No. 6 MSU Previews Season During Media Day
November 01, 2018 | Women's Basketball
By Brock Turnipseed, Associate Director/Communications
STARKVILLE — Mississippi State head coach Vic Schaefer and members of his preseason No. 6 women's basketball team previewed the upcoming season and Friday's exhibition game during the program's annual on-campus media day Thursday afternoon at Humphrey Coliseum.Scroll down to see what the Naismith National Coach of the Year and his Bulldogs had to say to local members of the media:
Vic Schaefer - Head Coach
Q: Opening Statement
VS: "First of all, thank you for being here today. It is an exciting time with another exciting team. Just as last year's team was unique and different to any team that we've ever had, I think this year's team will be different in its own way. I think we will be good. Certainly, it will be different a little bit. That's what coaching is all about, adapting and getting ready for a new team in a new season. Obviously, we are excited for the coming plans of the renovations of the Hump and what that entails. Again, I think both of our programs are excited about it and both very deserving. We look forward to what those renovations will look like in the coming months and years. Getting into this year's team, obviously, you have one starter back. That's the first thing that jumps out at you about our team. We have four seniors, and that's a great place to start. I love my seniors, and I think all of them have been in big moments, and they have been in big games. They understand what it takes to win at this level. I think that's a really good place to start. On the flip side, I really love my freshmen. I love Jessika [Carter] and Xaria [Wiggins] and what they bring to the table. They are great kids, and they work extremely hard. Obviously, Myah [Taylor] having the redshirt year, being in the program a year, she is able to come in and play this year with Jazzmun [Holmes.] We have a really good chance at having really good point-guard play. Holmes has been what I've expected and probably then some. She's been spectacular. She had a 12:1 assist-to-turnover ratio in the Maroon & White game against the guys. I think she only had one turnover in our scrimmage the other day. She understands, and she [understood] it a long time ago, not just here lately. [She has] the understanding of taking care of the ball. You have to have great point-guard play and point guards that value the ball. I feel good about that position. Jordan [Danberry] can actually swing there, if I need her to. She played that in high school. We could easily go with some pretty quick, athletic guards, that may be a little small, but we were really small last year. I was concerned, last year, starting Morgan [William] at four-foot-whatever, Blair [Schaefer] at 5-5, Roshunda [Johnson] at 5-6, and Victoria [Vivians] at six-foot tall at the four. That worked out pretty good for us, so maybe I need to look at those types of lineups more often. I'm excited about them. Chloe [Bibby] and Bre'Amber [Scott] have really come on here. Chloe's had a great summer, andBre'Amber has had a great week and a half now at practice. We are going to need those sophomores to play. That's the thing about this team—those sophomores have to play, and my freshmen have to play. We have to get them ready, as coaches, today. I don't have time for them to take their time. We have to get those kids ready. Xaria and Jazzmun will both have to play for us, and play right away and be productive. It's exciting. I think we will have some depth, and our depth will be very young. I think that's the challenge with this team. We have a senior, freshman and some inexperience at sophomore. We have no junior class, unless you want to count Zion [Campbell], who's a redshirt junior. This is her fourth year there. It's an interesting dynamic with our team, but I'm excited about it. I'll say this, we have a long way to go. We have a lot of work to do. We are a long way from being a finished product, but you're supposed to be. We've lost eight seniors in two years. Where people have us preseason and where our rankings are, that speaks volumes about the kids that we still have here in our program that are ready to step up and play. I think that speaks volumes to our recruiting, and what people, across the country, feel about our recruiting class. Obviously, we have a couple of kids that transferred and are sitting out right now. I have no information on them, so we can get that out of the way right now. I have no idea about them, other than that they are not clear right now."
Q: What is it like having one more year with Teaira [McCowan]?
VS: "Anytime you can have a kid back that averaged 20 points and 18 rebounds a game in the NCAA Tournament [is great]. Those are some pretty astounding numbers. I know we've had some great players here over the course of history of this program. I would venture to say that not one of them had those gaudy of numbers that she's had—29 double-doubles a year ago in 39 games, averaging 18 and 14 in the league. She has really impacted our program and impacted our team. This year, I probably need to make sure she is getting plenty of touches. We need to have her get plenty of touches every night, and [we need] to give her a chance to do what she can do. She is one of the elite players in the country, by far. She can affect the game on both ends. Getting her to continue to compete and play at that level is a challenge as a coaching staff—night-in-night-out and day-in-and-day-out. She's a senior, and she's coming off being an all-American. It's time to live that every day."
