Robelyn Garcia
WBA Player - Shooting Guard | |||||||||
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Born | Phoenix, Arizona |
September 16, 1965 ||||||||
Nationality | ![]() |
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Height | 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) | ||||||||
High Schools | Wichita East High School Enid High School |
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Colleges | University of Nebraska–Lincoln Dodge City Community College Friends University |
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Allocated | 1992, to the Kansas Crusaders | ||||||||
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Robelyn Annette Garcia (born September 16, 1965, in Phoenix, Arizona) is a former collegiate All-American and professional All-Star basketball player.[1][2] She was the Big Six Championship Game MVP on the Kansas Crusaders of the Women’s Basketball Association (WBA). Robelyn, nicknamed "Robbie", also led the nation in scoring[3] while playing at Dodge City Community College where she was inducted in to the 2015 Hall of Fame.[4][5]
Contents
High School
Garcia played at five different prep schools; she had a high scoring game of 56 points[6] while playing six-on-six basketball in Oklahoma. Robelyn also played two years for Wichita East High School and was an All-State Player at Elkhart High School in Elkhart, Kansas where she led her team in scoring. She played on two All-Star teams her Senior-year including the Kansas vs Texas All-Star Challenge. In addition, she was the leading scorer in The Boot Hill High School All-State game in 1983.[7] Garcia also played softball, soccer, volleyball, ran cross country and track and field in prep school.[8]
College career
Garcia had a stellar collegiate career with high scoring games of 46 and 40 points in her first year as a college player.[6][9] She was a Region NJCAA All-American and led the Nation in scoring as a freshman averaging 31.5 points per game before the implementation of the three-point line in the college game. Many of her points came from beyond what would have been the three-point arc.[10] She is the career All-time leading scorer at Dodge City College scoring 1,298 points in just two years.[11] She has held this title for over 30 years.[12] “At Dodge City, Garcia earned All-America honors and was ranked as one of the top junior college swing guards in the country when she averaged 28 points and five rebounds per game as a sophomore in 1984-85. She ranked as the nation's fourth-leading scorer as a sophomore.” [13] Garcia played at The University of Nebraska her junior year[14][15] and Friends University her senior year where she averaged 20 points per game and led her team and league in assists. She was a unanimous KCAC First-Team selection and NAIA Region All-Star her senior year.[16] Friends University Lady Falcons won the KCAC conference and made the NAIA National Tournament. Her Friends University Hall of Fame[17] Coach Jim Littell, now the head coach at Oklahoma State University, said "She's the greatest offensive talent I have ever coached. Passing, scoring, handling the ball".[6]
Garcia was a multi-sport athlete in college; she also played softball, soccer, ran cross-country and track.[18] She was honored in May 2015 with her induction into the Dodge City College [19] Athletic Hall of Fame.[4][20]
Professional
Garcia played for several professional basketball teams and leagues, including the 1993 Champion Kansas Crusaders, Kansas City Mustangs and Tulsa Flames of the WBA.[21] She also played in The Pro-Am, AAU Women’s League, Guadalupe, Mexico [22] and was chosen to play in the Liberty Basketball Association (LBA) professional league.[23] Garcia’s Kansas Crusaders team won the first WBA Championship in 1993. Her Kansas City Mustangs team won the regular WBA season going undefeated 15-0 in 1994.[24] Garcia was a 4-time WBA All-Star and is featured on the collector WBA All-Star Card Set by Fair Play Sports [25][26] In addition, Garcia was awarded the oldest women's sports [27] award of Women's Basketball AAU Athlete of the year in 1992 [28] while playing on her Championship Kansas City AAU Team.[29][30]
Garcia also received the 2015 WBCBL Women’s Professional Basketball “Trailblazer” Award on August 2, 2015 along with 9 other female basketball Icons including Cynthia Cooper, Nancy Lieberman, Sarah Campbell, E.C. Hill, Dr. Geri Kay Hart, Lynette Woodard, Kandi Conda, Lisa Leslie and Tamika Catchings.[31] The award recognizes some of the most influential people in professional women’s basketball, specifically those who helped blaze the trail, shape the overall landscape and pave the way for women’s professional basketball.[32] These 10 women have prevailed to greatness in a male dominated sport and give hope to young girls who inspire to be professional players, coaches, and team owners.[33]
