Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Minnesota hotbed for women’s hoops

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MINNETONKA, Minn. — Cheryl Reeve was once in between weightlift­ing sets at a Twin Cities area fitness center when she spotted a scrawny youngster working on her game on an otherwise-empty basketball court.

This sixth-grader had the moves, determinat­ion and moxie to catch the eye of a WNBA head coach, and Reeve was so impressed she initiated an impromptu shooting drill for the girl to run through over the course of the next half-hour.

When Paige Bueckers became a star on the local high school scene a few years later, Reeve — who is beginning her 13th season with the Minnesota Lynx — had a revelation.

“I know her!” Reeve said to herself that day she made the connection.

This weekend, Bueckers will be back home, leading the Connecticu­t Huskies into their 14th straight Final Four. Minneapoli­s is the too-good-to-betrue host city for Bueckers, the smooth-shooting sophomore guard who has been working her way back from a serious midseason knee injury.

“She’s a generation­al talent,” Reeve said Tuesday as she reflected on that chance first encounter with Bueckers, who in 2021 became the first freshman to win the AP women’s national player of the year award. “You can spot those at a very young age. I was really glad to see that it was a young girl, and I needed to acknowledg­e that. I didn’t know what it was going to turn into, but I was happy she was there hooping and I wanted to let her know that.”

As the northernmo­st state in the union with a long history of turning out top-level talent on the ice, Minnesota naturally gets labeled as the land of hockey. This is a basketball-avid area, too, from the four-time WNBA champion Lynx on down to the little girls learning to pass and dribble.

A progressiv­e culture provided fertile ground for Title IX advancemen­ts to spur growth of the women’s game, and the arrival of the Lynx in 1999 gave the Twin Cities a profession­al team to follow. One of their best stars was Lindsay Whalen, who grew up in Minnesota, stayed home to play for the state’s flagship university and led the Gophers to their only Final Four in 2004.

According to the most recent participat­ion survey conducted by the National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns, done after the 2018-19 school year, Minnesota has the highest per-capita rate of prep girls basketball players with 12,073.

Minnesota had 15 nominees for the girls McDonald’s All-American game, which was played Tuesday night in Chicago. The only states with more nominees were California, Florida, Maryland, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas and Virginia.

Whalen, who retired from a 15-year career as a WNBA player and now is the head coach of her alma mater, signed a four-player recruiting class for the Gophers for next season that was ranked 10th in the nation by ESPN. The entire quartet is from the Twin Cities area.

“Whoever it is who fits our program, that’s who we’ll recruit, but there’s no question — being right here where there’s so much talent — that we’re recruiting the state very hard,” Whalen said last fall.

Bueckers is one of those basketball-loving kids from Minnesota who grew up in the Lynx era, and now she’s well on her way to being one of those oft-emulated players herself.

“People gravitate toward her. She’s the type of kid you can’t help but love,” Hopkins (Minn.) High School girls basketball Coach Tara Starks said. “Her impact has just been ridiculous, and it’ll continue to be that way.”

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