Players on the bench cheer their teammates as they amass points against Baylor. |
Maybe it was the fright wigs. Maybe it was the
lock-down defense. Maybe it was the scouting report. Maybe it was the
sharp-shooting from beyond the arc.
Most likely it was all of these factors and more
as the Stanford women’s basketball team upset visiting Baylor 68-63 on Dec. 15.
It was a signature victory for the Cardinal with
its No. 11 ranking by AP and 6-1 record over the 8-0, No. 3 Lady Bears. It also
snapped the Bears’ 36-game regular season winning streak.
Welcome
back to Maples
And it was a welcome return to Maples after a
month. The Nov.18 game against Ohio State had been canceled because of smoke
from the destructive wildfire in Butte County.
Then the team spent Thanksgiving in Hawaii for
three wins. It was on the road again for a 73-77 loss at Gonzaga on Dec. 2,
followed by two weeks off for Dead Week and finals.
The usual student groups -– band, cheerleaders,
Dollies and Tree -– weren’t there, but they had a good excuse. They were in
Minneapolis backing the women’s volleyball team as it won its unprecedented
eighth national championship later in the day.
The game still attracted a vocal crowd of 3,440
even though the fall quarter had ended the previous day.
Baylor
comeback falls short
These fans had plenty of reason to cheer as the
Cardinal led 17-13 after the first quarter, 41-24 at the half and 58-42 after
the third quarter.
Baylor tried to mount a comeback in the final
quarter, giving fans some palpitations, but Stanford prevailed. Its largest
lead was 18 points in the second half.
With senior guard Marta Sniezek and freshman
forward Lexie Hull out with injuries, head coach Tara VanDerveer used 11 of the
13 available players.
Her starters were senior forward Alanna Smith,
junior forward Nadia Fingall, junior guard DiJonai Carrington, freshman forward
Lacie Hull and sophomore guard Kiana Williams.
Three of the starters were in double figures:
Alanna with 21, Kiana with 13 and DiJonai with 10.
Nadia and DiJonai team up on defense of a Baylor player. |
One example of the team’s defense was holding Baylor’s
leading scorer, 6’7” Kalani Brown, to only five points. Only two Bears were in
double figures. Another example –- steals –- 7-4 in the home team’s favor.
Stanford’s three’s, 13 of 30 for 43.3 percent,
went a long way toward assuring the win. Alanna had five. Kiana and senior
center Shannon Coffee, playing with a protective face mask for 19 minutes (more
than usual), each had three. DiJonai and Lacie had one each.
On the other hand, free-throw shooting was
sub-par, nine of 21, or 42.9 percent. Baylor made 16 of 20, or 80 percent.
Baylor also led in rebounds, 43-30.
Back in Stanford’s favor, Baylor had 15 turnovers,
Stanford 10. Fouls were close: 19 for
Stanford, 18 for Baylor.
Alyssa, Estella and Mikaela model the wigs. (Stanford Athletics) |
As fans arrived, they could help themselves to
what Stanford called rally wigs, but others called fright wigs. T-shirts were
tossed into the crowd at various intervals.
At the half, fans could cheer the football team
before its New Year’s Eve day matchup against Pittsburgh in the Sun Bowl in El
Paso, Texas.
Coaches Tempie Brown, Kate Paye, Lindy La Rocque and Tara, along with basketball administrator Amy Tucker, welcome Jayne and her daughter, Shea. |
The team faces its next tests on the road against
No. 9 Tennessee on Dec. 18 and against unranked Buffalo on Dec. 21. The latter
game might draw some cross-border contingents from Ontario, home of sophomore forward
Alyssa Jerome and junior guard Mikaela Brewer.
Except for wigs, photos by Don Feria/ISIPhotos.com
Except for wigs, photos by Don Feria/ISIPhotos.com
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