ESPNW Features UofLWBB and Mariya Moore

10455072This past Sunday, the Louisville Women’s Basketball team overcame a 10 point deficit and a bunch of turnovers to defeat #17 ranked North Carolina. It was televised on ESPN2 and showed what a great program Louisville has. There were over 13,000 at the KFC Yum! Center to watch the game and cheer on the Cards. It’s a great environment for basketball.

The team responded well in the second half and were led by one of the freshmen, Mariya Moore. She had a great game and scored a season high 28 points. ESPNW featured Mariya and the team on their Weekend Wrap. If you haven’t had a chance to check out the article, you can see it on the ESPNW Weekend Wrap.

Louisville Women’s Basketball TV Schedule

10455072I just saw a tweet with a link to an article on GoCards.com.

The article lists the various games that will be broadcast. There are a few games on ESPN2 and ESPN3. So, if you can’t make all the games during the season (like me), there will be some opportunities to watch at home! Go Cards!!

Here’s a copy of the article:

The University of Louisville women’s basketball program is gaining additional coverage for the 2014-15 season. The Cardinals are slated to have 22 of their games available either on television or online.

On Wednesday, it was announced that five of Louisville’s home games were selected to be broadcast on ESPN3. Games also are available on the UofL Sports Radio Network produced by Learfield Sports, including locally on WKRD (790 AM) in Louisville.

Since the 2010-11 season, Louisville has appeared on ESPN’s family of networks 45 times, including 21 last year.

The Cardinals’ contest against in-state foe Western Kentucky on Nov. 25 is the first to be produced on ESPN3 followed by the Dec. 4 matchup against Iowa, which serves as part of the ACC/Big Ten Challenge.

Louisville’s next game, a Dec. 7 tilt against Kentucky in the Battle of the Bluegrass, also will be featured on ESPN3. It marks the 50th meeting between the two programs since women’s basketball became a varsity sport at Louisville in 1975.

The other two additional games available on ESPN’s digital platform come during league play. Entering their first season in the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Cardinals’ league opener against Georgia Tech on Jan. 2 as well as the Jan. 14 game against NC State both will air on ESPN3.

Prior to the announcement, seven of Louisville’s regular-season contests were tabbed for television in addition to an ESPN3 broadcast at Florida State on Jan. 22.

The Cardinals are scheduled to make two appearances on ESPN2’s Big Monday, first at Duke on Feb. 2 and then at Notre Dame on Feb. 23 in a Play 4Kay contest. Contests against Virginia (Jan. 18), Miami (Fla.) (Jan. 25), and Virginia (March 1) are slated for RSN/FOX, and the home game against North Carolina on Feb. 15 will be broadcast on ESPN2. Louisville’s road trip to Cal on Dec. 21 was picked up to be televised on the Pac-12 Network.

Louisville’s nine home games not selected for television coverage will be available to CardsTV subscribers through GoCards.com.

Louisville, ranked 12th in the Associated Press preseason poll, opens the 2014-15 campaign on the road at IUPUI on Nov. 14 before five-consecutive games at the KFC Yum! Center, beginning with UT Martin on Nov. 16.

Louisville WBB Schedule is Out

20130209-191655.jpgSome good news came out this week for Louisville Women’s Basketball (or at least for those of us who follow them). The full schedule came out a couple of days ago for the 2014-2015 season. This will be Louisville’s first season in the ACC and the competition will be tough every night. The schedule is below.

The Cardinal Sports Zone had an article on the schedule release and carried the following quote from Coach Walz: “The strength of this league from top to bottom is remarkable. We know we’re going to be tested every single night, and that’s only going to make us better as we prepare for postseason. I think our fans are in for a real treat with this schedule.”

You can view the schedule below.

In other related (and really good!) news, one of the top players in the class of 2015 committed to play ball for Louisville. Asia Durr, a guard from Georgia, picked Louisville over several other schools and joins a very strong class. She is ranked #1 or #2 by many services. She will come to Louisville with these three commits: Erin DeGrate, Taja Cole and Brianna Jones. You can read more at Inside The Ville and Prospects Nation.

