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Women's Basketball Back Home To Take On Army

Nov. 26, 2001

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NOTRE DAME, Ind. – Returning to action after a loss has been quite an unfamiliar feeling for Notre Dame over the last three-plus seasons, as the Irish have lost just 14 times since the start of the 1998-99 campaign. It’s an even more rare occurrence when Notre Dame takes the floor after feeling the sting of back-to-back losses, a sensation the Irish last experienced four years ago. Yet, that’s the taste the Irish will have in their collective mouths when they match up with Army Monday at 7 p.m. (EST) at the Joyce Center.

For the first time since December 1997, Notre Dame lost for a second consecutive outing, as Arizona dealt the Irish a last-second 72-70 loss on Saturday at the McKale Center in Tucson, Ariz. Notre Dame owned a sizeable advantage over the Wildcats in most categories, shooting 43.1 percent from the floor (53.8 percent from three-point range). The Irish also dominated on the glass, holding a 41-30 rebounding edge. However, UA held the edge in one key area – free throw shooting, where it connected on all 20 attempts to set a Notre Dame opponent record.

Junior guard Alicia Ratay led the Irish in scoring for the second consecutive game, tallying 19 points on eight-of-13 shooting, including a trio of three-point field goals. Forward Jacqueline Batteast and guard Le’Tania Severe each added 12 points, with Severe also dishing out a career-high six assists.

Notre Dame jumped out to a pair of three-point leads in the early going, but Arizona countered with a 15-5 run to seize its biggest lead of the first half at 23-16 with 8:35 to go. The Irish rallied and tied the game four times in the period, the last when Severe hit two free throws for a 35-35 halftime deadlock.

Notre Dame stormed from the locker room in the second half, going on a 14-6 run to take a 49-41 lead at the 15:42 mark . However, UA reeled in the Irish, catching them at 54-54 with 8:56 left. From there, the lead changed hands eight times – Severe’s two free throws gave the Irish a 70-68 lead with 50 seconds to go, but Arizona scored four points in the final 24 seconds, the last two on Elizabeth Pickney’s layup at the buzzer to pull out the victory.

SCOUTING THE IRISH

Notre Dame looks to write a new chapter in its rapidly-developing history as the Irish defend their first NCAA championship in 2001-02. Seven monogram winners, including two starters, return from last season’s title-winning squad, giving head coach Muffet McGraw a broad foundation from which to build this year. In addition, the Irish welcome six talented freshmen to the fold, a group heralded as perhaps the finest recruiting class in school history and ranked as high as third by several national publications.

McGraw is in her 15th year at Notre Dame with a 323-119 (.731) record and has led the Irish to six straight NCAA Tournament appearances and eight overall. She was a near-unanimous choice as national coach of the year in 2000-01, winning top honors from the Atlanta Tipoff Club (Naismith Award), Associated Press, Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA), and Sports Illustrated for Women. She also was named the BIG EAST Coach of the Year, marking the third different conference to recognize McGraw as its top skipper since she took the reins at Notre Dame in 1987.

Both of Notre Dame’s returning starters have already been honored by the BIG EAST coaches in their preseason balloting. Senior guard/forward Ericka Haney (4.3 ppg., 5.0 rpg.) was a second team preseason all-conference pick and brings explosive quickness and versatility to the Irish lineup, along with veteran leadership. As Notre Dame’s only captain, she will be called upon to assume a greater mantle of responsibility in ’01-02, a trait she showed when she corralled a game-high nine rebounds at Arizona. Junior guard Alicia Ratay (15.3 ppg., 6.7 rpg.) was a first team preseason all-BIG EAST choice and is one of 30 finalists for the Naismith Award after setting an NCAA record for three-point percentage (.547) by a sophomore last season. She scored a team-high 19 points (hitting three of five three-point field goal tries) and added seven rebounds in Saturday’s loss at Arizona.

