Lady'Backs hit the road for Carolina

ABOUT THE LADY RAZORBACKS: The 30th edition of the Arkansas women’s basketball team takes the floor this season with head coach Susie Gardner. Initially, Arkansas returned at least four starters from last year’s team that went 17-14 overall, reaching the second round of the Women’s NIT. However, the injury bug hit once again, and the Lady’Backs find themselves without last year’s leading scorer and preseason all-SEC post Sarah Pfeifer. A rough non-conference season, particularly on the road, prepared Arkansas for a 5-1 start in SEC play. It is an ensemble cast for the Lady’Backs who have only one player to start every game, and only four players to play each contest.
ABOUT THE GAMECOCKS: South Carolina awaits Arkansas with one of the most powerful team interior games in the SEC, topping the conference in rebound margin and near the top in blocks and field goal defense. Truely a team effort, USC has only one player in double digits in super sub Stacy Booker with 10.5 ppg, and leads the league in rebound margin without a single standout rebounder. Three players average right at six boards per game, led by Iva Sliskovic with 6.0 rpg to go with her 8.1 rpg.
THE DOPPLEGANGERS: Carolina is Arkansas, but in stark reverse. The leading scorer is off the bench, there’s only one player that’s played and started every game and no one averages over 30 minutes a game. That’s where the similarity ends as USC uses interior power to build its team, dominating the glass and limiting opponents to only .336 from the field.
THEY’VE PLAYED THEM ALL: Carolina is 1-6 against top 25 teams, but in the game in five of those six ranked losses.
ONLY ONE OTHER: Of USC losses, all were to ranked teams except two, and only one of those defeats came at home. Unranked Georgia Souther slipped into Columbia for a 73-66 upset Nov. 29.
THINK OUR MINUTES BALANCE: Susan Walvius barely has three players over 20 mintues a game. Eleven of the 14 on the roster for USC are over double digit minutes.
THE IMMOVABLE OBJECT FACES THE IRRESISTABLE FORCE: Carolina’s wall of interior power is the key to this game. Where USC has six players under six foot, Arkansas has only two playing over six. It is a towering front line, similar to Auburn, Vanderbilt and Florida.
IF YOU DON’T BELIEVE US: The Gamecocks are second only to Duke in this week’s NCAA statistics for field goal percentage defense at .329. Carolina also ranks 10th in the nation this week in scoring defense.
NATIONAL NUMBERS: Bringing it all together, USC is No. 2 in field goal defense, No. 3 in blocked shots, No. 10 in scoring defense and No. 11 in scoring margin. In the same categories, Arkansas is No. 141 in field goal defense, No. 159 in blocks, No. 39 in scoring defesne and No. 30 in scoring margin.
COULD BE IMPORTANT: For the overall season, USC is No. 2 in scoring defense at 54.6 ppg. Arkansas is fourth at 58.2. In league games, however, the roles dramatically reverse. Arkansas is No. 2 with 58.7 allowed versus 67.7 for USC in a tie for ninth.
PREVIOUSLY BY 24: She might not be Jack Bower, but Leslie Howard shot her jersey number — 24 — and in the process brought down the 24th-ranked Florida Gators. Her shooting spree was made more impressive by Florida’s defensive efforts in the first half to limit her to only eight points and two three-pointers early. Thanks to The Sisters Vaughn, Howard broke free in the second to hit four-of-five threes in the second half. In the closing two minutes, Rochelle found Howard for the go-ahead trey with 1:58 left, 62-59. A minute later, Brittney kicked out to a wide open Howard for the two-possesion game maker, 65-61. Then the Gators sent Howard to the line, and CTU-style she iced the game to maintain the two-possesion spread, 67-63.
THIS WEEK’S HISTORICAL NOTE: Arkansas is riding its best SEC start at 5-1, and can equal one of the greatest starts in school history, the 1990 SWC Championship team’s 6-1 conference opening this Sunday.
THE DYNAMIC DUO: Leslie Howard claimed postgame that she and Adrienne Bush even had nametags this summer that said “Offense” and “Defense”. Making situational subs down the stretch, Susie Gardner alternated the pair; however, it would be a mistake to completely dismiss each player’s alter ego. While Bush is considered the team’s defense stopper, she leads the team in field goal percentage at . And, Howard hasn’t exactly slacked on defense, picking up career bests for steals and blocks versus Miss State then forcing a crucial jump ball in the final 40 seconds against Florida.
THE SISTERS VAUGHN: Brittney Vaughn looked straight into Susie Gardner’s eye during her home visit and said she’d not come to Arkansas because of her sister Rochelle. Well, two years later and the Sister Act is driving Arkansas to its best start in SEC play.
B. VAUGHN STRIKES AGAIN: It wasn’t at the end of the game, and not technically a buzzer beater, but for the third straight SEC home game, Brittney Vaughn provided last second heroics. This time it capped an 11-0 comeback run by Arkansas at the end of the first half. Trailing by as many as, Vaughn directed the comeback and after a Florida , she wound the clock for a final shot. Driving the right side of the lane for a clutch layup with 4.2 on the clock, Brittney sent Arkansas to half down only three, 30-27.
SILENCE OF THE HAMS: Arkansas hit four three-point shots in the opening five minutes of the game to tie 24th-ranked Florida, 12-12. The Lady’Back offense went dark for the next 8:20 of the first half, allowing Florida a 11-0 run. Melissa Hobbs long two broke the streak, but Florida extended to an 18-4 run and a 30-16 lead with 4:22 left.
FLIP A REPTILE ON ITS BACK: And at the 4:22 mark, Florida proceeded to return the favor as Arkansas’ defense clamped down harder than a Gator chomp. Five Florida turnovers fueled an 11-0 run to finish the first half. It continued in the second as Arkansas held UF scoreless the opening 1:34. The 5-0 second half start made it a 16-0 total swing over a combined 5:56.
