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Robert Morris Continues Winning Ways Over Youngstown State, 59-56
Youngstown State University finally got to come home and play a game Thursday night. The suitcase-carrying YSU team last played home games on November 18 and December 6. Robert Morris had not lost a game to Youngstown State since 2001 coming in. The Penguins were unable to reverse their recent misfortune against the Colonials and fell 59-56 to fall to 6-6 on the season.
With seven seconds separating the game clock and the shot clock and the game tied at 56, Youngstown State turned the ball over giving Robert Morris possession with 8.2 seconds remaining. Coron Williams fired a three right at the buzzer to seemingly give the Colonials the 59-56 win. Coach Jerry Slocum argued that time had elapsed before the shot was taken, and after the refs reviewed the video, the shot was ruled as good.
In the first half, the Penguins looked to be in control. In fact, at times they looked like they would pull away. The Colonials trailed the Penguins by seven at the 13:43 mark of the first half, but to their credit, kept clawing back to keep YSU within reach. The Penguins held a 32-31 lead at the half behind solid shooting from guards Kendrick Perry (above) and Blake Allen. Perry scored ten first half points with a couple of threes and 4-5 shooting. The consistent Allen poured in nine, hitting three triples.
In the second half, Perry continued to show his arsenal hitting a dunk and a three to put YSU ahead 43-39 with 11:43 left in the game. A half-court pass caught by a cutting Mike McFadden, who easily laid the ball in, tied the game. DuShawn Brooks then hit a couple of threes to put YSU ahead 49-45 with just under ten minutes remaining.
The second half of the game seemed much more physical than most for both teams. It seemed every trip in either direction left a member of either team lying under the hoop and grabbing a body part while wincing in pain.
“I am very disappointed with the outcome”, said Coach Slocum. “I am very respectful of our kids to come back and play as hard as they did against a good team like they did tonight.”
With 6:03 left in the game, and the Penguins ahead 49-48, Brooks hit a nice runner in the paint to stretch the margin to three. After a stop, Fletcher Larson hit a pair of free throws to widen the lead to 53-48. Brooks then was fouled grabbing an offensive rebound and he promptly hit a pair of free throws to make it 55-48 with 3:47 left in the game. The Colonials fought back to make it a two-point game, 55-53, with 3:14 left in regulation. That score would not change over a two minute span as YSU had a couple of empty possessions. Anthony Myers hit a three with about 50 seconds left to tie the game at 56.
Perry finished the game with 18 points, Brooks knocked in 16 more and Allen finished with 12. The Colonials are another quality opponent that the Penguins had on the ropes but could not put away. Coach Slocum and this dedicated team will continue to work hard and get better for league play.
Velton Jones finished with 15 to lead the Colonials who improved to 10-3 on the year.
YSU Christmas Ideas
Every family has one… that ‘hard to buy for’ relative that you can never figure out what to get for Christmas. Here are a couple of nice gift options that are relatively inexpensive:
- The Youngstown State Athletic Department is selling a one-of-a-kind “Pete the Penguin” golf club head cover for $30. The head cover makes a great last-minute Holiday gift for any golf enthusiast. All proceeds go to the YSU Athletics Department. To purchase a head cover, contact the YSU Athletic Ticket Office at (330) 941-1YSU or visit the Stambaugh Stadium Athletic Ticket Office. Supplies are limited.
- The 2012 football Penguins open with a three-game homestand in September featuring FCS playoff qualifiers Albany and Northern Iowa. YSU also plays host to South Dakota, Southern Illinois and Indiana State in MVFC action at Stambaugh Stadium next fall. Season tickets are available for $84 (reserved) and $60 (general admission).
- Baseball season tickets are available as well for just $40. The Penguins play 22 home games, including 21 at Eastwood Field in Niles. The cost is less than $2 per game with the purchase of season tickets. YSU is set to play host to non-conference foes Akron, Kent State, Pittsburgh, Toledo and Ohio while the league slate features UIC, Valparaiso, Milwaukee, Butler and Wright State. The home opener is set for March 16 against Milwaukee.
- The new Horizon League Membership in the Penguin Club begins on December 31 with the women’s game against rival Cleveland State. All Courtside Coaches membership levels are discounted 15 percent from the original full-season packages. YSU will play 18 home basketball games at the Beeghly Center between Dec. 31 and Feb. 25.
- As a friendly Holiday reminder, the only way to purchase tickets for next year’s football season opener at Pittsburgh on Sept. 1 is to be a Penguin Club member or season-ticket holder. YSU returns 10 starters on an offense that averaged a school record 36.2 points per game in 2011.
So why not spread a little cheer, and experience Youngstown State Athletics live!
Kenya Middlebrooks Is Horizon League Player of The Week
With her clutch performance in leading the Youngstown State women’s basketball team to a comeback win at Akron, YSU senior guard Kenya Middlebrooks has been named the Horizon League Player of the Week.
Middlebrooks, a native of Toledo, Ohio, scored 13 of her career-high 27 points in the final four minutes as YSU rallied from a 13-point second-half deficit. Middlebrooks was 8-for-12 from the field, including 6-for-9 from beyond the arc, and 5-for-6 from the free-throw line in the win.
