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Women's Basketball

Eyes On The Jacks

What's Next

No. 4 Stanford (25-7) will be looking to advance to the Sweet 16 for the ninth straight year when it plays No. 12 South Dakota State (27-6) in Maples Pavilion on Monday, March 21 at 6 p.m. Bob Picozzi and Mary Murphy have the call on ESPN2.

NCAA Tournament Notes

On Saturday, the Cardinal won its 78th NCAA Tournament game. Stanford is now 78-27 (.743) all-time in the event and 33-4 (.886) in the tournament at Maples Pavilion.

The Cardinal’s 78 wins in the NCAA Tournament are third all-time behind Tennessee (121) and Connecticut (104) as are its 105 tournament games. Tennessee has appeared in 147 and Connecticut 121.

Stanford’s .743 NCAA Tournament winning percentage is fourth all-time among programs with a minimum of 20 appearances. Connecticut is No. 1 (.860; 104-17), Tennessee is No. 2 (.823; 121-26) and Baylor is No. 3 (.755; 37-12).

For the 🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟🎟 th time » #LetsDance. #GoStanford #SelectionMonday

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Mar 14, 2016 at 4:20pm PDT

The Cardinal, which has won its tournament opener in 17 consecutive seasons, will be looking to advance to the Sweet 16 for the ninth straight year.

Since its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 1982, Stanford has won a pair of national championships (1990, 1992), reached 12 Final Fours (1990-92, 1995-97, 2008-12, 2014), 17 Elite Eights and 22 Sweet 16s.

Madness In Maples

As a city, Stanford has served as a host for 64 NCAA Tournament games, the third-most behind Knoxville, Tenn. (82) and Norfolk, Va. (67).

Each of those games has been played in Maples Pavilion, which has hosted more NCAA Tournament games than any other facility except Tennessee’s Thompson-Boling Arena (66).

The Cardinal is 33-4 all-time in NCAA Tournament games at Maples Pavilion and has won 13 straight. Its last loss came to Florida State, 68-61, in the Second Round on March 19, 2007.

This season is the 20th in which Stanford has hosted NCAA Tournament games in Maples Pavilion since staging its first in 1989 and the 19th in which the Cardinal has opened up its postseason at home. Of the program’s four home losses in the NCAA Tournament one came in the First Round (Harvard, 1998), two came in the Second Round (Florida State, 2007 and Minnesota, 2003) and one came in a Regional Final (Purdue, 1994).

Stanford is 134-7 (.950) in Maples Pavilion since 2007-08.

Against South Dakota State

Stanford and South Dakota State have met once before, an 80-60 Cardinal win at the Hardwood Tournament of Hope in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico on Nov. 28, 2013.

That win was the 901st of head coach Tara VanDerveer’s career. Monday’s matchup will be her 1,000th game as head coach at Stanford.

In that victory, then-freshman Kailee Johnson had 10 points on 4-of-5 shooting in 23 minutes. Erica McCall added nine points and seven rebounds and Karlie Samuelson had eight points and a pair of assists. Stanford shot 48.4 percent and the Jackrabbits 40.4 percent. The Cardinal led 40-19 at halftime.

Notes entering the weekend

Pac-12 All-Century

Setsuko Ishiyama Director of Women’s Basketball Tara VanDerveer was named the Pac-12 Coach of the Century and a conference-best eight players were named to the 20-member all-century squad when the league revealed the Pac-12 All-Century Women’s Basketball roster on Feb. 29.

Stanford’s all-century representatives are: Jennifer Azzi (1987-90), Molly Goodenbour (1990-93), Sonja Henning (1988-91), Chiney Ogwumike (2011-14), Nnemkadi Ogwumike (2009-12), Nicole Powell (2001-04), Kate Starbird (1994-97) and Candice Wiggins (2005-08).

Postseason Awards

Erica McCall was named to both the All-Pac-12 squad and the Pac-12 All-Defensive team, Lili Thompson earned her second All-Pac-12 nod and was a Pac-12 All-Defensive honorable mention, Karlie Samuelson was picked All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention, Kaylee Johnson earned a spot on the Pac-12 All-Defensive honorable mention team and Marta Sniezek was a Pac-12 All-Freshman honorable mention pick. Stanford now has 70 all-time Pac-12 all-conference honorees, the top total in league history.

1K Conquered

Stanford’s victory over Oregon State on Feb. 26 was the 1,000th in Cardinal program history. Stanford is the seventh Division I institution to reach the 1,000-win plateau, joining Tennessee, Louisiana Tech, James Madison, Old Dominion, Texas and Stephen F. Austin. The Cardinal’s overall record since its first varsity season in 1975 is 1,001-311 (.763) and 825-173 (.827) with Tara VanDerveer at the helm.

