Photo by John Swartzel Emily
Cummins' layup was somewhat closer than her 3-pointers that changed
each game in the Final Four.
By Mark Simon
D3hoops.com
It hit at about 9 p.m.
one night, while back at our real job, that it was going to be another
eight months before we got to cover another basketball game. That saddened
us, if not for a few moments, until we started thinking about all the
things we enjoyed this season. This was by far the most comprehensive
season of coverage we've had on this site, and there were so many pleasant
memories of great games, great conversations and great stories that went
along with it.
With that in mind,
here are some of our favorite thoughts from this year's women's Final
Four.
Rochester Senior
guard Erika Smith left her mark on the Batten Center floor and in our
mind as the best 'little player' in America. I've been watching Division
III basketball since 1993 and can't recall a player 5-6 or shorter having
a better game than Smith's 20-point, 18 rebound performance in the semifinal
loss to Wilmington. Smith finished her career as the No. 2 ranked 3-point
shooter in Division III, but also showed a tremendous ability to shoot
and score over traffic. There was no doubt in our mind after watching
those two games that her All-America selection was well justified.
The other thing that
stuck out was the reception that Rochester got from its fan base (known
on campus as "Yellow Fever") following its win over UW-Stevens
Point in the consolation game. For the second consecutive season, the
Yellowjackets showed a lot of pride with their second-half effort in their
final game of the season, and their fans helped put smiles on the faces
of players and coaching staff after a fine comeback that resulted in a
win and a third-place finish.
The
skinny from Va. Beach We're
leaving those years in Danbury behind, in more ways than one. Not
only did we get another set of great games, but the event was well-run,
the staff was friendly, and there seemed to be a real knowledge
in the area that the event was happening.
Biggest disappointment:
What television did to game times. Yes, regional cable is great
and it did put the game in about 15 million homes, but it threw
everything else off, inlcuding attendance. Unfortunately, the NCAA
will be making the decision on the future home of the final four
before the next final four is played, and Virginia Beach will not
get a chance to show what it can do.
Moment of
inspiration: Wilmington's Brittney Morris, out with a torn ACL,
spoke at the championship banquet Thursday evening and let the other
teams know, in a polite way, that they were there to win. Her teammates
took it as a call to action.
Most Improved
Player: D3hoops.com had staff at three of the four sectionals,
so we were very familiar with three of the four teams, plus all
of us had seen UW-Stevens Point in 2002. But the player who stood
out the most between the sectionals and the finals in our mind was
Emily Cummins. Cummins went from being fifth on the Quakers in minutes
in 2003 to being the main reason Wilmington survived the sectionals.
With 41 points in wins over Thomas More and Puget Sound, Cummins'
play gave the Quakers a chance to reach Virginia Beach in the first
place, not to mention her big 3-pointers in the semis and finals.
Best pregame
sound bite: (from Bowdoin coach Stefanie Pemper, when asked
what her team would do with all the extra TV timeout time) "I
don't know, maybe somebody's going to have to tell a good joke."
But not to single out Pemper, since we got good interviews from
all four coaches.
Hindsight
moment: Jim Strick, UW-Stevens Point SID, noted the night before
the semis that the only two Stevens Point road games he'd seen all
season were losses. Someone pointed out these games were technically
neutral games, prompting head coach Shirley Egner to breathe a sigh
of relief. "Otherwise, we'd have to send you home!" —
Pat Coleman
UW-Stevens
Point "We're
gonna be back here.There's no doubt about it."
That remark, from head coach
Shirley Egner, left a pretty strong impression, as did her observation
after the semifinal loss to Bowdoin that luck and good health go a long
way in determining a champion.
It would have been
nice to see the Pointers at full strength. The injury to Cassandra Heuer
in the WIAC Tournament left UWSP with a significant hole in its rotation.
UWSP was hit by injuries during the 2002-2003 season as well, which played
a large role in determining their fate.
The Pointers should
be among the favorites to return, considering that they'll return a Player
of the Year candidate in forward Amanda Nechuta, who carried UWSP to a
near victory over Bowdoin with her performance in the semifinals.
If there was any reason
not to take seriously Egner's quasi-guarantee consider this. Our publisher,
Pat Coleman, tried to talk to a Stevens Point assistant coach following
the game but realized he was interrupting the coach's calling recruits.
Bowdoin
You can tell when you've run into a special team by the way they act,
the way they play, and the way every little thing seems to break just
right on the path to a championship. That combination existed for the
Bowdoin Polar Bears, whose perfect season met an imperfect ending with
a loss in the championship game. We went back and read what
we wrote about Eastern Connecticut State after its loss to
Trinity in last year's championship game and found that a lot of the comments
we made about those Warriors held true for this team as well.
Head coach Stefanie
Pemper said that, to some degree, her squad overachieved a little bit
through the season. They won games not always on skill, but on belief
— in their abilities and each other. That, and not necessarily the
final tally of wins and losses, makes for a special team as well.
Wilmington
The nice thing about this season is that it gives hope to any team playing
in the postseason that it can win a championship. The Wilmington women
entered the NCAA Tournament this season as an afterthought, at least in
our minds after a third-place finish in the OAC during the regular season,
and ended it as one of the best stories in the history of Division III
basketball.
We joked with our halftime guest on the championship broadcast,
former All-American point guard Megan Woodruff that the season is a marathon
and not a sprint (Woodruff and Quakers shooting guard Emily Cummins ran
marathons in preseason), but in Wilmington's case it was both. Wilmington
may not have had the best record during the season, but it survived and
advanced its way through to the postseason, primarily by racing past teams
in the final minutes.
Wilmington's season
could have easily ended in defeat against Capital or Otterbein or Albion
or Franklin or Thomas More or Puget Sound or Rochester, but the Quakers
patiently persevered through every step. Their players may have been knocked
to the floor plenty of times, but they always got right back up, and proved
in the end that they had the strongest combination of mental and physical
strength.