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(May 7, 2002)
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36 Of Nation's Top
20-And-Unders Set To Try Out For 2002 USA World Championship
Five Members Of 2001 USA Junior World Championship Team Among
Invitees --
COLORADO SPRINGS CO (May 7, 2002) Five
members of the bronze medal winning 2001 USA Basketball Women's Junior
World Championship Team, as well as six collegiate All-Americans, are
among 35 of the country's top 20-and-unders who have accepted
invitations to try out for the 2002 USA Basketball World Championship
For Young Women Qualifying Team, USA Basketball announced today. The
invitations were
issued by the USA Basketball Women's Collegiate Committee, chaired by
University of Texas Senior Associate Athletics Director for Men's and
Women's Athletics Chris Plonsky. On May 20 following the three-day
Trials, which will be held May 17-19 at the U.S. Olympic Training Center
in Colorado Springs, Colo., the Committee will announce finalists for
the U.S.
squad.
The eventual 12-member U.S. team, which
will be comprised of U.S. citizens 20-years-old or younger (born on or
after January 1, 1982), will compete in the Confederation of Pan
American Basketball Associations
(COPABA) World Championship For Young Women Qualifying Tournament.
Hosted by Brazil in Ribeirao Preto July 17-21 and featuring eight teams
from North, South and Central America as well as the Caribbean, the top
three nations will qualify for the inaugural International Basketball
Federation (FIBA) World Championship For Young Women which is scheduled
to be played in Dubrovnik, Croatia in July 2003 (dates TBD).
USA team training will kick off on July
7 in Colorado Springs and run through July 11 (times TBD). Following the
July 7-11 training camp, during which will time the final 12-member 2002
USA 20-and-under squad will be
named, the U.S. is scheduled to continue its training July 12-20 in
Brazil prior to the start of the 2002 COPABA Qualifying Tournament.
Included among the invitees are:
Jacqueline Batteast (Notre Dame / South Bend, Ind.); Tera Bjorklund
(Colorado / St. Peter, Minn.); Betsy Boardman (Arizona State / Portland,
Ore.); Teresa Borton (Notre Dame / Yakima, Wash.); Kala Bowers (Texas /
Woodward, Okla.); Kara Brown-Braxton (Georgia / Jackson, Mich.); Shameka
Christon (Arkansas / Hot Springs, Ark.); Ebony Felder (Georgia /
Jackson, Miss.); Cisti Greenwalt (Texas Tech / Clovis, N.M.); Vanessa
Hayden (Florida / Orlando, Fla.); SeSe Helm (Kentucky / Bowling Green,
Ky.); Doneeka Hodges (Louisiana State / New Orleans, La.); Ebony Hoffman
(Southern California / Harbor City, Calif.); Sandora Irvin (Texas
Christian / Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.); Dionnah Jackson (Oklahoma / St.
Louis, Mo.); Amber Jacobs (Boston College / Clarks Summit, Pa.); Temeka
Johnson (Louisiana State / New Orleans, La.); Laurie Koehn (Kansas State
/ Hesston, Kan.); Kelly Mazzante (Penn State / Montoursville, Pa.);
Julie McBride (Syracuse / Mechanicville, N.Y.); Janel McCarville
(Minnesota / Stevens Point, Wis.); Kristen O'Neill (Washington /
Lynwood, Wash.); Amber Obaze (Louisiana Tech / Dallas, Texas ); Ugo
Oha (George Washington / Houston, Texas ); Nicole Ohlde (Kansas State /
Clay Center, Kan.); Jia Perkins (Texas Tech / Granbury, Texas ); Cappie
Pondexter (Rutgers /Chicago, Ill.); Heather Schreiber (Texas /
Windthorst, Texas ); Stacy Stephens (Texas / Winnsboro, Texas );
University of Connecticut freshman-to-be Ann Strother (Highlands Ranch
H.S. / Highlands Ranch, Colo.); Kelley Suminski (Stanford / Chester,
N.J.); Brandi Teamer (Virginia/ Joliet, Ill.); Christi Thomas (Georgia /
Buford, Ga.); Tanesheia Thompson (Gulf Coast Community College /
Roanoke, Ala.); Lindsay Whalen (Minnesota / Hutchinson, Minn.) and
Dee-Dee Wheeler
(Arizona / Chicago, Ill.).
All told, there are 34 NCAA Division I
players, including 20 rising juniors and 14 rising sophomores, one NJCAA
athlete and one who has recently completed her prep career; 19 previous
USA Basketball participants; six
2002 All-Americans; six 2002 conference Freshman of the Year honorees;
one 2002 conference Player of the Year and a total of 25 who were listed
among their 2002 all-conference or all-freshmen teams.
Returning to USA Basketball after
helping the U.S. capture a bronze medal at the 2001 FIBA Junior World
Championship are Bjorklund, Christon, Pondexter, Stephens and Strother;
while Hoffman, Koehn and Pondexter
were members of the gold medal winning 2000 USA Junior World
Championship Qualifying Team. In all, 19 athletes have had USA
Basketball experience. Boardman (2001), Borton (2001), Bowers (2000),
Brown-
Braxton 2000), Hayden (2000, 2001), Hodges (2000), Irvin (2001), Jacobs
(2001), Mazzante (2000, 2001), Obaze (2000, 2001) and Oha (2001) have
participated in at least one USA Basketball Women's Junior National Team
Trials and Felder was among the trials invitees for the 1998 USA World
Youth Games Team.