Stanford, which reached the milestone in 1,310 total games, is the third-fastest to the mark, behind Louisiana Tech (1,210) and Tennessee (1,232).

Entering this season, the Cardinal was fourth in the NCAA over the last five years by both wins and percentage. From 2011-15, Stanford went 160-22 (.879). Connecticut was 182-12 (.938), Baylor was 173-14 (.925) and Notre Dame was 174-18 (.906).

Bird Is The Word

Erica McCall is averaging 20.8 points on 57 percent shooting, 8.5 rebounds and 2.8 blocks in the last six games. She has scored in double figures in 15 of the last 16 games and put up more than 20 in three straight.

The Cardinal’s junior captain received the first weekly honors of her career on Feb. 29 when she was named both espnW National Player of the Week and Pac-12 Player of the Week for her performances in 20-points victories over No. 7 Oregon State (76-54) and Oregon (69-42). McCall posted back-to-back 20-point games for the first time in her career in the wins, averaging 25.0 points and 11.5 rebounds. She shot 56 percent from the floor and 44 percent from behind the arc.

Most impressively, McCall started taking and making the first 3-pointers of her career. She was 4-of-9 (44.4 percent) from behind the arc on the weekend after attempting just one 3-pointer in her first 99 career games. She is 6-of-14 (.429) on 3-pointers overall this season.

McCall also has 62 blocks this season, tied for fifth in school single-season history. Jayne Appel, Chiney Ogwumike and Joslyn Tinkle are the only other Stanford players to have as many in a single year.

McCall has 15 double-doubles this season, tied for 19th in the nation.

A psychology major with a 3.53 cumulative GPA, she was selected to the 2015-16 CoSIDA Academic All-District Women’s Basketball Team on Feb. 11. Her honor continued a run of five straight years with a Cardinal receiving academic all-district accolades, the longest streak in the Pac-12.

For her urban education class, McCall visited third and fifth-grade classrooms in East Palo Alto and wrote a paper on teacher-student interaction in the urban school setting.

.@birdstheword_24, smart and good at basketball. Earns CoSIDA Academic All-District distinction on Thursday. #GoStanford

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Feb 11, 2016 at 1:28pm PST

Sniezek Steps Up

Marta Sniezek is averaging 4.8 assists in Stanford’s last 11 games with a 2.9 assist-to-turnover ratio. In the first 20 games of the year, the freshman was handing out 1.8 assists and owned an assist-to-turnover ratio of 0.9.

Against Washington in the Pac-12 Tournament on March 4, the freshman had 13 assists against zero turnovers. Her assist total was a Pac-12 Tournament record and also the most for a Stanford player in a single game since 1991.

👀👆 #GoStanford 🙌🌲👏🏅

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Feb 29, 2016 at 1:28pm PST

The 13 assists are tied for third in program history and only equaled by a pair of Stanford greats in Jennifer Azzi and Sonja Henning. Azzi had a program-record 16 on Jan. 15, 1987 against BYU while Henning handed out 15 at Cal on March 1, 1991. Azzi also had 13 against Arizona on Jan. 24, 1987 and Henning the same number against Arkansas on March 24, 1990.

Season Quick Hitters

The Cardinal has won 20 games for the 15th straight year and reached double-digit Pac-12 victories for the 29th consecutive season.

In 2015-16, Stanford is without a senior starter for the first time in 13 seasons. The 2002-03 campaign was the last time the Cardinal didn’t have a senior in its first five.

Stanford is 4-5 against the AP top 25 and has had multiple wins over ranked opponents in every season starting in 2002-03.

This season is the first since 1999-2000 that the Cardinal has not won some form of a Pac-12 championship - regular season or tournament.

Schedule Perspective

Five of Stanford’s seven losses this season have to teams ranked in the AP top 20 at the time of the game and four have come on the road.

Texas (RPI No. 7), Arizona State (RPI No. 11), Oregon State (RPI No. 5) and UCLA (RPI No. 10) are all also in the top 11 of the RPI and are a combined 55-5 at home this season.

In the most recent in-depth NCAA RPI report, Stanford sits at No. 9 and has played the nation’s sixth-toughest schedule.

Entering the tournament, Stanford’s 31 opponents have the second-highest combined winning percentage in the country of .636 (432-247). Tennessee leads that category with opponents that have gone 513-247 (.675).

