Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Belibi soared on a memorable night for Stanford's present and future

Francesca Belibi dunks over Ashten Prechtel Monday night to win the McDonald All-American dunk contest. Belibi and Prechtel will be freshman at Stanford next season.

Jacob Rayburn • CardinalSportsReport.com

Stanford women's basketball program may be on the verge of something special, and the reasons why were on display in two gyms: Maples Pavilion in Stanford, Calif., and State Farm Arena in Atlanta


The current Cardinal fought through some adversity to defeat BYU 72-63 and earn a 12th straight trip to the Sweet 16 -- a remarkable streak that illustrates that the floor of the program is reaching the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament. Stanford will take on No. 11 seed Missouri State in Chicago because the Bears upset No. 3 seed Iowa State.
On the other side of the country incoming freshman Francesca (Fran) Belibi dazzled an audience of her high school all-star peers at the Powerade Jam Fest. She is the first girl to win the dunk contest of McDonald All-Americans since Candace Parker in 2004.

Belibi showed off an array of dunks -- baseline reverse, two-handed, alley-oop and leaping over a seated teammate -- to win the title over Scottie Lewis. (You can watch all four on this ESPN video.)

Meet Fran Belibi, the second woman to win the McDonald's All American dunk contest

Michelle Martinelli, usatoday.com, March 26, 2019

If you don’t know the name Fran Belibi, you should. The five-star forward from Aurora, Colorado is off to Stanford next season, but she’s already gone viral multiple times for her stunning moves on the court.
And Monday, she became the second female player to win the dunk contest at the McDonald’s All American Game, following only the great Candace Parker, who won in 2004. In the final round of the contest, Belibi was up against Florida five-star recruit Scottie Lewis and five-star forward Precious Achiuwa, who has not yet committed anywhere, ESPN reported.
At 6-foot-1, Belibi is listed as the No. 3 forward in the nation, and she threw up four dunks, all of which received perfect 10s. She even dunked over her future Stanford teammate Ashten Prechtel, who was sitting in a chair under the basket.

Monday, March 25, 2019

Stanford recruit Belibi wins JamFest dunk contest


Katie Barnes, espn.com, March 25, 2019

Fran Belibi became just the second woman to win the Powerade JamFest dunk contest on Monday night in Atlanta.
The Stanford recruit faced off against five-star forward Precious Achiuwa and Florida recruit Scottie Lewis in the final and put down a total of four dunks. She scored nothing but 10s for a total score of 320.
Candace Parker won the event in 2004.
Belibi sealed her victory with a dunk -- while wearing a cape -- over future Cardinal teammate Ashten Prechtel, who was sitting in a chair.

A HIGHER CALLING

Fran Belibi has captured the imagination of basketball fans with her astounding dunks. But the Stanford-bound star dreams of a different destiny.

Katie Barnes, espn.com, March 25, 2019

Students file into the gym at Regis Jesuit High School on a February night in Aurora, Colorado. Their feet, wet from the beginnings of snow, slide across the bleachers as they crowd into the student section. There is a hockey game taking place a few miles down the road, but the biggest draw for the senior boys in the front row is Fran Belibi. They run down her stats and debate the probability of whether she'll dunk. It's a Friday night, the second round of the state playoffs and one of her final home games before she heads to Stanford, so a dunk, they figure, isn't too much of a stretch.

Thursday, March 21, 2019

Meet all-Bay Area News Group team

Pinewood's Hannah Jump (24) heads to the basket against Salesian's Angel Jackson (15) in the third quarter of their CIF Northern California Open Division girls basketball championship game at Gunn High School in Palo Alto, Calif., on Tuesday, March 5, 2019. 

mercurynews.com, March 20, 2019


Top high school players from East Bay, South Bay and Peninsula recognized


Player of the year
Haley Jones, Archbishop Mitty, 6-1, senior
The consensus No. 1 recruit in the nation validated her status by averaging 26.1 points, 12.1, 4.4 assists, 3.7 steals and 2.8 blocks en route to a fourth consecutive CCS Open Division title. The Stanford-bound standout was tabbed as the Naismith Trophy girls basketball player of the year after being named Gatorade California POY for a second time in a row.