Mazzante and Whalen top the list of
2002 All-American selections as both were named 2002 U.S. Basketball
Writers Association (USBWA) All-Americans. Additionally, Mazzante and
Whalen listed as Associated
Press All-American second and third team honorees, respectively; while
Mazzante earned 2002 Kodak/Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA)
All-America status. Named as the 2002 USBWA National Freshman of the
Year was Batteast, who was also a 2002 Kodak/WBCA All-America honorable
mention. Rounding out the list of 2002 Kodak/WBCA All-America honorable
mentions are Hayden, Ohlde, Obaze and Whalen.
Six made an impact as a rookie among
their respective conferences in 2001-02 and were ultimately tabbed as
their conference Freshman of the Year, including Batteast (Big East),
Brown-Braxton (Southeastern)
McCarville (Big Ten), Schreiber (Big 12), Teamer (Atlantic Coast) and
Wheeler (Pacific-10); while Felder (Southeastern), Irvin (Conference
USA), O'Neill (Pacific-10) and Suminski (Pacific-10) were named to their
conference's All-Rookie teams.
Whalen, the 2002 Big Ten Conference
Player of the Year, is one of 21 trials participants who earned
all-conference honors. Seven listed among their all-conference first
teams, including Brown-Braxton (Southeastern), Hayden (Southeastern),
Hoffman (Pacific 10), Mazzante (Big Ten), Oha (Atlantic
10), Ohlde (Big 12) and Whalen. Ten of the invitees were named
all-conference second team, including Batteast (Big East), Christon
(Southeastern), Helm (Southeastern), Hodges (Southeastern), McCarville
(Big Ten), Obaze (Western Athletic), Perkins (Big 12), Stephens (Big
12), Teamer (Atlantic Coast) and Thomas (Southeastern); while Irvin
(Conference USA), Koehn (Big 12) and McBride (Big East) were named to
their respective all-conference third team and Schreiber was a 2002
All-Big 12 honorable mention.
Jackson, who earned Big 12
All-Tournament Team honors after averaging 12.0 ppg., 7.0 rpg. and 3.7
apg. in helping lead OU to the Big 12 Tournament title, will not attend
the Trials but has applied for a medical waiver to still be considered
among the finalists. She had arthroscopic surgery on April 18 to remove
an osteochondral defect in her right knee, and is expected to be fully
recovered within eight weeks following surgery.
The elder of the two non-NCAA Division
I players, Thompson helped Gulf Coast Community College (Fla.) to a
third place finish in the 2002 NJCAA Tournament, earning All-NJCAA
Tournament Team honors in the process.
She also collected All-Panhandle Conference, All-State and All-Region
VIII Tournament Team accolades. Strother, the lone high school player on
the Trials roster, earned 2002 National High School Player of the Year
honors by no less than Naismith, USA Today, Parade Magazine and the WBCA.
Texas Tech University head coach Marsha
Sharp will direct the 2002 USA Basketball World Championship For Young
Women Qualifying Team. Her assistants are collegiate head coaches Nikita
Lowry of New Mexico State
University and Lisa Stone of Drake University (Iowa).
In addition to Plonsky, the USA
Basketball Women's Collegiate Committee is comprised of NCAA appointees
Gail Goestenkors (Duke), Donna Noonan (Vice President, NCAA Division I
Women's Basketball Championship) and
Willette White (Northeastern); NAIA appointee Stephanie Findley
(Oklahoma Christian); NJCAA appointee Mary Ellen Leicht (Assistant
Executive Director, NJCAA); WBCA appointee Muffet McGraw (Notre Dame);
and
athlete representatives Teresa Edwards, a five-time Olympian, and 1992
Olympian Vickie Orr-Wiley.
2002 USA Basketball Women's National
Team Trials Schedule
Date *
Time * Event
May 17 * 5:30 p.m. * Trials Session #1
May 18 * 9:00 a.m. * Trials Session #2
May 18 * 5:00 p.m. * Trials Session #3
May 19 * 9:00 a.m. * Trials Session #4
May 19 * 4:30 p.m. * Trials Session #5
May 20 * TBD a.m. * Announcement of Finalists
* All Trials Sessions, which run
approximately two hours and are subject to change, will be held at the
U.S. Olympic Training Center Sports Center II
2002 USA Basketball World
Championship For Young Women Qualifying Team Staff
Head Coach: Marsha Sharp, Texas Tech
University
Assistant Coach: Nikita Lowry, New Mexico State University
Assistant Coach: Lisa Stone, Drake University (Iowa)
* Applied for a medical waiver and will
not attend Trials.
NOTE: Strother has signed a national
letter of intent to attend the University of Connecticut.
QUICK FACTS:
2002 USA Basketball World Championship For Young Women Qualifying Team
Site: Ribeirao Preto, Brazil
Dates: July 17-21
USA Head Coach: Marsha Sharp (Texas Tech)
USA Assistant Coaches: Nikita Lowry (New Mexico State), Lisa Stone
(Drake)
USA Team: 12 U.S. citizens age 20-years-old and younger
USA Team Trials: May 17-19, Colorado Springs, Colo.
USA Team Training: July 7-11, Colorado Springs, Colo.; July 12-16, TBD.
[Source: Caroline Williams, USA Basketball, Assistant Director,
Communications,
T - 719-590-4800, F - 719-590-4811, C - 719-330-3310]
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