NEW SCHOOL RECORD AT THE LINE: The 10-of-10 free throws meets the criteria of 10 minimum attempts, so the Lady’Backs claim a pair of school marks from the Florida game. The previous best was 21-of-22 for 95% against McNeese back in 1987. The SEC regular season game mark was 14-of-15 against LSU in 1999. It also becomes the UA record at Walton Arena, surpassing the 93.8% of the ‘99 LSU game.
JOHNNIE HARRIS WANTS HER DUE: Earlier in the year, the coaches’ luncheon quip was assistant coach Johnnie Harris was in charge of our free throw shooting. That’s when the Lady’Backs were struggling mightily at dead flat last in the SEC. Now, Harris gets free throw coach of the week as Arkansas breaks the school mark for free throw percentage in a game with 100% — 10-of-10 — against Florida. Of the 10 made, four were in the final 32 seconds to preserve the win.
CONSIDER IT OUR NEW YEARS RESOLUTION: The Lady’Backs will rally, and so far, usually win each game of 2006. Arkansas was down 14 in the first half and 10 with 13:16 to play against Florida. Since the start of the new year, Arkansas has trailed to seven to Miss State at home and four on the road, late in regulation and overtime to Vanderbilt and 18 at Alabama. Arkansas won all the games it trailed except Bama, and took its first and only lead in the closing seconds before the Tide took the game away. Arkansas not lead a game tip-to-buzzer. The closest thing was Auburn as Arkansas made up a 2-0 deficit in the first minute to lead the rest of the game, but the Tigers made that scarry by cutting a 22-point lead to two with 16 seconds left.
AVOIDING BEING THE OTHER WHITE MEAT: The Gamecocks are looking for their first home win against a SEC foe, but all three losses went into the final five minutes. Arkansas cannot afford to spot USC a double-digit lead a la Florida or Alabama.
DON’T GO DOWN LOW: Carolina leads the SEC in rebound margin with a whopping +9.6, ranks second in blocks to the towering Auburn Tigers with 7 per game and stand second in scoring defense, giving up only 54.6 ppg.
IT IS ABOUT THE SCHEDULE: Consider Carolina’s lament — four of the five losses are to SEC ranked teams (UT, LSU, Vandy and Georgia) and the fifth is to the conferences’ next ranked team, Kentucky.
COMMON OPPONENTS: Both teams hosted Vandy, played at Alabama and the results are enlightening. Arkansas scrapped to an overtime win with Vandy, but the Commodores pulled away late for a 67-69 win. Carolina thrashed Bama at Tuscaloosa, 67-48, but Arkansas lost, 75-73.
AND LO WE WALK THROUGH THE VALLEY OF THE TOP 25: Florida started a run of three ranked games in the next four contests for Arkansas; six of the next eight — and one of those two, Kentucky, is receiving votes.
THE ONLY SURE THING . . .: Is that there are no sure things this season. For the first time this year, Arkansas won an SEC game at the free throw line hitting four-of-four in the final 30 seconds versus Florida. That comes on the heels of Arkansas winning its first game after trailing at half, won with only a single extra turnover and got the job done with only eight points in the paint against Miss State.
WE’LL SELL THE WHOLE SEAT: But you’ll only use the edge in SEC games. Arkansas has played five straight last minute games, posting a 4-1 mark in those games.
THE MAGIC NUMBER IS 26: As in opponent turnovers — Arkansas is 7-0 with 26 or more; 5-6 this year with 25 or less.
GOTTA HAPPEN TO WIN: Every time Arkansas has won this year they outshot the opponent (13-3) and committed fewer turnovers (13-3). Another big indicator: leading when the bell sounds for recess: 11-2 when up at half and 2-4 trailing.
BEEP, BEEP, BEEP: That’s the sound of Arkansas’ perimeter player backing up to the arc. The Lady’Backs are shooting better from beyond 19-9 at .409 (63-of-154) than they shoot from the field .369. In fact, the Lady’Backs are almost better on treys than free throws in league games — .586 — and have certainly hit more threes — 63 — than free throws — 41.
TREY MANIFIQUE: Arkansas moves up in the top 20 this week in the NCAA stats to 13th for three-pointers per game at 7.3 per contest. Georgia tops the SEC (and ranks 11th).
DROPPING DIMES: The Lady’Backs continue top 20 in assists at 17.4 per game — a pretty unique achievement considering the aforementioned three-point ranking — and stand at 16th.
LOAD UP THE ARTILLERY: Arkansas ranks first in the league for three-pointers made per game against SEC foes — a whopping 10.50 per game — and No. 3 this week in accuracy with .409.
DOUBLE DOWN THE THREE: Arkansas has scored twice the number of three-pointers of South Carolina, 142 to 70. It’s not all raw shooting as Arkansas’ .360 comes of 394 attempts; Carolina’s put up 265 from behind the line bu hit only .264.
THREE FOR THREES: In the SEC standings, Arkansas has three players ranked top 15 in three-pointers made per game this week. Leslie Howard moves to No. 1 in three-pointers made per game with 3.2 followed by Rochelle Vaughn in fifth with 2.67 and Dominque Washington at 2.0.
QUAD DRIVE ON TREYS: Leslie Howard moves up to third in SEC game three-point shooting with 53.3%. Washington is tied for ninth on accuracy at .414 followed by Kristin Peoples with .389 and Rochelle Vaughn at 15th with .372.
TO’S BABY: Arkansas moves back to No. 1 in the SEC in turnover margin for the full season with +7.63 per game. Carolina is ninth at -0.22.
WHEN YOU SHOOT LIKE THIS . . .: Arkansas is averaging .400 from the field for the season, but .369 in SEC games which is 10th and .586 at the line which is last.
