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Micky Mallette hesitated to dial the number and ask. It was good news, which is something all of them could use, but who knew how Maggie Dixon's parents would react? Jimmy and Marge Dixon had 28 ...
Coach Maggie Dixon, who at age 28 led Army's women's basketball team to their first NCAA tournament berth last month, died after suffering heart arrhythmia.
There are certain times when Jamie Dixon feels the past five years have gone by quicker than he could have imagined. And then there are other times where the loss of his sister Maggie lingers in a ...
Maggie Dixon, a 28-year-old Southern Californian who coached the Army women’s basketball team to its first NCAA tournament appearance this season, died Thursday afternoon, a day after collapsing ...
Maggie Dixon put up a brave front, faced with the task of challenging national perennial Tennessee, and she accepted a resounding defeat with grace and hopes for a bright future.
Maggie Dixon's heart stopped a year ago today, her life cut short at age 28. Dixon, Army's first-year women's basketball coach, went for afternoon tea at friend Deb Dalton's house and collapsed ...
Maggie Dixon was a rising star in Women’s Basketball. Just 28 years old, Dixon led Army to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in its history - in her first year as the program’s coach.
THE toughest time is late at night when Jamie Dixon is driving home from a game or practice. That’s when he instinctively reaches for his cell phone to call his sister Maggie. This was their … ...
WEST POINT – They know how to deal with death here. Because they know how to live. The U.S. Military Academy is a place of sacrifice – for your country, for your Army brothers and siste… ...
NEW YORK — The last time UConn played in the Maggie Dixon Classic, the Huskies tied UCLA for the longest winning streak in NCAA college basketball history. Defending national champion ...
Maggie Dixon led Army to the NCAA tournament in 2006. AP Photo/Stephan Savoia. Elizabeth Merrill, ESPN Senior Writer Apr 4, 2011, 01:27 PM ET. Close. Elizabeth Merrill is a senior writer for ESPN.
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