Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Six-on-six basketball has been chronicled in such media as the 2004 book The Only Dance in Iowa: A History of Six-Player Girls' Basketball by Max McElwain, and in the 2008 Iowa Public Television special More Than a Game: Six-on-Six Basketball in Iowa. [13] "Six-On-Six: The Musical", a show by Robert John Ford celebrating the sport's popularity ...
Vernon E. "Bud" McLearn (September 11, 1933 – April 7, 1999) was an American high school basketball coach. Most notably the head coach for the Bullettes of Mediapolis High School (Mediapolis, Iowa) girls six-on-six basketball team from 1959 to 1987.
From 1990 to 1993, two awards were given, one for a 5-on-5 player and one for a 6-on-6 player, when girls in Iowa played in the two systems based on division. Prior to 1990 award winners played 6-on-6 basketball, and since 1993, award winners have played 5-on-5 basketball. Voting is done on a points system.
Jan Jensen (born December 6, 1968) is an American college basketball coach and former basketball player. Jensen currently serves as the head coach for the Iowa Hawkeyes women's team . She spent her playing career at Drake , where she led NCAA Division I women's in scoring in 1990–91.
The Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union (IGHSAU) ... IGHSAU State Basketball Champions [5] Year 6-Player 1920 Correctionville 1921 Audubon 1922 Audubon 1923
Crossover at Kinnick was an American exhibition women's college basketball game between the Iowa Hawkeyes and the DePaul Blue Demons.Held at Kinnick Stadium, the home stadium of the Hawkeyes football team, the game set the women's basketball single-game attendance record (55,646).
The television audience for the girls’ championship game drew as many as 3.5 million viewers in nine Midwestern states," [2] [6] and championship game week was the biggest week of the economic year for Des Moines merchants. [9] The 1968 championship game that her team won is available on YouTube. [3]
Yori was born in Des Moines, Iowa, and attended Ankeny High School in Ankeny, Iowa, where she graduated in 1982. [2] In her six-on-six high school basketball career (girls' rules were different back then, using six players instead of five), Yori compiled 3,068 points in her career. [2]