Partners:   NCAA.com   CSTV.com   MaxPreps.com  
    
powered by Google  
  Track your favorite teams and players.
Free membership, Register Now
Already a member, Log In
 


Community | Help
A familiar spot: George Washington looks to clear hurdle in NCAAs - NCAA Division I Womens Basketball Sports News
Home    Fantasy    NFL  |  MLB  |  NBA  |  NHL  |  College FB  |  College BK  |  Golf  |  Auto Racing  |  Tennis  |  Horses  |  SPiN  |  MMA & Boxing  |  More
Mobile  |  Shop
Women's Coll BK Home | Scoreboard | Standings | Schedules | Teams | Men's College BK
 

A familiar spot: George Washington looks to clear hurdle in NCAAs

 

WASHINGTON -- Kimberly Beck's face went blank at the mention of Dereck Whittenburg. And Sarah-Jo Lawrence? She'd never heard of Lorenzo Charles.

Advertisement  
 

But George Washington coach Joe McKeown is old enough to remember the Whittenburg-to-Charles air ball that won the NCAA men's championship at the buzzer for N.C. State in 1983. There's even a connection between the two: Then-N.C. State coach Jim Valvano had once tried to recruit McKeown to play at Iona.

McKeown got to watch his two senior guards reprise the Whittenburg-Charles moment Monday night, when Lawrence caught Beck's air ball and put in a layup at the buzzer in GW's 55-53 win over California in the second round of the NCAA tournament.

The only thing missing? McKeown didn't run onto the court with his entire body in a frenzy, as Valvano did.

"When we win the national championship," McKeown said, "I'll do my Valvano dance."

It would be a sight to see, but to get there, the Colonials need to clear a hurdle that's stymied them nearly every year. They beat the good teams, not the great ones.

"We always get to this point of the tournament," Lawrence said, "where we're playing a UNC or Tennessee or a Rutgers, a big team like that. This is our chance to establish ourselves."

Indeed, this senior class has lost to No. 1 seed North Carolina in 2005 and 2007 and No. 2 seed Tennessee in 2006. This year, the powerhouse opponent in the bracket is Rutgers, last year's NCAA runner-up. The sixth-seeded Colonials and second-seeded Scarlet Knights meet Sunday in the round of 16 at Greensboro, N.C.

"They're battle-tested; they're ready for anything," McKeown said after Thursday's practice at the Smith Center. "It should be fun. I'm trying not to put a lot of pressure on them."

The Colonials seem to own permanent residence in the Top 25 somewhere between Nos. 11 and 25. They have advanced past the round of 16 in the NCAAs only once, when they beat North Carolina in 1997 before losing to Notre Dame with a Final Four berth on the line.

GW also hasn't received much love from the selection committee. The Colonials have been shipped to California for first- and second-round games two years in a row; McKeown was particularly disappointed this year because there was a local site at Maryland.

"I wonder, maybe the committee thought we were the University of Washington the last two years, and they missed the 'George' somehow," McKeown said.

The Colonials get to take a bus instead of a plane this weekend, but Rutgers is a tough assignment no matter where the game is played. The Scarlet Knights routed GW 67-42 at the Smith Center in November, the Colonials' worst home loss in nearly seven years.

CONTINUED: 1 · 2 · Next »
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2007-2008, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
 
 
 
 
 
 
Headlines
· Staley to leave Temple, try to revive South Carolina
 
· Vols hire ex-player Charles-Furlow as assistant