The University of Chicago
Basketball
2011-12
General Information 2011-12 Schedule Date Nov. 18
Opponent UChicago Tip-Off Tournament
Table of Contents Site Home
Benedictine vs. Macalester Chicago vs. Fontbonne
Nov. 19
UChicago Tip-Off Tournament
Home
Nov. 22 Nov. 27 Nov. 30 Dec. 3 Dec. 14 Dec. 17 Dec. 30 Jan. 3 Jan. 7 Jan. 9 Jan. 13 Jan. 15 Jan. 20 Jan. 22 Jan. 27 Jan. 29 Feb. 3 Feb. 5 Feb. 10 Feb. 12 Feb. 17 Feb. 19 Feb. 25
Lake Forest Carthage Wheaton (Ill.) Illinois Wesleyan Olivet St. Mary’s (Ind.) North Park Bethany Lutheran Washington-St. Louis * Marian (Wis.) Carnegie Mellon * Case * NYU * Brandeis * Emory * Rochester * Emory * Rochester * Carnegie Mellon * Case * NYU * Brandeis * Washington-St. Louis *
Home Home Wheaton, Ill. Home Olivet, Mich. South Bend, Ind. Chicago, Ill. Home St. Louis, Mo. Home Pittsburgh, Pa. Cleveland, Ohio Home Home Home Home Atlanta, Ga. Rochester, N.Y. Home Home New York, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Home
* UAA game
|
Consolation/ Championship
Time
General Information
5 p.m. 7 p.m.
2011-12 Schedule Chicago Traditions Gerald Ratner Athletics Center The University of Chicago Athletics at Chicago University Athletic Association NCAA Division III Travel at UChicago
1 p.m./3 p.m.
6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 1 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 1 p.m.
Home games in maroon
Welcome to the Gerald Ratner Athletics Center
1 2 2 3 4 5 5 28
Coaches & Players Coaches Profiles Player Profiles
6 7-12
This Week’s Games Weekend Preview Rosters & Scorecards Maroon Spotlight
13 14-15 16
2010-11 Review Statistics & Results UAA Standings & Postseason Awards
17 18
History & Records UAA Records Coaching Records Year-by-Year Records Individual & Team Records Career & Season Leaders Ratner Center Records Opponent Series Records Honor Roll NCAA Tournament History UAA Basketball History
19 20 20 21 22-23 24 25 26 28 28
UAA Sportsmanship Code
The University of Chicago and the members of the University Athletic Association are committed to principles of good sportsmanship. We believe that all student-athletes, coaches, and spectators should strive to represent the very best spirit and tradition of intercollegiate athletics. We request your cooperation by supporting the participants and officials in a positive manner. Intimidating actions directed at officials, student-athletes, coaches, or team representatives will not be tolerated and are grounds for removal from the site of competition. Also, consumption or possession of alcoholic beverages is prohibited.
Concessions
The concessions stand is located at the southeast corner of the facility. Proceeds from concessions sales benefit U. of C. undergraduate letter winner organizations.
Rest Rooms
Rest rooms are located at the facility’s southeast corner, adjacent to the concessions stand.
Scorer’s Table
Seating at the scorer’s table is reserved for game operations staff, sports information personnel, media, and officials.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
1
Traditions The “C” Logo The University of Chicago athletics emblem underwent several changes during the institution’s early years. The first football team in 1892 sported no recognizable emblem on its uniforms. In an effort to provide the team with an identity, the letters “UC” were cut out of brown paper and pasted on the players’ uniforms. In the spring of 1893, the emblem was modified into the form of a monogram that the baseball team incorporated on its uniforms. A single letter was used for the first time in 1894 when the football and track squads displayed an oblong “C” on their uniforms. That emblem remained in existence until 1897 when it was replaced by a “C” in large, round type. Then in 1898, Maroon teams adopted the Chicago “C” emblem, which has been worn to the present day.
1892
1893
1894-96
1897
1898––
Maroon, Maroons & The Phoenix Maroon and “Maroons” became the University of Chicago’s official color and nickname, respectively, at a meeting of students and faculty on May 5, 1894. Before the University held its first classes on October 1, 1892, the Board of Trustees had selected goldenrod (yellow) as the school’s official color. By 1894, however, Chicago’s legendary football coach Amos Alonzo Stagg believed that a change was necessary. “The yellow ran, soiled easily, and had a regrettable symbolism which our opponents might not be above commenting upon,” said Stagg in his autobiography, Touchdown! Because maroon was not already in use by any major school in the Midwest, Stagg and his associate J.E. Raycroft brought a selection of maroon shades to the 1894 meeting of students and faculty. The meeting attendees made a choice from those ribbons, and the baseball team appeared in that color during its final games of the 1894 season. On July 21, 1894, the first mention of a U. of C. athletic team as “Maroons” appeared in the Chicago Tribune in an article about the baseball team. The Phoenix – which is featured as part of the University’s official coat of arms, or shield – serves as the school’s mascot. The University of Chicago Board of Trustees adopted the shield in 1910.
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Gerald Ratner Athletics Center
Designed by famed architect Cesar Pelli, the Gerald Ratner Athletics Center serves as the home of the University of Chicago basketball, volleyball, and wrestling teams. Completed in the fall of 2003, the 150,000-square-foot facility includes the 1,658seat basketball competition gymnasium. In six years under Head Coach Aaron Roussell, the Maroons have posted a 68-19 overall record and 36-13 UAA mark at the Ratner Center. During the past eight years, the Ratner Center has served as the site of the 2004, 2007, and 2010 UAA Wrestling Championships, the 2009 UAA Volleyball Championship, the 2005 UAA Swimming & Diving Championship, and the 2006 NCAA Division III Great Lakes Regional Wrestling Championship. In addition to the competition gymnasium, the Ratner Center features a 50-meter x 25-yard swimming pool with a moveable bulkhead; a multilevel fitness facility with cardiovascular exercise equipment, selectorized weight lifting machines, and free weights; a multipurpose dance studio; an auxiliary gymnasium; classroom and meeting room space; permanent and day lockers and locker rooms; the University of Chicago Athletics Hall of Fame; and the athletic department offices. The $51 million facility received awards from the American Council of Engineering Companies, the American Institute of Steel Construction, and the Consulting Engineers Council of Illinois for its excellence in engineering and design. Among the notable features of the two-story facility is a roof is suspended by cables attached to five masts that peak 100 feet from the ground. The Ratner Athletics Center is named in honor of Gerald Ratner (A.B.’35, J.D.’37), an outfielder at Chicago during its days as a member of the Big Ten Conference.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
The University of Chicago Ranked in 2011 as the nation’s fifthleading university by U.S. News & World Report, the University of Chicago is one of the world’s great intellectual communities and centers of learning. It has achieved particular distinction in faculty scholarship, the training of graduate students, and for its renowned undergraduate education that emphasizes critical thinking, intellectual depth, and cultural breadth. Founded in 1890 by John D. Rockefeller, the University opened its doors for classes on October 1, 1892, with an enrollment of 594 students. President William Rainey Harper presided over a faculty of 103, which included eight former college presidents. Today, the University features a total enrollment of approximately 15,149 students — including more than 5,027 undergraduates — and a 2,211-member faculty. The University is private, nondenominational, and coeducational, and it includes the undergraduate College, four graduate divisions, six graduate professional schools, the library, the Graham Center of General Studies, and the University of Chicago Press. The University also features several cultural resources, including the Oriental Institute Museum, Court Theatre, Renaissance Society, and the Smart Museum of Art. Extending along both sides of the Midway Plaisance, which was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and used for the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, the University occupies a 190-acre campus. The English collegiate Gothic style set the general tone for the design and development of the campus. Around a series of tree-shaded quadrangles, imposing buildings of gray limestone with red-tile roofs, and deep-set rectangular windows show off elaborate ornamentation, gargoyles and chimeras, and decorated towers. These quadrangles are dominated by Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, with its 207-foot tower, and by the Joseph Regenstein Library, one of the largest academic libraries in the United States. Many campus structures have been designated national historic landmarks, including Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House and the site of the first controlled, self-sustaining nuclear reaction marked by the Henry Moore sculpture Nuclear Energy. Chicago has had a major impact on American higher education — inventing the four-quarter system, developing extension courses and programs in the liberal arts for adults, establishing a coherent program of general education for undergraduates, and initiating a full-time medical school teaching faculty. Chicago also pioneered orientation week and gives the nation’s oldest teaching awards. Since the University’s founding, more than 80 recipients of the Nobel Prize have been students, researchers, or faculty. The University is located in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago, one of the world’s most exciting and vibrant cities. About 65 percent of the University’s faculty and their families and nearly all of its students live in the Hyde Park neighborhood. One of Chicago’s biggest tourist attractions, the Museum of Science and Industry, is located here, as well as the DuSable Museum of African-American History and the Weiss Museum of Judaica. Just 15 minutes north of Hyde Park is the Chicago Loop, where students and faculty regularly attend an array of theater, movies, art exhibits, museums, and restaurants. Some of Chicago’s main cultural attractions are the Art Institute, the Lyric Opera, the Chicago Symphony, the Goodman Theatre, and the Museum of Contemporary Art. Scores of other professional and community theater, dance, and visual arts organizations are active in the city. Architecturally, Chicago is the home of many major developments in 20thcentury architecture and urban design. One of the nation’s greatest sports cities, Chicago is the home of two Major League Baseball teams – the White Sox and the Cubs – as well as the National Basketball Association Bulls, the National Football League Bears, the National Hockey League Blackhawks, the Major League Soccer Fire, and the Women’s National Basketball Association Sky.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
University President Robert J. Zimmer On July 1, 2006, Robert J. Zimmer became the 13th President of the University of Chicago. Prior to his appointment as President, Zimmer was a University of Chicago faculty member and administrator for more than two decades specializing in the mathematical fields of geometry, particularly ergodic theory, Lie groups, and differential geometry. As a University of Chicago administrator, Zimmer served as Chairman of the Mathematics Department, Deputy Provost, and Vice President for Research and for Argonne National Laboratory. He also served as Provost at Brown University from 2002-2006, returning to Chicago in 2006 to become President of the University. As President of the University, he serves as Chair of the Board of Governors of Argonne National Laboratory and Chair of the Board of Directors of Fermi Research Alliance LLC, the operator of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Among other boards, he is chairman of the Board of Directors of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE) and a member of the Board of Directors of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. He serves on the President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science, and is on the executive committee of the Council on Competitiveness. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. President Zimmer is the author of two books, Ergodic Theory and Semisimple Groups (1984) and Essential Results of Functional Analysis (1990), and more than 80 mathematical research articles. The recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship, he served on the Board of Mathematical Sciences of the National Research Council from 1992 to 1995, and was on the executive committee from 1993 to 1995. Zimmer held the title of Max Mason Distinguished Service Professor of Mathematics at Chicago before leaving for Brown, where he was the Ford Foundation Professor of Mathematics in addition to being Provost. President Zimmer earned his A.B., summa cum laude, from Brandeis University in 1968 and a Ph.D. in mathematics from Harvard University in 1975. He joined the Chicago faculty as an L.E. Dickson Instructor of Mathematics in 1977. He was also on the faculty of the U.S. Naval Academy from 1975 to 1977. He has held visiting positions at Harvard University and at institutions in Israel, France, Australia, Switzerland, and Italy.
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Athletics at UChicago At the University of Chicago, the classical and oldfashioned ideal of the student-athlete is consistent with the highest levels of athletics and academic success. Throughout the University’s history its student-athletes and teams have met that unique challenge, demonstrating that academic and athletic excellence can complement each other.
The UAA Chicago, which sponsors 19 intercollegiate sports, is a charter member of the University Athletic Association, an NCAA Division III conference formed in 1986 as a bold statement of what college athletics can and should be — that it is highly desirable and possible for a group of committed institutions to seek excellence in athletics while holding the student-athlete and the institution’s academic mission as the center of focus. The eight members of the UAA include Brandeis University, Carnegie Mellon University, Case Western Reserve University, Emory University, New York University, the University of Chicago, the University of Rochester, and Washington University in St. Louis. With its membership in the UAA, Chicago offers its student-athletes the opportunity to compete against athletes and teams from among the top research institutions in the country, as well as travel opportunities comparable to those offered by members of major Division I conferences. Chicago has played a major role in helping the UAA attain its goal of achieving the proper balance between athletics and academics. In Reclaiming the Game: College Sports and Education Values, author William Bowen –– president of the Mellon Foundation –– posed the question, “How has the UAA managed to mount what is, by all signs, a successful intercollegiate program without paying the academic price that is so evident in other similar college athletics conferences?” Bowen continued, “The active involvement of the University of Chicago, with its emphasis on core academic values, has without question been a help in achieving and maintaining this policy.”
