WESTERN ILLINOIS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
WESTERN ILLINOIS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
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2011-12 Roster 2011-12 schedule OFFICIAL Leatherneck athletics WEBSITE 2011-12 preview HISTORY OF THE LEATHERNECK NAME 2010-11 overall stats COLONEL ROCK
INFORMATION GUIDE
LEATHERNECK TRADITIONS
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President of Western Illinois University
Director of Western Illinois Athletics
Dr. Jack Thomas
Dr. Tim Van Alstine
Board of Trustees
Dr. Gary Biller Vice President Student Services
Brad Bainter Vice President Advancement and Public Services
Dr. Kenneth S. Hawkinson Provost & Academic Vice President
Julie DeWeese, Dr. Joseph A. Rives Interim Vice President for Quad Vice President Cities, Planning & Administrative Services Technology
Athletic Department Staff Directory
wESTERN iLLINOIS
cORE vALUES
A TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE A Historical Perspective of Women’s Athletics at Western Illinois University EARLY 1900s
1960s
1930-40s Perhaps the finest all-around female athlete of the 1930s was Evelyn Brackeveld, who was outstanding in field hockey, basketball and baseball. The president of the WAA in her junior and senior years, “Brackie”, as she was commonly called, was a model athlete. In June 1935, just before her graduation, she received the WAA’s highest award, a rarely presented gold pin, for her four years of athletic and scholastic achievement.
By the mid-1960s, Western’s women had intercollegiate competition in basketball, swimming, archery, volleyball, field hockey, gymnastics, tennis, softball, fencing, badminton and golf. On the national level, in 1965, with the desire to consolidate governance of women’s intercollegiate athletics under one organization, the NJCESCW agreed to let the Division for Girl’s and Women’s Sports (DGWS) assume control over competition and extramural events.
President Henninger organized the first athletic board and the women’s basketball team in 1903. The team quickly became the most integral part of the athletics program during those early years.
Women’s basketball was the first team at Western Illinois University. It was first managed by Dr. J.P. Drake.
The first action of the DGWS was to establish the Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (CIAW) to assume responsibility for designing, sponsoring and sanctioning women’s intercollegiate sports and championships. 1930’s Field Hockey Team
Dr. Ann Lamb was influential in the establishment of the women’s intercollegiate athletic program through her position as the Chair of the Women’s Physical Education Department from 1966-1981. Beginning at this time, the men’s and women’s athletic departments were separate, with the men in Western Hall and the women in Brophy Hall.
1940’s Women’s Golf
In 1907, Ethel Anderton was the captain of the basketball team.
1910s Under Helen Rockwell’s leadership, field hockey, which demanded skills like “dribbling, driving, bullying and lunging,” was added as a female sport in 1914.
1920s In 1920, President Morgan hired Ruth Glassow. At that time, the two most important female sports were field hockey and basketball; a small number of women also played tennis. Since there was less to offer female students, Glassow developed Western’s first women’s track team and baseball (softball) team and organized the Women’s Athletic Association (WAA).
All women’s sports in the the 1940s
Brophy Hall
Dr. Kathleen Brophy, hired in 1936, taught physical education to all grades in the training school and college courses. She chaired the Women’s Physical Education department for 17 years, and Brophy Hall was later named in her honor. She remained at Western Illinois for 31 years.
In 1925, the state legislature provided $180,000 to start construction on Morgan Gymnasium. The photograph shows two gym floors: one for the men and one for the women. They were separated by a fold partition, but when combined as shown, they constituted the second largest gym in Illinois at that time.
1970s
Up to this time, women did not have the opportunity to compete at the intercollegiate level, so many other national governing bodies such as the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU), American Softball Association (ASA), United States Field Hockey Association (USFHA), and the United States Track and Field Association (USTFA) provided women the opportunity to compete at state, regional, national and international levels in the 1930s and 1940s.
1950s Dora Sharp was hired in 1925 to replace Glassow. Under Sharp’s leadership, the WAA became the most important female organization at Western, where it remained so for decades. Volleyball, archery, golf and tennis were popular activities. The 1926 Sequel photograph (right) shows WAA members with athletic equipment for various spring sports.
In 1967, Dr. Marion Blackinton was hired as the Director of Women’s Intramurals, the Director of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (1967-1986), coached volleyball and was instrumental in Western Illinois University becoming a founding member of the Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference (GCAC).
The construction of the indoor pool allowed Western to develop its first swim team during the 1951-52 school year. A women’s synchronized swimming club, the Westerfins, organized in 1953, also used the new pool. The Westerfins were coached by June Sebree and sponsored by the WAA.
The Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) developed from the CIAW in recognition of the need for institutional membership and elected representation. Western Illinois University became a Division I charter member of the AIAW during the 1971-72 school year. Dr. Blackinton’s volleyball team won the 1970 state tournament and participated in the first national tournament sponsored by the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women in 1971.
1980s
In 1972, the softball team, coached by Valerie Lindbloom, placed third in the nation. Then, under Coach Kathy Veroni, softball won two state championships, placed 5th nationally in 1975, 13th nationally in 1977 and 7th nationally in 1979. Veroni’s field hockey teams won the 1979, 1980, 1981 and 1982 state
The first issue of Westerwinds Newsletter was published.
titles; in softball, her teams finished 5th in 1980 and 7th in 1982 at the AIAW national tournament. In 1984, 1987 and 1989 Coach Veroni’s softball teams captured three GCAC titles but were unable to compete at the national tournament because the conference did not have an automatic bid. From 1982-1998, Coach Veroni’s softball teams won the Mid-Continent Conference six times and won a record-setting 37 games in 1995. In 2000 and 2001, Veroni’s softball teams won back-to-back Mid-Continent Conference titles and competed at the NCAA regional. Veroni was inducted into the National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) Hall of Fame in 1998 and the WIU Athletics Hall of Fame in 2007. She ended her career ranked among the top-15 winningest coaches in NCAA history. On a national level, in the early 1970s, women leaders began to challenge discrimination on all fronts, not only in athletics, but also in the classroom and in the work force. Women did not receive equal pay for equal work, nor did they receive the same opportunities in higher education.
Women’s Gymnastics Team
In 1974, women’s athletics was granted departmental status at Western Illinois University, and Dr. Blackinton was appointed the first Director of Women’s Intercollegiate Athletics, a position she held until her retirement in 1986. In 1976, fifteen female coaches and student-athletes filed suit in federal court against the Illinois Board of Higher Education, Board of Governors, Western’s President, Provost and the Student Government Association in an effort to improve the resources for women athletes at Western Illinois University. The suit claimed “unlawful discrimination in educational opportunities” because women constituted 40% of students engaged in the athletic programs but only received 18% of available funds. The suit was dismissed by the judge on the basis that, in his words, “Men and women are different.” In July 1977, a county-wide contest was held to establish an identity for Western’s female student-athletes. Ms. Malea Kotter submitted the winning nickname, voted on by female athletes and coaches. The new nickname was the “Westerwinds”, which represents a strong, powerful wind that blows forcefully into town, threatening to blow its opponents away.
Women’s Golf Team with Coach Virginia Hayter
Laurie Meyers (’77 MS) Potter (Track and Cross Country, Field Hockey, Swimming) was a four-year student-athlete at Western in the early 1970s and the first woman to represent Western in national track and field competition. She later coached track and field at Western from 1975-1977.
Patty Viverito, pictured with tennis coach Judy Butterfield, was named the GCAC’s first and only commissioner.
In 1982, Sheila Cooper was the first African American head coach of a female sport at Western.
Dr. Bea Yeager’s basketball coaching career record from 1971-1982 was 121-114. She coached four future Western Hall of Famers: Carol Anderson (’85 BS-Kaskaskia), Wendy Hedberg (’74 BS), Kelle Lindbeck (’84 BS) Oest and Pat Stoffel (’82 BS)
1990s
In 1992, Andrea Shane (’92 BS), who ran cross country and track, was named the NCAA Woman Athlete of the Year for the state of Illinois. In 1994, Dr. Helen Smiley was named Director of Athletics. At the time, she was one of very few women to hold that position at the NCAA Division I level. Smiley was named the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) Athletic Director of the Year in 2000. The Mid-Continent Conference All-Sports Awards was renamed the Dr. Helen Smiley Women’s All-Sport Award in 2001. Dr. Smiley was inducted into Western’s Hall of Fame in 2010. In 1995, the basketball team won its first Mid-Continent Conference title and competed in its first NCAA tournament under coach Regina Miller. The team’s star was forward Oberon Pitterson (’96 BA), who was named Mid-Continent Conference Player of the Year. In 1996, Susan Edwards (’96 BS), who played basketball, was named the NCAA Woman Athlete of the Year for the state of Illinois. In 1997, women’s soccer was added as an intercollegiate sport. The women’s swim team, coached by Jerry Champer, won the 1999 conference championship and finished second in the conference in 1994-95, 1995-96, 1996-97, and 1997-98.