First team
Hannah Jump, Pinewood, 5-11, senior
The Stanford-bound sharpshooter set a career high with 11 3-pointers in a single game early in the season, as she averaged 16.7 points, 5.9 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 2.9 treys. Named MVP of the West Bay Athletic League Foothill Division, she helped the Panthers advance to consecutive state finals in the Open Division.


Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Meet the Bay Area News Group player of the year


Archbishop Mitty's Haley Jones (30) drives to the basket against Pinewood's Klara Astrom (11) in the fourth period of their Central Coast Section Open Division girls basketball championship game in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Feb. 22, 2019

Vytas Mazeika, mercurynews.com, March 20, 2019

 Archbishop Mitty senior Haley Jones will share another accolade in common with Diana Taurasi after flying to Atlanta next week to participate in the McDonald’s All-American Game.


Eighteen years ago, the four-time Olympic gold medalist, three-time WNBA champion and three-time NCAA champion capped her high school career as not only a two-time Gatorade California player of the year, but also as the Naismith national girls basketball player of the year.
It’s an eerily similar résumé to the one Jones compiled during her four years at Mitty, with one missing element for both: a state title.
That’s an asterisk, not a punctuation mark for Jones, the 2018-19 Bay Area News Group player of the year.
“My freshman self would probably be in shock of the position I am in today, but truly grateful and humbled,” said the 17-year-old, who also received the top honor from this publication as a sophomore and junior. “When I was a freshman I didn’t expect for myself to be in this position, so it would push my freshman self to work even harder.”
That’s certainly the work ethic that landed Jones a scholarship to Stanford, which nabbed the consensus No. 1 recruit in the nation away from Connecticut, where Taurasi went, along with fellow finalists Notre Dame, Oregon and South Carolina.
“Haley being mentioned in the same sentence as Diana Taurasi is an incredible compliment; and, yet, an appropriate high school comparison given Haley’s level of dominance, versatility, and skill set at the point guard position,” Mitty coach Sue Phillips said.
“Basketball is something that Haley loves to do and has experienced an enormous amount of success, but it does not define her. Basketball is how people know Haley, but she is much more than a game. Haley is bright, kind, compassionate, and driven.
“She can be or do whatever she sets her mind to. And whatever she decides to do, she will positively influence those around her.”
From Day 1 at Mitty, the talent was undeniable.
Jones never lost in the Central Coast Section playoffs, coming away with a quartet of Open Division titles — all against Pinewood senior Hannah Jump, her future teammate on The Farm.
“And to Haley’s credit, she trusted in our vision that we wanted to develop her at all five positions,” Phillips said. “We alternated days in practice by having her work out with points, wings and posts on a rotational basis. In turn, she worked on all facets of her game to become the epitome of a position-less player.”
As a senior, Jones led Mitty (25-3) in virtually every statistical category by averaging 26.1 points, 12.1 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 2.7 steals and 2.8 blocks per game.
By the time it was all said and done, the 6-foot-1 guard/wing broke the program’s all-time scoring mark that had stood for 23 years and previously belonged to Kerri Walsh Jennings, a three-time Olympic beach volleyball gold medalist who also claimed two NCAA titles in women’s volleyball at Stanford.
“She was a human highlight reel,” Phillips said. “Even when Haley was guarded, she was open to score. And while we have touched upon her ability to score, she also led our team in rebounds, assists, blocks and steals.”
Her only trip to a state final came in 2017 as a sophomore, then was eliminated in excruciating fashion as a junior in triple overtime to Pinewood in the NorCal Open title game — the Monarchs went 29-1 and finished as the No. 1 team in the nation — and came up shy of the ultimate goal again this month to Salesian in the NorCal semifinals.
“I definitely learned from success, but mostly from setbacks,” Jones said. “Whenever we didn’t achieve what we wanted to as a team, it gave us more motivation to make it happen the next time around and it fueled our fire to go even harder during practice so we wouldn’t have to feel that way again.”
It will be fun to find out how the incoming freshman at Stanford will view herself after four years on The Farm as her time as a Monarch comes to a close.
“I have had some of my best high school memories alongside my Mitty teammates,” Jones said. “They have become some of my best friends on and off the court. We have accomplished so many things that most people could never dream of and we do it all for each other. The bonds what we have made will last a lifetime.”

