Western Kentucky Lady Toppers basketball

Summary

The Western Kentucky Lady Toppers basketball team represents Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The team currently competes in the NCAA Division I as a member of Conference USA. Greg Collins is entering his fourth season as the head coach of the Lady Toppers in 2021–22 after previously serving as the team's associate head coach under Michelle Clark-Heard.[2]

Western Kentucky Lady Toppers
2023–24 Western Kentucky Lady Toppers basketball team
UniversityWestern Kentucky University
First season1914–15
All-time record1026–499 (.673)
Head coachGreg Collins (6th season)
ConferenceC-USA
East Division
LocationBowling Green, Kentucky
ArenaE. A. Diddle Arena
(Capacity: 7,326)
NicknameLady Toppers
ColorsRed and white[1]
   
Uniforms
Home jersey
Team colours
Home
Away jersey
Team colours
Away


NCAA tournament runner-up
1992
NCAA tournament Final Four
1985, 1986, 1992
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1985, 1986, 1992
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1985, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995
NCAA tournament appearances
1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2008, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018
Conference tournament champions
Sun Belt: 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2003, 2008, 2014
C-USA: 2015, 2017, 2018
Conference regular season champions
Kentucky State Champions: 1923
KIAC: 1929
Sun Belt: 1989, 1992, 1993, 1997
Sun Belt East: 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008
C-USA: 2015, 2017

Postseason edit

Western Kentucky University's women's basketball team has appeared in 32 national postseason tournaments, all since 1984.

NCAA tournament results edit

The Lady Toppers have appeared in the NCAA tournament 20 times, with a record of 17–20. They were NCAA runners-up in 1992 and made Final Four appearances in 1985 and 1986.

Year Round Opponent Result/Score
1985 Final Four Middle Tennessee
Texas
Mississippi
vs. Georgia
W 77–55
W 92–90
W 72–68
L 78–91
1986 Final Four St. Joseph’s
vs. James Madison
vs. Rutgers
vs. Texas
W 74–65
W 72–51
W 89–74
L 65–90
1987 First Round at USC L 69–81
1988 First Round at Georgia L 66–84
1989 First Round West Virginia L 57–66
1990 First Round at DePaul L 63–73
1991 Sweet Sixteen Florida State
at Tennessee
W 72–69
L 61–68
1992 NCAA Finals Alabama
vs. Tennessee
vs. Maryland
vs. Southwest Missouri State
vs. Stanford
W 98–68
W 75–70
W 75–70
W 84–72
L 62–78
1993 Sweet Sixteen Miami (FL)
vs. Ohio State
W 78–63
L 73–86
1994 Second Round at Rutgers
at Southern Mississippi
W 84–73
L 69–72
1995 Sweet Sixteen Toledo
Oregon State
at Tennessee
W 77–63
W 85–78
L 67–87
1997 First Round vs. Arizona L 54–76
1998 Second Round vs. Stephen F. Austin
at Tennessee
W 88–76
L 62–82
2000 Second Round vs. Marquette
at Duke
W 68–65
L 70–90
2003 First Round vs. Rutgers L 52–64
2008 First Round vs. UTEP L 60–92
2014 First Round at Baylor L 74–87
2015 First Round vs. Texas L 64–66
2017 First Round vs. Ohio State L 63–70
2018 First Round vs. Oregon State L 58–82

WNIT results edit

The Lady Toppers have appeared in the Women's National Invitation Tournament (WNIT) 13 times, with an overall record of 18-15. They made the semifinals of the tournament in 2006 and 2007.

