This was the condition of women's basketball at Macalester: Ellen Thompson went 5-17 in the MIAC in her second season (2006-07) and was named by her peers as the conference's coach of the year.
The Scots opened the 2004-05 season with six losses by an average margin of 40 points. The rest of the schedule was cancelled because of a minimum of players and the inability to compete.
Janine Ruth resigned as coach in the spring. The Scots' neighbor to the west, St. Thomas, also started a search for a coach after Tricia Dornisch's resignation.
Thompson was a Tommies assistant and was entrenched in that school's winning tradition. As Ellen Hanson, she was a forward and the captain of the Tommies' 1991 national champions. She also would marry Scott Thompson, the MIAC's men's player of the year for the Tommies in 1990.
Ellen badly wanted to coach the Tommies. She was considered for the job, before athletic director Steve Fritz went with Ruth Sinn, who was the coach at Apple Valley High.
"It was heartbreaking, but I also understood that St. Thomas wanted a completely fresh look at the basketball situation," Thompson said.
She made a call to Macalester. The Scots couldn't believe their luck -- a coach with an 82-40 record in six seasons at Hopkins High and with a strong background in the MIAC was willing to take a shot at building their program.
And that's the verb: building -- not rebuilding. Macalester's ineptitude in women's basketball was long-standing. The MIAC had crowned champions for over two decades and the Scots never finished above fifth.