Kara Elizabeth Wolters (born August 15, 1975) is an American former collegiate and professional basketball player and a current sports broadcaster. Standing at and nicknamed "Big Girl," she is the tallest player in University of Connecticut women's basketball history and one of the tallest women to ever play in the WNBA. During her playing career, she was an NCAA national champion (1995), FIBA world champion (1998), WNBA champion (1999), and Olympic champion (2000) becoming one of 11 women with those accolades. She also won AP College Player of the Year in 1997

Following her professional playing career, Wolters moved into broadcasting. She started as a radio color commentator for women's basketball on WTIC (AM), and since 2012 has served as the in-studio analyst for women's basketball on SNY. She also runs the Kara Wolters Dream Big Basketball Camp in Connecticut.

Wolters was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2017.

Personal

Wolters was born the youngest child of Liz and William Wolters and grew up in a basketball family. Her mother, Liz, once scored 50 points in one game at Wellesley High, more than any Massachusetts high school player before. Wolters has always worn uniform number 52, the same number as her father, as a tribute. Her maternal grandfather played Minor League Baseball in the New York Yankees system.

Wolters married Sean Drinan, a financial advisor, in November 2004. They have two daughters, Sydney and Delaney.

University of Connecticut

Wolters played for the women's basketball team at the University of Connecticut from 1993 to 1997. She was a member of the 1995 team that won the NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship, which capped a perfect 35–0 season. Her UConn team compiled a 132–8 record (94.3%). She appeared in four NCAA Tournaments, advanced to the 1996 Final Four, the 1994 and 1997 Final Eights and won four Big East Conference Championships and four Big East tournament titles. In 1997 she was named the National Player of the Year.

USA Basketball

Wolters was invited to be a member of the Jones Cup team representing the US in 1996. She helped the team to a 9–0 record, and the gold medal in the event. Wolters averaged 5.9 points per game.

Wolters was traded to the Sacramento Monarchs for the 14th pick in the 2001 WNBA draft on April 11, 2001. Wolters continued to play for the Monarchs until May 20, 2003, when she was released.

In her four-year WNBA career, Wolters averaged 50 percent in field goal shooting, 75 percent in free throw shooting, 3.2 rebounds per game, and 6.5 points per game.

International

Wolters was a member of the gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic women's basketball team during the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia.

She ranks second among all-time USA World Championship competitors for the most blocked shots (11).

Wolters is one of only 12 women to receive a Gold Medal in the Olympics, an NCAA championship, and a WNBA Championship. The others are Sue Bird, Swin Cash, Tamika Catchings, Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, Brittney Griner, Maya Moore, Candace Parker, Ruth Riley, Breanna Stewart, Sheryl Swoopes, and Diana Taurasi.

Honors and awards

USA Basketball notes

  • Gold Medal: 2000 2000 Summer Olympics
  • Gold Medal: 1999 U.S. Olympic Cup
  • Gold Medal: 1998 World Championship
  • Gold Medal: 1997 World University Games
  • Gold Medal: 1996 R. William Jones Cup
  • Silver Medal: 1995 World University Games
  • Bronze Medal: 1994 World Championship
  • Named to the 1999–2000 USA Basketball Women's Senior National Team on January 6, 2000.
  • Member of the gold medal-winning 1998 USA World Championship Team which finished with a perfect 9–0 record and was named the 1998 USA Basketball Team of the Year; aided the U.S. to a 12–1 record in its 13-game pre-World Championship tour.
  • Selected as one of the first six members to the 1998 USA Basketball Women's World Championship Team on September 4, 1997.
  • 1996 USA Olympic Team finalist (18).
  • The only collegian named to the bronze medal-winning 1994 USA World Championship Team.

USA Basketball records

  • Ranks second among all-time USA World Championship competitors for blocked shots (11).
  • Drafted by the Indiana Fever in the fourth round (16th overall) of the 2000 WNBA expansion draft.
  • Drafted by the Houston Comets in the third round (36th overall) of the 1999 WNBA draft.
  • Averaged 1.6 ppg. and 1.2 rpg. for the Houston Comets in 1999.
  • Prior to the ABL folding in December, 1998, ranked among league leaders 24th for scoring (11.0 ppg.), 16th for rebounding (5.3 rpg.), third for blocked shots (16) and first for field goal percentage (58.4%).
  • Finished the 1997–98 ABL season ranked as the league's leader for blocked shots (1.5 bpg.), fourth in field goal percentage (53.5%) and 16th in rebounds (5.2 rpg.).
  • Selected as the third pick in the 1997 ABL Draft by the New England Blizzard.

