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Friday, November 8
 
Coaching moves, long season give 2002-03 new look

By Chuck Schoffner
Associated Press

From prominent coaches on the move to new twists in the NCAA Tournament, there's change afoot in women's basketball.

Diana Taurasi
UConn's Diana Taurasi is the only returning starter for the defending champ.
So much could be different that Connecticut might not even win the national championship. No matter who does, it will come at the end of a l-o-o-o-ng season.

It starts Sunday with a doubleheader at Tennessee, and by the time it ends at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, major league baseball will be in its second week and Tiger Woods will be practicing for the Masters down the road in Augusta. Heck, even the men's college season will be over by then.

The national championship game won't be played until April 8, the night after the men's final in New Orleans.

"We've tried to be a little more patient with our players to make sure we're not peaking right now, because it is such a long season,'' said coach Gail Goestenkors of No. 1-ranked Duke. "Sometimes we get caught up in trying to be our very best early on, but that's not realistic. You've got to have something left in April.''

Connecticut starts the season with a 39-game winning streak but without the four seniors who led the Huskies to their second national championship in three seasons. All four, led by player of the year Sue Bird, were among the top six picks in the WNBA draft.

Coach Geno Auriemma still has flashy guard Diana Taurasi, and he brought in another top-notch recruiting class of high school All-Americans. Still, if there ever was a year for someone else to win it all, this is it.

Are you listening Duke, Tennessee, Stanford and all the rest? They are, but Duke took a hit when guard Monique Currie tore the ACL in her left knee in the first five seconds of the Blue Devils' first exhibition game.

One of the biggest changes this season will be the absence of Leon Barmore of Louisiana Tech. The crafty coach with the hangdog look has retired, and this time he means it. Barmore was talked into coming back when he tried to step down two years ago.

He leaves with a 576-87 record and the top winning percentage (.869) of all time in the women's game. Assistant coach Kurt Budke has the challenge of following him.

"It is a concern replacing Leon Barmore,'' Budke said, "but I don't have time to worry about it right now.''

Barmore's departure is just one of many changes in the coaching ranks. Jim Foster has shed his yellow sweater at Vanderbilt for the scarlet and gray of Ohio State. Brenda Frese moved after one year at Minnesota to become the coach at Maryland, where Chris Weller left after 27 seasons and 499 victories.

Cheryl Burnett, who had two Final Four teams at Southwest Missouri State, has stepped away from coaching, at least for a year. Dick Halterman was let go after 19 seasons at Oklahoma State.

Jim Foster
After running up a 256-99 record at Vanderbilt, Jim Foster left for Ohio State.
Former Purdue and Orlando Miracle coach Carolyn Peck is back in the college game at Florida. Peck, who guided Purdue to the 1999 NCAA title, was hired after the stunning resignation of Carol Ross.

Foster's move also was a surprise. He had spent 11 years at Vandy and left a talented team that features an All-America center, Chantelle Anderson. He's taking over a team coming off a 14-15 season.

But so far, Foster is living the high life in Columbus.

"I found a place to live. I have a great boss. The men's basketball coach is a great guy,'' Foster said. "The football coach spent an hour with a (women's) recruit the day of the Penn State game. How could it get any better?''

Xavier's Melanie Balcomb, who guided her team to an NCAA Tournament upset of Tennessee in 2001, replaced Foster at Vanderbilt. The school originally hired Colorado State's Tom Collen, but he quit less than 24 hours later because of a résumé discrepancy.

One thing that hasn't changed is the coaching at Tennessee and Texas. Pat Summitt of Tennessee and Jody Conradt of Texas will continue their race up the career victory ladder. They start the season tied for first with 788 wins.

Summitt gets the first chance to move ahead when the No. 2-ranked Lady Vols meet No. 22 Oklahoma, last season's national runner-up, in the Tip-Off Classic on Sunday. Budke makes his debut when No. 16 Louisiana Tech plays No. 7 Texas Tech in the first game of that twinbill.

Some players have been on the move, too. Rometra Craig left Duke for Southern Cal, Michelle Muńoz transferred from Tennessee to Ohio State and April McDivitt quit Tennessee for UC Santa Barbara. Jamie Carey, who had a history of concussions at Stanford, has been cleared to play at Texas.

While the Connecticut seniors are gone, many of the stars from last season are still around.

Anderson, Duke's Alana Beard and Mississippi State's LaToya Thomas return after earning first-team All-America honors. Taurasi was a second-team pick. Also back are Stanford's Nicole Powell, Tennessee's Kara Lawson, Purdue's Shereka Wright, Notre Dame's Alicia Ratay and Penn State's Kelly Mazzante, who led the nation in scoring as a sophomore last season.

In the comeback category, Plenette Pierson has returned at Texas Tech after being suspended for all but four games last season because of attitude problems. Pierson could help make the Lady Raiders a national title contender.

Utah State has resumed women's basketball but won't play until the 2003-04 season. The school dropped the sport in 1987.

The NCAA Tournament will start with everyone knowing the 16 sites for the first- and second-round games. Previously, those sites were awarded to the tournament's 16 highest seeded teams on Selection Sunday. Now, they're put up for bid and awarded in advance.

It's supposed to be a first step toward taking away the homecourt advantage in those games. But there won't be much neutrality in 2003 because most of the subregionals were given to some schools that make the tournament every year, including Tennessee, Connecticut, Louisiana Tech, Stanford, Texas Tech and Purdue.

Other top teams, such as Duke, LSU, Notre Dame and Texas, will to go on the road no matter where they're seeded in the tournament.

Not everyone is embracing the change.

"It is very difficult to accept,'' Conradt said. "They have taken away the right to win placement in the tournament. I don't believe this is going to help the game.''

But it's a long time until those March 22 games. There will be plenty to savor -- and debate -- before then.







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