Photo by: Red Box Pictures
Washington Closes Out Road Trip at Seattle U on Friday
November 28, 2018 | Women's Basketball
OPENING TIP
• Washington closes out its longest road trip of the season on Friday, taking on crosstown foe Seattle University at 6:00 p.m. at the Redhawk Center. The game will be live-streamed on the WAC Sports Network (link on gohuskies.com). Fans can also listen to Gary Hill Jr. call the game on KKNW 1150 AM, the TuneIn App, or online at GoHuskies.com
• UW's longest trip in years covered a total of 5,262 miles round-trip as the Huskies went to New Orleans before playing three games in Ft. Myers, Florida. Friday's road game will be noticeably shorter: just eight miles round trip. After this, UW is not on the road again until the first week of January.
• Sophomore guard Missy Peterson had a solid weekend, posting 44 points through three games at the Gulf Coast Showcase. She set a career high with 17 points on Friday vs Duke, then eclipsed that with 18 points on 7-of-15 shooting against Michigan on Sunday. Peterson is second on the team with 10.8 ppg.
Scouting the Redhawks
Seattle University is winless to start the 2018-19 season, dropping its first six games by an average of 18 points per game. The Redhawks have taken on a pair of Pac-12 teams already this season, losing 84-54 against Arizona in Hawaii and falling 89-62 at Utah on Monday.
Seattle made its first trip to the NCAA Tournament last season, winning the WAC Tournament title before falling 88-45 at Oregon in the NCAA first round. But things have been tough for the Redhawks this season as three of the top four scorers from that team have moved on. Guard Alexis Montgomery (18.7 ppg, 9.9 rpg and 3.9 apg) and forward Jacinta Beckley (12.3 ppg, 4.6 rpg) graduated and post Kallin Spiller (9.2 ppg, 6.5 rpg) transferred to Columbia University.
Leading the way for the Redhawks this season is junior guard Kamira Sanders, who is averaging 14.3 points and 4.7 rebounds per game. She averaged 11.5 ppg as a sophomore and was the team's second-best shooter, hitting 44.4 percent from the field. Junior post Joana Alves is adding 12.5 points and a team-best 6.0 rebounds per game after averaging just 2.2 ppg and 1.2 rpg last season.
All-Time Series Record
Washington holds a 17-3 lead in the all-time series between the two schools and is 8-0 against the Redhawks since their return to DI in 2008. Seattle U's last win in the series came back in 1981 as the Redhawks won 71-68 at Hec Ed. That was also the only time Seattle has won at UW with the Huskies holding an 8-1 all-time record at Hec Ed. Last season, the Huskies narrowly edged the Redhawks in overtime. Despite trailing by as many as 15 midway through the third quarter, Seattle U rallied back to tie the game. But the Huskies pulled away in OT. Amber Melgoza scored 26 points to lead the Huskies while Mai-Loni Henson added 16.
Up Next
Washington returns home for its first home game in three weeks, hosting George Mason on Sunday, Dec. 2 at 12:00 p.m. That game is the first of six-straight home games through December.
Last Time Out
Amber Melgoza scored 20 points, Missy Peterson added a career-high 18 points, and Jenna Moser scored a season-best 15 but it wasn't enough as UW lost its final game of the 2018 Gulf Coast Showcase 80-73 on Sunday. The Huskies placed fourth in the eight-team tourney with Melgoza scoring 59 total points and Peterson adding 44.
Magical Melgoza
Washington junior Amber Melgoza has picked up right where she left off last year, averaging 18.3 points through the first six games of the season. She recorded her first career double-double against Northern Arizona on Nov. 11 with 20 points and 10 rebound, coming up two assists shy of a triple-double with a career-best eight helpers.
The junior has reached double-figures in each of her last 19 games dating back to last year and has scored 20 or more points in 17 career contests including three this season. Melgoza's off-season goal was to become a more well-rounded player and it shows as she also leads the team in rebounds (5.8 per game), assists (3.3 per game) and steals (1.7 per game).
