2 on the road, making big
strides from last year's struggles away from
home. Notre Dame also has shown excellent
resiliency, losing back-to-back games just once
all season and rebounding from those two losses
with a season-long 10-game winning streak (the
program's longest since the '00-01 campaign).
And, the Irish have displayed an ability to win
games in numerous different ways - last-second
buzzer beaters (Marquette), thrilling second half
comebacks (Duke, Ohio State, Rutgers, Boston
College), gritty road victories (Connecticut,
USC), defensive battles (twice vs. Seton Hall)
and high-scoring shootouts (Purdue, Illinois
State).
Despite the added focus shown to her by
opposing teams, senior All-America forward
Jacqueline Batteast was a major catalyst for the
Irish this season, averaging 17.4 points, 6.5
rebounds and 2.8 assists per game. A four-time
BIG EAST Player of the Week and a leading
candidate for the Naismith Trophy, Wooden Women's
Award and Senior CLASS Award, Batteast has scored
in double digits 26 times this season, has earned
game-high scoring honors on 16 occasions and has
six double-doubles. She also moved into the top
five on Notre Dame's career lists for points
(1,820), rebounds (936), blocks (162) and
double-doubles (38). In addition, with 15 points
vs. West Virginia Feb. 26, she became the third
Irish player to amass 1,800 points and 900
rebounds in her career, joining All-Americans
Katryna Gaither and Ruth Riley.
Junior guard Megan Duffy also has stepped
up her play this season, registering 11.3 points
per game with a team-high 5.48 assists (second in
the BIG EAST and 25th in the nation as of March
1) and 2.76 steals per game (first in the BIG
EAST). Duffy also leads the league and is second
nationally with a .905 free throw percentage
(114-126) this season, sparking the Irish to a
BIG EAST-best .745 free throw ratio, which also
ranks 25th in the nation.
In the post, senior center Teresa Borton
is showing capable leadership by example. A
veteran post and tri-captain, Borton has not
missed a game (123 and counting), nor a practice
in her entire four-year career at Notre Dame. For
the season, she has posted career-best numbers in
almost every statistical category, ranking third
on the team in scoring (8.9 ppg.), second in
rebounding (6.1 rpg.) and first in both blocked
shots (1.72 bpg.) and field goal percentage
(.565).
SOME POTENT NOTABLES ABOUT THE FIGHTING IRISH *Notre Dame's 10-game winning streak from
Jan. 16-Feb. 15 was its longest since a
school-record 23-game run to open the 2000-01
season. It also was the ninth double-digit
winning streak in school history and the seventh
in Muffet McGraw's 18 seasons as head coach.
*The Irish are 11-2 on the road this year,
and won their first five road games this season
for the second time in school history. The
2000-01 club opened with a 10-game road winning
streak to set the school standard. Ironically,
Notre Dame struggled in true road games last
year, losing its first four and six of its first
seven on the opposition's floor.
*Notre Dame picked up its 20th win of the
season Feb. 5 at Pittsburgh. The Irish have now
posted 12 consecutive 20-win seasons (one of only
six schools in the nation that can make that
claim) and 16 in the 18-year Muffet McGraw era.
In addition, Notre Dame reached the 20-win mark
in its 23rd game this season, marking the
fourth-fastest run to 20 victories in school
history. The 2000-01 club opened with 23
consecutive wins, while the 1998-99 and 1999-2000
squads each did it in 22 games. However, in terms
of calendar dates, the Irish logged their 20th
win faster than any Notre Dame team except the
2000-01 unit, which reached the mark on Jan. 31.
*The Irish have been a fixture near the
top of the RPI charts this year. Through March 2,
Notre Dame is fourth in the WBCA/Summerville RPI
rankings, with the nation's 20th-toughest
schedule.
*Notre Dame has appeared in the top 10 of
the AP balloting 15 times in the 17 polls this
year, checking in at No. 10 this week. On three
other times in school history have the Irish
spent as long in the AP top 10 during one season
- 1998-99 (16 weeks), 1999-2000 (15 weeks) and
2000-01 (18 weeks). All told, Notre Dame has now
spent 71 weeks in the AP top 10 in the program's
28-year history and has a 109-19 (.852) all-time
record when it's ranked in the top 10.
