
Arizona's Burke, Arizona State's Miller enter rivalry with mutual respect
As new coaches at opposite ends of a rivalry, Arizona State's Molly Miller and Arizona's Becky Burke could easily hold animosity toward the other.
Far from it.
Both coaches admire the way the other has worked through the coaching ranks, winning at every stop, and how their infectious enthusiasm seeps onto the floor through their players.
They also have a common connection: Stephanie Norman.
The current associate head coach on Miller's inaugural staff was once at Louisville, where she coached Burke as an assistant under Jeff Walz.
'She's funny because coach Norman is like, Becky is kind of like my boss in a way, being a head coach,'' Miller said. 'She's (Burke) really competitive and comes from a great program in Louisville. It'll be fine because I have a lot of respect for how she's kind of climbed and been there."
Arizona and Arizona State have new women's basketball coaches for the first time — outside of the programs' first season in 1981 — since the Wildcats hired June Olkowski and Maura McHugh took over the Sun Devils in 1987.
Miller and Burke have the same goal — winning — yet will come at it from different starting points.
Burke takes over an Arizona program that's on firm standing, earning trips to the NCAA Tournament four of the past five years under previous coach Adia Barnes, including a run to the 2021 national championship game.
When Barnes left for SMU during the offseason, Arizona turned to Burke and her resume full of winning.
She played in the NCAA Tournament three times as a sharpshooting guard, reaching the 2009 national title game and the Sweet 16 two years later. After stints as an assistant coach, Burke had winning records as a head coach at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott, Arizona, the University of Charleston in West Virginia and USC Upstate.
Burke spent the past three seasons at Buffalo, leading the Bulls to a 30-win season and a WNIT title last year.
The transfer portal era wreaked havoc on Arizona's roster — Montaya Dew is the only returner on scholarship — but Burke has a foundation in place with recent successes and strong fan support in Tucson.
'The momentum in the brand and the fact that she (Barnes) did a great job building this is extremely helpful, but ultimately we're starting from scratch,' Burke said. 'We walk into a locker room that has one player and it doesn't help you in the moment, but it's nice to say on recruiting calls that you coach at Arizona and they know what it is and what it's about.'
Miller's task will be to rebuild a brand at Arizona State that's struggled to regain relevancy since the end of longtime coach Charli Turner Thorne's tenure.
The Sun Devils have not been to the NCAA Tournament since reaching the Sweet 16 in 2019 and went 29-62 in three seasons under Natasha Adair after Turner Thorne's retirement in 2022.
Like Burke, Miller brings a history of winning with her.
Miller was one of the top scorers in Drury University history as a player and spent two seasons as an assistant following a stint at a neurological and spine institute in her hometown of Springfield, Missouri. She became the head coach at her alma mater in 2014 and won 180 games over six seasons before becoming Grand Canyon's coach.
Miller led the Antelopes to a 32-3 record last season, including a 30-game winning streak, and took the program to its first NCAA Tournament. She went 117-38 at GCU before moving across town to Arizona State.
'I think with any good program to have a quick turnaround, you have to have buy-in,' Miller said. 'That's the biggest piece and I think we've gotten our teams to buy in pretty quickly the last few years.'
Burke has done the same everywhere she's been. Now the two coaches will try doing it on opposite ends of a rivalry.
___
Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP women's college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Cardinals lose starting cornerback Starling Thomas to torn ACL
Cardinals cornerback Starling Thomas suffered a serious knee injury during Friday's practice. Tests revealed that Thomas has a torn ACL, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN. That almost certainly means he will miss the entire season. Originally an undrafted rookie out of UAB, Thomas spent training camp with the Lions in 2023 but didn't make their roster. The Cardinals claimed him on waivers and he played surprisingly well as a rookie and even better in his second season in 2024. Last year Thomas played in all 17 games, with 15 starts, and played the most snaps of any cornerback on the team. The Cardinals may now be in the market to pick up another cornerback, as they were counting on Thomas to play a big role this year. He's a big loss.
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Report: Potential Red Sox trade candidate traded to AL West contender
One potential target for the Red Sox at the trade deadline has come off the board a week ahead of the MLB trade deadline. The Arizona Diamondbacks traded first baseman Josh Naylor to the Seattle Mariners on Thursday night, The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal reported. ESPN's Jeff Passan added that left-hander Brandyn Garcia and right-hander Ashton Izzi will be going to Arizona in the deal. Naylor was labeled as a 'best fit' for the Red Sox by Passan. The Red Sox could certainly benefit by adding a first baseman after Triston Casas suffered a ruptured patellar tendon that will sideline him for the remainder of the season. The corner position has been an issue since Casas' injury between lack of depth and Rafael Devers' — who was ultimately traded to the San Francisco Giants — unwillingness to move to first. In 93 games for Arizona this year, Naylor batted .292 with 11 home runs and 59 RBI. The Mariners are 54-48 — second in the American League West — going into Thursday's game against the Los Angeles Angels. More Red Sox coverage As Stefon Diggs goes, so will the 2025 Patriots MLB Notebook: A look at which prospects Red Sox might move at trade deadline; deal brewing with Dodgers? Red Sox pitcher who closed out World Series for Dodgers to receive ring this weekend Mass. native, two-time Gold Glove winner retires from MLB Why second MLB retirement has ex-Red Sox pitcher at peace Read the original article on MassLive.
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Mass. native, two-time Gold Glove winner retires from MLB
Nick Ahmed is calling it a career. The East Longmeadow native announced his retirement from Major League Baseball on Thursday in a social media post. "For as long as I can remember, all I ever wanted to do was play baseball," Ahmed posted to X. 'I got to live out my childhood dream and play for a very long time! After 15 professional seasons and over a decade in the big leagues I am officially hanging up my spikes and retiring from playing." Ahmed spent 10 seasons with the Arizona Diamondbacks before he was designated for assignment in September 2023. At the time, he was Arizona's longest-tenured player in the organization. In 2024, Ahmed played for the San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres. He appeared in five games for the Texas Rangers this season. Ahmed won consecutive Gold Gloves in 2018 and 2019 at shortstop. All told, he batted .233 with 72 homers and 339 RBI in 964 career games. More Red Sox coverage Potential Red Sox trade candidate traded to AL West contender (report) Red Sox pitcher who closed out World Series for Dodgers to receive ring this weekend Why second MLB retirement has ex-Red Sox pitcher at peace Red Sox' 'uber-athletic' 1st-rounder cracks Keith Law's Top 60, along with 2 other prospects Fenway Insider Live: Sean McAdam on trade deadline, potential Red Sox moves Read the original article on MassLive.