Success on the Playing Field In 2010-11, Chicago finished 27th in the nation among 447 NCAA Division III institutions in the final standings for the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup, which recognizes the top overall athletic programs in the country. Chicago teams notched national top-10 finishes in women’s tennis (4th), women’s basketball (quarterfinalist) and women’s cross country (10th), and won UAA championships in women’s basketball, football, women’s soccer, and wrestling. The Maroons also featured two NCAA Postgraduate Scholars, 14 All-Americans, 14 national qualifiers, seven UAA MVPs, two UAA Rookies of the Year, and 121 All-UAA performers.
Rhodes Scholars & Academic Excellence During Chicago’s early years as a member of the Big Ten Conference, the athletics program counted numerous distinguished scholar-athletes among its ranks, including 1910 Rhodes Scholar Edwin Hubble, a basketball player who later became a distinguished scientist for whom the Hubble Space telescope is named. Chicago has furthered that tradition in recent years as its student-athletes have continued to compile an extraordinary record of academic and athletic accomplishment, highlighted by four Rhodes Scholars, three individual national champions, and two national players of the year since 1996. Many of the most outstanding athletes at Chicago have also distinguished themselves in the classroom. In 2010-11, for example, Chicago featured 247 UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipients.
Award-Winning Facility In the fall of 2003, Chicago Athletics entered a new era with the opening of the $51 million Gerald Ratner Athletics Center. Designed by famed architect Cesar Pelli, the 150,000-square-foot facility includes a 1,658-seat competition gymnasium which is home to the Chicago basketball, volleyball, and wrestling teams. In addition to the competition gymnasium, the facility features the 50-meter Myers-McLoraine Pool, the Bernard J. DelGiorno Fitness Center, a dance room, classrooms, the Athletics Hall of Fame, locker rooms, offices, and saunas. In short, the University of Chicago provides student-athletes with what might be the best balance in higher education: an extraordinary commitment to academic excellence recognized all over the world, a high-quality intercollegiate athletics program consistent with its academic mission, unique conference travel and competition, and outstanding athletics and recreational facilities.
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Athletic Director Tom Weingartner To m W e i n gartner has served as director of athletics and chairman of the department of physical education and athletics at the University of Chicago since March 1990. Weingartner was instrumental in the planning and building of the $51 million Gerald Ratner Athletics Center, which opened in the fall of 2003 to provide the University with its first new athletics center since the 1930s and its first new swimming pool in nearly a century. During Weingartner’s tenure, Chicago has sent teams and individuals to NCAA Division III postseason competition in 16 different sports and has captured University Athletic Association team titles in 11 sports. Under Weingartner, Chicago Athletics has maintained its adherence to the notion that academic and athletic excellence complement each other. For example, since 1996 four Chicago student-athletes have received Rhodes Scholarships. Chicago has also featured an NCAA Walter Byers Scholarship Award winner as well as numerous NCAA Postgraduate Scholars and Academic All-Americans. As a group, Chicago male and female student-athletes have consistently maintained a cumulative GPA roughly equal to, or higher than, that of the general student body. Weingartner chaired the NCAA Committee on Amateurism, which passed groundbreaking amateurism reform legislation at the 2001 NCAA convention. The committee offered recommendations regarding professional contracts, entry drafts, seasons of competition rules, competition with professionals, acceptance of prize money, and the acceptance of pay for play. Weingartner served as athletic director and associate professor of human development at Manhattanville (N.Y.) College from 1985-90. From 1979-85, he was the athletics director and an assistant professor of human development at St. Mary’s (Md.) College. Weingartner began his college athletics career at Northwestern University, where he served as director of intramural, recreational, and club sports from 1974-79. In 1970, Weingartner earned a bachelor’s degree from Stanford University, where he was a linebacker on the Cardinal football team. He received a master’s degree and doctorate in educational administration from Northwestern in 1972 and 1977, respectively. Weingartner and his wife, Susan, reside in Hyde Park. They have a daughter, Jessie, and a son, Clayton.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
UAA & NCAA Division III The UAA
NCAA Division III
In 1987, Chicago became a charter member of a new and unique NCAA Division III conference, the University Athletic Association. Comprised of some of the nation’s leading research institutions, UAA members include Brandeis University, Carnegie Mellon University, Case Western Reserve University, Emory University, New York University, the University of Rochester, and Washington University in St. Louis. Since its founding, the UAA has continued to serve as a bold statement of the vision of its founders — that the pursuit of academic and athletic excellence are complementary goals and can be achieved without the compromise of one by the other. Implicit in this vision are three assumptions: • The academic enterprise is the primary element. Studentathletes are just that — students first and athletes second. • Athletic excellence is not to be confused with a win-at-allcosts attitude. It properly relates to the caliber of experience offered to students who participate in intercollegiate athletics. • Athletics should not only complement the academic experience, but should also reflect the quality of the academic environment within which they exist. Division III is an approach to athletics — not a synonym for third-rate. Since joining the UAA, Chicago teams have captured 44 conference championships, made 52 NCAA tournament appearances, and posted eight national top-four finishes. In addition, 10 Maroons have claimed NCAA individual titles and two have been selected as the national player of the year.
The University of Chicago has competed at the NCAA Division III level since it was established in 1973. The largest of the three NCAA Divisions, Division III counted as members 432 institutions (20 percent public, 80 percent private) in 2010-11.
The UAA in Theory • Academic excellence and athletic excellence are not mutually exclusive. • The academic enterprise is the primary element. • Athletic excellence properly relates to the caliber of experience offered to students. • Athletic programs should reflect the quality of the academic environment within which they exist. • A consistent and challenging level of athletic competition should be provided for both women and men.
The UAA in Practice • In 2010-11, 24 student-athletes from UAA institutions were recognized as CoSIDA Academic All-Americans ®, and five were named NCAA Postgraduate Scholars. • 189 UAA student-athletes received All-America honors, and 17 were individual national champions or players of the year in their respective sports. • In 2010-11 NCAA championship competition, 19 UAA teams finished in the top 10 in their national championships, while another 30 finished in the top 20.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
What is the NCAA Division III? • Division III features student-athletes who are subject to the same admission standards, academic standards, housing, and support services as the general student body. Division III studentathletes are not permitted to receive athletically-related financial aid. • Division III offers an intense and competitive athletics environment for student-athletes who play for the love of the game, without the obligation of an athletics scholarship. • Division III athletics departments place special importance on the impact of athletics on the participants rather than on the spectators. The student-athlete’s experience is of paramount concern. • Division III athletics provides a well-rounded collegiate experience that involves a balance of rigorous academics, competitive athletics, and the opportunity to pursue the multitude of other co-curricular and extra-curricular opportunities. • Division III places primary emphasis on regional in-season and conference competition, while also offering 36 national championships annually. • Division III playing season and eligibility standards minimize conflicts between athletics and academics, allowing studentathletes to focus on their academic programs and the achievement of a degree. • Division III athletics departments are dedicated to offering broad-based programs with a high number and wide range of athletics participation opportunities for both men and women. • Division III affords student-athletes the opportunity to discover valuable lessons in teamwork, discipline, perseverance, and leadership, which in turn make student-athletes better students and responsible citizens. • Division III encourages student-athletes to take advantage of the many opportunities available to them, both within and beyond athletics, so that they may develop their full potential as students, athletes, and citizens.
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Coaching Staff Head Coach Aaron Roussell The 2011 WBCA Central Region Coach of the
Year, Aaron Roussell begins his eighth season at the University of Chicago in 2011-12. Since his arrival prior to the 2004-05 campaign, Roussell has guided the Maroons to NCAA Division III Elite Eight and Sweet Sixteen appearances as well as a pair of University Athletic Association championships. Roussell’s teams have been included in the USA Today/ESPN and D3hoops.com national polls each of the past six seasons, including a #1 ranking in 2006-07. Roussell, who sports a career record of 134-49 (.732), orchestrated the most successful campaign in the program’s 40-year history in 2010-11. Under Roussell, the Maroons reached the NCAA quarterfinals and attained a #5 national ranking after going undefeated in UAA play. Following the season, Roussell was cited as the WBCA Central Region and UAA Coach of the Year. In 2009-10, Roussell led the Maroons to their second NCAA postseason appearance in three years as Chicago posted a 19-7 overall record en route to garnering an at-large berth. Two years earlier, he collected his first UAA Coach of the Year award after leading the Maroons to the league championship -- their first in 20 years -- and an appearance in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen. En route to a 17-8 overall record in 2005-06, Chicago made its initial appearances in the D3hoops.com and USA Today/ESPN national rankings. The Maroons spent five weeks in each poll, standing as high as 18th (D3hoops.com) and 20th (USA Today/ESPN). Assuming the head coaching responsibilities less than one month after his appointment as an assistant, Roussell engineered one of the school’s most successful seasons to date in his debut campaign in 2004-05. The Maroons posted a 16-9 overall record and boasted a Kodak All-American for the first time in 14 years. Before his appointment at Chicago in 2004, Roussell served a two-year stint as an assistant coach at the Minnesota State University-Mankato. In 2001-02, Roussell gained his first coaching experience as the assistant varsity and head junior varsity boys’ basketball coach at Breck High School in Minneapolis. He has also served as an instructor at numerous basketball camps in the Minneapolis area. Roussell holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Iowa and a master’s degree in sports administration from Minnesota State-Mankato. He resides in Chicago with his wife, Molly, and son, Riley, who was born in July 2010.
Overall UAA Year W L Pct. W L Pct. Place 2004-05 16 9 .640 9 5 .643 4th 2005-06 17 8 .680 6 8 .429 5th 2006-07 18 7 .720 7 7 .500 5th 2007-08 22 6 .786 11 3 .786 1st 2008-09 17 8 .680 8 6 .571 4th 2009-10 19 7 .731 11 3 .786 2nd 2010-11 25 4 .862 14 0 1.000 1st
6
134
49
Carissa Sain Carissa Sain begins her fourth campaign at the University of Chicago in 2011-12. In her first three seasons with the Maroons, Sain has helped guide them to a 61-19 overall record, two NCAA tournament appearances, and a UAA championship. Before arriving at Chicago, Sain spent three seasons as an assistant coach at UAA rival Carnegie Mellon University, where she was a four-year starter from 2001-05. A three-time All-UAA pick, Sain finished her career as CMU’s sixth-leading all-time scorer with 1,189 points. She also set CMU marks for 3-point field goals in a career (175) and season (54).