Melgoza is coming off an impressive sophomore campaign where she earned All-Pac-12 honors after finishing second in the conference in scoring at 19.0 points per game. But she did her real damage in Pac-12 play, leading the conference with 20.6 ppg in Pac-12 games. She finished the season with 570 points–11th most in program history and just five points shy of the Top 10. In addition, Melgoza closed out the season with 120 points over her final four games including pouring in 40 against Stanford–the most by a Pac-12 player on the season.
Melgoza on Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List
Amber Melgoza was one of 20 players from across the country to be named to the 2019 Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List as announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association on Oct. 23. The winner will be revealed on ESPN during the 2019 Women's Final Four in Tampa, Florida.
Productive Peterson
Sophomore Missy Peterson has been impressive through the first six games for Washington and had a great showing at the Gulf Coast Showcase, scoring a total of 44 points through three games. In the first game against Duke, she set a career-high with 17 points on 6-of-9 shooting from the field and added a career-high nine rebounds. On Sunday against Michigan, she eclipsed that mark with 18 points on 7-of-15 shooting.
Peterson struggled with injuries her freshman year as a lingering foot injury kept her off the court until just before the start of the season. After playing sparingly through 18 games last year, Peterson suffering a season-ending knee injury at Washington State on Jan. 17.
After rehabbing this offseason, a healthy Peterson has returned with a vengeance, averaging 10.8 points and 4.0 rebounds per game through six games this year. She has already scored more points this year (65) than she did all of last year (59) and is shooting 53.1% from the field (26-of-49) and 32% from three-point range (8-of-25).
Johnson Double-Double
Hannah Johnson opened the 2018-19 campaign with a 16-point, 10-rebound double-double, hitting 7-of-15 from the field with three offensive rebounds, two assists and a steal. The double-double was the fifth of her career. Johnson followed that up with 12 points and six rebounds on 5-of-8 shooting against Northern Arizona, adding six rebounds and a steal. After a few rough games without scoring, Johnson bounced back against Michigan, scoring 10 points on 3-of-5 shooting while adding five rebounds to close out the Gulf Coast Showcase.
Home, Non-Conference Success
The Huskies have an impressive record in home, non-conference games. After wins in its first two games this season, Washington is 16-1 in non-conference home games since the start of the 2016-17 season, having won six-straight. Going back a bit further, the Huskies are 32-3 in such games since the 2013-14 season.
That Halftime Lead...
The score at halftime has gone a long way to determine the score at the end of the game for the Huskies. Since Coach Wynn took over last season, Washington is 10-4 when leading at the half but is 0-22 when tied or trailing at halftime. This season, the Huskies are a perfect 3-0 when leading after 20 minutes, but are winless at 0-3 when trailing at the break.
RPI Check-In
The first NCAA WBB RPI was released on Monday and the Huskies check-in at #88 overall out of 351 NCAA D1 WBB programs. That is ninth-best among Pac-12 schools, ahead of undefeated Utah (#97), 5-1 Arizona (#135) and 2-4 Washington State (#309). Three conference teams were in the top 10, but not necessarily the ones you would expect: California (#3), Oregon (#4) and Colorado (#9). UW's three losses have come against teams ranked ahead of them in the RPI: Tulane (#29), Michigan (#45) and Fordham (#73).
Strength of Schedule
Once again, the Huskies are not shying away from playing a difficult schedule in the 2018-19. UW plays nearly half its schedule (14 games) against nine teams currently ranked in the AP Top 25 or receiving votes. The Pac-12 conference is the main reason the schedule is so tough as the conference boasts five teams in the AP top 25 including three in the top 10 (#3 Oregon, #8 Stanford, #9 Oregon State, #15 California and #19 Arizona State with USC and Utah receiving votes). Outside Pac-12 play, the Huskies are slated to face #6 Mississippi State on Dec. 20 and just battled Michigan (RV) on Sunday.
Last season, the Huskies played the 35th most difficult overall schedule among the 351 NCAA DI WBB programs with UW's opponents posting an overall winning percentage of .595. Eleven of the Huskies' 22 opponents in 2017-18 reached the NCAA Tournament with UW recording wins against two: Seattle U and Creighton.
