SEC's stability in women's basketball underscores challenge for Lady Vols coach Kellie Harper

AP photo by Butch Dill / Tennessee coach Kellie Harper speaks during the SEC's media day for women's basketball Thursday in Birmingham, Ala.
AP photo by Butch Dill / Tennessee coach Kellie Harper speaks during the SEC's media day for women's basketball Thursday in Birmingham, Ala.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Tennessee women's basketball coach Kellie Harper understands the enormity of her task as she tries to get the Lady Volunteers back among the nation's premier programs.

Tennessee has been picked to finish sixth out of 14 teams in the Southeastern Conference this season, its lowest projection in the 30-year history of the league's media poll. Never before were the Lady Vols projected to finish lower than fourth.

Harper, who won three straight NCAA titles while playing for Pat Summitt at Tennessee, is preparing for her first season as coach of the Lady Vols. She was hired to replace Holly Warlick, who was fired in late March after going 172-67 in seven seasons as Summitt's successor.

"I keep talking about not trying to worry about the big picture so much," Harper said Thursday at the SEC's media day for women's basketball. "How good can we be today? I think sometimes when you look big picture, it can be daunting, but every day if you can just walk away from practice, walk away from your day and be better, that's all you can do anyway.

"If we just manage that and really commit to that process - and understanding it's a process - I think that needs to be our goal."

While Tennessee struggles to regain its footing, its SEC rivals have shown stability.

For the second straight year, the league had only one offseason coaching change. Harper, who led Missouri State to a Sweet 16 berth last year, is the SEC's only new coach. Yolett McPhee-McCuin is entering her second season at Ole Miss.

"In our league, you get opportunity to be successful," South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said. "Our (athletic directors) and administrators give us an opportunity to be successful by keeping us around a little longer. They understand that it's really hard in our league. It's really, really hard. It takes a program three, four, five years to start seeing the pendulum move a little bit."

photo AP photo by Butch Dill / Tennessee's Jazmine Massengill, right, answers questions from her coach, Kellie Harper, during the SEC's media day for women's basketball Thursday in Birmingham, Ala. Massengill, from Chattanooga, is a former Hamilton Heights Christian Academy star.

Coaches said the lack of recent coaching turnover reflects the league's recent success. The SEC has received at least seven NCAA tournament bids each of the past eight seasons.

"Stability is hard in the Southeastern Conference," Mississippi State coach Vic Schaefer said. "I don't care what sport you're in, it's very difficult. I think it speaks volumes of the level of coaching, as well as the level of players that we have in our conference."

SEC Network analyst and former Georgia coach Andy Landers said there's still room for improvement. He believes SEC teams aren't doing enough damage in the NCAA tournament.

South Carolina beat Mississippi State in the 2017 NCAA final and Mississippi State reached the championship game again in 2018, but no other SEC school has advanced beyond the Sweet 16 over the past three seasons.

"It wasn't very long ago that you'd look in the regional and you'd still have three or four teams still alive in the Sweet 16, two or three in the Elite Eight," said Landers, who coached Georgia from 1979 to 2015.

"I know South Carolina and Mississippi State were in the Final Four a couple of years ago, but we've slipped in our advancement once we got to the tournament. That concerns me. I think we need to try to get better competitively at the national level. It would be nice if we recruited a little bit better."

South Carolina earned at least a share of the SEC title every year from 2014 to '17. Mississippi State is the two-time reigning conference tournament champion and also won the regular-season title last season.

Those two teams are top contenders again this season along with Texas A&M, which returns the nucleus of a Sweet 16 team and boasts SEC preseason player of the year Chennedy Carter.

"With South Carolina, just the back and forth with who owns really the SEC on the women's side, it's great to have," Mississippi State guard Jordan Danberry said. "It's fun. It's a lot of energy in both gyms. I'm just excited for that rivalry for women's basketball overall."

The emergence of that rivalry underscores how much the SEC has changed since Harper's playing career.

When she was known as Kellie Jolly while playing for Tennessee from 1995 to '99, South Carolina and Mississippi State posted a combined 22-80 conference record. Now they're the teams everyone's chasing.

"I do think what both Vic and Dawn have done have been really inspiring for a lot of people," Harper said. "I think they did it a certain way. They did it leading the way with their defense and their toughness. I think they (made a) hallmark of that and turned it into national prominence. We feel really good about where we can take our program."

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