March 21, 2023

Early exit ends 29-6 season

 

Lauren, Haley, Elena and Indya leave the court after the Ole Miss game.


After an easy win in the first round of the NCAA tournament, the one-seeded Stanford women’s basketball team and its fans saw their hopes and expectations dashed with a stinging loss in the second round.

The easy win was a 92-49 victory over 16-seeded Sacred Heart on March 17. The stinging loss was to eight-seeded Ole Miss, 49-54 on March 19.

The Rebels took the opening tip, scored first and never looked back. Stanford trailed by as many as 13 points in the third quarter and tied the game 49-49 only briefly in the fourth quarter. Stanford actually outscored Ole Miss 14-12 in the fourth quarter, but it wasn’t enough.

This loss marked only the first time since 2007 that Stanford didn’t advance to the Sweet Sixteen. In that year, Stanford lost to Florida State, 61-68, in the second round.

Team returns to full roster

Everyone was available after junior forward Cameron Brink and redshirt freshman Jzaniya Harriel had missed the Sacred Heart game.

Although, as reported by head coach Tara VanDerveer, Cameron wasn’t at full strength after a stomach bug, she led the team with a double-double, 20 points and 13 rebounds in 34 minutes despite being harassed, sometimes manhandled by Ole Miss’s tough defense. Half of her points came from the free throw line, where she was 10-10. Oh, and she had seven of the team’s 12 blocks.

Senior guard Haley Jones played all 40 minutes and had 16 points and eight rebounds. Senior guard Hannah Jump had 8 points, six of them by making both of the team’s two 3’s.

The Ole Miss defense contributed to Stanford’s 21 turnovers, while committing 17 of its own.

During halftime, Stanford’s 2022 national championship women’s water polo team was introduced and cheered.

The game was attended by the mostly Stanford crowd of 5,361. However, the Ole Miss band booed the Stanford players when they took to the court for their final pre-game warmups.

Despite the loss, fans cheered the players loudly as they left the Maples court for the last time this season. This was an especially poignant moment for the four seniors, the self-dubbed Funky Four -- Haley, Hannah and forwards Fran Belibi and Ashten Prechtel. However, ESPN reports that Hannah intends to return for the extra year granted in the wake of COVID disruptions.

“We will start off-season workouts in the spring for returners,” said associate head coach Kate Paye in an e-mail. Stanford is on a break until April 3, when the spring quarter starts.

Players on the sidelines celebrate Hannah's buzzer beater against Sacred Heart.


Cameron misses Sacred Heart game

Although Cameron missed the Sacred Heart game because of illness, her teammates made up for the loss of her production with a 92-49 win over the 16 seed to open the first round of the NCAA tournament on March 17 at Maples. It was the Cardinal’s 100th NCAA tournament win, according to a Pac-12 tweet.

Five players posted double figures: Haley, 17; Hannah and Fran, 12 each plus 10 rebounds for Fran; freshman guard Indya Nivar, 11; and freshman center Lauren Betts, 10.

Four players made up for Cameron’s shot-blocking prowess: Lauren with three; freshman guard Talana Lepolo with two; and Fran and junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu with one each.

All 13 available players got in. Jzaniya was the other absentee.

Stanford dominated the team from Fairfield, Conn., in every way, notably rebounds, 57-28; assists, 21-4; and steals, 8-1.

The Cardinal’s six 3’s came from Hannah with four and Indya and sophomore guard Elena Bosgana with one each. Hannah’s buzzer-beating trey that ended the first half broke the season record of 96 held by Karlie Samuelson, ’17, and Jeanette Pohlen, ’11. By game’s end she had 98 for the season.

The game drew a crowd of 4,020 people, some of them sporting something green in honor of St. Patrick’s Day.

The arena was reconfigured with some courtside seating removed to make room for coaches and others to scout the game. Consequently, some season ticket holders had to move.

The band sat in what has been the family section. The Sacred Heart band sat in the Stanford band’s usual area.

The Sacred Heart band taunted Stanford players who missed a free throw by shouting, “You let your whole team down.” It added “again” if the second free throw is missed, too.

Fran took Cameron’s place in the starting lineup, which also included Haley, Hannah, Talana and sophomore forward Kiki Iriafen.

Sacred Heart took a lead of four points early in the first quarter, and the score was tied several times during that period, but the Cardinal soon took over, ending the quarter up 23-18 and leading the rest of the way.

Everyone gets to play

Because the team was doing so well, no one played more than 25 minutes (Haley). Thus bench players had a chance to shine with 39 points. When freshman guards Stavi Papadaki and Lauren Green, who usually don’t play, got in with just under 3½ minutes to go, they were greeted by loud cheers.

