Notre Dame Fighting Irish - Official Athletics Website

Women's Basketball Battles No. 25 Boston College Wednesday

Jan. 28, 2003

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(#24 ESPN/USA Today) Notre Dame Fighting Irish (11-6, 3-3) vs. (#25 ESPN/USA Today) Boston College Eagles (13-4, 5-1)

The Date and Time: Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2003, at 7 p.m. EST.

The Site: Conte Forum (8,606) in Chestnut Hill, Mass.

The Radio Plans: All Notre Dame games are broadcast live on WDND-AM (ESPN Radio 1620) and/or WNDV-AM (1490) in South Bend with Sean Stires handling the play-by-play. These broadcasts also are available through the Notre Dame athletics website at www.und.com.

Real-Time Statistics: Live in-game statistics are available for the Boston College game via the Notre Dame (www.und.com) and Boston College (www.bceagles.com) athletics websites.

Websites: Notre Dame (www.und.com), Boston College (www.bceagles.com).

No. 24 NOTRE DAME VISITS NO. 25 BOSTON COLLEGE FOR KEY BIG EAST CONTEST
For the second time in less than a week, Notre Dame will be on the road to face a ranked BIG EAST Conference opponent when it travels to Chestnut Hill, Mass., Wednesday night for a battle with No. 25 Boston College at Conte Forum. The 24th-ranked Irish bring with them a seven-game regular-season road winning streak in conference play, their second-longest road success string away from the Joyce Center since they joined the BIG EAST eight years ago.

Notre Dame (11-6, 3-3 BIG EAST) picked up a critical conference win on Saturday, and snapped a two-game losing streak in the process with a 58-56 victory at No. 20 Villanova. The Irish led virtually the entire way, opening up double-digit leads in both halves before the Wildcats rallied to tie the game twice in the final three minutes. However, senior guard Alicia Ratay hit a jumper in the lane with 48 seconds left, breaking a 53-all tie, and junior guard Le’Tania Severe added a pair of crucial free throws moments later to help seal the victory, Notre Dame’s first road win over a ranked opponent in more than two years.

Freshman forward Courtney LaVere posted her fifth double-double of the season for the Irish, coming off the bench to pile up 20 points and a season-high 12 rebounds. She also connected on 12-of-16 free throws, setting a Notre Dame rookie record for free throws made.

Boston College (13-4, 5-1) earned its seventh win in the last eight games with a 69-61 victory over West Virginia last Saturday at Conte Forum. Senior forward Becky Gottstein scored 17 of her 22 points in the second half, and added 14 rebounds to chart her fifth double-double of the season.

Sophomore guard Jessalyn Deveny leads the Eagles in scoring (18.2 ppg.) and field goal percentage (.552), while Gottstein is second in scoring (14.1 ppg.) and first in rebounding (8.3 rpg.). As a eam, BC leads the league in free throw percentage (.774).

Head coach Cathy Inglese is 162-117 (.581) in 10 seasons at Boston College. She is 2-7 in her career against Notre Dame (2-2 at Conte Forum).

SCOUTING THE IRISH
Notre Dame’s latest ascension to college basketball’s summit already is underway, thanks in large part to the nine returning monogram winners and three starters back from last season’s 20-10 club. Of the nine veterans back in the fold, only two are seniors, providing head coach Muffet McGraw with a rich blend of stability and experience upon which to build her next title contender.

McGraw now is in her 16th season at Notre Dame with a 353-133 (.726) record (441-174, .717 in 21 years overall) that includes 13 20-win seasons, nine postseason appearances, seven NCAA Tournament bids, four trips to the Sweet Sixteen, two Final Four berths and the 2001 national championship. Along the way, she has groomed seven All-Americans, 17 all-conference selections (including 10 first-team picks), seven players who have gone on to play professional basketball in the United States, and three USA Basketball National Team players (who have won a total of six medals). In addition, 15 of her former players and/or assistants currently are coaching at the high school or college level, including five collegiate head coaches. She also has been a master recruiter, attracting seven consecutive top 20 classes, including this year’s freshman class, which was ranked eighth in the nation by Blue Star Basketball. McGraw coached the 600th game of her career on Nov. 29, a 69-57 win at USC, and she earned her 350th victory at Notre Dame on New Year’s Eve at Marquette, joining Digger Phelps as the only Irish basketball coaches (men’s or women’s) to win 350 games at Notre Dame.

Two of Notre Dame’s three returning starters received numerous preseason accolades. Senior guard Alicia Ratay (10.2 ppg., 3.8 rpg., .429 3FG%, .891 FT%) is a two-time Associated Press All-American and she is a preseason first-team all-BIG EAST Conference selection this year. The Lake Zurich, Ill., native has seen her name sprinkled liberally througout the Notre Dame record book, including marks for scoring (6th, 1,548 points), three-point field goal percentage (1st, .475) and free throw percentage (1st, .871). In the latter two categories, Ratay’s shooting numbers would be good enough to place her among the top 10 in NCAA history, and her three-point ratio would be the best in NCAA annals. She has led the Irish in scoring four times this season, including a game-high 20-point effort (6-8 FG, season-high 5-6 3FG) vs. IPFW. Ratay also tallied the 1,500th point of her career Jan. 8 at West Virginia, becoming the sixth player in school history to reach that milestone. Last weekend, she carded a season-high nine rebounds at Villanova and gave the Irish the lead for good on a jumper with 48 seconds to play.

In addition, Ratay joined sophomore forward Jacqueline Batteast (team-high 15.2 ppg., team-high 7.7 rpg., 2.2 apg., 1.4 bpg., 2.1 spg., five double-doubles) on the list of 30 candidates for the 2002-03 Naismith Award, given annually to the nation’s outstanding player. Batteast is the reigning United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) National Freshman of the Year and was a unanimous choice as the BIG EAST Rookie of the Year after turning in one of the finest rookie seasons in school history. Like Ratay, she also was a preseason first-team all-conference choice this year. Batteast has scored in double figures in 15 games this season, including three 20-point efforts. She also nearly posted a triple-double in Notre Dame’s season-opening win over Cleveland State, finishing with 19 points, eight rebounds and a career-high seven assists. She did notch her first double-double of the season with 14 points and a game-high 11 rebounds at USC. Batteast also contributed a season-best 24 points (10-15 FG) at Arizona State and added her second double-double (18 points, game-high 10 rebounds) vs. Colorado State. She tacked on her third double-double at Marquette, posting a game-high 23 points (career-best 11-17 FG) and 11 rebounds, and notched her fourth double-dip vs. Miami (12 points, 11 rebounds). Batteast tallied her fifth double-double at St. John’s, matching her season highs with 24 points and 11 rebounds.

Joining Ratay in the Irish backcourt is junior guard Le’Tania Severe (9.8 ppg., 3.9 rpg., team-high 3.8 apg., 2.0 spg., .490 FG%), who quickly has developed into one of the top point guards in the BIG EAST. Last season, the speedy Severe capably filled the large shoes left by the graduation of All-American Niele Ivey, setting career highs in virtually every statistical category. Severe has evolved into a scoring threat for the Irish this year, scoring in double figures in nine games after cracking double digits only seven times in her first two years at Notre Dame. She canned all three of her three-point attempts vs. Cleveland State and scored 15 points at Valparaiso, knocking down a career-best 11-14 FT. Severe chalked up 20 points (5-5 FG, 10-11 FT) and a season-high six assists at Marquette, before adding 10 points, seven rebounds and six assists vs. Purdue. However, her best all-around performance may have come at West Virginia, when she tallied a career-high 21 points (6-9 FG, 8-9 FT) along with six rebounds, five assists and five steals. She is backstopped by freshman Megan Duffy (2.3 ppg., 2.6 apg.), a crafty lefthander with a commanding floor presence and a smooth outside jumper. Duffy dished out a game-high seven assists at Arizona State, the most by an Irish rookie since Ratay’s seven handouts against Butler on Dec. 1, 1999. She also scored a season-high six points at Marquette, hitting the first two three-pointers of her career. Duffy added a game-high six assists at St. John’s and had a team-high five assists vs. Connecticut. She made her first career start last Saturday at Villanova, dishing out three assists in a career-high 34 minutes.