*The Irish have posted 37 wins over AP Top
25 opponents in the past seven seasons (1998-99
to present), including seven this year (No. 6
Duke, No. 10 Ohio State, No. 20 Purdue, No. 6
Rutgers, No. 9 Connecticut, No. 16 Boston College
and No. 25 Boston College). Notre Dame is tied
for the fourth-most Top 25 wins in the nation
this season, exceeded only by Duke and Ohio
State's nine wins and eight victories by Michigan
State. During the past two years, the Irish have
14 wins over ranked opponents.
*Notre Dame has defeated 23 top-10
opponents in its history, adding to that total
with four victories this season. The four top-10
wins represent the second-highest total in school
history (and tie Penn State for the second-most
by any team in the nation this season behind
Rutgers' five wins) - the 2000-01 squad holds the
Irish record with seven top-10 victories.
*Head coach Muffet McGraw has a 409-153
(.728) record in 18 seasons with the Irish,
having logged the milestone 400th victory Jan. 23
against Rutgers. She also has a 497-194 (.719)
overall record in 23 seasons, leaving her only
three victories shy of the 500-win plateau for
her career.
IRISH AT THE BIG EAST CHAMPIONSHI Prior to joining the BIG EAST in 1995-96,
Notre Dame won the Midwestern Collegiate
Conference tournament championship five times in
its seven years in that league, with the last
Irish conference tourney title coming in 1994. A
complete listing of Notre Dame's appearances in
the BIG EAST Championship may be found in the
sidebar on page 8 of this notes package.
THE NOTRE DAME-WEST VIRGINIA SERIES The early history of the series was
largely one-sided in Notre Dame's favor, with the
Irish winning the first eight series games in
convincing fashion. In that time, Notre Dame
scored at least 80 points against the
Mountaineers six times, including two 100-point
outings, and won seven of those first eight
contests by double-digit margins.
The tenor of the series began to shift in
the 2001-02 season, when Mike Carey took over as
the head coach at West Virginia. Under their
fiery mentor, the Mountaineers played Notre Dame
close in three consecutive matchups during his
first two years, including a narrow five-point
loss in their second meeting of the 2002-03
campaign (the closest series margin to date).
That set the stage for WVU's first-ever win over
the Irish on Jan. 17, 2004, as the Mountaineers
jumped on Notre Dame and never looked back en
route to a 64-51 victory in Morgantown. The Irish
avenged that loss earlier this season, downing
WVU, 82-57 on Feb. 26 at the Joyce Center.
THE NOTRE DAME-PITTSBURGH SERIES The first 11 games in the series were a
bit one-sided, with the Irish winning by double
figures on nine occasions. However, the next
three contests between the clubs saw Pittsburgh
getting steadily closer to its first win over
Notre Dame, culminating with a narrow four-point
victory for the Irish at the Petersen Events
Center last season. However, Notre Dame looked
sharp in its only matchup with the Panthers this
season, posting a 75-47 victory in the Steel City.
THE LAST TIME NOTRE DAME AND WEST VIRGINIA MET The Fighting Irish took control with a
13-0 run late in the first half and never let the
Mountaineers get back in the game, outshooting
West Virginia 70 percent to 33 percent after the
break.
Junior guard Megan Duffy added 12 points
and 10 assists for the Irish - her second career
double-double - but the inside play and free
throw shooting were the key. Notre Dame outscored
the Mountaineers 46-22 inside, had a 39-30
rebounding advantage and outscored West Virginia
15-6 from the free throw line.
Ten of the 11 Notre Dame players who got
into the game scored, giving the Irish the most
points against a BIG EAST opponent this season.
The Irish had scored 75 points three times, most
recently in wins against Pittsburgh and
Providence earlier this month.
The Irish also held West Virginia's Meg
Bulger, who averages 20.5 points, to less than
half of her league-leading scoring mark with nine
points on 4-of-19 shooting. Yolanda Paige and
Sherell Sowho had 16 points each to lead the
Mountaineers.
THE LAST TIME NOTRE DAME AND PITTSBURGH MET LaVere came off the bench to lead No. 6/7
Notre Dame's pivotal 14-0 run late in the first
half and the Fighting Irish went on to their
seventh consecutive victory, beating Pittsburgh
75-47.
LaVere scored 11 of her 17 points in the
first half to help Notre Dame turn a 24-18 lead
into a 38-18 advantage over a five-minute stretch
in which Pitt star Marcedes Walker drew her third
foul. Walker, also a freshman, had 13 points and
11 rebounds before fouling out with 6:32
remaining for Pittsburgh.
