Upcoming Event: Women's Basketball versus Oklahoma Christian (EXH) on October 29, 2025 at 6 PM

March 08, 2004 | Women's Basketball
I love Sheryl Crow. I love her raspy voiced lyrics that say the truth poetically. I love that she looks like she's 25 although she's 42. I love the fact that Lance Armstrong is teaching her to bike and she is teaching him to play guitar. And I'm not sure what that has to do with anything, except that I was thinking about her when I sat down to write this.
Probably because my computer sits in a spot where I am bathed in sunlight when I type, and that in and of itself means “Soak up the Sun” is bouncing in my mind. But maybe a little, too, because she has a maverick way about her. And what basketball team doesn't need a little maverick in them about this time every year.
After skidding in January, taking a week off, and rolling in February, our team sits on the cusp of what might be. In three days it's Senior Night and the regular season is over. It will be in the books. Caton and Maria have one game and the post-season left of their basketball careers. It seems like only yesterday that we were in Dallas gathering for Big XII media day.
I remember vividly the anticipation, the energy of what might happen, what could be. And here we are looking March right in the eye and though, as they say in southern Oklahoma, lots of water has flowed under the bridge, I am just as excited, just as hopeful, just as energized now as I was then. I have a few more knots in my shoulders. And a few more grey hairs. But I really like my team (STILL!) And I love the way the NCAA format leaves the windows wedged open for those who have put themselves in a position to crawl through.
Ours has been an eventful season thus far. We've had moments of brilliance. We've had spans of ignorance. We've been impossible to guard and we've been the keystone cops. We have guarded the heck out of people and we've been run through like a cheap paper towel. I suppose such is the track record of the young. But the one consistency has been our resilience.
Perhaps that was borne last season and has been passed on to our true freshman like an inoculation. Or maybe it's a result of bull headed, confident leaders. Or maybe it's partly just the stuff our particular kids are made of. Whatever the reason, we seem to be responders: guys who just keep showing up intent on not being one of the millions who got tired and quit fighting just before they won.
Our “big 3” have been big. It's no secret that when Caton, Maria, and Di have played well, we have won. Those three are a tough combination to thwart. Unfortunately, the road has been a bit rocky for our two seniors. Their determination, however, has been admirable. Not once during the tough times did Maria or Caton blame, whine, or run. They just kept attaching themselves to their belief in our team and the great glowing goal of possibility.
The two of them are very different players and very different leaders. Maria grew up in Margarita Venezuela; Caton grew up in Lansing, Kansas. Maria has a 29” vertical; Caton , well she really just can't jump very high. Maria laughs when Caton is funny; Caton laughs when Maria laps her. Caton has been at Oklahoma for forever and a day; Maria has been here for two short years. They both will leave a void when they're gone.
Teams always face the task of re-loading after seniors go. You get the points and rebounds and assists fairly easily. You miss the person for a long, long time. It is simultaneously the best and the worst part of coaching: adding people to your family and then having to let them go.
I spoke to Sunny Hardeman last week -- a kid I coached for 7 years: 3 in high school and four in college! I hadn't seen her since before Christmas (she lives here in Norman!) and she hadn't called, so I chastised her. I know she has a mother already but I'm in the mix there too whether she likes it or not.
I received an e-mail last week from Miranda Stacy Burcham, a former player who is now somebody's mother! It made me feel like it was 10:00 p.m. and I knew where all my children were. Steph Simon stopped by last week and visited for a bitwhen she left I felt better than I had in days. Stacy Dales e-mails me with regularity and I laugh out loud as I type back in turbo speed.
When you know someone the way you get to know them when you coach them for four (or five or seven!) years, you don't have to talk for hours to catch up, (though obviously it's fun when you can). Sometimes it's just a hug or a wave across the gym or a note or a voice mail. But family sticks. Phylesha Whaley will always be Oklahoma and Oklahoma will always be Phylesha Whaley. She graduated and left here four years ago (I'm getting so old!!!) and goodbye was really hard. It always is.
It was with Sunny and Miranda and Steph and Stace and it will be with Caton and Maria next week. But I take refuge in the knowledge that former players and team mates leave some of themselves with you. And no matter where they go, they are never very far away.
We need to beat Texas on Tuesday. Our other eggs are in somebody else's basket, but with a win on Tuesday we could end up with a first round bye in the Big XII tournament. We could also finish 5th or 6th if we stub our toe or the stars around the league don't correctly align. Either way, we'll be ready. What is it Sheryl sings . . . it's not getting what you want, it's wanting what you've got . . .See you in Dallas!