The Olympians: HoopsHD interviews 1976 Olympic silver medalist Mary Anne O’Connor

The NBA Finals date back to 1947 (when they were known as the Basketball Association of America Finals) and the very 1st NCAA tourney was held in 1939. Olympic basketball competition is even older: it debuted as a demonstration event in 1904 and the men’s version became a medal sport in 1936, with the women finally getting their chance to go for the gold in 1976. The United States has dominated Olympic basketball competition from the start: the men have won 16 gold medals in the 19 tournaments they have participated in during the past 87 years, while the women have won 9 gold medals in the 11 tournaments in which they have competed during the past 47 years. While we have to wait 1 more year until the 2024 Olympics in Paris, HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel will fill the void by interviewing as many prior Olympic players/coaches as possible. We continue our coverage by chatting with Mary Anne O’Connor about winning a silver medal in 1976 and (hopefully!) being inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame later this year.

 photo credit: Connecticut Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame

You were born in Bridgeport/raised in Fairfield: what made you choose Southern Connecticut State University for college? Southern Connecticut State was a local powerhouse for female sports. A lot of women who played semi-pro softball in the area stuck around during the winter and worked in Fairfield County as coaches, referees and PE teachers. We had a really good high school team coached by Ann DeLuca (who taught me my jump shot), that nobody knew about: we went undefeated for 2 years in a row. Coach DeLuca invited the Southern Connecticut State team to come play against us one day: they dominated us but I was in awe of them and their style was very appealing to me. I graduated high school in 1971 and decided to go to Southern Connecticut where the coach, Louise O’Neal was an icon. I majored in nursing, made the varsity and started as a freshman. We qualified for nationals all 4 years and made the Final 4 during each of my final 3 years. We got noticed and some of us received invites to try out for some of the national teams (I made the ’74 team): we toured the US playing against the Soviet team featuring 7’2” Ulyana Semenova. She had great footwork and was a 90% FT shooter! Needless to say our only option was to run if we wanted to medal.

Along with your sister Eileen, 2 of your college teammates were Joan Bonvicini (who became the 18th coach in D-1 women’s basketball history to win 600 games) and Sue Rojcewicz (your future Olympic teammate): what was it like to have so much talent on 1 team? We got along really well. I played 1-on-1 with Eileen growing up: she was only 5’7” but was strong as an ox and had flawless technique when it came to boxing out. She was even the leading rebounder at the 1975 national tourney. I played against Joan in high school: they called her “Spider” and she was like Pete Maravich. The only thing we lacked was size, which is why I played center. We trapped and used a full-court press. Our coach would take us to high schools and lead clinics for other coaches to give something back.

In 1975 you were named Southern’s Outstanding Scholar Athlete: how did you balance your work on the court with your work in the classroom? It was really hard. I missed a ton of clinical time due to basketball so I switched my major from nursing to psychology, which meant that I had to take like 10 psych courses during my senior year. I also had the incentive of not wanting to graduate with my sister! We never caught a break from any of our professors even though we put the school on the map every year. My parents were even prouder of that award than I was.

You won a gold medal with team USA at the 1975 Pan Am Games: could you tell at the time that your teammate Pat Head was going to become 1 of the greatest coaches in the history of the sport? I knew for sure that she was going to become a coach because she was like a general on the court. She had a good eye for flow/rotations that not many people knew about back then. Cathy Rush from Immaculata was our head coach and she liked to run a lot of different schemes.

You played for team USA at the 1976 Olympics: what did it mean to you to represent your country, and what did it mean to you to win a silver medal? An absolute dream come true! Just to qualify and get to the Olympics was amazing. Being in the Olympic Village with 11,000 other athletes and everyone speaking a different language and wearing different colored clothing was so cool. Even though it was a round-robin tournament it came down to the final game. My parents/siblings/83-year old grandmother all drove up from Fairfield after getting a car from a local dealership. My brother saw Curt Gowdy walking around so he thought he was a hot tamale! It is so immersive and I just soaked it all in. Everyone was over the moon to win a silver medal.