Coaching career
Garcia coached two seasons at Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kansas while she was working on her Doctorate at The University of Kansas. She coached the Haskell Indian Nations Fighting Indians freshman team to a 20-0 undefeated season in 1992.[18] Garcia also coached several semi-pro, exhibition and club teams including the touring team Christian Basketball.[34]
Higher education
Dr. Garcia finished her eighth college degree and third master's degree on May 16, 2014. This was a Master of Arts in Criminal Justice and Criminology at Arizona State University. She was also inducted into the Arizona State Chapter of Phi Kappa Phi for her academic and scholarly achievement in May, 2014.[35] In addition, she has a Ph.D in Education Administration,[36] a Master of Science in Kinesiology/Exercise Science, a Post-Doc Graduate Certificate in Gerontology, a master's in Aging and Lifespan Development, an Associate of Arts and Sciences and a Bachelor of Liberal Arts and General Studies.[37] Garcia began her second doctorate program at Arizona State University in Fall 2014. She is a post-doc in the Doctor of Behavioral Health program with an anticipated graduation date in 2017-2018 academic year.[38]
In addition to her post-secondary degrees, research and teaching she has several publications including her Guide to Coaching Youth Basketball, [39] Integrative Mind-Body Medicine as a Treatment for Psychophysiologic Disorders Utilizing the Seven Keys to Treating Stress Illness[40] and Transtheoretical Model Key Constructs Applied to the Intervention & Treatment of Weight Cycling & Yoyo Dieting: Cognitive-Affective Bases of Health for Weight Management.[41] Most recently she has been awarded a seat on the editorial board of The International Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine.[42]
Other Activities
Garcia began competition in 2014 for the Senior Olympics, 2015 regional Senior Games and the 2016 World Games. Garcia is the President Emeritus of the Jr. NBA-WNBA[43] and the Vice President of American Community Team Sports. She has been a Professor in various academic fields for over twenty years.[44] Dr. Garcia began offering Jr. NBA - WNBA scholarships in 2011 in honor of her late Mother and launched her new Dr. Robelyn Garcia Scholarships in 2015.[45][46] She is the official team sponsor for the new Kansas City Pro WBCBL team and also provides scholarships for Seniors 50+, Jr. NBA-WNBA Players, WBCBL Teams and College Scholar Athletes.[47][48] Her volunteer work includes work with The Arizona State University Doctor of Behavioral Health Student Forum, Special Olympics, Beatitudes Healthy Aging Adult Center and Senior University.[49] Garcia was also a radio announcer for the WBA, DCCC, University of Nebraska, Friends University and Kansas City Public radio.[50] Dr. Garcia has been featured in and authored the afterword for the 2015 book "It's Your Go Season" by Kandi Conda.[51][52][53]
See also
References
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External links
- WNBA Cards - WBA All Star list
- History of Women's Professional basketball
- Beckett Cards
- WBA Photo & Article Archive
- KCAC Coverage Wichita Eagle
- Friends University
- Fan Base Women's Basketball Association
- Association for Professional Basketball Research
- WNBA Basketball Cards
- Women's American Basketball Association#Results WBA Season Results
- Women's Basketball Timeline
- Women’s Professional Basketball Leagues
- 1998 Steve Dimitry’s Extinct Sports Leagues
- WBA
- Robelyn Garcia Athlete
- Women's basketball#History Wikipedia History of the Women's basketball
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- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- American women's basketball players
- 1965 births
- Living people
- Shooting guards
- Sportspeople from Wichita, Kansas
- Sportspeople from Phoenix, Arizona
- American adoptees
- Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball players
- Arizona State University alumni
- Wichita State University alumni
- Junior college women's basketball players in the United States
- Sportspeople from Scottsdale, Arizona
- American women's basketball coaches