Rutgers' Pondexter Strikes Gold With Team USA
Aug 19 | Women's Basketball
IZMIR, TURKEY – Rutgers’ Cappie Pondexter (Chicago, IL) contributed six points, three assists and two steals as Team USA defeated Serbia & Montenegro 79-63 in the final of the World University Games Aug. 19 in Izmir, Turkey.
The Americans posted a 7-0 record at the World University Games, striking gold at the competition for the first time since 2001. Pondexter, who will be a fifth-year senior on the Scarlet Knight squad this fall, served as a co-captain for the Americans. She started four of the seven games, averaging 8.9 points, 3.1 rebounds, 1.4 steals and a team-best 3.3 assists per contest, shooting 46.4 (26-56) percent from the field and 76.9 (10-13) percent from the free-throw line at the World University Games.
The 5-9 guard spent four straight summers (2000-2003) with the USA Basketball program as a member of the U.S. 20-and-Under National Team. Pondexter led the Americans to the gold medal at the 2003 FIBA World Championship For Young Women in Sibenik, Croatia, serving as the team co-captain and the starting point guard while averaging 5.3 points, 1.6 rebounds and 1.0 assist per game. She won a gold medal at the 2002 World Championship For Young Women Qualifying Tournament in Ribeirao Preto, Brazil, posting a tournament-best 6.5 assists-per-game average as the starting point guard and a team co-captain.
She tallied 8.8 points, 2.5 rebounds and 2.5 steals per game and shot 51.9 (14-27) percent from the field and 62.5 (5-8) percent from three-point range at the 2002 qualifying tournament. As a member of the 2001 U.S. Junior National Team, Pondexter won a bronze medal at the FIBA World Junior Championships in Prague, Czech Republic, and she also was a member of the 2000 U.S. Junior World Championship Qualifying Team that struck gold in Mardelplata, Argentina.
Pondexter was a candidate for three 2005 national player-of-the-year awards (Naismith, State Farm Wade Trophy, Wooden Women’s Award) as well as the Nancy Lieberman Award (top point guard) and Bayer Advantage Senior CLASS Award. Pondexter also was named to the 2004-2005 Associated Press (honorable mention), Full Court Press (third team) and Kodak/Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (honorable mention) All-America Teams, the Kodak/ WBCA All-Region 1 Team, the BIG EAST All-First Team and the BIG EAST All-Tournament Team, and was the NCAA Tournament Philadelphia Region’s Most Outstanding Player. She averaged 14.7 points, 3.5 rebounds and 3.1 assists per game last season, posting 19 double-digit scoring efforts (seven 20+ points) in 27 appearances.
The World University Games, held every two years and organized by the International University Sports Federation (FISU), is a multi-sport competition open to men and women between the ages of 17 and 28 (born between January 1, 1977, and December 31, 1987), who are, or have been within the past year, a student at a college or university. A total of 21 teams competed at the 2005 Women’s World University Games.
The USA women have enjoyed outstanding success in the World University Games and have earned 13 medals in 14 appearances, including six golds, six silvers and one bronze medal, and have compiled an overall record of 82-15 (.845) since beginning World University Games play in 1973. Prior to this year, USA Basketball last sent a squad to the 2001 World University Games, where the U.S. ran off to a 7-1 record and clinched the gold medal in Beijing, China. USA Basketball did not send a team to the 2003 World University Games.
Pondexter was one of two Scarlet Knights to play for USA Basketball this summer. Rising sophomore Essence Carson (Paterson, NJ) won a gold medal at the 2005 FIBA Under-19 World Championship July 24 in Tunisia.
2005 World University Games Schedule/Results
Wednesday, Aug. 10 USA vs. Czech Republic W, 88-64
Thursday, Aug. 11 USA vs. South Africa W, 92-22
Friday, Aug. 12 USA vs. China W, 107-54
Monday, Aug. 15 USA vs. Poland W, 89-63
Tuesday, Aug. 16 Quarterfinals vs. Taiwan W, 109-57
Wednesday, Aug. 17 Semifinals vs. Russia W, 118-67
Friday, Aug. 19 Championship game vs. Serbia & MontenegroW, 79-63











