Lynn Barry

Lynn Norenberg
College The College of William & Mary
Conference VAIAW (present-day CAA)
Sport Basketball
Position Forward
Jersey # 22 (retired)
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Nationality American
Born 1959
St. Petersburg, Florida
High school Lakewood
St. Petersburg, Florida

Lynn A. Barry (née Norenberg) is an American former assistant director of USA women's basketball and former adviser to the Women's National Basketball Association.[1][2] Barry is also considered to be the most talented player in The College of William & Mary's women’s basketball program history.[3]

Contents

Personal

Born in St. Petersburg, Florida, Norenberg attended her hometown's Lakewood High School where she graduated in 1977.[2] She currently resides in Colorado Springs, Colorado and is married to Basketball Hall of Famer Rick Barry. They have one son together, Canyon (Rick has four sons — Jon, Brent, Scooter and Drew — by his first wife).[2]

College

Lynn Barry (then Norenberg) attended The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia from 1977-1981.[3] By the time she graduated, she had become the most decorated player in school history after having established 11 school records (six of which still stand).[4] Lynn was a four-year starter and co-captain. She was named the conference Player of the Year as a freshman and led the team to the VAIAW state championship during her sophomore campaign, and for her career she scored exactly 1,500 points in only 82 games played.[3][5] On February 17, 2002, Barry became the only women’s athlete in William & Mary history, regardless of sport, to have her jersey number retired (#22).[3]

Academic success

Aside from being the top player in program history, Lynn Barry was also recognized for her academic success. She was inducted into the Verizon Academic All-America Hall of Fame in 2001 after having graduated with a 3.97 GPA.[1][3] Her grades earned her two Academic All-American honors while at the College as well as an induction into the prestigious Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society.[1][3] Barry graduated 7th in her class of 869.[3]

Multi-sport star

Lynn Barry also lettered in track and field and was the Virginia discus champion in 1977.[3]

Other accomplishments during, or because of, Barry's athletic achievements include:

Post college

After graduation from the College in 1981, Lynn went on to earn a master's degree from Kentucky with a 4.0 GPA.[1][3] While a graduate student, she was an assistant coach for the Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team from 1981 to 1983 under head coach Terry Hall.[6]

Lynn eventually worked as an enforcement representative for the NCAA and was the only woman on a 10-person staff of field investigators. She then worked as the assistant director of USA Basketball for eleven years (1985–1996) where she organized all women’s basketball teams for participation in events such as the Olympics, World Championships and Pan-American Games.[3] After the women's national team won the gold medal at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Barry left USA Basketball to become a special advisor to the WNBA. She worked at this position for five years, but is now a guest speaker at youth basketball camps in and around her home of Colorado Springs.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d St. Petersburg Times - A basketball honor. Accessed August 7, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c St. Petersburg Times - Former resident inducted into Hall of Fame. Accessed August 7, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k William & Mary women's basketball media guide 2007-08 (page 86). Accessed August 7, 2008.
  4. ^ Lynn Barry still owns the following single season records: scoring average (20.3 ppg), field goals made (204) and field goal percentage (.604). She owns the following career records: scoring average (18.3 ppg), field goal percentage (.619) and field goals made (607).
  5. ^ Canyon Barry to play at College of Charleston | barry, ramsey, college - RAMSEY - Colorado Springs Gazette, CO
  6. ^ UK Athletics - women's basketball media guide (page 175). Accessed August 10, 2008.