News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Hoops analyst propels cancer project's growth

Published: Jan 20, 2008 12:30 AM
Modified: Jan 20, 2008 04:03 AM

Hoops analyst propels cancer project's growth

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DEBORAH MULLIGAN ANTONELLI

BORN: Sept. 1., 1964, in Fayetteville

FAMILY: Husband Frank Antonelli; children: Joey, 12; Frankie, 10, and Patrick, 6.

EDUCATION: Double major in business management and economics, N.C. State, 1986; master's from Ohio University in sports administration, 1988.

AS A PLAYER: Kay Yow says Antonelli would have been a 3-point specialist, but the 3-point line didn't exist during her career.

TECHNICAL TALE: Antonelli got the only technical foul of her career as a freshman on the bench against North Carolina. She jumped up and yelled "Foul!" after a no-call on a teammate.

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WINSTON-SALEM - Debbie Antonelli believes in women's basketball and in the power of hope.

Basketball has been her life; hope has helped her create a niche for herself.

Using the lessons learned as a camper and later a player for N.C. State University's Hall of Fame coach Kay Yow, Antonelli has become one of the leading voices in women's basketball and put herself in a position to help the woman who helped her.

Antonelli is in her 20th year of broadcasting basketball and she's one of the few in women's college basketball who works full time on the sport.

With that comes influence.

That includes "Hoops for Hope." N.C. State began its "Hoops" event in 2006 as a way to raise awareness of breast cancer and money for research. Yow has publicly fought the disease since 1987 and is receiving chemotherapy.

After the first "Hoops," Antonelli called Beth Bass, the president of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association, and told her something needed to be done nationally.

"She got this whole ball started," Bass says. "Obviously she played for Coach Yow, but she's the one who picked up the phone -- she's relentless, but relentless in a good way."

The week of the third "Hoops," which is Feb. 10 at Reynolds Coliseum, more than 600 schools across the nation will participate in "Think Pink," intended to raise awareness and money. Some money will go to local charities, some to the Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund.

"It's about hope, and that's what Kay is all about," Antonelli says. "When you played for her, you knew that she believed in you and that you could win. It didn't matter who you were playing -- Tennessee or the top programs in the country. Even when we were overmatched on paper, she made you believe that you could succeed."

Antonelli has applied that lesson in creating a full and busy life.

Sunday, she was in Austin, Texas, broadcasting the Kansas State-Texas game. Monday, she was in Winston-Salem for Clemson-Wake Forest. It's nothing for Antonelli to have four games in four cities on four different nights.

Still, she finds time to keep up with the Wolfpack and Yow.

"She calls, always checking on me," Yow says. "She called [Monday] morning, just to see how I'm doing. She always stays in touch, and if there's any way she can help, she always offers her help."

Watching the Pack

On Monday, Antonelli, who has broadcast games on ESPN, Fox Sports and CBS, told her viewers how she had grown up watching Cristy McKinney -- now the Clemson women's head coach -- play at N.C. State. Antonelli went to Cary High School and spent many nights at Reynolds watching the Wolfpack.

Antonelli hadn't broadcast McKinney's Tigers and Wake before, so she had to put in six to eight hours to get ready. Antonelli watches game film, goes to shoot-arounds, pores over notes, talks to coaches and players. It takes half the time to prepare for a team she's already seen.

The work pays off.

Antonelli keeps her observations conversational, but she speaks with authority on why Wake Forest can't let Clemson score too many points -- it doesn't have the offense to keep up.

As the first half ends, Antonelli jumps up to chase down Wake coach Mike Petersen, who doesn't see her and goes back to his team's locker room. Instead, Antonelli snags McKinney and has a quick interview.

Halftime gives Antonelli and Mike Hogewood, her play-by-play partner for the game, a break. She checks other basketball scores and watches the halftime Special Olympics game with a smile.

Antonelli has three sons -- Joey, 12; Frankie, 10, and Patrick, 6 -- and they all play basketball. Frankie, who has Down syndrome, is a Special Olympics athlete.


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