Korry Schwanz One of the top backcourt performers to play at Chicago, Korry Schwanz returns for her fourth season as assistant coach in 201112. Schwanz has helped the Maroons produce a 83-25 mark with three NCAA postseason appearances and a pair of UAA titles during her four-year tenure as an assistant coach. A four-time All-UAA pick Schwanz finished her career as the third-leading scorer (1,226 points) in Chicago history. In 2006-07, Schwanz was the most accurate free throw shooter in the NCAA Division III (93.2%),
B.J. Dieterich
Roussell at Chicago
Total
Assistant Coaches
.732
66
32
.673
B.J. Dieterich joins the Chicago staff this season. He spent the 201011 campaign as an assistant coach at Division II Illinois-Springfield. Dieterich holds a B.S. in kinesiology and sports studies from Eastern Illinois and an MBA from IlllinoisSpringfield.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Player Profiles - Seniors Bryanne Halfhill #24 Senior | 5-9 | Canfield, Ohio (Canfield) Career: Three-time All-UAA ... 78 games played, 74 starts ... Scored double digits 40 times with four double-doubles ... Holds school season 3-point field goals record (62). In 2010-11: AllUAA Second Team … Started all 29 games … Averaged 12.3 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 4.5 assists … Hit a school record 62 3-point baskets … One of two UAA players to rank among the league’s top 10 in scoring (8th), rebounds (7th), and assists (3rd) … Scored in double digits 18 times, including a career-high 24 against Wisconsin-Platteville (12/30/10) … Grabbed doubledigit rebounds on three occasions … Recorded two doubledoubles … Led the team with 77 steals … Averaged 8.5 points in four NCAA tournament games … Tallied 12 points against Calvin (3/5/11) in the NCAA second round. In 2009-10: Played in 25 games with 22 starts … Honorable mention All-UAA … Averaged 8.6 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 2.4 assists … Scored double digits eight times, including a season-high 19 points against Brandeis (2/14/10) … Maroons’ most prolific three-point shooter (35) … Contributed 15 points, six boards, five steals, and three assists in the Maroons’ NCAA tournament opening-round game against Simpson (3/5/10) … Led the Maroons with 47 steals. In 2008-09: Played in 24 games with 23 starts … Women’s D3 News Freshman All-American … All-UAA Second Team … Maroons’ top scorer (11.6) and third-leading rebounder (4.8) … Tallied double figures on 14 occasions, including four 20-point efforts … Poured in a season-best 22 points against Case (2/13/09) … Sunk a team-best 48 3-point field goals … Grabbed at least 10 boards twice, both time resulting in double-doubles (21/12 vs. Elmhurst, 12/6/08 and 16/12 vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2/22/09) … UAA player of the week ... Midway Classic MVP … St. Mary’s (Ind.) Thanksgiving Classic AllTournament Team. High School/Personal: Attended Canfield (Ohio) High School … Played for coach Pat Pavlansky … Helped lead CHS to four conference titles ... Four-time 1st-team all-league ... Honorable mention all-state ... Economics major ... Daughter of Brian and Renee Halfhill.
Career Statistics
Bryanne Halfhill
Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 24-23 25-22 29-29 78-74
Min/Avg 633/26.4 639/25.6 827/28.5 2099/26.9
Total FG-FGA Pct 99-241 .411 77-214 .360 132-306 .431 308-761 .405
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 48-141 .340 35-123 .285 62-173 .358 145-437 .332
FT-FTA 32-42 26-40 30-46 88-128
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .762 19-97 116 .650 26-106 132 .652 26-163 189 .688 71-366 437
Avg PF-FO Ast TO Blk Stl 4.8 38-0 53 74 2 35 5.3 54-1 61 79 5 47 6.5 63-0 131 101 3 77 5.6 155-1 245 254 10 159
Pts/Avg 278/11.6 215/8.6 356/12.3 849/10.9
Class of 2012 Since the start of the 2008-09 campaign, UChicago women’s basketball has enjoyed the most successful threeyear stretch in the program’s 40-year history. Joann Torres, Taylor Simpson, Morgan Herrick, Meghan Herrick, and Bryanne Halfhill (pictured left to right) comprise a senior class that lists among its accomplishments: • Two NCAA tournament appearances • NCAA Elite Eight in 2011 • UAA champions 2011 • First team in 10 years to go undefeated in UAA play • Three-year overall record of 61-19 (.763) • Three-year UAA record of 33-9 (.786) • Three-year home record of 29-7 (.806) • National ranking as high as #2 • Combined eight All-UAA selections • Combined two All-Americans
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
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Player Profiles - Seniors Meghan Herrick #11 Senior | 5-9 | Cedarburg, Wis. (Cedarburg) Career: D3hoops.com and Women’s D3News preseason AllAmerican ... Honorable mention All-American in 2010-11 ... Two-time All-UAA ... Has played in all 80 games with 55 starts … Has scored in double figures 40 times with two double-doubles. In 2010-11: Women’s D3 News honorable mention All-American … All-UAA First Team … Started all 29 games … Averaged 14.0 points per game, 5.3 rebounds, and 3.3 assists … Made a school record 146 free throws ... Scored in double digits in 23 games … Recorded a double-double (17 pts, 10 reb) against Illinois Wesleyan (12/4/10) … Maroons’ leading scorer in NCAA tournament play with 19.5 points per contest, including a career-high 27 points against Washington (3/12/11) in the quarterfinals … Grabbed double-digit rebounds five times, including a career-high 12 against Greensboro in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen (3/11/11). In 2009-10: Played in all 26 games with 25 starts … All-UAA Second Team … UAA All-Academic … Led the Maroons in scoring (11.0) and assists (2.5) ... Team’s second-leading rebounder (5.5) … Scored in double figures 16 times, including a season-best 26 points against Carthage (11/28/09) … Tallied 20 points against Emory (1/29/10) … Grabbed 10 or more rebounds on two occasions … Pulled down a season-high 11 boards en route to her first career double-double (16-11) against MSOE (1/2/10). In 2008-09: Played in all 25 games with one start … Averaged 5.0 points and 2.2 rebounds … Logged the most minutes per game (16.6) among non-starters … Scored in double figures on one occasion with 10 points against Chapman (11/16/08). High School/Personal: Attended Cedarburg (Wis.) High School … Played for coach Dave Ross … Helped lead Cedarburg to three conference titles and a state semifinal appearance ... Honorable mention all-state as a senior ... Lettered in softball and volleyball ... Economics major ... Sister of teammate Morgan Herrick … Daughter of Daryl and Wendy Herrick.
Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 25-1 26-25 29-29 80-55
Min/Avg 416/16.6 749/28.8 831/28.7 1996/25.0
Total FG-FGA Pct 39-100 .390 95-218 .436 124-289 .429 258-607 .425
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 4-14 .286 9-34 .265 13-39 .333 26-87 .299
FT-FTA 42-74 87-163 146-204 275-441
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .568 18-38 56 .534 47-97 144 .716 54-99 153 .624 119-234 353
Avg PF-FO Ast TO Blk Stl 2.2 26-0 33 36 1 21 5.5 76-2 65 76 3 39 5.3 78-1 97 86 12 46 4.4 180-3 195 198 16 106
Pts/Avg 124/5.0 286/11.0 407/14.0 817/10.2
Meghan Herrick
Morgan Herrick #44 Senior | 6-1 | Cedarburg, Wis. (Cedarburg) Career: Begins her second year at Chicago after playing in 19 games with three starts at Division I Drake from 2007-10 ... In 2010-11: All-UAA Second Team … Saw action in 28 games, starting in 26… Averaged 11.0 points and 4.4 rebounds … Recorded 19 double-digit scoring efforts … Scored a career-high 23 points against Illinois Wesleyan (12/4/10) … Shot 47.4% from the field (118-249) … Averaged 11.3 points in NCAA tournament play, with double figures in three of the four games. High School/Personal: Played for Head Coach Dave Ross at Cedarburg (Wis.) High School ... Wisconsin Basketball Coaches Association First Team Division I All-State ... Associated Press second team all-state selection as a senior ... Led Cedarburg H.S. to three straight conference titles ... Finished career as CHS’s all-time leading scorer (1,345) and rebounder (594) ... Majoring in public policy ... Sister of teammate Meghan Herrick ... Daughter of Daryl and Wendy Herrick.
Career Statistics (at Chicago) Year 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 21-0 21-0
Min/Avg 155/7.4 155/7.4
Total FG-FGA Pct 11-28 .393 11-28 .393
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 0-0 .000 0-0 .000
FT-FTA 16-21 16-21
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .762 10-25 35 .762 10-25 35
Avg 1.7 1.7
PF-FO Ast 22-0 7 22-0 7
TO Blk Stl 10 5 5 10 5 5
Pts/Avg 38/1.8 38/1.8
Morgan Herrick
8
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Player Profiles - Seniors Taylor Simpson #5 Senior | 6-2 | Lee’s Summit, Mo. (Lee’s Summit) Career: Women’s D3 News and D3hoops.com Preseason AllAmerican ... All-American and UAA Player of the Year in 2010-11 ... Two-time UAA All-Academic ... Two year-starter ... Has played in 72 games with 33 starts … Has tallied double figures 30 times and grabbed double digit rebounds on 18 occasions, with 15 double-doubles. In 2010-11: Named All-American by Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (first team), Women’s Division III News (second team), and D3hoops.com (third team) … UAA Player of the Year … Started all 29 games … UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipient … Averaged a double-double with 14.3 points and 10.2 rebounds per contest … Scored in double figures on 23 occasions, including a career-high 25 against NYU (1/23/11) … Grabbed double-digit rebounds 16 times, highlighted by a career-best 19 against Case (1/28/11) … Logged 13 doubledoubles … Shot 55.6 % from the field (165-297) … Averaged 11.0 points and 10.5 boards in four NCAA tournament games. In 200910: Played in 25 games with four starts … Honorable mention All-UAA … UAA All-Academic … Averaged 6.0 points and 4.9 rebounds … Scored in double figures on seven occasions … Tallied a season-high 15 points against NYU (2/12/10) … Grabbed double digit rebounds twice, both resulting in double-doubles (10-10 vs. Brandeis, 1/17/10 & 12-15 vs. Case, 2/21/10) … Team’s most accurate shooter from the field (50.8%). In 2008-09: Played in 18 games … Averaged 1.9 points and 2.2 rebounds … Scored a season-high eight points against Case (1/18/09) … Matched her season high with five boards against Kalamazoo (12/15/08) and Case (1/18/09) … Blocked 10 shots in 86 minutes in UAA play. High School/Personal: Attended Lee’s Summit (Mo.) High School … Played for coach Brian Bubalo … Helped lead Lee’s Summit to district and sectional titles ... Two-time all-conference first team pick ... All-city player of the year ... Two-year starter in soccer ... Majoring in pre-med and visual arts ... Daughter of Bill and Kari Simpson.
Taylor Simpson
Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 18-0 25-4 29-29 72-33
Min/Avg 108/6.0 424/17.0 873/30.1 1405/19.5
Total FG-FGA Pct 12-27 .444 60-118 .508 165-297 .556 237-442 .536
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 0-0 .000 1-11 .091 5-12 .417 6-23 .261
FT-FTA 10-12 29-43 81-103 120-158
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot Avg .833 11-29 40 2.2 .674 45-78 123 4.9 .786 116-180 296 10.2 .759 172-287 459 6.4
PF-FO Ast 8-0 2 36-0 14 50-0 52 94-0 68
TO Blk Stl 3 10 8 41 14 20 54 20 36 98 44 64
Pts/Avg 34/1.9 150/6.0 416/14.3 600/8.3
Joann Torres #2 Senior | 5-4 | Richgrove, Calif. (Cesar Chavez) Career: Has played in 64 games, with 27 starts ... Has scored double figures four times. In 2010-11: All-UAA honorable mention … Played in 28 games, starting 27 … Averaged 5.7 points per contest … UAA’s most accurate 3-point shooter (52.5%) … Led the Maroons in assist-to-turnover ratio (1.65) … Committed no turnovers in 11 of her 29 games and turned the ball over once in six other contests ... Averaged 7.3 points per game with a 1.60 assist-to-turnover ratio in four NCAA tournament games ... Scored double digits on four occasions, including a career-best 16 against Greensboro NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen (3/11/11). In 2009-10: Played in all 26 games … Averaged 2.1 points and 1.1 rebounds … Matched her season scoring high with eight points against North Central (12/15/09) and Carnegie Mellon (2/19/10) … Shot 38.5% from three-point range (10-26) … Only Maroon who averaged at least nine minutes per game to post more assists (19) than turnovers (14). In 2008-09: Played in 10 games … Averaged 2.0 points and 1.1 rebounds … Scored a season-high nine points against Kalamazoo (12/15/08). High School/Personal: Attended Cesar Chavez (Calif.) High School … Played for coach Albert Sabado … Three-time all-league (two years first team) and league MVP as a senior ... Four-year letter winner ... Earned four letters in volleyball ... Majoring in biology ... Daughter of Nenita and Perfecto Torres.
Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 10-0 26-0 28-27 64-27
Min/Avg 56/5.6 235/9.0 676/24.1 967/15.1
Total FG-FGA Pct 6-14 .429 17-49 .347 51-114 .447 74-177 .418
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 2-5 .400 10-26 .385 32-61 .525 44-92 .478
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
FT-FTA 6-7 10-16 25-31 41-54
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .857 3-8 11 .625 7-21 28 .806 18-41 59 .759 28-70 98
Avg 1.1 1.1 2.1 1.5
PF-FO Ast 1-0 6 16-0 19 39-0 53 56-0 78
TO Blk Stl 10 0 4 14 0 16 32 0 31 56 0 51
Pts/Avg 20/2.0 54/2.1 159/5.7 233/3.6
Joann Torres
9
Player Profiles - Juniors Jenna Lillemoe #13 Junior | 5-9 | Hopkins, Minn. (Minnetonka) Career: Has played in 48 games with two starts ... Has scored in double figures five times ... Career 38% 3-point shooter ... In 201011: Played in all 29 games, starting two … Averaged 4.2 points … UAA All-Academic … Scored double-digits on three occasions, including a season-high 15 against Loras (11/19/10) … Shot 36.1% from 3-point range (26-72) … Averaged 3.3 points in NCAA tournament play, including a 6-point effort against Greensboro (3/11/11). In 2009-10: Played in 19 games … Averaged 3.8 points and 1.2 rebounds … Tallied double digits on two occasions, with a career-high 16 points against NYU (2/12/10) and 14 against Emory (2/5/10) … Shot 44.4% from three-point range (12-27) … Hit 50% of her 3-point tries in UAA play (11-22) … Averaged 17.8 minutes in the season’s final eight games after logging 5.6 minutes per game in her first 11 outings … Contributed three points and three boards in 16 minutes off the bench against Simpson in the NCAA tournament first round. High School/Personal: Attended Hopkins (Min.) High School… Played for coach Brian Cosgriff…Helped lead Hopkins to three straight Classic Lake Conference Championships…Served as a team captain for two years… Was named all-conference once and honorable mention twice ... Pre-med major ... Daughter of Kent and Tami Lillemoe.
Career Statistics Year 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 19-0 29-2 48-2
Min/Avg 205/10.8 493/17.0 698/14.5
Total FG-FGA Pct 25-55 .455 40-117 .342 65-172 .378
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 12-27 .444 26-72 .361 38-99 .384
FT-FTA 11-14 16-24 27-38
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .786 3-19 22 .667 14-36 50 .711 17-55 72
Avg 1.2 1.7 1.5
PF-FO Ast 7-0 6 29-0 25 36-0 31
TO Blk Stl 17 1 5 34 1 10 51 2 15
Pts/Avg 73/3.8 122/4.2 195/4.1
Jenna Lillemoe
The 2011-12 Chicago Maroons
10
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Player Profiles - Sophomores Kate Casaday #10 Sophomore | 5-7 | Phoenixville, Pa. (Phoenixville) In 2010-11: Played in 20 games … Averaged 2.0 points per game … Scored a season-high five points on four separate occasions … Saw action in two of the Maroons’ four NCAA tournament games. High School/Personal: Played for Head Coach Michele Dunleavy at Phoenixville (Pa.) High School ... All-State game qualifier ... PAC-10 honorable mention ... Four-year letterwinner ... Graduated in top 4% of her class ... Major undecided ... Daughter of Mark and Ann Casaday.
Career Statistics Year 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 20-0 20-0
Min/Avg 144/7.2 144/7.2
Total FG-FGA Pct 12-29 .414 12-29 .414
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 7-20 .350 7-20 .350
FT-FTA 9-14 9-14
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .643 4-13 17 .643 4-13 17
Avg 0.9 0.9
PF-FO Ast 10-0 5 10-0 5
TO Blk Stl 15 0 5 15 0 5
Pts/Avg 40/2.0 40/2.0
Kate Casaday
Christiane Murray #45 Sophomore | 6-2 | Fairfax, Va. (Woodson) In 2010-11: Saw action in 21 games … Averaged 1.8 points and 1.1 rebounds per contest… Scored a career-high eight points against Greensboro in the NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen (3/11/11). High School/Personal: Played for Head Coach Pat Neri at Woodson (Va.) High School ... All-district second team, first team all-defense as a senior ... Averaged 10 points, 10 rebounds, and three blocks per game ... Led Woodson H.S. to regionals and a 13-8 record ... Played in Suburban Classic Senior All-Star Team ... History and psychology major ... Daughter of Scott and Jolande Murray.
Career Statistics Year 2010-11 TOTAL
GP-GS 21-0 21-0
Min/Avg 155/7.4 155/7.4
Total FG-FGA Pct 11-28 .393 11-28 .393
3-Point FG-FGA Pct 0-0 .000 0-0 .000
FT-FTA 16-21 16-21
Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .762 10-25 35 .762 10-25 35
Avg 1.7 1.7
PF-FO Ast 22-0 7 22-0 7
TO Blk Stl 10 5 5 10 5 5
Pts/Avg 38/1.8 38/1.8
Christiane Murray
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
11
Player Profiles – Newcomers Maggie Ely #14
Morgan Donovan #21
Junior | 5-9 | Hillsdale, N.J. (Pascack Valley)
Freshman | 5-8 | Cincinnati, Ohio (Ursuline Academy)
College: Played the past two seasons at NYU ... All-UAA First Team a year ago after ranking second in the league in scoring (15.7) and third in 3-point field goals (2.1) ... Averaged 2.9 points per game as a freshman in 2009-10. High School/Personal: Attended Pascack Valley (N.J.) High School, playing for Head Coach Jeff Jasper … Played four years of basketball and three years of soccer … First Team All-Bergen County ... Three-time First Team All-NBIL selection ... Helped lead PVHS to the New Jersey Group 2 championship NBIL Female ScholarAthlete… Daughter of John and Laura Ely.
Julie Muguira #3 Sophomore | 5-9 | Boise, Idaho (Bishop Kelly)
High School/Personal: Played at Ursuline Academy for Head Coach David Coper … Four-year starter … Averaged 11 points and three assists per contest … Three-time first team all-conference … Two-time all-city honorable mention … District 16 All-Star … Cincinnati Top 30 … Captain for both soccer and basketball ... Scholar athlete … Member of National Honor Society ... Major undecided ... Daughter of Drew and Ginnie Donovan.
Ellie Greiner #33 Freshman | 6-2| Cincinnati, Ohio (Ursuline Academy) High School/Personal: Played at Ursuline Academy for Head Coach David Loper … Fouryear varsity starter … Helped lead Ursuline to a State Sectional Runner up appearance in 2011 … Averaged 10 points and eight rebounds per game…Two-time All-GGCL first team selection … District 16 All Star … Team captain as a senior … Member of National Honor Society ... Biology major ... Daughter of Jack and Kathy Greiner.
High School/Personal: Played at Bishop Kelly (Idaho) High School for Head Coach Derek McCormick … Averaged 13 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 1.7 assists per game as a senior ... Helped lead Bishop Kelly to State Consolation Championship ... 4A 1st Team All-State Selection in 2010 … Southern Idaho Conference MVP … Graduated at the top of her class at Bishop Kelly ... Economics major ... Daughter of Frank and Mary Muguira.
Hannah Ballard #30 Freshman | 6-2 | Oak park, Ill. (Fenwick)
Sehar Resad #32 Freshman | 6-0 | DeForest, Wis. (DeForest) High School/Personal: Played at DeForest (Wis.) High School for Head Coach Doug Pickarts … Averaged 17.2 points, 10.1 rebounds, and 3.4 assists as a senior … Three-time first team all-conference …Two-time all-area selection …Three-time team MVP … WIAA Academic All State Selection … WIAA All Start Player … Also participated in volleyball (4 years), soccer (2), and track (1) ... Pre-med major ... Daughter of Erkan and Teuta Resad.
High School/Personal: Played at Fenwick (Ill.) High School for Coach Dave Powers … Four-year player for the Friars … Helped Fenwick to a third-place State finish in 2009-2010 … Queen of the Hill 3-Point Shootout State Finalist (2010-11) …East Suburban Catholic Conference All-Conference Scholarly Athlete Selection in 2011 … Member of National Honor Society ... Pre-med major ... Daughter of Dave and Rhonda Ballard.
Claire Devaney #20 Freshman | 5-11 | Washington, D.C. (St. Andrew’s) High School/Personal: Played at St. Andrew’s (D.C.) Episcopal School for Head Coach Tish Few ... Four-year varsity starter … Averaged 16 points and seven rebounds per contest … Helped lead St. Andrews to the ISL co-championship in 2010 …ISL all league selection all four years … Soccer and basketball captain as a senior … Scored 1,000 career points ... Major undecided ... Daughter of John Devaney and Deborah Reagan.
12
Ali Shaw #23 Freshman | 5-11 | Glenview, Ill. (Glenbrook South) High School/Personal: Played at Glenbrook South (Ill.) High School for Head Coach Steve Weissenstein … Two-year starter … Averaged 12.5 points, 8.0 rebounds, and 5.0 assists … Led Glenbrook South to 2011 regional title … Captain … All-Central Suburban Conference selection … Glenbrook South Senior Athletic Academic Award … GBS Female Athlete of the Year … Member of Cum Laude Society ... Major undecided ... Daughter of Bob and Laura Shaw.
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
2010-11 Review Statistics Player Simpson Me. Herrick Halfhill Mo. Herrick Torres Kaplan Lillemoe Mulder Casaday Murray Kasper Leach Herlihy
GP-GS 29-29 29-29 29-29 28-26 28-27 28-0 29-2 29-0 20-0 21-0 27-3 18-0 16-0
FG-FGA 165-297 124-289 132-306 118-249 51-114 54-118 40-117 29-77 12-29 11-28 17-44 9-29 6-18
Pct. .556 .429 .431 .474 .447 .458 .342 .377 .414 .393 .386 .310 .333
Total Opponents
29 29
768-1715 614-1692
.448 .363
3FG-A 5-12 13-39 62-173 2-14 32-61 24-56 26-72 8-16 7-20 0-0 0-3 3-11 3-9
Pct. .417 .333 .358 .143 .525 .429 .361 .500 .350 .000 .000 .273 .333
FT-FTA 81-103 146-204 30-46 69-100 25-31 11-17 16-24 19-30 9-14 16-21 14-20 2-3 3-4
Pct. .786 .716 .652 .690 .806 .647 .667 .633 .643 .762 .700 .667 .750
Reb. 296 153 189 122 59 56 50 50 17 35 44 11 19
RPG 10.2 5.3 6.5 4.4 2.1 2.0 1.7 1.7 0.9 1.7 1.6 0.6 1.2
Ast 52 97 131 45 53 32 25 20 5 7 12 8 5
TO 54 86 101 55 32 34 34 31 15 10 25 12 8
Blk 20 12 3 24 0 4 1 1 0 5 2 0 1
Stl 36 46 77 29 31 8 10 5 5 5 7 1 2
Pts 416 407 356 307 159 143 122 85 40 38 48 23 18
PPG 14.3 14.0 12.3 11.0 5.7 5.1 4.2 2.9 2.0 1.8 1.8 1.3 1.1
185-486 .381 174-540 .322
441-617 344-485
.715 .709
1208 969
41.7 33.4
492 379
516 539
73 104
262 220
2162 1746
74.6 60.2
Results Overall: 25-4 Date Nov. 15 Nov. 19 Nov. 20 Nov. 27 Nov. 28 Dec. 1 Dec. 4 Dec. 13 Dec. 16 Dec. 18 Dec. 30 Jan. 8 Jan. 14 Jan. 16 Jan. 21 Jan. 23 Jan. 28 Jan. 30 Feb. 4 Feb. 6 Feb. 11 Feb. 13 Feb. 18 Feb. 20 Feb. 26 Mar. 4 Mar. 5 Mar. 11 Mar. 12
•
UAA: 14-0
Opponent NORTH CENTRAL vs Loras at Lakeland vs Luther at Wis.-La Crosse WHEATON (ILL.) at Illinois Wesleyan at Carthage at MSOE OLIVET WIS.-PLATTEVILLE WASHINGTON-ST. LOUIS * ROCHESTER * EMORY * at Brandeis * at NYU * CASE * CARNEGIE MELLON * at Case * at Carnegie Mellon * at Rochester * at Emory * BRANDEIS * NYU * at Washington-St. Louis * vs Hanover # at Calvin # vs Greensboro # vs Washington-St. Louis #
• W/L W W L W L W L W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W L
Home: 11-0 Score 79-54 74-65 63-70 85-55 56-62 84-63 75-76 (ot) 49-46 76-62 80-55 76-70 73-71 87-59 92-75 71-38 87-81 81-61 90-65 65-55 76-43 66-56 81-62 70-54 77-49 61-51 76-62 67-62 87-61 58-63
•
Road: 10-3 High Points (18) Simpson,Halfhill (17) Halfhill (13) Halfhill (18) Simpson (16) Halfhill (20) Halfhill (23) Herrick, Mo. (14) Herrick,Me. (16) Simpson (19) Halfhill (24) Halfhill (22) Simpson (16) Mulder (22) Simpson (17) Herrick,Me. (25) Simpson (23) Simpson (28) Simpson (17) Simpson (22) Halfhill (21) Herrick,Me. (19) Kaplan (18) Simpson (14) Torres (17) Herrick, Mo. (25) Herrick,Me. (18) Herrick,Me. (16) Torres (27) Herrick,Me.
