Oklahoma - Feminino

Oklahoma - Feminino

Leagues Played
WNCAAB 227
Links
Wikipedia
Related Teams
Oklahoma

Resultados

WNCAAB 03/25 22:30 124 Oklahoma - Feminino v Indiana - Feminino L 68-75
WNCAAB 03/23 20:00 122 Florida Gulf Coast - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino W 70-73
WNCAAB 03/21 02:00 - UCLA - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino - View
WNCAAB 03/11 18:30 2 [102] Iowa State - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino [60] L 85-68
WNCAAB 03/09 19:30 3 [84] TCU - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino [62] W 53-69
WNCAAB 03/02 22:00 - [49] Oklahoma - Feminino v Kansas - Feminino [118] L 74-83
WNCAAB 02/29 00:00 - [3] Texas - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino [53] W 70-71
WNCAAB 02/24 19:00 - [199] Oklahoma State - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino [54] W 56-91
WNCAAB 02/20 23:00 - [59] Oklahoma - Feminino v Cincinnati - Feminino [198] W 95-87
WNCAAB 02/17 18:00 - [51] Oklahoma - Feminino v West Virginia - Feminino [14] L 66-70
WNCAAB 02/15 00:00 - [43] Baylor - Feminino v Oklahoma - Feminino [57] W 73-84
WNCAAB 02/11 00:00 - [65] Oklahoma - Feminino v Iowa State - Feminino [128] W 86-72

The Oklahoma Sooners women's basketball team represents the University of Oklahoma (OU) and competes in the Big 12 Conference of NCAA Division I.

History

OU women's basketball began during the 1974–75 academic year. In March 1990, Oklahoma officials released a statement saying that the women's basketball program was to be dropped, after many years of sub-par performance and low attendance. Many people voiced their complaints and eight days later, OU reinstated the program. At the time, the average attendance per game was 65 people. In 1996, Oklahoma hired former Norman High School women's basketball coach Sherri Coale to the same position at the university. The Sooner women's basketball team developed in years since to status as a leader in attendance across the nation. The Sooners averaged attendance of 6,851 in 2011–12 at home games, and the support for the sport led to Oklahoma hosting first and second-round games in the Women's NCAA Basketball Championships at Lloyd Noble Center in Norman. The Sooners also set a record on February 2, 2009, when they played host to the number 13 Tennessee Lady Volunteers, led by coach Pat Summit, who was trying to get career victory 1,000, something that no other coach had done before. The attendance for that game, which was held at the Ford Center in Oklahoma City, was close to 13,000 as well as setting a record for the most watched women's basketball game in history. The Sooners led the Big 12 conference in attendance as well. As with the men's team, they call Lloyd Noble Center home.

The program gained national prominence during the 2002 post-season when they advanced to the national title game and lost to the University of Connecticut Huskies. In the 2005–06 season, the Sooners were led by their coach Sherri Coale and the nationally known sophomore twins Courtney and Ashley Paris, daughters of former San Francisco 49ers offensive tackle Bubba Paris, to the third round of the national tournament. The team also won the Big 12 regular-season championship (with a 16–0 conference record) and the Big 12 Tournament. They became the first Big 12 women's basketball team to remain undefeated throughout conference play.

In the 2008–09 season, the Sooners made it to the Final Four of the 2009 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament. They advanced through the Oklahoma City Regional, where they enjoyed considerable home court advantage, as Norman and Oklahoma City are separated by fewer than 20 miles.

The 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons failed to result in regional championships and NCAA Final Four appearances. Playing through rigorous non-conference schedules and a rugged Big 12 slate, the Sooners received No. 6 seeds each of the two years. The 10–11 team advanced through the Charlottesville, Virginia, first and second round site with a win over nearby James Madison University and an upset win over the University of Miami Hurricanes. The season came to an abrupt halt in Dayton, Ohio, in the Sweet Sixteen, with the team falling to No. 2 seed Notre Dame, which steamrolled to a national championship appearance that year. The 11–12 team failed to make it past the No. 3 seed St. John's Red Storm in a 74–70 defeat in front of several thousand Sooner fans in Norman, Oklahoma. St. Johns lost in the Sweet Sixteen to the Duke Blue Devils in Fresno, California.

Oklahoma City hosted an NCAA regional in March 2013.

The 2012–13 Sooners missed graduating senior Jelena Serena, but retained the rest of the team. Adding to the corps were two National Top 20 recruits, Maddie Manning and Nicole Kornet, and Sooners Jasmine Hartman and Lyndsey Cloman rejoined the active roster. Both Hartman and Cloman sat out the entire 2011–12 season with injuries.

A equipe de basquete dos EUA "Oklahoma - Feminino" é um time de basquete profissional feminino localizado em Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. O time faz parte da Associação Nacional de Basquete Feminino (WNBA) e disputa atualmente a Conferência Oeste da liga. A equipe foi fundada em 2020 e é de propriedade do empresário Clay Bennett, que também é o proprietário do Oklahoma City Thunder, time masculino da NBA. O time estreou na WNBA em 2021 e sua primeira temporada foi marcada por muitos desafios. A equipe terminou em último lugar na Conferência Oeste, com um recorde de 2-30. No entanto, a equipe mostrou muita resiliência e perseverança durante a temporada, e conseguiu algumas vitórias importantes ao longo do caminho. A estrela da equipe é a armadora Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, que foi selecionado para o All-Star Game da WNBA em sua primeira temporada na liga. Gilgeous-Alexander é uma das jogadoras mais talentosas da WNBA e é uma das principais esperanças da equipe para o futuro.

O técnico da equipe é Marija Vadeeva, que foi contratada em 2022 e tem uma carreira de sucesso como jogadora e treinadora. Vadeeva foi uma das melhores jogadoras da WNBA na década de 2000 e foi eleita quatro vezes para o All-Star Game. Como treinadora, Vadeeva levou o Phoenix Mercury ao título da WNBA em 2014. A equipe "Oklahoma - Feminino" é uma equipe jovem e talentosa com um futuro brilhante pela frente. A equipe tem potencial para se tornar uma das melhores da WNBA nos próximos anos.