Joining Ratay in the backcourt is sophomore Le’Tania Severe (11.3 ppg., 3.3 rpg, 5.0 apg), who was hampered by injuries last season, appearing in just 22 games, but has confidently taken control of the Irish offense this season. She smashed several of her previous career highs against Colorado State with 15 points and a trio of three-point field goals, the first of her career. She followed that up with 12 points and a career-high six assists three days later at Arizona. Juniors Monique Hernandez and walk-on Karen Swanson, along with sophomore Jeneka Joyce (1.7 ppg., 1.0 apg.) give McGraw tremendous flexibility in her guard rotation. Additionally, freshmen Allison Bustamante, Jill Krause and Kelsey Wicks (4.0 ppg., 305 rpg.) provide the Irish with solid ballhandling and perimeter shooting depth. Wicks scored a season-high nine points at Arizona, hitting all four of her free throw attempts and making her first career three-point field goal.

A pair of freshmen (and former Parade All-Americans) are looking to make an immediate impact on the Notre Dame front line, as forward Jacqueline Batteast (9.0 ppg., 6.7 rpg.) and center Teresa Borton (8.7 ppg., 7.0 rpg.) have started all three regular season games for the Irish. Batteast was named the 2001-02 preseason BIG EAST Rookie of the Year and her combination of speed, athleticism and perimeter shooting ability already make her a valuable weapon in the Irish arsenal. Batteast charted the first double-double of her career against Colorado State with 13 points and 11 rebounds. Meanwhile, at 6-3, Borton is a smooth and versatile post player with excellent mobility and a solid defensive presence. She showed tremendous promise in her first collegiate game against Valparaiso, scoring a game-high 14 points and grabbing a game-best nine rebounds. Junior Amanda Barksdale was one of the nation’s top shot blockers last season but has missed Notre Dame’s first three games with a stress reaction in her right leg, while freshman Katy Flecky was a two-time Miss Colorado Basketball and offers the Irish an physical presence in the post. In a reserve role, Flecky has turned in solid performances in her last two games, notching six points and eight rebounds at Colorado State last Wednesday, and tallying nine points and six rebounds at Arizona.

SCOUTING ARMY

In a strange scheduling twist, Army (1-3) actually has spent more time in northern Indiana over the last week than Notre Dame. The Black Knights arrived in South Bend on Thanksgiving Day and practiced in the area on Thursday and Friday before traveling down to Fort Wayne and picking up an 82-71 victory over Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne last Saturday afternoon. Katie Macfarlane led the way for Army, posting 18 points and 10 rebounds to notch her third double-double in four games this season. In fact, all five starters scored in double figures for the Black Knights at IPFW, thanks in large part to Army’s red-hot shooting (58.8 percent for the game, including 6-of-8 from three-point range).

The Black Knights opened their season at home and didn’t fare nearly as well, bowing to Davidson (72-58) and Hofstra (68-51) in the Army Tip-Off Classic, before dropping a 64-61 decision to Columbia last Tuesday night.

Although only a sophomore, Macfarlane has seized a leadership role for Army this season. The 6-0 forward, a second-team all-Patriot League selection last year, leads the team in scoring (17.0 ppg.) and rebounding (11.0 ppg.) and her .538 field goal percentage is good for second on the squad. Senior forward Halaevalu Helu, the sole captain for the Black Knights this season, also has shown good form in the early portion of the year, leading the team with a sparkling .722 field goal percentage this season. Senior guard Christina Canelli is Army’s primary offensive sparkplug, connecting at a 62.5 percent clip from three-point range while dishing out a team-best 4.0 assists per game.

Another player to keep an eye on is junior guard Amy Saal, who hails from nearby Elkhart, Ind., and attended Elkhart Central High School. Saal has appeared in two games for the Black Knights this season, averaging 5.5 points and 4.0 rebounds per game. She rang up nine points and seven rebounds in Saturday’s victory at IPFW.

Army is coached by Sherri Abbey-Nowatzki, who is in her fourth season at the Academy. She has posted a 36-53 (.404) record during her tenure with the Black Knights, a run which has included steady progress. Last year, she guided Army to a 19-10 record and a nine-game improvement, one of the best in Division I during the 2000-01 campaign. Prior to assuming the reins at Army, Abbey-Nowatzki was an assistant at St. Bonaventure (1996-98) and Navy (1993-96), as well as a head coach at the Division III level at Keuka College (1992-93) and D’Youville College (1991-92).

