Women's Basketball

Faraudo: Portland Completes Title Run

By Jeff Faraudo
#WCChoops Columnist | ARCHIVES
2020 WCC HALL OF HONOR PROFILES
 
LAS VEGAS — You want motivation? How about being picked to finish last?

Portland freshman forward Alex Fowler admits she and her teammates were insulted.

“Yeah, definitely we were,” she said. “I don’t think there’s many teams that can say they were picked to finish dead last and then win the entire tournament. It’s just a great feeling for us.”

That was season-long fuel for the Pilots, who upended the bottom-dwelling expectations of rival coaches and captured the title in the University Credit Union West Coast Conference Tournament with a 64-63 overtime victory over San Diego in Tuesday’s championship game at Orleans Arena.

The Pilots (21-11) earned their first NCAA tournament bid since 1997 and won their first WCC tourney crown since ’94. 

Fowler won Most Outstanding Player honors after posting 21 points and 10 rebounds in the championship game, and fellow Australian Haylee Andrews made the biggest plays for the second straight game.

After hitting the game-winning shot in the semifinal upset of top-seeded Gonzaga, the sophomore guard scored to tie the USD game with 4.5 seconds left in the fourth quarter, then converted a go-ahead drive to the basket with 58 seconds left in OT.

“Honestly, it’s a bit of pressure isn’t it? But it’s fun,” said Andrews, who had 18 points, seven rebounds and six assists, joining Fowler on the all-tournament team. “It’s nice to know my teammates and my coach trust me, they trust me to make the right move or take the right shot.”

Asked if they’re going to begin expecting this on a regular basis, Andrews just smiled. “After this weekend, yes.”

First-year coach Michael Meek, who came to Portland after an impressive run of success at nearby tiny George Fox University, said he wasn’t sure what to expect this season.

But athletic director Scott Leykam, who hired him, recalls the day last fall when Meek walked into his office with the news of the WCC preseason coaches poll.

“We were bummed,” Leykam said. “But we knew we were better. `Hey, maybe we can be .500 in league? Maybe we can beat a couple people?’ “

“You don’t want to be picked last,” Meek acknowledged, “but it’s fun being the underdog. Fun getting to have that chip and attitude towards things. Nothing was expected except what we expected from each other.”

Fowler’s parents, John and Holly, made the trip to Vegas from their home in Townsville, a city of 178,000 in North Queensland, Australia, to watch the tournament. They didn’t know what to expect this week, or even this season.

Said John, “We were just hoping Alexandra would settle into the university, settle into academics side . . .”

“And for her to get some court time,” Holly interrupted.

Some court time? Fowler was a first-team All-WCC pick and the WCC Newcomer of the Year, and she averaged 23 points and nine rebounds in the conference tournament.

The reality is there was no reason for WCC coaches to have much faith in the Pilots. They were 15-75 in league play the previous five seasons and had a new coach.

Meek saw something in his players that gave him hope early.

“There wasn’t a lot of belief from the outside but they believed in each other, they trusted each other, they loved each other, they cared for each other,” he said. “All the things that great teams do that are trying to reach championships.”

Then, when the team secured the No. 4 seed, Meek’s expectations grew, even though the Pilots would face three teams against whom they were a combined 0-6.

“I felt like this could be a thing that we could do,” he said. “I thought we could compete with anybody in the league. I knew it would be tough, and it was. We played three awesome teams.”

San Diego (20-11), hoping for its first NCAA bid in 12 years, forced the Pilots into 11 first-quarter turnovers, but the game remained tight throughout. 

“Great game, disappointing loss,” said Toreros coach Cindy Fisher, who expects her team to get a WNIT bid. “Both teams left it all on the floor. Hat’s off to Portland. They’ve just played an excellent tournament.”

From Townsville to Portland: Fowler was named the event’s top player, but Andrews — who comes from the same Australian city — was just as impactful.

“They’ve both been phenomenal all year, just like our team. So many different players have stepped up,” Meek said. “Haylee is such a phenomenal leader, she’s a warrior. When the game is on the line, she is so cool and collected. She’s clearly one of the best players in the league and I think she showed that this tournament.”

No argument from Fisher, but she has been bowled over by Fowler.

“Alex Fowler is just a phenomenal post player. She is super-hard to guard,” Fisher said. “We did everything we could on her. She’s a competitor.”

Turnovers kept coming: Portland prevailed despite turning the ball over 24 times. Then again, the Toreros had 21 giveaways of their own. 

“Quite funny,” Portland’s Andrews said, “because going into the first quarter we specifically said, `Don't turn the ball over.’ Credit to San Diego. They’re very good defensively — they’re long and very athletic and they really got after us and they really put us on our back foot. 

“But once we got the nerves out and started to get going it was smooth sailing from there.”

Fisher wasn’t surprised. “We’re both defensive teams, we’re both going to get after you,” she said. “We’re both going to rotate and trap and get hands . . . all of our games with them have been a little bit ugly like that with a lot of turnovers.”

A pretty good hire: Leykam said he sat in the stands at George Fox games last season, and came away impressed by the man he would eventually hire to coach the Pilots. 

“He is somebody I had my eye on for a long time,” Leykam said. “He’s an amazing tactician. And the way he connected — every kid looked him in the eye. 

“He will never take credit, but as an X’s and O’s guy, in a league like this, you look at how we did against teams the second or third time, we adjusted to them.”

All-tournament team: Besides Fowler and Andrews, the WCC all-tournament squad included Leticia Soares and Myah Pace of USD and Hannah Friend of Pepperdine.