Sophomore forward Taya Reimer (pictured earlier this month against Virginia) turned in the best shooting night of the season by any ACC player on Monday night, making all eight of her field-goal attempts and scoring 16 points in Notre Dame's 68-52 win over No. 8/7 Louisville at Purcell Pavilion.

#4 Irish Back On The Road Thursday At Georgia Tech

Feb. 18, 2015

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2014-15 ND Women’s Basketball: Game 27

#4/4 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (24-2 / 11-1 ACC) vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (14-12 / 4-8 ACC)

DATE: Feb. 19, 2015
TIME: 7:00 p.m. ET
AT: Atlanta, Ga. – McCamish Pavilion (8,600)
SERIES: ND leads 3-0
1ST MTG: ND 76-69 (11/30/96)
LAST MTG: ND 89-76 (1/22/15)
TV: ACC-Regional Sports Networks/ESPN3-WatchESPN (live) (Tom Werme, p-b-p / Debbie Antonelli, color)
RADIO: Pulse FM (96.9/92.1)/WatchND (live) (Bob Nagle, p-b-p)
LIVE STATS:
TWITTER: @NDsidMasters/@ndwbb

Storylines

  • Notre Dame is completing the home-and-home series with its second ACC “repeat opponent” this season, having already faced Boston College twice in 2014-15.
  • The Fighting Irish are seeking to reach the 25-win mark for the sixth consecutive season and seventh time in eight years.

No. 4 Fighting Irish Back On The Road Thursday At Georgia Tech
Teams make the turn for home this week in the 2014-15 Atlantic Coast Conference regular season, with No. 4 Notre Dame beginning its stretch drive at 7 p.m. (ET) Thursday with a visit to Georgia Tech. The game will be televised live from McCamish Pavilion in Atlanta on the ACC-Regional Sports Networks package, which includes Comcast Channel 101 in South Bend, as well as ESPN3 and the WatchESPN app (blackout rules apply).

The Fighting Irish (24-2, 11-1) picked up their 10th consecutive win on Monday with a 63-50 victory over No. 10/11 Duke at Purcell Pavilion. Notre Dame used a 19-4 run to erase an early nine-point deficit and post its seventh win in eight tries against a ranked opponent this year.

Junior guard Jewell Loyd scored a game-high 21 points and added six rebounds, a game-best five assists and two steals for the Fighting Irish. Freshman forward Brianna Turner chipped in with 11 points, five rebounds and a game-high four blocked shots.

Rankings

  • Notre Dame is No. 4 in this week’s Associated Press poll and is No. 4 in this week’s WBCA/USA Today poll.
  • Georgia Tech is not ranked.

Quick Hitters

  • Notre Dame is ranked No. 4 in this week’s Associated Press poll, its 81st consecutive week in the AP Top 10 and 75th of the past 81 weeks in the AP Top 5.
  • Notre Dame has appeared in the AP poll for 151 consecutive weeks, extending a program record that dates back to the 2007-08 preseason poll, and ranking sixth in the nation among active AP poll appearances. What’s more, every current Fighting Irish player has competed for a top-10 Notre Dame squad during her career, never ranking lower than seventh in that time (2011-12 to present).
  • Notre Dame is ranked No. 4 in this week’s Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA)/USA Today poll, after previously spending two weeks (Nov. 25 and Dec. 2) as the nation’s No. 1 team. It was the first time the Fighting Irish had been the top-ranked team in either major national poll since April 1, 2001, when they were No. 1 in the coaches’ poll following a 68-66 win over Purdue that secured the program’s first NCAA national championship.
  • Notre Dame ranks among the top 25 in eight NCAA statistical categories (as of Tuesday), including five top-10 rankings — field-goal percentage (3rd – .497), scoring offense (4th – 84.0 ppg.), scoring margin (5th – +23.8 ppg.), assists (6th – 18.7 apg.) and three-point percentae (7th – .386). The Fighting Irish also rank 12th in assist/turnover ratio (1.26), 18th in rebounding margin (+8.6 rpg.), and 21st in personal fouls (14.8 per game), plus fifth in the non-statistical measure of win-loss percentage (.923).
  • Notre Dame aims to continue its remarkable success at Purcell Pavilion, with the Fighting Irish owning a 415-91 (.820) all-time record in 38 seasons at the facility, including a 92-6 (.939) record since the arena was renovated prior to the 2009-10 season.
  • Including regular season and postseason play, the Fighting Irish have won 57 of their last 60 games against conference opponents (and 24 in a row at home), dating back to their membership in the BIG EAST. Since joining the ACC prior to last season, Notre Dame is 31-1 against conference foes (27-1 regular season, 4-0 postseason).
  • Senior guards Madison Cable and Whitney Holloway, and senior forward Markisha Wright have helped Notre Dame to a 131-9 (.936) record in their careers, putting them on pace to challenge last year’s senior class of Natalie Achonwa, Ariel Braker and Kayla McBride, who helped Notre Dame to 138 wins during their four seasons.
  • Since arriving at Notre Dame in 2011-12, Cable, Holloway and Wright have paced Notre Dame to two NCAA national championship games and three NCAA Women’s Final Fours (plus three conference regular-season titles and two league tournament crowns), as well as a 48-7 record against ranked teams (20-7 against AP Top 10).
  • Of the nine losses suffered by the current Fighting Irish senior class, four were decided by 13 points or less.
  • With 687 victories in her 28 seasons at Notre Dame, head coach Muffet McGraw ranks second on the Fighting Irish athletics all-time coaching wins list (across all sports), trailing only men’s/women’s fencing coach Michael DeCicco (774-80 from 1962-95).
  • With 775 career wins, McGraw ranks 10th in NCAA Division I coaching history. She also is one of two active ACC coaches in the top 10 along with North Carolina coach Sylvia Hatchell (second with 955 as of Tuesday).

