My argument? Where in all my posts have I argued that Sabrina is the Goat? Nowhere. As I clearly stated I simply posted it because of relevance to the topic. What it proves or disproves is...nothing. As is the case for pretty much the entire thread.To be honest I thought it was an awful article with meaningless comparisons and didn’t help your argument at all
Lots of reasons why 2k/1k/1k has never happened before and will take a very special player to see it happen again. It has to be in the right high-scoring system with very capable teammates (to finish her assists) with a coach that plays her lots of minutes and gives her the keys to the offense at the beginning of her four years. The player has to be ready to accumulate big numbers from Day #1 of her collegiate career and miss very few (if any) games. The player must be a quality shooter, passer, and rebounder and have enough size and strength to rebound in traffic at times. The player must be able to create shots for herself off the dribble as well as pull the ball in places where she knows her teammates will be able to convert consistently.
Can anyone find anyone else on the women's side who has amassed even 1,500/1,000/500? I checked on Stewart, Collier, and Taurasi. None of those three UConn greats checked all three boxes of that lower threshold for various reasons. Very difficult to have that many assists in a career unless you are a point guard and very difficult to have that many rebounds in a career unless you are a forward or center.
If your not disagreeing why every time someone responds about DT you counter with something about SabrinaMy argument? Where in all my posts have I argued that Sabrina is the Goat? Nowhere. As I clearly stated I simply posted it because of relevance to the topic. What it proves or disproves is...nothing. As is the case for pretty much the entire thread.
Good find about Moore. And she certainly was a generational collegiate player. So far, Ionescu and Moore are the only two 1,500/1,000/500 D1 women's players that I am aware of. Will also look at Cheryl Miller because of her unique skill set. Gabby was close and clearly special as well.Gabby Williams had 1582 points, 1007 rebounds, 481 assists, 305 steals
Maya Moore had 3036 points, 1276 rebounds, 544 assists, 310 steals, 204 blocks
USC's Miller at 6'2" had 3,000/1,500/400 and held the USC assists record at 414 when she left school.Good find about Moore. And she certainly was a generational collegiate player. So far, Ionescu and Moore are the only two 1,500/1,000/500 D1 women's players that I am aware of. Will also look at Cheryl Miller because of her unique skill set. Gabby was close and clearly special as well.
USC's Miller at 6'2" had 3,000/1,500/400 and held the USC assists record at 414 when she left school.
Anybody else with 1,500/1,000/500 in women's D1 history? It is the assists that typically limits players from joining that club.
???? I don't and have not. Check again.If your not disagreeing why every time someone responds about DT you counter with something about Sabrina
Check the career steals record. That looks like a season record.The problem with the thread is that the original question posed was vague. Without actual criteria clearly defined (ie an actual GOAT trophy...ha ha) the entire discussion is simply speculation and opinion of which criteria are most important.
What I have be able to glean is that UConn fans think that DT is, in fact, the Greatest to Ever Play the Game. I admit that surprised me a bit since I was more familiar with other UConn players from the past (Sue Bird, Maya Moore, Breanna Stewart, KLS) for example). Also more familiar with players like Cheryl Miller, Jackie Stiles, Jillian Alleyne, etc but whatever...
But there is a way to reset the entire discussion and one whose metrics are provable rather than vague opinions and intangibles
(This is from the NCAA.org thru end of 2018-2019 season)
Who was the Greatest of All Time (to this date) in WBB in:
Career Scoring: Kelsey Plum (UW) - 3527
Career Rebounding: Courtney Paris (OU) - 2034
Career Assists: Suzy McConnell (PSU) - 1307
Blocked Shots: Britney Griner (Baylor) - 748
Steals: Chastadie Barrs (Lamar) - 193
Triple Doubles: Sabrina Ionesco - 18 (still active-now 26)
Most Games in Double Figures: Maya Moore (UConn) - 154
Three Point FGs: Kelsey Mitchell (tOSU) - 497
and on and on through all kinds of categories.
There doesn't seem to be a a category for "Most Years a Member of a Championship" team but if there was it would be shared by many, many UConn players... obviously.