Date Opponent / Event Location Time / Result
11/14/14 at IUPUI Indianapolis, Ind. TBA
11/16/14 vs. TENNESSEE-MARTIN KFC YUM! CENTER 2:00 p.m. ET
11/20/14 vs. BELMONT KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
11/23/14 vs. BALL STATE KFC YUM! CENTER 2:00 p.m. ET
11/25/14 vs. WESTERN KENTUCKY KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
11/28/14 vs. LAFAYETTE KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
11/30/14 at Valparaiso Valparaiso, Ind. TBA
ACC/BIG TEN CHALLENGE
12/04/14 vs. IOWA KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
12/07/14 vs. KENTUCKY KFC YUM! CENTER 2:00 p.m. ET
12/15/14 vs. OLD DOMINION KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
12/18/14 at Grand Canyon Phoenix, Ariz. TBA
12/21/14 at California Berkeley, Calif. TBA
12/29/14 vs. EVANSVILLE KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
01/02/15 vs. GEORGIA TECH # KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
01/04/15 at Pittsburgh # Pittsburgh, Pa. 2:00 p.m. ET
01/11/15 at Wake Forest # Winston-Salem, N.C. 2:00 p.m. ET
01/14/15 vs. NC STATE # KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
01/18/15 vs. VIRGINIA # TV KFC YUM! CENTER 3:00 p.m. ET
01/22/15 at Florida State # TV Tallahassee, Fla. 7:00 p.m. ET
01/25/15 vs. MIAMI (FLA.) # TV KFC YUM! CENTER 5:00 p.m. ET
01/29/15 vs. SYRACUSE # KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
02/02/15 at Duke # TV Durham, N.C. 7:00 p.m. ET
02/08/15 vs. PITTSBURGH # KFC YUM! CENTER 2:00 p.m. ET
02/12/15 at Clemson # Clemson, S.C. 7:00 p.m. ET
02/15/15 vs. NORTH CAROLINA # TV KFC YUM! CENTER 1:00 p.m. ET
02/19/15 at Virginia Tech # Blacksburg, Va. 7:00 p.m. ET
02/23/15 at Notre Dame # TV South Bend, Ind. 7:00 p.m. ET
02/26/15 vs. BOSTON COLLEGE # KFC YUM! CENTER 7:00 p.m. ET
03/01/15 at Virginia # TV Charlottesville, Va. 1:00 p.m. ET
ACC TOURNAMENT
03/04/15 TBD Greensboro, N.C. TBA
03/05/15 TBD Greensboro, N.C. TBA
03/06/15 TBD Greensboro, N.C. TBA
03/07/15 TBD Greensboro, N.C. TBA
03/08/15 TBD Greensboro, N.C. TBA

 

U of L Women’s Basketball Summer Update

20130209-191655.jpgSince the first part of June, the U of L women’s team has been conditioning and practicing getting ready for the school year and the start of the season. Coach Walz held a press conference today giving an update on the team. With the recent success of the team and the departure of several seniors, he talked about where the team is going next in light of joining the ACC this season.

There is a video of the press conference and some cute pics of Coach Walz’s little girl on the Courier-Journal site.

The Courier-Journal posted this article today.

Louisville’s women’s basketball team faces a major task in 2014-15: Replacing several major pieces of a team that reached the Elite 8 a year after making the national championship game.

On Tuesday, U of L coach Jeff Walz said his program is on task and headed in the right direction, despite the challenges presented by the departures of WNBA All-Star Shoni Schimmel, standout forward Asia Taylor and two other key seniors.

Having five freshmen ready to play is a big factor in that transition, Walz said.

“I’m really excited about where they are now and even more excited about where they’ll be in two or three months,” Walz said.

The freshman class is built around wing Mariya Moore, a McDonald’s All-American who will play for the USA under-18 team this summer. Walz is an assistant coach for that team.