Other Notre Dame Notables

  • Notre Dame is among the nation’s winningest programs during the past six seasons (2009-10 to present), ranking second with 191 victories.
  • Notre Dame has ranked among the top 20 in the nation in average attendance annually since 2000-01 (including top-five rankings the past five years). The Fighting Irish rank sixth in the nation (as of Tuesday), averaging 8,832 fans per game at home this season, and have drawn at least 5,000 fans to 223 of their last 225 home games (with an active streak of 66 consecutive contests with 8,000 fans), logging 45 Purcell Pavilion sellouts, including 39 since the start of the 2009-10 campaign and four this season.
  • The Fighting Irish have become a regular fixture in the WNBA Draft in recent years, as 12 Notre Dame players have been selected in the past 14 seasons. Kayla McBride and Natalie Achonwa were the most recent Fighting Irish players to be chosen, with McBride going to the San Antonio Stars in the first round (third overall selection) and Achonwa six picks later (No. 9 overall) to the Indiana Fever in the 2014 WNBA Draft. It marked the third consecutive year Notre Dame had a player selected No. 3 overall (Devereaux Peters went third to Minnesota in 2012 and Skylar Diggins was chosen in that same spot by Tulsa in 2013), making the Fighting Irish the second program with lottery choices in three consecutive seasons.
  • Diggins was a 2014 All-WNBA First Team selection and the league’s Most Improved Player, in addition to earning the starting nod for the West at the 2014 WNBA All-Star Game. Meanwhile, McBride was chosen for the 2014 WNBA All-Rookie Team, the second Fighting Irish alumna in as many years to be selected for the squad (Diggins was picked for 2013 all-rookie honors).
  • Peters earned her first WNBA Championship in 2013 with the Lynx (and fifth by a Notre Dame alumna), who defeated the Atlanta Dream (and former Fighting Irish All-American Ruth Riley) in the WNBA Finals. Riley previously had won a pair of crowns with the Detroit Shock (2003 Finals MVP, 2006), while Coquese Washington toiled for the 2000 Houston Comets and Jacqueline Batteast was Riley’s teammate on the 2006 title-winning squad in Detroit.
  • For the eighth year in a row, the Fighting Irish posted a perfect 100 Graduation Success Rate (GSR) score, according to figures released by the NCAA in October. Notre Dame was one of only four schools in the previous seven years to record a perfect GSR score and play for a national championship in the same season (and the only program to do it more than once, pulling off that feat in 2011, 2012 and 2014).

The Notre Dame-Georgia Tech Series
Notre Dame and Georgia Tech will be meeting for the second time this season and fourth time in series history on Thursday night. The Fighting Irish are 3-0 all-time against the Yellow Jackets, including a win in their only prior matchup in Atlanta.

The Last Time Notre Dame and Georgia Tech Met
No. 6/5 Notre Dame led wire-to-wire, going up by as many as 18 points in the first half on the way to defeating Georgia Tech, 89-76 on Jan. 22, 2015, at Purcell Pavilion.

Jewell Loyd put up 29 points and Taya Reimer added 19 points and eight rebounds for the Fighting Irish.

The Yellow Jackets shot 50 percent – the only other team to shoot at least 50 percent against the Fighting Irish was Miami, which who 53 percent in a 78-63 loss by Notre Dame.

The Fighting Irish had a 12-3 advantage in rebounding early in the game, but finished with just a 34-30 edge. The hosts also enjoyed a 54-40 margin on points in the paint.

Notre Dame used a 10-0 run midway through the first half to open a 32-14 lead and appeared to be on the verge of breaking the game open. However, Katarina Vuckovic banked in a three-pointer for Georgia Tech as the shot clock expired at the 9:08 mark, igniting a 22-8 spurt during the next five minutes and the Fighting Irish lead was down to 48-41 at halftime.

Notre Dame led by double digits virtually the entire second half, but didn’t shake the Yellow Jackets until layups by Lindsay Allen and Reimer and a pair of free throws by Loyd with 5:33 remaining gave the Fighting Irish a 17-point lead.

Notre Dame had a 14-0 advantage in fastbreak points and Brianna Turner added 14 points for the Fighting Irish, who shot 56.5 percent from the floor.

Kaela Davis led the Yellow Jackets with 24 points. Aaliyah Whiteside scored 16 points, Vuckovic had 12 and Zaire O’Neil added 10.

The Last Time Notre Dame and Georgia Tech Met In Atlanta
Beth Morgan scored 14 of her 29 points in the final five minutes to propel No. 9/12 Notre Dame to a 76-69 victory at Georgia Tech in the championship game of the Comfort Inn Downtown Classic on Nov. 30, 1996, at O’Keefe Gymnasium in Atlanta.

Katryna Gaither, who was named the tournament MVP, sparked a 20-2 second-half run with eight points to help the Fighting Irish overcome a 44-28 deficit early in the half. Gaither had scored a (then) school-record 40 points a day earlier in a tourney-opening victory over Ohio.

Carla Munnion, who passed the 1,000-career point mark, led Georgia Tech with 27 points, but had only eight in the second half.

Kisha Ford added 14 points and seven assists for the Yellow Jackets.

