Senior forward Becca Bruszewski is one of eight monogram winners and two starters who will be returning for Notre Dame from last year's NCAA Sweet 16 squad that posted a 29-6 record.

#3 Irish Back Home Saturday To Face Pittsburgh

Feb. 5, 2010

camera.gifW. Basketball vs. Pittsburgh – LIVE Saturday at 2 p.m. ET

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2009-10 ND Women’s Basketball: Game 22

#3/3 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (20-1 / 7-1 BIG EAST) vs. Pittsburgh Panthers (12-9 / 1-7 BIG EAST)

DATE: February 6, 2010
TIME: 2:00 p.m. ET
AT: Notre Dame, Ind. – Purcell Pavilion (9,149)
SERIES: ND leads 17-3
1ST MTG: ND 90-51 (2/7/96)
LAST MTG: PITT 82-70 (2/3/09)
WEBCAST: UND.com (live)
RADIO: Pulse FM (96.9/92.1) / UND.com (Bob Nagle, p-b-p)
LIVE STATS: UND.com
TWITTER: @ndwbbsid
TICKETS: (574) 631-7356

Storylines

  • Since the Irish clinched a share of the 2001 BIG EAST title with a win at Pittsburgh, eight of the past 10 games against the Panthers have been decided by 12 points or fewer.
  • Notre Dame is set to join Connecticut as the only BIG EAST programs to have three active players with 500 career rebounds (Irish senior center Erica Williamson is at 498).

No. 3 Irish Back Home Saturday To Face Pittsburgh
After a grueling two-game road swing that tested its mental and physical endurance, No. 3 Notre Dame opens the second half of the BIG EAST Conference season on Saturday with a 2 p.m. (ET) matinee against Pittsburgh at Purcell Pavilion. The game, which is approaching sellout status, will be webcast live and free of charge on the official Irish athletics web site, www.UND.com.

Notre Dame (20-1, 7-1) reached the 20-win mark for the 16th time in 17 years on Monday with a 75-63 victory at Rutgers. The Irish used a 10-0 run midway through the first half to take the lead for good, then fashioned a 12-3 game-clinching spurt in the final five minutes after the Scarlet Knights closed within two points.

Five Notre Dame players scored in double figures to spark the victory, led by freshman guard Skylar Diggins (14 points) and junior forward Becca Bruszewski (13 points).

Rankings

  • Notre Dame is No. 3 in the latest Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today polls.
  • Pittsburgh is not ranked.

Quick Hitters

  • The Irish have appeared in the top five of the AP poll all 13 weeks this season (through Feb. 1), marking the second-longest string of consecutive AP Top 5 rankings in program history behind only the final 17 weeks in 2000-01.
  • Notre Dame’s 15-game winning streak earlier this season tied for the third-longest in school history, and longest since a school-record 23-game run from Nov. 17, 2000-Feb. 14, 2001.
  • At 15-0, the Irish posted the second-best start in program history, topped only by a 23-0 debut in 2000-01 (the season in which Notre Dame won its first NCAA title).
  • Notre Dame has defeated five ranked opponents (Michigan State, San Diego State, Oklahoma, Vanderbilt, West Virginia) in six tries this season, including three wins away from home.
  • The Irish won the 2009 Paradise Jam Island Division title (their first regular-season tourney crown since the 2005 Duel in the Desert in Las Vegas), with freshman guard Skylar Diggins capturing MVP honors and senior guard/tri-captain Melissa Lechlitner making the all-tournament team.
  • Seven different players have led the Irish in scoring, rebounding and assists this season. In addition, 11 of the 13 players on the Notre Dame roster have scored in double figures at least once this year.
  • In Friday’s NCAA statistical rankings, Notre Dame appears among the top 30 in eight categories, including top-10 rankings in six areas — steals (3rd, 13.8 spg.), won-loss percentage (3rd at .952), turnover margin (4th at +7.52), assists (5th at 18.1 apg.), scoring offense (7th at 79.4 ppg.) and scoring margin (8th at +19.0 ppg.).
  • Conversely, Notre Dame has only one player ranking among the top 100 in any NCAA statistical category — freshman guard Skylar Diggins ranks 78th in the land in steals (2.4 per game).
  • Notre Dame is forcing 24.9 turnovers per game this season, including 27.6 at home. The Irish also have caused at least 20 takeaways in 18 of 21 games to date, with no fewer than 25 opponent turnovers in seven of 11 home games this year.
  • Notre Dame is averaging 8,505 fans per game this year, unofficially ranking fifth in the nation and showing a 18.7-percent increase from last year (7,168). The Irish also are the only school from the top 25 of the final 2008-09 NCAA attendance rankings to see an increase in attendance this year.

Other Notre Dame Notables

  • Notre Dame is among the nation’s winningest programs during the past 14 seasons (1996-97 to present), ranking seventh with 334 victories.
  • Notre Dame has ranked among the top 20 in the nation in attendance each of the past nine seasons. Last year, the program finished ninth in the country for the second year in a row with an average of 7,168 fans for its 13 home games (the second-highest single-season attendance average in school history). The Irish also have drawn 5,000-or-more fans to 135 of their last 137 home games, including eight Purcell Pavilion sellouts (most recently on Jan. 24, 2010 vs. West Virginia).
  • The Irish have become a regular fixture in the WNBA Draft in recent years, as seven Notre Dame players have been selected in the past nine seasons. Charel Allen was the most recent Irish player to be chosen, going to the Sacramento Monarchs in the third round (43rd overall pick) of the 2008 WNBA Draft. Ruth Riley (San Antonio) was active in the league during the ’09 season, helping the Silver Stars return to the playoffs for the third consecutive season. Three of Notre Dame’s eight WNBA alums have won a total of four league championships — Riley won a pair of crowns with the Detroit Shock (2003 Finals MVP, 2006), Coquese Washington toiled for the 2000 Houston Comets, while Jacqueline Batteast was Riley’s teammate on the ’06 title-winning squad in Detroit.
  • For the fourth year in a row, the Irish posted a perfect 100-percent Graduation Success Rate (GSR), according to figures released by the NCAA in October 2009. What’s more, since Muffet McGraw became the Irish head coach in 1987, every Notre Dame women’s basketball player that has completed her athletic and academic eligibility at the University has graduated (a 58-for-58 success rate), with all five members of this year’s senior class on target to graduate by May 2010 (Erica Williamson earned her undergraduate degree one semester early in January 2010).

