MARIA GIOVANNETTI SPOTLIGHT
2-21-03
Many high school phenoms have been humbled once they step on to a
college campus. Whether it's calculus or physics or basketball,
freshmen often find that what seemed to work in high school just
doesn't cut it at the next level. The success of that student or
athlete depends on the adjustments he or she makes, as well as
the time and effort invested into improving the weaknesses
exposed by the tougher competition. Case in point: sophomore
forward Maria Giovannetti (Richmond, Va./St. Gertrude's), whose
transition from high school star to bench warmer to contributor
culminated in a 20-point explosion that allowed the Rams to upset
Old Dominion earlier this season.
In high school, Giovannetti was a very big
fish in a very small pond. Playing for tiny St. Gertrude's,
Giovannetti was named all-state three times, was Virginia's
private school player of the year as a senior and became the
first private school player ever to be selected to the Richmond
Times-Dispatch all-metro first team. Giovannetti led St.
Gertrude's all the way to the Virginia Independent Schools
championship game and finished her career with 1,588 points.
Although some college coaches questioned the quality of the
opponents Giovannetti faced in putting up such impressive
numbers, VCU's coaching staff was confident her skills as a
shooter and scorer would transfer to the Division I level.
The transition to college basketball wasn't as
smooth as Giovannetti would have liked. The team's more
experience players were getting the bulk of the playing time, and
when Giovannetti got into games she did little to prove she
deserved a permanent spot in the rotation. She finished the
season with 24 total points in 100 minutes over 19 games, not
exactly what she envisioned for her freshman year coming out of
high school.
"It was hard, coming from high school
where I played every minute of every game to college where I'm
playing against the best players in the country,"
Giovannetti said. "We had players like Rochelle [Luckett]
and ShaVohn [McKinnon] who were seniors and Cyndy Wilks, who was
playing well, so I didn't play as much as I would've liked. It
was frustrating at times, and I struggled with my confidence last
year and part of this year. But I knew if I was given the
opportunity I could hang with anyone."
Giovannetti paid the price in the offseason,
staying on campus through the summer and working out every day to
get stronger and regain the confidence she had as a prep star.
She earned her first collegiate start in the third game of her
sophomore season against George Washington and played 35 minutes,
over a third of her first-year total. Although her playing time
increased, Giovannetti wasn't filling the baskets anywhere near
the rate she or the coaching staff expected, scoring 20 points in
nine non-conference games in which she averaged over 15 minutes
per game. An adjustment in her approach to the game was
necessary, or her detractors that said she couldn't make it in
Division I would be correct.
"You can spend hours in the gym and shoot
1,000 times a day but sometimes in games it's just not going to
go in for you," she said. "I realized that there are
other things I can do, the hustle points like creating shots for
teammates, getting rebounds and steals and playing good defense.
That can be bigger than scoring points. It can get you going
offensively too."
The prolific, sweet-shooting scorer became a
scrappy, blue-collar worker bee, turning around her season -- and
her collegiate career. The so-called "hustle points"
served Giovannetti well, earning her a starting spot at the start
of the CAA schedule and building up her confidence as a
contributor, and eventually as a scorer again. In 14 conference
games, she has reached double figures in points six times while
averaging 8.8 points per game. Also, she has grabbed at least
four rebounds 12 times, and dished out at least three assists
seven times while swiping 26 steals.
"[Starting] means all the hard work from
last year and the summer has paid off," she said. "It
feels great to have a role on the team and to be counted on for
each game."
With Wilks and leading scorer and CAA player
of the year candidate Kristine Austgulen carrying almost all of
the scoring load the first half of the season, Giovannetti knows
her role on the team is to give the Rams another offensive
option. Although she feels she has always had the ability to
score, Giovannetti admits it's her confidence that has allowed
her to embrace that role and become a solid offensive player in
college.
"When I get the ball now I don't think
twice about shooting or driving to the basket," she said.
"The biggest difference [between this year and last year] is
I'm not afraid to take risks. I'm definitely looking more to
shoot and be more of a threat offensively."
Everything seemed to come together for
Giovannetti and the Rams when VCU defeated CAA power Old Dominion
67-56 earlier this month, ending the Lady Monarchs' 35-game CAA
winning streak. Giovannetti scored a career-high 20 points and
added seven rebounds and three assists in support of Austgulen
and Wilks, who combined for 38 points. "Everyone knew we'd
have to perform our best and even get career highs, to beat
ODU," she said. "They are always at the top of our
league, and it's a great example of how hard we work as a group
and as individuals. It shows we can knock off a top opponent if
we play at our best.
"[Before the ODU game] I realized that if
I don't get my 10 points or so, we can't win, so it's a perfect
example of the fact that everyone needs to pull their own
weight."
Playing college basketball just a 15-minute
drive away from where she grew up required a bit of an
adjustment, too, but she's happy to be at VCU. "I love
it," she said. "At first I wanted to get away from home
and go away to college, but once I got here it's like I'm in a
different world. I like the atmosphere at VCU and I don't go home
much. But it's great having my parents, grandparents, sisters and
my brother at every game, home and away."