•
Neutral: 4-1 High Rebounds (14) Simpson (11) Herrick,Me. (12) Simpson (6) Simpson,Taylor (10) Herrick,Me. (14) Halfhill (12) Simpson (13) Simpson (6) Halfhill (9) Herrick, Mo. (14) Simpson (14) Simpson (8) Simpson (13) Simpson (12) Simpson (13) Simpson (19) Simpson (14) Simpson (12) Halfhill (9) Simpson (10) Simpson (9) Simpson (10) Simpson (8) Halfhill (14) Simpson (12) Simpson (13) Simpson (12) Herrick,Me. (9) Halfhill, Simpson
* UAA game # NCAA Division III Tournament Home game in CAPS
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
17
2010-11 Review UAA Standings Team W Chicago 14 Washington 11 Rochester 10 Case 7 NYU 6 Brandeis 4 Emory 4 Carnegie Mellon 0
UAA Overall L Pct. W L 0 1.000 25 4 3 .786 25 6 4 .714 21 6 7 .500 13 12 8 .429 12 13 10 .286 12 13 10 .286 11 14 14 .000 2 23
Pct. .862 .806 .778 .520 .480 .480 .440 .080
All-UAA Team First Team Name Melissa Alwardt Kathryn Berger Maggie Ely Meghan Herrick Erin Hollinger Alex Hoover Taylor Simpson
School Rochester Washington NYU Chicago Case Washington Chicago
Ht 5-9 6-1 5-9 5-9 6-0 5-10 6-2
Yr Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr.
Pos G F G G F G C
Second Team Name Bryanne Halfhill Morgan Herrick Evy Iacono Misha Jackson Morgan Kendrew Hannah Lilly Jodie Luther
School Chicago Chicago Case Emory Brandeis Emory Rochester
Ht 5-9 6-1 5-8 5-11 5-9 5-8 6-1
Pos Jr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Jr.
Yr G F/C G F G G F/C
Honorable Mention Brandeis: Amber Strodthoff; Carnegie Mellon: Jacki Cortese, Emily Peel; Case: Caitlin Henry; NYU: Chelsea Blake, Kelly Loughney; Chicago: Joann Torres; Rochester: Madeline Korber, Laney Ming, Kristyn Wright; Washington: Kristin Anda, Dani Hoover.
Top Awards Player of the Year: Taylor Simpson, Chicago Rookie of the Year: Hannah Lilly, Emory Coaching Staff of the Year: Chicago (Head Coach Aaron Roussell)
Joann Torres was the most accurate 3-point shooter in the UAA in 2011-11
18
2011-12 Conference Schedule Jan. 7
Chicago at Washington Rochester at Emory Brandeis at NYU Carnegie Mellon at Case
Jan. 13
Chicago at Carnegie Mellon Washington at Case Emory at NYU Rochester at Brandeis
Jan. 15
Chicago at Case Emory at Brandeis Rochester at NYU Washington at Carnegie Mellon
Jan. 20
NYU at Chicago Case at Rochester Carnegie Mellon at Emory Brandeis at Washington
Jan. 22
Brandeis at Chicago NYU at Washington Case at Emory Carnegie Mellon at Rochester
Jan. 27
Emory at Chicago Rochester at Washington Case at Brandeis Carnegie Mellon at NYU
Jan. 29
Rochester at Chicago Case at NYU Carnegie Mellon at Brandeis Emory at Washington
Feb. 3
Chicago at Emory Washington at Rochester Brandeis at Case NYU at Carnegie Mellon
Feb. 5
Chicago at Rochester NYU at Case Washington at Emory Brandeis at Carnegie Mellon
Feb. 10
Carnegie Mellon at Chicago NYU at Emory Brandeis at Rochester Case at Washington
Feb. 12
Case at Chicago Brandeis at Emory NYU at Rochester Carnegie Mellon at Washington
Feb. 17
Chicago at NYU Rochester at Case Emory at Carnegie Mellon Washington at Brandeis
Feb. 19
Chicago at Brandeis Emory at Case Rochester at Carnegie Mellon Washington at NYU
Feb. 25
Washington at Chicago NYU at Brandeis Emory at Rochester Case at Carnegie Mellon
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
History & Records UAA Records - update Individual
Team
Points 39
Points 109
Kelly Manning, Washington (vs. Chicago, 2/25/06)
Two Teams Washington (vs. Rochester, 1/23/98)
Field Goals 15 Jody Chattin, Case (vs. Emory, 12/5/93)
Field Goals 47 Carnegie Mellon (vs. Emory, 12/2/88)
Field Goals Attempted 30 Mandy Jackson, Emory (vs. Rochester, 2/29/92); Carrie Kaczmarski, NYU (vs. Washington, 2/16/92)
Field Goals Attempted 92 Carnegie Mellon (vs. Emory, 12/2/88)
3-Point Field Goals 10 Laura Crowley, Washington (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2/21/03)
3-Point Field Goals 15 NYU (vs. Emory, 1/26/97)
3-Point Field Goals Attempted 19 Mandy Jackson, Emory (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2/20/94)
3-Point Field Goals Attempted 31 Case (vs. Chicago, 1/18/08); Case (vs. Rochester, 2/22/08)
Free Throws 19 Caitlin Malcolm, Brandeis (vs. Case, 1/21/05)
Free Throws 37 NYU (vs. Washington, 2/21/97)
Free Throws Attempted 22 Caitlin Malcolm, Brandeis (vs. Case, 1/21/05)
Free Throws Attempted 49 Washington (vs. Chicago 1/10/04); Chicago (vs. NYU, 1/20/02)
Offensive Rebounds 11 Wendy Mramor, Case (vs. Emory, 12/3/88) Defensive Rebounds 17 Rachelle Roll, Carnegie Mellon (vs. Emory, 2/10/10); Angela Warner, Emory (vs. NYU, 1/27/89)
Offensive Rebounds 31 Rochester (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2/13/88) Defensive Rebounds 48 Case (vs. Rochester, 12/6/89)
Total Rebounds 24 Patti McCrudden, NYU (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 12/3/88)
Total Rebounds 68 Case (vs. Rochester, 12/6/89)
Assists 13
Assists 34
Leslie Berger, Washington (vs. Chicago, 2/26/05)
Emory (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 1/16/93)
Blocked Shots 8 Elaine Cotronakis, Case (vs. Rochester, 12/12/87)
Blocked Shots 11 NYU (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 1/6/02)
Steals 14
Steals 32
Jehan Clark, NYU (vs. Brandeis, 1/9/99)
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Carnegie Mellon (vs. Emory, 12/2/88)
Points 189
NYU (100) vs. Washington (89) 2/2/04
Field Goals 74 Johns Hopkins (39) vs. Rochester (35) 12/9/95 Field Goals Attempted 161 Emory (81) vs. Carnegie Mellon (80) 2/20/94 3-Point Field Goals 24 Chicago (14) vs. Brandeis (10) 1/20/06 3-Point Field Goals Attempted 53 Case (31) vs. Rochester (22) 2/22/08 Free Throws 66 NYU (37) vs. Washington (29) 2/27/97 Free Throws Attempted 83 NYU (48) vs. Washington (35) 2/27/97 Total Rebounds 115 Case (68) vs. Rochester (47) 12/6/89 Assists 51
Emory (34) vs. Carnegie Mellon (17) 1/16/93
Blocked Shots 19 Carnegie Mellon (8) vs. NYU (11) 1/6/02 Steals 42
Johns Hopkins (30) vs. Emory (12) 12/6/91
Records from UAA games only.
19
History & Records Year by Year Records Overall Year 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 Total
W 3 0 8 13 13 13 12 10 5 13 8 15 15 12 15 11 14 18 21 14 8 14 13 19 12 12 14 9 14 15 9 11 10 16 17 18 22 17 19 25 527
L 4 6 6 7 8 9 8 7 12 6 14 6 6 9 7 11 8 7 4 11 17 11 12 7 13 13 11 16 11 9 15 14 15 9 8 7 6 8 7 4 369
Pct. .429 .000 .571 .650 .619 .591 .600 .588 .294 .684 .364 .714 .714 .571 .682 .500 .636 .720 .840 .560 .320 .560 .520 .731 .480 .480 .560 .360 .560 .625 .375 .440 .400 .640 .680 .720 .786 .680 .731 .862
Coach Patricia Kirby Patricia Kirby Patricia Kirby Patricia Kirby Patricia Kirby Patricia Kirby Marcia Hurt Marcia Hurt Marcia Hurt Diann Nestel Diann Nestel Diann Nestel Diann Nestel Kevin McCarthy Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Jennifer Kroll Jennifer Kroll Jennifer Kroll Jennifer Kroll Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell
.588
40 years
All-Time Coaching Records By Winning Percentage Coach Aaron Roussell Diann Nestel Susan Brower Kevin McCarthy Patricia Kirby Susan Zawacki Marcia Hurt Jennifer Kroll
Years 2004–– 1980-84 1985-93 1984-85 1971-77 1993-00 1977-80 2000–04
W 134 51 115 12 50 93 27 45
L 49 32 76 9 40 83 27 53
Pct. .732 .614 .602 .571 .556 .528 .500 .459
Years 2004–– 1985-93 1993-00 1980-84 1971-77 2000–04 1977-80 1984-85
W 134 115 93 51 50 45 27 12
L 49 76 83 32 40 53 27 9
Pct. .732 .602 .528 .614 .556 .459 .500 .571
Years 2004–– 1985-93 1993-00 2000–04
W 66 40 44 22
L 32 35 55 35
Pct. .673 .533 .444 .386
By Victories Coach Aaron Roussell Susan Brower Susan Zawacki Diann Nestel Patricia Kirby Jennifer Kroll Marcia Hurt Kevin McCarthy
UAA Coach Aaron Roussell Susan Brower Susan Zawacki Jennifer Kroll
UAA Year 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 Total
20
W 3 9 11 6 4 7 6 9 5 5 6 4 9 7 5 5 5 9 6 7 11 8 11 14 172
L 4 3 3 8 10 7 8 5 9 9 8 10 6 8 9 9 9 5 8 7 3 6 3 0 157
Pct. Place .429 5th .750 1st .786 2nd .429 5th .286 6th .500 4th .429 4th .643 4th .357 4th .357 4th .429 4th .286 5th .600 3rd .467 4th .357 6th .357 6th .357 6th .643 4th .429 5th .500 5th .786 1st .571 4th .786 2nd 1.000 1st .523
Coach Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Brower Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Susan Zawacki Jennifer Kroll Jennifer Kroll Jennifer Kroll Jennifer Kroll Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell Aaron Roussell 24 years
Aaron Roussell has led Chicago to three NCAA tournaments, including a 2011 quarterfinal appearance
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
History & Records Individual & Team Records Individual Most Points •Career:
1,924
•Season:
580
•Game:
43
Gretchen Gates (1982-86) Gretchen Gates (1985-86) Gretchen Gates (v. Colo. College, ‘85-86)
Most Field Goals Made •Career:
847
•Season:
248
•Game:
17
Gretchen Gates (1982-86) Gretchen Gates (1985-86) Gretchen Gates (3 times)
Most Field Goals Attempted •Career:
1,519
•Season:
448
•Game:
26
Gretchen Gates (1982-86) Gretchen Gates (1985-86) Gretchen Gates (v. Lawrence, ‘85-86)
Most Free Throws Attempted •Career:
469
Team
