Lake County Record-Bee

Paye's plan at Stanford: `Compete for a national championsh­ip'

- By Joseph Dycus

When legendary Stanford women's basketball coach Tara VanDerveer addressed the media during her retirement news conference, she made sure to note that the program would be left in good, and familiar, hands.

Sitting a few feet away on Wednesday from the woman who won an NCAArecord 1,216 games was Kate Paye, VanDerveer's hand-selected successor as the next Cardinal coach.

“It's a plan that's been in place for a while,” Paye said. “It's something I've been able to prepare for. I feel like I'm extremely wellprepar­ed, and a lot of that goes to Tara.”

Paye, 50, is the embodiment of the Stanford program.

Born at Stanford hospital, she won a national championsh­ip with the Cardinal in 1992 after walking on as a freshman and was a two-time team captain.

She went on to hold assistant coaching positions at San Diego State and later at Pepperdine, played profession­ally and worked as a corporate attorney for Palo Alto-based Cooley Godward LLP before joining VanDerveer's staff in 2007.

Stanford athletic director

Bernard Muir said the school plans to officially announce Paye as head coach at some point next week.

“She's paid her dues,” said VanDerveer, who coached the Cardinal since 1985. “She has been incredibly loyal. I just cannot say enough good things about her.”

Paye's older brother, John, a Stanford quarterbac­k in the 1980s, recalled a conversati­on he had decades ago with VanDerveer about his sister.

“I remember Tara called me almost 20 years ago and she told me she was making changes to her staff, and that she really wanted Kate,” John Paye told the Bay Area News Group this week. “She mentioned that

Kate would be potentiall­y the heir apparent to her. Now she did say that she was going to stay for a couple more years.”

Paye will usher in a new era for Stanford, one in which the Cardinal will move from its longtime home — the Pac-12 — to the Atlantic Coast Conference starting next season.

The soon-to-be new head coach embraces the challenge.

“We have smart women on our team, and they come to Stanford to get a world-class education and to compete for a national championsh­ip,” Paye told the Bay Area News Group. “They're smart enough to know that we have to be in one of the power conference­s to do that.”

Winning championsh­ips is something Paye knows all about.

Coached in high school by her brother John, Paye led nearby Menlo School to three consecutiv­e Division V state basketball titles from 1989 to 1991.

Menlo School is 2.5 miles from Stanford, which is obviously home for Paye and her immediate family. They all attended the university.

“She's had plenty of opportunit­ies to go elsewhere, but this was her home and she loved coaching with Tara and the whole Stanford experience,” John Paye said. “I'm hoping that she gets the job and coaches another 38 years like Tara.”

VanDerveer cited the 24/7 demands of modernday recruiting and Name, Image and Likeness endorsemen­t deals as factors for her retirement.

Paye is confident that she has what it takes to guide the program as it navigates a new world of college athletics.

“All coaches have been trying to learn on the fly with all of the changes going on, and change has been happening very quickly,” Paye said. “I feel like we've learned a lot, and that we're well positioned to compete at a championsh­ip level.”

 ?? DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Stanford University women's basketball associate head coach Kate Paye, who will succeed Tara VanDerveer, listens to VanDerveer during Wednesday's press conference at Stanford University.
DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Stanford University women's basketball associate head coach Kate Paye, who will succeed Tara VanDerveer, listens to VanDerveer during Wednesday's press conference at Stanford University.

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