After the Olympics you spent almost a decade playing pro basketball in France and were named France’s Sportswoman of the Year in 1985: what was the biggest difference between college ball and pro ball? I went over in 1976 and played for the CUC 10-time defending champion of the French League for 2 years and then for the Stade Français in Paris for 6 years. The biggest difference was the international rules: the ref did not touch the ball as often so if you were unaware then you could get caught off-guard. It was also much more physical overseas. I got to go to so many great European countries even though the Iron Curtain was still thick. It was an education that I never would have experienced had I stayed in the US. I played for 8 years and won the title 5 times. I later got my MBA at University of Hartford in Paris, then worked as an agent representing American players who wanted to play in Europe. One of my clients was 1984 Olympian Denise Curry. It is amazing to see how much money the players make now.

After retiring from basketball you got your MBA and co-founded an IT/operations consulting firm: how do you like the job, and what do you want to do in the future? I have been doing this for 30 years after moving to San Francisco. It is still going strong but I am unsure how much longer I will feel like doing it. The pandemic has put a break on so many things but I am in a good place given the world we live in now.

Your mother played basketball at UConn and you along with all 5 of your siblings swam competitively: who is the best athlete in the family? If you asked everyone else in my family they would choose me since I did several other sports in addition to basketball. My brother John was a superstar swimmer before getting hurt. The fun thing is that we all drove around to different swim meets together: I do not know how my parents managed to fit the 6 of us in their station wagon!

In 2014 your Olympic team was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame as “Trailblazers of the Game”: where does that rank among the highlights of your career? It is up there for sure. Halls of Fame are a cool thing because it means that people remember you. Even though we were the 1st women’s Olympic team we were standing on the shoulders of the women who came before us: it was the actualization of Title IX. Pat went to Tennessee and did not make a lot of money but changed the game forever. Tara VanDerveer is my age and just look at what she has done at Stanford. A lot of influence came out of the women who played in the 1970s. The biggest change for me is that there were so many female coaches back then. I am with Coach Muffet McGraw on that: young girls need to see women coaching/playing.

Last December your Olympic team was nominated to become part of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2023: do you think we will hear your team’s name called when the inductees are unveiled during the Final Four on April 1st?! I am really hoping and I think that we deserve it. It would be really cool for us to be all together again. We have lost a lot of people including Pat/Billie Moore/Lusia Harris/Charlotte Lewis, which is sad, but it would be nice to take them along with us in spirit.

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Championship Week Video Notebook – Day 13

The Hoops HD Mock Committee as completed Day 3 of their deliberations.  We have completed our field of 68, seeded all the teams, and scrubbed lines 1 through 10.  John Stalica has a writeup of what we’ve done so far.  CLICK HERE TO CHECK IT OUT

CLICK HERE for the HOOPS HD SURVIVAL BOARD, which shows who is a lock, who is on the bubble, and who needs the auto-bid

CLICK HERE for our CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT INFO PAGE, which has brackets, times, and viewing information for all 32 conference tourney

CLICK HERE for our most recent BRACKET PROJECTIONS

Saturday of Championship Week is in the books, and it is now officially Selection Sunday.  We recap all the action from all the conference tournaments, discuss all the teams that punched tickets, and take a look at what happened in the major conferences and how today’s action could have impacted their seedlist.  We close by showing you the board of what the Hoops HD Mock Committee has done.

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio only version of the show…

SEC CHAMPIONSHIP:

BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIP:

AMERICAN CHAMPIONSHIP:

ATLANTIC TEN CHAMPIONSHIP:

IVY LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP:

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The Hoops HD Selection Committee – Saturday Night Update

Tonight was Day 3 of the Hoops HD Selection Committee meetings via Zoom conference call; our first major task of the night was adding the final 8 at-large bids to the field. With a lack of bid thieves this year, we were assured of bids opening up thanks to the American, Conference USA and SEC results from today.