•Season:
204
Most Points
•Game:
17
Highest Free Throw Percentage •Career:
.882
•Season:
.932
•Career:
1,056
•Season:
322
•Game:
26
Most Assists
•Season:
.558
.587
Gretchen Gates (1982-86) Amy Gleisner (1999-00)
•Career:
391
•Season:
131
•Game:
13
Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Made
Most Steals •Career:
234
•Season:
62
•Season:
78
•Game:
6
•Game:
9
•Career:
174
Vicki Wittman (1991-95) Bryanne Halfhill (2010-11) Bryanne Halfhill (v. Wheaton, ‘10-11); Korry Schwanz (v. Lake Forest, 04-05); Laura Hebel (v. Defiance, ‘01-02); Amy Still (v. CMU, ‘95-96); Vicki Wittman (v. Fontbonne, ‘92-93)
Korry Schwanz (2003-07) Korry Schwanz (2006-07)
Most Blocked Shots •Career:
220
•Season:
58
•Game:
7
Gretchen Gates (1982-86) Maria Del Favero (1986-87) Helen Strauss (v. Washington, Mo. ‘80-81) Kim Dennis (1992-96) Bryanne Halfhill (2010-11); Kim Dennis (1994-95) Janae Winner (v. Concordia Chicago ‘05-06) Kristin Maschka (1987-91) Catherine Fitzgerald (1991-92) Catherine Fitzgerald (v. Wis. Lutheran, ‘91-92) Kate Poneta (1993-97) Kate Poneta (1994-95) Kate Poneta (v. No. Central, ‘95-96, ‘94’95)
452
•Season:
173
•Game:
12
.385
•Season:
.525
297
•Season:
146
•Game:
17
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
1,254 67
•Season: •Game:
(2007-08) (v. Lawrence, ‘85-86)
768 45
(2010-11) (v. Rockford, ‘92-93)
Most Field Goals Attempted •Season: •Game:
1,715 88
(2010-11) (v. Wis. Lutheran, ‘90-91)
Highest Field Goal Percentage •Season: •Game:
.448 .633
(2010-11) (v. Ill. Wesleyan, ’03-04)
Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Made •Season: •Game:
185 14
(2010-11) (v. Brandeis, ‘05-06)
Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Attempted •Season: •Game:
486 29
(2010-11) (v. Carthage, ‘09-10); (v. NYU, ‘03-04)
Highest 3-Pt. Field Goal Pct. (min. 5 made) •Season: •Game :
.383 .875
(1995-96) (v. Elmhurst, ‘96-97)
Most Free Throws Made •Season: •Game:
•Season: •Game:
441 33
617 49
.774 1.000
Most Assists
Vicki Wittman (1991-95) Joann Torres (2010-11)
Susie Gutowski (2002-06) Meghan Herrick (2010-11) Paula Markovitz (v. Valparaiso, ‘77-78)
•Season: •Game:
(2010-11) (v. Olivet Nazarene, ‘85-86); (v. Rockford, ‘92-93)
(2010-11) (v. Chapman, ‘08-09)
(2010-11) (v. NYU, ‘01-02)
Highest Free Throw Pct. (min. 10 made)
•Season: •Game:
Most Steals
Most Free Throws Made •Career:
Most Rebounds
•Season: •Game:
Vicki Wittman (1991-95) Bryanne Halfhill (2010-11) Korry Schwanz (v. Brandeis, 05-06)
Highest 3-Pt. Field Goal Percentage •Career:
2,162 101
Most Free Throws Attempted
Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Attempted •Career:
•Season: •Game:
Most Field Goals Made
Most Rebounds
Highest Field Goal Percentage •Career:
Kim Dennis (1992-96) Meghan Herrick (2010-11) Paula Markovitz (v. Valparaiso, ‘77-78)
•Season: •Game:
(2003-04) (v. Carnegie Mellon, ‘89-90)
492 34
(2010-11) (v. Rockford, ‘92-93)
326 30
(1992-93) (v. Rockford, ‘92-93)
Most Blocked Shots All-American Kristin Maschka
•Season: •Game:
129 11
(2009-10) (v. Hope, ‘94-95)
21
History & Records Career & Season Statistical Leaders Points CCareer 1,924 1,399 1,299 1,226 1,180 1,111 1,101 1,089 1,001 945
Season 580 474 436 434 416 409 407 362 361 356
Assists Career Gretchen Gates Nofi Mojidi Kristin Maschka Korry Schwanz Susie Gutowski Jenny Costello Molly Hackney Nadya Shmavonian Kate Poneta Kim Dennis
1982-86 2004-08 1987-91 2003-07 2002-06 1994-98 2006-10 1977-81 1993-97 1992-96
Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Taylor Simpson Nofi Mojidi Meghan Herrick Nofi Mojidi Susie Gutowski Bryanne Halfhill
1985-86 1984-85 1982-83 1983-84 2010-11 2006-07 2010-11 2005-06 2004-05 2010-11
Season
Scoring Average Career (min. 50 games) 22.9 14.9 14.3 14.3 13.6 12.3 11.8 11.5 11.0 10.9
Season 26.4 22.5 21.8 20.7 20.0 18.0 16.4 15.9 15.0 14.5
1,056 759 669 663 652 616 613 563 545 515
Season 322 309 296 271 271 258 229 226 218 215
22
131 131 120 116 109 108 108 106 105 103
Kim Dennis Catherine Fitzgerald Kristin Maschka Janae Winner Dana Allison Jamie Stinson Jaimie Bleck Korry Schwanz Bryanne Halfhill Jenny Costello
1992-96 1989-93 1987-91 2002-06 1997-01 2006-10 1999-03 2003-07 2008––– 1994-98
Bryanne Halfhill Kim Dennis Kristin Maschka Catherine Fitzgerald Janae Winner Catherine Fitzgerald Karen Walsh Jaimie Bleck Catherine Fitzgerald Dana Allison
2010-11 1994-95 1989-90 1991-92 2005-06 1989-90 1984-85 2001-02 1990-91 2000-01
Kristin Maschka Nofi Mojidi Catherine Fitzgerald Kim Dennis Bryanne Halfhill Paula Lepka Kate Hemker Alex Leach Heather Gammel Jenny Costello
1987-91 2004-08 1989-93 1992-96 2008––– 2000-04 1996–00 2005-09 1990-94 1994-98
Catherine Fitzgerald Bryanne Halfhill Kim Dennis Catherine Fitzgerald Kristin Maschka Kim Dennis Kristin Maschka Nofi Mojidi Kristin Maschka Nofi Mojidi
1991-92 2010-11 1994-95 1990-91 1988-89 1992-93 1987-88 2006-07 1989-90 2004-05
Steals Career
Gretchen Gates Nadya Shmavonian Kristin Maschka Vadis Cothran Nofi Mojidi Korry Schwanz Susie Gutowski Janet Torrey Jenny Costello Bryanne Halfhill
1982-86 1977-81 1987-91 1974-77 2004-08 2003-07 2002-06 1977-81 1994-98 2008–––
Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Nadya Shmavonian Nadya Shmavonian Nofi Mojidi Maria Del Favero Kristin Maschka Nofi Mojidi
1985-86 1984-85 1982-83 1983-84 1979-80 1980-81 2006-07 1986-87 1987-88 2005-06
234 226 220 218 159 137 136 135 131 130
Season
Rebounds Career
391 361 316 291 291 284 280 260 245 234
78 77 70 68 66 65 64 63 63 59
Nofi Mojidi poured in 1,399 points from 2004-08
Blocked Shots
Gretchen Gates Kate Poneta Kate Hemker Nicaya Rapier Molly Hackney Kathleen Abbott Maria Del Favero Kristin Maschka Susie Gutowski Angel Korer
1982-86 1993-97 1996-00 2004-08 2006-10 1991-95 1984-87 1987-91 2002-06 2000-04
Maria Del Favero Gretchen Gates Taylor Simpson Gretchen Gates Helen Straus Gretchen Gates Beth Woods Kate Hemker Gretchen Gates Kate Hemker
1986-87 1985-86 2010-11 1982-83 1981-82 1984-85 1988-89 1999-00 1983-84 1997-98
Career 220 164 118 116 97 91 68 64 59 59
Season 58 56 55 51 45 44 44 43 43 43
Kate Poneta Molly Hackney Anna Woods Kate Hemker Kristin Maschka Kathleen Abbott Gretchen Gates Susie Gutowski Angel Korer Beth Woods
1993-97 2006-10 2006-10 1996-00 1987-91 1991-95 1982-86 2002-06 2000-04 1987-91
Kate Poneta Kate Poneta Kate Poneta Kate Poneta Molly Hackney Molly Hackney Kathleen Abbott Molly Hackney Kate Hemker Gretchen Gates
1994-95 1993-94 1996-97 1995-96 2008-09 2007-08 1992-93 2006-07 1997-98 1984-85
Nicaya Rapier grabbed 663 rebounds from 2004-08
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
History & Records Career & Season Statistical Leaders Field Goals Made Career 847 545 531 452 430 424 410 388 354 344
Season 248 212 194 193 165 158 151 150 146 144
Field Goal Percentage
Gretchen Gates Nofi Mojidi Kristin Maschka Molly Hackney Susie Gutowski Korry Schwanz Kate Poneta Jenny Costello Angel Korer Kathleen Abbott
1982-86 2004-08 1987-91 2006-10 2002-06 2003-07 1993-97 1994-98 2000-04 1992-96
Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Taylor Simpson Nofi Mojidi Maria Del Favero Molly Hackney Kristin Maschka Kristin Maschka
1985-86 1984-85 1983-84 1982-83 2010-11 2006-07 1986-87 2007-08 1989-90 1988-89
Free Throws Made Career 297 289 275 272 260 236 230 230 223 220
Season 146 125 107 103 87 84 84 82 81 78 78
174 161 145 109 108 94 89 84 75 73
Season 62 52 50 49 48 47 45 45 44 42
.558 .532 .486 .478 .475 .475 .471 .469 .465 .465
Gretchen Gates Amy Gleisner Kim Dennis Nofi Mojidi Angel Korer Maria Del Favero Nicaya Rapier Susie Gutowski Molly Hackney Kathleen Abbott
Season (min. 100 attempts) .587 .576 .556 .555 .554 .551 .548 .548 .537 .532
Amy Gleisner Gretchen Gates Taylor Simpson Gretchen Gates Gretchen Gates Kathleen Abbott Nicaya Rapier Gretchen Gates Amy Gleisner Karly Kasper
1982-86 1996-00 1992-96 2004-08 2000-04 1984-87 2004-08 2002-06 2006-10 1991-95
1999-00 1983-84 2010-11 1984-85 1985-86 1993-94 2006-07 1982-83 1998-99 2008-09
Free Throw Percentage
Susie Gutowski Catherine Fitzgerald Meghan Herrick Kim Dennis Jenny Costello Nofi Mojidi Paula Lepka Gretchen Gates Dana Allison Kristin Maschka
2002-06 1989-93 2008––– 1992-96 1994-98 2004-08 2000-04 1982-86 1997-01 1987-91
Meghan Herrick Paula Markovitz Susie Gutowski Catherine Fitzgerald Meghan Herrick Dana Allison Gretchen Gates Kim Dennis Taylor Simpson Paula Lepka Allison Heyne
2010-11 1977-78 2004-05 1991-92 2009-10 2000-01 1985-86 1992-93 2010-11 2001-02 1989-90
3-Pt. Field Goals Made Career
Career (min. 450 attempts)
Career (min. 150 attempts) .882 .821 .762 .759 .754 .732 .726 .725 .718 .698
Korry Schwanz Kristin Maschka Susie Gutowski Taylor Simpson Janae Winner Angel Korer Paula Lepka Kelly Humphry Jenny Costello Catherine Fitzgerald
Season (min. 50 attempts) .932 .869 .845 .836 .824 .824 .821 .813 .792 .788
Korry Schwanz Janae Winner Korry Schwanz Kristin Maschka Kristin Maschka Kristin Maschka Korry Schwanz Allison Heyne Paula Lepka Susie Gutowski
2003-07 1987-91 2002-06 2008––– 2002-06 2000-04 2000-04 1993-97 1994-98 1989-93