THE NOTRE DAME-ARMY SERIES

Monday’s game will be the first-ever meeting between Notre Dame and Army on the hardwood.

IF NOTRE DAME WINS …

* Notre Dame would register its 40th consecutive home victory, continuing the second-longest active streak in the nation (Kent State – 43).

* The Irish would chalk up their 25th consecutive non-conference win at the Joyce Center, a streak which dates back nearly five years (Dec. 9, 1996 – L, 81-69 vs. No., 19/13 Wisconsin).

* Notre Dame would end just its second two-game losing streak in the last five seasons.

* The Irish would raise their record to 25-1 (.962) all-time against teams from New York State.

* Notre Dame would improve its overall record to 89-14 (.864) over the last three-plus seasons.

NOTRE DAME AGAINST THE PATRIOT LEAGUE & SERVICE ACADEMIES

Notre Dame will be entering a new forum when it takes on Army Monday night. It will be the first-ever meeting for the Irish women’s basketball team against both a Patriot League member and a U.S. service academy. The Notre Dame men’s basketball team has faced service academies 21 times in its history, going 19-2 against these military institutions. However, the Irish men haven’t faced a service academy since playing Navy in 1980.

EMPIRE STATE SUCCESS

When it takes the floor Monday night against Army, Notre Dame will be seeking to continue its hold over teams from the state of New York. The Irish are 24-1 (.960) all-time against Empire State schools, with a 63-56 loss at Syracuse in 1989 standing as the only blemish on that record. Notre Dame also is 10-0 at home against New York schools, including a 89-44 win over Fordham last season. The majority of that success has come at the hands of Syracuse and St. John’s, both of whom are members of the BIG EAST Conference along with the Irish.

A SEVERE DEVELOPMENT

Sophomore guard Le’Tania Severe turned in two of the best performances of her career last week at Colorado State and Arizona, piling up career highs of 15 points and three three-point field goals and CSU and tallying a career-best six assists at UA. Through the first three games of this season, Severe is second on the team with 11.3 points per game and leads the squad with 5.0 assists per game. Entering the 2001-02 campaign, her previous career bests were seven points and two assists and she had yet to make a three-point field goal in her career.

IT’S BATTEAST, TO SAY THE LEAST

Although the 2001-02 season is only three games old, freshman forward Jacqueline Batteast is already showing flashes of the potential which led the BIG EAST coaches to vote her as the league’s preseason Rookie of the Year. The South Bend, Ind., resident added another accomplishment to her growing resume last Wednesday night at Colorado State, chalking up her first career double-double with 13 points and 11 rebounds against the Rams. This season, Batteast is third on the team in scoring at 9.0 points per game and ranks second on the squad with 6.7 rebounds per contest.

RATAY TURNS IN SOME IRONMAN PERFORMANCES

Junior guard Alicia Ratay has chosen to lead by example in the first three games of this season. In a remarkable display of endurance, the Lake Zurich, Ill., native has played 117 of a possible 120 minutes this season, including a wire-to-wire stint in Notre Dame’s season-opening win over Valparaiso on Nov. 18.

CRASHING THE BOARDS

Despite losing its top two rebounders from last year (Ruth Riley and Kelley Siemon), Notre Dame doesn’t appear to have broken stride in the rebounding department this season. The Irish have averaged 42.7 rebounds per game in their first three games of 2001-02, owning a +8.0 edge on the glass this year. Leading the charge on the boards for Notre Dame have been a pair of freshmen – center Teresa Borton is grabbing a team-high 7.0 rpg., while forward Jacqueline Batteast is hot on her heels, tied with junior guard Alicia Ratay at 6.7 rpg. Batteast also set a team season-high with 11 caroms last Wednesday at Colorado State.

