
Even putting aside game statistics, Vivian Stringer is a competitor and winner in many arenas. Stringer is the leader, an inspiration, and a role model for her players, just as she is for her own children. Her teams are filled with much more than competitive spirit; each group of women becomes a family, playing alongside each other, working in the community, and sharing their skills with younger, aspiring basketball players. These women not only learn how to play great basketball, but they also learn how to tackle their own personal challenges with spirit and assist others facing challenges as well.
Close family ties and a cooperative, enduring spirit had roots much earlier than Stringer’s first appearance on the college basketball court. Stringer (whose maiden name is Stoner) came from a family who has always stuck together and persevered through tough times. In her hometown of Edenborn, Pennsylvania, she shared chores and responsibilities with her five brothers and sisters. They also came together to play music with her father, who although passionate about his music, had to support his family with a job working in the coal mines of Pennsylvania. Everyday, Vivian would watch her father come home and carefully clean out the soot and grit from his fingernails, never complaining, but believing that his kids would have a better future. She saw her father carry on with work and family when both of his legs had been amputated, after an injury caused gangrene to set in. And when her father died, Vivian watched another hero in the family rise to the challenge. Her mother picked up the pieces of her family, got a job, and managed to feed and clothe her family on much less than the had before.
Family strength, resourcefulness, and the ability to overcome any obstacle has helped Stringer’s basketball teams--and also her own family. When childhood meningitis left her middle child, daughter Janine, with special needs, Vivian and her husband Bill took the challenge in stride. Instead of looking at what would not be possible for their daughter, they looked at the possibilities that existed and found ways to bring her a full life. With the help of The University of Iowa, which offered her a position as coach to take another underdog to the top, and also gave her daughter the best medical attention available. During the time that she was coaching the Iowa Hawkeyes and revolutionizing women’s basketball with unprecedented game attendance (including some sold-out venues) and another try in the Final Four, Vivian’s own husband died tragically and unexpectedly from a heart attack. It may have been the most defeating and devastating event in her life; but she picked herself up and held her family together, even without the other half that she was so tied to.
After Bill’s death, Vivian delved even deeper into her passion, and struggled to take care of three young children. Vivian needed to find a way to continue success in both arenas, so she moved from her twelve-year position at Iowa to Rutgers University in New Jersey, where she could return to her roots and be closer to her family. Once again, she found herself charged with turning around a struggling team, and, once again, she turned underdogs into national champions.
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Written by
Kathy Crockett The My Hero Project Photos courtesy of The Scarlet Knights Women's Basketball, Rutgers University |
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The Scarlet Knights, Women's Basketball The official home page to Rutger's University's women's basketball. |
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Coach Stringer in Action...
"This is a Game Ladies" is a PBS film documentary that follows the Scarlet Knights Women's Basketball team and their coach, C. Vivian Stringer through nearly two years of practices, games, and life. You can watch short videos of Coach Stringer's pep talks before the Final Four and shares her goals and mission for Women's Basketball. There are also links to more articles on Stringer and the Final Four.
Listen to Coach Stringer
Listen to an interview with C. Vivian Stringer as she talks about "This is a Game Ladies" with Tavis Smiley on PBS.
Read More About Coach Stringer
On the Books... Vivian Stringer is also featured in the book, My Hero as she writes |
RECOMMENDED
READING | |
![]() Inside Women''s College Basketball: Anatomy of Two Seasons by Richard G. Kent (Editor), C. Vivian Stringer |
Standing Tall: Lessons in Turning Adversity into Victory by Vivian Stringer, Laura Tucker (With) |
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Last changed on:1/27/2007 6:56:21 AM
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