Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer used a morbid (but on-brand!) joke when explaining her retirement decision

Tara VanDerveer, everybody!

Tara VanDerveer’s retirement shocked many fans, but it was a new reality for her that finally made sense. On Wednesday, when describing why she decided to retire now, after 38 seasons, she dropped a morbid one-liner — a “Tara-ism” — about what making that decision was like.

To know Tara VanDerveer is to understand that she can coach the heck out of some basketball and deliver a zinger like nobody else can. Affectionately known as “Tara-isms,” VanDerveer’s witty but impactful one-liners were a staple of her career. That wasn’t going to change simply because she’s retiring.

During her retirement press conference on Wednesday, the Stanford head coach explained to the media that she wasn’t sure the day she would no longer coach would ever come. VanDerveer jokingly said she thought the conclusion of her life would be on the bench.

“Sometimes, it’s just…you’re ready. I just felt I’m ready. I never really thought I would be. I kind of just felt like maybe I would keel over on the bench…because I love it.”

Pac-12 women’s basketball report: Stanford wins last conference title, three bubble teams all lose

Tara VanDerveer and Stanford were supposed to have a down year. Instead, they won the Pac-12 convincingly.

On Thursday night, the Stanford Cardinal — already assured of a share of the Pac-12 women’s basketball championship — clinched the outright title in the final season of Pac-12 women’s hoops by beating Oregon State in Corvallis. Stanford winning the Pac-12 women’s basketball title is a very regular and common occurrence. The Cardinal have won 27 Pac-10 or Pac-12 titles dating back to 1989. Legendary coach Tara VanDerveer has won 26 of those titles. Yet, this most recent title is special.

We will explain why this latest Pac-12 championship for Stanford is so remarkable, and we’ll also go through the Pac-12 women’s basketball bubble watch, in the slides below:

One final legendary Pac-12 moment: Tara VanDerveer becomes all-time basketball wins leader

Tara VanDerveer of Stanford passed Coach K with 1,203 wins, the most Division I wins for any basketball coach, ever.

The Pac-12 is a dying conference. In the next college sports cycle, several current Pac-12 schools will be in the Big Ten Conference. Others will go to the Big 12. Oregon State and Washington State, technically Pac-12 schools, will play Mountain West opponents in football and West Coast Conference opponents in basketball. There isn’t much time left for Pac-12 schools, teams, coaches, and athletes to achieve Pac-12 milestones. One Stanford legend notched a big feat before Stanford leaves for the ACC in several months. Tara VanDerveer now stands alone.

VanDerveer scored her 1,203rd career Division I victory on Sunday afternoon when Stanford beat Oregon State, 65-56. VanDerveer passed Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski — Coach K — for the top spot on the all-time Division I basketball wins list.

VanDerveer has won three national championships at Stanford and reached 14 Final Fours. At the age of 70, she now has an achievement reflective of the marriage of her longevity and excellence.

Notable about this win: Stanford won without injured star Cameron Brink, who got hurt Friday against Oregon. VanDerveer had to make adjustments for this game and get an altered lineup ready to play against a good Oregon State team which is likely to make the NCAA Tournament.

In her record-breaking win, VanDerveer reminded everyone how great she is, a fitting tribute to a coach who has dotted her Is, crossed her Ts, minded her Ps and Qs, and who has now eclipsed Coach K.

Thankfully, the Pac-12 — not the ACC — was able to fully claim this special college basketball milestone at Stanford.

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WBB Recap: Slow start costs Oregon a possible upset on The Farm

After falling down 20-0, the Oregon Ducks women’s basketball team plays No. 8 Stanford almost even on the road.

If only they could just erase those first six minutes.

The Oregon Ducks women’s basketball team fell down 20-0 to No. 8 Stanford on the road and although they made a valiant effort the rest of the way, the Cardinal came away with an 88-63 win.

It was a historic victory for Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer as she collected win No. 1,202, which ties her with former Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski for all-time wins in college basketball.

For Oregon, however, it was just another loss down on The Farm, a place the Ducks have won just three times in their history. They fell to 11-8 overall and 2-4 in Pac-12 play.

The game was over in that initial 20-0 run, but then Stanford’s All-American Cameron Brink injured her knee and didn’t come back rest on the night. With Stanford’s post player out, the Ducks went on a 15-2 run and cut that deficit in half at the end of the first quarter at 25-15.

Oregon eventually cut the lead to eight, but could never make a further dent in the deficit. The Ducks could have easily thrown in the towel, but they kept on playing and gained confidence which will hopefully carry over to the next game at California on Sunday.