. . . AND YOUR OPPONENTS HIT . . .: Arkansas’ SEC foes are converting 45.3% from the field which ranks the Lady’Backs the worst shooting defense.
. . . YOU BETTER GET MORE SHOTS: There’s only two ways to have more possessions, and so far this SEC season Arkansas has both of them working. Always an aggressive team with turnovers — and ranked No. 1 in the SEC for turnover margin — Arkansas has added a new passion for rebounds, particularly on the offensive glass, to bolster opportunities.
OR THEY BETTER COUNT FOR MORE: Of the 140 field goals Arkansas has made in league games, almost half — 63 — are behind the arc.
VAUGHN INTO TOP 25; THE GAP IS NEXT: Senior Rochelle Vaughn has quietly moved up the career scoring list from her preseason 31st to 24th heading into the Florida game. Vaughn has 835 points to edge past Shea Henderson for 24th. Next is Lanell Dawson at 858, then the Great Void. No Lady’Back that passed Dawson completed her career without joining the 1,000-point club.
SERIES: Arkansas leads the series, 13-5, but USC leads in Columbia, 5-3.
LAST MEETING WITH CAROLINA: Kristin Peoples’ 12 points and defensive pressure allowed Arkansas’ to send South Carolina home with yet another loss in Fayetteville. Building a 13-point halftime lead, the defense produced 22 turnovers resulting in almost one third (20) of Arkansas’ points. Timely three-pointers from Sheree Thompson gave Arkansas a lead of 18 points early. Sarah Pfeifer joined Peoples in double digits with 10.
THE NEW POTO: Back in the day, Arkansas was all about Poteau — as in the Oklahoma hometown of its first Kodak All-American and two-time SWC player of the year Delmonica DeHorney. In this historic 30th season, it’s all about POTO — points off turnovers. Arkansas is averaging 27 ppg off opponent turnovers — that’s 38.5% of the offense from the defense.
JUST WHEN YOU THOUGHT IT WAS SAFE TO GO BACK TO THE GYM: With Sheree Thompson missing the Miss State game in Fayetteville Arkansas’ streak of having the entire team on the bench is broken at two games. When Danielle Allen dressed out against Auburn, Arkansas had its complete roster of 13 players for the first time this entire season. That gave Arkansas two games — the following game with Alabama — with it’s entire roster. Arkansas has “lost” 30 player games on the 13-player active roster. Add in Sarah Pfeifer to get to the original 14 player roster (and 17 missed games) and Arkansas is up to 47 games.
NOTABLE FROM RECENT GAMESTHAT WASN’T NECESSARY: Arkansas looked well on its way to an easy win until the 5:47 mark. Arkansas was up seven, 53-46, but did not score for the next five minutes as Miss State made a comeback thanks to five straight turnovers. Next thing you know Lady’Backs trail by two as MSU converts three of the five mistakes into a 7-0 run to lead, 55-53.
IT WAS “VAUGHN-DERFUL”: The Sisters Vaughn strike again with last minute heroics. For the second time this year, Brittney Vaughn scores all her points in the final seconds, and Rochelle Vaughn gets game the game icier. Brittney’s breakaway layup tied the game at 55-55, and her free throw put Arkansas ahead. Rochelle Vaughn scored her career-high tying 22nd point on a pair of throws with 13 seconds left.
CAREER GAME FOR ROCHELLE: For only the third time in her Arkansas career, Rochelle Vaughn scored 20 points. The graduate student tied her career best with 22 against Miss State, the most she’s ever scored against a SEC foe. Vaughn had 22 against Northwestern State as a sophomore and Memphis as a senior; then scored 20 at the SEC Tournament against Vandy as a junior. She also had a career high six made three pointers — the most of any Lady’Back this season.
HOWARD TEARS UP STATE: Leslie Howard didn’t play in the conference opener at Miss State. She didn’t waste any time when State came to Fayetteville, torching the Lady Bulldogs for a career high 19 points off 6-of-9 from the field and 4-of-5 from three-point range.
THOMPSON OUT AGAIN: It’s always something with the 2005-06 Lady Razorbacks. Sheree Thompson was not available for the Miss State game in Fayetteville. She left Fayetteville the night prior to the game to assist with a family emergency in Kansas City. Adrienne Bush took her spot in the starting lineup.
MORE HISTORY FOR THE 30TH SEASON: Arkansas achieved its best start in SEC play at 4-1 with the comeback win against Miss State.
SCHOOL RECORD TIED FOR TREYS: The 13 three-pointers made against Auburn’s 2-3 zone tied the Arkansas record in a SEC game
SOME KIND OF SCHOOL RECORD FOR FT FUTILITY: Or it should be as Arkansas shot an abysmal 4-of-12 in the second half and only 5-of-17 for the game.
HOBBS NEAR DOUBLE: Melissa Hobbs came as close as one can to her second career double with nine points and nine rebounds against Auburn. The nine points ties her career best for a conference game.
FIRST TOP 25 WIN SINCE 2004: Susie Gardner picked up her second win over a top 25 team with her team’s upset of 20th-ranked Vanderbilt in overtime. Her first — and Arkansas’ most recent top 25 win — came over 16th-ranked Georgia in February 2004.
THE SISTERS VAUGHN: Rochelle and Brittney Vaughn were a combined 2-of-9 from the field heading into the final five seconds of regulation. Neither had a three-pointer until Brittney Vaughn launched a 40-foot buzzer beater to send the game into overtime. Rochelle was 1-of-5 from three-point range for the game, but her final shot of the contest — in the last minute of overtime — was a three-pointer to tie the contest with 14 seconds remaining.
UPON FURTHER REVIEW: Officially, Brittney Vaughn’s shot will be listed as a 47-footer. Initially scored 33, then revised post game to 40 based on recollections of media the video tape shows that Vaughn indeed shot from the mid-court stripe for her game-extending trey.