Q: How can Danberry translate getting to a spot to hitting more shots?
VS: "I think that is the challenge. Again, nothing is different today than last year. She's still getting to her spots when she wants to and how she wants to. The challenger for her, and the challenge for us, is we need to get her to where she can finish. You talk about an explosive, athletic guard, she's all of that and then some. We need to do a good job of continuing to develop her and to continue to want from her. I tell several of them, every day, "I just need more". We've had people in front of you, in front of you and in front of you. Now, this is your time. It's time for you to produce. This is your moment. This is it. I need it more, and I need it better. I wish I had plenty of time, and we could play a bunch of three-name directional schools and figure it out, but we don't. We open here at home against a good Southeast Missouri team, and then we go to Virginia. ACC on the road in game two—boom. As you know, we have to go to Texas, to Oregon to Washington. Marquette, the Big East champion with five starters back, here at home. There's no time. We have to get these kids on a fast track and get them ready. Jordan impacts our team either way."
Q: How much will Bibby's summer affect her this year?
VS: "I think it's a tremendous benefit to her. I was really pleased. Her summer was as good as anyone's on the team. She went on the tour with us and played really well. She was our most consistent player. I need her to be better. I need her to be good because she has to play. That's a kid that wants to be good. With some of our players, it's just showing them. I think film is a wonderful thing. Number one, the film doesn't lie. Number two, they can see exactly what we are talking about. If you think you're playing hard, look at it and tell if you really think you are playing hard. Understanding positioning, where you are supposed to be, help-side defense, whose rotation is it, understanding screening angles—all of those things I just think are great teaching tools. I think, especially with these kids and our young ones, we need to use that to our advantage."
Q: What does [Anriel] Howard do differently at the four spot than Vivians, last year?
VS: "Well, the first thing is the rebounding piece. Howard's motor is on all the time and it's on high—smiling. I just love the kid. What a great young lady. She brings it every day. I think the first thing she brings, different than Vivians, is the rebounding piece. She's got a nose for the ball, and that's one of the things that she's really good at. I think she's a great float in our press. She understands it, she has good quickness and she's really good in that regard. Her mid-range game is really good—her 15-footer. Vivians had a good 15-footer, so I don't think we lose anything there. Their face-up game is really good there. We continue to work with her on her perimeter game from 15, out. She has a beautiful shot, and we've really worked hard on extending her range. I think she's comfortable extending her range. That may be where she's a little different—that 18-to-22-foot range. I could even go to 30 with Vivians. Anriel plays extremely hard and rebounds it extremely hard. She has a great understanding of the game, and she's a great teammate. Her work ethic, the energy she brings to a practice, is really special."
Q: How much will you have to rely on 15-foot shooters?
VS: "I don't think we are void of shooters. I, certainly, think Wiggins and Bibby provide that. Howard has shown that she can do that. I don't think we are necessarily void of that. I think, too, we are really good off the bounce, and we can get to that mid-range game where we can be really effective. My job has to be to make sure that I have Howard and McCowan in a position where they can clean up our mess. We may have to run some different stuff than we've run in, say, the last couple of years so that I have both of them in a position to do what they do best—offensive rebound. You have a big guard in Wiggins, who should be a good offensive rebound. Danberry is a tremendous offensive rebounder, an explosive rebounder. I would say Danberry and Howard are explosive. McCowan is tall, big and hard to get around. Those two are explosive. Scott is a smart, tough and flashy-type player that can go get you some offensive boards. Again, different teams. We may be a team that shoots it and goes and gets it. I think our identity is still out there, and that is the answer I can give you today. I'm not sure what our identity is right now. I think we've got kids that can knock down shots. At the same time, I just think our identity is still to be determined."
Q: How has the newcomers embraced the defensive side of the court?
VS: "It's a struggle right now. I don't think we can guard anybody right now, to be honest with you. Again, it's November 1. We're just not very good, right now, defensively. There is a lot of teams across the country that will say that. Last year's team, with the four senior guards that got it and knew it, that was a little different. We are struggling right now defensively, and we are working really hard on it every day. I do think this team is going to be more in line with teams we've had in the past. We will have to beat some teams 66-60 and 60-58, that kind of thing. We are going to have to learn to lock down. McCowan is going to have to become more active. She's still where I want her to be, with this group, defensively. If you're going to be the defending National Player of the Year defensively, you have to go out and get it again. She has to be more active and do some things to help her teammates. This team right now, we are a work in progress on that end."