Recall from Thursday’s meetings that our four carryover teams for the purposes of at-large selection were Mississippi State, NC State, Providence and Rutgers. After extensive debate of each under consideration team, each committee member sent a list of their top 8 teams to our committee chairman Chad Sherwood. The top 4 vote-getters (Oklahoma State, Penn State, Utah State and Arizona State) joined the 4 carryover teams and then each committee member ranked these teams 1 through 8. In this round of voting, we added Penn State, Providence, Mississippi State and Rutgers to our at-large board. (This also opened up another at-large bid with a bid thief no longer possible in the B1G). We repeated the process once more with only 3 carryovers; NC State was returned to the Under Consideration board after failing to make the ballot in 2 consecutive rounds. This time around, the top 5 vote-getters to join the 3 carryover teams were NC State, Vanderbilt, Clemson, Nevada and Boise State. After ranking these teams 1 through 8, our final four at-large teams added were Boise State, Utah State, Arizona State and NC State. Our first four teams out were Oklahoma State, Vanderbilt, Nevada and Clemson.

Our next task was seeding the remaining lines from 8 through 16. After the field was seeded, we began scrubbing the seed list to account for Saturday results. Below is what our board looks like through tonight’s games:

Sunday afternoon will be the final day of the Hoops HD Selection Committee – there will be additional scrubbing of the seedlist to account for Sunday’s games. We will also build our bracket; no contingencies will be necessary.

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Bracketology 2023: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.6)

-For the latest CHAMPIONSHIP WEEK VIDEO NOTEBOOK – DAY 12 where we break down all of yesterday’s conference tournament action and preview all of todays, and with links to brackets, schedules, the Survival Board, and more – CLICK HERE

We are only 1 day away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked 67 of the 68 teams that made the 2022 tourney and each of his 67 of were within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 49 right on the money. He will spend the weekend predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 12th. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today and if you agree or disagree then feel free to tweet us. To see how he stacks up with other websites (ranked 12th out of 148 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Alabama (SEC)
1: Kansas (Big 12)
1: Houston (AAC)
1: Purdue (Big 10)

2: UCLA (Pac-12)
2: Texas (Big 12)
2: Arizona (Pac-12)
2: Baylor (Big 12)

3: Marquette (Big East)
3: Gonzaga (WCC): AUTO-BID
3: Kansas State (Big 12)
3: Tennessee (SEC)

4: Xavier (Big East)
4: Connecticut (Big East)
4: Indiana (Big 10)
4: Virginia (ACC)

5: Iowa State (Big 12)
5: Miami (ACC)
5: San Diego State (MWC)
5: TCU (Big 12)

6: Texas A&M (SEC)
6: Duke (ACC)
6: St. Mary’s (WCC)
6: Kentucky (SEC)

7: Missouri (SEC)
7: Creighton (Big East)
7: Northwestern (Big 10)
7: Michigan State (Big 10)

8: Maryland (Big 10)
8: Arkansas (SEC)
8: Florida Atlantic (C-USA)
8: Iowa (Big 10)

9: Illinois (Big 10)
9: West Virginia (Big 12)
9: Memphis (AAC)
9: Boise State (MWC)

10: Auburn (SEC)
10: USC (Pac-12)
10: Providence (Big East)
10: Penn State (Big 10)

11: Utah State (MWC)
11: NC State (ACC)
11: Mississippi State (SEC)
11: Rutgers (Big 10)
11: Pittsburgh (ACC)
11: Arizona State (Pac-12)

12: Charleston (CAA): AUTO-BID
12: Oral Roberts (Summit): AUTO-BID
12: Drake (MVC): AUTO-BID
12: VCU (A-10)

13: Toledo (MAC)
13: Iona (MAAC)
13: Princeton (Ivy)
13: Louisiana (Sun Belt): AUTO-BID

14: Furman (SoCon): AUTO-BID
14: Fullerton (Big West)
14: Kennesaw State (Atlantic Sun): AUTO-BID
14: Colgate (Patriot): AUTO-BID