Korry Schwanz led the nation in free throw percentage in 2006-07
2006-07 2003-04 2004-05 1989-90 1988-89 1987-88 2003-04 1989-90 2003-04 2002-03
3-Pt. FG Percentage
Vicki Wittman Korry Schwanz Bryanne Halfhill Alex Leach Janae Winner Kim Burke Laura Hebel Amy Still Jenny Costello Nofi Mojidi
1991-95 2003-07 2008–– 2005-09 2002-06 1988-92 1999-03 1995-98 1994-98 2004-08
Bryanne Halfhill Laura Hebel Vicki Wittman Kim Burke Bryanne Halfhill Vicki Wittman Korry Schwanz Korry Schwanz Janae Winner Vicki Wittman
2010-11 2001-02 1993-94 1990-91 2008-09 1992-93 2005-06 2004-05 2002-03 1991-92
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Career (min. 50 made) .385 .370 .367 .362 .359 .356 .347 .338 .332 .330
Vicki Wittman Amy Still Jamie Stinson Dana Kaplan Korry Schwanz Laura Hebel Alex Leach Lori Tanaka Bryanne Halfhill Kim Burke
Season (min. 20 made) .525 .469 .443 .435 .435 .429 .427 .405 .382 .380
Joann Torres Korry Schwanz Jenny Costello Amy Still Vicki Wittman Dana Kaplan Vicki Wittman Jamie Stinson Alex Leach Laura Hebel
1991-95 1995-98 2006-10 2007-11 2003-07 1999-03 2005-09 2004-08 2008––– 1988-92
2010-11 2005-06 1994-95 1995-96 1992-93 2010-11 1993-94 2009-10 2006-07 2001-02
Janae Winner hit 108 career 3-point field goals
23
History & Records Ratner Center Records Individual Most Points •Chicago: 32 •Visitor:
39
Most Rebounds •Chicago: 19 •Visitor:
20
Team Susie Gutowski (vs. Northland, 11/20/04) Kelly Manning, Washington (2/25/06) Taylor Simpson (vs. Case, 1/28/11) Jessica McEntee, NYU (1/26/07)
Most Field Goals •Chicago: 12 Taylor Simpson (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 1/30/11) •Visitor: 14 Kelly Manning, Washington (2/25/06) Most 3-Pt. Field Goals •Chicago: 6 Bryanne Halffhill (vs. Wheaton, Ill., 12/1/10); Korry Schwanz (vs. Lake Forest, 11/30/04) •Visitor: 7 Kristy Freeman, Lake Forest (11/30/04) Most Free Throws •Chicago: 12 Nofi Mojidi (vs. Washington, 2/25/06) •Visitor: 13 Elyse Lambert, Monmouth (11/23/03) Most Assists •Chicago: 9 •Visitor:
9
Most Steals •Chicago:
7
•Visitor:
9
Janae Winner (vs. Brandeis, 1/20/06), (vs. Rochester, 2/18/05) Savannah Morgan, Emory (1/16/11); Chiresse Paradise, Baruch (11/18/07); Keesha Allen, Case (1/16/04) Nofi Mojidi (vs. Concordia Chicago, 11/23/04) Keesha Allen, Case (1/16/04)
Year by Year Records
Most Points •Chicago: •Visitor:
94 97
Most Rebounds •Chicago: 62 •Visitor: 51 Most Field Goals •Chicago: 40 •Visitor: 34
vs. Aurora (11/29/05) Lake Forest (11/30/04) vs. MSOE (1/2/10) Johns Hopkins (12/9/06), Rochester (2/6/04) vs. MSOE (1/3/08) NYU (1/22/06); Brandeis (1/20/06); Lake Forest (11/30/04)
Most 3-Pt. Field Goals •Chicago: 14 vs. Brandeis (1/20/06) •Visitor: 12 Wheaton (Ill.) (12/1/10); NYU (2/8/09) Most Free Throws •Chicago: 33 vs. Chapman (11/16/08) •Visitor: 23 Monmouth (11/22/03) Most Assists •Chicago: 27 •Visitor: 25
vs. Carnegie Mellon (1/19/07) NYU (1/22/06)
Most Steals •Chicago: •Visitor:
vs. Concordia Chicago (11/23/04) Case (1/16/04)
23 20
Most Blocked Shots •Chicago: 9 vs. Case (2/21/10); vs. Baruch (11/18/07) •Visitor: 10 Washington-St. Louis (1/8/05)
Both Teams Most Points 183 Longest Game 1 Overtime
Most Blocked Shots •Chicago: 6 Molly Hackney (vs. Baruch, 11/18/07) •Visitor: 6 Kelly Manning, Washington (1/8/05)
Lake Forest 97, Chicago 86 (11/30/04) Brandeis 92, Chicago 85 (1/20/06); Chicago 70, Washington-St. Louis 67 (1/8/05)
Chicago RAC Scoring Highs Pts. 32 31 28 26 26 25 25 24
24
Player Susie Gutowski Korry Schwanz Taylor Simpson Meghan Herrick Nofi Mojidi Nofi Mojidi Molly Hackney Bryanne Halfhill
Opponent (Date) Northland (11/20/04) Lake Forest (11/30/04) Carnegie Mellon (1/30/11) Carthage (11/28/09) Washington (2/25/06) Washington (3/1/08) Baruch (11/18/07) Wis.-Platteville (12/30/10)
Year 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11
W 5 11 6 10 12 8 10 11
Overall L Pct. 6 .455 3 .786 5 .545 3 .769 1 .923 4 .667 3 .769 0 1.000
W 3 6 2 4 7 4 6 7
Total
73
25 .745
39 17 .696
vs. Opponent Augsburg Aurora Baruch Benedictine (Ill.) Blackburn Brandeis Carnegie Mellon Carroll Carthage Case Chapman Coe Concordia (Minn.) Concordia Chicago Dominican (Ill.) Emory Illinois Wesleyan Johns Hopkins Kalamazoo Lake Forest Monmouth (Ill.) MSOE North Central North Park Northland NYU Olivet Presentation Rhodes Rochester St. Mary’s (Minn.) St. Norbert Trinity (Texas) Washington-St. Louis Wesleyan (Conn.) Wheaton (Ill.) Whitman Wis.-Platteville Wis.-Whitewater Wittenberg
UAA L Pct. 4 .429 1 .857 5 .286 3 .571 0 1.000 3 .571 1 .857 0 1.000
W 1 1 1 1 1 5 8 1 1 6 1 1 1 1 1 7 0 1 1 0 1 2 2 1 2 4 1 1 1 5 1 1 0 4 0 3 1 1 0 1
L 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 4 1 0 0 0 1 0
Chicago RAC Firsts Pts. 23 23 22 22 22 21 21 21
Player Taylor Simpson Molly Hackney Taylor Simpson Taylor Simpson Nofi Mojidi Alex Leach Nofi Mojidi Susie Gutowski
Opponent (Date) Case (1/28/11) Coe (11/22/09) Emory (1/16/11) Washington (1/8/11) Carthage (12/18/06) Johns Hopkins (12/9/06) Brandeis (1/20/06) North Central (12/30/05)
Game/Win: UAA Game: UAA Win: O.T Game: Points: Field Goal: 3-Pt. FG: Free Throw: Rebound: Assist: Steal: Block:
Chicago 79, Monmouth 51 (11/22/03) Case 66, Chicago 62 (1/16/04) Chicago 66, Emory 51 (1/18/04) Chicago 70, Washington, Mo. 67 (1/8/05) Paula Lepka vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Susie Gutowski vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Paula Lepka vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Paula Lepka vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Susie Gutowski vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Janae Winner vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Daniela Lieber vs. Monmouth (11/22/03) Paula Lepka vs. Monmouth (11/22/03)
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
History & Records Series Records vs. All Opponents Opponent Adams State Adrian Air Force Augsburg Augustana (Ill.) Aurora
W L 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 2 3 10 3
First Last ‘85-86 ‘85-86 ‘89-90 ‘91-92 ‘78-79 ‘78-79 ‘05-06 ‘08-09 ‘75-76 ‘87-88 ‘81-82 ‘06-07
Baruch Beloit Benedictine Blackburn Brandeis Brown Bucknell
1 10 11 2 25 2 0
0 1 5 2 21 3 1
‘07-08 ‘82-83 ‘78-79 ‘97-98 ‘88-89 ‘74-75 ‘82-83
‘07-08 ‘87-88 ‘05-06 ‘05-06 ‘10-11 ‘79-80 ‘82-83
Caldwell Calvin Carleton Carnegie Mellon Carroll Carthage Case Chapman Chicago State Coe Colorado College Concordia (Mich.) Concordia (Minn.) Concordia (Wis.) Concordia Chicago Cornell (Iowa) Cortland State
1 1 0 34 1 6 28 1 1 3 4 1 1 1 17 0 1
0 1 1 12 1 3 9 0 9 1 0 0 0 0 13 2 0
‘87-88 ‘97-98 ‘01-02 ‘87-88 ‘08-09 ‘81-82 ‘86-87 ‘08-09 ‘72-73 ‘82-83 ‘85-86 ‘84-85 ‘07-08 ‘98-99 ‘72-73 ‘82-83 ‘01-02
‘87-88 ‘10-11 ‘01-02 ‘10-11 ‘09-10 ‘10-11 ‘10-11 ‘08-09 ‘88-89 ‘09-10 ‘01-02 ‘84-85 ‘07-08 ‘98-99 ‘05-06 ‘82-83 ‘01-02
Defiance DePaul Dominican (Ill.) Dyke
0 1 2 0
1 1 2 1
‘01-02 ‘72-73 ‘72-73 ‘86-87
‘01-02 ‘74-75 ‘05-06 ‘86-87
Earlham Eastern Illinois Edgewood Elmhurst Emory Eureka
1 1 1 6 30 1
0 3 0 1 15 0
‘99-00 ‘74-75 ‘07-08 ‘79-80 ‘88-89 ‘81-82
‘99-00 ‘79-80 ‘07-08 ‘08-09 ‘10-11 ‘81-82
Fontbonne Franklin
1 0
0 1
‘92-93 ‘92-93 ‘99-00 ‘99-00
George Williams Goucher Greensboro Greenville Grinnell
3 1 1 2 4
5 0 0 3 0
‘75-76 ‘88-89 ‘10-11 ‘74-75 ‘78-79
‘81-82 ‘88-89 ‘10-11 ‘78-79 ‘83-84
Hanover Harvard Haverford Hendrix Hope
1 0 1 0 1
1 1 0 1 3
‘04-05 ‘82-83 ‘98-99 ‘03-04 ‘94-95
‘10-11 ‘82-83 ‘98-99 ‘03-04 ‘09-10
Illinois Illinois-Chicago Illinois College Illinois State Illinois Tech Illinois Wesleyan
0 2 1 2 7 2
3 2 0 1 0 3
‘75-76 ‘73-74 ‘84-85 ‘75-76 ‘95-96 ‘02-03
‘77-78 ‘76-77 ‘84-85 ‘79-80 ‘01-02 ‘10-11
Johns Hopkins Judson
6 2
8 0
‘88-89 ‘06-07 ‘82-83 ‘93-94
5 0 10
4 1 0
‘95-96 ‘08-09 ‘07-08 ‘07-08 ‘76-77 ‘85-86
Kalamazoo Kean Knox
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Opponent Lake Forest Lakeland Lawrence Lewis Loras Loyola Chicago Luther Manchester Marquette Maryville McKendree Middlebury Millikin MIT Monmouth Mount Union MSOE Mundelein
W L 16 11 1 2 8 0 2 2 5 2 2 0 1 1
First Last ‘76-77 ‘09-10 ‘01-02 ‘10-11 ‘83-84 ‘86-87 ‘74-75 ‘95-96 ‘81-82 ‘10-11 ‘73-74 ‘78-79 ‘91-92 ‘10-11
1 0 1 0 1 1 4 4 0 6 7
0 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 0
‘08-09 ‘79-80 ‘88-89 ‘81-82 ‘97-98 ‘75-76 ‘74-75 ‘82-83 ‘98-99 ‘99-00 ‘73-74
‘08-09 ‘79-80 ‘88-89 ‘81-82 ‘97-98 ‘94-95 ‘86-87 ‘03-04 ‘98-99 ‘10-11 ‘87-88
0 10 17 4 0 2 6 0 15
1 7 3 2 1 0 3 1 33
‘80-81 ‘72-73 ‘74-75 ‘73-74 ‘79-80 ‘03-04 ‘72-73 ‘79-80 ‘87-88
‘80-81 ‘10-11 ‘07-08 ‘88-89 ‘79-80 ‘04-05 ‘76-77 ‘79-80 ‘10-11
Oberlin Olivet Olivet Nazarene Otterbein
3 3 2 0
0 0 3 1
‘75-76 ‘90-91 ‘73-74 ‘95-96
‘98-99 ‘10-11 ‘85-86 ‘95-96
Penn Presentation
1 1
1 0
‘76-77 ‘77-78 ‘07-08 ‘07-08
Quincy
1
3
‘76-77 ‘79-80
Redlands Rhodes Ripon Robert Morris (Ill.) Rochester Rockford
1 1 4 1 30 8
0 1 4 0 20 0
‘91-92 ‘03-04 ‘83-84 ‘94-95 ‘84-85 ‘73-74
‘91-92 ‘07-08 ‘86-87 ‘94-95 ‘10-11 ‘95-96
St. Catherine St. Francis, (Ill.) St. Mary’s, (Ind.) St. Mary’s, (Md.) St. Mary’s, (Minn.) St. Norbert St. Thomas, (Minn.) St. Xavier Savannah A&D Smith Spring Arbor Swarthmore
2 1 10 1 4 5 1 5 2 1 0 1