Freshmen Making a Splash
Husky freshmen Haley Van Dyke, T.T. Watkins and Darcy Rees have seen quite a bit of action in Washington's first six games of the season. With the trio averaging 16.2 minutes per game through the early going. Van Dyke is averaging 5.2 ppg and has scored in double figures in two games thus far, scoring 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting vs Cal State Fullerton, and had 10 points and a team-high three steals at Tulane.
Watkins scored 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting against Northern Arizona and is averaging 6.2 points per game through five games this year. Rees scored in double-figures in two of the Huskies' three games in Florida, recording 10 points against Duke and Fordham to open the tournament. Overall Rees is averaging 4.7 points and 2.3 rebounds and has two starts under her belt.
Shooting Stars
The Huskies have been markedly better in shooting from the field this season, connecting on 44.6% through the first six games. Last season, Washington shot just 38.6% through its first six games and hit just 38.3% at the end of the season. While it is early on, Washington has six players shooting 50% or better. The Huskies have already shot 45% of better in four games this season after do so in just five games all of last year.
Huskies in the Rankings
While still early in the season, Washington ranks among the Pac-12 leaders in a number of categories. The Huskies are currently ranked third in the Pac-12 and 32nd in the NCAA in free throw percentage, converting 77.1% from the charity stripe. Washington is also fourth in turnovers forced (17.17/game), fifth in steals (53), sixth in steals per game (8.8).
Home Bodies
After spending a bulk of the 2017-18 pre-conference schedule on the road, the Huskies will spend the majority of the non-conference slate at home. Washington plays seven of its 12 non-conference games at home this year with one LONG road trip breaking up two home stands. The Huskies first road game comes in two weeks at Tulane followed by a tournament in Florida after Thanksgiving. Washington then returns to the Evergreen State for its closest possible road game, battling cross-town rival Seattle U on Nov. 30. The Huskies don't play another road game after that until heading to Oregon to open its Pac-12 road slate on Jan. 4.
Radio Show
Washington Head Coach Jody Wynn joins Elise Woodward for the UW Coaches Show throughout the season at Chinook's at Fisherman's Terminal. The show is carried live on KOMO AM 1000 in Seattle at 6:00 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 3, Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Jan. 2, Jan. 8, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, March 4 and March 11. The show can be streamed online at gohuskies.com or by using the TuneIn Mobile App.
Wynn Adds Talented Trio on Signing Day
UW coach Jody Wynn announced the signing of a talented trio to National Letters of Intent during the November early signing period: JaQuaya Miller (Renton, WA/Kentridge HS), Ali Bamberger (Concord, CA/Carondelet HS), and Nia Lowery (Sacramento, CA/McClatchy HS).
Miller is a local product and one of the top post recruits in the country. The 6-3 post from Renton is a 4.5-star rated recruit by Prospects Nation, ranked No. 41 overall (sixth-best post in the country) and the top overall prospect out of Washington state.
Bamberger, a 6-3 post, is ranked as the No. 8 player out of California (No. 2 post player) and No. 81 overall in the Class of 2019 by Prospects Nation heading into her final season at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif.
Lowery, a 5-11 wing from Sacramento, is rated as a four-star recruit by Prospects Nation from McClatchy High School. As a senior, she helped guide the Lions to a NorCal Division I Title, an appearance in the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section championship and a berth in the state tournament.
Medical Retirements
Jody Wynn announced a pair of roster changes heading into the 2018-19 season, as Deja Strother and Natalie Romeo will be medically retired, ending their UW careers. Strother, a redshirt-junior center, suffered a leg injury prior to the start of the 2017-18 season. Despite rehabbing over the last season, she has not been able to return from the injury. Romeo, a senior guard, has battled an undisclosed medical issue which kept her off the court last season. She attempted to make a comeback this season, joining the team for summer workouts, but the condition kept her from returning.
2017-18 Recap
Washington's first season under new head coach Jody Wynn proved to be a tough one with the Huskies' new coach inheriting a team with just five returning players and one who had started a college game. Despite the inexperience and the fact that no Husky on the active roster stood taller than 6-1, Washington proved to be a gritty, gutty team which gave many of its opponents as much as they could handle. The Huskies finished the 2017-18 season with a 7-23 overall record.