Other Notre Dame-Georgia Tech Series Tidbits

  • The Fighting Irish are 7-2 (.778) all-time against Georgia schools (and have won their last seven), including a 2-1 record on the road (Notre Dame defeated Mercer, 128-42 on Dec. 30, 2011, in Macon — the last time the Fighting Irish visited the state of Georgia).
  • Notre Dame sophomore forward and Buford, Georgia, native Kristina Nelson is the third Peach State resident to suit up for the Fighting Irish and the second in recent seasons, following in the footsteps of Atlanta native Fraderica Miller (2008-12).
  • Nelson and Georgia Tech sophomore guard Kaela Davis were teammates at Buford (Ga.) High School for their final two prep seasons, helping the Wolves reach the Class 2A state title game in 2011-12 and a quarterfinal berth in 2012-13 (Nelson missed much of the latter season due to a shoulder injury).
  • Nelson and Davis also played on the same AAU team, Georgia Ice, which was coached by Davis’ father Antonio, a 16-year NBA veteran who was drafted by the Indiana Pacers in 1990. With Nelson and Davis on the roster, the Georgia Ice won 2009 state and national titles at the 13-and-under level.
  • Davis also played alongside Notre Dame sophomore guard Lindsay Allen, sophomore forward Taya Reimer and freshman forward Brianna Turner on the 2012 USA Basketball U17 World Championship Team that won the gold medal with a perfect 8-0 record in the tournament, which was contested in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Turner and Davis earned a gold medal with USA Basketball at the 2012 FIBA 3×3 U18 World Championship in Alcobendas, Spain.
  • Reimer and Davis made up half the USA Basketball roster at the inaugural FIBA 3×3 U18 World Championship in 2011 in Rimini, Italy. That squad earned honorary bronze medals from FIBA after being forced to forfeit its third-place game vs. Japan when Reimer and current Duke redshirt freshman guard Rebecca Greenwell were injured.
  • Reimer and Davis were teammates on the 2011 USA Basketball U16 National Team that won gold at the FIBA Americas U16 Championship in Merida, Mexico.
  • Allen, Reimer and Davis joined forces as teammates on the East Team at the 2013 McDonald’s High School All-America Game, but their side fell to the West Team, 92-64, at the United Center in Chicago.

Doing Some Networking
Thursday’s game is the last of four appearances for Notre Dame on the ACC-Regional Sports Networks (RSN) television package this season. The Fighting Irish, who are 6-0 on the conference’s syndicated TV package since joining the ACC last year, already earned wins at No. 21/22 Syracuse (85-74 on Jan. 4), No. 12/10 North Carolina (89-79 on Jan. 15) and Wake Forest (92-63 on Feb. 1) while playing on the ACC-RSN airwaves in 2014-15.

Fans wishing to tune in and watch Thursday’s ACC-RSN broadcast of the Notre Dame-Georgia Tech game are asked to go online to the ACC web site for the latest rundown of affiliates that will carry the game (including Comcast Channel 101 in South Bend). In addition, ESPN3 and the WatchESPN app will stream the game live (subject to blackout in certain areas).

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 1995-96, the Fighting Irish are 118-28 (.808) in February games (including an active 23-game winning streak), as well as a 66-6 (.917) mark at home.

In the 28-year Muffet McGraw era (1987-88 to present), the Fighting Irish are 166-43 (.794) in the month of February, including a 88-12 (.880) home record. In that time, Notre Dame has never posted a losing record in February (a standard that already has continued this season), and only once did the Fighting Irish end the month at .500 (4-4 in 1988-89, McGraw’s second year in South Bend).

Youth Movement
Notre Dame continues to make impressive strides this season, considering the Fighting Irish came in looking to replace three senior starters who accounted for nearly 40 percent of the team’s scoring, rebounding and assists last season.

This year, Notre Dame hasn’t featured a senior in its most common starting lineup, and four of the team’s top five scorers and three of its top four rebounders are freshmen or sophomores, the lone exception in both cases being the ACC’s leading scorer, junior guard Jewell Loyd.

Leading the Fighting Irish youth movement is freshman forward Brianna Turner. A six-time ACC Freshman of the Week and two-time United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) National Freshman of the Week, Turner ranks among the top 11 in the ACC in points, rebounds, blocks and field-goal percentage (leading the nation in the latter category), the only conference rookie to rank in the top 11 in the league in those four categories — no other ACC freshman ranks in the top 11 in more than two of those areas.

A pair of Notre Dame sophomore starters are making their mark as well, with both guard Lindsay Allen (10.4 ppg., 4.9 apg.) and forward Taya Reimer (9.7 ppg., 6.3 rpg.) logging career-high averages in virtually all statistical categories.

Allen ranks among the top five in the ACC in assists (first), assist/turnover ratio (second) and field-goal percentage (fourth), while Reimer has come within an eyelash of four double-doubles in her last eight contests, missing the mark by a mere two points or two rebounds in each case.

Another Notre Dame rookie Kathryn Westbeld also continues to blossom. The Kettering, Ohio, native leads all Fighting Irish reserves in scoring (7.9 ppg.) and rebounding (4.4 rpg.), and during ACC play, she ranks third in the conference in field-goal percentage (.608), while averaging 9.4 ppg. in her inaugural ACC campaign.

Westbeld has been particularly sharp of late, averaging 10.0 points per game and shooting .629 (39 of 62) from the field in the past 10 games, highlighted by a career-high 17 points on eight of 14 shooting in a Jan. 29 win at Virginia Tech.

Notre Dame Is Hoop City, USA
Virtually no other campus in America is enjoying the kind of success on the basketball court that Notre Dame has seen in 2014-15. The Fighting Irish men’s and women’s basketball programs are a combined 47-6 (.887) on the hardwood this season, tying Gonzaga (47-5, .904) for the most total basketball wins and second only to the Bulldogs for the best combined winning percentage among both basketball programs on a national level.

Notre Dame also was the first school this season to have both basketball teams top the 20-win mark, with each Fighting Irish squad now approaching 25 victories in the same season for the fourth time in eight years (also 2007-08, 2010-11 and 2012-13) after never having previously reached that win total in the same season.

This year’s Fighting Irish squads also are challenging the school records for combined men’s/women’s basketball victories and winning percentage in a single season, with Notre Dame amassing a combined 60-12 (.833) record on the hardwood in 2012-13 (women 35-2; men 25-10).