Q: Where is (Andra) Espinoza-Hunter in relation to some other guards?
VS: "She shot it well in the Maroon & White game. [Espinoza-Hunter and (Promise) Taylor] practice with the men's practice team, right now. That's where they are at. I have to get the ones that are clear and ready, ready. As soon as these others fall into place, then we will get them ready. They are working hard every day. Espinoza-Hunter and Howard are, probably, my two most consistent kids, day-in-and-day-out. They bring it every day, they work extremely hard, they have great attitudes, and they are smiling. They are consistent effort-wise, and consistent in every-day demeanor. They are really pros. I love that about them. I have to have kids like that. You have to have the Dominique [Dillinghams] and Ketara [Chappells] that just bring it every day. Blair, Roshunda, Victoria and Morgan—those four brought it every day their senior year and even before that. I think it's important that you have [that]. Y'all have good days and bad. These kids, with everything they have to do academically and the demands on them, [they do too]. For a young person, not every day is peaches and cream. Those two, boy, I can't think of a bad day they've had."
Q: What are the mental transitions you want the team to improve on?
VS: "Mentally, I think it's a toughness thing right now. I think its understanding how hard you have to play and going and playing that hard. For a lot of what we do, and how we do it, it's that mental toughness. It is understanding that you've got a lot more to give than you think you do. You have a lot more to give than you think you do. For young players and freshmen, that's no different from any other freshman that's come in. They will learn that there's so much more in the tank, and there's so much more they can do. It's our job to help that along and show them as fast as we possibly can. They are so skilled, that's the piece that holds them back a little bit. They can figure out that they can play a lot harder and a lot longer. The faster a young person figures that out, that's when they really just take off. I think that separates your freshmen that have the chance to be freshman of the year in that league, and freshmen just trying to figure it out and get through the season."
Q: How will Howard's motivation be a driving force for the rest of the team?
VS: "I think that's really important. That kid really has a goal—give her credit. She had the opportunity to go to a number of different places, and she felt like this was the place where she could achieve that goal. Trust me, I wear that every day because I don't want to let her or her mother down. They trusted us to get that done. I will do everything I can, and she will have to be an active participant in that. The kid averaged 12 and 12. She was a double-double machine a year ago. She's had some really big-number games, like McCowan. The thing with this team is, we may not shoot it as well as we did a year ago, but we will rebound it a whole lot better. That's where your tradeoff is. I don't get too worried about [who is not here]. I get caught up in "I have this one, and this one can do this, this one can do that, and she's better at this than the one before". I get excited about what this team can do. It's my job to put them in a position where they can be successful. Like I said, we are going to rebound the ball a whole lot better, offensively and defensively. If we are rebounding it better, we can get second-chance point better and get out and run in transition better. In some regards, we are faster and quicker in transition. We need to use that for our advantage. That is my challenge. Every team is different. To have two players like McCowan and Howard, that can do what they do, is really cool."
Q: How much do you want Howard to be a leader on this team?
VS: "I think it would be great. For somebody who didn't get here until August, she's trying to get acclimated to a new system. She's trying to get acclimated to new teammates and getting to know them on a personal level—what makes them tick, go and what motivates them. Anytime you're new to an environment, you want to make sure you don't step on somebody's toes. She's done a great job, I think, of navigating those waters and getting to know her teammates. Like I said, she's very encouraging in practice. Again, I think she's contagious in practice with her energy, attitude and her presence. I think Howard has a presence on the court. I think Holmes has that, right now, at point. Holmes is just really doing a great job for us, right now, at point guard. She's different—she has a presence. She understands what I want and how I want it done. She's letting me coach her. I'm really excited about both of those kids. Holmes, at the point, I'm really excited about her. I think she's really excited about her senior year and getting the opportunity to do what she's been doing for us behind William for three years. Yet, she really wasn't behind William. She gave us things, night-in-and-night-out, that William maybe couldn't give us. I'm really excited about her. Howard hasn't been here that long, so she's still trying to find her way a little bit. She's in a new offensive system and a new defensive system. It takes time. I told you when we opened this up, we are a long way from a finished product or anything close to that. We are not very good right now, defensively. We are not supposed to be. Defensive chemistry is the last thing you get with a team. It is the last thing. We are a work in progress on that end. Again, I believe we will get it. This team will be fine, defensively."
