CORVALLIS, Ore. — When Oregon State defeated mighty Stanford in January for the first time in 29 tries, Cardinal coach Tara VanDerveer gave credit to Beavers coach Scott Rueck.
In the six seasons since Rueck took over, Oregon State had steadily ticked off the milestones. Beating Stanford was the latest.
There were more to come.
“He’s put them into the national conversation, which is fabulous,” VanDerveer said.
Oregon State’s most recent accomplishment is the program’s first-ever NCAA Final Four appearance. The Beavers face undefeated defending champion Connecticut in Indianapolis on Sunday for a chance to play for the national championship.
“Did I ever think we could be here in six years?” Rueck asked Wednesday. “No way.”
To fully appreciate how far the Beavers have come, consider that when Oregon State hired Rueck, the team was down to two players and three recruits who were on the fence.
The Beavers were in disarray amid reports of player mistreatment, including verbal abuse, by the former coach. Oregon State had lost 17 in a row at one point during the previous season.
Rueck had spent 14 seasons at George Fox, an NCAA Division III Christian college in Newberg, Ore., leading the Bruins to six D-III tournaments and the national championship in 2009.
Coaching at his alma mater Oregon State was a dream.
Rueck was able to convince the three recruits to stick with Oregon State despite the uncertainty. But then he was left to build a Division I roster nearly from scratch. Taking the bold step of holding an open prospect camp for players, he could only promise walk-on status with a chance at earning a scholarship sometime later. Fifty-five young women showed up.
At a rally on campus Tuesday, Oregon State athletic director Todd Stansbury marveled at how far the team has come.
“You’re usually rebuilding something that’s there, but this was the total creation of a new program, from the ground up,” Stansbury said. “I remember having some conversations early on, when Scott first came here, about whether we were going to have to petition the NCAA to take a season off, because we didn’t have a team. So this is incredibly miraculous.”
The Beavers’ climb was steady and in 2014 the team reached the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 18 years. The ninth seed after finishing a then-school record 13-5 in Pac-12 play, the Beavers were runners-up in the conference tournament and advanced to the second round in the Big Dance. Rueck won league Coach of the Year honors and Sydney Wiese hit a Pac-12 freshman record 104 3-pointers.
The next season, Oregon State popped into the AP Top 25 for the first time since 1996, won the Pac-12 regular season title outright to end Stanford’s string of 14 seasons with at least a share of it, and again advanced to the second round in the NCAAs.
So far this season, the Beavers have collected a first-ever conference tournament championship, and, of course, that first Final Four. Oregon State climbed to No. 6 in the poll for its highest ranking ever.
A 60-57 victory over top-seeded Baylor on Monday got them here.