At the other guard position, sophomore Kelsey Wicks (2.8 ppg., 2.6 rpg.) offers a unique mix of outside shooting ability and toughness in the paint. The 6-2 native of Gillette, Wyo., connected at a 33-percent clip from the three-point line as a freshman, and she showed no fear in playing some of the nation’s elite teams, scoring in double figures on the road at Connecticut and Tennessee. She scored a season-high 12 points against Temple, her third career double-digit game and best-ever outing at home. Wicks also was strong on the glass at St. John’s, collecting a season-high eight rebounds. However, she sat out the Villanova game with a foot injury and is questionable for the Boston College matchup.

Senior walk-on Karen Swanson (1.1 ppg., 0.3 spg.), junior Jeneka Joyce and sophomore Jill Krause (0.5 ppg., 0.4 rpg.) also will be counted on for support at the guard positions. Swanson tied her career high with five points vs. Cleveland State, while Krause has seen action in 11 games, grabbing a career-high three rebounds vs. IPFW and canning her first career three-pointer vs. Tennessee. Meanwhile, Joyce is out indefinitely while recovering from a myriad of leg injuries suffered during her career.

Sophomore center Teresa Borton (7.9 ppg., 4.9 rpg., team-high .612 FG%) and sophomore forward Katy Flecky (7.7 ppg., 4.2 rpg., .456 FG%) have teamed up with Batteast to produce a formidable front line for Notre Dame this season. The 6-3 Borton turned in a solid performance in Notre Dame’s season opener, hitting her first six shots and finishing with 18 points. She also set new career highs with 11 rebounds and four assists vs. IPFW, and later added 14 points and a career-best four blocked shots against Tennessee. She also piled up a team-high 13 points vs. Miami and tossed in a season-best 19 points (8-11 FG) at St. John’s. Borton has been solid thus far in BIG EAST games, posting a sparkling .700 field goal percentage (21-30). At the same time, Flecky is widely considered to be the most improved player on the Notre Dame roster, after logging 10 points per game during her team’s tour of Europe last May. She displayed her improvement in the season opener, tallying a career-high 22 points and game-best eight rebounds vs. Cleveland State. Her five double-figure games this season already have topped her total (three) from all of last year. Flecky has seen limited action over the last month due to a lingering back injury that forced her to miss the Marquette and St. John’s games.

Freshman forward Courtney LaVere (13.4 ppg., 7.1 rpg., .525 FG%, five double-doubles) also is seeing significant playing time on the blocks for the Irish this season. LaVere was a consensus prep All-American as a senior at Buena High School in Ventura, Calif., averaging 26.5 points, 11.4 rebounds and 3.5 blocks per game, all while shooting 57 percent from the field. The potential the 6-3 LaVere brings to the table was noticed by one national media outlet prior to the season, as the website Women’s College Hoops.com named the Irish rookie one of its “Top 21 Freshmen of Impact.” LaVere wasted little time in living up to that billing, coming off the bench to card 18 points, seven rebounds and five assists vs. Cleveland State. It was the highest scoring output by a Notre Dame freshman in her debut since Ratay’s 18-point night vs. Toledo in 1999. She also rang up game highs of 17 points and 11 rebounds against No. 5 Tennessee.

LaVere has been playing extremely well of late, averaging 16.4 ppg. and 9.1 rpg. with a .546 field goal percentage (53-97) over the last nine games. In that time, she has amassed four double-doubles against Marquette (16 points, game-high 12 rebounds), Purdue (game highs of 23 points and 10 rebounds), St. John’s (19 points, 10 rebounds) and Villanova (20 points, season-high 12 rebounds). She also scored in double figures eight times with three 20-point outings. She also tied her career best with 23 points and added nine rebounds (both game highs) vs. Rutgers.

THE NOTRE DAME-BOSTON COLLEGE SERIES
Notre Dame and Boston College have played 10 times previously, with the Irish holding a 7-3 edge in the series. All but one of those games (a BC victory) have come since Notre Dame joined the BIG EAST Conference for the 1995-96 season. The series has been much tighter when the scene shifts to Chestnut Hill, with the Eagles hold a slim 3-2 advantage at Conte Forum.

The teams played just once last season, with Notre Dame downing No. 16/18 Boston College, 60-44 on Feb. 10, 2002, before a crowd of 9,676 at the Joyce Center, the third-largest women’s basketball audience in school history. Jacqueline Batteast carded her 11th double-double of the season with 18 points and 10 rebounds. Alicia Ratay added 11 points, igniting a decisive 10-0 second-half run with a foul-line jumper that gave the Irish a 41-31 lead, and BC would get no closer than six points the rest of the way. Amanda Barksdale also set a school record with 11 blocked shots, part of a 16-block effort by Notre Dame, one off the BIG EAST record.

Boston College entered the game leading the nation in three-point percentage (.441), but shot 2-of-17 from behind the arc. Amber Jacobs was the only Eagles’ player in double figures, scoring 10 points. As a team, BC shot a season-low 23.9 percent (17-of-71) from the field en route to its lowest point total in more than two years.

In their last meeting at Conte Forum on Feb. 3, 2001, Notre Dame fought off a stiff challenge from Boston College, coming away with an 81-65 victory over the Eagles. Ruth Riley led all players with 24 points and 13 rebounds, while Niele Ivey chipped in with 16 points, seven assists and six rebounds for the Irish, who shot 47.4 percent from the field and committed just nine turnovers. Becky Gottstein and Nicole Conway both played all 40 minutes and scored 16 points apiece for BC. Notre Dame led by only a point with eight minutes to go in the first half, but broke the game open with a 16-6 run late in the period, and the Eagles never got closer than six points after that time.

SCOUTING BOSTON COLLEGE
Paced by a experienced core of veterans that includes three fifth-year seniors, Boston College has surged to a 13-4 record this season (5-1 in the BIG EAST Conference). The Eagles have been receiving votes in both major national polls nearly all season, and were ranked 25th in the most recent ESPN/USA Today coaches poll. BC has a total of nine letterwinners returning from last year’s club that posted a 23-9 record, reached the BIG EAST Championship game and advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three years.

Boston College notched its seventh win in the last eight games on Saturday by rallying from a 69-61 victory over West Virginia at Conte Forum. Senior all-BIG EAST forward Becky Gottstein scored 22 points (17 in the second half) and added 14 rebounds to pick up her fifth double-double of the season. Sophomore guard Jessalyn Deveny chipped in with 17 points and junior guard Amber Jacobs contributed 14 points and seven assists for the Eagles. BC actually trailed by two at halftime, but bounced back to remain undefeated all-time against the Mountaineers. WVU won the rebounding battle 40-38, but the Eagles forced 17 Mountaineer turnovers while giving the ball up only 11 times themselves.