The Cardinal is tied for fourth in the nation with 16 RPI top 100 wins. Only South Carolina (19), Notre Dame (18) and Connecticut (17) have more.

Stanford’s 23 games against RPI top 100 foes are also tied for second in the country behind UCLA (24).

The Cardinal is 6-6 against NCAA Tournament teams this season.

Applying Pressure

The Cardinal has held 24 of 31 opponents below 40 percent shooting, 10 below 30 percent and one below 20 percent. Stanford is second in the nation in field goal percentage defense (.326) and 17th in scoring defense (53.8).

Says Tara Vanderveer » Our defense is what we’ve been hanging our hat on...This is one of the most committed defensive teams we’ve had.

Opponents have put up 15.1 points less than their season scoring average when facing Stanford.

In its last 23 games (beginning with Tennessee), the Cardinal has surrendered 51.2 points on 32.0 percent shooting (423-of-1,320) and has surrendered more than 60 points just three times, including one overtime affair. In its first eight games of the season, Stanford gave up 61.2 points on 33.8 percent shooting (179-of-529) and allowed more than 60 points six times.

Opponent Field Goal Percentage - Stanford History
No.Pct.Year
1..3162012-13
2..3262015-16
3..3362010-11
4..3392009-10
 .3392011-12
6..3462001-02
 .3462006-07
8..3512004-05
9..3522008-09
10..3552007-08

One game after holding Chattanooga to 30 points on Dec. 28, the sixth-fewest for an opponent in program history, the Cardinal only surrendered 34 on Jan. 2 at Arizona, a total now tied for 10th in its record books and for the fewest allowed by the program in a Pac-12 game. Stanford had never before held back-to-back opponents to less than 35 points.

Stanford has held its opponent below 10 points 30 times in 124 regulation quarters, or 24 percent of the time this season.

Stanford is also seventh in the country in blocked shots per game (6.2) and has tallied seven or more blocks in a game 13 times this season after doing it five times all of last year. Its 193 total blocks are second in school history. The program record is 196 (2001-02).

The Cardinal’s 13 blocks against USC on Jan. 22 tied the school record from Feb. 3, 1989 against Arizona State. Stanford also had 12 against CSU Bakersfield, 11 against Utah, 11 against Oregon and 10 against UC Davis. Stanford has had a school-record five games with double-digit blocks in a single season. Its 2000-01 squad had four games with at least 10 blocks.

Stanford Single-Season Blocks
No.BlocksYear
1.1962001-02
2.1932015-16
3.1892006-07
4.1872007-08
5.1862012-13
6.1772011-12
 1772008-09
 1762000-01
9.1662014-15
10.1582009-10

Its defensive prowess this season is a return to normal for the Cardinal. Last year’s 37.0 percent field goal percentage defense mark was 43rd and the lowest in some time. Stanford hadn’t surrendered a better percentage since 2005-06 (36th; .373) and hadn’t finished a season ranked lower in that category since 2002-03 (57th; .384).

From 2006-07 to 2013-14, the Cardinal did not finish outside the nation’s top 15 in field goal percentage defense, capping that stretch with a 35.7 percent mark to check in 14th in the country in 2013-14.

Stanford was the nation’s best with a school record field goal percentage defense in 2012-13 (.316). The Cardinal was seventh in 2011-12 (.339), fifth in 2010-11 (.336), third in 2009-10 (.339), 13th in 2008-09 (.352), 11th in 2007-08 (.355) and sixth in 2006-07 (.346).

Tracking Thompson

Against Colorado on Jan. 10, Lili Thompson became the 36th Stanford player to surpass 1,000 career points. Now at 1,184 she is 28th all-time at Stanford between Julie Zeilstra (1,259; 1988-91) and Maggie Nelson (1,180; 1974-78).

Stanford up 28-21 on Colorado at the half. @_li_squared just became the 36th Cardinal to surpass 1,000 career points. #GoStanford

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Jan 10, 2016 at 12:57pm PST

Thompson has scored 20 or more seven times this season, including in recent wins against Washington and Washington State. In those two, she averaged 28.5 points per game and shot 63 percent from the field (22-of-35) and 71 percent from the 3-point line (10-of-14). Thompson scored 41 percent of Stanford’s points (57) and was named both espnW National Player of the Week and Pac-12 Player of the Week for her efforts.

It was the second espnW National Player of the Week award of Thompson’s career. Last November, she was honored after averaging 26.0 points and 5.5 rebounds per game in Stanford’s games against No. 1 Connecticut and No. 10 Texas. Her conference accolade was her league-leading third of the season and the fourth of her career.

