Lady Vols coach wants a stronger finishing touch

STEVE MEGARGEE
AP Sports Writer

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Holly Warlick believes Tennessee’s bid to return to national title contention is more a mental hurdle than a physical test.

The Lady Vols were rolling going into last season’s NCAA tournament. The momentum carried only so far and Tennessee lost in a regional semifinal. Warlick wants to make sure her team doesn’t peak too early again.

“I think our team needs to have a little bit more togetherness,” the Tennessee coach told The Associated Press. “We have to have a little bit more discipline, a little bit more toughness. I thought we were tough at times, but not all the time. I thought sometimes when our back got against the wall, we folded a little bit.”

Tennessee has shown plenty of grit at times. The Lady Vols won last season’s Southeastern Conference tournament by erasing double-digit deficits in each of their three games.

But they weren’t the same in the NCAA tournament. Tennessee was tied early in the second half of victories over Northwestern State and Southern California before falling 73-62 to Maryland.

The Lady Vols lose leading scorer Meighan Simmons but return everyone else as they chase the Final Four bid that has eluded them since the 2008 national championship. That represents Tennessee’s longest Final Four drought since the NCAA started running the tournament in 1982.

“I don’t think we played well in any of the three (NCAA tournament) games we played,” Warlick said. “The first two, we got by. In the regional semifinals, we couldn’t get by with a team like Maryland. For some reason, we weren’t as focused. It was almost like we peaked at the SEC tournament.”

Warlick is 56-14 since succeeding Pat Summitt, who remains on staff as head coach emeritus after stepping down in 2012 with the most career wins of any men’s or women’s college basketball coach in history.

Tennessee won an SEC regular-season title in Warlick’s debut season and was 29-6 with a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament last season. Warlick has proved a strong recruiter, landing center Mercedes Russell in the fall of 2012 and recently adding North Carolina transfer Diamond DeShields, who will sit out the 2014-15 season.

“Holly continues to do a very, very good job,” athletic director Dave Hart said. “Filling in for a legend is no easy task, and she’s handled that very well.”

The Lady Vols just haven’t ended seasons the way they wanted. Warlick notes Tennessee hasn’t played particularly well in each of her two NCAA tournament losses.

“I just think at times certain people put a lot of pressure on themselves,” Warlick said. “We’ve got to learn how to compete at the highest level when the game’s on the line and (if) you lose, you’re out.”

Inexperience may have played a part in last season’s troubles. Tennessee had only two seniors and one junior in Warlick’s first season. Simmons was Tennessee’s lone senior last season.

That shouldn’t be an issue this year.

Senior center Isabelle Harrison was a first-team all-SEC selection last season. Senior guard Ariel Massengale, a three-year starter, is back after missing the last 16 games of the 2013-14 season with a head injury. A third senior is forward Cierra Burdick, who has 44 career starts.

Tennessee returns five players with at least 19 starts and eight players who averaged more than 15 minutes a game last season. That group has helped Tennessee remain among the SEC’s top schools in the post-Summitt era.

“We want to compete for the national championship,” Warlick said. “We sell that to these kids. That’s why they came here. We haven’t done it in a while. These kids want to get us back there.”

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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