CALLING ALL MEDIA: To the best of WCO staff’s collective recollection, Brittney Vaughn’s halfcourt shot is the longest shot scored at home by the Lady’Backs — certainly at Bud Walton Arena. So far, the laundry list of famous long-distance connections includes: Rochelle Vaughn at Florida in 2004, India Lewis against NC State at Hawaii in 2001, Christy Smith at Louisville — and all of these share a common denominator: they are all going to halftime. Can you remember any other long shots? Please let Bill Smith know.
ABOUT THAT SHOT: Brittney Vaughn’s 40-footer sent Arkansas into overtime against 20th-ranked Vanderbilt. It was the first buzzer beater and the last long distance bucket since the half-courter by India Lewis against NC State in the Rainbow Wahine Tournament in 2000. Of course, Kelly Johnson also had a famous final second shot to hand Vandy an overtime loss back in the day (as in 1996).
THE FORGOTTEN SHOT: Recall that Brittney Vaughn scored the last five points of regulation for Arkansas. Her drive down and through the lane, punctuated with a reverse layup, cut the game to two, 45-43.
DEFENSE IS A BEAUTIFUL THING: Arkansas held its fourth team to less than 20 points in the first half with the 19 yielded to Vanderbilt. It was the season low for points in a half by the 20th-ranked Commodores. The Lady’Backs held the SEC’s overall most accurate team — and number four in the nation — to only 16.7% in overtime and 37% for the game.
ANOTHER FOUL GAME: Arkansas went 38:05 before it shot its first free throw in the Vanderbilt game. It took over 39 minutes before the Lady’Backs scored its first free throw. And, with only two free throws made it was a season low.
HOWARD ROCKS FROM BENCH: Leslie Howard did not play at Miss State, but immediately after the game Susie Gardner told her junior sharpshooter to get ready for Vanderbilt’s match-up zone. Howard did not disappoint with three first half treys to help build Arkansas’ 24-19 halftime lead. She came through at the line with the only free throw made of the game for Arkansas — the game winner — with 2.1 seconds left in overtime.
TOTAL TEAM EFFORT: Arkansas got points from 11 of its 12 active players against Vanderbilt.
SENIOR NIGHT IN THE OPENER: Five of Arkansas six senior players played a major role in the historic win at Starkville. Along with Kristin Moore’s season-high 15 points, Rochelle Vaughn (9) and Adrienne Bush (6) had season highs for rebounds. Melissa Hobbs scored her career high for a SEC game with nine — all in the second half. Sheree Thompson had nine points, five assists and three steals, plus a dramatic shot-clock beating 26-foot bank shot down the stretch in the second half.
NEAR RECORDS AT STATE: Arkansas missed its school record for fewest points allowed in a SEC game by a single bucket. Miss State’s Miayorka Johnson saved the day with her three-pointer with 2:03 left to play to give State 45 points. For some time is appeared the Lady Bulldogs would break the mark of 43 points set by Kentucky in 1993 at Barnhill Arena. It does tie the second-lowest game — ironically 45 by Miss State in Fayetteville in 2001.
NEW STANDARD FOR FUTILITY: Arkansas held Miss State scoreless for 8:08 in the first half, a new record for the Lady’Back defense this season. The Lady Bulldogs scored two field goals — and five points — in the last 15:12 of the first half.
MOORE GETS SEASON HIGH: The 15 points by Kristin Moore, including the first five of the ball game for Arkansas, is a new season high for Moore. It was her first SEC game in over 12 months as she last appeared against a conference opponent (at Georgia) in December 2004.
HOW ABOUT FIVE POINTS A MINUTE: Brittney Vaughn scored all five of her points in the closing minute — actually closing 30 seconds — against Vanderbilt in regulation. Her drive down the lane and reverse layup followed by a miracle half-court shot accounted for all of her scoring.
HOW LOW CAN YOU GO: That might be the question for the Auburn game. Arkansas’ offense over the years has famously under performed versus the Tigers. In fact, most of Arkansas’ records for offensive futility are against Auburn teams. Meanwhile, Arkansas defense has clamped down season lows on its first two SEC opponents.
THAT’S NO MONKEY: Arkansas got King Kong off its back in Starkville by winning the first SEC road opener in the 15-year membership of the Lady Razorbacks. The Lady’Backs were 0-8 starting SEC play on the road (the first overall game) and 0-14 in the first SEC road game. Arkansas now stands atop the league standings after game one for only the fourth time in those 15 seasons with the league.
SOMETHING FOUL ABOUT THOSE TWO LOSSES: There is a single constant in Arkansas’ last two defeats — fouls. In its most recent defeat, Arkansas never shot the bonus as Florida International had six first half fouls, three in the second for a total of nine fouls. For the game, Arkansas hit 6-of-7 for one of the best percentages of the year, 85.7%. Meanwhile, FIU went to the line 22 times, making 14, off of 20 Lady’Back fouls that including fouling out Arkansas’ leading scorer, Kristin Moore. At Western Kentucky, the Lady’Backs committed a near school record 31 fouls with another almost school record three players fouling out at Bowling Green. Western made (29) more free throws than Arkansas shot (18).
OFFENSE M.I.A. IN MIAMI: Arkansas scored 51 points in the first 30 minutes at Florida International and led by 17 points. In the final 10 minutes — 9:40 to be exact — Arkansas had one field goal and a total of three points while FIU went on a 24-3 run to turn the 17-point deficit into a four-point victory. Arkansas missed 10 straight field goals, 12 of its final 13 attempts, and aggravated the situation with five turnovers over the same time frame.
ANDJELKOVIC HIGH: Kristina Andjelkovic made the most of her “homecoming” trip to Florida at the FIU Fun and Sun. Andjelkovic came off the bench for a season high tying eight points against Florida International. The senior played her second season of junior college basketball at north Florida Chipola JC.