A Quick Look At Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh has a strong nucleus in place for future success, with nine veterans back in the fold from last year’s club that made the program’s second consecutive trip to the NCAA Sweet 16.

The Panthers (12-9, 1-7 BIG EAST) have had to battle through injuries and other adversities this season, coming into Saturday’s game on the heels of an 87-80 overtime loss at home to Syracuse on Tuesday night. Junior guard Shayla Scott tallied a double-double (21 points, 10 rebounds), while classmate and backcourt partner Jania Sims chalked up 18 points and a game-high six assists for Pittsburgh.

Sims leads the Panthers in scoring (13.5 ppg.) and assists (4.1 apg.) this season, while junior guard Taneisha Harrison is second in both categories (12.7 ppg., 3.5 apg.), as well as the team leader in steals (1.1 spg.). Junior forward Chelsea Cole also has been a force on the glass, ranking among the BIG EAST leaders at 10.6 rebounds per game, while sophomore center Pepper Wilson is among the conference’s best with a .626 field goal percentage — both players average around 1.5 blocks per game, putting them in the top 10 in the BIG EAST as well.

Head coach Agnus Berenato is in her seventh season at Pittsburgh with a 126-83 (.603) record. She has a 26-year career record of 409-347 (.541) that includes a 3-5 mark against Notre Dame.

The Notre Dame-Pittsburgh Series
Notre Dame and Pittsburgh will meet for the 21st time on Saturday, with the Irish holding a 17-3 lead in the series with the Panthers, including an 8-0 record at Purcell Pavilion. Notre Dame won the first 16 series with Pittsburgh, but the Panthers have had the upper hand of late, winning three of the past four meetings (two in the Steel City and one in the 2008 BIG EAST Championship quarterfinals at Hartford, Conn.).

The Last Time Notre Dame and Pittsburgh Met
Shavonte Zellous scored 29 points and No. 22/24 Pittsburgh beat No. 19/16 Notre Dame 82-70 on Feb. 3, 2009, at the Petersen Events Center in Pittsburgh.

Xenia Stewart and Taneisha Harrison scored 17 points and Shayla Scott added 11 points and a career-high 18 rebounds for the Panthers (17-4, 7-2 BIG EAST).

Pepper Wilson had 12 rebounds for Pittsburgh. Becca Bruszewski and Erica Solomon scored 14 points for Notre Dame (16-5, 5-4), which lost for the fourth time in six games.

Notre Dame, which never led, closed to 49-48 on Erica Williamson’s basket five minutes into the second half. Zellous then scored eight points during a 14-6 Pitt run which put the Panthers ahead 63-54. The Irish got no closer than seven points the rest of the way.

The Last Time Notre Dame and Pittsburgh Met At Purcell Pavilion
Tulyah Gaines scored 13 points and No. 16/17 Notre Dame held 15th-ranked Pittsburgh to 31 percent shooting in an 81-66 victory on Feb. 10, 2008, at Purcell Pavilion.

Melissa Lechlitner added 12 points for the Fighting Irish, who had a 13-point advantage on free-throw points despite taking just five more shots. The Panthers were just 14-of-27 from the free throw line.

The Irish improved to 7-0 in the 2007-08 season when they had five players in double figures. They managed that despite their two leading scorers, Charel Allen and Ashley Barlow, being held to six points each because of foul trouble.

Gaines made 9-of-10 free throws, all in the final 1:40, to become the sixth different leading scorer for Notre Dame in the ’07-08 season. Lindsay Schrader had 12 points and added a team-high eight rebounds for the Irish, while Devereaux Peters was leading the Irish with 11 points when she left the game with 13:44 left with an injured left knee.

Becca Bruszewski added 10 points for the Irish.

Marcedes Walker, who missed Pitt’s previous game with an ankle injury, had 18 points and 14 rebounds. Shavonte Zellous had 16 points (on 5-of-22 shooting) and grabbed nine rebounds, and Xenia Stewart added 16 points.

Walker twice had chances to give Pitt the lead early in the second half, but both times she failed to convert a free throw for three-point plays. The Irish opened a 38-33 lead when Peters made a free throw for a three-point play. She extended the lead to 45-35 moments later when she converted on another three-point play.

Other Notre Dame-Pittsburgh Series Tidbits

  • Ten of the first 11 series games were decided by double digits, before five of the next six games in the series featured single-digit victory margins by an average spread of 7.2 points per game. However, the past three contests wound up being double-figure wins, with the Irish taking the 2007-08 regular-season matchup, 81-66, and Pittsburgh returning the favor in that year’s BIG EAST Championship quarterfinals by a 64-53 count, before the Panthers claimed last year’s contest, 82-70 in Pittsburgh.
  • Notre Dame has scored 65 or more points in all but two of its 20 meetings with Pitt, with both exceptions resulting in Panther victories (71-62 in 2007 and 64-53 at last year’s BIG EAST Championship). Pitt has reached that standard nine times against the Irish, including seven of the past nine games.
  • The two head coaches in Saturday afternoon’s game have faced one another on the sidelines 13 times during the past three decades. Irish head coach Muffet McGraw is 10-3 in these head-to-head contests with Pitt head coach Agnus Berenato, with the first five games coming when McGraw was at Lehigh and Berenato at Rider in the 1980s.
  • Notre Dame junior guard Brittany Mallory and Pitt junior guard Taneisha Harrison were teammaes on the Fairfax (Va.) Stars AAU 16-and-under squad in 2006. Mallory’s father, Bob, was an assistant on that team.
  • Notre Dame freshman guard Skylar Diggins and Pittsburgh sophomore center Pepper Wilson both competed at the 2009 USA Basketball U19 World Championship Team Trials in Colorado Springs last summer. Diggins made the squad (and was a co-captain in leading Team USA to the gold medal), while Wilson was a finalist, but withdrew from consideration because of a knee injury.
  • Notre Dame freshman guard Kaila Turner and Pittsburgh freshman guard Ashlee Anderson were key players in one of the more dramatic playoff games in Illinois girls’ high school basketball history, and it came just last year in the Class 4A St. Xavier Supersectional (one step from a trip to the state semifinals). On March 2, 2009, Turner scored a team-high 24 points and rallied her Marian Catholic squad from an early seven-point deficit, helping send the game to double overtime before Anderson’s Whitney Young team prevailed, 78-76 on a miraculous half-court shot at the buzzer. Anderson scored 21 points in the game.
  • Fifth-year Notre Dame coordinator of basketball operations Stephanie Menio graduated from Pittsburgh in 2004 with a degree in business administration. Menio spent two years as a marketing assistant with the Panthers’ women’s basketball program, and in conjunction with the debut of the Petersen Events Center, she aided in the program’s 114-percent increase in attendance from 2002-04, as well as the first sellout in program history (12,632 vs. Connecticut on Jan. 25, 2003).
  • Fifth-year Notre Dame assistant coach Angie (Potthoff) Barber spent three seasons (2002-05) coaching the girls’ basketball team at Beaver (Pa.) Area High School, located 45 minutes northwest of Pittsburgh; she was an assistant for two seasons before taking over as head coach during her final year.
  • Barber also was a three-year college assistant (1999-2002), spending her first year as a graduate aide at Indiana (Pa.), located 70 miles east of Pittsburgh, then two more seasons as a full assistant at Robert Morris in Moon Township, Pa. (located near Pittsburgh International Airport).