THE BEST OFFENSE IS A GOOD DEFENSE …

Over the last five-plus 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 88-1 (.989) record when they hold their opponents to less than 60 points in a game. Curiously, the only time that notion didn’t come to pass was last season, when Rutgers handed Notre Dame a 54-53 loss, one of only two setbacks the Irish suffered en route to the 2001 national championship.

… 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. Over the last five-plus seasons (1995-96 to present), the Irish are 79-3 (.963) 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 and a 106-81 loss to Connecticut in 1998.

IRISH GET DEFENSIVE IN WIN OVER VALPARAISO

If the season opener was any indication, Notre Dame is ready to continue the defensive lockdown it mastered last season. The Irish gave up just 35 points in the victory over Valparaiso, holding the Crusaders to a 27.7 field goal percentage and only one field goal over the final 14 minutes of the contest. The 35 points were the fewest allowed by the Irish to a non-conference opponent since Nov. 24, 1989, when Notre Dame routed Liberty, 113-35, at the Rotary Classic in Orlando, Fla. Last year, the Irish led the nation in field goal percentage defense (.336) and ranked fifth in scoring defense (55.8 ppg.). They held 12 opponents under 50 points and 22 of 36 foes under 35 percent shooting.

NOTRE DAME STARTS A NEW THREE-POINT STREAK

The season-opening win over Valparaiso produced an offensive anomaly for Notre Dame. The Irish were held without a three-point field goal, breaking a streak of 50 consecutive games in which they had made at least one trey. Prior to last Sunday, the last time Notre Dame had gone dry from beyond the arc was Jan. 26, 2000, at St. John’s.

Notre Dame didn’t waste time in starting up a new three-point streak, canning seven triples last Wednesday night at Colorado State and seven more on Saturday at Arizona. The Irish have now made at least one three-pointer in 148 of their last 150 games, a streak which stretches back more than four seasons.

KILLER B’S IN THE IRISH LINEUP

Notre Dame had a decidedly youthful look in its starting lineup when it opened the season Sunday against Valparaiso, as freshmen Jacqueline Batteast and Teresa Borton got the nod at forward and center, respectively. In doing so, the pair were first rookie tandem in 20 years to start a season opener for the Irish – Ruth Kaiser and Mary Beth Schueth cracked the starting five in a 78-44 win over St. Joseph’s (Ind.) on Dec. 2, 1981. Borton paced the Irish with 14 points and nine rebounds against the Crusaders, while Batteast scored two points and grabbed five rebounds against Valparaiso.

Batteast, a 6-1 native of South Bend, was a consensus All-American as a senior at Washington High School after averaging 26.0 ppg., 16.0 rpg. and 4.4 bpg. She also has been chosen as the 2001-02 BIG EAST Conference Rookie of the Year. Borton joined Batteast as a Parade All-America selection last season at West Valley High School in Yakima, Wash., where the 6-3 post player rang up 17.9 ppg. while leading her school to the Class 3A state title.

RATAY NAMED NAISMITH CANDIDATE FOR SECOND CONSECUTIVE YEAR

Notre Dame junior guard Alicia Ratay has been selected as a preseason candidate for the 2001-02 Naismith College Basketball Player of the Year Award. It marks the second time in as many seasons that Ratay has been named to the 30-player preseason Naismith watch list.

Ratay averaged 12.9 points and 5.1 rebounds per game last season, and set an NCAA record for three-point percentage (54.7 percent) by a sophomore on the way to third-team all-BIG EAST Conference honors – she was the only sophomore to make any of the three all-league squads. Ratay also is a former BIG EAST Rookie of the Year and was named an honorable mention All-American by the Associated Press in 2000. She will be looking to follow in the footsteps of her former teammate, Ruth Riley, who won the 2000-01 Naismith Award, becoming the first Notre Dame women’s basketball player to be so recognized.

