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| Dean Hare / Associated Press
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| Washington head coach Tia Jackson (right) applauds her players while (left to right) Sara Mosiman, Sarah Morton and Michelle Augustavo celebrate following the Huskies’ win over Washington State last March. Jackson, 21-40 her first two seasons at UW, has the Huskies off to a 1-1 start this season. |
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Published: Sunday, November 22, 2009
Huskies womens basketball coach in unfamiliar position
Washingtons Tia Jackson is no stranger to successful basketball, but after two seasons guiding the UW, she is still discovering what it takes to win as a head coach
By Scott M. Johnson Herald Writer
After what may have been the most exciting win of her head coaching career, Tia Jackson chose not her own words but the words of a colleague. Shortly after shocking BYU 67-66 with a buzzer-beating shot last Wednesday night, the University of Washington womens basketball coach borrowed a phrase that she credited to UW cross country coach Greg Metcalf from earlier in the day.
Good teams figure out how to win, Jackson said. Today, we were a good team.
Having been a winner at every other level, Jackson is still learning what it takes to win games as a head coach. With a 22-41 record in two-plus seasons as head coach of the Huskies, Jackson has found herself in the unfamiliar position of underachiever at UW.
Two games into the 2009-10 season, Jackson is still trying to fight for respectability in an athletic department that, during the past academic year, won two national titles and had seven NCAA berths among the nine womens sports. She entered her third season as head coach needing to show signs of improvement.
But Jackson doesnt shy away from the inevitable pressure.
It kind of comes with the position, said Jackson, whose Huskies play at Gonzaga this afternoon. But I dont mind it. When youre changing a program, youre coming in, youre new, youre building what you want to see on the floor, youre going to take a lot of that.
At the beginning of this season, Jackson was asked whether she has had to develop thick skin amid the criticism that comes with her record as UWs coach. She said shes always been tough, and last week Jackson pointed toward an impressive list of mentors like C. Vivian Stringer, Tara VanDerveer and Gail Goestenkors to help her through the bumps in the road.
All the people that have touched my life, its been amazing just to have that collection of people I could go to and lean on over the course of life, of my 17 years now of coaching, said Jackson, who played under Stringer at Iowa and served as an assistant under VanDerveer at Stanford and Goestenkors at Duke.
Some of Jacksons current players have come to her defense in recent weeks, saying that the coach has taken too much of the blame for the Huskies lack of success.
Obviously, the head coach isnt out there (on the floor) with us, said Kristi Kingma, a sophomore guard from Mill Creek. She wasnt out there with us defending or the one that gave up the (game-winning shot at Portland State eight days ago).
Shes considered a part of our family, just like the players, so its tough. But shes a tough person. She handles it; she lets it fall on her shoulders so it comes off of us, which is nice. She takes one for the team. We just wish we could give her better outcomes.
If Jackson feels the heat this season, shes certainly not showing the marks of perspiration.
She has been promising a more exciting product since the season started, and the Huskies (1-1) have provided just that with back-to-back buzzer beaters. What Jacksons UW teams are still trying to prove is that they can win with any kind of consistency.
Todays game at Gonzaga would be a good start in that the Huskies were able to win back-to-back games on only two occasions last season. The longest winning streak of the Jackson era is three games, which happened twice in 2007-08.
But the Huskies third-year coach isnt overly concerned about the slow start to her tenure.
People want instant gratification, coaches included, she said last week. You want to be able to watch it happen right now. Well, thats not realistic. So I think the patience in all that has probably been my biggest challenge.
Its been fun. Well see the individual growth out there, and thats been the biggest highlight even though we havent had the win-loss (percentage) we would have liked.
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