Lechlitner Named Second-Team Academic All-District
Senior guard/tri-captain Melissa Lechlitner has been named to the 2010 ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District V Second Team, it was announced Thursday by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).

It’s the first time Lechlitner has earned the award, and she is the first Fighting Irish player to garner academic all-district status since 2006, when former Notre Dame point guard Megan Duffy received her second consecutive district award and parlayed that into first-team Academic All-America honors. What’s more, Lechlitner becomes the eighth Fighting Irish women’s basketball player in the past 12 seasons to be an academic all-district selection.

Lechlitner currently maintains a 3.377 cumulative grade-point average (GPA) in the College of Arts and Letters, where is pursuing her bachelor’s degree in psychology. She earned dean’s list honors in the spring of 2007 with a 3.75 semester GPA, and is coming off a stellar fall 2009 term that saw her post a 3.583 GPA. In addition, she is a three-time BIG EAST Conference All-Academic Team selection and is a prime candidate to make that squad once again this year.

On the court, Lechlitner has started all 21 games this season, ranking among the BIG EAST leaders in assists (13th – 3.3 apg.) and assist/turnover ratio (9th – 1.33), while also averaging 8.0 points per game and leading the team in both three-point percentage (.455) and free throw percentage (.818), although she has not made enough shots in either category to qualify for a conference ranking (1.0 three-pointers/game and 2.0 free throws/game).

In league play, she ranks 12th in the BIG EAST in assists (3.3 apg.) and fifth in assist/turnover ratio (1.30), along with 8.9 points per game, a .438 three-point percentage and a .923 free throw percentage. Furthermore, she was named to the BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll on Jan. 11 after a week that was highlighted by a career-high 22 points in a nationally-televised win at Purdue, one of eight double-digit scoring games this season for the Fighting Irish veteran.

For her career, Lechlitner ranks ninth in school history with 345 assists, and she is closing in on the program’s all-time Top 10 list in total games played (117; 10th place is 127) and minutes played (3,127; she’s one of three current players with more than 3,000 minutes, while 10th place entering this season was 3,279). A two-year team captain, she has helped lead Notre Dame to a 42-10 (.808) record since taking over as the starting point guard prior to last season.

Twenty Questions
Notre Dame reached the 20-win mark for the 16th time in the past 17 seasons with its 75-63 victory at Rutgers on Feb. 1. The Irish now have registered 20-or-more wins 20 times in the 23-year Muffet McGraw era and 24 times in the program’s 33-year history.

Notre Dame also hit the 20-win plateau in its 21st game this season, reaching that milestone faster than all but one Irish team — the 2000-01 squad that opened 23-0 and earned its 20th victory at Providence on Jan. 31, 2001 (one calendar day earlier than this year’s club).

Peaking When It Counts
When the regular season enters its stretch run in the month of February, Notre Dame historically seems to raise its level of play. Since joining the BIG EAST Conference in 1995-96, the Irish are 82-23 (.781) in February games, including a 46-5 (.902) mark at home.

In the 23-year Muffet McGraw era (1987-present), the Irish are 130-38 (.774) in the month of February, including a 68-11 (.861) home record. In that time, Notre Dame has not had a losing February, and only once did the Irish end the month at .500 (4-4 in 1988-89, McGraw’s second season in South Bend).

Tough Enough
Notre Dame already has faced a rigorous schedule through the first two months of the 2009-10 season, taking on six ranked opponents in its first 21 games. The Irish also have risen to that challenge quite well, winning five of those six contests (Michigan State, San Diego State, Oklahoma, Vanderbilt and West Virginia), including three victories away from home (MSU, SDSU and OU).

Four of Notre Dame’s five wins over ranked opponents came during the non-conference portion of the schedule, marking the second consecutive year in which the Irish defeated four Top 25 non-conference foes.

Comeback Kids
Notre Dame has rallied from a double-digit deficit to win three times this season. The Irish erased a 10-point first-half margin at Purdue on Jan. 4, followed by a 12-point first-half spread at Louisville on Jan. 19, and most recently, they wiped out a 13-point second-half gap at home against West Virginia on Jan. 24.

The three double-digit comeback victories are the most for Notre Dame in a single season since 2002-03, when it came back to win at West Virginia (trailed by 14), at Providence (trailed by 10) and home vs. Seton Hall (trailed twice by 12).

Spread The Wealth
Notre Dame has seen seven different players led the team in scoring, rebounding and assists this season.

In addition, 11 of the 13 players on the Irish roster have scored in double figures at least once this season, including sophomore guard Fraderica Miller, and freshman guards Skylar Diggins and Kaila Turner, who each topped the 10-point mark for the first time in their careers.

Stat Sheet Stuffers
Another sign of Notre Dame’s versatility is seen in the number of “5-5-5” games (5 or more in points, rebounds, assists, blocks and/or steals) posted by its players this year.

Junior guard Brittany Mallory (Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Oklahoma and Vanderbilt) and freshman guard Skylar Diggins (UAPB, Charlotte and Syracuse) have a team-high three 5-5-5 games, while senior guard Ashley Barlow (Iona and South Florida) has two 5-5-5 outings, and junior forward Becca Bruszewski (Louisville) and sophomore guard Natalie Novosel (Eastern Michigan) each have one.

Taking What We Can Get
Fueled by a renewed attention to defense this offseason, Notre Dame has been in the taking mood this year, forcing its opponents into at least 20 turnovers in 18 of 21 games thus far, with Irish foes averaging 24.9 giveaways per game.

