ND’s Diggins goes third overall to Shock

Notre Dame’s Skylar Diggins was the third overall pick in the WNBA Draft Monday night. She was picked by the Tulsa Shock. (Leader photo/File)

Notre Dame’s Skylar Diggins was the third overall pick in the WNBA Draft Monday night. She was picked by the Tulsa Shock. (Leader photo/File)

BRISTOL, Conn. — For the second consecutive year, the Notre Dame women’s basketball program has seen one of its players selected near the top of the first round in the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) Draft, as senior guard/co-captain Skylar Diggins was chosen by the Tulsa Shock with the third overall pick in the 2013 WNBA Draft that was held Monday night at the ESPN Studios in Bristol, Conn.

At No. 3, Diggins (South Bend, Ind./Washington) matches former teammate Devereaux Peters (’11) as the highest-drafted Notre Dame player in program history, with Peters going third overall in last year’s WNBA Draft to the Minnesota Lynx. What’s more, Notre Dame becomes just the second school to have players chosen with WNBA draft lottery picks in consecutive years since the introduction of the league’s draft lottery (a weighted system to help determine the order of the top four selections from among those teams that do not qualify for the postseason) — Connecticut had a three-year run of WNBA draft lottery choices from 2009-11.

Diggins’ selection also gives Notre Dame three first-round WNBA Draft picks in the past two seasons (all within the top eight overall selections), four in school history and 10 total draftees since 2001. In addition to Peters going at No. 3 last year, another of Diggins’ former teammates, Natalie Novosel (’12) went eighth overall in the first round to the Washington Mystics.

The trio of Diggins, Peters and Novosel join 2001 consensus National Player of the Year and three-time All-America center Ruth Riley (’01) as Fighting Irish players who were later selected in the first round of the WNBA Draft (Riley was chosen with the No. 5 overall pick in 2001 by the Miami Sol before being taken first overall in the 2003 WNBA Dispersal Draft by the Detroit [now Tulsa] Shock in 2003 when the Miami franchise folded). Riley is preparing to begin her 13th WNBA season next month, and her second as a member of the Chicago Sky.

Diggins recently completed a remarkable college career that saw her rewrite the Fighting Irish record books and help lead Notre Dame to three consecutive NCAA Women’s Final Four appearances (2011-13), including two national championship game berths (2011 and 2012), and a 130-20 (.867) record. In addition, during Diggins’ career, the Fighting Irish won back-to-back outright Big East Conference regular season titles (2012 and 2013) and the 2013 Big East Championship crown, with the latter victory making Notre Dame the first Big East school other than Connecticut in 20 years to sweep the conference regular season and tournament championships in the same year.

Diggins leaves campus as the holder (or co-holder) of no fewer than 32 game, season or career records at Notre Dame, and ranks among the top five on an astounding 105 of the program’s game, season or career charts, including school records for career points (2,357), steals (381), games started (144) and double-figure scoring games (121), just to name a few.

What’s more, Diggins is the only player (of either gender) in Notre Dame basketball history to register 2,000 points, 500 rebounds, 500 assists and 300 steals in her career, and one of only six NCAA Division I women’s basketball players since 1999-2000 to reach those impressive marks. She also stands among the top 15 players in BIG EAST history (regular season games only) in four career categories — assists (15th), steals (tied-15th), free throws made (7th) and free throws attempted (11th).

Diggins is the only player in program history to be a four-time All-America selection, earning consensus first-team honors the past two years to join Riley as the only Fighting Irish cagers ever to pull off that feat. In addition, she broke new ground in the Notre Dame history books as a three-time NCAA Regional Most Outstanding Player (2010-Dayton, 2011-Raleigh, 2012-Norfolk), a two-time Big East Player of the Year and a two-time recipient of the Nancy Lieberman Award, given annually to the nation’s top point guard (the past two seasons making her just the third two-time honoree in the award’s history).

As a senior in 2012-13, Diggins started all 37 games, leading the Big East in assists (6.1 apg.; also 19th in nation), while ranking fourth in scoring (17.1 ppg.) and third in steals (3.1 spg.; also 18th in nation; school-record 114 steals overall) and fourth in free throw percentage (.814). She also is among the conference’s best in assist/turnover ratio (5th – 1.67) and three-point percentage (6th – .362), and she led the team with 33 double-figure scoring games, including 12 20-point outings. Furthermore, she added three double-doubles and her second career triple-double after piling up 17 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists in a Feb. 24 win at DePaul.

While with the Shock organization from 2003-06, Riley helped the franchise win two WNBA titles, earning WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player honors in 2003 to become the first of only two players to be named the finals MOP at both the college and professional levels (she earned the collegiate honor in 2001 while leading Notre Dame to its first national championship). In 2006, Riley teamed up with another Fighting Irish alum to drive the Shock towards another title, as Jacqueline Batteast (’05) came aboard after spending her rookie season in Minnesota.

A third Notre Dame standout joined the Shock’s roster in 2005, when current Fighting Irish assistant coach/recruiting coordinator Niele Ivey (’00) signed on as a free agent following four successful seasons with the Indiana Fever. Ivey, who subsequently was traded to the Phoenix Mercury before the 2005 regular season, was part of the Notre Dame contingent at Monday night’s WNBA Draft, along with the program’s Hall of Fame head coach (and 2013 consensus National Coach of the Year) Muffet McGraw.

 

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