• Washington closes out its longest road trip of the season on Friday, taking on crosstown foe Seattle University at 6:00 p.m. at the Redhawk Center. The game will be live-streamed on the WAC Sports Network (link on gohuskies.com). Fans can also listen to Gary Hill Jr. call the game on KKNW 1150 AM, the TuneIn App, or online at GoHuskies.com
• UW's longest trip in years covered a total of 5,262 miles round-trip as the Huskies went to New Orleans before playing three games in Ft. Myers, Florida. Friday's road game will be noticeably shorter: just eight miles round trip. After this, UW is not on the road again until the first week of January.
• Sophomore guard Missy Peterson had a solid weekend, posting 44 points through three games at the Gulf Coast Showcase. She set a career high with 17 points on Friday vs Duke, then eclipsed that with 18 points on 7-of-15 shooting against Michigan on Sunday. Peterson is second on the team with 10.8 ppg.
Scouting the Redhawks
Seattle University is winless to start the 2018-19 season, dropping its first six games by an average of 18 points per game. The Redhawks have taken on a pair of Pac-12 teams already this season, losing 84-54 against Arizona in Hawaii and falling 89-62 at Utah on Monday.
Seattle made its first trip to the NCAA Tournament last season, winning the WAC Tournament title before falling 88-45 at Oregon in the NCAA first round. But things have been tough for the Redhawks this season as three of the top four scorers from that team have moved on. Guard Alexis Montgomery (18.7 ppg, 9.9 rpg and 3.9 apg) and forward Jacinta Beckley (12.3 ppg, 4.6 rpg) graduated and post Kallin Spiller (9.2 ppg, 6.5 rpg) transferred to Columbia University.
Leading the way for the Redhawks this season is junior guard Kamira Sanders, who is averaging 14.3 points and 4.7 rebounds per game. She averaged 11.5 ppg as a sophomore and was the team's second-best shooter, hitting 44.4 percent from the field. Junior post Joana Alves is adding 12.5 points and a team-best 6.0 rebounds per game after averaging just 2.2 ppg and 1.2 rpg last season.
All-Time Series Record
Washington holds a 17-3 lead in the all-time series between the two schools and is 8-0 against the Redhawks since their return to DI in 2008. Seattle U's last win in the series came back in 1981 as the Redhawks won 71-68 at Hec Ed. That was also the only time Seattle has won at UW with the Huskies holding an 8-1 all-time record at Hec Ed. Last season, the Huskies narrowly edged the Redhawks in overtime. Despite trailing by as many as 15 midway through the third quarter, Seattle U rallied back to tie the game. But the Huskies pulled away in OT. Amber Melgoza scored 26 points to lead the Huskies while Mai-Loni Henson added 16.
Up Next
Washington returns home for its first home game in three weeks, hosting George Mason on Sunday, Dec. 2 at 12:00 p.m. That game is the first of six-straight home games through December.
Last Time Out
Amber Melgoza scored 20 points, Missy Peterson added a career-high 18 points, and Jenna Moser scored a season-best 15 but it wasn't enough as UW lost its final game of the 2018 Gulf Coast Showcase 80-73 on Sunday. The Huskies placed fourth in the eight-team tourney with Melgoza scoring 59 total points and Peterson adding 44.
Magical Melgoza
Washington junior Amber Melgoza has picked up right where she left off last year, averaging 18.3 points through the first six games of the season. She recorded her first career double-double against Northern Arizona on Nov. 11 with 20 points and 10 rebound, coming up two assists shy of a triple-double with a career-best eight helpers.
The junior has reached double-figures in each of her last 19 games dating back to last year and has scored 20 or more points in 17 career contests including three this season. Melgoza's off-season goal was to become a more well-rounded player and it shows as she also leads the team in rebounds (5.8 per game), assists (3.3 per game) and steals (1.7 per game).
