Lady Tigers(JSU) junior, 6-foot-6, is blocking 5.6 shots per game


bluphiiijsu

Creative Director
January 31, 2003

JSU's Williams stands tall as force in middle



Lady Tigers junior, 6-foot-6, is blocking 5.6 shots per game
By Mark Alexander
[email protected]



Next for JSU

Who: JSU Lady Tigers, 12-4, 5-2 SWAC, vs. Miss. Valley Devilettes, 6-9, 2-5
When: Saturday, 5:30 p.m.

Where: Athletics and Assembly Center



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There's not many, if any, Division I schools in the country where there's a player on the women's basketball team taller than any player on the men's team.

Jackson State does. Her name: Amie Williams.

Not only is the 6-foot-6 Williams very tall, she's very good. The junior center is averaging a double-double ? 15.8 points, 11.2 rebounds ? and leads the nation in blocked shots at 5.6 per game.

"She can play for me," JSU men's coach Andy Stoglin said.

As bad as Stoglin would like to have Williams, it's highly unlikely that's going to happen. A player of Williams' size and ability come along once a lifetime, if ever, for most coaches.

"She's a dream come true," JSU women's coach Denise Taylor said.

Taylor, like Williams, grew up in Cleveland and played at Cleveland East Side under coach Lucy Seaberry. She knew all about Williams, a former Dandy Dozen and All-State pick who drew national attention from the time she was a 6-4 ninth-grader.

So it's no surprise one of the first things Taylor did when she took the job at JSU was call Williams, who at the time was an All-American at Southwest Tennessee Community College.

"Everywhere I went she was calling me," said Williams, who originally signed with Mississippi State out of high school.

After sitting out last season, Williams ? who is at least a half a foot taller than most players she's matched up against ? has had a more immediate impact in her first season at JSU than she or her coach envisioned. Especially considering Williams was slowed in preseason practice by a torn meniscus in her left knee.

"She has played beyond my expectations," Taylor said. "I didn't expect her to come into her own until February. Anytime you sit out you're going to lose some of your timing. And then she had the knee injury. She's way ahead of where I thought she would be."

Williams has season-highs of 26 points, 17 rebounds and has blocked eight shots on four different occasions. She is coming off arguably her best game, a dominating 23-point, 13-rebound, 6-block performance in a 64-50 win at Grambling that helped her land SWAC player of the week honors.

"We fronted her, we sided her, we played behind her, we did everything we could do and it didn't work," Grambling coach Rusty Ponton said.

Williams, a left-hander, scores most of her points on moves around the basket. But she has displayed a nice shooting touch from 10-12 feet at times, prompting JSU's p.a announcer to nickname her Big Smooth. On the defensive end, her long reach makes her a human fly-swatter.

"It's extremely difficult to prepare for her because there aren't many girls her size," Ponton said. "She looks like she's 7-1. She's a one-man defense, like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. If you shoot it near her, you're going to get it blocked back at you."

Williams put up gaudy stats in high school despite playing uninspired at times. That has since changed. She's even displayed a mean streak, although one is likely to see the fun-loving, gentle giant laugh, or even dance, on the court before seeing her throw an elbow.

"I've worked hard to make myself better," said Williams, who hopes to play in the WNBA. "I've lifted weights, I've exercised. And it's paid off. I've improved a lot."

Williams, who has a three-year old son named K.J., experienced a "very scary" moment earlier this season. She collapsed after a game at Alabama A&M and was wisked away via ambulance to a local hospital where tests revealed she suffered a concussion.

"I'm OK now for the most part, but sometimes I have minor headaches and hot flashes," she said.

Fans who haven't gotten a chance to see Williams play can do so Saturday. JSU, 12-4 overall and 5-2 in the SWAC, hosts Mississippi Valley State at the Athletics and Assembly Center.

"The first time I saw her play I was amazed," Stoglin said.

That's the same reaction others have had this season as Williams makes her first stops around the SWAC. She created quite a buzz at Grambling ? something she's well-accustomed to by now.

"I'd hear people talking about (my height), while I was playing, walking in the mall, or whatever," Williams said. "It used to bother me at first, but it doesn't bother me anymore. I kinda like it now."
 
Originally posted by bluphiiijsu
There's not many, if any, Division I schools in the country where there's a player on the women's basketball team taller than any player on the men's team.


"She can play for me," JSU men's coach Andy Stoglin said.

As bad as Stoglin would like to have Williams,
LOL!!

I wonder if she could handle ASU's 6'5" center
 



Man, stop crying, I didn't say anything negative about that chick.

I'm laughing cause she's taller than anybody on your men's team.

damn!
 
Originally posted by mighty hornet

I'm laughing cause she's taller than anybody on your men's team.

Ummm no she's not....

Ryan Kennedy

Rashad Taylor

Jamal Ward

Ernest Hassel

Edrick Montgomery

Kelli Ross

Leonard Taylor
 
Prodigy,
Maybe you need to let that writer know then.