Chance Gray led the Ducks with 19 points on 6-of-14 from the floor and 3-of-5 from three-point land. Phillipina Kyei was the only other Duck in double figures with 14 points.

The Ducks will next battle the Bears on Sunday for a noon tip-off.

Now at USC, Lindsay Gottlieb calls upon her experience vs Tara VanDerveer to foil Stanford

Let’s remember that Lindsay Gottlieb took Cal to the 2013 Women’s Final Four and has coached vs Stanford many times before. That working knowledge mattered for #USC.

This is the big-stage experience USC Athletic Director Mike Bohn coveted when he hired Lindsay Gottlieb as the Trojans’ women’s basketball coach.

Gottlieb was the head coach at California for eight consecutive seasons (2012-2019). She went up against Stanford icon Tara VanDerveer at least twice every season, three times when Cal and Stanford would meet in the Pac-12 Tournament.

Gottlieb has been on the short ends of games against VanDerveer and Stanford. She has seen the precise, fluid, structured Stanford halfcourt offense dissect her defenses. She has seen how disciplined and strong the Cardinal regularly are. Gottlieb knew that the difficult but realistic path to victory against Stanford is to turn a game into a street fight, not give the Cardinal easy baskets or free throws, and make them hit jump shots.

Defend without fouling. Rebound. Minimize turnovers. That’s the formula against Stanford.

Gottlieb got her players to hold Stanford to 31-percent shooting, just 4 of 21 on 3-pointers. Rebounds were nearly even (40-36 Stanford), and USC was plus-16 in free throw attempts (26-10) and plus-nine in makes (17-8). USC was plus-seven in turnovers, forcing 14 Stanford giveaways while coughing up the ball just seven times.

It was a complete defense-first, toughness-first game plan, the only way for the Trojans or anyone else to beat Stanford.

What made the win even more amazing: USC hit just 27 percent of its shots. The Trojans, when they get more elite talent on the recruiting trail in future seasons, will have the high-end scorers who will give USC more margin for error on offense. Beating Stanford in Year 2 of her tenure shows that Lindsay Gottlieb has USC women’s basketball ahead of schedule.

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USC women’s basketball stuns No. 2 Stanford, gives Cardinal first Pac-12 loss of 2023

TIM-BERRRRRR! #USC chops down the tall Trees of Tara VanDerveer, giving Stanford its first #Pac12 loss since January 22, 2021. Lindsay Gottlieb had the perfect plan.

The USC women’s basketball team came achingly close to beating UCLA twice in recent weeks. The Trojans lost twice to the Bruins by a combined total of four points. In one of the two losses, they had a double-digit lead heading into the fourth quarter but couldn’t hold on. A program in a building and transition phase, with players learning how to win, needed to get the statement victory which enables everyone in the locker room to see that success can be achieved.

No moral victories, no almosts, no “good job, good effort” participation trophies. USC needed to finish the job against an elite team in order to know that this program is on its way back to the top, on its way to greateness, on its way to restoring the stature and national relvance USC women’s basketball possessed in its 1980s glory days under Cheryl Miller.

Sunday afternoon in the Galen Center, the Women of Troy got the job done. They finished what they started, and they did it against the really big fish in women’s Pac-12 college basketball.

The Trojans toppled the big, tall Trees of Tara VanDerveer and Stanford, shocking the Cardinal in a 55-46 defensive masterpiece.

The Cardinal, No. 2 in the country and previously unbeaten in Pac-12 play, are a Final Four and national championship contender for a reason. They played a typically strong, tough game on Friday night to beat No. 8 UCLA on the road. Stanford has lots of high-end wins on its resume. That comes from having superstars such as Cameron Brink and Haley Jones plus role players such as Hannah Jump. Stanford has two primary scoring options but also size and length on the glass which can put back misses, and capable supporting-cast players who can hit shots when open.

To beat Stanford, a team needs to be extremely tough, very attentive, able to play initial defense but also tend to the glass and then minimize mistakes on offense to avoid giving the Cardinal cheap points on fast breaks before the defense can set up.

USC checked every box on Sunday.

It starts with forcing tough shots and not letting Stanford’s power get to the rim for layups and easy finishes. USC held Cameron Brink to 3-of-14 shooting, Haley Jones to 3-of-13 shooting. That doesn’t happen if those two stars are getting to the rim. USC simply won the territorial battle and would not concede any real estate near the basket.