Melgoza is coming off an impressive sophomore campaign where she earned All-Pac-12 honors after finishing second in the conference in scoring at 19.0 points per game. But she did her real damage in Pac-12 play, leading the conference with 20.6 ppg in Pac-12 games. She finished the season with 570 points–11th most in program history and just five points shy of the Top 10. In addition, Melgoza closed out the season with 120 points over her final four games including pouring in 40 against Stanford–the most by a Pac-12 player on the season.
Melgoza on Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List
Amber Melgoza was one of 20 players from across the country to be named to the 2019 Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List as announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association on Oct. 23. The winner will be revealed on ESPN during the 2019 Women's Final Four in Tampa, Florida.
Productive Peterson
Sophomore Missy Peterson has been impressive through the first six games for Washington and had a great showing at the Gulf Coast Showcase, scoring a total of 44 points through three games. In the first game against Duke, she set a career-high with 17 points on 6-of-9 shooting from the field and added a career-high nine rebounds. On Sunday against Michigan, she eclipsed that mark with 18 points on 7-of-15 shooting.
Peterson struggled with injuries her freshman year as a lingering foot injury kept her off the court until just before the start of the season. After playing sparingly through 18 games last year, Peterson suffering a season-ending knee injury at Washington State on Jan. 17.
After rehabbing this offseason, a healthy Peterson has returned with a vengeance, averaging 10.8 points and 4.0 rebounds per game through six games this year. She has already scored more points this year (65) than she did all of last year (59) and is shooting 53.1% from the field (26-of-49) and 32% from three-point range (8-of-25).
Johnson Double-Double
Hannah Johnson opened the 2018-19 campaign with a 16-point, 10-rebound double-double, hitting 7-of-15 from the field with three offensive rebounds, two assists and a steal. The double-double was the fifth of her career. Johnson followed that up with 12 points and six rebounds on 5-of-8 shooting against Northern Arizona, adding six rebounds and a steal. After a few rough games without scoring, Johnson bounced back against Michigan, scoring 10 points on 3-of-5 shooting while adding five rebounds to close out the Gulf Coast Showcase.
Home, Non-Conference Success
The Huskies have an impressive record in home, non-conference games. After wins in its first two games this season, Washington is 16-1 in non-conference home games since the start of the 2016-17 season, having won six-straight. Going back a bit further, the Huskies are 32-3 in such games since the 2013-14 season.
That Halftime Lead...
The score at halftime has gone a long way to determine the score at the end of the game for the Huskies. Since Coach Wynn took over last season, Washington is 10-4 when leading at the half but is 0-22 when tied or trailing at halftime. This season, the Huskies are a perfect 3-0 when leading after 20 minutes, but are winless at 0-3 when trailing at the break.
RPI Check-In
The first NCAA WBB RPI was released on Monday and the Huskies check-in at #88 overall out of 351 NCAA D1 WBB programs. That is ninth-best among Pac-12 schools, ahead of undefeated Utah (#97), 5-1 Arizona (#135) and 2-4 Washington State (#309). Three conference teams were in the top 10, but not necessarily the ones you would expect: California (#3), Oregon (#4) and Colorado (#9). UW's three losses have come against teams ranked ahead of them in the RPI: Tulane (#29), Michigan (#45) and Fordham (#73).
Strength of Schedule
Once again, the Huskies are not shying away from playing a difficult schedule in the 2018-19. UW plays nearly half its schedule (14 games) against nine teams currently ranked in the AP Top 25 or receiving votes. The Pac-12 conference is the main reason the schedule is so tough as the conference boasts five teams in the AP top 25 including three in the top 10 (#3 Oregon, #8 Stanford, #9 Oregon State, #15 California and #19 Arizona State with USC and Utah receiving votes). Outside Pac-12 play, the Huskies are slated to face #6 Mississippi State on Dec. 20 and just battled Michigan (RV) on Sunday.
Last season, the Huskies played the 35th most difficult overall schedule among the 351 NCAA DI WBB programs with UW's opponents posting an overall winning percentage of .595. Eleven of the Huskies' 22 opponents in 2017-18 reached the NCAA Tournament with UW recording wins against two: Seattle U and Creighton.
