BOWLING GREEN, Ky. -- Pat Summitt wondered when her young Tennessee team would finally get through its growing pains and finally figure it out.Ball State gave her the emphatic answer: maybe next year.
The Cardinals stunned the two-time defending national champions 71-55 in the opening round of the NCAA tournament on Sunday night, snapping one of the more remarkable streaks in college basketball history.
No. 12 Ball State 71, No. 5 Tennessee 55: Women's NCAA Tourney Scores
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The Lady Volunteers (22-11) had never lost in the first two rounds of the tournament, going 42-0 through the years. It's a run the program has used as a launching pad to eight national championships.
No. 9 will have to wait.
Tennessee became the first defending champ to lose its opening game in the women's tourney. Old Dominion won the title in 1985 and failed to make the tournament the following year.
The Lady Vols were never in danger of missing the NCAAs even after an uneven regular season, though the selection committee dropped them all the way to a fifth-seed, lowest in 28 tournament appearances.
Summitt, college basketball's all-time winningest coach, hoped for a fresh start in the NCAAs. She made the team watch a documentary on Tennessee's 1997 national championship team, a club that lost 10 games during the regular season before finally figuring it out in March.
Yet instead of history repeating itself, the Lady Vols made the kind of history they were hoping to avoid.
Tennessee had never lost to a team seeded lower than fourth, yet looked outclassed against a team playing on college basketball's biggest stage for the first time.
"I thought we were tentative, maybe uptight," Summitt said. "But you have to give credit where credit is due and that's to the Ball State basketball team. They had a lot more toughness. They beat us to loose balls. They made shots."
The 12th-seeded Cardinals (26-8) will play Iowa State in the second round on Tuesday.
Porchia Green led Ball State with 23 points, Audrey McDonald added 18 and the Mid-American Conference champions dominated the second half to capture the biggest win in school history.
The upset and its decisiveness even left the Cardinals stunned.
"I would be lying to you if I told you I thought it would be a 16-point victory," Ball State guard Kiley Jarrett said. "It hasn't hit me yet. "It is just unbelievable."
Shekinna Stricklen had 17 points for Tennessee. The Lady Vols shot just 35 percent and played the second half without center Kelley Cain, who went down in the first half with a knee injury.The way the Cardinals fearlessly challenged the Lady Vols, it might not have mattered if Cain was available.
Green and Jarrett did whatever they wanted against the bigger - but decidedly slower - Lady Vols. Using their speed to go by defenders, Green and Jarrett were able to get into the lane or find open teammates.
The Lady Vols, meanwhile, appeared to be a step behind all night.
"Their guards did an awesome job," Tennessee's Angie Bjorklund said. "We need to get down and defend no matter what and we didn't do that today."
Ball State took the lead for good on a 3-pointer by Emily Maggert with just over 14 minutes remaining and Tennessee had no response.
The Cardinals pushed the lead to 10 on a pair of free throws by Jarrett with 7:20 to go and Tennessee would get no closer than eight the rest of the way.
"To go out and do what they just did, it's going to take us a really long time to get our minds around the accomplishment that they have been able to achieve," said first-year Ball State coach Kelly Packard who has 26 career wins, or 979 fewer than Summitt.
Jarrett celebrated the victory by jumping into Green's arms at midcourt as the buzzer sounded while the large contingent of the orange-clad Tennessee fans who made their way to E.A. Diddle Arena walked to the exits in stunned silence.
This one may take awhile to sink in.
Getting through the first two rounds has been a mere formality for the Lady Vols through the years, as Tennessee used the opening games as glorified scrimmages in an effort to iron out the kinks before getting to the round of 16.
It's a formula that's worked for 27 years and ended with the Lady Vols cutting down the nets in the national championship game, including titles behind star Candace Parker each of the past two seasons.
Parker is long gone now and the seven freshmen that comprise the core of the youngest team of Summitt's remarkable coaching career will have to wait a year to get a shot at starting another streak.
Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.





























Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-23-2009 @ 5:54AM
Hey Sexy! said...
Pat Summit will have a better year, if the past can predict the future... Anytime the Lady Vols have an off year it always seems the next season is one to remember.
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 8:54AM
James said...
Lucky the vols got out before UCONN got to them, You know Geno would have run the score up on them so bad, 150 points or more.
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 11:15AM
rich said...
ANYBODY OUT THERE THINK WE WON"T BE BACK?
Reply
3-24-2009 @ 2:59PM
Laura said...
Coach Pat Summitt suffered her worse year in her career. So What? She is the winningest coach in history with over 1,000 wins and 8 National titles to her credit. Some might be a fool who think that every great program will not have one bad season for they do.Coach Pat Summit is not down by any means.She STILL is the best coach.She cannot win the title every year.Some critics are having a field day at her expense but let them. She had a young team and did not do so well. She will tell you that, herself.Her Track record, she will be back.BANK ON IT.
Reply
3-24-2009 @ 9:40PM
George said...
Best coach? Not even close. Longevity and recruiting every top prospect with scholarships does not make her the best. I am glad they are gone,tired of seeing that ugly woman on my ESPN,she looks like a man.
Reply
3-25-2009 @ 3:57PM
UConnPam1 said...
well the only way to look at things is we all have a rebuilding process we all go thru. this year wasnt tenn. year. pat summit will be back that you can count on. now as for uconn. let the party begin. uconn is one of the best programs out there. they build character and professionalism out of each of their players.
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