Allen, who is one of Pennsylvania's
leading high school scorers ever, didn't start
but scored 16 points while being cheered on by
hundreds of fans from her Monessen, Pa., hometown.
With Walker out, the 6-foot-1 LaVere and
6-3 senior center Teresa Borton dominated inside
against Pittsburgh, which was far less physical
without the BIG EAST's third leading rebounder.
LaVere started the run with a steal and finished
it with consecutive baskets, then added two free
throws after Pittsburgh scored for the first time
in five minutes on Jessica Allen's three-pointer,
her only basket.
Borton had two blocked shots, a steal and
a basket, and sophomore forward Crystal Erwin
added a steal and basket during the run, which
repeatedly saw the Panthers settle for
three-point attempts when they couldn't get the
ball inside. Borton finished with 10 points and
four blocked shots, and Erwin had eight points.
Pittsburgh was only 5-of-26 on
three-pointers, with Vika Sholokhova going
1-of-9. Notre Dame was so successful pounding the
ball inside it attempted only six three-pointers,
making two. Walker, a muscular former high school
shot putter, had little help offensively. Katie
Histed had eight points and five rebounds, but
missed 12 of 15 shots as the Panthers shot 25
percent (17-of-68) to Notre Dame's 43.5 percent
(27-of-62).
OTHER NOTRE DAME-WEST VIRGINIA SERIES NOTES *Notre Dame scored at least 70 points
against West Virginia in 10 times in the 13-game
series. On the other hand, West Virginia has
reached the 70-point plateau just twice against
Notre Dame and has been held under 60 points by
the Irish six times.
*The Irish have scored 100 points in a
game twice against WVU, making the Mountaineers
the only BIG EAST opponent to see Notre Dame
crack triple digits more than once.
*Notre Dame won the first eight games in
the series by an average of 23.0 ppg., with only
one of those contests decided by single digits
(86-78 on Jan. 14, 1998 at the Joyce Center).
*The winning margin in the next four
series games has been just 8.5 ppg., with WVU
getting steadily closer to Notre Dame in the
first three outings before winning its first game
vs. the Irish in 2004. However, the Irish
rebounded with a 25-point victory in their most
recent encounter (82-57 on Feb. 26, 2005 at the
Joyce Center).
*Should Notre Dame and West Virginia meet
in the BIG EAST Championship quarterfinals, it
would be the first neutral-site game played
between the two squads.
OTHER NOTRE DAME-PITTSBURGH SERIES NOTES *Notre Dame is 15-0 all-time against
Pittsburgh, one of three BIG EAST Conference
opponents the Irish have never lost to. The
others are Providence (13-0) and St. John's
(15-0).
*Ten of the 15 games in the series have
been decided by double-digit margins in favor of
Notre Dame, including a 75-47 Irish victory in
their most recent matchup back on Feb. 5 in
Pittsburgh.
*In the history of the Notre
Dame-Pittsburgh series, the Irish have never
scored less than 65 points in any game against
the Panthers. Conversely, UP has hit the 65-point
mark five times in 15 games (three of those
coming in the past four contests).
*The relationship between the two head
coaches - Notre Dame's Muffet McGraw and
Pittsburgh's Agnus Berenato - dates back more
than 20 years to their formative days in the
coaching ranks. The pair matched wits on several
occasions during the early 1980s in the old East
Coast Conference when McGraw was the head coach
at Lehigh and Berenato held a similar post at
Rider (McGraw won all five of their matchups from
1982-85). The duo renewed acquaintances on Nov.
30, 1997, when McGraw's ninth-ranked Irish
defeated Berenato's Georgia Tech squad, 76-69 in
Atlanta to win the Comfort Inn Downtown Classic,
en route to Notre Dame's first NCAA Final Four
appearance.
*Notre Dame freshman guard Charel Allen is
a native of Monessen, Pa., having graduated from
Monessen High School in 2004. She was the
two-time Associated Press Pennsylvania Class A
Player of the Year (2003, 2004) and ended her
prep career as the second-highest scorer in WPIAL
history and fifth-highest in state history (3,110
points).