The Naismith Awards, in their 34th year, are given in honor of the inventor of the game of basketball – Dr. James Naismith. The awards program was founded by the Atlanta Tipoff Club, an organization dedicated to recognizing the achievements of student-athletes in basketball. The Awards, including Men’s and Women’s College Player of the Year, Men’s and Women’s Coach of the Year, Male and Female Prep Player of the Year and Men’s and Women’s Official of the Year, are determined by a vote of the Naismith Board of Selectors. In addition, the Board of Selectors, comprised of a select group of leading basketball coaches, journalists and administrators, honors a Men’s and Women’s Outstanding Contributor to Basketball. The 2001-02 Naismith Award will presented April 5, 2002 in Atlanta.

NOTRE DAME PICKED SECOND IN BIG EAST PRESEASON BALLOTING

Fresh off a share of their first-ever BIG EAST championship last season, the Irish have been picked to finish second in 2001-02 according to a preseason poll of the league’s coaches which was released at BIG EAST Media Day on Oct. 25. Notre Dame claimed two first-place votes and 155 points overall, trailing only Connecticut (11 first-place votes, 167 points). Rutgers, Boston College and Villanova round out the top five, with VU picking up the remaining first-place vote.

Individually, junior guard Alicia Ratay was a first team preseason all-BIG EAST selection after earning third-team honors last year. The Lake Zurich, Ill., native set an NCAA record for three-point percentage by a sophomore last season (.547) and is the top returning scorer for the Irish in 2001-02 after charting 12.9 points per game a year ago.

Senior guard/forward Ericka Haney also was recognized by the conference coaches, earning second team preseason all-BIG EAST laurels. She joins Ratay as one of two starters back from last year’s NCAA championship squad and averaged 11 ppg. and 5.7 rpg. during the ’00-01 campaign.

In addition, freshman forward Jacqueline Batteast was chosen as the preseason BIG EAST Rookie of the Year. It’s the latest in a series of early-season honors for the South Bend, Ind., product, who also has been named a first team freshman All-American by the Women’s Basketball News Service and has been tabbed as one of the Top 21 “New Players of Impact” by Women’s College Hoops.com.

OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN

This season, for only the fourth time in school history, Notre Dame will have just one captain – senior guard/forward Ericka Haney. She is the first solo captain for the Irish since Sheila McMillen in 1998-99 and the second in head coach Muffet McGraw’s 15-year tenure.

IRISH HAIL FROM SEA TO SHINING SEA

The 13 players on this season’s Notre Dame roster hail from 10 different states, including two each from Florida, Illinois and Ohio. Other states represented on the Irish roster include Colorado, Indiana, Kansas, New Mexico, Texas, Washington and Wyoming. The all-time Notre Dame women’s basketball roster features players from 34 different states, including 23 during the Muffet McGraw era. Ironically, the most common home state on the Irish all-time roster – Michigan (14) – is not represented on this season’s roster.

FUN WITH NUMBERS

This season, Notre Dame fans will see a pair of jersey numbers on the floor that haven’t made an appearance in quite some time. Freshman guard Kelsey Wicks has chosen to wear No. 24, becoming the first Irish player since Andrea Alexander (1990-94) to sport those digits. In addition, freshman forward Jacqueline Batteast is wearing No. 21 this season, a number which has not been modeled by an Irish player since All-American Beth Morgan wore the same jersey from 1993-97. Prior to Morgan, the last Notre Dame player to wear No. 21 was current Irish assistant coach Coquese Washington, who had the number from 1989-93.

NOW THAT’S A HOME COURT ADVANTAGE

Notre Dame is looking to continue some impressive streaks in 2001-02. The Irish have won a school-record 39 consecutive games at home, the second-longest active streak in the nation behind Kent State’s 43-game run. In fact, the Irish have not lost at home in nearly three years, dating back to a loss to top-ranked Connecticut on Dec. 8, 1998. Notre Dame also has a 49-3 (.942) record in BIG EAST games at the Joyce Center, with Connecticut the only league team to solve the Irish at home.

Notre Dame also sports a four-year, 24-game non-conference winning streak at the Joyce Center – a streak that includes victories over a trio of sixth-ranked teams (UCLA and Duke in 1998-99 and Purdue in 2000-01), as well as 25th-ranked Illinois in ’98-99. Notre Dame’s last non-conference loss at the Joyce Center came way back on Dec. 9, 1996, when 19th-ranked Wisconsin toppled the Irish, 81-69. Overall, the Irish are 64-2 (.970) at the Joyce Center in their last 66 home games, with the only losses coming to Connecticut.

