Sunday, December 11
Norman, Okla.
2:00 pm

Tulsa

at

Oklahoma

oklahoma preview

Tulsa Women’s Basketball vs. Oklahoma Preview

12/9/2016 11:07:00 AM | Women's Basketball



Sunday, December 11 ~ 2:00 pm Central ~ Lloyd Noble Center ~ Norman, Okla.
  
Game Notes: Tulsa
 
Radio: TU's regular season games can be heard on CHROME 93.5 FM and KWTU 88.7 FM HD2, as well as online on TulsaHurricane.com.  Brandon Hart calls play-by-play.
 
Live Audio: Listen Here
 
Video: Watch on TV's Fox Sports Oklahoma
 
Live Stats: Click Here
 
Rosters: Tulsa ~ Oklahoma
 
2016-17 Season Stats: Tulsa ~ Oklahoma
 
Tulsa Facebook: TulsaHurricane ~ TulsaWBasketball
 
Oklahoma Facebook: OU WBB
 
Tulsa Twitter: TulsaHurricane ~ TUWBasketball
 
Oklahoma Twitter: OU WBB
 
Tulsa Instagram: TulsaHurricanePics ~ TulsaWBB
 
Oklahoma Instagram: OU WBB
 
The Coaches
Tulsa: Matilda Mossman (Western Kentucky, 1979), 6th Year
Career Record: 222-180 (14 years)
Record at Tulsa: 75-87 (6 years)
 
Oklahoma: Sherri Coale (Oklahoma Christian, 1987), 21st Year
Record: 448-219 (21 years)
Record at Oklahoma: same
 
Tulsa's Probable Starters
F     00     Kendrian Elliott, 6-2, Fr.-HS, Wichita, Kan., 11.0 ppg, 6.8 rpg
G     2       Tatyana Perez, 5-6, So.-1L, Cypress, Texas, 10.2 ppg, 1.9 rpg
G     3       Erika Wakefield, 5-4, Jr.-2L, Moore, Okla., 12.9 ppg, 3.0 rpg, 3.4 apg
G     10     Alexis Gaulden, 5-8, Fr.-HS, Broken Arrow, Okla., 6.6 ppg, 4.2 rpg
G     13     Ashley Hughes, 5-7, Sr.-3L, Sulphur, Okla., 3.6 ppg, 2.7 rpg
 
Oklahoma's Probable Starters
C     0       Vionise Pierre-Louis, 6-4, Jr., Lake Worth, Fla., 10.6 ppg, 9.5 rpg
G     2       T'ona Edwards, 5-5, Sr., Spencer, Okla., 5.3 ppg, 6.1 rpg, 3.0 apg
G     10     Peyton Little, 5-11, Sr., Abilene, Texas, 12.3 ppg, 2.6 rpg, 10.8 bpg
G     25     Gioya Carter, 5-9, Sr. Midwest City, Okla., 9.9 ppg, 4.0 rpg
G     33     Chelsea Dungee, 5-11, Fr., Sapulpa, Okla., 7.6 ppg, 1.8 rpg
 
In the Last Game
     Kendrian Elliott recorded her first collegiate double-double with 20 points and 12 rebounds, but the Tulsa women's basketball team dropped an 83-80 decision to Arkansas State on Tuesday night at the Convocation Center in Jonesboro, Ark.
     Tatyana Perez totaled 14 points, while Erika Wakefield added 13 points, and Alexis Gaulden and Shug Dickson both scored nine.  Gaulden almost had her first career double-double as well as she also pulled down 12 rebounds.  Elliott had three blocks and Perez had three steals in the contest.
     TU shot 42-percent from the field, 33-percent from three-point range and 76-percent from the free throw line, while ASU shot 42-percent from the field, 56-percent from behind the arc and 85-percent from the charity stripe.
 
Scouting the Opponent
     #19/20 Oklahoma has a 6-2 overall record, including a 5-1 mark at the Lloyd Noble Center this season.  Peyton Little and Vionise Pierre-Louis lead the Sooners with 12.3 points per game and 10.6 ppg, respectively.  Pierre-Lewis has a team-best 9.5 rebounds per game and 14 blocks, Gabbi Ortiz has 28 assists and Maddie Manning has 16 steals.
 
Against the Opponent
     This will be the 27th meeting between Tulsa and Oklahoma, as OU has a 24-2 lead in the series.  The Sooners picked up a 75-62 win last season in Tulsa.
 
Stepping Up
     Nine of Tulsa's 13 players have scored in double figures this season.  Erika Wakefield has scored in double figures seven times, while Tatyana Perez has six double-digit games, and Kendrian Elliott has four double-figure scoring contests. Crystal Polk and Jessica Pongonis both have two double-figure contests, while Shug Dickson, Alexis Gaulden, Ebony Parker and Liesl Spoerl have all had one double-digit scoring game on the year.
 