At one point late in the second quarter, all four seniors were on the court along with Talana.

Live feeds from other games were shown on the videoboard during breaks. During one break, spirit squads from both teams tossed socks to fans.

The following matchup between No. 9 seed Gonzaga and No. 8 Mississippi ended with Mississippi on top 71-48, making it Stanford’s next opponent.

Before the tournament started, Haley and Cameron were named All-Americans for the second year. Hannah was named an Academic All-American.

 The team ended the season with a 29-6 record.

Photos by Scott Strazzante/SF Chronicle

 

 

March 4, 2023

No tournament title this year

 

Cameron defends against a UCLA player. (Chase Stevens/AP)


The Stanford women’s basketball team’s hopes for another Pac-12 tournament championship were dashed with a 65-69 loss to UCLA on March 3 in Las Vegas.

Played in front of 5,071 people, the game started well with Stanford leading by 9 points after the first quarter, 13 points at the half and 10 points after the third quarter.

UCLA immediately cut the lead in the fourth and edged ahead by a point with about two minutes to go. Stanford kept trying to regain the lead, but couldn’t quite make it. Several deliberate fouls in the closing seconds were made in hopes of regaining possession, but the UCLA players made their free throws and kept Stanford at bay.

It was a bitter disappointment, especially since Stanford was the No. 1 seed in the tournament and UCLA was No. 5. Moreover, this was Stanford’s second straight game, UCLA’s third, including an overtime win in the first round.

Lower seeded teams advance

Even more surprising were some of the other results with lower seeded teams prevailing. Thus the championship game on March 5 found UCLA facing No. 7 seed Washington State, which had upset No. 2 seed Utah and then No. 3 seed Colorado.

Against UCLA, junior forward Cameron Brink posted a double-double to lead the team with 19 points and 11 rebounds. Senior guard Haley Jones also had a double-double with 15 points and 10 rebounds.

No other Cardinal scored double figures, but freshman guard Talana Lepolo had 8 points, as did senior forward Fran Belibi. Senior guard Hannah Jump, usually a high scorer, had no points.

The team had four 3’s: two from Talana and one each from junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu and sophomore forward Brooke Demetre.

Conference honors five Stanford players

Although the championship eluded Stanford, five Cardinal players earned Pac-12 season honors.

Hannah was named Scholar-Athlete of the Year. She follows in the footsteps of Lexie Hull, ’22; Alanna Smith, ’19; Brittany McPhee, ’18; Chiney Ogwumike,’14; Kayla Pedersen, ’11; and Jayne Appel, ’10.

Hannah also was named to the All-Pac-12 Team, as were Cameron and Haley. In addition, Cameron was named Defensive Player of the Year; and Talana and forward Lauren Betts earned honorable mention on the All-Freshman Team.


Talana, left, and Hannah celebrate a 3-pointer by Hannah. (David Becker/AP)

Stanford begins tournament with win over Oregon

Making its first appearance in the tournament, the team downed Oregon 76-65 on March 2 before a crowd of 4,245.

Oregon, the tournament’s No. 9 seed, had earned the right to play No. 1 seed Stanford by defeating No. 8 Washington the day before.

Stanford opened the game on a 7-0 run before Oregon’s first score at the 6:30 mark. The Cardinal held the lead for the rest of the game and outscored the Ducks in every quarter except the fourth, when they had a 2-point advantage.

Three players in double figures

Even though her playing time was limited by fouls, Cameron was in double figures with 12 points by about halfway through the second quarter. She went on to lead the team with 22 points plus11 rebounds, but – unusual for her – had no blocks.

Hannah also was in double figures with 13 points, thanks to five-of-five free throws and two of the team’s six 3’s.

Talana made two 3’s on her way to 10 points, five assists, two steals and no turnovers.

Agnes had two 3’s as part of her 8 points. Haley, with a team-high 13 rebounds, and Fran, the Energizer bunny off the bench with 10 rebounds, had 8 points each. Lauren, the only other Cardinal to score, had 7 points.

Stanford dominated the stat sheet in almost every category, especially rebounds, with a 56-39 advantage.

With its unexpected departure from the conference tournament, the team now awaits its seeding for the NCAA tournament. Selections will be announced March 12 at 5 p.m. PDT on ESPN.

Assuming a top four seed, Stanford will host the first two rounds March 17 and 19 or March 18 and 20.

The last day of winter quarter classes is March 17. Spring quarter classes start April 3.