Deveny has been the biggest surprise for Boston College this season, more than tripling her scoring average from last season at 18.2 points per game (third in the BIG EAST). She also leads the conference with a .552 field goal percentage and her 5.8 rpg. average is good for 19th in the loop. Meanwhile, Gottstein has recovered nicely from a season-ending injury in 2001-02, logging 14.1 points and 8.3 rebounds per game to rank 16th and fourth in the BIG EAST, respectively. She also is fifth in the conference in field goal percentage (.516) and eighth in free throw percentage (.783). Jacobs is third on the team in scoring (11.6 ppg.), while senior guard Brianne Stepherson ranks fifth in the BIG EAST with 5.12 assists per game.

Boston College has thrived in part because of its stingy defense. The Eagles are outscoring their opponents by 13.1 ppg., and own a +5.1 edge in the rebounding column. In addition, BC has been superb at the foul line this season, leading the BIG EAST with a .772 free throw percentage.

Head coach Cathy Inglese is in her 10th season at Boston College with a record of 162-117 (.581) at the school. She previously coached seven years at Vermont and owns a career record of 282-191 (.596), with five NCAA Tournament appearances to her credit (three at BC). She is 2-7 against Notre Dame in her head coaching career, including a 2-2 record in Chestnut Hill.

OTHER NOTRE DAME-BOSTON COLLEGE SERIES TIDBITS

  • Only twice in 10 previous meetings has Boston College scored more than 65 points in a game against Notre Dame (both coming at Conte Forum in 1998). Conversely, the Irish have topped the 65-point mark six times against BC, including each of their last three visits to Chestnut Hill.
  • The 44 points scored by Boston College in last year’s game with Notre Dame were the fewest by either team in the 10-game series.
  • For the sixth time in Notre Dame’s eight-year affiliation with the BIG EAST Conference, the Irish will be playing Boston College just once this season. Notre Dame faced the Eagles twice during the 1996-97 and 1998-99 campaigns.
  • Wednesday’s Notre Dame-Boston College contests will mark the seventh time in the last eight series games that one or both teams are ranked at tipoff (ND leads 6-1 in these games). The 1997-98 matchup (a 78-76 BC win on Feb. 12) is the only time in the last seven years that neither team appeared in the Top 25 of one of the major national polls prior to the game.

NOTRE DAME-BOSTON COLLEGE CONNECTIONS

  • Boston College junior center Maureen Leahy is the sister of former Notre Dame player Meaghan Leahy, who was one of five seniors on the 2001 national championship team. The Leahy family hails from Wilbraham, Mass.
  • Although they will be 3,000 miles away from home on Wednesday, there are three California natives (all freshmen) on the combined rosters for this year’s Notre Dame-Boston College matchup. Irish forward Courtney LaVere was a standout at Buena High School in Ventura. Meanwhile, BC guard Christine Smith played at the Crossroads School in Los Angeles, and Eagles forward Nicole Warren graduated from Marin Catholic High School in Mill Valley.

COMMONPLACE
Notre Dame and Boston College have faced six common opponents this season < temple,=”” colorado=”” state,=”” purdue,=”” west=”” virginia,=”” miami=”” and=”” st.=”” john’s=””>< with=”” the=”” eagles=”” holding=”” a=”” 5-1=”” record=”” and=”” the=”” irish=”” a=”” 4-2=”” mark=”” against=”” this=”” group.=””>

IF NOTRE DAME WINS …

  • The Irish will earn their second win in five tries over a ranked opponent this season.
  • Notre Dame will collect back-to-back road victories over Top 25 opponents for the first time in school history.
  • The Irish will raise their all-time regular-season BIG EAST Conference record to 106-21 (.835), the best mark in league history.
  • Notre Dame will claim its eighth consecutive regular-season conference road win, its longest BIG EAST winning streak away from home in three seasons (eight from 2/20/99 to 2/19/00).
  • The Irish will move to 3-3 all-time vs. Boston College at Conte Forum.
  • Head coach Muffet McGraw will see her record at Notre Dame rise to 354-133 (.727) in 16 seasons, and her overall ledger will jump to 442-174 (.718) in 21 years.
  • The Irish will raise their all-time record to 518-232 (.691) in 26 seasons of varsity competition.

IRISH INJURY REPORT (as of Jan. 28)
Junior G Jeneka Joyce leg injuries, out indefinitely
Sophomore G Kelsey Wicks soft tissue injury – foot, questionable (DNP at Villanova)

THREE-QUARTERS OF A MILLENNIUM
Notre Dame will play the 750th game in the program’s history Wednesday night when it takes on Boston College at Conte Forum. The Irish have an all-time record of 517-232 (.690) in 26 seasons of varsity competition. Included in that record are 17 20-win seasons (13 under current head coach Muffet McGraw), nine NCAA Tournament appearances, four trips to the NCAA Sweet Sixteen, two Final Four berths and the 2001 NCAA championship. However, what may be most impressive about Notre Dame’s women’s basketball program is the fact that the Irish have had exactly two losing seasons (1980-81 and 1991-92) in their first 25 years of existence!

RUNNING THE GAUNTLET
Notre Dame is in the midst of a difficult six-week stretch in its schedule. Beginning Dec. 23 vs. Colorado State and ending Feb. 5 vs. Georgetown, the Irish are playing 11 of 13 games against teams that are currently ranked or receiving votes in one or both of the major national polls. That run is highlighted by five games against Top 25 opposition, including this current stretch of three consecutive contests against nationally-ranked opponents (Connecticut, Villanova and Boston College).

The Boston College game is the 11th contest in this rugged mid-season docket, with Notre Dame holding a 5-5 record in this stretch to date.

CHARITY STRIPERS
The free throw line has been a very friendly place for Notre Dame this season. The Irish rank second in the BIG EAST Conference with a .744 free throw percentage, a far cry from their .673 mark last season which was the lowest ratio in 15 years. Notre Dame has shot 75 percent or better at the charity stripe nine times this season, highlighted by its 95-percent efficiency rate (19-20) Jan. 14 at St. John’s. That was the highest free throw percentage by an Irish squad since Dec. 1, 1993, when Notre Dame connected at a school-record .960 clip (24-25) in a win over Marquette.

Leading the Irish assault from the line has been senior guard Alicia Ratay, who leads the BIG EAST and ranks 12th in the nation with an .891 free throw percentage. That should come as no surprise, because Ratay ranks sixth in NCAA history with an .871 career free throw ratio (318-365). However, Ratay is one of four Notre Dame players who are shooting 75 percent or better at the stripe this year < junior=”” guard=””>Le’Tania Severe is second at .831 (3rd in the BIG EAST), followed by sophomore forward Jacqueline Batteast (.768, 9th in the BIG EAST) and sophomore guard Kelsey Wicks (.765). Severe’s free throw percentage has been perhaps the most pleasant development for the Irish < coming=”” into=”” this=”” season,=”” she=”” owned=”” a=”” .651=”” career=”” free=”” throw=”” percentage.=””>

Freshman forward Courtney LaVere added to Notre Dame’s free throw resurgence on Jan. 25 with her 12-for-16 performance from the charity stripe at Villanova. Her 12 made free throws were an Irish freshman record and tied for the fifth-highest total in school history. In addition, her 16 free throw attempts matched the fourth-highest single-game mark in the Notre Dame record book.

