LITTLE ROCK (AP) Arkansas State says that it should play Arkansas again after a record crowd turned out to see the Lady Indians dispatch the Lady Razorbacks 98-84 Monday night in the second round of the WNIT in Jonesboro.<br>
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Attendance for the game at ASU's Convocation Center totaled 10,892.<br>
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``There's very few women's basketball programs where they can have more than 10,000 fans,'' Arkansas state women's basketball coach Brian Boyer said. ``When you draw that much, it can only be good.''<br>
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But Lady Razorbacks spokesman Bill Smith is less enthusiastic about the possibility of future meetings between the two teams during the regular season in any major sport.<br>
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``Right now, in the heat of things, it's not best to discuss those future plans,'' he said.<br>
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It has long been Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyles' practice to avoid scheduling regular-season games with in-state schools for the men's program, and the women's teams have followed suit. Before Monday's game, the last time teams from Arkansas and Arkansas State competed against each other in a major sport was in a men's NIT game in 1987, at Fayetteville.<br>
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Susie Gardner, Lady Razorback coach, is also skeptical about future matchups.<br>
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``Somebody tell me the benefit for Arkansas,'' she said. ``What would be the benefit for Arkansas playing Arkansas State?''<br>
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Boyer said it's not what the rivalry could do for Arkansas, but rather women's basketball in general.<br>
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``It's easy for me to say this because I'm not in their shoes, but as a women's basketball coach I accept a responsibility to promote women's basketball, and anything I can do to do that I think you have to do,'' he said. ``You saw how many little girls were in the stands looking up to the Lady Indians and the Lady 'Backs alike.''<br>
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Smith agrees with that conclusion.<br>
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``It's one game. It wasn't like it was the championship game,'' he said. ``It was very significant in that we haven't played so long. What was great (is that the) Convocation Center's record crowd is now a women's basketball game. That speaks to the improved status of women's basketball.''<br>
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Smith said the dynamics in Arkansas are different from other places with in-state rivalries.<br>
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But Dean Lee, the Arkansas State athletic director, said it only makes sense to have the two schools compete against each other.<br>
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``We think it is a natural rivalry that our fans want and players want on both sides,'' he said.<br>
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Boyer said, at the very least, the Lady Razorbacks should want to meet up with the Lady Indians, if only to satisfy a simple desire revenge.<br>
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``Again, it's easy for me to say from my end,'' he said. ``But if I were in their shoes I would say I'm a competitor and I'd want to try to turn the tables and have another shot.''<br>
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(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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