Nearly In A Class By Themselves
For the fourth consecutive season, a Notre Dame senior class is threatening to set the bar in terms of career wins by one group. The current class of tri-captains Whitney Holloway and Markisha Wright, plus Madison Cable, is second all-time with 131 wins (131-9, .936), trailing only the 2014 seniors.

Last year, Notre Dame’s three-player senior class of Natalie Achonwa, Ariel Braker and Kayla McBride posted the best four-year record (138-15, .902) in school history, topping the win total (130) compiled by the previous year’s seniors (Skylar Diggins and Kaila Turner).

The year before Diggins and Turner departed, Notre Dame’s Class of 2012 (Brittany Mallory, Fraderica Miller, Natalie Novosel and Devereaux Peters) rang up 117 wins to set the early benchmark in this current era of Fighting Irish women’s basketball success.

Prior to the 2011-12 season, the highest four-year win total by a senior class was 109, set by the Class of 2001 that capped their careers with the program’s first NCAA national championship and included (among others) consensus national player of the year and 13-year WNBA veteran Ruth Riley, as well as current Fighting Irish assistant coach/recruiting coordinator Niele Ivey.

Conference Conquests
Notre Dame’s 78-63 loss at Miami on Jan. 8 ended a school-record 38 consecutive regular season conference games, dating back to the end of its BIG EAST Conference membership and through the first two seasons of its affiliation with the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Prior to the Miami loss, the Fighting Irish last dropped a conference regular season game on Feb. 12, 2012, falling 65-63 to then-BIG EAST foe West Virginia at Purcell Pavilion (on two free throws by WVU’s Brooke Hampton with 4.6 seconds left).

Notre Dame’s recent streak erased the prior school-record 33-game run from Feb. 25, 1989-Feb. 14, 1991 — that streak took place during the program’s dominant seven-year tenure as part of the Midwestern Collegiate Conference (now known as the Horizon League).

Despite the loss at Miami, and when factoring in postseason tournament results (league and NCAA), the Fighting Irish have won 57 of their last 60 games against conference opponents (and 24 in a row at home). Notre Dame’s other two losses to a league foe in the past three seasons both came at the hands of Connecticut in the 2012 BIG EAST Championship title game (63-54 in Hartford, Connecticut) and the 2013 NCAA Women’s Final Four national semifinals (83-65 in New Orleans, Louisiana).

Road Warriors
With Notre Dame’s 78-63 loss at Miami on Jan. 8, the Fighting Irish saw their NCAA Division I record-tying 30-game road winning streak snapped. It was an amazing string of success in hostile territory, a streak that lasted exactly three years (Jan. 4, 2012-Jan. 4, 2015) and ended with the Fighting Irish tied with Connecticut for the NCAA Division I all-time mark in that category.

Prior to the setback at Miami, the Fighting Irish last tasted defeat on the road on March 6, 2012, falling at No. 4 Connecticut, 63-54 in the BIG EAST Conference Championship final at the XL Center in Hartford, Connecticut.

In addition, the Miami loss was the first for the Fighting Irish in a regular season road game since Nov. 20, 2011, a 94-81 defeat at No. 1 Baylor in the Preseason WNIT championship game.

Notre Dame also had its streak of a school-record 25 consecutive conference road wins snapped at Miami, with the last Fighting Irish road loss in league play coming as part of the BIG EAST Conference on Feb. 28, 2011 (a last-second 70-69 loss at No. 12/11 DePaul).

The highlight of Notre Dame’s remarkable recent road run came on Jan. 5, 2013, when Notre Dame edged No. 1 Connecticut, 73-72, in Storrs, Connecticut, earning its fourth all-time win over a top-ranked opponent and first-ever victory on the road.

Even with the Jan. 8 loss at Miami, Notre Dame still has won 43 of its last 44 (and 50 of its last 56) regular season road games.

More Streak Stats
Dating back to the start of the 2012-13 season, Notre Dame has posted a 96-5 (.950) record. In that three-year span, four of the five Fighting Irish losses have come against top-three teams — No. 3 Baylor (73-61 on Dec. 5, 2012, at Purcell Pavilion), No. 3 Connecticut (83-65 on April 7, 2013, in the NCAA Women’s Final Four national semifinals at New Orleans Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana), No. 1 Connecticut (79-58 on April 8, 2014, in the NCAA Women’s Final Four national championship game at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee) and No. 3 Connecticut (76-58 on Dec. 6, 2014, in the Jimmy V Classic at Purcell Pavilion).

The other loss came Jan. 8 with a 78-63 setback at Miami. That defeat ended Notre Dame’s 61-game winning streak against unranked opponents (in the Associated Press poll), the second-longest active run in the nation. The Fighting Irish last fell to an unranked team on Feb. 12, 2012, suffering a last-second 65-63 home loss to West Virginia (research for this note provided by STATS via the AP).

Poise Under Pressure
Notre Dame hasn’t had to deal with many close games in recent seasons, but when faced with such a challenge, the Fighting Irish have risen to the occasion.

Notre Dame has won its last 15 games decided by single digits and/or in overtime, including all three close games this season. The Fighting Irish last dropped a single-digit decision on March 6, 2012, falling 63-54 at No. 4 Connecticut in the BIG EAST Conference Tournament championship game at Hartford, Connecticut.

Don’t Call It A Comeback
Twice in less than two weeks last month, Notre Dame has rallied from a double-digit deficit to earn a victory.

On Jan. 2, the Fighting Irish trailed Florida State, 20-8 with 7:41 left in the first half before charging back to win, 74-68 at Purcell Pavilion.

On Jan. 15, Notre Dame fell behind at No. 12/10 North Carolina, 34-23 with 5:28 to go in the first half, but the Fighting Irish rallied to register an 89-79 victory in Chapel Hill.

