"
Alma College has a history of excellence, both in the
MIAA and against colleges around the nation. The pinnacle of
Alma's athletic excellence, however, is the
National Championship that the women's basketball team of
1992 brought back to
Scotland U.S.A.
Led by head coach
Charlie Goffnett and assistant coach
Mark Guyette, the team was comprised of 13 players: Amy
Elbers '92, Lauri LaBeau '93,
Julie Long '93,
Colleen Wruble '93,
Kelly Jaster '94,
Susie Kieffer '94,
Katie Mans '94,
Stephanie Mortensen '94,
Tara Sherman '94,
Andrea Balliet '95, Amy
Doucette '95,
Terri Hogan '95, and
Jamie McCallister '95. Several of the players earned All-MIAA honors,
American Women's
Sport Federation Fast Break All-American honors and All-Tournament honors from the
NCAA playoffs.
Coach Goffnett was also given
Coach of the Year by the American Women's Sport Federation.
The Lady Scots were predicted to be number one in the MIAA by the coaches' preseason poll and led off the year with a Baldwin-Wallace tournament win, in which they beat
Rio Grand (
Ohio) 74-60 in the final game to win the tournament for the third straight time. The Lady Scots finished the season only losing one league game and winning the MIAA by beating second place
Adrian College in the final game of the season 68-65. The win gave Alma an automatic berth into the
NCAA tournament, which was the first time the NCAA had given an automatic tournament bid to the winner of the MIAA. The days leading up to the tournament were not without controversy, however, as a mistake by the NCAA failed to give the MIAA champions a home court advantage in the tournament, which they would normally have deserved. Consequently, throughout the playoffs, Alma played on the road, including in the first game at
Adrian, a lower tournament seed. Some thought the reasoning was because Adrian had a wood floor and Alma had a "Tartan" artificial floor, but a more plausible reason was discovered later.
The NCAA made the mistake by using the wrong criteria when deciding home court advantage, using
Division 1 criteria instead of
Division 3. After an appeal, the NCAA upheld its original decisions and proceeded with the tournament as planned. The Lady Scots were only motivated by the disadvantage and used it to fuel their playoff run. Coach Goffnett was quoted saying "You could see it in our player's eyes. They were just not going to be denied." Alma won three road consecutive road games to earn a place in the
NCAA Division III Final Four.
The Lady Scots then went on to defeat
Luther, an unranked team going into the tournament, in the semifinals 81-80, and played
Moravian, a team which was on a forty-three-game winning streak, in the finals. Alma was down at the end of the first half, but after a very physical second half came back to defeat Moravian 79-75, winning the NCAA Division III
Championship."
source:
http://historyengine.richmond.edu/episodes/view/5247
"The Greyhounds had their best showing in the
NCAA Tournament in 1991-92 when Moravian hosted the Final Four and finished as the runner-up to Alma College. After the 4-1 mark in the tournament in 1991-92, the Greyhounds went 1-1 and reached the
Sweet 16 in 1992-93, the last time Moravian was in the NCAA Tournament."
source: http://www.moravian.edu/athletics/sportsnews/05-06/winter/SN1318
.htm
Links:
http://www.jonfmorse.com/wiki/index
.php?title=1992_NCAA_Division_III_Women%27s_Basketball_Tournament
- published: 01 Mar 2013
- views: 1109