ROAD WARRIORS, PART I
In a surprising reversal of fortune this season, Notre Dame has had more success on the road than at home. The Irish are 7-2 this year on hostile ground (7-1 road, 0-1 neutral), compared to a 4-4 record at the Joyce Center. That’s a far cry from last season’s road woes when Notre Dame lost its first five games outside the Joyce Center and finished with a 7-9 record in road/neutral site games. Conversely, the Irish went 13-1 at home last year, winning their first 13 games at the Joyce Center before a season-ending three-point loss to Villanova. The Irish have won 13 of their last 17 regular-season games outside the Joyce Center, including 11 of their last 13. Of those last 13 games in hostile territory, the only blemishes on that record came earlier this season with losses to two teams that either are ranked or receiving votes in the current Associated Press poll < depaul=”” and=”” no.=”” 4=”” tennessee=”” (neutral=”” site).=””>

ROAD WARRIORS, PART II
Notre Dame has been especially effective on the road in BIG EAST Conference play, winning its last seven regular-season conference games away from the Joyce Center, dating back to last season. That’s the second-longest regular-season road winning streak for the Irish since they joined the BIG EAST in 1995-96 < the=”” longest=”” big=”” east=”” streak=”” is=”” eight=”” consecutive=”” regular-season=”” road=”” wins=”” from=”” feb.=”” 20,=”” 1999=”” to=”” feb.=”” 19,=”” 2000.=””>

Incidentally, the Notre Dame record for the longest regular-season road winning streak in any conference is 14 games (Feb. 18, 1993 to Jan. 14, 1995), which the Irish set during their days in the Midwestern Collegiate Conference.

THE BEASTS OF THE BIG EAST
Notre Dame is 105-21 (.833) in regular-season competition against the rest of BIG EAST Conference, owning the best conference winning percentage of any current member of the BIG EAST since joining the circuit for the 1995-96 campaign. The Irish also have won 61 of their last 72 regular-season conference games, and claimed a share of their first-ever BIG EAST regular-season championship in 2001. When including postseason competition (BIG EAST and NCAA tournaments), Notre Dame is 117-28 (.807) against league opponents < when=”” factoring=”” in=”” these=”” 19=”” postseason=”” tilts,=”” the=”” irish=”” are=”” 56-7=”” (.889)=”” at=”” home,=”” 49-17=”” (.742)=”” on=”” the=”” road=”” and=”” 12-7=”” (.632)=”” at=”” neutral=”” sites=”” all-time=”” against=”” big=”” east=”” foes.=””>

THE BATTEAST 500
Sophomore forward Jacqueline Batteast scored the 500th point of her career on Dec. 31 at Marquette. She now has 617 points in only 43 career games (14.3 ppg.), making her the fourth-fastest player to reach the 500-point mark in school history. A total of 13 players have scored their 500th point in less than two seasons at Notre Dame, although only five have done so in less than 40 career games (including Batteast and senior guard Alicia Ratay, who did it in 35 games).

RETURN OF THE RALLY MONKEY
The Irish posted their largest comeback in more than a year when they rallied from a 14-point second-half deficit to knock off previously unbeaten West Virginia, 66-59, on Jan. 8 in Morgantown. Notre Dame trailed 33-22 at the half and fell into a deeper hole when Mountaineer guard Kate Bulger nailed a three-point field goal on her team’s first possession of the second half. However, the Irish answered with a 16-2 run over the next 3:43 to tie the game and eventually take the victory.

The WVU win was the biggest comeback for Notre Dame since it set a NCAA Final Four record by erasing a 16-point deficit in a 90-75 win over Connecticut on March 30, 2001 in St. Louis. The victory over the Mountaineers also marked the fourth time in the last three years the Irish have won after trailing by double digits. In addition to the UConn game, Notre Dame rallied from 12 points down to defeat Purdue in the 2001 NCAA championship game, and the Irish also came back from a pair of 10-point deficits to win at Seton Hall on Feb. 2, 2002.

DIGGER AND ME
With a 75-68 Irish win at Marquette on New Year’s Eve, Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw joined Digger Phelps as the only Irish basketball coaches (men’s or women’s) to collect 350 victories at the school. McGraw is 353-133 (.726) in 16 seasons at Notre Dame, while Phelps posted a 393-197 (.666) mark in 20 years at the helm of the Irish men’s basketball program.

In addition, McGraw has the third-highest winning percentage of any basketball coach at Notre Dame (men’s or women’s) with at least five years of service, and her .726 ratio is the best by any coach in the last 60 years. Only men’s coaches Bertram G. Maris (.794 from 1907-12) and George Keogan (.771 from 1923-43) have had more success at Notre Dame over an extended period than McGraw.

CLOSE SHAVES
Three times this season, Notre Dame has been involved in some hair-raising finishes. The Irish pulled out narrow victories over Colorado State (46-45) and Villanova (58-56), but came up just short against Rutgers (64-61). However, a close game shouldn’t come as any surprise to Notre Dame fans. Over the last three seasons, the Irish have played 14 games that were decided by five points or less, evenly splitting those contests. The Colorado State nail-biter was the first one-point win for Notre Dame since a 63-62 squeaker over Villanova on Dec. 12, 1998 at the Joyce Center.

During the 16-year tenure of head coach Muffet McGraw, the Irish have posted a 33-39 (.458) record in games decided by five points or less, including a 15-13 (.536) mark since joining the BIG EAST Conference in 1995-96.

A WELL-BALANCED DIET
Notre Dame has benefited this season from a well-balanced offense, one which has seen at least three players score in double figures in 14 of 17 games (and 10 of 11 wins). In addition, the Irish have had four players reach double digits in six games this season (Cleveland State, USC, Valparaiso, Arizona State, Temple, Miami) and had five double-figure scorers on four occasions (Cleveland State, USC, Temple, Miami). The last time Notre Dame had five double-figure scorers four times in the same year was 2000-01, when the Irish turned the trick vs. Fordham, Connecticut (twice) and Alcorn State.

As you might expect, Notre Dame has three players averaging in double figures for the season. Sophomore forward and Naismith Award candidate Jacqueline Batteast has been the pacesetter at 15.2 ppg., followed by freshman forward Courtney LaVere, who has surged over the last month to average 13.4 points per game. Last year’s leading scorer, senior guard Alicia Ratay is third at 10.2 ppg. this season. Junior guard Le’Tania Severe is nearly scoring in double figures as well, currently averaging 9.8 ppg.

CATCH HER IF YOU CAN
Junior guard Le’Tania Severe has evolved into a major contributor at both ends of the floor for Notre Dame this season. The Pembroke Pines, Fla., product leads the Irish and ranks among the leaders in the BIG EAST Conference in assists (13th, 3.76 apg.) and steals (12th, 2.0 spg.). However, she also has displayed a nose for the basket, ranking fourth on the team with 9.8 points per game, more than double her career scoring average of 4.6 ppg. entering this season. In addition, Severe has scored in double figures nine times this year (including a career-high 21 points at West Virginia), after reaching double digits seven times in her first two seasons at Notre Dame.

WISH THEY ALL COULD BE CALIFORNIA GIRLS
Despite having to adjust to the faster college game, not to mention the unfamiliar winter weather of South Bend, freshman forward Courtney LaVere has made a significant impact in her first season at Notre Dame. The Ventura, Calif., native ranks second on the team and in the top 20 in the BIG EAST Conference in scoring (17th, 13.4 ppg.), rebounding (10th, 7.1 rpg.) and blocked shots (11th, 1.12 bpg.). In addition, she has five double-doubles to her credit, with three of her double-dips coming against top-10 opponents (No. 5 Tennessee, No. 7 Purdue and No. 20 Villanova).

LaVere began the season in fine fashion, coming off the bench to score 18 points in Notre Dame’s 107-65 rout of Cleveland State. That was the highest-scoring debut for an Irish freshman since current senior guard Alicia Ratay tallied 18 points at Toledo in 1999. As it turned out, that would be just the beginning for LaVere, who has scored in double figures seven times and earned game-high scoring honors three times this season.

