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Associated Press 5y

Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer taking regular season off to rest

Women's College Basketball, Rutgers Scarlet Knights

Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer, who earlier this season posted her 1,000th victory, is taking off the rest of the regular season on the advice of doctors.

The announcement Sunday by the Big Ten school came three days after the 70-year-old Hall of Famer missed a game at Michigan.

Rutgers said Stringer is expected to return for the postseason. The Scarlet Knights (18-8, 10-5) were ranked earlier this month and are expected to make the NCAA tournament.

Assistant coach Tim Eatman will serve as acting coach through the Big Ten tournament.

"As you can imagine this was not an easy decision; however, in consultation with my doctors, it is in my best interest to spend time to get healthy before returning to the day-to-day grind of coaching," Stringer said in a statement.

"I know our young ladies can finish the season strong playing Scarlet Knight basketball and I will rejoin the team as soon as I can," she added.

Eatman served as acting head coach for three games after the illness and death of Stringer's mother, Thelma Stoner, in 2016.

Rutgers has three regular-season games left, starting with a home game against Wisconsin on Monday.

Stringer picked up her 1,000th win on Nov. 13 with a 73-44 decision over Central Connecticut.

She was the fifth Division I women's coach to achieve the milestone and sixth overall. She is the first African-American coach to reach the mark.

The others are Pat Summitt, Geno Auriemma, Tara VanDerveer and Sylvia Hatchell. Division II coach Barbara Stevens also has won more than 1,000 games.

Stringer has a career mark of 1018-410 in 48 seasons, making her the sixth-winningest coach in women's basketball. She is 498-275 in 24 seasons at Rutgers.

Stringer is the only women's coach to take three different teams to the Final Four: Cheney State in 1982, Iowa in 1993 and Rutgers in 2000 and `07. Her teams have appeared in 26 of the 36 NCAA tournaments and made 10 regional finals.

Rutgers last appeared in the NCAA tournament in 2015.

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