THE BEAST OF THE BIG EAST When including postseason competition
(BIG EAST and NCAA tournaments), Notre Dame is
150-40 (.789) against league opponents - when
factoring in these 22 postseason tilts, the Irish
are 76-8 (.905) at home, 61-26 (.701) on the road
and 13-6 (.684) at neutral sites all-time vs. BIG
EAST foes.
POLLING PLACE Upon closer inspection, Notre Dame has
been very sharp when it's ranked in the top 10 of
the AP poll. The Irish are 109-19 (.852) as a
top-10 squad, including a 53-4 (.930) record at
home. In fact, prior to its Dec. 2 overtime loss
to then-No. 15 Michigan State, Notre Dame had a
41-game home winning streak when it was ranked in
the AP top 10, dating back to December of 1998.
SOLID AS A ROCK Batteast's regularity in the starting
lineup is especially notable. Entering this
weekend's BIG EAST Championship, Batteast has
made 93 consecutive starts, dating back to the
opening game of the 2002-03 season against
Cleveland State. The school record for
consecutive games started in 95 by Katryna
Gaither from 1994-97.
TOUGH STUFF For her career, Duffy is averaging 31.0
minutes per game, which would rank fourth in
school history just behind her current teammate,
senior All-America forward Jacqueline Batteast
(31.5).
BALANCE IS KEY In addition, four of Notre Dame's five
current starters have at least two double-doubles
to their credit this season. Senior All-America
forward Jacqueline Batteast leads the way with
six double-doubles, followed by two each for
senior center Teresa Borton, junior guard Megan
Duffy and junior forward Courtney LaVere.
THE SEASON FOR SHARING Junior guard Megan Duffy leads the way at
5.48 assists per game (second in the BIG EAST and
25th in the nation), with at least five dimes in
18 contests this year, four double-digit assist
games (most by an Irish player since Niele Ivey's
five in 2000-01), and a career-high 11 assists
vs. Rutgers on Jan. 23. Duffy also was second in
the BIG EAST with 6.19 apg. in conference play.
KEEPING IT ON THE PLUS SIDE ROAD WARRIORS Accenting Notre Dame's play on the road
has been its defensive prowess. The Irish are
holding opponents to 51.8 ppg., a .337 field goal
percentage (242-for-718) and a .242 three-point
percentage (54-for-223) away from home and have
allowed more than 60 points only once in their 13
road games this year (61 by Syracuse on Jan. 19,
although SU needed a Rochelle Coleman bucket with
five seconds left to reach the mark).
PINE TIME PLAYERS Notre Dame's bench play has been
especially important during the past 13 games.
The Irish are getting an average of 19.8 ppg.
(258 total points) from their reserves in that
stretch, compared to 14.2 ppg. (184 total points)
from the opposition's bench. Allen (9.7 ppg., 126
total) has been the key bench contributor in that
stretch with five double-figure games - 17 points
at Syracuse (Jan. 19), 16 points at Pittsburgh
(Feb. 5), 14 points vs. Georgetown (Feb. 12) and
at Seton Hall (March 1), and 11 points at No.
9/10 Connecticut (Jan. 30).
THE FIVE-FINGER DISCOUNT Individually, junior guard Megan Duffy is
tops in the conference in steals (2.76 spg.),
while her 80 total steals are tied with Mary
Gavin (1986-87) for the seventh-highest
single-season mark in school history. Duffy's
backcourt mate, sophomore Breona Gray, is second
on the team with 1.21 steals per game (35 total),
while two other Notre Dame players also have at
least 30 steals this year - freshman guard Charel
Allen (33) and senior All-America forward
Jacqueline Batteast (32).
LOTS OF FREE STUFF Notre Dame has been led at the gift line
by junior guard Megan Duffy (.905, 114-126),
freshman guard Charel Allen (.843, 59-70) and
senior All-America forward Jacqueline Batteast
(.810, 119-147). Duffy currently ranks first in
the BIG EAST and second in the nation in free
throw percentage, while Batteast is second in the
conference and has shown the greatest improvement
among all Irish players this season with more
than an 18-percent jump from last year's career
low .627 mark.
One side note about Duffy's free throw
prowess - the Irish junior struggled at the line
early in her freshman season, shooting just 59.3
percent (16-27) during her first 15 collegiate
games. However, in the 78 games since then (Jan.
20, 2003 to present), Duffy is connecting at an
.871 clip (229-263) on her foul shots.
STILL MORE FREE STUFF
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