2000s
On June 23, 1972, President Richard Nixon signed the Higher Education Act, which included Title IX. Title IX states that “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.”
In 1957, the National Joint Committee on Extramural Sports for College Women (NJCESCW) was formed to guide and administer women’s intercollegiate athletic programs.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Dr. Rosemary Aten (’57 BS-ED), who later became chair of Western’s Physical Education Department, a position she held from 1981-93, participated in sports days and as an intercollegiate athlete in basketball and softball for Western Illinois University.
In July 1982, Westerwinds Athletics combined with nine other universities to form the Gateway College Athletic Conference, which included Eastern Illinois University, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Illinois State University, Bradley University, University of Northern Iowa, Drake University, Wichita State University, Southwest Missouri State University, Indiana State University and Western Illinois University.
At the start of the 1982-83 school year, women’s athletics became part of the NCAA.
Dr. Donna Phillips coached Western’s winning badminton team for 13 seasons, guiding the Westerwinds to eight national tournaments (AIAW). Western placed in the top seven in each of those national championship appearances, including two that were hosted on WIU’s campus.
Women’s Tennis Team Dorothy Watson (’28 BA), who attended WIU in 1927 and 1928, earned a varsity letter in baseball (softball) as the left fielder.
1970s
Holly Killion (’08 MS-ED) Van Vlymen was a third team All-American in softball in 2000. In 2001, women’s golf was reinstated as an intercollegiate sport, raising the number of women’s intercollegiate teams to 10. This equaled the number of men’s sports and gave Western a total of 20 sports. Dr. Helen Smiley came to Western Illinois University as a professor and as the second Director of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
Patty Murray (’88 BB) became the first-ever Western student-athlete to earn a NCAA Division I national title when she won the 10,000 meter run in 1987. That summer, she won a gold medal in the World University Games and a bronze medal in the Pan American Games. She also participated in the 1988 Olympic Trials. Patty still holds 6 WIU records.
Coach Leslie Crane led the Westerwinds basketball team to four-straight Mid-Continent Conference regular season titles in 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06. She also led Western to a 46-game home winning streak from 2001-06, the longest in the nation for both men and women during that time. Zane Teilane (’06 BA) Tamane, the starting center for those teams, still holds many school and conference records. Zane Teilane Tamane was the first ever WNBA draft pick from Western. She was chosen 35th overall by the Detroit Shock in
In June 1989, the men’s and women’s athletic departments merged into the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.
Standout thrower Aubrey Martin (’06 BS) was a four-time All-American shot putter, eight time Mid-Continent Conference Champion, finished 5th in the NCAA Nationals as a senior and 7th at the 2006 Olympic Trials (pictured right). In 2006, Jennifer Gilson (’06 BS-ED) finished 7th as a senior at the NCAA Nationals in the shot put and earned All-American honors.
1990s The first women inducted into the Western Illinois University Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame were: Dr. Donna Phillips, former badminton coach, and Laurie Meyers (’77 MS) Potter, standout student-athlete and coach. Lee Ann Majerle (’93 MS-ED) Kitchell, a three-year basketball and four-year track and field student-athlete, was named Western’s Lincoln Acadamy of Illinois Student Laureate. The prestigious award, which is presented annually to an outstanding senior from each of Illinois’ four-year degree-granting institutions, honors a student’s overall academic excellence and extracurricular activities. In July 1992, the original Gateway College Athletic Conference disbands. The GCAC continued to operate with a new name and a new look. In 1992, the league was reformed and became the Gateway Football Conference.
In 2007, 2009 and 2010 Head Softball Coach Holly Van Vlymen’s teams were conference champions and in 2008 advanced to the NCAA regionals where they won the 1st NCAA postseason game in program history. On June 1, 2007 the Mid-Continent Conference changed its name to The Summit League.
In 2009, the men and women began using a unified nickname, “THE FIGHTING LEATHERNECKS”
Leatherneck Women’s Basketball
JACKIE RIEGER
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TRICIA COATES
REBECCA HENRICSON
BRITTANY DEMERY
MICHELE SALVATORI
SADIE WEBB
RACHEL EVANS
VALENCIA KELLY
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There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball
JD GRAVINA Head Coach First Season
• Two-time GLVC ‘Coach of the Year’ • Three-time Illinois Basketball Coaches Association Division II ‘Coach of the Year’ • Women’s Basketball Association Region 4 ‘Coach of the Year’
• 2009 Finalist for ‘National Coach of the Year’
Coach GRAVINA’S BIO
EDUCATION: • William Jewell College B.S. 2000 • UMKC M.A. 2002 • Emporia State M.A. 2007
COACH GRAVINA FILE
COACHING RESUME: • Western Illinois Head Coach: 2011-present Quincy University Head Coach: 2007-11 Record: 93-28 (4)
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• McPherson College Head Coach: 2005-2007 Record: 21-33 (2) NCAA POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: • NCAA Division II Tournament 2007, 2008, 2009 PERSONAL: Wife: Meredith Hometown: Monmouth, Ill.
