Tennessee, Parker dunk Army in tourney debut



Duke and George Washington also posted opening-round victories.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NORFOLK, Va. -- Candace Parker is a redshirt freshman for Tennessee who can play every position and distribute the ball as easily as she scores. Oh yeah, she dunks, too.
The 6-foot-4 Parker became the first woman to dunk in an NCAA tournament game Sunday, jamming one-handed on a breakaway just 6:12 into the second-seeded Lady Vols' 102-54 victory against an Army team that was making its NCAA tournament debut.
Then, for good measure, Parker ensured her place in basketball lore by becoming the first to do it twice in a college game with another one-hander on the baseline.
She finished with 26 points in 26 minutes, and added five rebounds, a career-high seven assists, four blocks, two steals -- and the feeling of an obstacle cleared.
Dunking legacy
Parker, who first dunked when she was a 15-year-old high school sophomore, gave fans a possible preview in warmups, dunking several times. Then she made tournament history.
The first came when she took an outlet pass from Sidney Spencer, causing the large contingent of Lady Vols fans to begin thinking it was time.
Parker beat Army's Margaree King down the center of the floor, elevated and dunked with her right hand, causing fans at the Constant Convocation Center to go wild.
It was the second college dunk attempt for Parker, who missed against Auburn on Feb. 23. She became the fourth woman in college history to dunk in a game, joining Georgeann Wells of West Virginia (twice in 1984), Charlotte Smith of North Carolina (1994) and Michelle Snow of Tennessee, who did it in 2000, 2001 and 2002.
Turning point
The play gave the Lady Vols a 15-14 lead against the 15th-seeded Black Knights, who were adopted by most of the fans at Tennessee rival Old Dominion's home arena, and it spelled the beginning of the end of Army's whirlwind NCAA tournament experience.
A little over eight minutes later, the Lady Vols (29-4) held a 37-17 lead thanks to a 24-4 run and the only suspense left was whether Parker would try to do it again.
She did, with 14:18 left, working a give-and-go with Nicky Anosike from the right corner, and taking a return pass with a clear path down the baseline. This time, it happened so fast that the crowd didn't even have a chance to anticipate the moment.
But Parker said now that she's done it, fans shouldn't expect more.
"I'm not going to force it," she said. "I'm not pressed to do it again."
The second dunk was something coach Pat Summitt had already seen before.
"It took me back to our first day of official team practice," Summitt said, recalling seeing Parker do the same thing while running a simple baseline drill.
Rest time
Less than a minute later, Parker got the rest of the afternoon off to rest up for a game against George Washington on Tuesday night.
For Army, which had West Point superintendent Lt. Gen. Bill Lennox among its fatigues-wearing, face-painted fans, Parker's dazzling performance likely only enhanced their debut in the tournament, which had already sparked a frenzy at the academy.
"This isn't something that's going to go away," first-year coach Maggie Dixon said, referring to both the positives of making it and the bummer of the blowout finish.
The Blacks Knights (20-11), who were carried off the court by cadets after winning the Patriot League tournament, lost to the Lady Vols 96-44 in 2002, so they knew what they were up against. They gave away several inches at each position on the floor.
Enright led the Black Knights with 21 points and Alex McGuire had eight.
Duke 96, Southern 27
NORFOLK, Va. -- Monique Currie scored 19 points to lead the top-seeded Blue Devils (27-3) and Lindsey Harding added 18.
No. 16 seed Southern (20-11) set a tournament record for futility with its point total, breaking the mark of 29 set by Long Island against Connecticut in 2001.
Tiffany Jones led Southern with seven points, and SWAC player of the year Rolanda Monroe shot 2-for-7 and scored five.
George Washington 87, Old Dominion 72
NORFOLK, Va. -- Sarah-Jo Lawrence scored 20 points and the Colonials (23-8) held off a desperate rally by the Lady Monarchs.
Shahida Williams led Old Dominion (21-9) with 19 points.