Moore and fellow freshmen Sydney Brackemyre, Arica Carter, Ariana Freeman and Myisha Hines-Allen join a returning core of seniors that includes forward Sara Hammond and guards Jude Schimmel and Bria Smith.

Louisville is losing four of its top five scorers from last season, but Hammond (10.4 points per game), Smith (7.6) and Schimmel (5.6) scored their share. Hammond was the second-leading rebounder on the team; Schimmel was second in assists.

“I’m expecting more of them,” Walz said of his seniors. “I’m really excited to see what our returning players are going to do.”

Hammond in particular will play a key role this upcoming season. The 6-foot-2 post won the FIBA 3-on-3 world championships this summer, and Walz hopes that experience will translate to a larger leadership role at U of L.

“She learned to play quicker,” he said, noting that the 3-on-3 shot clocks are 12 seconds. “It really worked on her in terms of the speed of things. She’s going to have to be a leader for us. She’s got everything you need in that role.”

Walz said guards Starr Breedlove and Monny Niamke decided to transfer, though they haven’t found landing spots yet. Neither played major roles on last season’s team.

He also said Louisville’s nonconference schedule includes matchups at California and at home against Kentucky, in addition to games against Iowa, Western Kentucky and Belmont.

That slate precedes Louisville’s first season in the ACC, which Walz called, “top to bottom, without a doubt the best league in the country.”

National runner-up Notre Dame is the team to beat, with Louisville, North Carolina, Duke and Syracuse each possessing programs that regularly challenge for league titles.

But joining a new league won’t change what U of L does, Walz said, whether it’s on the court or recruiting prospects.

“It’s going to be fun,” Walz said. “It really makes for an enjoying X’s and O’s time … You’ve got to come to play every night in the ACC.”

1st Game on Calendar: B1G/ACC Challenge

I posted yesterday that Sydney has started her freshman year at the University of Louisville. While the basketball season doesn’t begin for a few months, the first game in on the schedule.

Louisville is moving this year to the ACC, so they will be a part of the B1G/ACC Challenge. The match ups were released today at Louisville will host Iowa on Thursday, December 4 at the Yum! Kind of exciting to think about already!

Here’s an infographic of all the games. Go Cards!

B1G ACC

Check Out Syd on ESPNW

espnw-fbWith the arrival of March Madness, people all over the country are filling out brackets and giving their opinions on who is going to win it all. ESPN W is dedicated to women’s athletics and they interviewed several of the nation’s top recruits to see who they were pulling for in the Women’s March Madness Tournament. One of those interviewed was Sydney.

Here’s what they posted:

Sydney Brackemyre, Louisville
Brackemyre, a 6-foot forward from Clinton-Massie (Clarksville, Ohio), keeps it simple when explaining why she likes Louisville’s chances.

“Two words: Jeff Walz,” Brackemyre said of the Louisville coach when asked why the Cardinals could go a step beyond their runner-up finish from a year ago. “The entire Louisville staff does a great job of preparing the X’s and O’s and scouting the opponent.

“I think Louisville has a chance to get back to the championship game because history repeats itself. Their past success will repeat itself, in my opinion.”

While Brackemyre agrees that UConn and Notre Dame are the favorites, she also has been impressed with South Carolina (27-4), the No. 1 seed in the Stanford Regional.

“[Coach] Dawn Staley is doing a great job with the program,” she said.

Brackemyre said she will watch most of the tournament at home decked out in her favorite Louisville T-shirt, but there is also a chance she will catch some games in Louisville since the city will host a regional.

As for players to watch outside of Louisville, the No. 3 seed in the Louisville Regional, Brackemyre listed two: “Tricia Liston of Duke – I love how she plays. She is so skilled. And Diamond DeShields has been blowing up this year. I want to see how she does in her first NCAA tournament.”