15: Montana State (Big Sky): AUTO-BID
15: Vermont (America East)
15: UNC-Asheville (Big South): AUTO-BID
15: Northern Kentucky (Horizon): AUTO-BID

16: Fairleigh Dickinson (NEC): AUTO-BID
16: Southeast Missouri State (OVC): AUTO-BID
16: Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (Southland): AUTO-BID
16: Grambling (SWAC)
16: Howard (MEAC)
16: Grand Canyon (WAC)

1ST 4 OUT
Clemson (ACC)
Nevada (MWC)
Oklahoma State (Big 12)
Vanderbilt (SEC)

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Tourney Talk: HoopsHD interviews Tennessee Tech coach Kim Rosamond

Last Saturday Tennessee Tech beat Little Rock 54-46 in the OVC tourney title game to earn an automatic bid to next week’s NCAA tournament. The Golden Eagles wrapped up their 5th straight winning season by clinching the school’s 1st NCAA tourney bid since 2000. Earlier today HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with Tennessee Tech coach Kim Rosamond about playing for a Hall of Fame coach during her own college days.

You played basketball at Mississippi: how good a player were you back in the day, and how did you get into coaching? I was a role player who played my role well. Ole Miss was coming off an SEC title and Coach Van Chancellor had that thing rolling. I redshirted as a freshman and bided my time behind some all-conference players. As a 5th-year senior I tore my ACL and had to make a decision: I decided to play and it was extremely rewarding. It was a special time/place in my life. I majored in journalism/advertising and actually ran away from coaching! God kind of shifted my route and opened a door for me. The 3rd assistant coaching spot was a restricted-earnings position but I stepped in at my alma mater at age 23.

What made Hall of Famer Van Chancellor such a great coach, and what was the most important thing that you ever learned from him? He always played his players to their strengths: he was very smart in that sense. I did not realize it as a teenage player but he always put the person before the player: from the meals his wife cooked to the flag football games he hosted in his backyard.

You were the 1st player to be named All-Academic SEC for 4 years in a row: how did you balance your work on the court with your work in the classroom? I grew up on a farm showing horses competitively, which is where I gained my work ethic. My mom was a single mother and after observing her I learned how to out-work people.

You won plenty of NCAA tourney games as an assistant to Stephany Smith at Middle Tennessee and Melanie Balcomb at Vanderbilt: what is the key to winning games in March? Our current team is a great example of this: guard play is so important. Every team that I have been a part of that has made deep runs had great guard play/shooting. In addition to the basketball piece, you need a group of players who love each other so much that they are not ready for their season to be over.

In 2019 as head coach at Tennessee Tech you snapped Belmont’s 47-game OVC winning streak and were named OVC COY: where does that win/honor rank among the highlights of your career? It was a really special time because we did not have a lot of on-court success during my 1st 2 years even though we were winning in the classroom/community/recruiting. We wanted to build not just a team but rather a program so it took a little time. To see things come together in year #3 was extra-special. You want to celebrate every win because it is hard at this level so you never take it for granted: it catapulted us to where we are right now.

Most of your roster is from Kentucky/Tennessee with a few players from some other states: what sort of recruiting philosophy do you have? When we got here there were only 2 players from Tennessee and that is something we knew that we had to change. Tennessee high school basketball is as good as it gets. We started at home and built a lot of strong relationships so we knew that if we kept the top kids at home then we would have a chance. This is a great location because we can stay within a 6-8 hour radius and still find kids to help us win championships.

Your team is top-10 in the nation with 25.3 3P% allowed: how crucial is perimeter defense to your team’s success? When you defend good 3-PT shooters every day in practice, and we have great 3-PT shooters, then you are forced to work to defend the 3 every day. If you had told me that we would win a title while going 0-6 from behind the arc I would not have believed you! Defending and shooting the 3 has been very vital to our success.