 

February 26, 2023

Win and loss end the regular season

 

                                    Brooke is closely guarded by a Utah player. (Stanford Athletics)

The Stanford women’s basketball team wound up its regular season schedule on the road with a win, 73-62 over No. 21 Colorado on Feb. 23 in double overtime, and a loss, 78-84 to No. 8 Utah on Feb. 25.

Thus Stanford and Utah share the regular season championship, but Stanford has the top seed in the Pac-12 tournament in Las Vegas from March 1-3 and 5.

Stanford’s first game is at 2:30 p.m. March 2 against the winner of the Washington-Oregon game on March 1. If Stanford wins this game, it will play again at 6 p.m. March 3. The championship game is at 2 p.m. March 5.

Pac-12 Networks will televise all of the games except for the championship, which ESPN or ESPN2 will air.

Flight problems limit players’ rest

Going into the Utah game, Stanford had some potential problems because of limited rest. Its two-hour flight from Boulder to Salt Lake City was delayed, not leaving until after 4 a.m. Feb. 24. Thus the players didn’t get to bed in their hotel until about 7 a.m., the TV announcers reported.

Nevertheless, the team started off well as junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu, who got the start over sophomore forward Kiki Iriafen, nailed a 3-pointer to open the scoring. The team then went on to a 9-0 start before Utah got two 3’s of its own.

The first quarter ended with Stanford up 17-15, but Utah prevailed after that. Despite getting close several times in the fourth quarter, the Cardinal couldn't close the gap.

Hannah leads team in scoring

Sharp-shooting senior guard Hannah Jump led the team with 24 points, 18 of them from six 3’s. Sophomore forward Brooke Demetre had two 3’s to go with Agnes’s one for the team’s total of nine.

On the other hand, Utah had 12 3’s and prevailed at the free-throw line, 26-11. Twenty-one turnovers also were costly to Stanford. Three in the final minute of play secured the win for Utah before a home crowd of 9,611.

Besides Hannah, the only other Cardinal in double figures was junior forward Cameron Brink with 14 points and 12 rebounds. She also had four of the team’s 11 blocks. She played only 28 minutes because of foul trouble.

Senior guard Haley Jones had 9 points and eight rebounds but fouled out late in the fourth quarter after playing 28 minutes.

Stanford had more rebounds, assists and bench points.

Victory at Colorado gave the team a share of the Pac-12 championship. (Stanford Athletics)


Team triumphs over Colorado in 2 OTs

It took two overtimes, but the Stanford women’s basketball team finally overcame obstacles to defeat No. 21 Colorado 73-62 on Feb. 23.

Even before donning its black road uniforms, the team’s schedule allowed only three days between the UCLA game at home Feb. 20 and the game in Boulder, and that included a travel day. Then there were the time change and the thin air at high altitude.

Once play began, the team went scoreless until just over a minute to go in the first quarter, when Haley made two free throws to prevent a shutout. Brooke made a 3-pointer shortly thereafter, but the quarter ended with an 8-point deficit, 5-13, on 6.25 percent field goal shooting.

There still was a 6-point deficit at the half, but the team led by 6 points after the third, 38-32. Colorado tied it up at the end of the fourth, 48-48. The first overtime also was tied, 60-60, but Stanford scored 11 more points than Colorado in the second OT to claim the victory and clinch the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament.

It was a nerve-wracking affair with numerous ties, lead changes and turnovers (18 by Stanford, 13 by Colorado). Neither team would give up.

Haley, Hannah, Lauren in double figures

Aiding Stanford’s cause were three players in double figures: Haley with 23 points plus 11 rebounds in all 50 minutes, Hannah with 14 plus two rebounds in 41 minutes and freshman center Lauren Betts also with 14 plus eight rebounds in 29 minutes.

After some problems in previous games, Hannah regained her long-range touch to make four 3’s, one of them late in the second OT to help ice the win. Brooke and sophomore guard Elena Bosgana each had one for the team’s total of six.

Because of foul trouble, Cameron was limited to 21 minutes, when she scored an uncharacteristically low 8 points and had only six rebounds, but added four blocks to her ongoing record. She fouled out in the first OT.

Senior forward Fran Belibi came off the bench and hustled to 6 points, eight rebounds, three blocks and a steal.

She, Lauren and senior forward Ashten Prechtel all come from Colorado, so one would assume a contingent of their families and friends was in the crowd of 2,963. Tara’s mother, Rita, lives in Boulder and was there, too.

After this win and the loss to Utah, the team finished the season with a 27-4 record overall and 15-3 in the Pac-12.

