All posts in Women’s Sports

WNBA Draft Live, 3 p.m. Today

Just a week after a women’s NCAA basketball championship that may have been better played and harder fought than the men’s, it’s time for some of the ladies to go pro.

Texas A&M champs Sydney Colson and Danielle Adams were two of the 15 players invited to attend today’s WNBA draft, along with UConn star forward Maya Moore, Australia National Team member and Bulleen Boomers (Australia’s WNBL) center Elizabeth Cambage, Ohio State center Jantel Lavender and Gonzaga guard Courtney Vandersloot.

Rounding out the list of invited players are Jessica Breland from North Carolina, Kentucky forward Victoria Dunlap, Xavier forward Amber Harris and center Ta’Shia Phillips, Stanford forward Kayla Pedersen, Oklahoma guard Danielle Robinson, Boston College center Carolyn Swords and Duke guard Jasmine Thomas.

The Minnesota Lynx have first pick in the first round, and a likely shot at adding Moore, whose UConn career point tally was a remarkable 2871, to their roster. The Tulsa Shock and Chicago Sky have the second and third picks.

ESPN will broadcast the draft live at 3 p.m., and WNBA.com will have live chat, live blogging, and live tweeting from WNBA players, coaches, and GMs. You can also follow #WNBADraft on Twitter (and help it trend, if you’re so inclined.) Best of luck to all of these standout players.

Irish Beat UConn Women

The UConn Huskies’ three-season dominance of women’s basketball ended tonight, as Notre Dame’s Fighting Irish knocked them off in the Final Four.

The story is really best told by my friend Alana, a daughter of ND alums, partially raised in Indiana:

UConn star Maya Moore could not overcome Notre Dame, led by guard Skylar Diggins, who scored 28 points tonight and had the look of a woman who was not finished winning games in this particular series. March was lucky indeed for the Irish, who had already knocked off a Tennessee team they hadn’t bested in 20 games.

The Huskies pulled back within six a little more than three minutes from the final buzzer, with a series of buckets from Moore pulling them closer than the 10 deficit they faced at the half, but it wasn’t to be. Statistics aside, shots of UConn coach Geno Auriemma courtside after the two-minute warning told the tale. Or at least I thought you could see it on his face:

He just did. He looked like a guy who knew his girls were done, that they were going to lose this game. And I have to say that of all of the displays of basketball coaching I’ve witnessed from many men and women over the past few weeks, I think that Geno Auriemma handled this situation in the best possible way for the situation he was facing for his players and himself.

And I don’t even like UConn, so you can take that to the bank.

“They played great basketball all year,” he said in the post-game presser, which UConn also handled with aplomb across the board, of Notre Dame.

“It’s their turn.”

Moore was a model of poise and mature disappointment in her post-game interview, speaking of her UConn family as the best thing she’d gotten from her competitive experience.

And to anyone who says that women’s basketball isn’t exciting or athletically viable? I say you missed a hell of a game, and a fine example of collegiate athletes working hard to represent themselves and their teams on and off the court. I don’t give a damn where the net is or how exciting anyone thinks  games are or should be. I know basketball, and this was good, competitive basketball, gender aside. All of the women on that court tonight should be proud.

The Irish will meet the Aggies Tuesday in the NCAA women’s championship.

Swoopes Signs with Shock

Whoa. Say that 5 times fast.

Sheryl Swoopes, a WNBA pioneer, has rejoined the league, signing with the Tulsa Shock for the 2011 season. She turned 40 this week.

Swoopes retired after the 2008 season after two seasons of back problems. She has played in Greece for the last 2 years and says that “I can honestly say physically my body feels better than it’s probably felt in the last two or three years I played in the WNBA.”

The Shock is hoping that her all-career averages of 15.8 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 2.2 steals will help the team after a dismal 6-28 season last year.

Swoopes has a storied career in basketball including playing on three gold-winning Olympic teams.

[Image courtesy of Lucas Swoopes Basketball]

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Why it Sucks to Be a Girl Playing Sports

Men have everything easier.