Year Round Opponent Result/Score
1984* Third Round vs. California
vs. Vanderbilt
vs. Clemson
W 82–76
L 68–79
L 106–110 (OT)
1996* Third Round vs. Arizona
vs. Princeton
vs. UC Santa Barbara
L 72–80
W 74–41
L 61–77
2001 Quarterfinals Mississippi
Indiana
Ohio State
W 95–92
W 64–63
L 61–70
2002 First Round at Illinois L 84–91
2004 Quarterfinals Cincinnati
Memphis
at UNLV
W 80–78 (OT)
W 104–87
L 75–78
2005 First Round Xavier L 85–87
2006 Semifinals Tennessee Tech
Charlotte
at Villanova
at Kansas State
W 83–66
W 81–68
W 94–81
L 56–57 (OT)
2007 Semifinals Minnesota
Mississippi State
Hofstra
at Wisconsin
W 73–57
W 56–53
W 72–54
L 72–79
2010 First Round Illinois L 51–68
2013 Second Round East Carolina
at Auburn
W 88–77 (OT)
L 66–84
2016 Quarterfinals Dayton
Tennessee-Martin
at Saint Louis
at South Dakota
W 89–72
W 64–57
W 78–76 (OT)
L 54–68
2019 Third Round at Miami (OH)
Morehead State
at Ohio
W 67–63
W 68–65
L 60–68
2023 First Round at Kansas L 72–86

Rivalries edit

Source
[3]

Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders edit

WKU–Middle Tennessee: All-Time Record
Games played First meeting Last meeting WKU wins WKU losses Win %
78 1924–25 (lost 7–41) January 23, 2021 (lost 60–77) 33 45 .423

Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters edit

WKU–Louisiana Tech: All-Time Record
Games played First meeting Last meeting WKU wins WKU losses Win %
50 December 3, 1983 (lost 50–82) January 9, 2021 (lost 52–58) 23 27 .460

Louisville Cardinals edit

WKU–Louisville: All-Time Record
Games played First meeting Last meeting WKU wins WKU losses Win %
47 1921–22 (won 26–6) November 5, 2019 (lost 56–75) 25 22 .532

Home venue edit

E. A. Diddle Arena edit

 
E.A. Diddle Arena

Players edit

WNBA draft edit

Year Rnd Pick Overall Player name Position WNBA team
2001 3 1 33 ShaRae Mansfield F Houston Comets
2006 3 8 36 Tiffany Porter-Talbert G Los Angeles Sparks
2008 3 3 31 Crystal Kelly F Houston Comets

Coaches edit

  • J. L. Author (1914–16) 1–0 record in 2 seasons as head coach (incomplete records)
  • No Team 1916–21
  • Josephine Cherry and W.J. Craig (1921–22) 4–0 record in 1 season as co-head coaches
  • Edgar Diddle (1922–24) 11–6 record in 2 seasons as head coach
  • Jane Culbert (1924–25) 3–6 record in 1 season as head coach
  • Nell Robbins (1925–26) 3–6 record in 1 season as head coach
  • Elizabeth Dabbs (1926–30) 20–11 record in 4 seasons as head coach (incomplete records)
  • No Team (1930–73)
  • Pam Dickson (1973–1974) 4–7 record in 1 season as head coach
  • Dr. Carol Hughes (1974–1976) 22–20 record in 2 seasons as head coach
  • Julia Yeater (1976–1978) 44–18 in 2 seasons as head coach
  • Eileen Canty (1978–1982) 50–62 in 4 seasons as head coach
  • Paul Sanderford (1982–1997) 365–120 in 15 seasons as head coach
  • Steve Small (1997–2001) 88–40 in 4 seasons as head coach
  • Shawn Campbell (2001–2002) 14–12 in 1 season as head coach
  • Marti Whitmore (2002) 2–2 in 1 season as head coach (finished 2002 season after Campbell's departure)
  • Mary Taylor Cowles (2002–2012) 199–119 in 10 seasons as head coach
  • Michelle Clark-Heard (2012–2018) 154–48 in 6 seasons as head coach
  • Greg Collins (2018–present) 49–38 in 3 seasons as head coach

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "WKU Colors". WKU Communication & Branding Manual (PDF). August 21, 2018. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  2. ^ "Source: Greg Collins to be named WKU women's basketball coach". Bowling Green Daily News. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
  3. ^ "Western Kentucky University Athletics" (PDF). www.wkusports.com.

External links edit

  • Official website