 

 

 

 

February 22, 2023

Two too close for comfort

Fran spins Cameron around after the win over UCLA. (Carlos Avilia Gonzalez/SF Chronicle)


 

It wasn’t pretty, and it wasn’t easy, but the team defeated USC 50-47on Feb. 17, thus avenging the 46-55 loss it suffered at USC on Jan. 15. It then faced more challenges with UCLA on Feb. 20 but came out on top 71-66.

The UCLA game looked as if it would be a romp when the Cardinal led 39-26 at the half, much to the delight of fans in the crowd of 5,813.

However, UCLA came out hot in the third quarter scoring 25 points, while Stanford went cold with only 11 points, thus trailing 50-51 to end that period.

The lead shifted several times in the fourth quarter. Thanks to another two free throws by junior forward Cameron Brink, Stanford led 68-65 with just over a minute to go. Freshman guard Talana Lepolo iced the win with two free throws with just over 12 seconds to go.

Cameron goes a record 15-15 at charity stripe

Cameron led all scorers with 25 points, including a perfect 15-for-15 at the free throw line. Those 15 free throws without a miss were the most by any Cardinal since Candice Wiggins, ’08, went 14-for-14 in 2008, AP reported.

For the game, the team was 23 of 25 on free throws.

Also in double figures were senior guard Haley Jones with 18, freshman center Lauren Betts with 12 and Talana with 11. 

Part of what made UCLA so challenging came from its advantage in rebounds, turnovers and bench points. UCLA had seven 3’s, Stanford four, with three from Talana and one from sophomore forward Brooke Demetre. 

On the other hand, Stanford had six blocks, including the two that Cameron added to her ongoing team record. Senior guard Hannah Jump, usually so accurate from beyond the arc, had no points at all. 

Fran, Hannah, Haley and Ashten were honored after the UCLA game. (Stanford Athletics)


Seniors honored at last regular home game

Because it was Senior Night, head coach Tara VanDerveer gave flowers to UCLA’s seniors before the game and oversaw the salute to Stanford’s seniors after the game. 

Calling themselves the Funky Four (Tara calls them the Fabulous Four or the Final Four), they are Haley and Hannah and forwards Fran Belibi and Ashten Prechtel.

Each one was escorted to center court by family members and received flowers. Announcer Betty Ann Hagenau reported that this class has won 116 games to date and has Pac-12 and national championships on its list of credits.

Fran was the first Cardinal to dunk and has done so in three games. She’s a human biology major.

Haley has amassed numerous honors. So far she has recorded 31 double-doubles and one triple-double. She’s a communications major. A large contingent of family and friends from her hometown of Santa Cruz wore black T-shirts with her name and number.

Hannah, the 3-point specialist, is majoring in psychology.

Ashten will graduate with both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in management science and engineering.

Teammates speak highly of seniors

During this emotional event, each senior was honored by a teammate, starting with Cameron, who called Hannah “a ray of sunshine” through all the team’s ups and downs.

Hannah’s father talked about her early schooling in England before the family moved to California, where she chose basketball over softball. She’s “a very driven individual,” he said.

Lauren and Talana teamed up to salute Fran. Both Lauren and Fran hail from Colorado, where Lauren’s first basketball game was against Fran’s team. She’s “a huge inspiration to me,” Lauren said.

Fran has been helpful to Lauren as she adjusted to college life. Talana echoed similar sentiments, saying “I’m Fran’s second child.”

Fran’s mother, who’s from Africa, spoke proudly about her.

Speaking about Haley, redshirt freshman Jzaniya Harriel said Haley helped her get through her redshirt year last season. Noting that the Jones family has hosted the team several times, Haley’s father praised its sisterhood and community.

Saluting Ashten, junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu called her “a great teammate and friend.”

Ashten’s dad talked about her initial interest in several sports, including badminton, and her numbers prowess. She once calculated the value of pi, representing the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter, to 200 digits after the number 3.

Ending the event and saluting the seniors, Tara said, “We still have great basketball ahead, and they will be the leaders.”

Haley drives to the basket as Cameron is impeded by a USC player. (Santiago Mejia/SF Chronicle)


USC keeps fans on edge until the final buzzer

The first few plays against USC seemed promising as Stanford got the tip and sophomore forward Kiki Iriafen scored first within the first minute, but USC scored 8 points before Kiki scored the next 3 points.

USC, as it did throughout the game, made some 3’s during that quarter, but Stanford managed to pull ahead18-17 to end the first quarter. The Cardinal also outscored the Trojans in the next two quarters, giving it a 44-37 advantage at the end of the third.