In her seven games since those performances, Thompson is averaging 10.7 points on 27.8 percent shooting (25-of-90), but leads Stanford in steals.

Thompson, a science, technology and society major with a 3.32 GPA, has coded numerous computer programs for her programming abstractions class using C++, including a bacteria growth simulation program and hangman.

Good Stretches

Brittany McPhee has made 19 of her last 49 attempts from 3-point range (.488) after starting her career going 9-of-48 (.188) in her first 37 career games.

Kaylee Johnson has come on strong in Stanford’s last 23 games, averaging 7.3 points on 53.2 percent shooting (67-of-126) to go along with 7.5 rebounds.

👀👆 #GoStanford 🙌🌲👏🏅

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Feb 29, 2016 at 1:29pm PST

The sophomore opened the year averaging 1.1 points and 4.5 rebounds while shooting just 22.2 percent from the floor in the Cardinal’s first eight games. Johnson has scored 10+ nine times in those 23 games after doing it all of six times as a freshman.

Different Samuelson, Same Story

Stanford lost Bonnie Samuelson to graduation after a career in which she finished third in school history and 10th in Pac-12 history in 3-point makes (237), but younger sister Karlie Samuelson has stepped in to keep up the family’s sharpshooting legacy.

Karlie is 66-of-146 from behind the arc this season and is sixth in the nation (min. two made per game) in 3-point field goal percentage (.452). A career 40.8 percent 3-point shooter, Samuelson has made 139 from deep in her career.

👀👆 #GoStanford 🙌🌲👏🏅

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Feb 29, 2016 at 1:30pm PST

Eighty percent (514-of-640) of her career points have come on 3-pointers (417) and free throws (97). The junior captain has made more than twice as many field goals from behind the arc as she has from inside, converting 63 2-point attempts. She is 25-of-56 (.446) on such shots this season.

Thirteen of her 27 career games in double figures scoring have come in Stanford’s last 22 outings and in her last 17 games, Samuelson is 38-of-77 on 3-pointers (.494). In the Cardinal’s 22-point win over No. 7 Oregon State on Feb. 26, the junior tallied the first double-double of her career, with 13 points and a career-high 12 rebounds.

A human biology major with a 3.38 cumulative GPA, Samuelson spent last summer interning in the Stanford Radiology Department, evaluating the change of cartilage in MRI scans.

Splits

Stanford is 13-2 at home and 8-4 on the road, with all four of those losses coming to ranked teams. The Cardinal is scoring 72.1 points per game in Maples on 45.1 percent shooting, including 37.0 percent from deep, and has a +9.9 rebounding margin. On the road, Stanford is averaging 59.8 points per game on 38.5 percent shooting, 30.1 percent on 3-pointers, and has a +1.3 rebounding margin.

More Milestones On The Horizon For Tara

Entering her 30th season on the bench at Stanford, Setsuko Ishiyama Director of Women’s Basketball Tara VanDerveer has accumulated a 977-224 (.813) record in her 37 years as a collegiate head coach and an 825-173 (.827) on The Farm.

In November 2013, she became just the fifth college women’s basketball coach to win 900 career games. Last March she won her 800th game at Stanford, becoming the 10th college basketball coach – men’s or women’s – with that many victories at a single Division I school, P. Summitt (Tennessee), M. Krzyzewski (Duke), G. Auriemma (Connecticut), D. Smith (North Carolina), A. Rupp (Kentucky), A. Landers (Georgia), J. Boeheim (Syracuse), R. Selvig (Montana) and J. Phelan (Mount St. Mary’s).

Winningest NCAA Coaches All-Time (By Victories)
CoachYearsWonLostPercentage
Pat Summitt381,098208.841
Tara VanDerveer36+977224.813
Sylvia Hatchell40+975358.731
C. Vivan Stringer44+970365.727
Barbara Stevens38+956267.782

One of the greatest leaders in any sport at any level, VanDerveer is the second-winningest coach in NCAA women’s basketball history and is 23 victories away from joining Pat Summitt as the only coaches with 1,000 career wins.

Off the court, she served as Stanford football’s honorary captain for its Oct. 3 home win over Arizona. In another football connection, former Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh and one of Tara’s coaching confidants delivered a pregame address to the team before its win over Utah on Jan. 8.

"Do whatever is necessary to win. Play as hard as you can, as fast as you can, as long as you can." » @CoachJim4UM

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Jan 8, 2016 at 6:45pm PST

Checking The Polls

Stanford finished No. 13 in the AP top 25 and is No. 16 in the USA TODAY Coaches Poll.