Check out the entire article called FUTURE-SCHOOL SPIRIT FROM TOP RECRUITS

Louisville Recruiting Class Breakdown

20130209-191655.jpgI was forwarded this link to Inside The Ville where they offer their thoughts on the incoming freshmen class joining the Louisville Women’s Basketball program. We are excited to see how Syd and the rest of the 2014 class will impact CardNation. (Of course they spelled Brackemyre incorrectly, but we’ll just go with it.)

Louisville coach Jeff Walz has assembled one of the top women’s basketball programs in the country. The Cardinals are coming off an NCAA runner-up finish and are currently ranked in the Top 5 nationally. Walz has parlayed UofL’s on-court success into one of the nation’s best recruiting classes.

Louisville expects to sign five prospects — F Myisha Hines-Allen, F Mariya Moore, PF Sydney Brackemeyer, W Ariana Freeman and G Arica Carter – during the early signing period, which began Wednesday, who are rated in the Top 70 nationally by All Star Girls Report.

“I think they signed a great group,” said ASGR publisher Brett McCormick. “All of them are good. I think he has a good mix of players. They’ve got a solid class with five player in the (national) Top 66.”

Hines-Allen is Louisville’s high-ranked recruit at No. 16 nationally by All Star Girls Report; Moore is rated No. 22; Brackemeyer No. 39; Freeman No. 41 and Carter No. 66. McCormick calls Louisville’s recruiting class highly versatile with players who can play multiple positions on the basketball court.

“What gives Walz an advantage is Hines-Allen can play the 2, 3 or 4, Freeman can play 2 or 3 and Moore can play several positions,” said McCormick.

McCormick, a former college coach, helped break down the Cards recruiting class, which ranks No. 6 nationally by All Star Girls Report.

Star Recruit

“(Myisha) Hines-Allen is their headliner because she’s strong and athletic. She really improved from last year to this year. She has the inside game and the outside game. She’s a beast. She can post people up and step out and shoot the three.”

Highest IQ

“Sydney Brackemeyer is such a smart player. She can play inside and outside. She can shoot, she can pass it well. That’s what’s good about her. She does everything well. She can impact the game by not scoring.”

Most Athletic

“(Ariana) Freeman is a great athlete, she’s probably the most athletic in terms of speed and athleticism. She can pass and do other things.”

Most Versatile

“Mariya Moore can play multiple positions. She shoots it, she can post up, she goes coast to coast with it. She can think the game too.”

Best Shooter

“Arica Carter can flat shoot it and score. That was kind of a gift (recruit). That was a really nice pick up for Louisville.”

Biggest Sleeper

“That would have to be between Brackemeyer and Carter. I think Brackemeyer is really the sleeper of the class because a lot of people look at her as not being athletic as the others but she’s so smart and can do everything. She is kind of like Sara Hammond. She’ll do whatever it takes to help the team win. She will be a good teammate.”

Most Likely to Play in WNBA

“I’d say Hines-Allen, but probably Mariya Moore too; but definitely Hines-Allen. She’s a beast. She’s so athletic and strong, she can defend a guard or guard the post. Her game has really gotten a lot better from the perimeter. She used to play but the four but this summer she played the three well, shooting the three and putting it on the floor. And when she gets it inside she’s tough to handle.”

2014 Commits for Card Women’s Hoops

20130209-191655.jpgThe Louisville Women’s Basketball program picked up their fourth commit for the class of 2014 yesterday. Keil Moore of ProspectsNation.com had a nice article on the latest commit along with the previous three (including Syd).

Getting excited about Louisville Women’s Basketball.

After a great run that saw the Louisville women’s basketball program make it all the way to the national championship game, coach Jeff Walz and his staff have managed to capitalize with a good deal of recruiting success. Myisha Hines-Allen’s decision to pick Louisville over Georgia Tech and West Virginia is the next example of the success carrying over to recruiting momentum.

“The school in general was an amazing place,” Hines-Allen, the No. 13 prospect in the ELITE 100, said. “I felt like home while I was there.”

Hines-Allen picked Louisville after making an unofficial visit to Georgia Tech in early June in addition to official visits to Louisville and West Virginia in August.