Stanford managed only 6 points in the final quarter, while USC had 10, but the home team came away with the 50-47 win.

It was a highly physical game with lots of pushing, shoving and grabbing, mostly by USC, but the refs called only 10 fouls against the visitors and nine against the hosts.

Cameron owns the SWBB record for blocks. (Santiago Mejia/SF Chronicle)

Cameron sets school record for blocks

Cameron was the only Cardinal in double figures with 12 points to go with 10 rebounds. More notably, she had six blocks, raising her career total to 278 and surpassing the 273 that Jayne Appel, ’10, tallied in four years. Cameron broke the record about halfway through the second quarter.

On hand to watch this historic performance were family friend Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors, along with his daughter, Riley, and 49ers quarterback Trey Lance. Curry was at the UCLA game, too.

Both teams hauled in 43 rebounds, but Stanford had more success in the paint, scoring 34 points there and holding USC to just 2 points in the paint.

For the game, Stanford shot 35.6 percent, compared with USC’s 22.2 percent. USC’s biggest lead was 6 points in the first quarter. Stanford had an 11-point edge in the third.

While USC had eight 3’s, Stanford had only three: two from Hannah and one from freshman guard Indya Nivar. Stanford had 15 bench points, USC none.

Because the corner video displays of team and individual statistics weren’t working, it was impossible to keep track of them. (They were back for the UCLA game.)

The game drew a crowd of 6,343, filling the Maples lot and forcing some people to park elsewhere.

Pink Game supports breast cancer awareness

It was the annual Pink Game in honor of breast cancer awareness. Stanford’s home white uniforms were trimmed in pink, and most of the players wore pink hair ribbons. USC’s uniforms were mostly pink. Early-arriving fans received light-up pink pompons.

The win put Stanford alone atop Pac-12 standings because Utah, then ranked No. 4 nationally by AP, lost to No. 18 Arizona earlier in the day and fell to No. 8 in the latest rankings.

Up next: No. 3 Stanford will complete its regular season schedule by visiting No. 21 Colorado at 2 p.m. Feb. 23 and Utah at 11 a.m. Feb. 25. Pac-12 Networks will televise both  games.

 

 

February 13, 2023

Dominant in the desert

 

Indya Nivar (12) watches as Agnes's 3-point buzzer beater goes in. (ASU Athletics)


The Stanford women’s basketball team returned from a road trip by adding two decisive wins to its resume: 84-60 over Arizona on Feb. 9 and 96-64 over Arizona State on Feb. 12, raising its season record to 24-3 and its Pac-12 record to 12-2.

These two wins, combined with losses by teams ranked higher than Stanford, elevated the Cardinal to AP’s No. 3 from No. 6.

The ASU game was notable for major contributions from bench players. Junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu led the team with 17 points, while freshman center Lauren Betts added 13.

This performance by Lauren, combined with what she did against Arizona, earned her the honor of Pac-12 Freshman of the Week for the first time.

Thirteen players saw action against Arizona State, 11 scored and all contributed in some way.

Among the starters, junior forward Cameron Brink had 15 points and eight rebounds in 12 minutes. She had one block, leaving her just one shy of the Stanford season record of 94 set by Jayne Appel-Marinelli, ’10.

Senior guard Hannah Jump and sophomore forward Kiki Iriafen each had 12 points. Kiki, like Cameron, also had eight rebounds in 13 minutes.

Hannah’s points came from four 3’s, three in the first quarter and one in the second.

Agnes leads team in points, 3’s

But she wasn’t the 3-point leader. That honor went to Agnes, who made five of six in 16 minutes. One of them was a buzzer-beater to end the second quarter.

Adding to the team’s 12 3’s were freshman guard Talana Lepolo, sophomore forward Brooke Demetre and senior forward Ashten Prechtel with one each.

No one played more than 22 minutes (senior forward Fran Belibi, who had 9 points and eight rebounds). Senior guard Haley Jones played 21 minutes and had only 2 points, quite unusual for her, but she had five rebounds, five assists and four blocks.

In all, the bench added 52 points, an indication of the team’s depth. “Tag-team basketbalI,” Cameron said after the game. “Everyone contributed. Everyone played really well.”

Playing in front of 1,759 people, Stanford outscored ASU in the first three quarters and tied in the fourth. For the game, the Cardinal scored 46.1 percent on field goals and held the Sun Devils to 33.3 percent.

The team also led in rebounds, 58-35 and points in the paint, 38-24.