Beginning with the first game after Christmas (vs. Tennessee), LaVere is averaging 16.4 points and 9.1 rebounds per game with a superb .546 field goal percentage (53-97). That run includes eight double-figure scoring games, three 20-point affairs and four double-doubles. Among her top performances over that time have been a 16-point/12-rebound afternoon at Marquette (Dec. 31), a 23-point/10-rebound outing vs. Purdue (Jan. 4), a 19-point/10-rebound evening at St. John’s (Jan. 14), a 23-point/nine-rebound day vs. Rutgers (Jan. 18) and a 20-point/12-rebound effort at Villanova (Jan. 25).

COOL AS ICE
Twice this season, senior guard Alicia Ratay has added chapters to her ever-growing legend at Notre Dame. On Dec. 23, she buried two free throws with 9.3 seconds left to defeat Colorado State, 46-45. It wasn’t the first time the Lake Zurich, Ill., product had stepped up in the clutch. Then, just over a month later on Jan. 25 at No. 20 Villanova, she canned a jumper in the lane with 48 seconds remaining to break a 53-53 tie and propel the Irish to the victory.

Late-game heroics have been nothing new for Ratay, who has been tough in the clutch ever since her freshman season. As a rookie playing at No. 8 Rutgers in 2000, Ratay set a BIG EAST Conference record by going 7-for-7 from three-point range, including two treys in the final 16 seconds of the contest with the Irish trailing by six. She went on to finish with 26 points and 10 rebounds as Notre Dame pulled out a 78-74 overtime win.

Last season, Ratay nearly topped herself in the BIG EAST Tournament quarterfinals vs. Syracuse. With the Irish trailing by 16 points and only 3:52 left, Ratay scored 17 of the next 19 Notre Dame points, including nine in a span of 18 seconds, to single-handedly spark a 19-5 run that pulled her team within 81-79 with 18 seconds remaining. However, Syracuse finally forced a Ratay miss and hit three free throws to save the victory.

START ME UP
Senior guard Alicia Ratay reached a milestone at Valparaiso, becoming the 10th player in school history to start 100 career games. The Lake Zurich, Ill., native now has started 114 of 115 games for Notre Dame (including the last 56 in a row), yielding her starting spot to Imani Dunbar for Senior Night in 2001 (vs. Georgetown). With her next start, Ratay will break a tie Beth Morgan (1993-97) and Niele Ivey (1996-2001) for fourth place on Notre Dame’s career games started list. Ratay is presently 10 starts away from the school record of 124, currently held by Ruth Riley. At her current pace, Ratay would break Riley’s mark by the time the BIG EAST Championship rolls around in early March.

RATAY’S MILESTONE WATCH
Senior guard Alicia Ratay is on the threshold of several other career milestones in 2002-03. The Lake Zurich, Ill., native reached her first landmark at Valparaiso, becoming the fifth player in school history to amass 1,000 points, 500 rebounds and 200 assists in her career. She also is the second Irish player in three seasons to attain that feat, following Kelley Siemon, who completed the hat trick when she scored her 1,000th point in Notre Dame’s NCAA championship game win over Purdue in 2001. The others in this elite group are Beth Morgan (1993-97), current Irish assistant coach Letitia Bowen (1991-95) and Trena Keys (1982-86). Ratay currently has 1,548 points, 573 rebounds and 223 assists, becoming the sixth Irish player to score 1,500 points with 14 points at West Virginia Jan. 8.

Ratay also is 19 three-point field goals away from tying the Notre Dame career record of 249, currently held by Sheila McMillen (1995-99), and one behind Morgan for second place. Ratay averaged more than 70 treys per season during her first three years at Notre Dame.

Two other milestones also are within Ratay’s reach. She ranks sixth on the Irish all-time scoring list with 1,548 points, but she needs only 41 counters to move into the top five on that chart, catching Keys (1,589 from 1982-86). Karen Robinson (1987-91) is fourth on that list at 1,590 points. In addition, Ratay has been one of the most durable players in school history, appearing in all 115 Irish games in her career and starting all but one (2001 Senior Night vs. Georgetown). She can break the Notre Dame career records for starts and games played with another 11 starts and 18 games played this season.

Ratay already holds the Irish career marks for free throw (.871) and three-point field goal (.475) percentages, records which would rank among the top 10 in NCAA history. In fact, if her career ended today, Ratay’s three-point percentage would stand as the best in women’s college basketball history, and her free throw ratio would be sixth in NCAA annals. For a complete rundown of Ratay’s place in the Notre Dame and national record books, please see the charts in the page 9 sidebar.

POLL POSITION
Notre Dame earned 53 votes in the latest Associated Press poll, marking the 12th consecutive week that the Irish have been ranked or receiving votes in the AP Top 25 this season. Notre Dame was in the top 25 for the first 10 weeks of the season, and the Irish have spent 56 weeks in the top 10 in the 26-year history of the program (two weeks in 1996-97, 16 in 1998-99, 15 in 1999-2000, 18 in 2000-01 and five in 2002-03).

Notre Dame has been extremely successful at home when playing as a ranked team. The Irish are 72-7 (.911) all-time at the Joyce Center when they appear in the AP poll at tipoff, including 46 wins in their last 51 games and a 4-4 mark this season.

The Irish are ranked 24th in the most recent ESPN/USA Today coaches poll, marking their 12th consecutive week in that survey. Notre Dame spent two weeks in the top 10 of the ESPN/USA Today poll earlier this season, marking its first foray into the top 10 since finishing No. 1 after winning the 2001 NCAA championship. That top ranking also capped a string of 52 consecutive weeks in the coaches’ top 10 for the Irish, who were in the poll’s upper division continuously from Nov. 22, 1998-April 2, 2001.

Five of Notre Dame’s 2002-03 opponents are currently ranked in one or both major polls (No. 2/2 Connecticut, No. 4/4 Tennessee, No. 10/9 Purdue, No. 20/21 Villanova and No. rv/25 Boston College). In addition, five other Notre Dame opponents were receiving votes in one or both of the major polls last week < depaul,=”” georgetown,=”” miami,=”” rutgers=”” and=”” virginia=”” tech.=””>

NOTRE DAME HAS REASON TO BE THANKFUL AFTER FALL SEASONS
Irish teams have turned in exceptional performances during the 2002 fall sports season. All six of Notre Dame’s fall sports (football, volleyball, men’s/women’s soccer, men’s/women’s cross country) qualified for postseason play, headlined by a third-place finish for the women’s cross country squad at the NCAA Championships, an NCAA quarterfinal finish for the women’s soccer team, and a Gator Bowl berth and No. 9 BCS ranking for the football team. In fact, Notre Dame was the only school in the nation to have all six of those fall sports qualify for the postseason.

Thanks to its successful finishes in the fall, Notre Dame moved into third place in the latest NACDA Directors’ Cup standings (see sidebar on page 11).

RATAY, BATTEAST NAMED TO 2002-03 NAISMITH PRESEASON WATCH LIST
Senior guard Alicia Ratay (Lake Zurich, Ill.) and sophomore forward Jacqueline Batteast (South Bend, Ind.) were named preseason candidates for the 2002-03 Naismith College Basketball Player of the Year Award, which is presented annually by the Atlanta Tipoff Club.

The Naismith Awards program, now in its 35th year, honors the outstanding male and female college basketball players in the United States. The awards program was founded by the Atlanta Tipoff Club, an organization dedicated to recognizing the achievements of student-athletes in basketball. The candidates were selected by a vote of the Board of Selectors comprised of leading basketball coaches, journalists and basketball analysts.