Even in its second loss of the season on Jan. 8 at Miami, Notre Dame showed remarkable character, erasing nearly all of a 22-point second-half deficit (45-23 with 17:00 to play) and getting within 55-49 with eight minutes left before UM held on for the win.

Visiting Century City
Notre Dame has scored at least 100 points four times this season (and posted 97 points in another), challenging last year’s school-record mark of five triple-digit outings, erasing the 2012-13 standard of three such contests.

The Fighting Irish have piled up 12 100-point games since the start of the 2011-12 season (and nine other games of 95-99 points), a remarkable offensive explosion considering Notre Dame had 13 triple-digit games in the first 34 years of the program’s existence–and just four in the 12 seasons prior to its current run.

This season marked the first time the Fighting Irish opened with three 100-point games in their first six contests. In fact, prior to 2012-13, Notre Dame had never had more than two triple-digit outings in an entire season, something it has now done for a third consecutive campaign.

Crown Jewell
Junior guard Jewell Loyd leads the ACC and ranks 20th in the nation in scoring (as of Tuesday), thanks in part to one of the most explosive individual scoring seasons in Notre Dame women’s basketball history.

  • Loyd has scored 538 points through 26 games this season (20.7 points per game). She scored her 500th point in her 24th game (Feb. 5 against Virginia), marking the quickest run to 500 points in a single season in program history (Katryna Gaither scored her 500th point in her 26th game during the 1996-97 season, a 91-64 win at home over Boston College on Feb. 12, 1997).
  • Loyd is the first Fighting Irish women’s basketball player to register eight 20-point games in her first 10 outings of a season, surpassing Gaither (who had seven 20-point games in first 10 contests of 1996-97).
  • Loyd currently leads the ACC with 15 20-point games this season, tying her for fifth in school history, and she has 30 career 20-point games, good for sixth in Fighting Irish annals.
  • Loyd is the first Notre Dame women’s basketball player to register back-to-back 30-point games and for good measure, she did it against a pair of ranked opponents in No. 3 UConn (31 points) and No. 25 DePaul (school record-tying 41 points). Current Fighting Irish associate coach Beth (Morgan) Cunningham had two 30-point games in three days on Dec. 1 and 3, 1995, in close losses to No. 12/13 Penn State (32) and No. RV/22 Texas A&M (34) at the Kona Women’s Basketball Classic in Kona, Hawaii, although there was a game between those two (Cunningham scored 23 points in a win over Washington).
  • For the second consecutive year, Loyd has tied the program record with three 30-point games in one season, most recently dropping in 34 points against No. 5/6 Tennessee on Jan. 19 at Purcell Pavilion. It was the third-highest single-game point total by a Notre Dame player in arena history, and most since Feb. 22, 2000, when Ruth Riley scored 36 points against Miami.
  • Loyd’s six career 30-point games tie the school record set by Gaither from 1993-97.
  • In eight games against ranked opponents this season, Loyd is averaging 26.9 points per game, with seven 20-point outings to her credit. The lone exception came on Jan. 15 at No. 12/10 North Carolina, when she scored eight points.
  • Loyd is eighth in school history with 1,675 career points, moving up two rungs on the Notre Dame career scoring list on Jan. 24 with a game-high 17 points at Clemson, passing both Trena Keys (1,589 points from 1982-86) and Karen Robinson (1,590 points from 1987-91).
  • Loyd scored her 1,500th career point in her 90th career game on Jan. 11, 2015, vs. Boston College at Purcell Pavilion. Loyd is the second-quickest player to score to 1,500 points in program history, trailing only Cunningham, who scored her 1,500th point at Notre Dame in her 80th career game on Feb. 21, 1996, at home against Miami.

The Model Of Consistency
Junior guard Jewell Loyd scored eight points in Notre Dame’s 89-79 win at No. 12/10 North Carolina on Jan. 15, ending Loyd’s streak of scoring in double figures at 60 consecutive games. This remarkable run dated back to March 11, 2013, when she had eight points in Notre Dame’s 83-59 BIG EAST Championship semifinal win over No. 16/15 Louisville at the XL Center in Hartford, Connecticut.

Loyd’s 60-game double-digit scoring streak was the second-longest in school history, topped only by Katryna Gaither’s 76-game string from 1994-97.

In less than three seasons at Notre Dame, Loyd has scored in double figures in 86 of her 99 career games — and 11 of those 13 single-digit games saw her within one basket of double figures.

Turner Throwing A Block Party
Freshman forward Brianna Turner has recorded 48 blocked shots in her last 15 games (3.2 bpg.), all since returning from a shoulder injury that sidelined her for the better part of the four previous games.

Following her return on Dec. 21 against Saint Joseph’s (Pa.), the Pearland, Texas, native has logged at least five blocks in six games, including a career-high seven rejections at No. 21/22 Syracuse on Jan. 4 and at No. 12/10 North Carolina on Jan. 15.

Turner’s 22 blocks from Dec. 21-Jan. 4 were the most by a Notre Dame player in a four-game span since Nov. 21-Dec. 2, 1998, when Ruth Riley had 22 blocks against No. 6/4 Duke, No. 25/23 Illinois, San Francisco and Toledo.

As of Tuesday, Turner ranks fourth in the ACC at 2.6 blocks per game, while her 59 total blocks are third in school history among Fighting Irish freshmen (and the most by a Fighting Irish rookie in one season since Riley’s 71 rejections in 1997-98).

In addition, Turner is on pace for the second-best blocked shot average by a freshman in program history, and best since 1979-80, when Shari Matvey averaged 3.1 blocks per game.

Allen Throws Wrench Into Opposing Game Plans
Sophomore guard Lindsay Allen has emerged as one of the top point guards in not only the ACC, but the nation as well.

Allen ranks among the top five in the ACC in assists (first – 4.9 apg.), assist/turnover ratio (second – 2.03) and field-goal percentage (fourth – .568), with the latter figure particularly notable as she is the only guard ranked among the top 15 in the ACC in field-goal percentage.

