Listen Live
The Light 103.9 Featured Video
CLOSE

By Donal Ware

Boxtorow.com

SAN ANTONIO, TX – It was 8:15 a.m. on Sunday morning when the charted flight carrying the two-time defending CIAA and Atlantic Regional Champion Shaw Lady Bears left from Raleigh-Durham International Airport with its final destination to San Antonio.

For the last eight years, the Shaw women’s basketball program has been used to taking flights. This is the fourth time Shaw has made it to the NCAA Division II Elite 8. In that time, the Lady Bears have flown to Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Arkansas, Missouri, California, and Pennsylvania. Just after Christmas, the Lady Bears flew to West Texas then to New Mexico to take on Division I New Mexico State where they played a respectable game losing 61-53.

Back in 2005 when the Lady Bears made it to the Elite 8 for the first time, Willie E. Gary, Chairman of the Shaw Board of Trustees allowed the team to fly on his private jet, Wings of Justice, to Hot Springs, AR, which is about 60 miles from Little Rock.

But this year instead of going directly to San Antonio, Shaw took a 30-minute detour and made a stop at Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport to pick up the Lander University women’s basketball team, who is also playing in the Elite 8.

With a lot of commercial flights being taken during spring break, the NCAA booked the flight for Shaw from RDU and suggested to Shaw head coach Jacques Curtis that they allow Lander to fly with them, which would save the NCAA money.

“I was fine with it if he (Lander head coach Kevin Pederson) was fine with it,” said Shaw head coach Jacques Curtis. This was definitely a business trip for both as the teams and personnel sat on opposite sides of the plane. There wasn’t much interaction between the teams.

The Lady Bears’ path to this year’s Elite 8 was perhaps the least difficult of the other three. That’s not to say it was easy, however. Shaw lost just one game in conference, won their seventh CIAA Tournament Championship in 11 years, are 26-6, and defeated Atlantic Regional host and No. 3 ranked Edinboro of Pennsylvania 70-53 in the championship game. The Shaw women made it all the way to the Final Four last year, before falling to eventual National Champion Clayton State.

Win three games in San Antonio and Shaw will win its first national championship in any sport. It began with a 61-58 win over Pittsburg State on Tuesday. This may be Shaw’s deepest team in Curtis’ 12 years at Shaw and is led by forward Aslea Williams, an All-CIAA performer and the CIAA Tournament and Atlantic Regional Tournament MVP. She averages 15.4 and 8.6 rebounds per game. Another forward Kyria Buford was the CIAA’s Defensive player of the Year and averages 9.4 rebounds, two steals, 2.1 blocks and 13.1 points per game.

Lander, a member of the Peach Belt Conference and located in Greenwood, SC, won the South Atlantic Regional Championship by defeating Wingate 72-67 in double overtime. This was Lander’s first appearance in the Elite 8 as they fell to Rollins on Tuesday 66-62.

Shaw will face Rollins on Wednesday in the Final Four. The game can be heard on WSHA-FM 88.9 at 9:30 p.m.

When asked about a return trip with Lander had they advanced Curtis said, “I am not sure if they would want to fly back with us if we win the championship.”

Known as the Voice of Black College Sports, Donal Ware has covered historically black college and university sports and pro sports across the U.S. for years. He is the host of the nationally syndicated FROM THE PRESS BOX TO PRESS ROW which airs on SiriusXM Channel 141 Fridays from 1-2 p.m.

and on radio stations around the country including Saturdays from 11-Noon on WAUG-AM 750 in the Triangle and from 1-2 p.m. at http://www.boxtorow.com You can follow him on twitter @dware1 or @boxtorow