Solace for UCI women
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BARRY FAULKNER
While the UC Irvine men’s basketball team was holding off a
second-half charge from Cal State Fullerton Saturday night, the UCI
women were doing the same.
The result for the Anteater women was a 75-74 triumph that snapped
a nine-game Big West Conference losing streak that included its first
five conference games this season.
Senior Ashley Biggins produced a career-high 16 points and 21 rebounds to key the victory, which also included a career-high 16
points from freshman guard Annie Mai.
Biggins, a 6-foot-4 center, had not led the team in scoring in any
game this season until busting loose against the visiting Titans. She
netted 8 of 11 field-goal tries.
Biggins’ 21 boards were the best single-game total by any Big West
player this season and the second-best single-game output in the
nation this season.
Biggins has produced double-figure rebounds in eight of her last
10 games and her 9.9 per-game average ranks second in the Big West.
The Anteaters (2-12, 1-5 in conference) are being guided by
interim coach Molly Tuter, who took over after Mark Adams resigned
following an 0-7 start.
But while the victory over Fullerton (1-12, 0-5) was cause for
celebration, UCI continues to absorb adversity. The latest blow was a
season-ending knee injury to senior guard Courtney Ferguson, who tore
her right patellar tendon in Thursday’s loss to UC Riverside.
Ferguson, who was averaging 7.4 points and ranks second on the
team with 15 three-pointers, joins freshman Kristee Davidson,
sophomore Stephanie Duda and senior Katie Sturgeon as players lost
for the season with injuries. Further, talented walk-on Katie Curtis
left the team early in the season.
*
Tuter, 29, hoping to make the most of her first head-coaching
opportunity, had only eight players available Saturday. But, the
former UCLA assistant who played at Arizona State, where she ranks
third on the career scoring list with 1,374 points, said help is on
the way.
Tuter, in her fifth season at UCI, said Kalee Davidson, who left
the team earlier in the season, has returned. Tuter also re-recruited
Kimberly Martin, a 6-foot-1 junior power forward, who last played at
UCI in 2001-02.
Martin, whom Tuter said could help the Anteaters’ front line,
happily accepted the coach’s recent invitation to return. Martin,
whose eligibility is being researched and must also pass a physical,
could begin practice this week. She may play as soon as she’s
physically ready, Tuter said.”She started a couple games as a
freshman, before dealing with some personal issues,” Tuter said. “She
went to Saddleback [Community College] for a year. She was at all our
games and I asked one of our players to get me her phone number. I
gave her a call to see if she would think about playing and she was
very excited about the idea.”
*
Tuter is also excited about her opportunity, though she laments
how it came about.
“It didn’t work out the way I wanted it to with Mark resigning,
but I’ve been given this opportunity and want to take full advantage.
I love challenges and this is one of the biggest ones I’ve faced. I’m
just taking it day by day.”
Tuter said she has become more comfortable with the added
responsibilities of running a program. “I think I have as good a
chance as anyone [to get the full-time job],” she said.
*
Meanwhile, there has been no shortage of good news for the
Vanguard University women’s basketball team, which continues to lead
the Golden State Athletic Conference, as well as occupy a marquee
presence on the national stage.
Coach Russ Davis’ Lions, ranked No. 2 in NAIA Division I, are
16-1, 6-0 in conference, heading into Thursday’s date with GSAC
visitor Cal Baptist.
Vanguard leads NAIA Division I in scoring margin (outscoring foes
by 34.7 points per game), rebounds per game (45.5) and assists per
game (22).
The Lions rank No. 2 nationally in scoring (90.8 ppg) and
three-point accuracy (39.4%) and are also in the top five in scoring
defense (third at 53.4 ppg), free-throw shooting (fourth at 76.1%)
and field-goal shooting (fifth at 48.3%).
Individually, senior point guard Lisa Faulkner, an NAIA
All-American last season, leads NAIA Division I in assists at 12.2
per contest. The No. 2 player on that list averages 8.7.
In addition, Vanguard sophomore Kelly Schmidt, another returning
All-American, is second in the nation in scoring (23.82 ppg),
trailing only Shalee Fackrell of Westminster College (Utah), who is
scoring 23.88 per contest.
*
Newport Harbor High product Greg Perrine, a point guard at Chapman
University, is sitting out his second collegiate season after
suffering his third torn ACL (the first two on his right knee and the
latest, days before the season opener, to his left knee) in the last
four years.
Obviously demoralized by his injuries, Perrine said recently he is
still undecided about whether to attempt yet another comeback.
Perrine, who has three years of eligibility remaining should he
wish to play again, is somewhat encouraged by what he said was less
structural damage with his latest injury. But he said he will wait
and see how his latest recovery goes before making a decision on
whether or not he’ll return.
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