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The 2024–25 Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball team represents the University of Nebraska during the 2024–25 NCAA Division I women's basketball season.The Cornhuskers are led by head coach Amy Williams in her ninth year, and play their home games at the Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska as a member of the Big Ten Conference.
Nebraska's women's basketball program started as a club sport in 1970 and became a varsity sport five years later. In its first season, George Nicodemus led the team to a 22–9 record and the second round of the AIAW Tournament. NU cycled through five head coaches over the next fifteen years until Angela Beck was hired in 1986.
The 2020–21 Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball team represented the University of Nebraska during the 2020–21 NCAA Division I women's basketball season.The Cornhuskers, led by fifth year head coach Amy Williams, played their home games at Pinnacle Bank Arena and were members of the Big Ten Conference.
The 2019–20 Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball team represented the University of Nebraska during the 2019–20 NCAA Division I women's basketball season.The Cornhuskers, led by fourth year head coach Amy Williams, played their home games at Pinnacle Bank Arena and were members of the Big Ten Conference.
In last week's poll, Upper Moreland basketball player Lianna Adames was voted Girls Athlete of the Week with 41 percent of the vote. Next was North Penn basketball player Kelly Donnelly at 25 percent.
Amy Michelle Williams (née Gusso; born March 22, 1976) is the current head coach of the Nebraska women's basketball team. [1] She was previously the head coach at the University of South Dakota , and led the Coyotes to the 2016 WNIT championship .
Drake basketball will lose Kevin Overton to the transfer portal, the Bulldogs freshman confirmed to the Des Moines Register on Monday. The 6-foot-5 guard made an immediate impact at Drake ...
Yori was born in Des Moines, Iowa, and attended Ankeny High School in Ankeny, Iowa, where she graduated in 1982. [2] In her six-on-six high school basketball career (girls' rules were different back then, using six players instead of five), Yori compiled 3,068 points in her career. [2]