If Stanfordβs womenβs basketball team was featured on βJeopardy!β the categories would likely be:
- McDonaldβs All-Americans.
- 100-point games.
- Final Fours.
- No. 1 rankings.
- Revenge.
If you choose All-Americans for $1,000, the clue might be: βThese three high school All-Americans were alternately assigned to guard Arizonaβs Aari McDonald in a sobering 81-54 victory over the Wildcats on New Yearβs Day, 2021β:
Answer: Kiana Williams, Haley Jones and Anna Wilson.
You get bonus points if you know that Wilson, a McDonaldβs All-American from Seattle, is the sister of Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson. That sheβs a fifth-year senior who only averages 19 minutes and 6.1 points for the No, 1 ranked Cardinal β a team so deep and so talented itβs difficult to imagine any womenβs basketball team any better, not even UConn.
βI feel like on a good day we could beat them,β said Arizona coach Adia Barnes. βIt wasnβt a good day.β
Stanford opened the season with 108-40, 101-50 and 101-61 victories. It arrived at McKale Center Friday outscoring opponents by an average of 39 points per game and beat the Wildcats by βonlyβ 27.
That was the good news.
If you follow Pac-12 menβs basketball, hereβs a comparison between the available talent at Stanford and Arizona: Stanford has Aaron Gordons, Lauri Markkanens and Nico Mannions. Arizona?
The Wildcats arenβt yet at that level.
UA senior Sam Thomas led the Wildcats with 14 points, but sheβs been around long enough to know it was probably the nightβs most meaningless statistic.
βOne basket isnβt going to bring us back 20 points,β she said, and then described the talent on Stanfordβs roster as 12 players deep and that βthey make you pay.β
The Cardinal also made it a payback game.
The headline on its basketball website said βStatement made.β
Coach Tara VanDerveer clearly spent some of the teamβs week-long stay at a Tucson hotel a mission to get back at the Wildcats for last yearβs 73-72 loss at McKale Center.
βWe came down here last year and it was really tough on us,β said VanDerveer. βOur players didnβt forget that. I know I didnβt forget it.β
There was little UA superwoman Aari McDonald could do to make a difference against VanDerveerβs ridiculously deep and talented roster.
McDonald was ineffective Friday, missing 15 of 18 shots. It wasnβt that she was cold or that it wasnβt her night. Wherever she went, the Cardinal followed with a McDonaldβs All-American. Stanfordβs Wilson called it βtag-teaming.β
Stanfordβs game is as good as it gets in womenβs college hoops. Itβs not that Arizona was overrated or over-ranked at No. 6 nationally; itβs that Stanford almost played a perfect game.
Arizona? Not close.
βWe did not play like No. 6,β said Barnes, βbut they played like No. 1.β
Hereβs how deep Stanford is: Leading 28-17 in the second quarter, VanDerveer inserted 6-foot 4-inch sophomore Ashten Prechtel, a McDonaldβs All-American who was ranked the nationβs No. 15 high school player two years ago. Prechtel averages just 12 minutes per game, on the fringe of Stanfordβs rotation.
Prechtel swished a 3-pointer. Three minutes later it was 40-17. Game over.
Stanford is so deep that 6-4 freshman Cameron Brink, the nationβs No. 3 high school player a year ago, averages just 16 minutes per game. Brink makes the most of it, averaging 12 points and 6.3 rebounds per game. She is obscured by Haley Jones, the nationβs No. 1 high school player two years ago, a 6-1 sophomore who leads the Cardinal with 16 points and 10 rebounds per game.
Jones is a difference-maker.
When Arizona won an epic 73-72 overtime game against No. 4 Stanford last February at McKale Center, Jones didnβt play. She was out with a knee injury.
This isnβt to be critical of Arizona, but on Friday it was shown how far it must go β how many more elite-level players it must recruit β before it can compete with a program like Stanford on a night it doesnβt have its best stuff.
Stanford is about defense and discipline. Itβs about size and strategy. It was able to gang up on McDonald and make her come off as just another player, which almost no other team has done, or will do between now and April.
A few weeks ago, VanDerveer coached her 1,099th college victory, tops in womenβs basketball history. Midway through the game, Stanford sophomore Fran Belibi, a McDonaldβs All-American from Colorado, got a breakaway steal and dunked the ball.
It is believed to be the first-ever dunk by a Pac-12 player. At any other school in this league, Belibi would be a franchise-type player. She averages 17 minutes per game at Stanford and is fourth on the team in scoring.
βThey have really good players,β Barnes said, understating the ease with which Stanford won Fridayβs game. βTheyβre No. 1 for a reason.β