In a two-game stretch bookending the Christmas holiday, Notre Dame harassed its opponents into a combined 79 turnovers (43 by Charlotte on Dec. 20 and 36 at UCF on Dec. 29).

Charlotte’s 43 turnovers tied for the second-most opponent giveaways in a game in school history and the most since Dec. 8, 1981, when the Irish forced sister school Saint Mary’s (Ind.) into 43 turnovers during the program’s second season at the Division I level. The Notre Dame record for opponent turnovers in a game is 48 by Southern Illinois-Edwardsville on Jan. 11, 1980, at DeKalb, Ill.

The Irish also are making even the most disciplined teams fall victim to their aggressive defensive style. Villanova came into its Jan. 9 game with Notre Dame ranked second in the nation with just 12.6 turnovers per game, but the Irish dogged the Wildcats into 34 turnovers (17 in each half).

Notre Dame has been especially hard on opponents in 11 home games this season, forcing 27.6 turnovers per game (at least 25 in seven Purcell Pavilion contests) while holding visitors to 54.8 points a night.

The Five-Finger Discount
According to Friday’s NCAA statistical report, Notre Dame ranks third in the nation in steals (13.8 spg.). The Irish have posted double-digit steal totals in 15 of their 21 games this season, including five 20-steal efforts.

Individually, Notre Dame has four players with at least 35 steals this year, led by freshman guard Skylar Diggins, who has 51 thefts. She is the seventh Irish rookie to record at least 50 steals in her freshman season, and the first to do so since 2006-07, when current Notre Dame senior guard/co-captain Ashley Barlow registered 63 steals.

Glass Houses
Notre Dame, Connecticut and Providence are the only three BIG EAST teams with at least two current players having 500+ career rebounds. Irish fifth-year senior guard/tri-captain Lindsay Schrader is eighth all-time at Notre Dame with 766 boards, while senior guard tri-captain Ashley Barlow has 584 caroms.

The Irish will soon join UConn and have a third player in this group, as senior center Erica Williamson has 498 career rebounds.

Schrader Added To State Farm Wade Trophy Watch List
Fifth-year senior guard/tri-captain Lindsay Schrader was one of seven players added to the 2009-10 State Farm Wade Trophy Watch List, it was announced Jan. 28 by the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA). Schrader and her fellow mid-season additions earned their spots on this year’s Wade Watch List by virtue of their on-court performances to date during the `09-10 campaign, and they expand the player pool for this season’s national player-of-the-year award to 32, as selected by the State Farm Wade Trophy Committee.

Schrader, a preseason all-BIG EAST Conference selection and three-time BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll choice this year, becomes the fifth Notre Dame player named to the Wade Watch List in the past seven seasons, and the first since Charel Allen in 2007-08.

In addition, Schrader is the third Notre Dame player this season to earn a place on a national player-of-the-year award watch list. Senior guard/tri-captain Ashley Barlow was both a preseason Naismith Trophy candidate and a midseason John R. Wooden Award Top 20 choice, while freshman guard Skylar Diggins joined Barlow on this year’s preseason Naismith Trophy candidate slate.

Getting The Jump
At 15-0, Notre Dame got off to the second-best start in the program’s 33-year history. The only time the Irish opened with a better record that this season was in 2000-01, when they reeled off a school-record 23 consecutive wins en route to a 34-2 final record and the program’s first national championship.

Streak Stats
Notre Dame’s season-opening 15-game winning streak tied for the third-longest success string in program history (at any time), and it was the longest since the school-record 23-game run to begin the 2000-01 season.

Road Warriors
Notre Dame is 26-10 (.722) in true road games since the start of the 2007-08 season, including a 6-1 record this year.

In addition, seven of the past eight road losses for the Irish have been decided by an average of 8.4 points per game (all by 12 points or fewer), including all five road setbacks last season (average margin of 8.6 ppg.).

Notre Dame posted 10 wins on the road in each of the past two years, marking just the second time in school history the Irish have logged double-digit win totals away from home in consecutive seasons (11 wins in 1989-90; 10 wins in 1990-91).

Polling Station
Notre Dame is ranked third in this week’s Associated Press poll, appearing in the top five for the 13th consecutive week — it’s the second-longest run in the AP Top 5 in program history, and the longest for the Irish since the 2000-01 season, when Notre Dame was a top-five fixture for the final 17 weeks.

In addition to their current poll appearance run of 51 consecutive weeks (the second-longest in school history behind a 56-week stretch from 1998-2002), the Irish have spent a total of seven weeks this year at a season-high No. 3 ranking. That is Notre Dame’s highest poll position since the week of Nov. 29, 2004, when the Irish also were ranked third.

What’s more, Notre Dame’s No. 4 preseason ranking on Oct. 30 was its the highest ever, topping its No. 6 debut in the 2000-01 poll.

With this week’s poll position, the Irish now have appeared in the top 10 of the AP poll during 10 of the past 14 seasons (1996-97 through 2009-10).

Notre Dame has been ranked in the AP poll for 191 weeks during the program’s 33-year history, with every one of those appearances coming in the Muffet McGraw era (since 1987-88). McGraw ranks 13th among all active NCAA Division I head coaches for weeks in the AP poll, and also is 22nd all-time in that category.

In addition, the Irish checked in at No. 3 in this week’s ESPN/USA Today/WBCA coaches’ poll. It’s the sixth time in seven weeks Notre Dame has reached its season high in the ESPN/USA Today poll, while also being the highest it has been ranked in the coaches’ survey since the 2004-05 season, when the Irish were third for two separate weeks (Nov. 30 and Jan. 5) during the year. It also is the first time they were in the top three in consecutive weeks since the final 14 weeks of the 2000-01 season (capped by a No. 1 ranking in the final poll after winning the national championship).

This marks the second consecutive season Notre Dame has been ranked in the top 10 of the ESPN/USA Today/WBCA poll, as well as eight of the past 12 campaigns (1998-99 to present).

Notre Dame was ranked in the coaches’ survey for 38 consecutive weeks before falling just outside the Top 25 in the final poll of last season. With their No. 3 ranking this week, the Irish have appeared in the coaches’ poll for 183 weeks during their history (all coming during McGraw’s tenure).

More Polling Data
Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw is one of 27 people in NCAA Division I women’s basketball history who have both played for and coached a team that has appeared in the Associated Press Top 25 poll.

