ap

Skip to content

From Evergreen High to MSU Denver, Tanya Haave is “one of the best” in Colorado basketball

Haave played for legendary University of Tennessee basketball coach Pat Summitt, helped Volunteers to three Final Four appearances

Metropolitan State University of Denver head ...
Andy Cross, The Denver Post
Metropolitan State University of Denver head women’s basketball coach Tanya Haave, center, fires up her players before the game against Regis University at MSU Denver on Feb. 5, 2022. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Noelle Phillips of The Denver Post.
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...
Cheney's Yolanda Laney breaks for a ...
Doug Pizac, The Associated Press
Cheney's Yolanda Laney breaks for a potential basket, although Tennessee's Tanya Haave, right, is too much for her, causing Laney to miss the shot during the NCAA women's game in Los Angeles, March 31, 1984. (AP Photo/Doug Pizac)

Those who watched Tanya Haave play basketball and volleyball for Evergreen High School disagree on which sport was her best.

“I’ve known Tanya since she was an eighth-grader because someone up at Evergreen said, ‘Hey Alice, this kid up in Evergreen is really good,” Alice “Cookie” Barron, a Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame member, said. “We started watching her. She’s one of the best.”

In 1980, Haave became the first girl to win the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s High School Athlete of the Year for her success in volleyball and basketball.

After high school, she went to the University of Tennessee where she played both sports for the Lady Volunteers. Ultimately, she chose basketball, quitting volleyball after two years in college. As a Lady Volunteer, Haave played for legendary basketball coach Pat Summitt and helped her team to three Final Four appearances. She graduated as the team’s all-time leading scorer.

Today, Haave coaches the MSU Denver women’s basketball team. She uses the lessons she learned from Summitt to guide her teams.

“Pat wasn’t going to get outworked. She was going to do everything she could to make her teams be the best they could be,” Haave said. “Those are the things she taught us. I’m coaching because of her.”

Once upon a time, Haave said she had ambitions to coach at a bigger school. But she’s found a “sweet spot” at Metro where she has a chance to prepare women for life through the game of basketball.

Players learn to deal with adversity and conflict, work together as team, negotiate and make sacrifices for the good of the whole, Haave said. Her players have gone on to become computer programmers, veterinarians and consultants, and many other professions.

“If there’s anything athletics teach you, it’s about accountability,” Haave said. “You win or lose. You do it or you don’t. And you fight through adversity.”

Title IX has done so much for women, she said.

“They can go into business and the corporate world. I don’t think you would have as much of that without this,” she said. “What itap done in athletics has just been tremendous. I can hardly wait to see what the next 50 years bring.”

Tanya Haave, Metro State's women's basketball coach, works with her team at practice in Denver on Monday Jan 10, 2011.
RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post
Tanya Haave, Metro State's women's basketball coach, works with her team at practice in Denver on Monday Jan 10, 2011.

RevContent Feed

More in Sports