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She was named a WBCA National Coach of the Year in 1991 and 2004 by her colleagues while serving as head coach at Penn State. Additionally, she brought the WBCA community of coaches together to put pressure on the University of Oklahoma administration to reverse its decision to end its women’s basketball program while serving as our association’s president for the 1989–1990 academic year. We shall never forget what Rene brought to our sport, both as a player and a coach.”
With outstanding center Andrea Garner and brilliant point guard Helen Darling, Penn State advanced to the 2000 Final Four in Philadelphia, defeating Louisiana Tech and Iowa State before losing to eventual champion Connecticut in theLate in her career, Portland also faced accusations she discriminated against players whom she perceived to be gay, with a former player suing Portland and the school in 2005.
An internal school investigation led to a one-game suspension and $10,000 fine though Portland disputed the findings. The lawsuit was settled confidentially.
She resigned as coach of Penn State in 2007.
Portland was inducted into the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame last November. “Rene fought a courageous and determined fight against her cancer,” former Virginia coach Debbie Ryan said.
“She will be remembered as someone who gave her life to her family, her teams and her women. As a player, she was a fierce competitor at Immaculata and she carried that trait into her coaching career. She was a wonderful wife, mother and grandmother and friend who will be missed.”
Portland took over a successful program, and the Lady Lions finished 19-9 in 1981 in her first season. The next year, Penn State finished 24-6 and received an invitation to the first NCAA women’s basketball tournament.
The Lady Lions emerged as a national power in 1985, reaching the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament behind Atlantic 10 Player of the Year Kahadeejah Herbert and freshman point guard Suzie McConnell, who would go on to be an All-American and Olympic gold-medalist.
On Jan. 3, 1991, a Penn State team led by Susan Robinson beat top-ranked Virginia and Dawn Staley on the road, 73-71, and four days later the Lady Lions had their first No. 1 ranking.
The Lady Lions went into the NCAA tournament with a No. 1 ranking and a 29-1 record that year, but after getting a bye in the first round, Penn State was upset in the second round by James Madison.
Penn State again received a No. 1 ranking in 1994, but was denied a trip to the Final Four when it was beaten in the Midwest Regional final by Alabama.
That was Penn State’s second season in the Big Ten, a conference the Lady Lions would dominate almost from the beginning. The Lady Lions won three regular-season and two conference tournament titles.
The same year Penn State reached its first Final Four, Portland signed perhaps the best scorer in school history in Montoursville native Kelly Mazzante. In 2001, Mazzante became the first freshman ever to lead the Big Ten in scoring, and as a sophomore Mazzante was a second-team All-American by The Associated Press.
Respected by her peers, Portland is a past president of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association and was one of 10 women’s coaches asked to help the NBA develop its first women’s professional league, the WNBA, in 1997. That same year, she coached the U.S. national junior team to its first-ever gold medal at the World Championships.
Portland’s pedigree stretched back to Immaculata College “Mighty Macs” — one of the first dynasties in women’s college basketball — where she played on three Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women national championship teams in 1972, ’73 and ’74, before the NCAA recognized women’s sports.
A year after graduating from Immaculata, Portland was named head coach at St. Joseph’s, leading her first team to a 23-5 record and the AIAW national tournament. Portland spent two seasons at St. Joseph’s and two at Colorado, racking up an 87-29 record and leading all four teams into postseason play. One of her star players at St. Joe’s was future Notre Dame coach Muffet McGraw.
In 1980, Portland was hired by Joe Paterno to succeed Pat Meiser as head coach at Penn State — the only head coach Paterno hired during his tenure as Penn State’s athletics director.