Saturday, May 29, 2004
Michelle Greco, College Hoops Star, Hoping to make it w Seattle Storm
The ANNOTICO Report

Diana Taurasi is expected to be the LeBron James, the Kobe Bryant of the Woman's National Basketball Association.

No threat to her eminence, or even close to being in her shadow, but probably spending a lot of time on the bench, will be Michelle Greco, with the "Seattle Storm",
playing behind Sue Bird and Betty Lennox.

Sue Bird was named First Team All-WNBA in 2002 and 2003. Enough said.

Betty Lennox was Named the 2000 WNBA Rookie of the Year, and the only rookie chosen by coaches for the 2000 WNBA All-Star Game. Betty has had Hip Surgery since, and loves to lift weights. However, Betty is a "ball hog", that shoots only 37%, tends to be a "hot dog", and has an "attitude".

Michelle had an impressive record at La Crescenta Valley High, where she was a four-time Pacific League most valuable player, a two-time high school All-American and the state Division I player of the year. At UCLA, she was a two-time Pacific 10 Conference scoring champion and two-time all-conference selection.

However she wasn't drafted for the Pros, and hoped to play in Italy to have an opportunity to learn more about her heritage, but her agent sent her to Israel, then to Greece, before she got her chance with Seattle.

Well, we now have a "top dog", Diana Taurasi with the Phoenix Mercury, and
"under dog" Michelle Greco with the Seattle Storm to "root" for.

Both Italian American young ladies in the WNBA, happen to be from the greater
Los Angeles area. Diana from Chino, and Michelle from La Crescenta.
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AFTER A LONG JOURNEY, GRECO FINDS A HOME

Los Angeles Times
Mike Terry
May 26, 2004

Nothing shakes an athlete quite like hearing "you're not good enough" to make the team. It is a message that can crush the spirit or awaken a new determination.

Until last year, Michelle Greco, 23, had never been told "you're not good enough" as a basketball player.

Certainly not at La Crescenta Valley High, where she was a four-time Pacific League most valuable player, a two-time high school All-American and the state Division I player of the year. Or at UCLA, where she was a two-time Pacific 10 Conference scoring champion and two-time all-conference selection.

At 5 feet 9, Greco in college was considered a prototype shooting guard who broke down defenses with either her signature hippity-hop dribble, or by firing away from well behind the three-point arc. And she was clutch, making memorable last-second baskets to win plenty of games — at UCLA, and before that at Crescenta Valley.

But professional scouts had their doubts about how her game would translate to the WNBA. Her quickness was considered questionable, as was her durability. She went undrafted by the WNBA. The now-defunct Cleveland Rockers did offer a free-agent tryout but cut her early in training camp.

Greco couldn't believe how far she'd fallen, but she refused to stay down. She kept working on her game and believing that she could make it in the WNBA.

And she did, with the Seattle Storm.

"I did lose a little faith, especially when I didn't get drafted," Greco said. "But after I got cut from Cleveland it lighted a fire in me."

She would have to prove herself overseas, which she started doing in December. Leaving Southern California for an extended period for the first time was a life-altering experience. She had to be responsible for herself instead of having others do things for her.

"I grew up in L.A., went to UCLA — I'd never had to experience anything out of my comfort zone or deal with not having family or my close friends no more than 20 minutes away," Greco said. "So it was good for me."

She had hoped to go to Italy — "I'm of Italian heritage even though my last name is from Greece" — but her agent, Gilberto Garcia, steered her to Israel.

It was a good move. Playing for Maccabi Raanana, a first-division club, Greco scored 31 points in her first game and averaged 25 points for the month she was there. But when she came home for a Christmas visit, she chose not to go back.

In January, Garcia arranged for Greco to play for first-division Greek team Apollon Ptolemaidas as a midseason replacement. Greco continued to thrive, averaging 18 points and making the all-star team.

Meantime, Garcia was burning up the phone lines to get Greco a 2004 WNBA camp invitation. He found a willing listener in Seattle Coach Anne Donovan.

"I'd watched Greco in college quite a bit," Donovan said. "I'd always liked her athleticism and the fact she's an over- achiever. She's a tough kid that has great offensive abilities. I thought she had enough quickness and athleticism to defend in the league. But I hadn't seen her since UCLA."

When Greco arrived in Los Angeles on April 26, following a 10-hour flight from Greece,... she had a scheduled flight to Seattle...In three hours...

During her first few days of Storm training camp, Greco fought jet lag and the urge to put up shots the minute she entered the gym. "Early on I was just trying to get into the swing of things and not shoot myself out of camp. I didn't want to come in and just be a gunner," she said.

But she also didn't look like the player Donovan remembered.

As the Storm prepared to scrimmage against the Chinese national team, Donovan spoke to Greco in blunt terms.

"I called her over and said, 'I know you're a scorer, I know you're here to prove that. But you haven't shown anything, and the clock is ticking,' " Donovan said.

The scrimmage lasted nearly six quarters and the stats were kept haphazardly. Greco's line wasn't eye-opening; she was scoreless and had one assist. But she went all-out. She drove to the basket, was aggressive on defense, displayed a high energy level.

"Once she clicked and people got confident in her," Donovan said, "she never went back."

Greco is a backup behind starting guards Sue Bird and Betty Lennox. She made her WNBA regular-season debut Saturday against the Sparks and scored six points in 10 minutes.

"I know I have to continue to prove myself in the games," she said. "It's one thing to make the team; it's another to show everybody that I do belong. Just sitting on the bench and being content to make the team isn't good enough."

After a Long Journey, Greco Finds a Home
http://www.latimes.com/sports/printedition/
la-sp-wnbacol26may26,1,109601.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-sports