Besides her 191 AP poll appearances while coaching at Notre Dame, McGraw was the starting point guard at Saint Joseph’s (Pa.) as a senior in 1977, helping the Hawks rise to No. 3 in the nation.

Of the 27 people on this list, 15 currently are NCAA Division I head coaches (see accompanying chart), including former Irish point guard and assistant coach Coquese Washington (’92), who helped Notre Dame to its first-ever AP poll ranking in 1990-91, and is in her third season as head coach at Penn State, guiding the Lady Lions into the Jan. 25 AP poll at No. 23.

Game #21 Recap: Rutgers
Notre Dame looked tired in its fourth game in eight days. The Irish were clinging to a two-point lead against hard-charging Rutgers, and their coach still wasn’t worried.

Head coach Muffet McGraw’s team just keeps finding ways to win.

Skylar Diggins scored 14 points and keyed a late run to help the third-ranked Irish beat Rutgers 75-63 on Monday night at the Louis Brown Athletic Center in Piscataway, N.J.

“It’s the veterans. At the end of the game I’m so confident in this team,” McGraw said. “In timeouts I don’t have anything to say. They know what they have to do and go out and do it.”

The Irish are 5-0 since their loss to top-ranked UConn on Jan. 16, but haven’t played their best basketball. Notre Dame (20-1, 7-1 BIG EAST) trailed by double digits against Louisville and West Virginia, and blew a 16-point lead against Syracuse before rallying for a late victory.

“Champions will find a way to win,” said Melissa Lechlitner, who finished with 12 points against the Scarlet Knights. “That’s what made us so successful so far into the season, digging down and finding a way to get a win.”

Becca Bruszewski added 13 to help Notre Dame beat Rutgers for the first time since 2005.

Khadijah Rushdan scored 16 points and Myia McCurdy matched her career high with 14 — all in the second half — for Rutgers (12-10, 4-4), which has lost three straight games.

Notre Dame was leading 44-36 midway through the second half when Rutgers started to rally behind McCurdy and Chelsey Lee. The two combined for 13 straight points for the Scarlet Knights, and Lee’s two free throws with 5:12 left cut the deficit to 52-50.

The Scarlet Knights trailed 55-52 after Rushdan’s putback with 4:05 to go, but Diggins’ layup kicked off a 9-1 run for Notre Dame. Leading 57-53, the Irish called a timeout and Ashley Barlow hit a three-pointer to extend the advantage to seven and put the game away.

“That was a huge shot,” McGraw said. “I thought her three was really big, so important as it stretched the lead a little bit.”

Notre Dame trailed 9-5 before going on a 16-4 run over the next 6 minutes. Lechlitner started the spurt with a layup and Diggins added consecutive baskets. The Irish scored 10 straight before Rashidat Junaid’s layup ended a five-minute scoring drought for the Scarlet Knights and made it 15-11. The Irish then scored six of the next eight points, capped by Natalie Novosel’s layup.

The Irish extended the advantage to 12 on Barlow’s three-pointer before Rutgers started pressing and trimmed the deficit to 31-23 at the half.

Rutgers is in the midst of a brutal stretch in the schedule. The Scarlet Knights lost to Connecticut, then fell to then-No. 17 Georgetown two days before Monday’s game against the Irish.

“The type of schedule we play you don’t have easy games,” Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer said. “Everyone you play, they’re legitimate.”

Rutgers’ leading scorer Brittany Ray has really struggled against the tough competition. She was 1 for 21, including going 0 for 10 from behind the arc, against UConn and Georgetown. Ray hit just 2 of 10 shots against the Irish, making her first three-pointer. She missed her next seven shots before hitting a jumper in the final minute.

Noting The Rutgers Game

  • Notre Dame snaps a five-game series losing streak vs. Rutgers, collecting its first win over the Scarlet Knights since Jan. 23, 2005 (a 63-47 triumph at Purcell Pavilion).
  • The Fighting Irish also break a four-game skid at the Louis Brown Athletic Center, earning their first victory over Rutgers in Piscataway since Feb. 16, 2002 (a 57-52 win).
  • The 12-point margin of victory is Notre Dame’s largest in its four series wins at Rutgers, with the other three victories all coming by single digits.
  • Notre Dame’s 75 points are the most it has scored against the Scarlet Knights since Feb. 19, 2000, when it logged a 78-74 overtime win in Piscataway (a game best remembered for then-freshman guard Alicia Ratay’s 7-for-7 effort from the three-point line, including two triples in the final 16 seconds of regulation that forced the OT period).
  • This marks the fourth time this season Notre Dame has played twice in a three-day span, with the Fighting Irish improving to 4-0 on the back half of these tight turnarounds (and 8-1 in such contests during the past two seasons).
  • The Fighting Irish have five double-figure scorers for the fourth time this season, and second in three games.
  • Fifth-year senior guard/tri-captain Lindsay Schrader moves into 15th place on the Notre Dame career scoring list with 1,293 points, passing Megan Duffy (1,290 points from 2002-06).
  • Junior forward Devereaux Peters tallies her second double-figure scoring game of the year, adding to her 12-point effort at top-ranked Connecticut on Jan. 16.
  • Junior forward Becca Bruszewski posts her eight double-digit scoring night of the season, and second in three games.
  • Freshman guard Skylar Diggins notches a game-high four steals, giving her a team-high 51 thefts for the season and making her the seventh Notre Dame freshman in history to record 50 steals in her rookie campaign (current Fighting Irish senior guard/tri-captain Ashley Barlow was the most recent player to accomplish that feat with 63 steals in 2006-07).

McGraw Earns 600th Career Win
Irish head coach Muffet McGraw reached her second important career milestone of the season on Jan. 19, as she became the 19th Division I coach to record 600 career wins when the Irish posted a 78-60 victory at Louisville.

McGraw earned the milestone win in her 839th career game (she now has a 28-year mark of 604-239, .716), tying her with former Saint Peter’s coach Mike Granelli as the 10th-fastest to the 600-win plateau in Division I history.

In honor of the historic 600th victory, Notre Dame fans at Purcell Pavilion held up signs with the number “600” on them when McGraw and her staff took the floor prior to the Jan. 24 win over No. 16/11 West Virginia. The visibly-moved Irish coach later called the scene “one of the top five moments” of her Notre Dame career.

