The Oklahoman

Mulkey's team lifts her up after difficult year

- By Stephen Hawkins AP Sports writer

Baylor coach Kim Mulkey's two children were on the ladder with her when she cut down the net after the Lady Bears won their first national championsh­ip in 2005.

Mulkey has already climbed two ladders this year, when Baylor clinched another Big 12 regularsea­son title and then after winning the conference tournament. She was joined both times by daughter Makenzie Fuller, now one of her former players and part of her staff, and held her five-month-old grandson.

“As Kramer says, I've been replaced,” Mulkey said, referring to her son, a minor league infielder in the St. Louis Cardinals organizati­on who was already at spring training. “I said, `Well, if you were home, you'd be on that ladder with us.' We'd just get a bigger ladder.”

While her children are now young adults and Mulkey is a grandmothe­r, one thing hasn't changed. Baylor is still among the nation's best teams in Mulkey's 19th season as coach.

The Lady Bears (31-1) are the No. 1 overall seed and take a 23-game winning streak into the NCAA Tournament. They open Saturday against Abilene Christian at home, where they have won 14 consecutiv­e NCAA games.

In a 15-season stretch starting with that 2005 national title, they also had an undefeated 40-0 season in 2012 while winning 10 Big 12 regular-season championsh­ips and 10 conference tournament­s. They have been to the Sweet 16 the past 10 seasons, and all 18 of the school's NCAA Tournament appearance­s have come under her watch.

Mulkey got a bit emotional after the Big 12 championsh­ip game when someone brought up the long-term success of the program, which was coming off a 20-loss season when she was hired in April 2000.

“I don't reflect on it myself and sometimes it's hard for me to comprehend just what has taken place here with the great players through the years and how difficult that it is to maintain,” said Mulkey, the first person to win national championsh­ips as a player, assistant coach and head coach.

Mulkey described this as maybe her most enjoyable season of coaching, with a group of happy kids who play for each other. It follows one of the most difficult and emotional years in the coach's life. Only a week into the 2017-18 season, Fuller was about 18 weeks into her pregnancy with her first child, Mulkey's first grandchild, when the baby girl was stillborn.

About two months later, former player Chameka Scott died of colon cancer at age 33. Scott was one of Mulkey's first recruits at Baylor, and the coach called her “the heartbeat” of the 2005 championsh­ip team.

“You keep your faith, you surround yourself with people who make you keep the faith when you're at your lowest moment,” Mulkey said. “And this year, to this point, has been probably one of the, if not the most enjoyable year of my coaching career. Not because of the record, but because of those kids in that locker room.”

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