San Francisco - Feminino

San Francisco - Feminino

Leagues Played
WNCAAB 217 NIT - Feminino 2
Links
Wikipedia
Related Teams
San Francisco

Resultados

WNCAAB 03/09 21:00 3 San Francisco - Feminino v Pacific - Feminino L 71-76
WNCAAB 03/02 22:00 - San Francisco - Feminino v San Diego - Feminino W 68-66
WNCAAB 03/01 02:30 - St Mary's - Feminino v San Francisco - Feminino W 74-78
WNCAAB 02/25 01:00 - [237] San Francisco - Feminino v Portland - Feminino [109] W 59-47
WNCAAB 02/23 02:00 - [223] San Francisco - Feminino v Gonzaga - Feminino [2] L 48-74
WNCAAB 02/16 02:00 - San Francisco - Feminino v Santa Clara - Feminino L 65-73
WNCAAB 02/10 22:00 - San Francisco - Feminino v Pacific - Feminino W 79-72
WNCAAB 02/09 02:00 - San Francisco - Feminino v St Mary's - Feminino W 59-54
WNCAAB 02/03 22:00 - San Diego - Feminino v San Francisco - Feminino L 77-66
WNCAAB 02/02 02:00 - Pepperdine - Feminino v San Francisco - Feminino W 54-78
WNCAAB 01/27 22:00 - [4] Gonzaga - Feminino v San Francisco - Feminino [232] L 73-54
WNCAAB 01/26 02:00 - San Francisco - Feminino v Loyola Marymount - Feminino W 61-48

The San Francisco Dons women's basketball team represents the University of San Francisco in NCAA Division I women's college basketball. The Dons play in the West Coast Conference and their home games at the Sobrato Center's War Memorial Gymnasium, with occasional games played at Chase Center.

History

San Francisco began play in 1976. Their first postseason appearance was in the 1980 AIAW National Division I Basketball Championship, losing 92–58 to BYU in the First Round. They made appearances in the NCAA Tournament in 1995, 1996, 1997, 2016, with a Sweet Sixteen appearance in 1996. That year, USF (ranked as a 5 seed) beat Florida 68–61, and Duke 64–60 before losing to Connecticut 72–44. They have made the WNIT three times. They played in the NCAC from 1977 to 1982 and the NORPAC from 1982 to 1985 before joining the West Coast Conference in 1985. As of the end of the 2015–16 season, the Dons have an all-time record of 546–595.

The Dons saw a major restructuring in the offseason between the 2022–23 and 2023–24 seasons. Two of their graduate-level starters, Ioanna Krimili (presently the 3-point record holder at USF) and Kennedy Dickie, transferred to UC Berkeley and Portland respectively. The San Francisco Chronicle described the transfers as happening all across the West Coast Conference, both between schools and out of the conference.

Molly Goodenbour abuse allegations

In 2022, a lawsuit was filed against head coach Molly Goodenbour with USF named as a secondary defendant by former players Marta and Marija Galic. The Galic sisters, both overseas student athletes from Croatia, allege that Goodenbour “archaic and abusive conduct”, highlighting an instance where Goodenbour refused to allow Marta Galic to go to the bathroom and thereby forcing her to urinate on herself in front of her teammates. Marija Galic additionally states in the filing that Goodenbour succumbed her to verbal and psychological abuse, causing her to suffer from nervous breakdowns, and that Goodenbour did not follow the proper concussion protocols.

Goodenbour and USF responded to the suit by denying an intent to cause the harm the sisters described. Both further argued that the bathroom incident described by the sisters never happened. Mike Vartain, a lawyer for USF, commented Goodenbour would never want a player to urinate their pants, and that no such prohibition on going to the bathroom without asking would exist.

The scandals revolving around Goodenbour, concurrent with abuse scandals surrounding Dons baseball coach Nino Giarratano, are credited with inciting the 2022 resignation of USF's athletic director Joan McDermott.

O time de basquete feminino de San Francisco é uma equipe profissional americana de basquete sediada em San Francisco, Califórnia. A equipe compete na Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) como membro da Conferência Oeste. A equipe joga os seus jogos em casa no Chase Center, que foi inaugurado em 2019. O San Francisco é um dos três times da WNBA no estado da Califórnia, juntamente com o Los Angeles Sparks e o Sacramento Monarchs.

A equipe foi fundada em 1998 como a expansão da WNBA para a Área da Baía. A equipe foi originalmente nomeada para representar a região metropolitana de San Francisco e a equipe jogou os seus jogos em casa no CSU Hayward Event Center por quase uma década. A equipe mudou o seu nome para San Francisco Shock em 2007, mudando-se também para o Oracle Arena em Oakland. A equipe lutou na quadra durante a sua existência, nunca terminando em primeiro lugar na temporada regular ou vencendo um campeonato da WNBA.

Em 2019, a equipe anunciou que estava se mudando para San Francisco e jogaria os seus jogos em casa no Chase Center. O time também mudou o seu nome para San Francisco. A equipe espera que a mudança para San Francisco a ajude a se tornar uma franquia mais bem-sucedida tanto dentro como fora da quadra.

O San Francisco é liderado por uma série de jovens estrelas, incluindo a ala Nneka Ogwumike e a pivô A'ja Wilson. A equipe também tem uma mistura de veteranas experientes, incluindo a ala Tamika Catchings e a armadora Lindsay Whalen. O San Francisco é treinado por Cheryl Reeve, que é uma das treinadoras de maior sucesso na história da WNBA.