My views run directly opposite to two of my favorite board members, grizzlyjournal and Fat Bruno. But I have to speak my truth.
A Division I Women's basketball coach has 15 scholarships, two more than the men. These are not for "Daddy's LIttle Girls Playing Pee Wee basketball." These are for mature young women who likely at an early age demonstrated considerable athletic ability. Who then attended summer camp after summer camp, before playing AAU ball, and then demonstrated enough ability as seniors in high school to win a full-ride scholarship to what had been one of the premier programs in all of Division I Women's basketball, the Montana Lady Griz. I would expect that even at the deep end of the bench, these young athletes would have demonstrated the core aptitudes and fundamental basketball skills to perform at a competent level, especially in a loser-go-home playoff game against a team seeded three spots beneath us.
But that's not what we saw yesterday. What we saw yesterday was a team that:
--Could not shoot. 20% from deep (including one last second heave that was so errant it banked it), and slightly better than 50% from the foul line. Jordan one for ten? I've seen spectators come out of the stands for halftime contests and shoot better than that. And how many uncontested layups did we miss? I counted five. There may may have been more.
--Could not rebound. How many offensive rebounds did they get, 28? Again, these are fundamental skills you should have learned if you earned a Division One scholarship: The ability to block out. Worse, we were out-hustled and out-quicked on rebound after rebound.
--Could not get a stop when we needed it. Just when it looked like we were on a run, we-could-not-get a-stop. Our defense was porous, to say the least. Driving lanes were open time and again for Southern Utah. And while I don't have a shot chart, I'm sure it would show most of their shots came from within 10 feet.
--Could not drive to the basket. Time and again, Krista Redpath, the ex-Griz doing color commentary, said Montana needed drive more, not only to score but to open things up for Jace down low. Instead, my dominant memory of our offense is of a player holding the ball over her head with two hands out near the three point line--a position from which you cannot make a chest pass or a bounce pass, let alone be in a position to drive to the basket.
I then made the mistake of flipping over to catch a bit of the UConn game. My God, the difference in skill level between us and a UConn or a Notre Dame is the distance of a space probe to Mars. Those teams would beat us by 50 points and probably more if their lives depended on it. Long gone are the days when a Montana could face a USC with Lisa Leslie or a Texas Tech with Sheryl Swoopes and not only be in the game, but have a chance to win it. That's how far this program has fallen.
But for all the people here who want to oust Shannon, I say, she deserves one more year. Any coach does--a full four year cycle. Not only do we get some key players back from injury, but we welcome perhaps the second-most heralded recruit in the history of Lady Griz basketball, Jamie Pickens.
But therein lies a great irony. Jamie could have played anywhere in the country, but she chose to stick with us, because she had Lady Griz in her blood. Many Montana girls do, who grew up during the glory days of the program, when Montana was the dominant program in the state, the role model for young girls throughout the state.
But after three years of Shannon's leadership, can we say the same today? Is this the program young girls aspire to?
Not on the evidence we all saw yesterday. What we saw yesterday was absolutely lacerating.