Michelle Marciniak
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Competitor for United States | |||
Women’s Basketball | |||
Pan American Games | |||
Bronze | Winnipeg 1999 | Team Competition |
Michelle Marciniak (born October 29, 1973 in Macungie, Pennsylvania) is a former American collegiate and professional basketball player, who played point guard in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). She was most recently an assistant coach of the women's basketball team at the University of South Carolina from 2003-2008.
Contents |
[edit] Allentown Central Catholic High School
Marciniak was one of the top players in the nation during her high school years, named by Parade Magazine and Gatorade as the 1991 National High School Player of the Year as a senior at Allentown Central Catholic High School in Allentown. At Allentown Central Catholic, she competed in the highly respected East Penn Conference (the forerunner to the Lehigh Valley Conference), where she scored 3,025 points for Central Catholic. Her No. 23 jersey has since been retired by the school in recognition of her extraordinary high school basketball achievements.
[edit] University of Notre Dame and University of Tennessee
After a year at the University of Notre Dame, Marciniak left the university for the University of Tennessee, where she quickly became a leader of the dominant University of Tennessee Lady Vols women's basketball team under head coach Pat Summitt. Summitt had recruited her in high school and in fact, went into labor as she was sitting in the Marciniak's home on a recruiting trip. Summitt quickly wrapped up the visit a flew back to Knoxville to have her son. "Spinderella" as Marciniak was affectionately known because of her free wheeling, spinning and slashing style, became a crowd favorite at Tennessee. She scored over 1,000 points and still is in Tennessee's top ten all-time in assists and three-point scoring.
With Marciniak at point guard, the Lady Vols won consecutive Southeastern Conference championships in 1995 and 1996. In the NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship, Tennessee came in second to the Connecticut Huskies in 1995. The next season, Tennessee wasn't expected to be as strong, but lost just four games during the regular season and eventually returned to the Final Four, where the Lady Vols earned a rematch with UConn. Marciniak led the team to an 88-83 overtime victory, then avenged an earlier loss to Georgia to claim Tennessee's fourth national championship.[1] During the season, Marciniak became the focused leader and played a methodical style of basketball that Pat Summitt demanded from her point guards. Marciniak was chosen the Final Four's Most Valuable Player for her inspired play. She graduated in 1996 with a degree in psychology.
[edit] Professional career
After three seasons in the American Basketball League, Marciniak was signed by the WNBA's expansion Portland Fire in 2000. She did not fare as well as she did in college, and was cut after one season. She signed with the Seattle Storm eight days later, endearing herself to Seattle fans before she even took a shot due to widely reported stories that she spent the intervening week living in her car.
More significant was her extremely hard-nosed play on the court, as a nationally televised throwdown with Los Angeles Sparks player Latasha Byears earned Marciniak a reputation as the Storm player that opponents least wished to foul. Byears intentionally threw a ball at Marciniak's face, and Marciniak, in response, charged the much larger and stronger Byears but was thrown to the floor.
Marciniak retired after the Storm's 2002 season to become an assistant coach for the University of South Carolina Gamecocks. She is also an occasional color analyst for WNBA and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball games on ESPN Radio and other media outlets.
[edit] External links
- Michelle Marciniak biography at University of South Carolina Athletics Web Site.
- Michelle Marciniak at WNBA.com.