TH#S&AMECOCK “I \ f \ T "V rTl GAME SCHEDULE W 11 |f 11 V f I 1 i MEN’S TENNIS at ITA Southeast Regional, Thursday |—* ■ ■ | EQUESTRIAN vs. Georgia, 2 p.m. Saturday L^| V l|| | l ^ FOOTBALL vs. Vanderbilt, 3:30 p.m. Saturday Page 10 ' KV '-/ —I— V. —I— fV-' Wednesday, Oct. 19,2005 Experience encourages hoops coach in Preseason similarities to Elite Eight team striking to USCs Walvius IDiquel Jacobs STAFF WRITER When five of your 14 players come from overseas, any coach would be left to wonder how the lines of communication and type of play will be different for those players, especially for a team that last season had no seniors, one junior.and eight sophomores. However, USC women’s basketball coach Susan Walvius has spent the past two seasons rebuilding with her group of young players, and after playing a summer tour throughout Europe, believes she finally has the talent, chemistry and experience to compete in the SEC. “When we had our press conference last year, I told you at that time, I didn’t know how we were going to be,” Walvius said. “We did not have a group of leaders, and we did not have a senior or junior class. I - - - - c>- o The Gamecocks also weren’t sure of what it took to play to the level of Tennessee, Vanderbilt, LSU and the rest of the SEC elite. The team struggled to an 8-20 record, but _ improved to a 2-12 mark in the conference, one game better than a season before when the team relied on six freshmen in the nine-player rotation.- Now those players have two seasons of experience, and the team is convinced that those down years prepared them for what they hope will be a breakout year. “This year I feel very different about our team,” Walvius said. “I think we have a pretty legitimate chance. We have a chance because we had an opportunity to take our team to Europe. We took our team to Europe the year before we went to the Elite Eight, and we were in a similar situation as we are in now.” During the 2001-2002 season, the Gamecocks rode a 25-7 record and fell within three games of winning the national championship. With five __l _ ...I_U~A played a combined 370 games as underclassmen, Walvius credited the teams tremendous success to experience. The eight juniors alone on this season’s team have played in 334 games with 163 starts. “We’ve grown up together,” junior guard Lauren Simms said. “We’ve been playing together for the past two years, and I think our chemistry is better now than ever. We know each other’s games and we’re all comfortable together. “We have a team with two years of foundation of teaching and a team that has been through the experience of playing in the SEC for two years,” Walvius said. “It’s nice to have a junior class that has been on the floor. There are a lot of juniors in this conference that now, for the first time, have the first chance to play.” The team tested how those years of experience would work by playing games in Europe that included teams from Croatia and the Czech Republic, countries three Gamecock players call home. Junior forward i r l • t I II I I iVlClalilv JU1U15UI1 GpECJAL TEAMS t?EFEN