In conference play, Allen leads the ACC in assists (5.9 apg.) and assist/turnover ratio (2.09), while ranking sixth in field-goal percentage (.518) and ninth in free-throw percentage (.788).

Allen also has logged at least five assists in 11 of her last 13 games, including 6.5 assists per game in four outings against ranked opponents during that span.

In addition, Allen has developed into a potent scoring threat for the Fighting Irish, increasing her offensive output by more than 67 percent to 10.4 points per game, and she has scored in double figures 13 times this season (after doing so eight times as a rookie in 2013-14).

Allen is in her second season as the starting point guard for Notre Dame, having not missed a game since she set foot on campus last year. With Allen at the helm, the Fighting Irish have amassed a stellar 61-3 (.953) record — and when you factor in her final prep season at St. John’s College High School in Washington, D.C., Allen’s teams are a combined 88-4 (.957) in the past three years when she’s been in the starting lineup.

Stealing Cable Is Legal Here
Senior guard Madison Cable has emerged as one of Notre Dame’s top defenders this season, with the Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvania, product currently ranking 10th in the ACC in steals (1.7 spg.) and third in that category during conference play (2.1 spg.).

Cable picked off a career-high six steals on Feb. 1 against Wake Forest, matching the most by any ACC player in a conference game this season. It also was the most thefts by a Fighting Irish player in a game since Dec. 19, 2012, when Kaila Turner logged seven steals against Alabama A&M.

Cable is enjoying her finest season in a Notre Dame uniform, posting career-high averages in nearly all categories, including scoring (6.1 ppg.), rebounding (4.2 rpg.), steals and three-point percentage (.491). She also registered her first career double-double back on Dec. 10 in an overtime win at No. 25 DePaul, collecting 20 points and 11 rebounds despite missing parts of the second half and overtime with cramping in both of her calves.

In addition to her defensive prowess, Cable leads the ACC in three-point percentage and ranks second during conference play (.448).

Game #26 Recap: Duke
No. 4 Notre Dame rode Jewell Loyd’s leadership, smothering defense and clutch three-point shooting to beat Duke.

The Fighting Irish won their 10th consecutive game, topping the No. 10/11 Blue Devils, 63-50 Monday night at Purcell Pavilion.

Duke (19-7, 10-3 ACC) came out strong, building a 14-5 lead over the first 5:31. The Blue Devils, who lead the nation in rebounding margin, asserted themselves early on the offensive glass, grabbing the game’s first six rebounds. They outrebounded the Fighting Irish 45-37, and Notre Dame (24-2, 11-1) scored well below their season average of 84.9 points.

But Notre Dame eventually heated up from beyond the arc, hitting nine threes, nearly double their 5.1-per-game average.

Loyd made four of her eight three-point attempts, while Duke missed all 12 of its tries. It was the first time this season that Duke went scoreless from beyond the arc.

Reserves Madison Cable and Kathryn Westbeld help put the brakes on that fast Duke start. Cable finished with six rebounds and nine points, including a three-pointer from the corner as the shot clock expired coming out of a first-half media timeout, giving Notre Dame its first lead of the game at 20-19.

The Fighting Irish went on a 14-5 run over the final 10:17 of the first half to take a 34-24 lead into the break. During that stretch, Duke hit just two of nine attempts from the field.

A 6-0 Duke run to start the second half trimmed the lead to 34-30 but a 11-0 Fighting Irish spurt over a 4:02 span gave Notre Dame its largest lead at 19 with 11:05 left.

Elizabeth Williams led Duke with 18 points.

Beyond The Box Score: Duke

  • Notre Dame improves to 7-1 against ranked opponents this season, including 4-1 record against top-10 teams.
  • Notre Dame held Duke to a season-low 50 points, the fewest the Fighting Irish have allowed to a top-10 opponent since March 27, 2012, when they defeated fifth-ranked Maryland, 80-49, in the NCAA Elite Eight (Raleigh Regional final) at RBC Arena in Raleigh, North Carolina.
  • Notre Dame held an opponent with out a three-point basket for the first time since March 9, 2014, when Duke was held scoreless on five attempts from beyond the arc in a 69-53 Fighting Irish win in the ACC Tournament championship game at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina.
  • Notre Dame tied its season high with nine three-pointers, having previously reached that total at No. 25 DePaul on Dec. 10 and at UCLA on Dec. 28.
  • Notre Dame moves to 10-1 all-time against Duke and has won the past eight games in the series.
  • The 50 points were the fewest scored by either team in the series (previous low had been Duke’s 53 points in last year’s ACC title game).
  • Notre Dame is 25-2 (.926) all-time against teams from the state of North Carolina, including an active 15-game winning streak, and the Fighting Irish are 9-0 all-time against North Carolina schools at Purcell Pavilion.
  • Notre Dame improves to 10-0 all-time on ESPN2’s “Big Monday” package (5-0 home, 5-0 road).
  • Notre Dame has won a season-high 10 consecutive games, all by double figures, including three wins over top-10 teams in that span (No. 12/10 North Carolina, No. 5/6 Tennessee, No. 10/11 Duke).
  • Loyd chalked up her 15th 20-point game this season, tying for fifth on the Notre Dame single-season list (most since Skylar Diggins had 15 in 2011-12).
  • Loyd also logged her 30th career 20-point game, taking sole possession of sixth place on the Fighting Irish record book.

Polling Station
Notre Dame is ranked No. 4 in this week’s Associated Press preseason poll, its 81st consecutive week in the top 10 of the media balloting (75 of those in the top five), dating back to the middle of the 2010-11 season and marking 151 consecutive weeks in the AP poll.

The Fighting Irish continue to extend the program record for consecutive poll appearances that started with the AP preseason poll in 2007-08 (the old record was 59 consecutive weeks from 1998-2001), while Notre Dame is one of six teams in the nation with an active streak of at least 150 consecutive AP poll appearances.