Friday, March 15, 2019

JONES NAMED NAISMITH POY

gostanford.com, March 15, 2019

Incoming freshman Haley Jones has been named the Naismith Trophy Girls' High School Player of the Year, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced Friday.

The nation's consensus No. 1 recruit, Jones is the first top prospect to sign with Stanford since Chiney Ogwumike came to The Farm as the top player in the country in Nov. 2009. Ogwumike is Stanford's only previous winner of the Naismith Trophy High School Girls' Player of the Year award, taking home the honor in 2010.

SC’s Haley Jones wins national award



Archbishop Mitty’s Haley Jones, a Santa Cruz native shown shooting a jumper over Pinewood’s Trinity Copeland on Feb. 22, was named the Naismith Trophy Girls’ High School Player of the Year.

santacruzsentinel.com, March 15, 2019

Archbishop Mitty senior basketball star Haley Jones, a Santa Cruz native, was named the Naismith Trophy Girls’ High School Player of the Year, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced Friday.

The nation’s consensus No. 1 recruit, Jones is the first top prospect to sign with Stanford University since Chiney Ogwumike came to The Farm as the top player in the country in Nov. 2009. Ogwumike is Stanford’s only previous winner of the Naismith Trophy High School Girls’ Player of the Year award, taking home the honor in 2010.


Stanford recruit Haley Jones named 2019 Naismith girls' high school player of the year

Naismith player of the year Haley Jones is headed to Stanford next season.
espnw.com, March 15, 2019

Stanford women's basketball recruit Haley Jones was awarded the Naismith Trophy as the Girls' High School Player of the Year on Friday.

Jones, the No. 1 prospect in the espnW HoopGurlz Top 100, averaged 26.1 points and 12.1 rebounds per game this season for Archbishop Mitty (San Jose, California).

Jones joins Chiney Ogwumike (2010) as the only two Stanford recruits to win the award. Other past Naismith winners include Christyn Williams (2018), A'ja Wilson (2014), Breanna Stewart (2012), Maya Moore (2006-07) and Candace Parker (2003-04).

Jones, a 6-foot-1 wing, finished her career at Archbishop Mitty with 2,126 points and 1,058 rebounds. She is next scheduled to play in the McDonald's All American Games on March 27.


Mitty’s Haley Jones named Naismith basketball player of the year



Archbishop Mitty’s Haley Jones (30) shoots a jumper against Pinewood’s Klara Astrom (11) in the fourth period of their Central Coast Section Open Division girls basketball championship game in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Feb. 22, 2019. 

Darren Sabedra, mercurynews.com/, March 15, 2019

Haley Jones did it all for Archbishop Mitty this season. Friday, the Stanford-bound star was named the Naismith national girls basketball player of the year by the Atlanta Tipoff Club.

Jones led Mitty to the Central Coast Section Open Division championship and a 25-3 record, averaging 26.1 points, 12.1 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 2.7 steals and 2.8 blocks per game.

Along the way, she became Mitty’s all-time leading scorer, breaking a record that beach volleyball legend Kerri Walsh Jennings held for 23 years.

Jones finished her high school career with 2,127 points, to go with 1,058 rebounds, 400 assists, 252 steals and 240 blocks.


Isaiah Stewart of La Lumiere School in La Porte, Indiana was named the Naismith boys player of the year.

“These two players have had outstanding seasons and have shown they have the talent and drive to play at the next level,” Eric Oberman, executive director of the Atlanta Tipoff Club, said in a news release. “We are proud to have them join our list of student athletes who have won the Jersey Mike’s Naismith High School Player of the Year honor and look forward to watching them play throughout their careers.”

In the release, Mitty coach Sue Phillips said, “This honor is a testament to her quality of character, hard work and dedication to perfecting her craft.  Haley is incredibly deserving as she worked tirelessly on all facets of her game to become the epitome of a position-less player and the best in her class.”