Three is the minimum. That's where DT, Stewie, Holdsclaw really separate themselves. It's the small knock on Catchings and Maya. In women's basketball, where the talent is so top heavy, you have to have these buckles on your belt
And for me it'll always be D. Carrying that crew to 2 championships her Jr Sr year is like nothing I've ever seen since.
Triple Doubles: Sabrina Ionesco - 18 (still active-now 26)
I disagree. Swoopes is a player that should be considered and she only has one title and that has alot to do with the fact that she had to carry her team. Candace Parker is another. She only played 3 seasons and won 2 titles in 3 years. Tamika Catchings has only 1 title, but that doesn't make her any less of a player. The college injury kept her from having a chance to lead her own team to a title without the other Meeks. Cheryl Miller had only 2 titles. With basketball being a team sport, you can't go by logic. However, I would not put Ionescu ahead of any of these players.
9 for NCAA women, 12 for NCAA men.Here’s the profound thing for me: What is the number for second place? It’s not even close.
I've always felt what Stewie did was unprecedented and phenomenal. Like Sabrina, she had to learn how to win her freshman season. She lost to a Greiner lead Baylor team during that regular season and I think UConn was lucky L'ville knocked Baylor out before UConn saw them in the tourney. She also lost three straight times to a Diggins lead Notre Dame team. You could see as they tried to win the very close Big East tourney, Stewie was carrying UConn. I knew by tourney time she would be the best player on the court and ND would not be able to beat them a 4th time that year. The next 3 years noone could stop Stewie and UConn on the way to the championship.The only player to say I'm going to Uconn to win 4 championships and do it was Stewie. And regardless of how many college All Americans, it was Stewie who allowed Uconn the opportunity.
Can anyone find anyone else on the women's side who has amassed even 1,500/1,000/500?
Not easy to do. My limited PAC-10/PAC-12 research has turned up Sabrina Ionescu and Nicole Powell as the only two from that conference in that 1,500/1,000/500 club. Both Ionescu (26) and Powell (6) accumulated multiple triple-doubles. Powell is impressive in that she recorded her 500+ assists at a height of 6'2".Mikayla Pivec is getting really close. I can't find up to date career stats for her, but the OSU media guide has her career numbers thru 3 seasons and combing it w/ her stats for this year, she's well over 1500 pts., looks like 1 rebound shy of 1000 and needs about 15 more assists. With at least 3 games before the NCAA Tourney and however many in post season, she should definitely get there.
Gabby Williams had 1582 points, 1007 rebounds, 481 assists, 305 steals
Maya Moore had 3036 points, 1276 rebounds, 544 assists, 310 steals, 204 blocks
I think FridaFriend got it right at 481. That is what Wikipedia has for Williams for assists. And you know about the accuracy for Wikipedia... What does the UConn WBB Media Guide have for the number of assists for Williams?I assume you mis-typed; Gabby had 612 assists.
Nicole Powell of Mountain Pointe HS in Tempe, Az was a force at Stanford.Not easy to do. My limited PAC-10/PAC-12 research has turned up Sabrina Ionescu and Nicole Powell as the only two from that conference in that 1,500/1,000/500 club. Both Ionescu (26) and Powell (6) accumulated multiple triple-doubles. Powell is impressive in that she recorded her 500+ assists at a height of 6'2".
And, as what happens eventually to all sports legends, several years past their prime.Clear comparison when bird and DT are coming back from major surgery
It takes a diverse skill set and opportunity to reach those numbers. Pivec played point guard for one season and passes a lot in OSU's offense. Difficult to get the 1,000 boards if you play point guard most of the time. Pivec has played a wing and a small forward for much of her career. Ionescu plays point guard in the frontcourt on offense, but gathers her share of defensive rebounds by seeking the ball from her zone position on defense. Ionescu leads the PAC-12 in defensive rebounds, quite a feat noting that she is often positioned at the top of a 2-3 zone for Oregon.Mikayla Pivec is getting really close. I can't find up to date career stats for her, but the OSU media guide has her career numbers thru 3 seasons and combing it w/ her stats for this year, she's well over 1500 pts., looks like 1 rebound shy of 1000 and needs about 15 more assists. With at least 3 games before the NCAA Tourney and however many in post season, she should definitely get there.