RECORD DEFENSIVE PERFORMANCE: The 33 points allowed to Coppin State is the least yielded in a neutral court game in the 30-year history of the program. It surpassed 41 Hampton in the 2002 Paradise Jam in the Virgin Islands and — ironically — 41 by New Hampshire in the third-place game of the 1995.
FOURTH LOWEST ALL-TIME: The 33-point game with Coppin is the least since a 31-point game against Alabama State in 1991. The all-time marks are 19 at Bartlesville Weslyan in the third game in school history (and the all-time low for a road game) then 29 points — again Bartlesville Weslyan — at Barnhill Arena in the return game. Those games come from the first year of Lady’Back basketball. Arkansas gave up 29 points the second year of the program in a home game win over Cottey College.
HOW LOW CAN YOU GO?: The defensive effort is only surpassed by the offensive limbo of escaping with victory in a game with less than 50 points scored. The last time Arkansas won with under 50 was the epic 45-43 upset of then #24 Kentucky on Jan 23, 1993, the only win in Lady’Back history without a single double digit scorer and one of only three games all-time with zero over 10. Arkansas also beat UMKC in 1988-89, 46-42; and downed Prairie View A&M 48-45 in 1978-79.
MO LOW — SCHOOL RECORD FOR LEAST POINTS, TWO-TEAMS: The Coppin State game goes into the books as the lowest scoring game in Lady Razorback history with 82 points. Arkansas and Bartlesville Weslyan combined for 86 points in 1977, while the Lady’Backs and then Ladykats of Kentucky scored only 88 points in 1993. The 88 total also was hit in the UMKC game of 1988-89 and Arkansas-Rice (53-35) in 1979.
DON’T GO CHANGING: Rochelle Vaughn got blood on her jersey early in the game against Coppin State and was forced to change to number 23. In her new number, Rochelle Vaughn hit only 2-of-10 from the field, had zero assists and scored a mere five points.
DEFENSE SETS NEW STANDARD: Arkansas held UNO without scoring for 6:05 midway through the first half. It came on the heels of a 4:12 stretch and 4:00 to start the game — totaling up to only two field goals in 14:17.
POTO OPENS THE GAME: The Lady’Backs scored its first 17 points against UNO off turnovers to build a 17-4 lead. Arkansas forced 13 turnovers in the opening 10 minutes to take the lead. For the game, Arkansas had 32 — 11 from UNO’s point guard alone — and a turnover advantage of 15.
B. VAUGHN ALMOST GETS RECORD: Brittney Vaughn crushed her career high of eight assists (set earlier this year against Nicholls State) with 12 versus UNO. She came within two assists of breaking the sophomore class record of 14 set by India Lewis against Howard.
BUSH ON A ROLL: Adrienne Bush came off the bench for a career high 18 points against UNO, her second double-double game of the year. The senior hit 6-of-7 from the field and 6-of-8 from the line in just 15 minutes played.
HOWARD DOUBLE AGAIN: Three games into her Arkansas career, Leslie Howard picked up her third double-digit game with UNO scoring 15 points in only 16 minutes.
MOORE MORE THAN STATS SHOW: Kristin Moore started the season sluggish, hitting in the 30s. In her first two games since returning to the starting lineup, Moore is averaging 11.5 ppg, 11 rpg and .733 from the field in only 24 minutes per game. That’s significantly higher than her season 4.9 ppg, 5.1 rpg and .474 and her 2.5 ppg, 3.2 rpg and .301 as a sub in the first six games.
ANOTHER DEFENSIVE VICTORY: Arkansas forced a near -2:1 assist-to-turnover ratio from UTPA, picking up 11 steals in 27 turnovers and converting it into 34 points off turnovers. Equally impressive, on Arkansas’ 15 turnovers UTPA scored only two buckets — an opponent season low four points of UA turnovers.
A/T THE WAY WE D: Arkansas’ crushed Nicholls on the perimeter, forcing 27 turnovers and allowing the Lady Colonel offense to muster only seven assists in 17 made shots. That’s almost a -4:1 assist to turnover ratio for NSU.
ALLEN RETURNS: Danielle Allen is the first to say it was no big deal when she took the court against UTPA. It was to her teammates, coaches and the crowd as she received a polite round of applause when she checked into the game at the 12 minute mark. Her stats were modest for her first game back after taking the fall semester off to give birth to her son Caden, but it didn’t take long for Allen to pick up where she left off in one area. The team leader in charges taken, Allen picked up her first of the season within a minute of entering the game and earned a standing ovation from the bench.
MORE, MORE, MOORE: Nicholls State didn’t like it as Kristin Moore broke out with her first start of her senior season with a career high 14 rebounds and 14 points for her first double-double since the 2004 SEC Tournament. Moore had a near double by intermission, heading to the locker room with 10 points and eight rebounds. Equally impressive was her shooting percentage. Moore came into the game averaging only 30.4% from the field making seven field goals in six games played. Against NSU, Moore hit 7-of-10 from the field in her 30 minutes played, and picked off four steals.
HALF OF TWO PLUS FOUR? IT’S THREE: Number 24 made her debut at Hot Springs as Leslie Howard scored 14 points in her first official game as a Lady’Back. Draining her first three-point attempt of her career, Howard converted on half of her long-distance shots and scored over half (4) of Arkansas’ treys versus Nicholls State.
MERRY SESQUICENTENNIAL, COACH GARDNER: Susie Gardner earned her 150th career victory against Nicholls State at Hot Springs.
B-VAUGHN GETS ASSIST MARK: Brittney Vaughn turned in her best game operating the offense with a then career high eight assists against two turnovers in 27 minutes versus Nicholls State. With Kristin Peoples unavailable, the sophomore had the most minutes of any of the ball-handlers against NSU. Brittney also picked up five steals, also a career best.
