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Bentley University women’s basketball coach on cusp of 1,000 wins

- By Doug Feinberg Associated Press Basketball Writer

Bentley University women’s basketball head coach Barbara Stevens, shown celebratin­g her 900th win with senior forward Lauren Battista in 2014, today has a chance to join icons Geno Auriemma and Pat Summitt in the 1,000-victory club.

NEW YORK — Barbara Stevens couldn’t imagine being mentioned in the same conversati­on with Geno Auriemma and Pat Summitt.

Yet Bentley’s longtime women’s basketball coach has a chance to join those two icons in the 1,000-victory club today. A win over Adelphi, which has beaten Bentley four straight times, would give Stevens 1,000 wins, making her the fifth women’s college basketball coach to reach that milestone. Tara VanDerveer and Sylvia Hatchell are the others.

“You look at all those coaches. They are huge names in the sport,” Stevens told The Associated Press by phone. “I don’t see the connection with me and them. I found my niche and I don’t need any limelight. I don’t need anything like that. What I’m trying to do in a small way is create a program that can be successful and that’s it.”

Stevens has been remarkably successful at the Division II school nestled 12 miles outside Boston. She has 842 of her wins at the school since becoming coach in 1986. She’s had only one losing season in her 32 years there and went 35-0 in 2014. Her coaching career started at Clark when she was 23 years old. She then went to UMass for three seasons before joining Bentley.

“It’s very meaningful to me to have continuity at Bentley,” Stevens said. “I loved my job at Clark University, loved the people I worked with. I left because I thought that careerwise you’re supposed to move up if you have the opportunit­y. It’s what you’re supposed to do so. If people want you, I had those visions in my head. I left Clark to go to UMassAmher­st. It was difficult, those were three unsuccessf­ul seasons. I was glad to go to Bentley.”

She’s had offers from Division I Ted Fitzgerald / The Boston Herald via AP schools but is happy to stay where she’s had unpreceden­ted success.

“I had some people reach out to me as I’ve been here at Bentley. It would have to take something really special. Not that those places weren’t special. They were very enticing,” Stevens recalled. “What I learned from being at UMass and at Clark was that for me personally it’s not about being a Division I coach, it’s not about the ego. It’s about my happiness, feeling that I could make a difference.”

Stevens remembers the players she coached more than the wins. Her first came against Western New England on Dec. 1, 1977.

She feels uneasy with the spotlight as she approaches No. 1,000.

“All of us, if you’re involved in a team sport, it’s all about the team,” she said. “The focus on one person, me, is really uncomforta­ble. I think part of the pressure comes with the fact that the school is putting some things together.”

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