McGraw Joins Elite Notre Dame Club
With a 84-79 win over No. 23/24 San Diego State on Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 26) at the Paradise Jam in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Irish head coach Muffet McGraw reached a personal milestone, becoming the fourth coach in school history (in any sport) to register 500 victories while coaching under the Golden Dome. McGraw now has a record of 516-198 (.723) in 23 seasons at Notre Dame (1987-88 to present) and a 604-239 (.716) record in 28 seasons overall — including a five-year stint at Lehigh from 1982-87.

Fencing’s Michael DeCicco (680-45 from 1962-86) and Yves Auriol (525-33 from 1986-2002), and baseball’s Jake Kline (558-449-5 from 1934-75) are the only other members of the “Fighting Irish Five Hundred Club,” with one able to connect 75 years of Notre Dame athletics history and success via just four degrees of separation (Kline to DeCicco to Auriol to McGraw).

McGraw reached two other mileposts on Dec. 2 vs. Eastern Michigan, as she coached her 700th game at Notre Dame, as well as her 300th at Purcell Pavilion.

As it turned out, that EMU game also saw the school honor McGraw with an on-court post-game celebration for her 500th win, capped by a visit from her 19-year-old son, Murphy, who secretly drove four hours from his college campus at Indiana University in Bloomington to surprise his mother with a bouquet of flowers and the game ball from her milestone win.

Keeping It Close To Home
Although Notre Dame has traditionally had a national reputation in recruiting circles, in recent seasons, the Irish have found their strongest talent comes from right in their own backyard. In fact, of the 13 players on this year’s Notre Dame roster, four are from Indiana, while five others are from states that border Indiana (including sophomore forward Erica Solomon, who lived in Oak Park, Mich., and graduated from Detroit Country Day School in 2008 before her family moved back to her birthplace of Charleston, W.Va., this past summer).

What’s more, of the five current Notre Dame starters, four are from the state of Indiana — senior guard Ashley Barlow (Indianapolis), junior forward Becca Bruszewski (Valparaiso) and the all-South Bend backcourt of senior guard Melissa Lechlitner and freshman guard Skylar Diggins — while the fifth starter (fifth-year senior guard Lindsay Schrader) is from Bartlett, Ill., located right outside Chicago.

As if that weren’t enough, the quartet of Barlow, Lechlitner, Bruszewski and Schrader have been mainstays in the Irish lineup for the past two seasons and have a combined total of 300 career starts between them.

Schrader reached a personal milestone on Dec. 12 against Valparaiso, becoming the 12th player in school history with 100 starting assignments in her career. Schrader now stands eighth in school history with 112 career starts, including a current streak of 70 in a row (putting her four away from moving into the Notre Dame top five in that category).

Experience Matters
For the first time in Notre Dame women’s basketball history, four players have hit the 100 games played mark in the same season. Senior guards/tri-captains Ashley Barlow, Melissa Lechlitner and Lindsay Schrader, along with senior center Erica Williamson, all reached the century mark during the Thanksgiving weekend at the Paradise Jam (Lechlitner and Williamson on Nov. 26 vs. San Diego State, Barlow and Schrader on Nov. 27 vs. South Carolina).

Current Irish assistant coach Niele Ivey holds the school record with 132 games played from 1996-2001, while the current Irish senior quartet is closing in on 10th place (127) in that category (Lechlitner at 117, the other three at 116).

Upwardly Mobile
Two of Notre Dame’s senior guards and tri-captains — Ashley Barlow and Lindsay Schrader — are already members of the program’s 1,000-Point Club, and will spend this season trying to work their way up the Irish all-time scoring ladder.

Barlow currently ranks 13th in school history with 1,356 career points, while Schrader is 15th with 1,293 points. They could be joined by their fellow senior guard and tri-captain, Melissa Lechlitner, who has 878 points to date.

Only one other time in program history has Notre Dame fielded three 1,000-point scorers on its roster at the same time — and it literally happened for less than one game. Ruth Riley, Niele Ivey and Kelley Siemon all reached the millennium mark and played on the 2000-01 Irish national championship squad, with Siemon reaching the milestone after scoring 10 points in her final collegiate contest — Notre Dame’s 68-66 title-game victory over Purdue in St. Louis.

Tournament Tested
Notre Dame has felt right at home in tournament situations during the past 14 years. Starting with the 1996-97 season, the Irish have won 21 of their last 24 regular-season tournament games (multi-game events only), most recently capping a three-game run to the 2009 Paradise Jam Island Division championship over the Thanksgiving weekend in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The only Notre Dame losses during this current stretch were a pair of defeats to third-ranked teams in the Preseason WNIT semifinals (72-59 vs. Tennessee at Ruston, La., in 1996; 75-59 at Maryland in 2007) and a 67-63 overtime setback at No. 20 Colorado on Nov. 15, 2003 in the finals of the WBCA Classic — a game that saw the Buffaloes sink a desperation 30-footer at the end of regulation to force the extra session.

High Value Freshman
Freshman guard Skylar Diggins was named the most valuable player in the Island Division of the 2009 Paradise Jam after averaging 16.3 points, 4.7 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game with a .538 field goal percentage (21-of-39) and a .545 three-point ratio (6-of-11) at the tournament.

Diggins, who also earned a spot on the BIG EAST Conference Weekly Honor Roll for her efforts, was the first Notre Dame rookie in a decade to collect all-tournament team honors in a regular-season event. Alicia Ratay was the last to do so, garnering a place on the 1999 Wachovia Women’s Basketball Invitational all-tournament team after helping Notre Dame to wins over No. 9/12 North Carolina (99-86) and Liberty (85-68) in Richmond, Va.

Pomp And Circumstance
On Jan. 3, senior center Erica Williamson received her bachelor’s degree in film, television & theater from Notre Dame’s College of Arts and Letters. Williamson, who also serves as the president of the school’s Student-Athlete Advisory Council (SAAC), graduated a full semester early and has begun graduate studies this spring.

With Williamson collecting her diploma, all 58 Notre Dame women’s basketball student-athletes who have completed their athletic and academic eligibility under head coach Muffet McGraw (1987-present) have earned their degrees.

Eight Is Enough (For Now)
Notre Dame had a school-record eight players score in double figures in its 102-57 win over Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Nov. 15 at Purcell Pavilion. That eclipsed the old standard of seven double-digit scorers that was first set on Feb. 6, 1997 vs. Syracuse (90-73 win at the Joyce Center) and matched on Jan. 19, 2008, in a 104-86 win at Georgetown.

Century City
With its 102-57 season-opening win over Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Nov. 15 at Purcell Pavilion, Notre Dame topped the 100-point mark for the 13th time in school history, and the third time in less than two years (104-86 at Georgetown on Jan. 19, 2008; 102-54 at Boston College on Nov. 23, 2008).