What’s more, every current Notre Dame player has competed for a top-10 Fighting Irish squad throughout her career (74 consecutive weeks for the current senior class), spending the vast majority (68) of those appearances in the AP Top 5 (and never lower than seventh).

Notre Dame was No. 3 in the preseason AP poll, representing the 15th time in 16 years (starting with the 1999-2000 campaign) that Notre Dame has appeared in the preseason AP poll, something only five schools in the nation have done — Connecticut, Duke and Tennessee have shown up in all 16 during that span, while Stanford joins the Fighting Irish with 15 preseason AP poll berths.

Notre Dame has been ranked in the AP poll for 290 weeks during the program’s 38-year history, with every one of those appearances coming in the Muffet McGraw era (since 1987-88). McGraw is eighth among all active NCAA Division I head coaches for weeks in the AP poll, and 15th all-time in that category.

Meanwhile, the Fighting Irish are No. 4 in this week’s WBCA/USA Today coaches’ poll, after spending two weeks earlier this season as the nation’s No. 1 team (Nov. 25 and Dec. 2). It was the first time Notre Dame stood atop the rankings since April 1, 2001, following the program’s first NCAA national championship. The Fighting Irish were the first ACC team to be ranked No. 1 in either major national poll since March 12, 2007, when Duke was in that position prior to the NCAA Championship.

Notre Dame has been ranked in the coaches’ poll for 153 of the past 154 weeks (and 117 in a row), falling just outside the Top 25 in the final poll of the 2008-09 season. Nevertheless, the Fighting Irish have appeared in the coaches’ poll for a total of 285 weeks during their history (all coming during McGraw’s tenure).

This marks the seventh consecutive season Notre Dame has been ranked in the top 10 of the WBCA/USA Today poll, as well as 13 of the past 17 campaigns (1998-99 to present).

More Polling Data
Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw is one of 33 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 290 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 to No. 3 in the nation.

Of the 33 people on this list, 18 currently are NCAA Division I head coaches (see accompanying chart), with McGraw and Baylor’s Kim Mulkey the only active skippers to play for and coach a team in the AP poll, and coach that team to a national title (McGraw in 2001, Mulkey in 2005 and 2012).

Half And Half
During the past 15 seasons, Notre Dame has been nearly unbeatable when it has the lead at halftime. The Fighting Irish are 334-19 (.946) since the start of the 2000-01 campaign when they go into the dressing room with the lead, including wins in 262 of their last 275 such contests (.953).

What’s more, in the past six seasons (2009-10 to present), Notre Dame is 171-2 (.988) when leading at the half, with the only losses coming on April 5, 2011, in the NCAA national championship game at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis (Notre Dame led Texas A&M, 35-33 at intermission before falling 76-70), and Feb. 12, 2012, against West Virginia (Fighting Irish led 33-30 at the break before the visiting Mountaineers rallied to win in the closing seconds, 65-63).

The Best Offense Is A Good Defense…
During the past 20 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, the Fighting Irish have an amazing 306-15 (.953) record when they hold their opponents below 60 points in a game (14-0 record this season).

…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 20 seasons (since 1995-96), the Fighting Irish are 230-6 (.975) when they score at least 80 points in a game. The only blemishes on that record are three overtime losses to Texas A&M (88-84) and Michigan State (87-83) in 1995 and UCLA (86-83 in double OT) in 2010, as well as a 106-81 loss to Connecticut in 1998, an 81-80 loss to DePaul in 2008, and a 94-81 setback at Baylor in 2011.

In the past six years (2009-10 to present), Notre Dame is 107-2 (.982) when topping the 80-point mark, including an active 74-game winning streak since a 94-81 loss at No. 1 Baylor on Nov. 20, 2011, in the Preseason WNIT final.

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 Fighting Irish have been virtually untouchable at home in recent years, winning 266 of their last 296 games (.899), all but one game/win at the 9,149-seat Purcell Pavilion, including winning streaks of 51, 34, 25 and 20 games in that span.

Since Purcell Pavilion was renovated prior to the 2009-10 season, Notre Dame is 92-6 (.939) — including wins in 68 of its last 71 games — and three of the six Fighting Irish losses in their refurbished facility have come by three points or fewer (two in overtime).

Notre Dame also has a 210-30 (.875) record in regular season conference play at the former Joyce Center, sporting a program-record 31-game league winning streak at home before it ended with a 48-45 loss to BIG EAST foe Villanova in the ’02 home finale.

The Fighting Irish have been especially strong when it comes to non-league home games, winning 126 of their last 136 out-of-conference home contests (.926), dating back to the 1994-95 season. Five of the 10 losses in that span came at the hands of Big Ten 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 defeats coming to Tennessee in 2005 (62-51) and 2008 (87-63), UCLA in 2010 (86-83 in 2OT), Baylor in 2012 (73-61) and Connecticut in 2014 (76-58).

Since its inaugural season in 1977-78, Notre Dame has played all but one of its games at the former Joyce Center, posting a 415-91 (.820) record at the venerable facility, including a school-record 17 wins in both 2011-12 and 2013-14.

One Of Nation’s Toughest Cities To Play In
According to a study released by the University of Utah Athletic Media Relations Office, Notre Dame and Purcell Pavilion are among the toughest places in the nation to play. In fact, Notre Dame is one of just 11 programs in the nation to own a winning percentage of .800 or better in its home city.

Fighting Irish Are Hottest Ticket In Town
The past five seasons have seen an unprecedented surge in fan support for Notre Dame women’s basketball, as the Fighting Irish set new program records for the highest year-end NCAA attendance ranking (fourth in 2009-10 and 2013-14), highest average attendance (8,979 fans per game in 2012-13) and most sellouts in a single season (11 in 2012-13). And, as the old saying goes — “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.”