Freshmen Making a Splash
Husky freshmen Haley Van Dyke, T.T. Watkins and Darcy Rees have seen quite a bit of action in Washington's first six games of the season. With the trio averaging 16.2 minutes per game through the early going. Van Dyke is averaging 5.2 ppg and has scored in double figures in two games thus far, scoring 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting vs Cal State Fullerton, and had 10 points and a team-high three steals at Tulane.
Watkins scored 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting against Northern Arizona and is averaging 6.2 points per game through five games this year. Rees scored in double-figures in two of the Huskies' three games in Florida, recording 10 points against Duke and Fordham to open the tournament. Overall Rees is averaging 4.7 points and 2.3 rebounds and has two starts under her belt.
Shooting Stars
The Huskies have been markedly better in shooting from the field this season, connecting on 44.6% through the first six games. Last season, Washington shot just 38.6% through its first six games and hit just 38.3% at the end of the season. While it is early on, Washington has six players shooting 50% or better. The Huskies have already shot 45% of better in four games this season after do so in just five games all of last year.
Huskies in the Rankings
While still early in the season, Washington ranks among the Pac-12 leaders in a number of categories. The Huskies are currently ranked third in the Pac-12 and 32nd in the NCAA in free throw percentage, converting 77.1% from the charity stripe. Washington is also fourth in turnovers forced (17.17/game), fifth in steals (53), sixth in steals per game (8.8).
Home Bodies
After spending a bulk of the 2017-18 pre-conference schedule on the road, the Huskies will spend the majority of the non-conference slate at home. Washington plays seven of its 12 non-conference games at home this year with one LONG road trip breaking up two home stands. The Huskies first road game comes in two weeks at Tulane followed by a tournament in Florida after Thanksgiving. Washington then returns to the Evergreen State for its closest possible road game, battling cross-town rival Seattle U on Nov. 30. The Huskies don't play another road game after that until heading to Oregon to open its Pac-12 road slate on Jan. 4.
Radio Show
Washington Head Coach Jody Wynn joins Elise Woodward for the UW Coaches Show throughout the season at Chinook's at Fisherman's Terminal. The show is carried live on KOMO AM 1000 in Seattle at 6:00 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 3, Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Jan. 2, Jan. 8, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, March 4 and March 11. The show can be streamed online at gohuskies.com or by using the TuneIn Mobile App.
Wynn Adds Talented Trio on Signing Day
UW coach Jody Wynn announced the signing of a talented trio to National Letters of Intent during the November early signing period: JaQuaya Miller (Renton, WA/Kentridge HS), Ali Bamberger (Concord, CA/Carondelet HS), and Nia Lowery (Sacramento, CA/McClatchy HS).
Miller is a local product and one of the top post recruits in the country. The 6-3 post from Renton is a 4.5-star rated recruit by Prospects Nation, ranked No. 41 overall (sixth-best post in the country) and the top overall prospect out of Washington state.
Bamberger, a 6-3 post, is ranked as the No. 8 player out of California (No. 2 post player) and No. 81 overall in the Class of 2019 by Prospects Nation heading into her final season at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif.
Lowery, a 5-11 wing from Sacramento, is rated as a four-star recruit by Prospects Nation from McClatchy High School. As a senior, she helped guide the Lions to a NorCal Division I Title, an appearance in the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section championship and a berth in the state tournament.
Medical Retirements
Jody Wynn announced a pair of roster changes heading into the 2018-19 season, as Deja Strother and Natalie Romeo will be medically retired, ending their UW careers. Strother, a redshirt-junior center, suffered a leg injury prior to the start of the 2017-18 season. Despite rehabbing over the last season, she has not been able to return from the injury. Romeo, a senior guard, has battled an undisclosed medical issue which kept her off the court last season. She attempted to make a comeback this season, joining the team for summer workouts, but the condition kept her from returning.
2017-18 Recap
Washington's first season under new head coach Jody Wynn proved to be a tough one with the Huskies' new coach inheriting a team with just five returning players and one who had started a college game. Despite the inexperience and the fact that no Husky on the active roster stood taller than 6-1, Washington proved to be a gritty, gutty team which gave many of its opponents as much as they could handle. The Huskies finished the 2017-18 season with a 7-23 overall record.
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