The above statement is not a precursor to a tirade of men being dumb, and women being the superior vaginawarriors of the species. I make the above statement because it is true.

I make the above statement because I used to play softball, when I was younger and I had an experience which, frankly, never would have happened to a boy in a similar position.

I was a suckfest of a softball player, so I was relegated to the right field. I could catch fly balls. That was the totality of my softball prowess. I could snag a fly ball out of mid air, no problem. Once I got it in my glove though, my pitiful, spaghetti arm allowed me to throw it about 12 feet. That is why my coach stuck me behind our rock star infielder, Jessie, who literally could play the shit out of every infield position and hit and throw and do it all while running backwards and putting on mascara.

U.S. Women's Softball Team, Beijing Olympics, 2008. Minus Jessie.

So one game, Jessie was pitching, playing all three bases and shortstop. All of the hits were pitiful little bunts which never had a prayer of making it into fly ball, Christine range. It was hot and I had had a lot of Gatorade.

I was bored and I really, really had to pee. That squatting position you have to get into when a batter gets ready to bat? Not helpful. I started to do the dance of the urinata as Jessie played the entire game herself. But then, then…a fly ball came into the outfield. I uncrouched, popped up and ran to grab it.

Then I pissed myself in the outfield.

So you see, kids? It sucks to be a girl in sports, not because of the lack of funding, advertising or fan interest. It sucks to be a girl in sports because men can whip it out and piss in the outfield. Girls, well, we can’t.

Just one more tally on the ever-growing list of why men have it so much easier.

Concussions, and How to Spot Them

It seems we’ve been hearing a lot more about concussions in recent years, particularly with regard to football and hockey. There was Merril Hoge’s career-ending head injury after a concussion that ultimately resulted in a $1.55 million judgment against the doctor who cleared him to play, and players like Aikman and Young retiring earlier than expected at least in part because of concussions.  In the NHL, it’s questionable what the most notable outcome of January’s Winter Classic was: the Washington Capitals’ win over the home team or the Pens’ star forward Sidney Crosby’s eventual absence from the ice after a series of what some said were intentional hits to the head.

An almost-fanatical attention to head-hitting rules seemed to pervade this season in the NFL, so it’s clearly being taken seriously there, and players are regularly suspended in the NHL for so-called “dirty hits,” some of which can surely cause obvious or more insidious injury to the head. Not to mention? These can be contact sports. Things happen, intentional or not, and players hit the ground and equipment too.

A couple of new developments suggest the science of detecting concussions is getting better.

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of medicine have developed a test that can be given quickly to players on the sideline who have just suffered a blow to the head. The test, which any coach or parent can be trained to administer, is remarkably accurate at detecting concussions, according to the study, which is published in the current issue of the journal Neurology.

A test like this is potentially big news- something cheap, accurate, and easy to administer immediately following a potential head injury would be a huge step forward, and could prevent a lot of really scary and dangerous reinjuries that occur when athletes insist they’re ready to go back in and trainers/doctors don’t have anything concrete with which to stop them.

In other concussion news, researchers at Ohio State have recently released a study, published in the Journal of Athletic Training, that examined high school athletes who have experienced head trauma.  The study suggests that the symptoms of head injuries and concussions manifest differently in girls than boys. As more and more girls are playing sports, including contact sports (yay!) it’s essential that their coaches, trainers, and parents realize that the symptoms they report of a concussion are different than what one might “expect” given the conventional wisdom, which has almost always analyzed boys and men.

For example, the study says that while the primary symptom of concussion for both boys and girls is headaches, the secondary symptoms differ quite noticeably.  Boys are more likely to report feeling disoriented or confused, or to have memory loss, while girls are more likely to report feeling sensitive to noise and sound, as well as being drowsy.  Couple that with previous studies that suggest that girls suffer concussions at higher rates than boys, and this is key information for anyone involved in girls and women’s sports.

Interesting stuff.  Don’t lead with your head, kids.

Image Credit: wakemedvoices.org

Katie is lucky to have never received a concussion while playing sports. Unless sledding counts as a sport, in which case she totally has.

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