0 0 3 0 0 6 0 0 1 0 1 0
‘97-98 ‘77-78 ‘81-82 ‘96-97 ‘91-92 ‘83-84 ‘07-08 ‘77-78 ‘98-99 ‘86-87 ‘98-99 ‘76-77
‘05-06 ‘77-78 ‘08-09 ‘96-97 ‘09-10 ‘07-08 ‘07-08 ‘81-82 ‘02-03 ‘86-87 ‘98-99 ‘76-77
Taylor Thomas More Trinity (Texas) Trinity Christian Trinity International
1 1 0 0 7
0 0 1 2 0
‘87-88 ‘04-05 ‘04-05 ‘86-87 ‘75-76
‘87-88 ‘04-05 ‘04-05 ‘87-88 ‘92-93
Valparaiso
1
7
‘76-77 ‘86-87
0 11 0 13 1 1
1 42 1 13 0 0
National Education North Central North Park Northeastern Illinois Northern Illinois Northland Northwestern Notre Dame NYU
Wartburg Washington (Mo.) Wesleyan Wheaton (Ill.) Whitman Whittier
‘89-90 ‘80-81 ‘03-04 ‘75-76 ‘05-06 ‘02-03
‘89-90 ‘10-11 ‘03-04 ‘10-11 ‘05-06 ‘02-03
Opponent Williams Wis. Lutheran Wis.-Eau Claire Wis.-Green Bay Wis.-La Crosse Wis.-Oshkosh Wis.-Parkside Wis.-Platteville Wis.-River Falls Wis.-Stevens Point Wis.-Stout Wis.-Whitewater Wittenberg
W L 1 0 5 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 5 10 2 2
First Last ‘84-85 ‘84-85 ‘90-91 ‘95-96 ‘96-97 ‘07-08 ‘80-81 ‘80-81 ‘10-11 ‘10-11 ‘86-87 ‘86-87 ‘81-82 ‘81-82 ‘10-11 ‘10-11 ‘02-03 ‘02-03 ‘02-03 ‘04-05 ‘01-02 ‘01-02 ‘86-87 ‘07-08 ‘88-89 ‘06-07
Aaron Roussell vs. All Opponnets Augsburg Aurora Baruch Benedictine (Ill.) Blackburn Brandeis Calvin Carnegie Mellon Carroll Carthage Case Chapman Coe Concordia (Minn.) Concordia Chicago Dominican (Ill.) Edgewood Elmhurst Emory Greensboro Hanover Hope Illinois Wesleyan Johns Hopkins Kalamazoo Kean Lake Forest Lakeland Loras Luther Manchester MSOE North Central North Park Northland NYU Olivet Presentation Rhodes Rochester St. Catherine St. Mary’s (Ind.) St. Mary’s (Minn.) St. Norbert St. Thomas (Minn.) Simpson Thomas More Trinity (Texas) Washington-St. Louis Wheaton (Ill.) Whitman Wis.-Eau Claire Wis.-La Crosse Wis.-Platteville Wis.-Stevens Point Wis.-Whitewater Wittenberg
2 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 6 8 1 0 14 0 1 1 3 1 12 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 13 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 3 1 0 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 5 0 4 0 3 0 1 0 8 6 2 0 1 0 1 0 8 6 1 0 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 5 10 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0
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History & Records Honor Roll All-America
All-UAA 1st/2nd Team
Meghan Herrick Taylor Simpson
2010-11 2010-11
Susie Gutowski
2004-05
Catherine Fitzgerald Kristin Maschka
1990-91 1990-91
Kristin Maschka
1989-90
Gretchen Gates
1985-86
Gretchen Gates
1984-85
Academic All-America Gretchen Gates
1985-86
Gretchen Gates
1984-85
NCAA Walter Byers Award Kristin Maschka
1990-91
NCAA Postgraduate Scholar Kristin Maschka
1990-91
NCAA Division III Statistical Champion Korry Schwanz (FT pct.)
2006-07
D3 News Freshman All-America Bryanne Halfhill
2008-09
All-Midwest Conference (1982-87)
Meghan Herrick Taylor Simpson Bryanne Halfhill Morgan Herrick
1st 1st 2nd 2nd
2010-11 2010-11 2010-11 2010-11
Molly Hackney Meghan Herrick Jamie Stinson
2nd 2nd 2nd
2009-10 2009-10 2009-10
Molly Hackney Bryanne Halfhill
2nd 2nd
2008-09 2008-09
Molly Hackney Nofi Mojidi
1st 2nd
2007-08 2007-08
Nofi Mojidi Korry Schwanz
1st 1st
2006-07 2006-07
Nofi Mojidi Susie Gutowski Korry Schwanz
1st 2nd 2nd
2005-06 2005-06 2005-06
Susie Gutowski Korry Schwanz
1st 1st
2004-05 2004-05
Susie Gutowski
2nd
2003-04
Angel Korer
2nd
2002-03
Angel Korer
2nd
2001-02
Kealey Mayer
2nd
2000-01
Kate Hemker
1st
1999-00
Sarah Fox Kate Hemker
2nd 2nd
1998-99 1998-99
Jenny Costello Kate Hemker
1st 2nd
1997-98 1997-98
Kate Poneta
1st
1996-97
Kathleen Abbott
1st
1994-95
Maria Del Favero
1986-87
Madelyn Detloff Gretchen Gates
1985-86 1985-86
Gretchen Gates
1984-85
Kate Poneta Vicki Wittman
2nd 2nd
1993-94 1993-94
Gretchen Gates
1983-84
Kathleen Abbott
2nd
1992-93
Catherine Fitzgerald
1st
1991-92
Kristin Maschka Catherine Fitzgerald
1st 2nd
1990-91 1990-91
Kristin Maschka Allison Heyne
1st 2nd
1989-90 1989-90
Kristin Maschka Christine Bork
1st 2nd
1988-89 1988-89
Kristin Maschka Kathy Fitzpatrick
1st 2nd
1987-88 1987-88
UAA Player of the Year Taylor Simpson
2010-11
Kristin Maschka
1989-90
UAA Rookie of the Year Molly Hackney
2006-07
Korry Schwanz
2003-04
Susie Gutowski
2002-03
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2007 UAA Rookie of the Year Molly Hackney 2007 UAA Rookie of the Year Molly Hackney
Jamie Stinson earned All-UAA accolades in 2009-10
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
History & Records UAA Basketball History Year by Year Results Year Champion (UAA Record) 1987-88 Washington (5-2) 1988-89 Chicago, NYU, Washington (9-3) 1989-90 Washington (14-0) 1990-91 Carnegie Mellon (12-2) 1991-92 Washington (12-2) 1992-93 Washington (12-2) 1993-94 Washington (13-1) 1994-95 Washington (12-2) 1995-96 NYU (13-1) 1996-97 NYU (13-1) 1997-98 Washington (13-1) 1998-99 Washington (14-0) 1999-00 Washington (15-0) 2000-01 NYU, Washington (14-1) 2001-02 Washington (14-0) 2002-03 Washington (13-1) 2003-04 NYU, Washington (11-3) 2004-05 Washington (11-3) 2005-06 Washington (13-1) 2006-07 NYU, Washington (12-2) 2007-08 Chicago (11-3) 2008-09 Washington (13-1) 2009-10 Washington (13-1) 2010-11 Chicago (14-0)
Player of the Year Patti McCrudden, NYU Patti McCrudden, NYU Kristin Maschka, Chicago Karen Hermann, Washington Michele Lewis, Washington Donna Layne, NYU Donna Layne, NYU Ashley Gordon, Emory Marsha Harris, NYU Marsha Harris, NYU Alia Fischer, Washington Alia Fischer, Washington Alia Fischer, Washington Tasha Rodgers, Washington JeNine Nickerson, Case Laura Crowley, Washington Rachel Wojdowski, NYU Kelly Manning, Washington Kelly Manning, Washington Jessica McEntee, NYU Jaime Capra, Brandeis; Jessica McEntee, NYU Jessica McEntee, NYU Jessica Chapin, Brandeis Taylor Simpson, Chicago
2011 UAA Player of the Year Taylor Simpson
UChicago Basketball 2011-12
Rookie of the Year
UAA Teams in the NCAA Tournament (sweet 16 & Beyond)
Stephanie Seibert, Emory Hallie Hutchens, Washington Susie Gutowski, Chicago Korry Schwanz, Chicago Jamie Capra, Brandeis Shanna-Lei Dacanay, Washington Molly Hackney, Chicago Alex Hoover, Washington Jackie Cortese, Carnegie Mellon Brit Phillips, Carnegie Mellon Hannah Lilly, Emory
2003 UAA Rookie of the Year Susie Gutowski
Year 1987-88
School Washington
Result Round of 16
1988-89
NYU
Round of 16
1990-91
Washington
Semifinals
1992-93
NYU
Round of 16
1993-94
Washington NYU
Runner-up Semifinals
1994-95
NYU Emory
Round of 16 Round of 16
1995-96
NYU Washington
Semifinals Round of 16
1996-97
NYU Emory
National champion Round of 16
1997-98
Washington NYU
National champion Round of 16
1998-99
Washington NYU
National champion Quarterfinals
1999-00
Washington
National champion
2000-01
Washington NYU
National champion Quarterfinals
2002-03
Rochester Washington
Semifinals Quarterfinals
2003-04
Rochester NYU Washington
Semifinals Round of 16 Round of 16
2005-06
Rochester Washington
Round of 16 Round of 16
2006-07
Washington NYU
Runner-up Semifinals
2007-08
Chicago Rochester
Round of 16 Round of 16
2008-09
Washington Brandeis NYU Rochester
Runner up Quarterfinals Round of 16 Round of 16
2009-10
Washington Rochester
National champion Quarterfinals
2010-11
Washington Chicago
Runner up Quarterfinals
27
Basketball at Chicago Travel Travel to exciting destinations -- both international and domestic -- has been a significant feature of the Chicago basketball program. In the fall of 2009, the Maroons spent 10 days touring Argentina and Chile (below), during which the team visited the cities of Buenos Aires, Mendoza, and Santiago. Chicago enjoyed its first overseas trip when it visited Italy in 2006 (right). “These trips were tremendous opportunities for our players and our program,” said Head Coach Aaron Roussell. “It was a neat experience for our players to experience a different culture and a nice bonding trip for our team.” During the 2010-11 regular season, the Maroons logged more than 3,500 air miles as they navigated their 25-game slate with traditional weekend trips to UAA host cities New York, Boston, Atlanta, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Rochester. Other non-conference stops during Head Coach Aaron Roussell’s tenure have included Newark, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Louisville, Green Bay, and South Bend.
NCAA Tournament History 2010-11 First Round (Grand Rapids, Mich.) Chicago 76, Hanover 62 Second Round (Grand Rapids, Mich.) Chicago 67, Calvin 62 Round of 16 (Crestview Hills, Ky.) Chicago 87, Greensboro 61 Quarterfinals (Crestview Hills, Ky.) Washington-St. Louis 63, Chicago 58
2009-10 First Round (Bloomington, Ill.) Simpson 66, Chicago 53
2007-08 First Round (Stevens Point, Wis.) Chicago 62, St. Thomas (Minn.) 59 Second Round (Stevens Point, Wis.) Chicago 65, St. Norbert 52 Round of 16 (Union, N.J.) Kean 70, Chicago 56
1994-95 First Round (Decatur, Ill.) Millikin 70, Chicago 53
Maroons celebrate their second trip to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 2011
28
UChicago Basketball 2011-12