HOPEFULLY NOT A PREVIEW: Western Kentucky’s size led to a 50-16 advantage in points in the paint and a 47-24 advantage on the backboards.
FOUR DOUBLES, BUT NO WIN: Arkansas got the offensive balance it needed at Western Kentucky with four in double figures, but the 73-point output — just shy of the season average at the time — was not enough to overcome the Lady Toppers’ inside power.
THAT’S FOUL: Arkansas had a near-miss at two of its school records at Western Kentucky. The Lady’Backs were called for 31 fouls, just three from the school record of 34 from the 1993 meeting at South Carolina. Three Lady’Backs fouled out of the game, one away from the school record of four. It seemed like Arkansas would tie or break the DQ record — one that dates to the AIAW era — as three Lady’Backs finished the game with four fouls.
JONES GETS FIRST DOUBLE: Arkansas picked up another double for the team and a first for freshman Whitney Jones against UMKC. The Blytheville native pulled down 10 rebounds for a new career high to go with her near-career 21 points.
WHO YA GONNA CALL? ZONEBUSTERS: UMKC wasn’t exclusively 2-3 as they were at Kansas City last year, but whenever the Kangaroos went zone Arkansas punished them from the perimeter. Kristin Peoples led the way with a new team high of four made (on six attempts). Arkansas hit a season best 9-of-17 from behind the arc.
ONE SHY OF ALL SCORING: Arkansas had another balanced scoring day with UMKC as nine of the 10 players in the game scored and four players were in double digits, two starters and two from the bench.
YOU DON’T SEE THAT VERY OFTEN: Arkansas’ shooting got worse the closer it got to the bucket against UMKC. The Lady’Backs’ shot 52.9% from three-point range, 52.2% from the field and 50% from the line.
WE ARE ALL MADE OF STARS: In five of the first six games this season, Arkansas has seen at least one player pick up a major career game: Kristin Peoples’ 21 points and Whitney Jones’ 22 at SMU, Dominique Washington pulling down 25 with Memphis, 10 rebounds for Sheree Thompson at Portland, Ayana Brereton getting 18 against Grambling, Melissa Hobbs doubling Tulsa for 19 and 11 then Jones picking up the double of 21 and 10 against UMKC.
UNFORTUNATELY, THE STARS HAVEN’T ALIGNED: With the exception of Memphis, Arkansas hasn’t had all those star performances come together in a single contest this season.
HOBBS SCORES FIRST DOUBLE: Senior Melissa Hobbs got career highs for points and rebounds against Tulsa, and the first double-double of the year for Arkansas. Hobbs hit 19 points — more than double her junior season best of eight points — and pulled down 11 rebounds — another double of her previous high of five.
REBOUNDS TRUMP TURNOVERS: Arkansas had +9 in turnover margin and forced Tulsa into a negative assist-to-turnover ratio. The Lady’Backs also posted a 1.5:1 A:T. All for naught as the Golden Hurricane whipped up a storm of rebounds, 61-37, with almost as many offensive boards — 32 — as Arkansas had as a team — 37.
BENCH POWER: The starter shuffle against Grambling produced the most bench points of the season as the substitutes outscored the starters, 62-24. Not all of that can be attributed to former starter Kristin People’s career high 23 as the Lady’Backs got year-to-date highs from Kristin Moore (8) and Ayana Brereton (18).
COULD BE A FIRST: Arkansas had none of its starters in double digits, but three in double-digits from the bench. Three times in the 30-year history of the program Arkansas has not had anyone in double digits, but it will take some checking to verify if this was the first (or to find the last time) the double digit scorers were all off the bench.
PEOPLES “TIES” SCHOOL RECORD: The minimum for consideration for free throw percentage in a game is 10 attempts, and Kristin Peoples hit 11-of-11 with Grambling. That technically ties her for the school record at 1.000, but the most in a game gets the official mark — Christy Smith had 16-of-16 against Ohio State on Nov. 19, 1995.
MODELS OF EFFICIENCY: Aside from sharing the same initials, Adrienne Bush and Ayana Brereton were two of the most efficient players against Grambling. Bush started the game with 3-of-5 from the field for seven points in only 12 minutes. Brereton came on the court to hit 6-of-9 from the field, 6-of-7 at the line to score 18 in 23 minutes played.
LUCKY 7 FOR PEOPLES: For the fourth time in the first five games, Kristin Peoples had seven or more assists. Against Grambling, Peoples’ 7 assists were against only 3 turnovers. Seven was her pre-season career best, a mark she’s gotten twice this year but broke with eight against Memphis.
DIFFERENT FRESHMAN, SAME RESULT: For the first time, Whitney Jones wasn’t the star as the 6-0 post had a sluggish offensive start with Grambling but a strong defensive game as Arkansas’ leading rebounder (8) and shot-blocker (4). This game, it was Arkansas “other” freshman with the breakout game, Ayana Brereton.
A CAREER IN A HALF: Stop us if this sounds familiar to Danielle Allen’s season opener last year, but Ayana Brereton had her most minutes played in a single game and most points scored in a game by halftime. Brereton led Arkansas’ scorers with 10 points off 4-of-5 on her way to 18 for the game.
BALANCE CONTINUES: Arkansas had 10 players available for Grambling, and everyone saw at least 12 minutes of playing time. For the third time this year the entire team scored.
THE GOOD NEWS — FAST STARTS: Arkansas was rolling at McArthur Court, hitting three of its first four three-pointers to build an 11-2 lead to begin the game against Oregon. The Lady’Backs followed with the best half shooting the ball in just over four years at Portland State. Against Tulsa, the Lady’Backs held an 11-point lead late in the game.