Teaira McCowan - Sr., Center
Q: How excited are you for your senior season? It's finally here, you're the leader of the bunch now. What's your thoughts going into your last year?
TM: Last one, best one. I know we've been saying that for a while now, but this is my last year. Just trying to set it up right.
Q: What did you take away from the senior class last year to use this year?
TM: Just to go hard every day, and not to take days off. You can't have days off, and just going out and laying it all on the line, just knowing that you have to help other people who are not capable of doing some things on the court.
Q: How are you handling expectations of being the [SEC] Preseason Player of the Year? I know you got some accolades last year, but does it affect you in any way?
TM: I'm thankful for them. Those are great awards, but at the same time, it's like, 'OK, I can't harp on them all day.' I can't be like, I got all these awards, I'm on this, I'm on that, I don't really linger on them, I guess.
Q: Going to SEC Media Days and going to ESPN this week, does that sort of remind you that you have all these accolades? Do you feel sort of different this year?
TM: It definitely reminds me, I thank y'all for having me at these places and giving me these awards. At the same time, I have to put those, last year's awards, behind me and come to do this year, this season.
Q: Does that add to the pressure of what you're trying to do this year, knowing that you have these accolades and now people are expecting you to live up to them?
TM: No, that's just not my personality. I just don't get pressured. I got picked for this, and now I have to go out and live up to this, and then it's too much to worry about. I don't want to stress myself out. I just kind of let them fall where they may.
Q: Was it hard finding people to learn from, to just learn how to be you on the court?
TM: No, I think that me just getting comfortable in my own body kind of helped me. Then listening to my coaches, and them giving me moves and information on what to do made it come along easier.
Q: What are the dynamics between you and Anriel [Howard] down low?
TM: I think it's going to be great. She definitely helps us in many ways. She goes to rebound, she can take you out to the bounce, she's going to guard you hard. She just plays hard every possession. So she's just another person that we've added that just goes hard.
Q: How different is it playing with Anriel compared to Victoria?
TM: Whenever she shoots a three, it's not like Tori shooting a three, obviously. But I mean, she can get to the hole and she can create her own shots. We're not losing anything, but at the same time, it's almost like, we're losing a true shooter. That's what Tori did, and Anriel, she will take you off the bounce.
Q: What do you think the identity of this team will be?
TM: We're still trying to figure that out. No one really knows. Coach doesn't even know. We are just trying to figure it out.
Q: What's it like knowing that you're the senior class trying to set the expectation?
TM: Well, we set a standard here at Mississippi State. We expect nothing less than getting back to the Final Four. So whatever we have to do to get there, that's just what we'll have to do. We'll just have to buckle down, listen to coaches, do the little things that we didn't get done in the championship game to get the win.
Q: What are some of things right now you would say you have to get better at this to get back to the Final Four?
TM: Just focusing on the little things-- the boxing out, rebounding, not hustling to a spot when the ball's being taken out of bounds. Just the little hustle plays, I guess.
Q: Coach Schaefer just said he doesn't think you guys are very good at defense right now. What would your response be to that?
TM: I would agree 100 percent with him. He's a defensive coach. He knows what he's talking about. If he says it, we must not be too good at it.
Q: How long do you think it will take you guys to get where you want to be on defense?
TM: I don't think it will take long, because every day we're getting better. We have a lot of good kids, so they have to learn their spots and sometimes they have these mental breaks, they don't know where to go or what to do. It's all in teaching, showing, and then them putting it into motion and knowing where to be on defense.
Q: What's that dynamic like, without Victoria?
TM: Yeah, I do miss Tori. Whenever teams would double-team me, I knew she was going to be there knocking down shots. So this year's team, we're a bunch of drivers. They could still double-team me at the same time, it's, OK. They have to decide if they are going to let us take them off the bounce and get layups all day, or are they going to double me?
Q: We've seen you grow, personality-wise as well. Just talk about how Mississippi State has helped you come, not only into the player you are, but the woman you are too.