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SETH MINTER Assistant Coach First Season
KERRY JUHLIN Assistant Coach Third Season
TIFFANY COPPAGE Assistant Coach First Season
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JESSIE BIGGS Graduate Manager Second Season
MACKENZIE LESHE Student Manager
MEGAN SORRILL Student Manger
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MOLLY REIS
2011-12 SENIORS
Athletic Trainer
CARA VAN DORN Strength & Conditioning
DIANE BRUNS Director Athletic Equipment Operations
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There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball
LAURA ATKINSON
Lindsay CARROLL
TRICIA COATES
#45
#5
Junior Oregon, Wis.
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Freshman Roscoe, Ill.
Senior Joliet, Ill.
brittany DEMERY
Senior Oklahoma City, Okla.
Rachel EVANS
Rebecca HENRICSON
#44
#32
#42
#15
Sophomore Noblesville, Ind.
Sophomore Lidingo, Sweeden
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There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball
CHRISTINA JONES Junior Knob Noster, Mo.
#10 20
VALENCIA Salue KELLY KONTAUTAITE Senior Brunswick, Ga.
Junior Berciunai, Lithuania
#4
#21
MARTYNA KUDZIELA
Karis PHILLIPS
Jackie RIEGER
#33
#23
#12
Freshman Brisbane, Australia
Junior South Bend, Ind.
Junior Park Ridge, Ill.
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There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball There is Only ONE ... Leatherneck Women’s Basketball
Michele SALVATORI
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SADIE WEBB
Junior Rock Falls, Ill.
Senior Emporia, Kan.
#25
#24
Front Row (L to R): Michele Salvatori, Valencia Kelly, Christina Jones, Karis Phillips, Lindsay Carroll, Rebecca Henricson. Back Row (L to R): Graduate Manager Jessie Biggs, Assistant Coach Kerry Juhlin, Saule Kontautaite, Sadie Webb, Brittany Demery, Tricia Coates, Head Coach JD Gravina, Rachel Evans, Jackie Rieger, Laura Atkinson, Martyna Kudziela, Assistant Coach Seth Minter, Assistant Coach Tiffany Coppage
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Hannibal-LaGrange November 11 Macomb • 7 p.m.
Eastern Illinois
December 5 Charleston, Ill. • 7 p.m.
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Vanderbilt
Northern Illinois November 16 DeKalb, Ill. • 7 p.m.
Valparaiso
November 22 Valparaiso, Ind. • 7:05 p.m.
Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Iowa
Nebraska-Omaha
Bradley
William Woods
November 14 Nashville, Tenn. • 7 p.m.
December 9 Iowa City, Iowa • 7 p.m.
December 20 Macomb • 7 p.m January 30 Omaha, Neb. • 7 p.m.
December 21 Peoria, Ill. • 7 p.m.
November 26 Macomb • 4:30 p.m.
December 27 Macomb • 5 p.m.
South Dakota State
North Dakota State December 2 Macomb • 7 p.m. February 25 Fargo, N.D. • 4:30 p.m.
December 31 Indianapolis, Ind. • 1 p.m. January 28 Macomb • 4:30 p.m.
Southern Utah
Oral Roberts
South Dakota
November 30 Macomb • 7 p.m. February 27 Brookings, S.D. • 7 p.m.
January 14 Macomb • 4:30 p.m. February 13 Cedar City, Utah • 8 p.m.
January 16 Macomb • 7 p.m. February 11 Tulsa, Okla. • 2:05 p.m.
IUPUI
January 21 Vermillion, S.D. • 5 p.m. February 20 Macomb • 7 p.m.
IPFW
January 7 Fort Wayne, Ind. • 11 a.m. February 6 Macomb • 7 p.m.
UMKC
January 23 Kansas City, Mo. • 7 p.m. February 18 Macomb • 4:30 p.m.
Oakland
January 9 Rochester, Mich. • 5:30 p.m. February 4 Macomb • 4:30 p.m.
Summit League Tournament
March 3-9 Sioux Falls, S.D. • TBA
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