THE BAD NEWS — SLOW FINISHES: The Lady’Back offense stalled with only three field goals in the final minutes of the first half to allow the Ducks to catch and pass Arkansas by intermission, 33-30. Same story, second verse at Portland State as the Lady’Backs hit only 21.6% for the second half and went on a two-minute per field goal pace down the stretch. Tulsa added to the woes with a 13-0 run at the end to down Arkansas.
DEFENSE FLEXES ON VIKINGS: The defensive end gave the offensive end every chance in the world at Portland State, holding the Vikings to only five free throws in the last five minutes of the game. In fact, PSU made a single point in the last three minutes of the game.
THOMPSON NEAR DOUBLE: Sheree Thompson was credited with 10 rebounds at Portland State to lead the team and give her a second career high for caroms in the first four games of this season. Combined with eight points, the senior guard had her best shot at a career double of her career at Arkansas.
SPUTTERS: Arkansas’ offense has developed a problem, first allowing Oregon off the mat after building a 10-point lead early, 22-12, with a 3:05 scoreless stretch leading to a 10-0 Duck run to tie at 22-22. Same with Tulsa as the Lady’Backs’ stalled for the final three minutes of the game and let the Golden Hurricane score the final 13 points of the game.
COMEBACK: A 20-6 run by the Lady’Backs down the stretch rallied 14 points off the 17-point deficit to Oregon, including an 11-2 climax on the run.
BRINGING BALANCE TO THE FORCE: In the first two games this year, the starting five has produced four scoring, two assist and one rebounding high. Four of the five have scored 20 points each. In the opener, Whitney Jones (22) and Kristin Peoples (21) took the lead at SMU. Memphis learned from that game, fronted Jones and isolated Peoples. The result? A career high for Dominique Washington (25) and a career tie for Rochelle Vaughn (22) with Sheree Thompson scoring a season high (16).
A DEFENSE SO GOOD IT LOOKS LIKE OFFENSE: Arkansas shredded regional rival Memphis with series record numbers, racking up the most points in the 15-game series (99) and largest margin (46). The offensive outburst was set up by another outstanding defensive performance in the halfcourt. The Lady’Backs were hitting high percentage shots courtesy of 32 Lady Tiger turnovers.
99 PUNKTE: Somehow, it sounds even better in German (points=punkte) as Arkansas scored the most points to date of the Susie Gardner era against Memphis. The 99 points bettered 86 in a then-runaway versus Centenary in 2004 and was one shy of the first century game since December 2001 for Arkansas.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH: Arkansas left the building after Memphis with numerous career marks. Kristin Peoples got her career high for assists with eight. Rochelle Vaughn tied her scoring with 22. Sheree Thompson broke her rebound high with eight to lead the team. Ayana Brereton got scoring (8) and rebounding (5) bests as did Dominique Washington (25p, 7 r). Whitney Jones picked up her rebound and steal highs with five each.
VERY HIGH STEAL PERCENTAGE: Getting the 32 turnovers from Memphis wasn’t the news for the Lady’Back defense — it was 21 steals in the 32. Every Lady’Back except Kristina Andjelkovic had a steal; all but Rochelle Vaughn had more than one.
JONES MAKES MORE HISTORY: Whitney Jones’ record effort earned her the first-ever Southeastern Conference women’s basketball freshman of the week honor on Monday. The league added a freshman honor to its weekly player honors for the 2005-06 season.
FRESHMAN STARTS: Whitney Jones’ 22 points is the most for a freshman starting in the opening game since 15 points by Karyn Karlin back on Nov. 23, 1995, against Texas-Arlington. Karlin went on to a pretty good year — SEC Freshman of the Year in 1996. Jones becomes the only freshman to start her season opener and score 20 or more. In fact, many future Lady’Back superstars didn’t have very auspicious opening games — Christy Smith and Shameka Christon each started their career openers but had 0 points. Her 22 also tops the most by any freshman in the SEC era as Wendi Willits came off the bench to score 21 at Providence in 1997. Jones’ 22 is the best of the SEC and SWC eras — box scores are spotty prior to the fourth season (1980-81).
DID YOU KNOW?: That while looking up the best freshman first games, it was discovered that Whitney Jones’ 22 points was the fourth most points by a Lady’Back in the season opener and Kristin Peoples’ 21 points ties for fifth. Kimberly Wilson’s 32 versus Pitt at the UNLV Tournament in 1995 tops the list, followed by 28 by Shameka Christon at Wichita State in 2003. Amanda Holley had 25 against Kansas State in 1982.
THATS MS ANDJELKOVIC TO YOU: Kristina Andjelkovic played some of her best games at the close of last season, but wiped the slate almost clean in her senior season opener at SMU. The 6-2 Serb crushed her career rebound high with a team-leading 11 boards. She equalled her junior best with eight points, but none bigger than her super-clutch 18-footer with 1:03 left to play to give Arkansas a three-point lead, 66-63.
BE ONE WITH THE BALL: Whitney Jones said she was focused on stopping her player, SMU leading scorer Janielle Dobbs, from scoring her 17 point average, then just letting the came to come to her. At the 3:29 mark in the second half, Jones became one with the game as a series of plays set the stage for Arkansas’ win. Jones drove inside to draw Joselyn Greenard’s second foul and sink a pair of free throws to cut SMU’s lead to one, 60-59. On the ensuing inbound, Jones’ steal from Dobbs gave Arkansas back the ball. Her offensive rebound kept the possession alive, then her driving layup gave UA the lead, 61-60. After a Julie Colli’s three, Jones responded with a three-point play of her own, a layup and Greenard’s fourth foul, that put Arkansas up for good, 64-63.