Since its inaugural season in 1977-78, Notre Dame has played all of its games at the Joyce Center. The Irish own a 227-65 mark for a .777 winning percentage since that first season. Last year, the Irish were a perfect 15-0 for the second year in a row. The 15 victories are a school record for home wins in a season and the first time Notre Dame teams have been undefeated at home during the regular season. During the last five-plus seasons, Muffet McGraw’s squad is 77-4 (.951) at the Joyce Center.

SEASON TICKET SALES REACH ALL-TIME HIGH FOR IRISH

Attendance at Notre Dame women’s basketball games in 2000-01 increased nearly 88 percent compared to the previous season – and indications suggest another significant jump is in order for the 2001-02 campaign. Coming off the 2001 NCAA championship, there already have been more than 6,700 season tickets sold to the general public and University faculty and staff for the ’01-’02 women’s basketball season. That’s compared to 2,700 a year ago and 940 in 1999-2000- a jump of nearly 150 percent over last season, and a whopping 700 percent rise in just two years.

The sale of season tickets for the ’01-02 campaign actually began midway through Notre Dame’s 2001 championship season. All seats are reserved for Irish women’s games for the first time this season – all seating in previous years had been general admission.

The Irish ranked 10th nationally in attendance last year at 6,376 fans per game, compared to 3,392 in 1999-2000. Notre Dame also recorded the first two women’s basketball sellouts in school history, as 11,418 fans packed the Joyce Center for victories over top-ranked Connecticut and Georgetown.

In their season opener on Nov. 18, the Irish drew 7,960 fans for their win over Valparaiso, the sixth-largest crowd in school history. In fact, all of the top 20 crowds in the Notre Dame record book have occurred during the 15-year tenure of head coach Muffet McGraw.

NOTRE DAME FACES TOUGH SCHEDULE IN 2001-02

Notre Dame will play 10 teams which reached the postseason as part of a rugged schedule this year. The Irish battle seven NCAA Tournament squads, including four (Connecticut – 1/1, Purdue – 11/11, Michigan – 19/18 and Colorado State – 20/22) which are ranked in the Top 25 in the latest Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today polls. In addition, six Irish opponents (Villanova, Rutgers, Boston College, DePaul, USC and Arizona) are receiving votes in one or both of the major rankings.

IRISH ON THE SMALL SCREEN

Notre Dame is getting a good deal of face time in 2001-02, playing on television six times, including last Saturday’s nationally-televised contest at Arizona (Fox Sports Net) and the Jan. 21 tilt with Connecticut (ESPN). In addition, Notre Dame will appear three times as part of the BIG EAST regular-season television package, playing host to Virginia Tech (Jan. 26) and traveling to Villanova (Jan. 12) and Rutgers (Feb. 16). All three of those games will be telecast live on Fox Sports Chicago as part of the league’s TV deal. The BIG EAST Championship semifinals on March 4 also will be aired on the BIG EAST TV package, while the conference championship game on March 5 will be broadcast live on ESPN2.

Additionally, the rematch of the 2001 NCAA championship game between Notre Dame and Purdue on Dec. 6 from West Lafayette, Ind., will be televised live by LeSea Broadcasting’s flagship station, WHME-TV 46 in South Bend. Other LeSea stations may choose to carry the broadcast as well.

NOTRE DAME RECEIVES COMMITMENTS FROM PAIR OF TOP 25 PROSPECTS

Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw announced Nov. 15 that two of the nation’s top high school student-athletes have chosen to continue their careers with the Irish, signing national letters of intent to attend Notre Dame beginning in the fall of 2002. Megan Duffy (Dayton, OH/Chaminade Julienne HS) and Courtney LaVere (Ventura, CA/Buena HS) are the first players to commit to the Irish during the early signing period.

