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"Go Rez Girls! Best of luck to Shoni and Jude Schimmel tonight in the Championship game for the Women's Final Four. (Video)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — For Louisville’s Schimmel sisters, success on the basketball court during the NCAA tournament has brought their family closer together in ways they never anticipated.

It inspired their parents to finally get married, for one.

As Shoni Schimmel and younger sister Jude recounted Saturday, the eve of Louisville’s national semifinal matchup with Cal, the events leading to their father parents’ long-overdue marriage began when Rick was talking about why Easter Sunday was an appropriate time to believe in miracles.

That, of course, was the same day the fifth-seeded Cardinals were to meet top seed and defending national champion Baylor in the Oklahoma City Regional semifinal — a game the Bears were expected to win by most, including the Schimmel sisters’ own mother, Ceci Moses.

“Sadly, I have to put my mom in the category with everyone else,” Jude Schimmel said. “So she told my dad: ‘If these guys beat Baylor, then I’ll marry you.’”

That night, the sisters combined to go 7-of-10 from three-point range to help Louisville pull off an 82-81 victory that will be remembered as one of the biggest upsets of the 2013 tournament.


The next day, Rick and Cici were married in Oklahoma City. The day after that, Louisville pulled off another upset against Tennessee last Tuesday to advance to the Final Four in New Orleans.

“My parents have been together for 28 years, but they’ve never had the time to actually tie the knot,” Shoni Schimmel explained. “they had a ton of kids, eight kids, and they just never really had the time to go out and do it because they’re out coaching us or teaching us how to play basketball and stuff. They never had the time.”

It somehow seemed fitting that the marriage would be triggered by a basketball victory, given how the parents took so much time to raise their children playing the game.


Native Americans

The Schimmels are native Americans, and the family lives on a reservation in Oregon where, Jude said, life is not always easy.

“There are so many negative things that are on the reservation,” Jude Schimmel said, mentioning teenage pregnancy, drug addiction and alcoholism as examples. “Basketball is one of the things that are really positive.

“The fact we had so much support from our family helped us focus on basketball and not the negative things. Basketball’s got us this far.”


Shoni Schimmel is Louisville’s leading scorer, averaging a team-high 14.4 points. The 5-foot-10 junior guard has been known to hit shots from well beyond the three-point line. The 5-5 Jude Schimmel is a sophomore, averaging 5.6 points in a reserve role.

This past week, Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma called the Schimmel sisters two of the most exciting players in the country, and Jude Schimmel was gratified to hear such a high-profile figure in the game say that for several reasons.

“It’s cool knowing people like that are recognizing us,” Jude Schimmel said. “That’s kind of our goal, kind of make a name for not only us but other native Americans who want to do this.”
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The game tips off at approximately 8:30 p.m./ET; ESPN will televise, with ESPN3 livestreaming (check Espn.com/watchespn for details).

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