Blue and Gold Illustrated

Sept. 26, 2020

Blue & Gold Illustrated: America's Foremost Authority on Notre Dame Football

Issue link: https://read.uberflip.com/i/1290311

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 48 of 55

www.BLUEANDGOLD.com SEPT. 26, 2020 49 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL 2020-21 NUMERICAL ROSTER No. Name Ht. Year 1 Dara Mabrey 5-7 Junior 3 Amirah Abdur-Rahim 6-2 Freshman 5 Alasia Hayes 5-7 Freshman 10 Katlyn Gilbert 5-10 Junior 12 Abby Prohaska 5-10 Junior 15 Natalija Marshall 6-5 Freshman 20 Nicole Benz 5-8 Senior 21 Anaya Peoples 5-10 Sophomore 22 Danielle Cosgrove 6-4 Junior 23 Alli Campbell 5-11 Freshman 24 Destinee Walker 5-10 Graduate 30 Mikki Vaughn 6-3 Senior 33 Sam Brunelle 6-2 Sophomore 34 Maddy Westbeld 6-2 Freshman BY LOU SOMOGYI Sam Brunelle will be counted on to lead the way for the Irish in the coming years D uring its sensational run of seven Final Fours in nine years from 2011-19, highlighted by the 2018 na- tional title, a common thread in the Notre Dame women's basketball pro- gram was having at least one top- five-caliber recruit as "the face of the program." • It began with Skylar Diggins, signed in 2009 as ESPN HoopGurlz's top point guard and No. 3 overall prospect nationally. • In Diggins' senior year, fresh- man Jewell Loyd, the No. 1 shooting guard and No. 4 overall player in the country, was groomed for the future superstar status. • In 2014, Loyd's junior season, Gatorade National High School Ath- lete of the Year and freshman Brianna Turner was deemed the heiress to the throne. • The following year, Arike Ogun- bowale — listed No. 5 overall per Prospects Nation — joined the fold. • In 2016, guard Jackie Young was ranked No. 2 by Prospects Nation and named the prep Naismith Player of the Year, and the following year forward Jessica Shepard — ESPN HoopGurlz's No. 3 overall prospect — transferred as a junior from Ne- braska to Notre Dame. The pattern was clear: To be a su- per power, a top-five or top-10 recruit needs to be inked almost every year. That's not even including "comple- mentary" pieces who became stand- outs or premier leaders in their own right such as Kayla McBride, Natalie Achonwa, Lindsay Allen, Kathryn Westbeld or Marina Mabrey. Unfortunately, the Notre Dame recruiting gravy train in the high school ranks slowed in 2017-18, and then Young joined the WNBA in 2019 prior to her senior year. Also in 2019, 6-2 forward Sam Brunelle was originally ESPN Hoop- Gurlz's No. 1-ranked prospect, but dropped to No. 6 — and also No. 5 by Prospects Nation — after an in- jury sidelined the Ruckersville, Va., native a good portion of her senior season. She was still deemed the na- tion's No. 1 "stretch forward" and perhaps best pure shooter. Unlike her predecessors, however, Brunelle as a freshman did not have a veteran All-American in the program to lean on while she waded into the college basketball waters. Even Dig- gins as a freshman was able to turn to future No. 3 and No. 8 WNBA picks Devereaux Peters and Natalie No- vosel to ease her transition. There was no such bridge for Brunelle after all five starters from 2019 advanced to the WNBA. She was thrown into the deep end from the outset, hoping to just make it ashore. The challenge was compounded when center Mikki Vaughn missed the first two months of the season with a knee injury. Shortly after Vaughn returned, Brunelle's class- mate Anaya Peoples — a double- figure scorer and the top rebounder with 8.1 boards per game — was sidelined for the remainder of the season after 17 games due to a shoul- der injury. Amidst a 13-18 finish, Brunelle did earn ACC All-Freshman honors with 13.9 scoring and 5.8 rebounding av- erages while playing all 31 games through an assortment of setbacks, and maintained an effervescent per- sonality that will make her a prime national media figure in years to come. "She's one of the best shooting stretch forwards in the country," first-year head coach Niele Ivey said when assessing her roster this year. "She came off a really good season. It was kind of a rebuild for the pro- gram, but I feel like she gained a lot of experience going through that. "She has that confidence and swagger that we need, and she's a born scorer. She's comfortable in that position and role, and that's what I expect from her." Because of her size and Vaughn's injury, Brunelle had to be relied on more in new roles offensively and defensively in the post or in the mid- dle of a zone defense that became psychological hurdles. Her three-point shooting percent- age in her first 14 games was 19.1 (13 of 68), but over the final 17 it doubled to 38.1 (45 of 118) — and was 46.5 (20 of 43) the last five. She capped the regular season with a 23-point (9-of-14 shooting), nine- rebound effort in an 83-65 win versus North Carolina, and then in an up- set at No. 19 Florida State tallied 25 points while converting seven threes. A day later she was named ESPNW's National Player of the Week. For Ivey, a prime personnel goal is to facilitate Brunelle's skills. "I would hope to get her on the pe- rimeter a little more and hope to play her more at her natural position," Ivey said. "We're just trying to build the right team around her so we can do that." ✦ Brunelle averaged 13.9 points and 5.8 rebounds per game en route to ACC All-Freshman honors following the 2019-20 season. PHOTO BY MIKE MILLER Linchpin Figure

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Blue and Gold Illustrated - Sept. 26, 2020