Colorado University Athletics
Players Mentioned
Colorado-UTEP Notes
March 28, 2014 | Women's Basketball
Colorado drops to 34-22 all-time in postseason play; 12-5 in the WNIT.
Colorado falls to 3-8 all-time in the postseason on an opponent's home court.
Colorado played its 34th game of the season tonight, tying for the fourth most in team history. The school record is 36 in 1981-82 (28-8) and the Buffs have two seasons with 35 games; 21-14 in 2011-12 and 26-9 in 1995-96.
UTEP claims its first win over Colorado as the Buffs lead the all-time series 5-1. Tonight was the first meeting since Nov. 19, 1982.
Colorado finished off the season at 6-8 on the road; 7-9 away from Boulder. The Buffs have won 25 of their last 42 true road contests and are 29-22 away from Boulder dating back to the tail end of the 2010-11 season.
Colorado's 26 rebounds were a season low as was its 5-of-12 performance from the free-throw line (.417)
Colorado played a game on March 28 for the first time and has only played three games on a later date. The Buffs lost an NCAA Sweet 16 game against Villanova on March 29, 2003. Colorado played two later games during the 2008 WNIT, defeating TCU in a quarterfinal on March 30 before falling to Marquette in the semifinals on April 2.
Rachel Hargis finished her career by playing in a school record 134 games. Brittany Wilson took over sole possession of second place at 133 from previous record holder Erin Scholz who played 132 games between 1993-97. Ashley Wilson moved into a tie with six others for 20th by appearing in her 121st game.
Brittany Wilson finishes her career 1,194 points, 19th on CU's all-time list. She also finishes seventh in 3-point attempts (452), ninth in 3-pointers made (140), 13th in steals (168) and 18th in assists (287).
Hargis finishes eighth in career blocks with 105.
Jamee Swan had 15 points, reaching double-digits for the 12th time this season. She had two blocked shots moving into 15th on CU's all-time list with 64.
Colorado ends its season allowing 36.9 percent from the field, the third-best field goal defense mark for a season in team history.