TM: I think it's really humbled me. I think it's really honed me in on things I couldn't do. When you're in high school, you're just running free. When you're here it's kind of like, "OK, you can't do that because you're on a Division I team." It's all maturity, I guess. So just knowing that some things that I was doing in the past, I couldn't do now and so on. Looking back, I'm thankful for being here, because if I hadn't come here, then God, I don't even know what would have happened to me.
Q: Even at your maturity, personally, what about on the court? How has being on the court, being the tallest, how has that made you become of a mature person on the court in how you handle yourself?
TM: Well, I'm the last line of defense, I guess you could say, and so I have to be more vocal. I have to know my teammates' personnel, and so just knowing, who's going get the ball at the bounce, after the bounce, while also, I'm the tallest person, so everybody's going to want to come after me or double me and try to throw me off my game. I just have to maintain and know and trust in my teammates that I can be OK and still play in the game.
Q: Do you feel like there's more of a responsibility on the backcourt now since you both are on the team, especially with you guys both being well-rounded centers?
TM: Oh yeah. I think that we have to take responsibility in everyone else. At practice, coach is like, say a freshman messes up, he's like, seniors, fix them, because the four of us [seniors] know more than any freshman. So he always like, y'all four are seniors, y'all know what to do, y'all have to be responsible.
Q: Can you tell me how much you think Anriel has been contagious? Coach used that word to describe her energy, her attitude. I know she's only been here for a few months, but that's a pretty good word to use for a new player.
TM: She's very contagious. When she comes into practice every day, she's just ready to get after it. If you're on her team, she's going to push you. She has another motor. If you're going against her, you have to guard her. You can't just take it easy, because you're going to catch one.
Q: How do you think that Zion Campbell developed, matured, improved?
TM: She's definitely improved from last year. She doesn't shy away when she used to, she knows that if she's going against a tall player, she's going to do countermoves. She's been pretty smart with the ball.
Q: What do you think that Jordan can do to develop that confidence?
TM: It's all in us encouraging her. When she's missing shots, she kind of hangs her head. We'll just go in and tell her, she's good, just make the next play, you can't harp on that one. Us just being there for her and building her confidence.
Jordan Danberry — Sr., Guard
Q: How can you become that player coach wants you to be in terms of getting to your spots but finishing on a more consistent basis?
JD: Basically, just getting in the gym. Overall that's what I have to do is stay in the gym. I have to work on those shots and put those shots up and not be afraid to take those shots or certain shots in practice against defenders. Playing one on one against our practice players is always encouraged and if I can score and finish over tall grown men then I'm sure I can do that in games as well.
Q: How much do you think you have on worked on the offensive side of your game?
JD: I feel like I will be able to fulfil that spot. I feel like my defense plays a lot in that because defense gets me going. I can get those easy points, those easy fast break layups because I'm so fast. I can easily get those transition points. A lot of my scoring will probably come transition and dribble drive. I feel from watching my teammates over these years, just to see how patient they were, that's something I've learned and I'm trying to do myself is just be more patient and just get my shot.
Q: How would you like to be more patient?
JD: In terms of knowing when to go take the shot and when to drive to the lane. Not trying to drive every time because sometimes I get ahead of myself and feel like I can drive by everyone and run past everyone. I would like to know how to really control my speed and know when to use it and not use it and when to look for the next pass.
Q: How hard is it control your speed?
JD: It is kind of hard to. I'm already going fast so just a little slower so I can go my normal pace. I just need to figure out when to use it.
Anriel Howard — Gr., Forward
Q: What is it like coming to a new place and being called "contagious" by your coach?
AH: I'm just adapting. I think it is not as difficult as I thought it would be because of how helpful my coaches and teammates have been. They have helped me by getting me where I need to go and telling me how to get there, but other than that it's been fun. It's been very enjoyable, it's been exciting.
Q: What is it like to be a new player in a new environment?
AH: I feel that coming into a new program it is a different task. It is something different in itself, but as far as coming to this program, there are some similarities that have been beneficial to me. There are also some differences and I really like the differences as far as how up-tempo it is. That is kind of how I am. I think how tough we play is something that stands out for us. We play hard and tough majority of the time, so that's something I take pride in.
Q: How have you worked to become known for more than just rebounding?
AH: Specifically, this summer I have been really working on my range and dribbling. That is definitely something I've been trying to master and take pride in, so people can respect me.