Notre Dame also hit the century mark at home for the first time since Nov. 26, 2002, when the Irish toppled Cleveland State, 107-65 in the 2002-03 season opener.

First Impressions
Freshman guard Skylar Diggins had 14 points in the Nov. 15 season opener vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, the fifth-most by an Irish rookie in her debut game during the 23-year Muffet McGraw era (1987-88 to present), and the most since Courtney LaVere began her career with 18 points in a 2002 win over Cleveland State.

Dishing Thirty-One Flavors
Notre Dame’s 31 assists against Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Nov. 15 were the most for the Irish in a single game since Nov. 20, 2000, when they also recorded 31 assists in a 95-65 win over Arizona at the Joyce Center.

Leading the way for Notre Dame on that night was current Irish assistant coach Niele Ivey, who had a double-double with 14 points and 11 assists.

Half And Half
During the past decade, Notre Dame has been nearly unbeatable when it has the lead at halftime. The Irish are 180-17 (.914) since the start of the 2000-01 campaign when they go into the dressing room with the lead, including wins in 108 of their last 119 such contests.

Notre Dame has led at the break in 17 games this season and has gone on to earn victories each time.

The Best Offense Is A Good Defense…
During the past 15 seasons, Notre Dame has discovered that a solid defensive effort can almost certainly guarantee a victory. In fact, since the beginning of the 1995-96 season (Notre Dame’s first in the BIG EAST Conference), the Irish have an amazing 204-14 (.936) record when they hold their opponents below 60 points in a game.

Notre Dame has added nine more wins to the ledger this season with victories over Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Iona, South Carolina, Eastern Michigan, Valparaiso, Charlotte, UCF, Villanova and Providence.

…But Sometimes You Have To Score If You Want To Win
Not resting solely on its defensive laurels, Notre Dame also seemingly has found the magic mark when it comes to outscoring its opponents. During the past 15 seasons (since 1995-96), the Irish are 134-4 (.971) when they score at least 80 points in a game. The only blemishes on that record are a pair of overtime losses to Texas A&M (88-84) and Michigan State (87-83) in 1995, a 106-81 loss to Connecticut in 1998, and an 81-80 loss to DePaul in 2008.

Notre Dame already has added 11 more wins to this ongoing record with its conquests of Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Iona, No. 23/24 San Diego State, No. 20/17 Oklahoma, IPFW, Valparaiso, Charlotte, Villanova, South Florida and Providence.

Now That’s A Home Court Advantage
One of the hallmarks of Notre Dame’s success has been its stellar play at home. In fact, the Irish have been virtually untouchable at home in recent years, winning 184 of their last 208 games (.885) at the 9,149-seat Purcell Pavilion, including winning streaks of 51 and 25 games in that span. Notre Dame also has a 103-17 (.858) record in BIG EAST Conference play at the former Joyce Center, sporting a 31-game league winning streak at home before it ended with a 48-45 loss to Villanova in the ’02 home finale.

The Irish have been particularly strong when it comes to non-conference games at home, winning 83 of their last 90 non-BIG EAST contests (.922) at Purcell Pavilion, dating back to the 1994-95 season. Five of the seven losses in that span came at the hands of Big Ten Conference opponents (four by 12 points or less) — Wisconsin in 1996 (81-69), Purdue in 2003 (71-54), Michigan State in 2004 (82-73 OT), Indiana in 2006 (54-51) and Minnesota in 2009 (79-71) — with the other two defeats coming to Tennessee in 2005 (62-51) and 2008 (87-63). The Purdue loss also snapped a 33-game non-conference home winning streak which began after the UW setback.

Since its inaugural season in 1977-78, Notre Dame has played all of its games at the former Joyce Center, posting a 334-85 (.797) record at the venerable facility. Three times (1999-2000, 2000-01 and 2003-04), the Irish went a perfect 15-0 at home, setting a school record for home wins in a season.

It’s Fan-Demonium At Notre Dame
If the preseason was any indication, Notre Dame women’s basketball is easily the hottest ticket in South Bend. For the first time in school history, all Irish women’s basketball season ticket packages (close to 7,500) have been sold, including more than 1,000 packages to first-time season ticket purchasers when they went on sale Aug. 14. Furthermore, fans were waiting in line at the Purcell Pavilion ticket office as early as 4:30 that morning, more than four hours before the ticket windows opened. Those early birds were rewarded with a visit from Irish head coach Muffet McGraw, who delivered coffee and bagels, courtesy of McGraw and athletics director Jack Swarbrick.

While it’s likely that some tickets will be made available for individual games during the weeks and days prior to the contests, there’s a very real possibility that Notre Dame could approach a sell out for every one of its regular-season home games at the newly-refurbished 9,149-seat Purcell Pavilion. In fact, the crowd of 9,080 for the Nov. 15 win over Arkansas-Pine Bluff was the largest season-opening audience in program history, more than 1,100 higher than the old mark set in 2001-02 (7,960 vs. Valparaiso).

Through 11 home games this season, Notre Dame is averaging 8,505 fans per game, putting the Irish nearly 700 fans ahead of their school-record attendance average of 7,825 fans per game, also set in 2001-02.

Notre Dame has posted eight sellouts in program history, the most recent coming on Jan. 24, when the Irish drew 9,149 fans to Purcell Pavilion for their win over No. 16/11 West Virginia — it was the second women’s basketball sellout since the renovated arena opened this fall (the other capacity crowd coming on New Year’s Eve for a win over No. 18/16 Vanderbilt).

Irish On Your Radio Dial
Beginning with the 2008-09 athletics year, the Notre Dame athletics department announced it had partnered with the LeSEA Broadcasting Network, making Pulse FM (96.9/92.1) the new radio home of Notre Dame women’s basketball in the South Bend market.

LeSEA originates all Notre Dame women’s basketball games, with those events carried on Pulse FM (96.9/92.1), marking a return to the FM side of the dial for the first time since the 1998-99 season. Combined, these two stations blanket the nation’s No. 89 media market (South Bend-Elkhart), covering a 21-county area in northern Indiana and southwest Michigan that contains more than 1.35 million listeners (better than 800,000 in the greater South Bend area alone). All told, Notre Dame’s women’s basketball network stretches from Kalamazoo, Mich., to the north, North Judson, Ind., to the west, Macy, Ind., (home of former Irish All-America center Ruth Riley) to the south, and LaGrange, Ind., to the east.

