Sooners coach returns to place of fond memory

Clay Horning
CNHI News Service

March 20, 2008 01:34 am

Back in the dark ages when the NCAA still all but decided who would reach the Sweet 16 by awarding campus sites the first two rounds of the women’s tournament — eight years ago — the Oklahoma women shocked the women’s game.
It was a smaller game.
Even on the night of March 25, 2000, when reigning national champion Purdue met the upstart Sooners, even on the Boilermakers’ very own court inside Mackey Arena, attendance topped out at 5,680.
But it wasn’t that bad.
It was still 1,415 more fans than showed for OU’s last home game that season, a 77-68 Bedlam victory over Dick Halterman’s Cowgirls.
Yet even if nobody had been there, OU coach Sherri Coale would feel the same way.
“(I have) such sweet memories of West Lafayette,” she said. “You know, sometimes there’s just some serendipity involved.”
The news came Monday, when OU learned it would open NCAA Tournament play against Illinois State at 11 a.m. Sunday back at Mackey Arena, where the Sooners women and a former high school coach hit the big time for the first time.
It was Coale’s fourth season since leaving Norman High and her first trip to the NCAA Tournament.
OU had to score 54 second-half points to erase a one-point halftime deficit and beat Brigham Young 86-81 just to play the national champion Boilermakers. And trailing 44-32 at the half, the Sooners had to come back all over again.
That comeback still feels like yesterday to Coale.
“Everybody scored,” she said. “Everybody took a turn making the big play, getting the rebound, diving on the floor for the loose ball.”
Indeed, juxtaposed against the Sooners’ most recent fortunes — three straight losses including a first-round bounce from the Big 12 tournament at the hands of 20-loss Missouri — it may have been everything the Sooners might hope to do to emerge from their longstanding funk.

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