Myah Taylor — R-Fr., Guard
Q: Can you talk about your redshirt experience?
MT: For me it was the year I needed, and a year that I'm glad I took. I was able to learn from Jazz [Holmes] and others. Just being at every game and being able to experience it with them, just watch them play and see the things Coach wants from them. I feel like it got me to where I am today. I feel like I know what Coach needs, what he wants, and demands from his point guards. For me redshirting last year, I was able to see that more and be able to work on it. That redshirt year was a very key point in my career and I'm glad I took it.
Q: What are you exciting to display for the team this year?
MT: I still have some things I need to work on as far as leadership and things like that, but as long as I stay accountable, as long as I stay dedicated to my teammates, being able to have a relationship and build a relationship with all my teammates. I feel like that's something I've gotten a lot better at and want to continue to do.
Q: What are some things you're trying to teach the freshman who are not getting that delay in their career?
MT: The biggest thing, especially with me redshirting last year, coming from high school or any freshman who comes in, her biggest thing is hustle. That is one of the biggest things that I think freshmen struggle with. Being able to play through it, all the way through, hustle every time you step on the court, being ready. So, I just feel like that's one of the things I can try to install in them and keep rem
Q: Coach had mentioned in the presser that he doesn't think you guys are good defensively right now. What would you say to that and is he right?
JH: Well if he says we're not good defensively, then we're not good defensively. We definitely have a lot of work to do, since we have a lot of new people coming in that don't really understand the concept of help side and helping the helper and things like that. We have to work on that.
Q: How hard is it to find that defensive chemistry?
JH: It's hard especially coming from high school to college, it's a different feel. It's a different type of defense. How coach wants to play, and he wants to play high tempo, baseline to baseline, so it's hard.
Q: With the season starting next week, has it hit you that it's your senior year and your final ride?
JH: I don't think it hit me personally yet. I mean I really don't have a choice but to get prepared for it now. I mean it's here, it came faster than I thought, so I have to roll with the punches.
Xaria Wiggins – Fr., Guard/Forward
Q: What has been the biggest adjustment for you coming to college?
XW: The speed. High school when we played on the court practicing and in games, the speed was way different just moving up and down the court. The intensity is way higher. That is the main things.
Q: What expectations do you have for this season?
XW: I expect to learn from my teammates. I expect this year to be a learning experience and to build my skill up and learn from the older players.
Q: If you could name two things to represent this Mississippi State program, what would that be?
XW: Mentally tough. In the beginning of the year, we had our fall downs but I think Coach Schafer got to us and we know what we need to do to pick up mentally. I also think that we have good chemistry. Losing four seniors last year was definitely hard because none of us really played with each other, so it's great we have good chemistry.
Chloe Bibby – So., Forward
Q: How has your game improved and how is your role changing?
CB: We lost four shooters last year. We have to fill those roles. I have been in the gym trying to improve my shot and be as good as I can be so I can get on the court and hit shots for us.
Q: What do you think the identity of this team is?
CB: I think we will go back to our fundamentals of defense. The past two years we have been different and we will be different again. If we rely on our fundamentals in defense and toughness and be as good as we can be, we will be great.
Q: How did your experience on the court last year help you?
CB: SEC play is definitely different from anything else. That experience is going to help me. We lost four main starters, [who are] great players. Just having that little bit of experience [on the court] is going to help me and the others.
Jessika Carter – Fr., Forward/Center
Q: How do you think being a younger person on this team is going to affect your playing?
JC: I think I will learn a lot, especially from watching Teaira [McCowan].
Q: How has transitioning been?
JC: It has been easy. In high school, I was used to getting up at 4 a.m. for training before school. With the conditioning, it was not a problem. Getting used to time management and getting my work done and doing stuff on the court, that has been kind of hard. The more we do it, the easier it gets.
Q: How do you think you will be able to implement yourself this season?
JC: By getting out there and working hard. I am long and I am tall. I can block shots. I have been working hard and playing tough.
Players Mentioned
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Wednesday, March 04
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL | Sam Purcell Media Session - 2/24/26
Tuesday, February 24
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL | Sam Purcell Media Session - 2/18/26
Wednesday, February 18
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL | Highlights at Arkansas - 2/16/26
Tuesday, February 17










