The Mercury News

Vanderveer still has Stanford going strong since last NCAA title

- By Jon Becker jbecker@bayareanew­sgroup.com

In these unsettling times when scoring a package of toilet paper from your local store can be a cause for celebratio­n, we could use a dose of normalcy back into our lives.

As Bay Area sports fans, we know just where to look for it. Sometimes we just need a reminder.

It’s a place here that gets overlooked for its unfailing dedication to consistenc­y — Stanford, where, no matter what else goes on around it, the women’s basketball program under Tara Vanderveer just keeps rolling along.

It’s now been 40 years since Vanderveer took over Stanford’s dilapidate­d women’s program and began a stunning renovation that’s produced two NCAA championsh­ips, 12 Final Four appearance­s, 32 trips to the NCAA tournament and 25 Pac-12 titles.

The best reminder of the sustained excellence at Stanford comes today — on the anniversar­y of the Cardinal’s last NCAA women’s basketball championsh­ip in

1992. Here’s the best testament to a place where things get done the right way: It’s now been 28 years since Vanderveer last brought home a national championsh­ip and no one in their right mind believes she doesn’t still belong on Stanford’s bench.

For her part, the 66-year-old Vanderveer remains as content as ever at the school. “I go to work happy every day,” she has said.

Still, some days are happier than others, especially since sports and many ways of our lives were shuttered by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

When the NCAA announced two weeks ago its men’s and women’s tournament­s were canceled due to the virus, it meant Vanderveer wouldn’t have a chance to surpass Tennessee legend Pat Summitt for most career coaching victories. Vanderveer, with 1,094 wins, will go into next season five wins shy of becoming the sport’s measuring stick for success.

But when the games were called off, Vanderveer’s main thought was what her players would be missing.

“I mean, obviously, I’ve gone to a lot of NCAA tournament­s myself as a coach, I hope that there are a lot in front of me, (but) I feel the unfinished business for the most part, for me, is the seniors,” Vanderveer said. “Especially somebody like Nadia Fingall, who came back after an ACL. You know, the seniors not getting their last chance. And also even for the freshmen who came from high school, this would be their first NCAA tournament.

“Just all in all, the experience of it. The excitement to it. The build up. Everything about it that we love. Obviously we will all miss it.”

Speaking of the memories, there’s some cold facts from 28 years ago for Vanderveer that are still soothing.

Like in the moments following Stanford’s

78-62 victory over Western Kentucky in the women’s NCAA title game in 1992. Juniors Val Whiting and Molly Goodenbour, the Final Four’s MVP after making an Ncaa-record 18 3-pointers in five tournament games, had been the main reasons for Stanford’s title. But it really took the efforts of pretty much every player on the team.

It was that sense of unity that made Vanderveer happiest that night while standing in the team’s locker room at the Los Angeles Sports Arena soaking wet. Her players had doused her in ice-cold water, but Vanderveer’s heart remained as warm as ever.

“I’m really proud of how hard we worked and their unselfishn­ess. This was a team in the truest sense of the word,” Vanderveer said that night. “People weren’t afraid to set high goals and dream big dreams.”

Also on this day ...

2019: The Giants gave their three-time World Series champion manager Bruce Bochy an emotional tribute in his final Opening Day at Oracle Park. Bochy threw out the first pitch to Pablo Sandoval and Giants fans should have tuned out the rest of the day in San Francisco’s 5-2loss to Tampa Bay.

1998: Ex-giant Matt Williams had three hits and an RBI to help the Arizona Diamondbac­ks beat the Giants 3-2 in Phoenix for their first win in team history. The victory ended the second-worst start (0-5) by an expansion team.

1992: Pleasanton’s Dana Dormann (Lofland), a three-time All-america golfer at San Jose State, won her first LPGA tournament by capturing the Las Vegas LPGA Internatio­nal title.

1971: The A’s lost 8-0at RFK Stadium in the Senators’ final home opener in Washington. Oakland’s Vida Blue, who went on to win Cy Young and AL MVP, had his worst start of the season. He gave up four runs in 1 2⁄3 innings.

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Tara Vanderveer turned Stanford’s struggling women’s program into a perennial NCAA powerhouse over her 40 years in charge.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Tara Vanderveer turned Stanford’s struggling women’s program into a perennial NCAA powerhouse over her 40 years in charge.

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