2009–10 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball team
The 2009–10 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball team will represent Villanova University in the 2009–10 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats are a member of the Big East and will attempt to win the NCAA championship. Courtney Davis is the Director of Basketball Operations
2009–10 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball | |
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Conference | Big East Conference |
Head coach | Harry Perretta |
Assistant coaches |
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Offseason
- July 17: On July 8, 2009, the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) announced its winners for the 2008-09 Academic Top 25 Team Honor Roll. Villanova finished 18th in the nation on the Honor Roll with a 3.346 team grade point average. The Wildcats have earned a spot for the fourth consecutive year on the Honor Roll.[1]
Regular season
Roster
Number | Name | Position | Class | Height |
2 | Rachel Roberts | Guard | FR | 5-9 |
3 | Jesse Carey | Guard | FR | 5-10 |
4 | Lindsay Kimmel | Forward | JR | 6-0 |
5 | Maria Getty | Guard | SR | 5-9 |
10 | Sarah Jones | Guard | SO | 5-7 |
12 | Kyle Dougherty | Guard | SR | 5-10 |
20 | Megan Pearson | Forward | RS FR | 6-0 |
21 | Tia Grant | Guard | SR | 5-11 |
22 | Devon Kane | Guard | FR | 5-9 |
24 | Amanda Swiezynski | Guard/Forward | JR | 6-0 |
25 | Emily Suhey | Forward | RS FR | 6-1 |
33 | Laura Sweeney | Forward | RS FR | 6-2 |
45 | Shannon Elliott | Forward/Center | JR | 6-2 |
55 | Heather Scanlon | Center | JR | 6-3 |
Player stats
Player | Games Played | Minutes | Field Goals | Three Pointers | Free Throws | Rebounds | Assists | Blocks | Steals | Points |
Postseason
NCAA Basketball Tournament
Awards and honors
Team players drafted into the WNBA
Round | Pick | Player | NBA Club |
gollark: Also that some people may not actually *like* it.
gollark: <@!332271551481118732> Cost. It would be fine if universities had reasonable pricing, and they do not really.
gollark: "You pick basically whatever, and we pay for it" isn't really a monopsony; people still have demand for each university, but the version of demand as "willing and able to pay for it" just becomes "willing to have it".
gollark: If the government throws piles of money at free education, you would, presumably, eventually get the majority of people going through university or something. Which would be nice, if it did not also cost a vast amount of money. And at the same time you dilute... whatever the degree is supposed to represent... and I don't really know what happens.
gollark: But that university has basically no incentive to have reasonable prices.
External links
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