WORLD VIEW ON THREES: Really, more treys isn’t that big a surprise as historically, Arkansas has produced some of the SEC’s most prolific three-point shooters. On the SEC’s career top 10, Wendi Willits is the second all-time three-point shooter with 316 in her career, and Kimberly Wilson and India Lewis tie for sixth. Christy Smith just misses the SEC top 10, and that accounts for Arkansas’ career top four. Lewis (#4) and Willits (#5) rank in the three-point attempts while Smith is the seventh most accurate three-point shooter in SEC history. The one change this year is how many big guns Arkansas’ sports outside the arc.
SIGNING DAY NEWS: The Lady’Backs picked up four high school signees on the opening day of the early National Letter of Intent period. In-state, Arkansas signed Kendra Roberts, a 5-8 guard from Fort Smith, Ark., Northside High School. Susie Gardner picked up players from three neighboring states: Charity Ford, a 5-8 combo guard from Arlington, Texas, Juan Seguin; TaNisha Smith, a 6-2 forward from Kansas City, Mo., Lincoln Prep; and 6-3 forward Ashley Wilson of Byhalia, Miss.
KENDRA ROBERTS: The 5-8 guard averaged 16 ppg, 6 rpg, 9 apg and 2 spg as a junior for Fort Smith Southside High. Roberts was an all-conference and all-region pick for the Lady Rebels. Playing her summer AAU basketball with the Arkansas Kamikazi team, The former Southside High guard will participate for Northside this season for Lady Bears head coach Rickey Smith. As a freshman, she averaged 18 ppg and 10 rpg and was the district MVP at Trinity Junior High. Her sophomore season at Southside, she averaged 12 ppg, 6 rpg, 4 spg and 2 apg and was named to the state’s top 10 sophomore list by Southern Starzz. UPDATE: Roberts is averaging double figures to led the Lady Bears to an undefeated conference mark (6-0) and 14-3 overall midway through 5-A West games.
TANISHA SMITH: The 6-2 guard-forward averaged 16 ppg, 10 rpg, 2 apg and 3 spg for Coach Jeff Atkins at Lincoln Prep Academy as a junior. Lincoln finished the season in the Missouri state title game with a 26-4 record. She averaged 14 ppg and 8 rpg as a sophomore for the Tigers. Her career highs are 39 points and 17 rebounds. A three-time first-team all-district pick, Smith was also a first-team Missouri Basketball Coaches Association Class AAAA all-state selection in 2005. She led her AAU team, Kansas City Keys, to a 62-3 mark this past summer for coach Harrell Johnson. The Keys reached the AAU Final Four in Orlando this year. Smith averaging 18 ppg, 4.1 rpg, 3.5 apg and 2.0 spg in AAU play, including a 31-point game against Cincinnati Nets, to earn AAU All-America honors. UPDATE: Smith is averaging over 28 ppg her senior year, and racked up 50 points in one pre-conference game for Lincoln Prep — half the team’s 98 points in the game.
CHARITY FORD: Ranked the No. 13 prospect in the state of Texas by TexasHoops, Ford averaged for Arlington’s Juan Seguin High. The co-MVP of District 7-AAAA, Ford averaged 18 ppg, 4.5 apg and 2.3 spg for the Lady Cougars last season she racked up 596 points as half of one of the strongest backcourts in the state of Texas. UPDATE: Now ranked as the No. 13 prospect in the state of Texas by TexasHoops.com, Ford is averaging 17.9 ppg, 3.2 rpg, 3.7 apg. 4.0 spg off 53.6% from the field through the first 25 games of her senior season. Seguin was 22-3 through the middle of January.
ASHLEY WILSON: One of the top prospects from the state of Mississippi, Wilson did not participate in high school basketball last season while she was living in Ohio. The 6-3 swing post player currently attends Byhalia High School in Byhalia, Miss. The Indians’ leading scorer as a sophomore, Wilson is currently starting at point. UPDATE: As the point guard, Wilson was name MVP of one of the Indians’ preconference tournaments. BHS is 15-7 with two tournament titles heading into the heart of conference play.
PFEIFER OUT FOR THE SEASON: One day after being voted by the league’s coaches and media to the preseason all-SEC second team, returning leading scorer Sarah Pfeifer tore her ACL in her left knee during the opening minutes of the Red-White Game. Pfeifer had surgery on the knee in early November 2005 to begin the rehab process. The 2005 SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year, Pfeifer has already used a redshirt season in 2003 after a traumatic shoulder injury at the Loyola Marymount tournament. Regrettably, this marks the fourth major surgery (2003, left shoulder arthroscopic; 2004, left shoulder full cut; 2005, right shoulder full cut) in her Arkansas career.
LADY’BACKS VOTED PRESEASON 10TH AT SEC MEDIA DAYS: The Arkansas Lady Razorbacks were voted in a tie for 10th place with Mississippi State by the media assembled for this year’s basketball media days in Birmingham. The media seconded the endorsement of the coaches by voting Sarah Pfeifer to the preseason all-SEC second team. Prior to media day, the league coaches picked Pfeifer preseason second team. Defending champion LSU and Tennessee split most of the first-place votes, with UT getting the nod on points in the poll with 251, followed by LSU in second at 248 but one more first-place vote (11 to 10 for UT). Georgia was third with one first-place vote and 224. Vanderbilt rounded out the top four. Ole Miss, Auburn, Florida, Alabama and Kentucky were next before Arkansas and Miss State. South Carolina was voted 12th.
LUNCH WITH SUSIE: Arkansas head coach Susie Gardner’s next luncheon is Monday, Jan. 23. The luncheons begin at 11:30 at the Clarion Hotel. Cost is $8.50 for the buffet. For more questions, contact Lady’Back marketing at 575-7312.
LIVE LADY’BACKS: Arkansas will provide all games from Bud Walton Arena not available on cable television via LADYBACKS.COM video streaming, plus the Arkansas road game from Oregon via a shared feed in the XOS system. This means that 19 of Arkansas’ 27 regular season games can be viewed live by cable or internet.