For Ratay, this year’s selection to the Naismith Preseason Watch List was her third in as many seasons. The senior guard is a two-time Associated Press honorable mention All-American and ranks sixth on Notre Dame’s career scoring list with 1,548 points. She also ranks among the top 10 in NCAA history in career three-point (.475) and free throw percentage (.871), and she is on the verge of breaking the school record for career three-point field goals made, needing just 19 treys to match Sheila McMillen’s total of 249 from 1995-99.

Last season, Ratay was a first-team all-BIG EAST Conference selection after finishing third in the conference in scoring at 15.4 points per game. She also averaged a career-high 5.5 rebounds per game and ranked 15th in the nation in free throw percentage, hitting a school-record 88.2 percent of her charities. Ratay started every game for the Irish last season and has played in every Notre Dame game in her career, starting 114 of a possible 115 contests to date.

Batteast was named the 2002 United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) National Freshman of the Year and a WBCA/Kodak honorable mention All-America pick after averaging 13.8 points and 7.8 rebounds per game in her rookie season at Notre Dame. The sophomore forward ranked second in the BIG EAST in rebounding and double-doubles (11) and fifth in blocked shots (1.38 bpg.), earning second-team all-conference honors along the way. She also was a unanimous choice as the BIG EAST Rookie of the Year and was a six-time conference Rookie of the Week in 2001-02. Batteast was one of only four sophomores to be named to the 2002-03 Naismith Preseason Watch List.

Notre Dame was one of five schools to have more than one women’s basketball player named to the Naismith Award Watch List, joining Duke, Kansas State, LSU and Tennessee in that select group.

NOTRE DAME AMONG RECENT WINS LEADERS
Notre Dame has won 171 games over the last seven seasons, which stands as the sixth-most wins of any school in the country during that time.

HALF AND HALF
Over the last three seasons, Notre Dame has been nearly unbeatable when it has the lead at halftime. The Irish are 56-2 (.966) since the start of the 2000-01 campaign (9-1 this season) when they go into the dressing room with the lead. In that span, the only times Notre Dame didn’t win with a halftime lead were Jan. 12, 2002 at Villanova (the Irish took a 31-25 advantage at the intermission, only to see the Wildcats claim a last-second 60-59 victory) and Jan. 18, 2003 vs. Rutgers (Notre Dame led 34-28 at the half before the Scarlet Knights rallied for a 64-61 win).

THE BEST OFFENSE IS A GOOD DEFENSE …
Over the last eight 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 109-2 (.982) record when they hold their opponents to less than 60 points in a game. The only times that notion didn’t come to pass were on Feb. 17, 2001 (Rutgers 54-53), and Feb. 26, 2002 (Villanova 48-45). Notre Dame has added seven wins to that count this season with victories over USC, Arizona State, IPFW, Colorado State, West Virginia, St. John’s and Villanova.

… 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 eight seasons (1995-96 to present), the Irish are 85-3 (.966) 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. Notre Dame has added four wins to that total this year with its victories over Cleveland State, Arizona State, Temple and IPFW.

OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN
Notre Dame has two captains this season < senior=”” guard=””>Alicia Ratay (Lake Zurich, Ill.) and junior guard Le’Tania Severe (Pembroke Pines, Fla.).They are the 34th and 35th different players to serve as captains for the Irish in the 26-year history of the program (not including the 1986-87 season, when captains were chosen on a game-by-game basis).

IRISH HAIL FROM SEA TO SHINING SEA
The 12 players on this year’s Notre Dame roster hail from nine different states, including two each from Illinois, Kansas and Ohio. Other states represented on the Irish roster include California, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Washington and Wyoming. The all-time Notre Dame 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=”” for=”” the=”” second=”” year=”” in=”” a=”” row,=”” although=”” assistant=”” coaches=”” (and=”” former=”” notre=”” dame=”” players)=””>Coquese Washington and Letitia Bowen both are Michigan natives.

FUN WITH NUMBERS
This season, Notre Dame fans are seeing a pair of jersey numbers on the floor that are a bit uncommon in Irish colors. Freshman guard Megan Duffy has chosen to wear No. 13, becoming only the second Notre Dame player since 1986 to wear those digits. Danielle Green was the last to sport No. 13, doing so during her freshman season (1995-96). Prior to Green, no Irish player had worn that number since Trena Keys (1982-86).

In addition, freshman forward Courtney LaVere is wearing No. 41 this season, a number which has been modeled just once before by an Irish player. Imani Dunbar had that jersey number throughout her Notre Dame career from 1997-2001.

NOTRE DAME PICKED FOR SHARE OF BIG EAST TITLE IN PRESEASON POLL For the first time in its eight-year affiliation with the BIG EAST Conference, Notre Dame was picked to finish first in the league’s preseason coaches poll that was released Oct. 24 at BIG EAST Media Day. The Irish shared top billing with defending national champion Connecticut, with each team earning seven first-place votes and 161 total points in the balloting. Boston College (143 points), Villanova (128 points) and Virginia Tech (110 points) round out the top five.

Individually, Notre Dame was the only school to place two players on the preseason all-BIG EAST first team. Senior guard Alicia Ratay earned Associated Press honorable mention All-America honors for the second time in her career last season, and was a first-team all-conference selection. She is the top returning scorer for the Irish, averaging 15.4 points and 5.5 rebounds per game in ’01-02. She also led the BIG EAST and ranked 15th in the nation in free throw percentage, hitting a school-record .882 from the charity stripe. Ratay also was named one of 30 preseason candidates for the Naismith Player of the Year award, her third selection in as many seasons.

Sophomore forward Jacqueline Batteast also was recognized by the conference coaches after being named the 2002 United States Basketball Writers Association National Freshman of the Year. The South Bend native averaged 13.8 points and 7.8 rebounds per game last season, and was a unanimous selection as the BIG EAST Rookie of the Year. She also registered 11 double-doubles (second in the conference) and was a second-team all-league selection, the only freshman to make an all-BIG EAST squad in ’01-02. In addition, Batteast was a WBCA/Kodak honorable mention All-America selection last year and like Ratay, she was chosen as one of 30 preseason candidates for the Naismith Player of the Year award.

RATAY NAMED CANDIDATE FOR SENIOR C.L.A.S.S. AWARD
Senior guard Alicia Ratay was selected as one of 30 candidates for the second annual Senior CLASS Award, which is presented annually to the nation’s senior Player of the Year by the Senior CLASS Organizing Committee. Ratay is one of three BIG EAST Conference student-athletes on the list of Senior CLASS Award ?Players to Watch,? joining Villanova’s Trish Juhline and Brianne Stepherson of Boston College. Connecticut guard Sue Bird received the inaugural award last year.

Ratay is a two-time Associated Press honorable mention All-American and was a first-team all-BIG EAST selection last season. She ranks sixth in school history with 1,548 points and is among the top perimeter shooters in the country, connecting at a school-record .475 clip from behind the three-point line in her career. She also has made a school-record 87.1 percent of her free throws at Notre Dame, and both her free throw and three-point percentages would rank among the top 10 in NCAA history.

Ratay also is an exemplary student, owning a 3.483 cumulative grade-point average while pursuing a double major in psychology and education. She has been named to the BIG EAST Academic All-Star Team each of the last three years, and she has garnered Dean’s List honors three times.

