Women's Basketball History
The 1993-94 UNA Lions (above) advanced to the Division II Final Four
UNA WOMEN’S BASKETBALL HISTORY
The women’s basketball program began at the University of North Alabama in the late 1960s as part of the physical education department, but has grown into a nationally respected program that has made four trips to the NCAA Division II national tournament since 1984. Initially competing against other schools in competition known as extra-murals, the UNA women’s basketball began competing under the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) in 1975, with Susan Phillips as head coach. Phillips coached the Lions from 1975-77 and was followed for one year by Sharron Perkins.
Then, in 1978, the Lions made their first move to regional and national prominence with the hiring of Gary Elliott as head coach. Over the next four seasons, Elliott compiled a 75-42 record that included the 1979-80 Alabama Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AAIAW) State Championship and the 1981-82 AAIAW Northern Division championship. Those years also produced the school’s first women’s basketball All-American in Wanda Beckham, who was a second-team AIAW selection in 1980. Major change came in
1982 when women’s sports were included for the first time as championships under both the Gulf South Conference and the NCAA. It was also the year that Wayne Byrd was hired to succeed Elliott as the fourth women’s basketball coach in school history. Byrd directed the UNA women’s program for the next 16 years, winning 232 games while leading the Lions to one Gulf South Conference championship and four NCAA Division II regionals.
The UNA women’s basketball program received its first NCAA Division II Top 20 ranking on January 16, 1984, when the Lions debuted in the poll at No. 20. The 1983-84 Lions were ranked in the Top 20 for eight straight weeks and advanced to the championship game of the Division II South Regional. In 1993-94, Byrd led the Lions an NCAA South Regional championship and a third place finish at the Division II Elite Eight in Fargo, N.D. The Wayne Byrd era at UNA also included three All-Americans, with LaConger Cohran and Brenda Mayes earning national awards in 1985, and Serita Gauldin becoming the school’s first, first-team All-America pick in women’s basketball in 1998. In 1997-98, UNA guard Becky Mauck led the NCAA Division II in both free throw percentage and three-point field goal percentage, becoming the first player in Division II women’s basketball history to lead the nation in two shooting categories in the same season. Mauck also established an NCAA Division II National Record for three-point percentage in a season at 56.25.
With Byrd’s retirement in 1998, Jeri Porter became the fifth head women’s basketball coach in school history.
Jeri Porter resigned as women’s head coach at the end of the 2001-02 season to take a job with Radford.
Flora Willie led the Lady Lions to a 16-12 record in the 2002-03 season and served as the UNA coach through the 2005-06 season.
Terry Fowler became the seventh head women’s basketball coach in UNA history in 2006 and took the first step in rebuilding the winning tradition with a solid 14-14 mark in his inaugural season. UNA’s Amber Rutherford led Division II in free throw percentage at 93.7, and the Lions returned to the Gulf South Conference Tournament for the first time since 2003. Rutherford successfully defended her national free throw championship in 2008 by hitting 93.6 percent of her foul shots. She finished her career with the NCAA all division record of 92.38 percent, hitting 526 of 570 free throw attempts in four seasons.
The 2011 campaign proved to be a breakout year for Fowler and the Lions. North Alabama advanced to its sixth consecutive GSC Tournament after winning the East Division with an undefeated league record. The Lions also advanced to the NCAA Division II Tournament for the first time since 1994 and finished the year with a 21-7 mark.
After returning to the NCAA Tournament in 2012, Fowler departed for Division I South Alabama, opening the door for current head coach Missy Tiber. She posted a 15-13 record in her first season with the Lions during the 2013-14 campaign. In the 2017-18 season, UNA broke or tied five individual and four team school records, including the most regular season wins in school history. The team returned to the NCAA Division II tournament for the first time since 2013 and also cracked the NABC Top 25 Poll for the first time in 24 years.
Entering her 10th season at UNA, Tiber has posted a 141-114 record with the Lions. She led North Alabama as the school began the transition to the NCAA Division I basketball in the 2018-19 season as a member of the ASUN Conference. The Lions posted a 21-9 record during its first Division I season, earning a No. 4 seed in the ASUN Tournament with a 10-6 league record after being picked to finish eighth in the preseason coaches' poll. The following season, the Lions posted a 21-9 mark, giving UNA three straight 20-win seasons for the first time in program history.
Following a successful debut at the Division I level, Tiber's second Division I team at UNA continued to reach new heights. Led by a senior class that won a school-record 85 games and included the top two scorers in program history, the Lions set 14 school records at the single-season and career levels. Ivy Wallen became the program's all-time leading scorer with 1,762 career points. Her sister, Emma, finished a close second with 1,640 points. Brittany Panetti also reached the 1,000-point club and finished her career with a program-record 113 blocked shots.