Women’s basketball game broadcasts also continue to be streamed live and free of charge on Notre Dame’s official athletics web site (www.UND.com) through the Fighting Irish All-Access multimedia package.

Bob Nagle, the voice of Notre Dame women’s basketball from 1996-97 through 1998-99 (including the program’s first NCAA Final Four berth in 1997), returns for his second season in his second stint as the radio play-by-play broadcaster for the Irish.

Notre Dame On The Small Screen
Notre Dame will have at least 18 games televised during the 2009-10 season. Highlighting this year’s broadcast schedule are 11 nationally-televised Irish women’s basketball contests, including at least six games on the ESPN family of networks and four others on CBS College Sports (check schedule on page 1 of these notes for exact broadcast coverage).

In addition, Notre Dame continues to expand its broadcast reach globally on the Internet. All Irish regular-season home games not selected for commercial TV coverage (with the exception of the Nov. 15 game vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff) will be webcast live on the official Notre Dame athletics web site, www.UND.com, via the site’s free multimedia package, Fighting Irish All-Access. And, the Thanksgiving weekend Paradise Jam was webcast in its entirety through Fox College Sports Broadband on a pay-per-view basis.

This year’s TV slate continues a recent trend that has seen the Irish become a regular fixture on television. Beginning with the NCAA championship season of 2000-01 and continuing through this year, Notre Dame has played in 157 televised games, including 104 that were broadcast nationally.

Oh Captain, My Captain
Fifth-year senior guard Lindsay Schrader and senior guards Ashley Barlow and Melissa Lechlitner all return for their second year as team captains for the 2009-10 season. All three players received the captain’s honor following a vote of their teammates prior to the season.

This marks the first time in program history that the same players are serving as captains in consecutive seasons.

Irish Sign Three For 2010-11 Season
Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw announced Nov. 13 that three of the country’s top high school student-athletes have chosen to continue their academic and athletic careers with the Fighting Irish, each signing a National Letter of Intent to attend Notre Dame beginning in the fall of 2010.

Natalie Achonwa (last name pronounced uh-CHAWN-wuh), a 6-3 forward from Guelph, Ontario (St. Mary’s Catholic Secondary School/National Elite Development Academy), Ariel Braker, a 6-1 forward from Grosse Pointe Woods, Mich. (Grosse Pointe North High School) and Kayla McBride, a 5-11 guard from Erie, Pa. (Villa Maria Academy) all made their official commitments to the Fighting Irish during the early signing period, which ended Nov. 18.

All three student-athletes are rated among the top 50 players in the country by various national recruiting services. As a group, this trio is ranked as the No. 10 recruiting class in the country by All-Star Girls Report (and a consensus top-16 class by other recruiting services), giving Notre Dame a Top 25 recruiting class for the 14th consecutive year, a streak only two other schools in the country (Connecticut and Tennessee) can match. It’s also the third consecutive top-10 recruiting class for the Fighting Irish.

“I’m very excited about the class that we’re signing this year,” McGraw said. “I think we really addressed our needs, with three very good players coming in. They’re going to change the way we do some things at both ends of the floor next year. We’re going to be able to be more aggressive on defense because we’re adding athleticism, length and speed, and on offense, we’ll look at ways that we can take advantage of the size that we’re going to have. It will probably be a whole new look, going from the more guard-oriented team that we have now, to next year when we’ll have some depth in the post as well.”

“Notre Dame emphasized strengthening their perimeter game and did so with size, athleticism and versatility,” said Dan Olson, director of the Collegiate Girls Basketball Report.

The full press release, with a complete look at the newest members of the Notre Dame women’s basketball program, is available on-line at http://www.und.com/sports/w-baskbl/spec-rel/111309aab.html.

Irish Fans Crave Another Big Mac Attack
It’s year three of Notre Dame’s wildly-successful “Big Mac” promotion, offering fans a coupon for a free Big Mac from South Bend-area McDonald’s restaurants if the Irish score at least 88 points in a home game.

In the three-year history of the promotion (and counting exhibition games), Notre Dame has hit the 88-point mark 17 times, including wins this year over Indianapolis, Arkansas-Pine Bluff, IPFW, Valparaiso and Charlotte.

It should come as no surprise that in the short history of the promotion, the Notre Dame player with the most “Big Mac” baskets shares the same initials with the tasty burger — junior guard Brittany Mallory, who sent the crowd home happy (and presumably with full bellies) four times during the promotion’s inaugural run in 2007-08.

And for those tracking such things (or perhaps falling under the heading of “SID has too much time on his hands”), 10 different players have converted the “burger ball”, including nine current members of the Irish roster.

What’s more, of the 17 Big Mac games to date, nine have been reached on two-point baskets, five on free throws, and three on three-pointers.

Irish Lend Hand For Haiti Earthquake Relief
Fundraising efforts held in conjunction with two University of Notre Dame home basketball games have resulted in more than $250,000 in donations that will go toward relief efforts in Haiti in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake that hit the island nation on Jan. 12.

Through the generosity of fans and alumni, as well as contributions from the University and the Notre Dame Monogram Club, the money was raised at the men’s and women’s basketball games that were played Jan. 23 and 24, respectively, at Purcell Pavilion.

Notre Dame donated full gate receipts and net concession revenue from both games to the relief effort. In addition, a collection organized by the Notre Dame Student-Athlete Advisory Council (SAAC) — led by president and current Irish women’s basketball senior center Erica Williamson, as well as baseball player Ryan Connolly and rower Emily Crosby — raised more than $25,000 from fans and alumni who contributed during the games. The Monogram Club added a $10,000 matching gift to the student total.

Money raised will benefit short-term needs and long-term rebuilding efforts in Haiti and will be distributed to the Notre Dame Haiti Program, which works to eradicate the debilitating mosquito-borne disease lymphatic filariasis; the Congregation of Holy Cross, which has served in Haiti since 1944 and was heavily affected by the earthquake; and Catholic Relief Services, the international humanitarian agency of the Catholic community in the United States.

Next Game: Cincinnati
The Irish head back on the open road Tuesday for a 7 p.m. (ET) BIG EAST contest at Cincinnati. The Bearcats (10-11, 3-6), under the guidance of first-year head coach (and former Connecticut assistant) Jamelle Elliott, are off this weekend, having most recently earned a 74-68 overtime win at Louisville on Feb. 2.

— ND —