For the sixth consecutive year, Notre Dame fans all but exhausted the program’s season ticket packages (approximately 7,500) and have snapped up single-game ducats at a rate that helped the Fighting Irish post four sellouts (Dec. 6 vs. Connecticut; Jan. 2 vs. Florida State; Jan. 11 vs. Boston College; Jan. 19 vs. Tennessee), while several other home games are rapidly approaching sellout status.

As of Tuesday, Notre Dame ranks sixth in the nation in attendance, averaging 8,832 fans per game. That equates to 96.53 percent of Purcell Pavilion’s capacity, the highest such percentage of any team in the country (DePaul is second at 91.03 percent, while Gonzaga and Kentucky are the only other Division I schools currently filling their arenas to better than 70 percent capacity this season).

Oh Captain, My Captain
Senior guard Whitney Holloway, senior forward Markisha Wright and junior guard Michaela Mabrey are serving as Notre Dame’s team captains for the 2014-15 season. All three players received the captain’s honor for the first time in their respective careers following a preseason vote by their teammates.

This is the seventh time in 11 seasons the Fighting Irish have had a trio of captains, as well as the second year in a row (Natalie Achonwa, Ariel Braker and Kayla McBride filled the captaincy trio last season).

Riley Earns 2015 Moose Krause Award
The Notre Dame Monogram Club has selected former women’s basketball star Ruth Riley (’01) as this year’s recipient of the Edward “Moose” Krause Distinguished Service Award.

Riley will receive the organization’s highest honor during Notre Dame’s game vs. Louisville on Feb. 23 at Purcell Pavilion.

A 13-year WNBA veteran, Riley retired from the sport in June 2014 and currently serves as an NBA/WNBA Cares Ambassador. Back in November, Riley traveled to Leipzig, Germany, where she was honored as a 2014 Junior Chamber International Ten Outstanding Young Persons of The World recipient in the category of humanitarian and/or voluntary leadership. She was the first American to receive the global award since 2008.

Achonwa Named To 2015 ACC Women’s Basketball Legends Class
Natalie Achonwa (’14), one of the cornerstones of the most successful four-year run in Notre Dame women’s basketball history and a tri-captain on last year’s Fighting Irish squad that earned the Atlantic Coast Conference regular season and tournament championships with a combined 19-0 record, has been named to the 11th annual class of ACC Women’s Basketball Legends, the conference office announced Jan. 27.

Achonwa (pronounced uh-CHAWN-wuh) and the rest of the 2015 ACC Legends Class (which includes 14 former student-athletes and one former head coach who represent five decades of women’s basketball) will be honored at the annual ACC Women’s Basketball Legends Brunch at 10 a.m. (ET) March 7 in Greensboro, North Carolina. The group then will be introduced to the crowd at the Greensboro Coliseum at halftime of the first ACC Tournament semifinal that afternoon.

The ACC Women’s Basketball Legends program honors both players and coaches from each of the ACC’s 15 schools who have contributed to the conference’s rich tradition. The full list of this year’s ACC Women’s Basketball Legends can be found on the conference’s official web site, theacc.com.

Tickets to the ACC Women’s Basketball Legends Brunch are priced at $35 each and can be purchased by calling (336) 369-4673 — quantities are limited.

A two-time All-America forward, Achonwa helped lead Notre Dame to a 138-15 (.902) record from 2010-11 through 2013-14, along with four NCAA Women’s Final Four appearances and three trips to the NCAA title game, as well as three conference championships (two in the BIG EAST Conference before last year’s perfect run through the ACC) and two conference tournament crowns (2013 in the BIG EAST, 2014 in the ACC). She also ranks among the program’s all-time leaders in points (13th – 1,546 points), rebounds (fourth – 970), field goal percentage (sixth – .562) and double-doubles (tied-fifth – 28).

Later this year, Achonwa will continue her basketball career as a member of the WNBA’s Indiana Fever, who selected her in the first round (No. 9 overall) of the 2014 WNBA Draft. Achonwa missed the 2014 season while recovering from knee surgery.

A native of Guelph, Ontario, Achonwa graduated from Notre Dame in May 2014, earning her bachelor’s degree in management-consulting from the top-ranked Mendoza College of Business. She currently serves as an operations specialist for the Fighting Irish women’s basketball program, coordinating team travel arrangements, supervising the team’s student managers, helping oversee the program’s popular summer camps, and serving as a liaison for the team’s numerous community service projects.

Irish Fans Crave Another Big Mac Attack
Now in its eighth season, Notre Dame’s wildly-successful “Big Mac” promotion once again looks to send fans home with full bellies, offering a coupon for a free Big Mac from South Bend-area McDonald’s restaurants if the Fighting Irish score at least 88 points in an regular season or exhibition game at Purcell Pavilion.

In the eight-year history of the promotion, Notre Dame has hit the 88-point mark at home 62 times, most recently in the Feb. 1 win over Wake Forest.

Senior forward Markisha Wright leads all current Fighting Irish players with seven “Big Mac Baskets” during her career.

And for those tracking such things (or perhaps falling under the heading of “the media relations director has way too much time on his hands”), 28 different players have converted the “burger ball”, including 10 current members of the Fighting Irish roster.

What’s more, of the 62 Big Mac games, 30 have been reached on two-point baskets, 19 on free throws, and 13 on three-pointers.

Next Game: Louisville
Notre Dame begins the final week of the 2014-15 regular season in the Atlantic Coast Conference at 7 p.m. (ET) Monday when it plays host to No. 8/7 Louisville at Purcell Pavilion. The game will be televised live to a national audience as part of ESPN2’s Big Monday, marking the third time this season (and second consecutive week) the Fighting Irish will appear on Big Monday.

— Chris Masters, Associate Athletic Media Relations Director