Last Saturday in the OVC tourney title game Jada Guinn scored 12 PTS/6-6 FT in an 8-PT win over Little Rock: how on earth were you able to beat a team that only lost 1 conference game all year, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? It is a great example of how we approach losses: we view them as lessons. They manhandled us in the 1st game and we lost our composure at their place. At our place their physicality really bothered us in the 1st half but we scored 26 PTS against them in the 3rd quarter, which I believe is the most they have allowed in a quarter all year. We lost the game but gained confidence and figured out the formula to beat them, which we did last weekend. The locker room was exhilarating/emotional. We did not skip a single step during the past 7 years: it took a winding road to get here but that just made it taste even sweeter. I know how special/rare it is to be a part of March Madness and I want our young women to experience it.

You had a birthday last month: what did you do for the big day? We had a game the very next day against UT-Martin in our regular season finale so we prepared for Senior Day. That is how I have spent my birthday for most of my career!

What kind of seed do you think you deserve, and what kind of seed do you think you will get? That is up to the committee. We are happy to be here…but we are not JUST happy to be here. We do not care where we go and I can promise you that this team will not back down from anybody. We will continue to fight for 40 minutes together because we are not ready for this ride to be over.

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Tourney Talk: HoopsHD interviews Washington State SR G Johanna Teder

Last Sunday Washington State beat UCLA 65-61 in the Pac-12 tourney title game to earn an automatic bid to next week’s NCAA tournament. The Cougars lost their regular season finale in double-OT but were able to win 4 postseason games in 5 days to make the school’s 2nd straight NCAA tourney. Earlier today HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with Washington State SR G Johanna Teder about making the NCAA tourney for the 2nd straight year.

You were born/raised in Estonia: how did you 1st get into basketball? My sister played basketball and I got interested after attending some practices when I was in kindergarten.

You began your college career at South Plains Community College: how close did you come to going undefeated in 2020, and what was your reaction when you learned that the national tourney was canceled due to COVID? I was supposed to go to a D-1 school but I ended up at a JUCO with a lot of other international players. We only lost 1 game and we were getting ready to go to nationals to try to win a title. It was a crazy time: we kept practicing and nobody went home because we thought that we would eventually play…but it never happened.

How did you end up at Washington State? I knew that year that I was ready to play D-1 by that point so when COVID hit I put my name in the transfer portal and a lot of teams contacted me. I got recruited by WSU and chose them.

You are majoring in Digital Technology and Communication Advertising and minoring in Fine Arts: what is the post-graduation plan? I actually finished all of my classes for my major/minor last December. My plan is to graduate next spring with 2 bachelor’s degrees. I am not sure of the long-term plan but I would love to play pro basketball. I think my major allows me to take my work wherever I am.

You play for Coach Kamie Ethridge, who was just named national COY on Thursday: what makes her such a great coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from her so far? She is genuine and always treats us as human before athletes. She expects a lot out of us but is really fair.

Last year you led the team with 56 3PM: what is the secret to making shots from behind the arc? I have not always been a shooter: I was a PG in high school and barely attempted any threes. I started working on my shot after getting to college and now that is what my team expects me to do. I am a good shooter…but could always be better.

Your school also made the NCAA tourney for the 1st time in 30 years: how big a deal was it? Huge! They also made it during COVID so this year will be the 3rd time in 4 years. It has been amazing to build this program and see what our accomplishments mean to everyone. I am lucky to be a part of it and am excited for this year’s NCAA tourney.

You had a birthday last month: what did you do for the big day? We had a game that day against Cal and we won, so that was the best gift that the team could give me. However, I was a little bummed because I am already 23!

Last Sunday in the Pac-12 tourney title game you scored 7 PTS in a 4-PT win over UCLA: what did it mean to you to win the title, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? The whole tourney was unbelievable: I still cannot believe that we did it! We pulled off a couple of upsets and after we beat Utah I thought that anything was possible. After the win over UCLA I just sat in the locker room and felt like it was 1 of the best days of my life: it was so awesome that I wish I just could re-live that day over and over.

What kind of seed do you think you deserve, and what kind of seed do you think you will get? That conversation comes up almost every day. I am expecting a better seed than last year: maybe a 5/6? I feel that we have proved what we are capable of and we won a championship so I think that we should be up there somewhere.

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