Above 500
     Kendrian Elliott has a team-high .571 field goal percentage, while Jessica Pongonis is also shooting above .500 with 55.0-percent.  Erika Wakefield is just under that mark with 48.4-percent.
 
Behind the Arc
     Eight of Tulsa players have combined for 65 three-pointers this season, for a 7.2 three-pointers per game average.  TU's opponents have hit 46 three's for 5.1 per game.
 
In Tulsa's Top 10
     Ashley Hughes is second in free throw percentage in school history with a .865 clip (32 of 37).
 
Parker for Three
     Tulsa junior-transfer Ebony Parker knocked down an NJCAA Division I record 144 three-point shots last season.  In comparison, then TU senior Kelsee Grovey had a team-best 68 three's last season and 233 in her career.  The most in a single season at Tulsa was 77 by Athena Pirpich (2000-01), while Grovey's 233 career three's is a school best.
 
Mossman Has 222 Career Wins
     Matilda Mossman has collected 222 career victories, including 67 wins at Arkansas, 80 wins at Kansas State and currently 75 wins at TU.
 
Returning Starters
     Tulsa returns two starters from last season, including junior Erika Wakefield and sophomore Tyjae' Scales.  Wakefield averaged 8.7 points, 3.0 assists and 2.9 rebounds per game, while Scales posted 2.1 points and 4.1 rebounds per game a year ago.
 
Hurricane Picked Ninth in The American Preseason Coaches' Poll
     In the American Athletic Conference coaches' poll, UConn was predicted to win the 2016-17 American Athletic Conference Championship, while Temple was second and USF third.  Tulane, SMU, East Carolina, Memphis, UCF, Tulsa, Cincinnati and Houston round out the poll.
 
UConn to Host American Championship
     UConn will host the 2016 American Athletic Conference Championship at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn., from March 3-6.
 
13 Opponents in 2016 Postseason
     Thirteen of Tulsa's opponents played in the postseason in 2015-16, including NCAA teams BYU, Kansas State, Oklahoma, UConn and USF; WNIT teams Arkansas State, Little Rock, Memphis, Saint Louis, South Dakota, Temple and Tulane; and WBI participant New Mexico.
 
The Non-Conference Slate
     Tulsa announced the 13-game non-conference schedule, which features a potential eight games against 2016 postseason teams, five home contests, including games against Arkansas and the 2016 WNIT Champions South Dakota, and a trip to Albuquerque, N.M., for the UNM Thanksgiving Classic. All 14 of TU's potential non-conference opponents finished last year with double-digit wins, while eight teams played in the postseason.
 
The League Opponents
     Tulsa will host 11-time National Champion UConn, as well as three other teams that played in the postseason, in American Athletic Conference action. Five teams in The American advanced to postseason play last year, as UConn and USF played in the NCAA Tournament, and Memphis, Temple and Tulane participated in the Women's National Invitation Tournament.  (Tulsa will not host Tulane at home this season.)
 
Tulsa in Postseason
     Tulsa has made five postseason appearances, including WNIT bids in 2004, 2005 and 2015, and NCAA bids in 2006 and 2013.  TU lost in the first round in 2004 (Memphis), 2005 (Texas A&M) and 2013 (Stanford), but went 1-1 (W, North Carolina State; L, DePaul) in 2006 and 2015 (W, Missouri State; L, Eastern Michigan), for a 2-5 overall mark in postseason play. 
 
TulsaHurricane.com
     Keep up with the Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team by accessing the official University of Tulsa athletic department web site at TulsaHurricane.com. 
 
A Hurricane in Tulsa?
     The Origination of The University of Tulsa nickname - Golden Hurricane - was created in 1922.  A new football coach, Howard Archer came to town and inherited a slew of nicknames dating back to 1895.  In the past, Tulsa had been named "Kendallites," "Presbyterians," "Tigers," "Orange and Black," "Tulsans," and of course, "Yellow Jackets." The team started working out in the fall with a new nickname "Yellow Jackets" which was apparently due to the fact that the team was wearing new black and yellow uniforms.  The team opened the season and it was apparent that Tulsa was going to have a great year, and trying to seize some publicity for his team, Archer wanted to find a new nickname quickly.  After a remark was made in practice one day about "roaring through opponents," and because of their new jersey colors, he thought of "Golden Tornadoes." But a check showed that Georgia Tech already had chosen that tag in 1917. From the tornado, he evolved meteorologically to the hurricane. A few days before the team left for a game against Texas A&M, Archer asked the squad to vote on the name, and thus "Golden Hurricane" was born.
 

 

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