The Senior CLASS Award < the=”” acronym=”” stands=”” for=”” celebrating=”” loyalty=”” and=”” achievement=”” for=”” staying=”” in=”” school=””>< is=”” based=”” on=”” a=”” number=”” of=”” factors,=”” the=”” most=”” important=”” being=”” that=”” the=”” recipient=”” must=”” have=”” exhausted=”” their=”” four=”” years=”” of=”” eligibility=”” and=”” have=”” fulfilled=”” their=”” commitment=”” to=”” their=”” respective=”” university.=”” in=”” addition,=”” the=”” recipient=”” must=”” be=”” working=”” toward=”” their=”” degree,=”” be=”” in=”” good=”” academic=”” standing=”” and=”” be=”” of=”” sound=”” moral=”” character.=”” the=”” award=”” was=”” developed=”” last=”” season=”” in=”” response=”” to=”” the=”” recent=”” trend=”” of=”” college=”” basketball=”” players=”” leaving=”” early=”” to=”” turn=”” professional.=””>

The performances of the 30 ?Players to Watch? will be tracked during the season, and from that pool of players, a group of 10 finalists will be selected by a national committee of sportscasters and sportswriters that cover Division I college basketball. The finalists then will appear on the official ballot which will be voted upon in March by the national media committee and Division I college basketball coaches. The winner will be announced during the Women’s Final Four April 6-8 at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.

LaVERE NAMED ONE OF NATION’S “TOP 21 FRESHMEN OF IMPACT”
Courtney LaVere was a consensus All-America selection and one of the top 25 prep players in the country following her senior season at Buena High School in Ventura, Calif. One media outlet believes LaVere will continue that success in her initial campaign at Notre Dame. Women’s College Hoops.com chose the 6-3 freshman forward as one its “Top 21 Freshmen of Impact” for the 2002-03 season.

LaVere joins the Irish after averaging 26.5 points, 11.4 rebounds and 3.5 blocks per game during her senior season. She finished her high school career with 1,897 points (second in school history), 1,029 rebounds (third in school history) and 303 blocks (first in school history). She also holds school single-game records for points (45) and blocks (9), as well as BHS single-season marks for points (741), scoring average (26.5) and blocks (99). LaVere was named the 1999 California Freshman of the Year by Cal-Hi Sports, and she helped lead Buena to the top spot in the USA Today Super 25 national rankings for much of the 2000-01 season.

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 80 of their last 87 games at the 11,418-seat Joyce Center, including a school-record 51-game winning streak from 1998-2002. Notre Dame also has a 57-6 (.905) record in BIG EAST Conference play at the Joyce Center, sporting a 31-game winning streak at home before it was snapped with a 48-45 loss to Villanova in the 2002 home finale.

Notre Dame also owned a 33-game non-conference winning streak at the Joyce Center (dating back more than six years) before it was snapped Jan. 4 with a loss to No. 7 Purdue. This streak included victories over a trio of sixth-ranked teams (UCLA and Duke in 1998-99 and Purdue in 2000-01), as well as No. 19 Illinois in ’98-99. Prior to the Purdue loss, Notre Dame’s last non-conference defeat at home came way back on Dec. 9, 1996, when 19th-ranked Wisconsin toppled the Irish, 81-69.

Since its inaugural season in 1977-78, Notre Dame has played all of its games at the Joyce Center. The Irish own a 243-70 (.776) record at the venerable facility. In both the 1999-2000 and 2000-01 seasons, the Irish were a perfect 15-0 at home, setting a school record for home wins in a season. Also, since joining the BIG EAST in 1995-96, Notre Dame is 93-8 (.921) at the Joyce Center.

JAMMIN’ THE JOYCE
For the third consecutive season, Notre Dame is ranked among the top 10 in the nation in attendance, according to the latest unofficial rankings compiled by the University of Wisconsin Sports Information Office. The Irish have averaged 7,311 fans for eight home games this season, placing them seventh in the country (through games of Jan. 26). Notre Dame also drew the fifth-largest crowd in school history on Jan. 4 for its nationally-televised game with Purdue, attracting 9,483 fans to the Joyce Center.

Notre Dame averaged a school-record 7,825 fans for their 14 home games last season, good for eighth in the final NCAA attendance rankings. The 2001-02 season also saw Notre Dame register 13 of the top 20 crowds in school history, including a gathering of 9,676 fans, the third-largest in school annals, for a 60-44 win over 16th-ranked Boston College.

Furthermore, all of the top 20 crowds in the Irish record book have occurred during the 16-year tenure of head coach Muffet McGraw (1987-present). And, as more evidence of Notre Dame’s rapid elevation to “hot ticket” status in South Bend, 19 of the top 20 crowds in school history have been recorded in the last four seasons.

NOTRE DAME FACING ONE TOUGH SLATE
Historically, Notre Dame has always played a difficult schedule and 2002-03 is no exception. The Irish will play no less than 14 teams that qualified for postseason play last year, including nine NCAA Tournament teams (highlighted by defending national champion Connecticut and Final Four participant Tennessee). In addition, six opponents (Arizona State, Connecticut, Purdue, Temple, Tennessee and Valparaiso) won the regular-season or tournament title in their respective conference. Furthermore, 17 of the 24 Irish opponents finished with records of .500 or better last season, including 10 squads that posted 20-win campaigns.

IRISH ON THE SMALL SCREEN
Notre Dame is getting a good deal of face time in 2002-03, playing on television at least seven times, including nationally-televised contests against Arizona State (Dec. 7 on Fox Sports Net), Purdue (Jan. 4 on CBS) and Connecticut (Jan. 20 on ESPN2). In addition, Notre Dame appears three times as part of the BIG EAST regular-season television package, playing host to Miami (Jan. 11, noon ET) and traveling to Villanova (Jan. 25, noon ET) and Virginia Tech (Feb. 9, 2 p.m. ET). All three of those games may be telecast in South Bend on WHME-TV on a tape-delayed basis as part of the league’s TV deal. WHME-TV also broadcast the Irish game at DePaul (Dec. 11) live from Chicago.

Besides the regular-season conference television deal, the BIG EAST semifinals on March 10 also will be aired on BIG EAST TV, while the conference title game on March 11 will air live on ESPN2.

The Irish are 2-4 on TV this year, defeating Arizona State and Villanova, but falling to DePaul, Purdue, Miami and Connecticut.

NOTRE DAME ON THE AIRWAVES
Once again this season, every Irish women’s basketball game will air on WDND-AM (ESPN Radio 1620) and WNDV-AM (1490) in South Bend. Veteran broadcaster and WDND sports director Sean Stires is now in his third season handling the play-by-play for Notre Dame. The Irish also can be heard on the Internet at Notre Dame’s official athletics website (www.und.com) by subscribing to Fighting Irish Pass, which gives listeners full access to a variety of Irish events on radio for only $6.95 per month.

THE MUFFET McGRAW SHOW
Muffet McGraw’s half-hour, weekly television show is produced by LeSea Broadcasting and hosted by Bob Nagle. The show, now in its fifth season, is carried by WHME-TV (Channel 46) in South Bend and will air at 6:30 p.m. (EST) on Saturdays through the completion of the 2002-03 season. The show also is available via satellite (Galaxy 6, Transponder 15) each Saturday at 10:30 a.m. (EST), and may be seen on LeSea Broadcasting stations in Denver, Honolulu, Indianapolis, New Orleans and Tulsa (check local listings).

ANNE WEESE ADDED TO NOTRE DAME ROSTER
Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw announced Jan. 7 the addition of 5-10 junior non-scholarship guard Anne Weese (first name pronounced Annie) to the 2002-03 Irish roster.

