So there's progress, which is what the Lady Vols have made since the beginning of the season, and there's lack of progress, which is where their pursuit of a #1 seed in the NCAA Tournament is. That's how it goes for a team that can beat anyone (well, almost anyone) at home but can't get it done against the elite teams on the road. That's how this last week went for them, and it's less an unfortunate event and more the continuation of a trend.
The frustrating part is that both these games were winnable. The road game against Kentucky was ugly, hectic, frantic, and the worst possible scenario playing against a team that likes to play at tempo. There wasn't a prayer of maintaining an A/TO greater than one (Ariel Massengale was, of course, the only player on the court to do this), but 20 turnovers and a .383 percentage from the field isn't going to cut it. At this point, we expect Meighan Simmons to shoot sub-50% from the floor; we don't expect Shekinna Stricklen to go 3-12, though.
That being said, even with the chaos and Kentucky going up 10 around the under-8 thanks to an absurd prayer of a 3 that A'Dia Mathies threw up JP Prince-style (that is, fouled on a three and made both the three and the FT), the Lady Vols did a great job to force the game back to even - heck, they were even leading late and had the ball on the next-to-last possession. Then again, that didn't work out quite like you expect; Stricklen got called on a charge (which was ...um, questionable and let's just move on) and Mathies hit a runner in traffic as the game expired, giving Kentucky the 61-60 win. Frustrating way to end it, but not unjustified.
Of course, the Ladies came home and promptly housed Vanderbilt to the tune of 87-64. This was closer than it needed to be for a lot of the game until the Lady Vols turned on the afterburners in the second half. This game was Powered By Glory (Johnson), who has been a house afire since the Stanford loss. (On a related note, Glory and Vicki Baugh both get a pass for their play over the last week; Glory put up a 17/7 in Lexington and a 16/13 with 5 steals in Knoxville; Baugh went 16/9 and 16/7 respectively, and there's some serious chemistry between them. The team struggles are not their fault.) Massengale hit double-digit assists for the first time in a Lady Vol jersey (I think), Stricklen went for 20, and that was that.
And yet, it's not enough. This team is still on the 2/3 seed line, and there's basically one more opportunity to get to the 1 line. That opportunity comes on the 23rd, in a game in South Bend against now-#2 Notre Dame (aka the team that knocked the Lady Vols out of the tourney last year). Win on the road and that's the marquee victory Tennessee's resume quite frankly lacks. Lose and it's fine - it's not like the team is in danger of missing the tourney. However, a loss there means the Baby Vols are also going to graduate being one of the few classes under Pat Summitt to not make a Final Four while on-campus. That doesn't sound good, does it?

It's not that a 2 or 3 seed is particularly harder to make the tournament than the 1; this team is more than talented enough to make the Final Four. However, at the highest levels potential victors are defined by what they did on the road against elite teams. That record ...well, that record isn't good. That looks like a close victory over Rutgers, a close loss to Kentucky, and an absolute blowout against Stanford. Notre Dame is much closer to Stanford than they are Rutgers or Kentucky (who both may challenge for a Final Four spot, but not for the title). Win in South Bend and we'll start to entertain Final Four or title hopes (okay, we'll entertain them regardless, but they'll be real reachable goals than instead of hopeful dreams); lose and it won't be anything that we haven't seen so far this season.
Elite Eight as a potential peak for a Lady Vol club just sounds wrong, though. How do the Lady Vols get out of that rut and reach their potential?
0 recs | 4 comments
There are moments I'd like to see a Massengale-Spani-Stricklen-Baugh-Johnson line.
David Hooper - January 17, 2012
That's close to the best five, if not the best five outright.
Chris Pendley - January 17, 2012
Right now, there are three "must play" players: Ariel, Glory, and Shekinna.
If there was a lockdown perimeter defender not named Glory, that would be the 4th, and the 5th slot could be passed around depending on the opponent.
David Hooper - January 17, 2012
We're going to need three-point shooting against LSU.
We don’t need many – perhaps just 3 or 4 – but enough to keep their zone honest. Otherwise, they’ll collapse it down and make interior passing extremely difficult.
David Hooper - January 17, 2012
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