There's not many, if any, Division I schools in the country where there's a player on the women's basketball team taller than any player on the men's team.

Jackson State does. Her name: Amie Williams.
 
I have seen her and Kitt from Bama St play..... Amy is a much better player than Kitt. Kitt is too slow and if she doesnt stay under the goal she is useles... prime example the 5'10 freshmen girl from AAMU killed Kitt and got the women back into the game until they switched and put Shameka Jackson on her. She was too quick for Kitt and beat her to the basket everytime. Amy is the best womens player I have seen in some time. She looks like a giant out there. She would start on ANYBODYS womens team. The difference between her and Kitt is that Amy doesnt have anybody else on her team and Kitt is surrounded by PLAYERS. If AMY gets in foul trouble, its over for JSU. Bama St has so much talent that they could still win by large margins without Kitt. Both are very talented players.
 
DAHILL,
I'm not knocking Wms, cause I have never seen her play, but I think you're selling Kitt short. One, she just came off a major injury that caused her to miss the first half of the season. She only recently rejoined the team. I'm sure when she came to Huntsville, she wasn't near 100%. Heck, she's played so little, her numbers don't even allow her to be ranked among the top 30 in the swac. Also, you're right, she's surrounded by a talented team with the leading scorer in the SWAC and she aint called on to do as much.
If the team had to just stand and feed the ball to Kitt, she would kill folks.
With Jackson being a senior this year and Kitt just a sophomore, I think in the next couple of years Kitt will dominate.

btw, is Wms. big like Kitt is or is she just tall.

Maybe they'll meet in Bham at the tournament.
 
Originally posted by mighty hornet

That's how Kitt is.

Should be a good matchup when they meet.

Gon big girls!

they aint made the same... Amy looks like a *****... not once ounce of fat on her. She got legs and arms like a man. She could wear a 2 piece and show her stomach (she ugly and i wouldnt want to see it though)... Kitt is more of the "big boned" type. Amy is more in shape than Kitt also, she just has NO supporting cast.
 
When I saw Williams she is good but she can be beaten if you play her right. You have to make quick passes into the post and force her to move. Offensively, she needs some polish if she wants to move to the next level.

She will dominate the SWAC until more big women show up.
 
Originally posted by Blu Panther
When I saw Williams she is good but she can be beaten if you play her right. You have to make quick passes into the post and force her to move. Offensively, she needs some polish if she wants to move to the next level.

She will dominate the SWAC until more big women show up.

to add to that...she gets in a lot of foul trouble also because will swat at anything close to her.
 
Originally posted by Prodigy



She's huge! Not fat or anything... but she's a monster!
t01l.jpg

Here is an upper body shot of her.
 



DIZZAM!!!!

She shoots w/ the "evil" hand? (lefty) :confused:

Aw man. That right there should cause her to have the edge over err'body! :tup: Man! I'd LOVE to work w/ someone like her to move her game to that next level!

Signed, disciple of Kaser!
 
I saw the two Bama giants tonight and their big but slow. Williams is the best post in the SWAC. The two big posts from Bama don't even start.
 
Originally posted by DAHILL
The difference between her and Kitt is that Amy doesnt have anybody else on her team and Kitt is surrounded by PLAYERS. If AMY gets in foul trouble, its over for JSU.



JSU had not one, not two, not three, but four players go down with season-ending knee injuries before the season started.

Still, the Lady Tigers have found a way to keep winning. Coach Denise Taylor's crew is 13-4 overall and 6-2 in the SWAC following Saturday's win over Mississippi Valley.

"I am surprised at how well we've started," said Taylor, whose team is just three wins shy of reaching last year's win total. "It has been a team effort. We've had a different player step up each night."

The four who were injured were: Forwards Alisha Richard, Shi'Nita Woulard and Adrienne Hudson and guard Dasieka Hawthorne. Each was expected to contribute, especially Hawthorne, a Kentucky transfer. The losses left Taylor with just nine players. A former player at Texas Southern, Taylor and her assistants have had to suit up for practice at times because of the lack of bodies.

"I would've had much more depth and flexibility," Taylor said. "I could've gone big, I could've gone small. We could've matched up better. Our depth, I believe, would've put us in a different category.

"But it's like I told the girls, we can't worry about what we can't control. I challenged each one of them to step up."

Newcomer Amie Williams (15.8 ppg., 11.2 rpg, 5.6 bpg) has had a huge impact. So, too, have returnees Sonia Washington (17.9 ppg.), Genina Johnson (11.7 ppg.) and Latesha Lee (9.7 ppg., 7.2 rpg., and 7.4 apg.)

Lee, a point guard, stands 5-5.

"She's amazing," Taylor said. "She plays with a lot of passion."

Washington, a senior guard from Callaway, ranks second in the SWAC in scoring. She recently joined the 1,000-point club.

"She has definitely elevated her game," Taylor said
 
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