Arizona falls 84-60

Fans watching the Feb. 9 Arizona game on ESPN missed about the first five and a half minutes while a hockey game wrapped up.

When the Arizona game came on, Stanford was winning 10-5. The Cardinal never tied or trailed throughout the game, going on to win 84-60.

At that time, one of Cameron’s nostrils was plugged, but there was no explanation, and it was gone after halftime.

Although Cameron and Haley were the leading scorers with 18 each, plus 12 rebounds for Haley, eight other players scored. Among them was Lauren, who came off the bench to add 12 points and four rebounds in 21 minutes.

Bench players add 31 points

In all, the team had 31 bench points. Fourteen players got into the game, and 10  scored while two others helped in other ways.

Lauren led the team with four of its 10 blocks. Cameron had an unusually low two blocks, but they were enough for her to break her own Stanford season blocking record with 92 – and counting.

Lauren and Cameron excelled in the high-low game with one feeding the ball to the other for a score. This play also was used by other post players, helping the team to reach 50 points in the paint.

The team registered only three 3’s, all of them from Hannah.

Playing before a crowd of 9,868, No. 6 Stanford dominated No. 17 Arizona in nearly every statistical category, including rebounds, 45-27. For the game, it shot 59.3 percent, compared with Arizona’s 35.8 percent.

During the half, the first NCAA tournament reveal was announced. It placed Stanford in the Seattle regional as a one seed, the third of four one seeds.

The team returns to the Farm for its final two home regular season games, hosting USC at 8 p.m. Feb. 17 and UCLA at 6 p.m. Feb. 20. Pac-12 Networks will broadcast the USC game. The UCLA game will be on ESPN2.

 

 

 

 

 

 

February 6, 2023

Mixed outcomes after trip to Washington

 

The Huskies' Elle Ledine exults next to Cameron and Brooke. (Stephen Brashear/AP)


The Stanford women’s basketball team returned from the Evergreen State with a decisive win over Washington State 71-38 on Feb. 3 and a painful upset loss to Washington 67-72 on Feb. 5.

The loss dropped Stanford to No. 6 from No. 2 in the AP poll. It also moved the team into a Pac-12 tie with Utah.

With attendance at 4,317 for the Washington game, the Cardinal had a comfortable 17-8 first-quarter lead on 53.85 percent shooting but was outscored in the second and fourth. For the game, Stanford shot 48 percent to Washington’s 43.1 percent, but the home team made four more free throws.

The fourth quarter was a nail-biter with several ties and lead switches even down to the last few seconds, but Stanford ran out of luck.

Cameron not feeling well

The TV announcers said that junior forward Cameron Brink was under the weather, but she started the game and finished with14 points and six rebounds in 27 minutes. While she is known for blocks, she had none in this game.

Senior guard Haley Jones played all 40 minutes and led the team with 18 points and seven assists. Also in double figures were sophomore forward Brooke Demetre with 15 points and senior guard Hannah Jump with 10.

Brooke’s points came from five 3’s, while Hannah had two.

Besides being outscored, the team also was outrebounded, 34-24. Sixteen turnovers didn’t help, nor did 18 fouls. However, several of those fouls came late in the game when Stanford fouled deliberately in hopes of regaining possession and a chance to score.

Ten players got into the game, and six scored.

Lauren shoots over a Washington State player. (Young Kwak/AP)


Defense, depth help in win over WSU

Defense and depth led to the 71-38 domination of Washington State on Feb. 3. Thus the Cardinal spoiled the Cougars’ hopes of defeating Stanford for the first time in all 72 games they have played.

WSU nailed a 3 to start the game, but Stanford took over after that, leading 15-3 after the first quarter. The Cardinal outscored the host team in every quarter thereafter.

All 15 players got into the game, and most of them contributed in some way.

Seen by 1,128 people, this was a game in which no one player needed to post gaudy numbers. Instead, 11 scored as the bench contributed an impressive 37 points, more than half the total.

Haley led the scoring with 13 points. The only other players in double figures were Cameron and freshman center Lauren Betts with 10 each. Cameron played only 16 minutes because of foul problems and probably because others were doing so well.

Lauren’s performance was noteworthy. Besides her 10 points, she snared three rebounds and had two assists, a block and a steal with no fouls or turnovers in 16 minutes, one of her longer playing times.

Five players make 3’s

The balanced scoring extended to seven 3-pointers from five players. Hannah and sophomore guard Elena Bosgana had two each. The others came from junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu, Brooke and freshman guard Indya Nivar.

Fans watching at home endured a blank TV screen during several minutes of the third quarter. During that time, the Cardinal poured in 7 more points. The broadcast came back in time to see the rest of the quarter, which ended 51-30.