Collegiate notes

  • During her four seasons (1993–97), UConn compiled a 132–8 record (94.3%), appeared in four NCAA Tournaments, won the 1995 NCAA championship, advanced to the 1996 Final Four, the 1997 and 1994 Final Eights, and won four Big East Conference championships and four Big East tournament titles.
  • Named by Associated Press 1997 All-America first team and Player of the Year.
  • Runner-up for the 1997 Boost/Naismith National Player of the Year.
  • Awarded the 1996 Victor Award as the nation's top female collegiate player.
  • Ranks second among all-time USA World Championship competitors for blocked shots (11).
  • She is one of three finalists for the 1997 Women's College Basketball ESPY award.
  • Named 1997 All-America by Basketball America, United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) and Kodak.
  • Named 1996 All-America first team by the USBWA, United Press International and the Associated Press.
  • Named 1997 and 1995 District I All-America by Kodak, and 1996 All-America honorable mention by Kodak.
  • Named to 1995 NCAA Tournament All-Final Four Team, averaged 20.5 ppg. in the Final Four.
  • Named to 1997 and 1996 All-NCAA Midwest Regional and 1995 and 1994 All-NCAA East Regional.
  • Named 1997 Big East Conference Women's Basketball Player of the Year, 1997 and 1996 All-Big East first team, 1995 All-Big East second team and 1994 Big East All-Rookie Team.
  • Named 1996 and 1995 Big East tournament Most Outstanding Player and Big East All-Tournament all four years.

Career statistics

WNBA

Regular season

|-

| align="left" | 1999

| align="left" | Houston

|10||0||4.1||23.1||0.0||83.3||1.2||0.2||0.1||0.0||0.3||1.6

|-

| align="left" | 2000

| align="left" | Indiana

|31||30||25.6||56.1||0.0||74.0||5.3||1.3||0.4||1.6||2.4||11.9

|-

| align="left" | 2001

| align="left" | Sacramento

|31||1||12.2||47.0||0.0||80.6||2.4||0.5||0.1||0.8||1.1||4.9

|-

| align="left" | 2002

| align="left" | Sacramento

|14||0||5.6||32.1||0.0||60.0||1.6||0.2||0.0||0.2||0.4||1.7

|-

| align="left" | Career

| align="left" | 4 years, 3 teams

|86||31||15.0||50.8||0.0||75.2||3.2||0.7||0.2||0.9||1.3||6.5

Playoffs

|-

| align="left" | 1999

| align="left" | Houston

|2||0||2.5||100.0||0.0||100.0||0.5||0.0||0.0||0.0||0.5||2.0

|-

| align="left" | 2001

| align="left" | Sacramento

|4||0||9.3||35.7||0.0||0.0||1.0||0.3||0.5||0.5||0.3||2.5

|-

| align="left" | Career

| align="left" |2 years, 2 teams

|6||0||7.0||40.0||0.0||100.0||0.8||0.2||0.3||0.3||0.3||2.3

College

{| class="wikitable" <hiddentext>generated with :de:Wikipedia:Helferlein/VBA-Macro for EXCEL tableconversion V1.7<\hiddentext>

|- style="font-size:10pt" align="center" valign="bottom"

|colspan="20" height="14" | Kara Wolters Statistics at University of Connecticut

|- style="background-color:#002868;font-size:10pt;color:white" align="center" valign="bottom"

| height="15" | Year

| G

| FG

| FGA

| PCT

| 3FG

| 3FGA

| PCT

| FT

| FTA

| PCT

| REB

| AVG

| A

| TO

| B

| S

| MIN

| PTS

| AVG

|- style="font-size:10pt" align="right" valign="bottom"

| height="14" | 1993–94

| 33

| 168

| 264

| 0.636

| 0

| 0

| 0

| 29

| 57

| 0.509

| 159

| 4.8

| 9

| 54

| 75

| 12

| 511

| 365

| 11.1

|- style="font-size:10pt" align="right" valign="bottom"

| height="14" | 1994–95

| 33

| 222

| 354

| 0.627

| 0

| 0

| 0

| 59

| 89

| 0.663

| 204

| 6.2

| 38

| 60

| 94

| 13

| 761

| 503

| 15.2

|- style="font-size:10pt" align="right" valign="bottom"

| height="14" | 1995–96

| 37

| 306

| 486

| 0.630

| 0

| 0

| 0

| 82

| 142

| 0.577

| 291

| 7.9

| 37

| 103

| 105

| 14

| 978

| 694

| 18.8

|- style="font-size:10pt" align="right" valign="bottom"

| height="14" | 1996–97

| 34

| 251

| 403

| 0.623

| 0

| 0

| 0

| 77

| 135

| 0.57

| 273

| 8.0

| 46

| 78

| 96

| 12

| 894

| 579

| 17.0

|- style="background-color:#002868;font-size:10pt;color:white"

| height="15" align="center" valign="bottom" | Totals

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 137

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 947

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 1507

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 0.628

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 0

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 0

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 0

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 247

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 423

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 0.584

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 927

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 6.8

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 130

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 295

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 370

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 51

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 3144

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 2141

| align="right" valign="bottom" | 15.6

|}

See also

  • List of Connecticut women's basketball players with 1000 points

References

  • Official Site
  • WNBA Player Profile
  • Kara Wolters bio on usabasketball.com