Felicia Ragland

{{Short description|American basketball player (born 1980)}}

{{Infobox basketball biography

| name = Felicia Ragland

| image =

| width =

| caption =

| number =

| position = Guard

| height_ft = 5

| height_in = 9

| weight_lb = 135

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1980|02|03}}

| birth_place = Tulare, California

| death_date =

| death_place =

| nationality = American

| high_school = Tulare Western
(Tulare, California)

| college = Oregon State (1998–2002)

| draft_league = WNBA

| draft_year = 2002

| draft_round = 2

| draft_pick = 28

| draft_team = Seattle Storm

| career_start =

| career_end =

| years1 = 2002

| team1 = Seattle Storm

| years2 = 2003

| team2 = Phoenix Mercury

| years3 = 2004–2005

| team3 = Houston Comets

| highlights =

| stats_league =

| stat1label =

| stat1value =

| stat2label =

| stat2value =

| stat3label =

| stat3value =

| bbr_wnba = raglafe01w

| letter = r

}}

Felicia Ragland (born February 3, 1980) is an American former professional basketball player who played four seasons in the WNBA.

College

After playing for the Beavers for four years, Ragland ranked in the school's top-10 all-time in 14 different statistical categories. In 2001, she became the third Oregon State player to earn Pac-12 Conference Women's Basketball Player of the Year.[http://www.osubeavers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=30800&ATCLID=207829442 Felicia Ragland Named Pac-10 Conference Player of the Year - Oregon State University Official Athletic Site] She was the first women's basketball player to be drafted by the WNBA when she was picked in the 2002 WNBA draft.

Career statistics

{{WNBA player statistics legend}}

=WNBA=

==Regular season==

{{WNBA player statistics start|caption=WNBA regular season statistics}}

|-

| align="left" | 2002

| align="left" | Seattle

|31||3||13.9||38.4||40.0||82.1||1.5||0.7||0.9||0.0||0.9||4.5

|-

| align="left" | 2003

| align="left" | Phoenix

|3||0||13.0||8.3||20.0||100.0||0.7||0.7||0.7||0.0||1.0||1.7

|-

| align="left" | 2004

| align="left" | Houston

|34||10||15.2||36.7||38.8||84.6||2.0||1.1||0.7||0.1||0.9||3.5

|-

| align="left" | 2005

| align="left" | Houston

|4||0||2.3||0.0||—||—||0.0||0.3||0.0||0.0||0.0||0.0

|- class="sortbottom"

| align="left" | Career

| align="left" | 4 years, 3 teams

|72||13||13.8||36.0||38.5||83.7||1.6||0.9||0.8||0.1||0.9||3.7

{{S-end}}

==Playoffs==

{{WNBA player statistics start|caption=WNBA playoff statistics}}

|-

| align="left" | 2002

| align="left" | Seattle

|2||0||9.5||33.3||33.3||—||3.0||0.5||0.0||0.0||1.0||3.5

|- class="sortbottom"

| align="left" | Career

| align="left" | 1 year, 1 team

|2||0||9.5||33.3||33.3||—||3.0||0.5||0.0||0.0||1.0||3.5

{{S-end}}

=College=

class="wikitable sortable"

|+ NCAA statistics

!Year

!Team

!GP

!Points

!FG%

!3P%

!FT%

!RPG

!APG

!SPG

!BPG

!PPG

1998–99

|rowspan=4| Oregon State

|27

|205

|36.4

|0.3

|0.7

|4.7

|1.8

|1.5

|0.1

|7.6

1999–00

|30

|388

|37.3

|26.7

|74.7

|6.2

|2.9

|2.1

|0.3

|12.9

2000–01

|29

|572

|44.4

|46.3

|75.2

|7.4

|1.9

|2.6

|0.2

|19.7

2001–02

|32

|638

|39.4

|34.7

|82.8

|6.6

|2.3

|2.5

|0.1

|19.9

class="sortbottom"

|align=center colspan=2| Career

|118

|1803

|39.9

|35.8

|76.6

|6.3

|2.2

|2.2

|0.2

|15.3

Honors and awards

  • Two-time honorable mention Associated Press
  • Two-time Kodak District 8 All-American
  • Three-time Pacific-10 Conference first team pick
  • 2001 Pac-10 Player of the Year
  • Jersey retired at Oregon State{{Cite web |url=http://www.osubeavers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=30800&ATCLID=207829558 |title=Women's Basketball Will Retire Felicia Ragland's Jersey on Saturday - Oregon State University Official Athletic Site |access-date=2015-08-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150205041536/http://www.osubeavers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=30800&ATCLID=207829558 |archive-date=2015-02-05 |url-status=dead }}

References

{{Reflist|refs=

{{cite web|last1=|first1=|title=Women's Basketball Player stats|date=|url=http://web1.ncaa.org/stats/StatsSrv/careersearch|website=NCAA|accessdate=19 October 2015}}

}}