Stanford hit just 4 of 21 3-pointers, exhibiting a lack of an ability to work the ball for close-in attempts. The Cardinal couldn’t hit shots when the USC defense packed the paint and clogged driving lanes. That’s how to beat Stanford. Teams must make the Trees hit threes, and that did not happen.

Let’s also check the boards: Stanford outrebounded USC by only four, 40-36. USC held its own against a very powerful and physically gifted team.

The other essential piece of the puzzle: turnovers. Stanford committed 14, USC only 7. Points off turnovers were even, 4-4.

That is the core of any winning plan and successful effort against Stanford. Make the game ugly and difficult. Force Stanford to hit 3-pointers. Don’t give the Cardinal anything cheap or easy.

One more testament to how physically strong USC was in this game: 26 free throw attempts to just 10 for Stanford. USC made nine more foul shots in a game decided by nine points. USC beat Stanford by nine despite shooting only 27 percent from the field (15-55).

Just stop and imagine what USC would have done if it had shot the ball well.

Coach Lindsay Gottlieb created the perfect defensive game plan. Her players could not have done a better job of implementing it.

USC basketball made a major national statement. Now — with a victory which was real and complete, not merely a moral one — the Trojans can truly say, with total confidence and certain knowledge, they are on the road back to greatness.

It’s not wishing and hoping. It’s not coming close and thinking the good times are just around the corner. No, it’s real. When a team beats Stanford despite hitting only 27 percent from the field, it’s clear that the right mentality, the right identity, and the right culture exist. With future recruiting classes coming in, and with transfer portal prospects taking notice, USC basketball is poised to take a big leap forward under Lindsay Gottlieb.

The future just came a lot closer at USC, and that future looks very bright.

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Tara VanDerveer passes Pat Summitt in all-time victories

Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer surpasses UT’s Pat Summitt for all-time victories.

Women’s college basketball has a new leader in career wins.

Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer passed the legendary Pat Summitt for career victories when her Cardinal basketball team defeated University of Pacific, 104-61, Tuesday in Stockton, California.

The win was the 1,099th of VanDerveer’s career, surpassing Sumitt, who won 1,098 games and eight national championships as head coach of Tennessee.

FILE – Stanford head coach Tara VanDerveer, left, and Tennessee head coach Pat Summitt, right, and greet each other before an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., in this Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011, file photo. Their mutual respect always showed, and shined. So, when VanDerveer tied the late Hall of Famer as winningest women’s coaches in history with 1,098 victories Sunday night, Dec. 13, 2020, she quickly credited Summitt for helping her get there. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

VanDerveer, who played college basketball at Albany and Indiana, has coached at Idaho, Ohio State and Stanford.

She led the Cardinal to national championships in 1990 and 1992.

VanDerveer has made the NCAA Final Four 12 times and won four Big Ten championships. She has won 25 conference championships with the Cardinal.

VanDerveer has been named national coach of the year four times.

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Tara VanDerveer gets praised by Steph Curry after record-breaking win

Tara VanDerveer received a congratulatory message from Steph Curry after she surpassed the legendary Pat Summitt on Tuesday night.

For the Golden State Warriors, the night of Dec. 16 was just another in the march toward the commencement of the regular season, but for Stanford University head women’s basketball coach Tara VanDerveer, it was one that she’ll never forget.

On Tuesday night, by virtue of Stanford’s 104-61 victory over Pacific, coach VanDerveer surpassed the late Pat Summit for most victories in Division I women’s basketball as a head coach.

Coach Summitt — a legend in the profession — died in 2016 after she was diagnosed with early-onset dementia, Alzheimer’s type. Between 1974 and 2012, however, Summitt coached her Tennessee Volunteers to a remarkable won-loss record of 1,098-298.

On Tuesday night, though, coach VanDerveer recorded victory number 1,099, eclipsing the record previously held by the late coach.

In a video tweeted by the Warriors on the team’s official Twitter account, Steph Curry recognized VanDerveer and the incredible accomplishment.

“Coach VanDerveer, just want to say congratulations on breaking the all-time wins record in women’s basketball as a head coach. It’s a true testament to who you and what you’ve been able to do and build over the course of your career and building up Stanford to the prestigious program that it is. I know you have a lot more wins in the tank so I’m sure there’s more to come, but I just wanted to say congratulations on this major, major accomplishment and congratulations to all your players and coaches that have been along the journey with you. All the best.”

Sure, the Warriors may have lost their second preseason contest on a buzzer-beater from the Sacramento Kings’ Kyle Guy. But in the grand scheme of things, Dec. 16 will be remembered for much more than in the Bay Area.

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