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A blog on UConn women's basketball.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Auriemma a Naismth finalist

UConn's Geno Auriemma is one of the four finalists for the Naismith national coach of the year.

Naismith voters really went out on a limb, picking the head coaches of the four No. 1 seeds in the upcoming NCAA tournament as the other finalists are Tennessee's Pat Summitt, Tara VanderVeer of Stanford and the frontrunner to win the award, Connie Yori of Nebraska.

For the sake of full disclosure, I should state that I vote for the award and my four finalists were Auriemma, Yori, Kentucky's Matthew Mitchell and Kim Barnes Arico of St. John's.

Here is the release courtesy of the Atlanta TipOff Club


NAISMITH WOMEN’S COLLEGE COACH OF THE YEAR FINALISTS ANNOUNCED

Auriemma, Summitt, VanDerveer and Yori Seek Prestigious Coaching Honor

ATLANTA (March 17, 2010) – Geno Auriemma and Pat Summitt, who collectively have won 11 of the 23 Naismith Women’s College Coach of the Year awards, headline the 2010 final ballot for the most prestigious national coaching honor. Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer, the 1990 winner, and Nebraska’s Connie Yori round out the four finalists, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced today. The winner will be announced in early April.

The finalists were voted on by the Atlanta Tipoff Club’s National Voting Academy, comprised of leading basketball journalists, coaches and administrators from around the country. The academy based its criteria on player performances this season. The vote was tabulated and certified by the accounting firm of Habif, Arogeti & Wynne, LLP. HA&W is the largest independent accounting firm in Georgia and one of the top 50 firms in the United States.

ABOUT THE FINALISTS
Geno Auriemma: Auriemma, who has won six Naismith Awards, has led the Huskies to their sixth perfect regular season amidst an NCAA-record 72-game winning streak. He shared Big East Coach of the Year honors for the third straight year and won the award for the ninth time overall. Connecticut earned its 18th outright regular-season championship in 2009-10, went undefeated in league play for the eighth time in program history and became the 10th league team to accomplish the feat. In 25 seasons at Connecticut he has a 723-122 record and his squad has been ranked number one by the Associated Press for 41 straight weeks, a poll record.

Pat Summitt: The Volunteers won their 15th SEC regular season title and 14th SEC Tournament title this year, pushing Summitt’s career record to 1,035-195 (.841 overall). The five-time Naismith Women’s Coach of the Year has led UT to all 29 NCAA Tournaments, the only school to achieve that feat, and earned a number one seed for the 20th time.

Tara VanDerveer: Stanford went 18-0 to win their 10th consecutive Pac-10 regular-season title, and followed that up by winning the conference tournament. The Cardinal (31-1) is making its 23rd consecutive appearance in the NCAA tournament and 24th overall. The top seed in the Sacramento region, Stanford seeks its third consecutive Final Four appearance.

Connie Yori: The 2010 Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year has led Nebraska (30-1, 16-0 Big 12) to the best season in school history. The Huskers tied the Big 12 record with a 30-game winning streak, shattering the school record (23) in the process. The Huskers are also the nation's most improved team, winning 15 more games than the previous season. Nebraska became the first Big 12 Conference team to finish a regular season with an unbeaten record (29-0), and just the second Big 12 team to go 16-0 through league play. Yori’s record at Nebraska (eight seasons) is 151-98 and her overall career mark is 346-238 in 20 seasons.

For more information, visit www.naismithawards.com.


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Naismith Women’s Coaching Finalists
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ABOUT THE ATLANTA TIPOFF CLUB
The Atlanta Tipoff Club, an Atlanta Sports Council property, is committed to promoting the game of basketball and recognizing the outstanding accomplishments of those who make the game so exciting. The Atlanta Tipoff Club, founded during the 1956-57 season, has presented the Naismith Trophy every year since UCLA’s Lew Alcindor first won the award in 1969. Old Dominion’s Anne Donovan won the inaugural Women’s Naismith Trophy in 1983.

The Naismith Award has become the most prestigious award in all of college basketball, recognizing the Men’s and Women’s College Basketball Player of the Year, Men’s and Women’s College Basketball Coach of the Year, as well as awards for outstanding achievement in high school basketball, officiating, and contribution to the game.


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1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

They just cannot possibly elect another coach of the year when Geno has just set the all-time record for consecutive wins and the all-time record for consecutive weeks in AP poll for first place. And the fact that he not only has just set the all-time consecutive win record, but did it by winning each one by double-digits- well, it would be criminal if they gave the award to someone else.

4:10 PM 

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