As might be expected by the final score, Stanford dominated the stat sheet. For the game, field goal shooting was 50 percent, treys 38.9 percent and free throws 85.7 percent.

Stanford takes to the road again to face Arizona at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 9 and Arizona State at 11 a.m. Feb. 12. ESPN will air the Arizona game. The Arizona State game will be seen on Pac-12 Networks.

 

 

 

January 31, 2023

Oregon teams fall to Cardinal

 

After posting a triple double against Oregon, Cameron (left) is congratulated by Brooke,
who was 3-3 on 3-pointers. (Paul Kurada/special to SF Chronicle)

Two wins over the visiting Oregon teams moved the Stanford women’s basketball team up from AP’s No. 3 to No. 2, the spot it had occupied for most of the season.

Oregon State fell first, 63-60 on Jan. 27, followed by Oregon falling 62-54 on Jan. 29.

Speaking after the Oregon game, head coach Tara VanDerveer said it was “a good weekend for us.”

Cameron posts triple-double with blocks, points, rebounds

Junior forward Cameron Brink was the headliner against Oregon, racking up a triple double, thanks to a team- and game-leading 16 points, 11 rebounds and 10 of the team’s 13 blocks. Thus she was named  Pac-12 Player of the Week for the third time this season. 

Senior guard Hannah Jump was the only other player in double figures with 14 points, while senior guard Haley Jones had 16 rebounds.

Eleven players got into the game, and eight scored. Most notably, the bench added 16 points.

The team had eight 3’s, thanks in large part to sophomore forward Brooke Demetre, who was 3-3 from behind the arc for 9 points in her eight minutes on the court.

Also chipping in 3’s was Hannah with two. Junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu, sophomore guard Elena Bosgana and freshman guard Talana Lepolo had one each. This was Talana’s second game back after missing both games the previous weekend with an ankle injury.

Stanford led most of the way. Its largest lead was 16 points late in the fourth quarter.

Attendance totals 5,133

Game attendance was 5,133, bolstered by the groups invited to celebrate National Girls and Women in Sports Day. They enjoyed activities set up by Stanford women’s teams in the concourses.

The video board showed the 49ers vs. Eagles conference championship game until about 30 minutes before tipoff. Many people in the stands kept up with the score, which ended in a 31-7 loss for the Niners and the end of their season.

After the game, Jeanette Pohlen, ’11, opened the Behind the Bench joined by Clare Bodensteiner, ’07, and Krista Rappahahn Birnie, ’06. They were among several alums at the game who had met for dinner the night before.

Joining them, Tara praised the contributions from a number of players, including Cameron.

“We are more of a gritty team this year,” she said, noting that different players step up at different games.

Haley goes for a mid-range jumper against OSU. (Stanford Athletics)


Oregon State proves tough

With 21 points from Cameron and 17 from Haley, the team eked out a 63-60 win over Oregon State on Jan. 27.

Attended by 3,890, it was a hard-fought game with numerous ties and lead changes. With the final seconds ticking down and Stanford clinging to a 62-60 lead, Haley made one of two free throws for the final winning score.

The drama didn’t end there, though. OSU had the ball with 18.7 seconds to go but couldn’t get off a tying shot. With 2.5 seconds to go, Stanford fouled, giving OSU the ball out of bounds and perhaps another chance. Instead, Talana stole the ball when it was inbounded, thus ending OSU’s hopes.

Besides 21 points, Cameron came up with 13 of the team’s 39 rebounds and six of its eight blocks.

In all, seven of the 13 players who got into the game scored. Several of those who didn’t score contributed in other ways with rebounds and defensive efforts.

Perimeter shooting came up short with two 3’s by Agnes and one each by Hannah and Brooke.

Free-throw shooting was crucial as the team made 15 of 18 shots, while OSU made 2 of 2, a difference of 13 points.

The first quarter ended 22-18 in Stanford’s favor. The Cardinal had a one-point lead, 33-32 at the half, followed by a 49-49 tie after the third quarter.

Stanford’s largest lead was 7 points early in the second quarter. OSU’s was 4 points about halfway through the first.

The team will be on the road for the next two weekends, visiting the Washington teams Feb. 3 and 5 and the Arizona teams Feb. 9 and 12.

The Washington State game is at 7 p.m. Feb. 3, followed by the Washington game at noon Feb. 5. Pac-12 Bay Area will air both games.