The 6-foot-2 forward has a combination of size and athleticism that is rarely seen on the recruiting circuit. She is a much improved perimeter shooter and is also capable of putting the ball on the deck and making a play. She should fit in well at the future ACC school as she shares similarities with current rising senior Sarah Hammond.

“The style of play was also a huge factor,” she added.

With the addition of Hines-Allen, Louisville now has four talented wings and forwards on the way to campus next year. Mariya Moore of Oakland, Calif., Arianna Freeman of Manassas, Va., and Sydney Brackemyre of Cincinnati, Ohio. With the forward positions locked up for the next couple of years, look for Louisville to focus heavily on adding true post play and a point guard with their remaining scholarships. Jatarie White of Charlotte, N.C., Dekeiya Cohen of Charleston, S.C., and Gabby Green of Oakland, Calif., are players Louisville may still be looking to add to their 2014 class.

The Rise of Louisville Athletics

20130209-191303.jpgSince Syd made the decision to go to UL, we have paid more attention to what happens to the Cardinals. Obviously the men won the National Championship in basketball and the women went to the championship game, but they have also seen success in other sports.

I saw a link to the following article on Twitter today. I don’t know much about the history of the athletic department, but according to this article, it was in bad shape. The author talks about the improvements that have occurred in the program and the steps that were taken to bring that about. He refers to the book Good to Great by Jim Collins, which interested me as well. Thought it was worth sharing.

You can read the original article on the Forbes website.

Louisville athletics was a pariah. An organization so mis-aligned, so bloated in inefficiency that the very conference it helped form had sued to expunge the university from its ranks. A desperate attempt to prevent the department’s disease of non-compliance from spreading to the other members of the league. There was little hope for Louisville, its faith seemingly sealed as terminal.

In his influential work on organizational management, “Good To Great”, author Jim Collins refers to the circumstances Louisville had fallen into as the “Doom Loop”. The organization lacked internal accountability, failed to achieve credibility within its own community and had lost all authenticity with the college athletics community as a whole. It was not that the department did not want to change, but rather that it lacked the discipline to do so.

Those were the circumstances that faced Tom Jurich when he became the athletic director at the University of Louisville in 1997. Jurich understood that if there was any chance of salvation, he needed to reconstruct the athletic department to be built upon a foundation of accountability, integrity and honesty. Then, and only then, could a culture be born that would filter its way through the department and move it slowly out of a vicious cycle of disappointing results and stalled momentum.

“The department was out of control when it came to issues like compliance and Title IX,” says Jurich. “We were staring down the barrel of a gun and potentially facing the death penalty from the NCAA. Either we made a decision right then and there to change the culture once and for all or we would forever be mired in our own self-sabotage,” he adds.

For Jurich and his leadership team, part of that process involved confronting the hardest decision a manager must ever make – replacing individuals who did not fit within the cultural boundaries they set out for the department. In fact, within the first five years of tenure, there were more than 130 changes within the staff, or almost 50% of the entire department. Such high turnover is almost unheard of from any organization with the multi-million dollar revenues, and is testament to the dire situation Louisville found itself in.

According to Jurich, “The ride [Louisville] was embarking on wouldn’t be easy – we were going to need tough, self-motivated people who were selflessly driven by their passion for the department and the university as a whole. If they weren’t hungry and humble, they weren’t getting on the bus.”

Once the wrong people were off the bus, and the organization’s cultural foundation began to take shape, Jurich’s administration was only then able to begin to systematically address the issues that were plaguing the department. The most pressing of which was gender equity, or rather the total lack thereof.

“When it came to non-compliance with Title IX, Louisville was in dire straights,” says Jurich. “We had Lamar Daniel, a leading gender equity consultant, come to campus and tell us that we were the ‘worst program he had ever seen’. Here was someone who had spent over two decades conducting investigations for the Office of Civil Rights and who was practically at a loss for words on just how bad our situation was.”

