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Iowa State women’s basketball wants execution to match effort
Cyclones host Kansas Wednesday in Big 12 home opener and Bill Fennelly is looking for a little more
Rob Gray
Dec. 31, 2024 1:45 pm, Updated: Dec. 31, 2024 3:44 pm
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AMES — Bill Fennelly’s a self-described worrier.
“I worry about a lot of stuff,” said Iowa State’s veteran women’s basketball coach, whose team (9-5, 0-1 Big 12) faces Kansas (10-2, 0-1) at 2 p.m. Wednesday in its Big 12 home opener at Hilton Coliseum. “That’s my number one trait, quality: I worry well."
But — and you should have known a “but” was coming — the last thing Fennelly’s worried about as conference play kicks into high gear is the Cyclones’ resiliency.
ISU has endured humbling losses to No. 2 South Carolina and seventh-ranked UConn, as well as a pair of six-point setbacks to No. 23 Iowa and 11-1 Oklahoma State. The Cyclones have fought back from steep deficits in almost all of their losses, however, and Fennelly said his leadership core formed by senior point guard Emily Ryan, center Audi Crooks, and guard/forward Addy Brown buoys his hopes that Big 12 season could still bring considerable success.
“Obviously, moral victories don’t mean crap to anybody, but I think it shows that they’re gonna keep competing, and that’s kind of been the case all year,” Fennelly said. “Now, there’s competing and then there’s execution that comes with a level of effort.”
In other words, hard work doesn’t always translate into positive results. ISU hopes that eventually its best efforts will lead to a string of victories that could start against a Jayhawks team that features polished playmaker S’Mya Nichols, who leads her team in scoring (21.4 points per game) and assists (4.9).
The star sophomore point guard scored 16 points and had four assists in both meetings with the Cyclones last season, which the teams split.
“S’Mya Nichols is a pro,” Fennelly said. “You look at her numbers and it’s staggering. … She’s got the ball in her hands a lot. She’s really, really good at what she does. And then defensively, (Kansas always has) smart pressure, man-to-man, physical defense, tough to score on.”
So ISU is facing another formidable challenge — something its has embraced already just in scheduling teams such as South Carolina and UConn.
“We knew what was coming,” said Brown, who ranks second on her team in scoring (14.1 points per game) and rebounding (7.3). “We knew what signed up for. They’re both great teams and I think we needed to see that type of talent early on just to prepare for our conference.”
Nineteen of those regular season Big 12 games remain, and ISU’s still poised to be a contender if its execution can match its effort.
“We’ve had teams, we’ve had games (since) forever and I would walk out and say, ‘We really played hard,’” Fennelly said. “But if you don’t guard right (and) if you don’t make shots, you lose.”
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