DobbsRover2
Slap me 10
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2011
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What does "usually" mean? I guess to some it might mean more than 50% of the time.Having the #1 player in WCBB (not talking about high school rankings) usually results in a Championship (looking back through the 00s). But isn't that just common sense? Best player / best team is often a symbiotic relationship.
The only teams that failed to do it since 2001(looking at both AP and Naismith POY) were: LSU with Seimone Augustus. Duke With Beard. And Duke with Lindsey Harding. Admittedly, that's a very subjective calculation. The truly transcendent players in that time, were Maya, Diana, and Candace. They got 7 NCs among them.
All that said, it doesn't guarantee it. There are a whole lot of other variables.
In the last 20 years, the Naismith winner has played on the NC winner 11 times ( and in the 31 years of the award, it's just 14 times). That's a significant contribution for the last 20 years, but that still leaves 9 teams that didn't get the NC without the best player, and why Baylor in 2013 was left off your list, I'm not sure. Many would consider Griner a transcendent player by her stats.
Simply put, having the top player with either a very strong cast or another top-5 player can often get you an NC, but there are times like with Griner and Sims last year, or perhaps a Naismith winner Catchings in 2000 backed by Lawson and Clement that still falls well short. On the other hand, move Beard and the Duke team from 2004 to 2005 and they could well have won that NC game against MD in a diminished year. There is no magic formula for an NC other than true grit to the very end.