Stanford has appeared in the AP rankings 495 times out of 710 total polls since 1977 (69.7 percent), with an average positioning of 7.0. It’s been in the past 286 polls, the second-longest active streak behind Connecticut (431). Stanford has also been in 293 consecutive coaches polls.

The Cardinal’s 495 all-time appearances in the AP top 25 are fourth behind Tennessee (692), Georgia (522) and Texas (501).

Past and Future

On Jan. 25, former Stanford All-American sisters Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike were named as two of 25 finalists for the 2016 U.S. Olympic Women’s Basketball Team. The 25 finalists were chosen by the USA Basketball Women’s National Team Player Selection Committee, which will select the official 12-member U.S. Olympic Team later this year.

Go America. Go Chiney. Go Nneka. Go Stanford. @chiney321 and @nnemkadi named two of 25 finalists for the 2016 @usabasketball Olympic Team. 🌲🇺🇸 #GoStanford

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Jan 25, 2016 at 12:28pm PST

On Jan. 17, incoming freshmen DiJonai Carrington, Nadia Fingall and Anna Wilson were named to the West roster for the 15th annual McDonald’s All American Game on March 30 in Chicago.

Of the 24 girls selected to be McDonald’s All Americans, Stanford and Maryland have the most players suiting up next fall with three commits each.

They will be the 16th, 17th and 18th Cardinal signees featured in the nation’s premier high school basketball all-star event. Stanford most recently had a pair of McDonald’s All Americans in 2013 in current juniors Kailee Johnson and Erica McCall.

Teammates a little sooner than expected. @dijonai__, @nadia.fingall and @aplusw3 named to the @mcdaag West Team. #GoStanford

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Jan 20, 2016 at 9:00am PST

The three commits to earn roster spots ties a program record from 2007 when Ashley Cimino, Kayla Pedersen and Jeanette Pohlen were each named McDonald’s All Americans.

On March 15, the same trio was selected to the West Team for the Jordan Brand Classic on April 15 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. They will be the first to represent Stanford at the event, now in its second year on the women’s side.

So International

Stanford forward Erica McCall won her fourth gold medal representing the United States at the 2015 World University Games in Gwangju, South Korea in July.

A United States co-captain, McCall finished the event tied for eighth overall in scoring (15.2), was eighth in rebounds (8.5), tied for third in blocks (1.8) and led all players in South Korea in field goal percentage, converting 37 of her 62 attempts from the floor (.597). Team USA went a perfect 6-0 and defeated its opponents by an average of nearly 22 points per game.

Champ. 🏆🇺🇸 @birdstheword_24 @gostanford @usabasketball #GoStanford

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Jul 13, 2015 at 12:20pm PDT

In July, freshman Alanna Smith led Australia to a third-place finish and was named to the All-Star Five at the FIBA U19 Women’s World Championship in Chekhov, Russia.

The first international recruit in Stanford women’s basketball history, Smith tied for 12th in the entire tournament in points per game (12.6), tied for 15th in rebounds (7.0), tied for third in blocks (2.7), tied for 23rd in steals (1.3) and led Australia in each of those categories.

.@alannas96 » @gostanford freshman and one of the best at the @fiba U19 Women's World Championship. #GoStanford #FIBAU19 @basketballaus

A photo posted by Stanford Women's Basketball (@stanfordwbb) on Jul 27, 2015 at 10:22am PDT

Always Learning

Last year it was Mike D’Antoni, Joe Prunty, Jenny Boucek and others who helped Tara VanDerveer and her staff learn the intricacies of a more guard-oriented, fast-paced, pick-and-roll offense as Stanford moved away from the triangle for the first time since the 2002-03 season.

This year it has been a give-and-take with the NBA Champion Golden State Warriors. The Warriors practiced at Stanford on Oct. 5 before preseason game in San Jose and assistant coach Kate Paye attended another Golden State practice in the East Bay. When the Warriors were on the road in San Diego, VanDerveer’s sister and UCSD women’s coach, Heidi VanDerveer, attended a practice.

Warriors assistant coach and former Stanford star Jarron Collins » “It goes back to, men’s team or women’s team, basketball’s basketball and we’re all trying to improve. There’s this synergy of just talking shop. We’ve had a level of success, obviously, and you just want to borrow from those that have achieved a certain level. Our practices are very open to coaches who want to come and watch and observe. It’s pretty cool for us getting to interact with Coach VanDerveer.”

VanDerveer, who also asks former Stanford guard and now-Warriors sideline reporter Rosalyn Gold-Onwude of her observations on what Golden State is doing, says “it’s kind of a little clinic happening every two or three nights on television.”