Weese spent the last two seasons at Seward County (Kan.) Community College, helping the Saints to a combined record of 71-1 and the 2002 NJCAA national championship. She averaged 4.3 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.4 assists per game during her two-year junior college career. Weese also was a starter on the Saints’ 38-0 national championship squad.

NOTRE DAME INKS PAIR OF TOP 20 PREP STANDOUTS IN EARLY SIGNING PERIOD
University of Notre Dame women’s basketball coach Muffet McGraw announced Nov. 14 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 2003. Crystal Erwin, a 6-2 forward from St. Paul High School in Santa Fe Springs, Calif., and Susie Powers, a 5-11 guard from Highlands Ranch High School in Denver, Colo., will join the Irish for the 2003-04 campaign.

Erwin has averaged 22.6 points and 14.5 rebounds per game during her three-year prep career at St. Paul. She holds the school records for career points (2,084) and rebounds (1,324), as well as single-season points (869) with one year still to play for the Swordsmen. Ranked as high as third in the nation by All-Star Girls Report, Erwin was named to the 2002-03 USA Today Preseason Super 25 Team, and she is a two-time Street & Smith’s All-America pick, earning third-team honors last season. She also has been named to all-star teams at the adidas Top Ten Camp each of the last two years and she was a member of the USA Basketball Youth Development Festival West Team this past summer. Erwin is the second California native in as many seasons to commit to the Irish, following current Notre Dame freshman Courtney LaVere.

Powers averaged 11.5 points and 6.8 assists per game last season for perennial national power Highlands Ranch High School, which won its third consecutive Colorado Class 5A title last season and was ranked No. 1 in the nation for much of the campaign according to the USA Today Super 25 poll. Powers was ranked as high as 12th in the nation by the Greg Swaim Basketball Report, and she is a two-time Street & Smith’s honorable mention All-America selection. She also was Erwin’s teammate on the USA Basketball Youth Development Festival West Team in the summer of 2002. In addition to Erwin, Powers will have some familiarity with another Irish player — she played with sophomore forward Katy Flecky at Highlands Ranch in 2000, helping lead the Falcons to the first of their three straight state championships.

With the addition of Erwin and Powers, Notre Dame has its seventh consecutive top 20 recruiting class, according to Blue Star Basketball, which rated the newest Irish signees 16th in the nation.

McGRAW INDUCTED INTO SAINT JOSEPH’S UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME
University of Notre Dame women’s basketball coach Muffet McGraw was one of seven people inducted into the Saint Joseph’s (Pa.) University Athletics Hall of Fame Nov. 16 in Philadelphia. McGraw was a standout point guard for Saint Joseph’s during its first four years of varsity competition, serving as team captain during her final two seasons (1975-76 and 1976-77). She helped lead the Hawks to an 18-3 record as a junior and a third-place finish in the AIAW Eastern Regional Tournament. A year later, she guided SJU to a 23-5 record, a sixth-place finish at the AIAW National Tournament, and a No. 3 national ranking in the Associated Press poll, the highest year-end poll finish in school history. She also set the Saint Joseph’s single-season record for steals with 102 during the 1976-77 campaign.

McGraw graduated from SJU in 1977 with a bachelor’s degree in sociology. She played one season for the California Dreams in the Women’s Professional Basketball League (WBL) before beginning her college coaching career as an assistant coach at her alma mater from 1980-82. Following five successful seasons at Lehigh (1983-87), McGraw was named the head coach at Notre Dame, a position she has held ever since.

Now in her 16th year with the Irish, McGraw has posted a stellar 353-133 (.726) record (441-174, .717 overall in 21 years), guiding Notre Dame to 13 20-win seasons, nine postseason appearances, seven NCAA Tournament berths, four Sweet Sixteen visits, two Final Fours and the 2001 NCAA title. The 2001 Naismith and AP National Coach of the Year, McGraw also is a member of the SJU Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame and the Philadelphia Big Five Hall of Fame.

IRISH ASSISTANT COACH FEATURED ON WNBA.COM
When she’s not diligently working with the Notre Dame women’s basketball team, assistant coach Coquese Washington spends the offseason playing in the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA). A six-year veteran point guard, Washington guided the Indiana Fever to their first-ever playoff berth this past summer, following her midseason trade from the Houston Comets.

During the course of the 2002-03 college basketball season, WNBA.com will feature regular interviews and chat sessions with Washington. Readers will get an inside look at how she successfully handles the challenges of being a collegiate assistant, while also remaining prepared for the next professional basketball season.

IRISH ENJOY SUCCESSFUL SUMMER TRIP TO EUROPE
Last May, the Irish embarked on a 12-day tour of Italy and France, going 3-1 in a four-game series against Italian professional teams. Among the Notre Dame victories was an 82-76 conquest of 14-time Italian First Division champion Pool Comense 1872, which had won its latest league title only two weeks prior to playing the Irish.

Sophomore forward Jacqueline Batteast and sophomore guard Kelsey Wicks shared team-high scoring honors on the tour, averaging 14.8 points per game during the series. Batteast, the reigning United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) National Freshman of the Year, also registered two double-doubles and carded 11.3 rebounds per game while in Europe.

Sophomore center Teresa Borton collected team-high rebounding laurels, averaging 12.3 boards per contest. She also posted double-figure rebounding totals in three of four games, finishing with nine caroms in her other outing. Like Batteast, she averaged a double-double, adding 10 points per night.

All told, five Irish players scored in double figures while in Europe < the=”” aforementioned=”” trio,=”” along=”” with=”” junior=”” guard=””>Le’Tania Severe (13.5 ppg.) and sophomore forward Katy Flecky (10.0 ppg.). As a team, Notre Dame averaged 79.5 points and 51.3 rebounds per game during the trip.

UP NEXT: WEST VIRGINIA
Notre Dame reaches the midway point of this year’s BIG EAST schedule on Saturday when it welcomes West Virginia to the Joyce Center for the second of two meetings between the schools this season. The Irish snapped the Mountaineers’ school-record 10-game season-opening winning streak back on Jan. 8 with a 66-59 victory at WVU Coliseum in Morgantown. In that game, Notre Dame trailed by as many as 14 points (36-22) early in the second half, but rallied behind the play of junior guard Le’Tania Severe, who scored a career-high 21 points. Senior guard Alicia Ratay added 14 points and became the sixth player in school history to score 1,500 career points.

Beginning with its loss to Notre Dame, West Virginia (11-5, 0-5 BIG EAST) has had its own difficulties, losing five of its last six games with only a non-conference win over in-state rival Marshall on its ledger in 2003. Prior to arriving in South Bend, the Mountaineers will close out the month of January Wednesday when they played host to another up-and-coming BIG EAST member, Seton Hall.

Junior guard Kate Bulger has been the top scoring threat for the Mountaineers this season, averaging 15.6 points per game with a sparkling .483 three-point percentage that leads the BIG EAST and ranks among the nation’s best. Junior guard Sherell Sowho has been Bulger’s primary complement on offense this season, collecting 13.1 ppg., with a .506 field goal percentage. Sophomore point guard Yolanda Paige has expertly piloted the WVU offense, averaging 7.6 assists per game with an outstanding 2.83 assist-to-turnover ratio.

Including its earlier win over the Mountaineers this season, Notre Dame is 10-0 all-time against West Virginia, with a 5-0 record at the Joyce Center. The last time they met in South Bend, the Irish claimed a 72-63 win over Feb. 19, 2002, behind 31 points from Ratay.

NCAA AND BIG EAST STATISTICAL LEADERS
Here’s where the Irish players and team stand in the most recent NCAA statistics report (through games of Jan. 20) and BIG EAST Conference statistics reports (through games of Jan. 27):