While the problem Louisville faced was evident, the solution was less clear. At the time, the department’s budget was $14.8 million, or just 17% of the $85 million it had risen to today. Just about every area of the department needed improvement and additional resources. The problem was that not only did the Cardinals need to fundraise, but also that they needed to invest the majority of the money back into women’s sports, none of which would provide any financial return on investment.

“Our backs were against the wall, but we had no choice but to do what was right. I caught a great deal of criticism in those early days as we tried to pull ourselves out of the quicksand, but the reality is that without the tremendous support of the Louisville community and our boosters, we would have never made it out. ” Jurich explains.

In the words of Jim Collins, Louisville needed to confront the brutal facts of their current reality, while retaining resolute faith that they would prevail in the end, regardless of the difficulty. Breakthrough for organizations that face such adversity comes through making good decisions, each of which is meticulously implemented and accumulated one on top of the other. Yet more importantly, without the guidance of Jurich and his senior administration, whose keen leadership focused attention away from the disillusion of the circumstance and towards the delicious potential of the future, the Cardinals’ never would have made it.

Ever so slowly, Louisville began its slow climb out the college athletics basement and towards respectability. With a blue-collar like work ethic, the department inched towards ever-greater achievements, each victory built upon the last. Yet, while that work ethic Jurich had installed helped turn the tide for Louisville, many of its teams still failed to achieve their full potential. Like most organizations that make great strides in a short time, the greatest threat they face to continued progress is the stagnation of their culture.

His solution was the installation of a philosophy known as “Louisville First, Cards Forever” or “L1C4”. The concept was simple – the name on the front of the player’s jerseys was far more important than the one on the back. Pitino wanted his players to understand that they were playing not for themselves, not even for their teammates, but for the university community as a whole. It was no surprise then that the entire Louisville athletics department soon adopted the L1C4 philosophy as its own. After all, it was the perfect epitome of the cultural mindset Jurich began to implement within the organization when he arrived a decade earlier.

L1C4 came full circle for Louisville during the quarterfinal game of the 2013 NCAA tournament against the Blue Devils of Duke. Cardinals’ guard Kevin Ware landed awkwardly after attempting to block a basket, suffering a compound fracture to his leg live on national television. The gruesome injury sent a debilitating shockwave through the team, bringing to a grinding halt to the Cardinals’ seemingly unstoppable momentum. In a single moment, the dreams of the entire Louisville nation were brought to the brink extinction, resting precariously once again on the edge. Yet the Cardinals had been there before, had seen this void and in that very moment decided that this time was different, that they would not go quietly into the night again without a fight. The Cardinals rallied around Kevin Ware, his injury a profound reminder of just how far they had come and that they no longer had an opportunity, but rather an obligation to win. The rest of course was history.

Some 15 years after Jurich took over as athletic director, the Louisville Cardinals have made history. The university became the first to win a BCS football game, a national championship in men’s basketball, play for the national championship in women’s basketball, and make the College World Series all in one year. Even more significantly, the University received an invitation to the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), a move that all but guarantees stability for many years to come in tumultuous college athletics landscape. For any other university, achieving even one of those feats would be cause for tremendous celebration, but for the University of Louisville, anything less would have been a disappointment.

By human nature, the majority of people do not want to hear that success comes from years of effort or discipline. They prefer to think that it emanates from some predetermined advantage or is just the luck of circumstance. The transformation that occurred at the University of Louisville was certainly not the inevitable, nor was it a function of circumstance. Rather, it is the culmination of years of calculated risk and exceptional hard work. More significantly, it serves as testament to the importance of visionary leadership, organizational buy-in, and the courage to carry on when everything seems against you.

Every morning, Tom Jurich asks his department to answer a simple question, “How are we going to wake up and become better as an athletic department next year?”

The University of Louisville stays humble and hungry.

This post was co-authored by Justin Vine.

Jason Belzer is Founder of GAME, Inc. and CSA, and a Professor of Organizational Behavior and Sports Law at Rutgers University. Follow him on Twitter @JasonBelzer.