 

 

January 24, 2023

Team snaps back with wins over Utah, Colorado

 


Cameron gets a hand in her face as she tries to block a Colorado shot. (Jim Gensheimer/AP)

After the loss to USC the previous weekend had knocked the Stanford women’s basketball team down to No. 4 from No. 2 in AP’s weekly poll, the Cardinal moved up to No. 3 on Jan. 23 and gained sole possession of first place in Pac-12 standings thanks to two home wins.

The first was over then-No. 8 Utah 74-62 on Jan. 20, followed by a 62-49 win over then-No. 24 Colorado on Jan. 22. Utah subsequently fell to No. 9. Colorado dropped to 25.

The Colorado game featured a revised starting lineup with freshman guard Indya Nivar replacing freshman guard Talana Lepolo, who had injured her ankle in the Utah game. Talana was there with her ankle taped.

Also moving into the starting lineup for the second straight game, junior guard Agnes Emma-Nnopu replaced sophomore forward Kiki Iriafen. Eventually 12 players got into the game, with the bench supplying 11 points.

Hannah pours in 21 points

Scoring was led by senior guard Hannah Jump with 21 points, 15 of them coming from her five 3’s.

Junior forward Cameron Brink supplied 14 points, while senior guard Haley Jones had 11 points and a team- and game-high of 18 rebounds. After the weekend victories, Haley was named Pac-12 Player of the Week and Naismith Trophy Player of the Week.

Besides Hannah’s five, the team’s other two 3’s came from Agnes and sophomore forward Brooke Demetre.

Defense played a big part of the win, thanks to 14 blocks: six by Cameron, two each by Hannah and freshman center Lauren Betts, and one each by Haley, Agnes,  Indya and senior forward Fran Belibi.

Free throws were another major factor -- 17, or 77.3 percent, by Stanford; six, or 37.5 percent, by Colorado, or 37.5 percent -- an 11-point advantage.

Colorado never led even after outscoring Stanford 18-16 in the final quarter, but it was too little, too late. After the first quarter ended 18-8, Stanford led by double figures for the rest of the game. Its largest lead was 17 points in the second quarter.

Early in the fourth quarter, Brooke limped to the locker room but returned to the bench later.

A few minutes after that, Colorado’s bench was assessed a technical for jawing at a referee.

Elevator out of service

When the crowd of 4,122 people arrived, they learned that Maples’ only elevator was out of service. Hence many seniors and people with disabilities had to struggle up and down the stairs or, perhaps, go back home.

Once fans got into the arena, those in the lower levels found red T-shirts honoring the Lunar New Year draped over their seats. When it came time for Conga on the Court between the first and second quarters, the shirts came down to the knees of many of the youngsters.

Another change was that the usual announcer, Betty Ann Hagenau, was absent, replaced by someone else.

And the previously announced Behind the Bench was canceled so that fans could hustle home to watch the 49ers defeat the Dallas Cowboys and advance to the NFC championship game against the Philadelphia Eagles the next weekend.

Utah keeps score close but loses

It wasn’t until the fourth quarter of the Jan. 20 Utah game that Stanford fans could sit back and say, “OK, it looks like we’ve got this one.” The Cardinal went on to win 74-62 before a crowd of 3,730.

Until then, despite leading at the end of the first three quarters, No. 4 Stanford couldn’t be sure of victory because No. 8 Utah kept closing the gap but couldn’t quite pull ahead.


Agnes goes for a basket against Utah. (Santiago Mejia/SF Chronicle)

Coming off the loss at USC the previous weekend, the team got off to a slow start in the first quarter, trailing by as many as 8 points at the 7:26 mark, but it rallied to lead 24-22 at quarter’s end. It seemed that ball movement and defense both improved.

Talana leaves game with ankle injury

It was during that quarter that the team lost Talana to an injury. After going to the locker room, she returned with ice on her left ankle, sat at the end of the bench and elevated her leg. After the half, she was wearing a boot on her left foot.

Indya stepped in to replace Talana at the point.

Three players accounted for 63 points, or about 85 percent, of the final score.  Haley and Cameron had 25 each, while Hannah pitched in 13. Cameron also had 14 rebounds, and Haley had 12. Hannah’s 12 points in the first quarter went a long way toward the team’s lead then.

Hannah logged two 3’s, while Cameron and redshirt freshman guard Jzaniya Harriel had one each.

A game of Simon Sez, led by Steve Max with two lines of about 20 youngsters each, entertained the crowd at halftime.

Next up, Stanford stays home to host Oregon State at 8 p.m. Jan. 27 and Oregon at 1 p.m. Jan. 29. Both games will be carried by Pac-12 Networks.