The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stanford wins for those who fell short

Coach dedicates NCAA championsh­ip to her former Cardinal players.

- By Janie Mccauley

Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike had their chances at championsh­ips for Stanford that fell short before the sisters finally celebrated one in San Antonio when the Cardinal finally got it done again.

Kate Starbird, Nicole Powell, Candice Wiggins and countless others were also part of talented Stanford teams that never ended their seasons by cutting down the nets.

“It’s heartbreak­ing to go through that,” recalled Tara Vanderveer, who completed her 35th year coaching Stanford by capturing the program’s first NCAA championsh­ip since 1992.

The Cardinal had made 10 Final Four appearance­s only to come up empty-handed since the previous championsh­ip — twice finishing as runners-up before holding off Pac-12 rival Arizona 54-53 to end the nearly three-decade drought.

“It means everything,” Wiggins said of seeing Stanford come through this time.

The coach and her emotionall­y spent team returned to Northern California on Monday for a victory parade through campus after winning it all again.

Vanderveer took time after winning to reflect on all of those special players, deep runs and nearmisses. And how this talented team did it for the others who did their part to build the perennial powerhouse.

“I really feel like we won this for all the great players that have played at Stanford,” Vanderveer said. “The former players would be so proud to be part of this team because of the resilience they’ve shown, because of the sisterhood that they represent.”

That sisterhood became even stronger following a poor decision by players in September that could have derailed the championsh­ip season before it began. Kiana Williams and some teammates left campus to play pick-up basketball in a gym nearby when they were supposed to be under quarantine following COVID-19 protocols after everyone reconvened on campus. Vanderveer shared her disappoint­ment in their choices — and her hurt.

That “incident,” as the coach and her star point guard described it after Sunday night’s win, made Williams strive to be a better leader. The only way she imagined making it up to her coach: Hoist the championsh­ip trophy.

“When she found out she was just so heartbroke­n and disappoint­ed,” Williams shared. “Me and Alyssa ( Jerome), we said from there on out we’re going to be better leaders, follow the rules, follow protocol, to win this natty. To look back on that experience, having that feeling to now, I’m extremely proud of this team.”

The 67-year-old Vanderveer is the all-time winningest women’s coach and not ready to say whether she is pondering retirement now that she is back on top — not yet, anyway.

“Maybe I’ll think about it later. Right now I am very excited about what we accomplish­ed, and I’m really excited about the team that we have ... and the young people that are committed to Stanford,” Vanderveer said. “I don’t know if I can go through another COVID year, so I hope everybody is wearing their mask. Let’s get better so we can get back to normal.”

 ?? MORRY GASH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Stanford head coach Tara Vanderveer cuts down the net after the championsh­ip game win Sunday night over Arizona. “I really feel like we won this for all the great players that have played at Stanford,” Vanderveer said.
MORRY GASH/ASSOCIATED PRESS Stanford head coach Tara Vanderveer cuts down the net after the championsh­ip game win Sunday night over Arizona. “I really feel like we won this for all the great players that have played at Stanford,” Vanderveer said.

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