Duffy, a 5-7 guard, averaged 17 points per game last season for Chaminade Julienne High School in Dayton, Ohio. She was a 2001 first-team Division I all-state selection and earned honorable mention All-America accolades from Street & Smith’s. Additionally, Student Sports tabbed her as a junior All-America selection. She was rated as high as No. 24 in the country by the All-Star Girls Report (ASGR) and No. 29 by School Sports.

LaVere, a 6-3 forward, tallied 13.8 points and eight rebounds per game last season for Buena High School in Ventura, Calif. She also shot 54 percent from the field and 73 percent from the free throw line for BHS, which was ranked in the top 10 nationally throughout the 2000-01 season by USA Today. In addition, LaVere was an All-America honoree by both USA Today and Street & Smith’s last year, and she already has been selected as a preseason third-team All-American for the ’01-02 campaign by School Sports. Like Duffy, LaVere also was a first-team all-state selection last season. She is a consensus top-15 player according to all of the major recruiting services – No. 10 by the Blue Star Index, No. 13 by School Sports and No. 15 by ASGR.

The additions of Duffy and LaVere already have given Notre Dame one of this year’s top 10 recruiting classes, according to at least one recruiting outlet. The Blue Star Index has ranked the latest group of Irish signees sixth in the nation, marking the sixth consecutive year in which Blue Star has placed Notre Dame’s recruiting class among the Top 20 in the country.

NOTRE DAME LOGO IS TOPS IN CONSUMER SALES

According to a recent survey published in USA Today, more consumers buy clothing with a Notre Dame logo than any other university in the country. More than 10 percent of all clothing college owned has a Notre Dame logo, topping the University of North Carolina, which was second with 9.5 percent. Rounding out the top five were Michigan (6.7 percent), Penn State (6.4 percent) and Duke (6.1 percent). The survey was printed in USA Today on Nov. 20 and was conducted by ESPN Sports Poll, a service of TNS Intersearch.

BOOK ON NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP SEASON TO HIT SHELVES IN DECEMBER

Fans of Notre Dame women’s basketball will be able to relive the 2000-01 NCAA championship season in a new book by Mark Bradford entitled “Nice Girls Finish First.” The book, which is slated to hit store shelves on Dec. 10, is the story of how the Irish and head coach Muffet McGraw put together a squad of truly remarkable young women, some of whom overcame great odds, to win the national championship last April. Included in the book are in-depth interviews with members of the Notre Dame senior class and starting lineup, giving an unique perspective on what it goes into putting together a championship team.

Bradford is a sportswriter for the South Bend Tribune, and also has done freelance work for the Associated Press and Indianapolis Star. The Mishawaka, Ind., resident has covered Notre Dame football and men’s and women’s basketball for the last six years.

KRAUSE FEATURED IN “CONFESSIONS OF A FRESHMAN”

Freshman guard Jill Krause will give fans an inside look at the the 2001-02 Irish women’s basketball team through regular diary entries on the Notre Dame athletic website, www.und.com. Entitled “Confessions of a Freshman,” the Glenview, Ill., native will trace the journey for a first-year player on the defending NCAA championship squad. Her diary entries may be accessed either from the front page or the women’s basketball page on the Notre Dame website.

HANEY SHINES ON BIG EAST ALL-STAR TEAM

For the second time in as many years, Notre Dame sent a player with the BIG EAST Women’s Basketball All-Star Team, as guard/forward Ericka Haney joined the squad for its six-game swing of Germany this summer. Haney followed in the footsteps of Niele Ivey, who helped lead the BIG EAST All-Stars to a 5-1 record during a junket through Canada in the summer of 2000.

Haney helped the BIG EAST, which was led by Syracuse head coach Marianna Freeman, to an unbeaten 6-0 record during its tour, scoring a team-high 18 points in a 103-57 win over Ludwigsburg/Malmsheim in the final game of the trip.

Haney finished with a team-high 13.0 points per game and collected 4.5 rebounds per game during her European vacation. She also scored in double figures in five of the All-Stars’ six wins.

– ND –