With the Penguins down 67-62 at the 3:55 mark, Middlebrooks made two free throws to cut the deficit to three. She hit another charity toss at the 3:31 mark to make the score 69-65 with 3:31 left, and she went on to score the Penguins’ final 10 points. Her jumper with 2:41 left got YSU within one, and she hit a 3-pointer with 1:45remaining that gave the Penguins their first lead of the second half. Another triple put YSU ahead 76-72 with 50 seconds left, and she hit two free throws with 6.6 seconds left for the final margin.
Defensively, Middlebrooks had a steal with fewer than 50 seconds left when Akron trailed by four. She also grabbed the defensive rebound off an Akron miss with 23 seconds remaining.
Middlebrooks’ previous career high in scoring was 23 points in February against Valparaiso. She surpassed 20 points for the fourth time in her career and for the second time in 2011-12. The senior guard has made a Horizon League-leading 23 3-pointers.
Middlebrooks and the Penguins will be back in action on Dec. 27 at Stony Brook.
YSU Women Continue Turnaround, Post 78-72 Win At Akron
Kenya Middlebrooks scored 13 of her career-high 27 points in the final four minutes as the Youngstown State women’s basketball team rallied to defeat Akron 78-72 on Sunday afternoon at James A. Rhodes Arena. The Penguins scored 51 points and shot 60 percent after halftime and overcame a 13-point second-half deficit to improve to 6-4 on the season. They’ve now matched their win total from last season and have won five straight road games for the first time since 1997-98. Akron dropped to 5-6.
Youngstown State trailed 60-47 with nine minutes remaining and by eight with five minutes left. Melissa Thompson hit a 3-pointer at the 4:35 mark to start the rally, and Middlebrooks made two free throws after the media timeout to make the score 67-64. Akron upped its lead to 71-65 after two Taylor Ruper free throws at the 3:30 mark, but YSU closed out the game by outscoring the Zips 13-1.
Brandi Brown‘s 3-pointer cut the deficit in half, and Middlebrooks scored the next five points to give the Penguins a 73-71 lead with 1:45 left. Ti’eshia Stubbs made 1-of-2 from the free-throw line to make the score 73-72 with just over a minute left, but Middlebrooks hit her sixth 3-pointer of the game to push the lead to 76-72 with 50 seconds remaining.
Middlebrooks had a steal on Akron’s next possession, and she rebounded Akron’s miss with just over 20 seconds remaining. She made two free throws with 6.6 seconds left for the final margin.
Brown finished with 15 points and 14 rebounds, including 10 of each in the second half. Thompson added a career-high 12 points after having 11 points total in the first nine games. Hanna Luburgh had 20 points to lead three players in double figures for Akron.
The Penguins outshot the Zips 43.5 percent to 35.7 percent and held the rebounding edge 44-40. Youngstown State made 13 3-pointers, which was two off of the school record. Ten of those triples came on 16 attempts in the second half. Macey Nortey and Kelsea Fickiesen combined for 11 of YSU’s 19 assists.
Youngstown State battled through a sloppy first half to only trail by four at halftime. The Penguins scored 10 straight points early in the period but trailed by as many as nine before closing the gap late. Akron hit a triple on the first possession of the game, but the Penguins scored the next 10 points to take a 10-3 lead on a Middlebrooks trey with 17:15 remaining. After the fast start, YSU got out of sync offensively and committed eight turnovers in the first nine minutes. Akron used that to its advantage and went on a 12-1 run to go up 15-11 with 8:04 left.
Youngstown State’s next game will be at Stony Brook on Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. Merry Christmas Lady Penguins!
*Story Courtesy of YSU Sports
YSU Basketball Profiles: DuShawn Brooks
Nobody knew how much of a contributor DuShawn Brooks could be this season. Last year, Brooks played sparingly as a sixth man and showed flashes of the potential he has stabilized as a senior starter for the 2011-12 Youngstown State Penguins team. Brooks, or DB as he is called by friends, has already been named a Horizon League Conference Player of The Week this season and has really worked hard to get better. The most impressive part about Brooks’ role as a senior is that he puts the team first. The Chicago-area native had plenty to say in our recent interview.
Paneech: You have been called DuShawn, Terrell, and DB. What should I refer to you as?
Brooks: My name on my birth certificate is DuShawn Terrell Brooks, my sister gave me my name. On Facebook, I am listed as Terrell, it is what I go by. Most people call me Shawn or DB.
Paneech: Being raised in a big city presents problems such as pressure to do drugs and join a gang. Were you able to steer clear of that activity?
Brooks: Growing up, I lived with my grandmother until seventh grade, then I moved back with my mom in the suburbs. As soon as I got back, she got me involved with a mentor and I started playing basketball around that time. I really didn’t even have the time to get involved with anything that was bad. I was either at basketball, in church, or in school. I never got involved with any of those bad things, I was a pretty good kid.
Paneech: What was it like growing up in Chicago with Michael Jordan images and mentions everywhere?
Brooks: I never wanted to ‘be like Mike‘, I always wanted to play like him though. You get sucked into it and you want to wear his shoes, you want to dunk over somebody like he used to. You want to do the stuff he did to accomplish what he has — six rings, MVP awards, scoring titles. It was fun watching him play. Michael Jordan was like Batman, and Scottie Pippen was his Robin. It wasn’t always Michael. If Jordan was having a bad night, Pippen stepped up many times to provide the win.
Paneech: Is the basketball at the high school level in Chicago better than the product the Youngstown area schools put on the courts?
Brooks: I notice a difference when I come up to watch some of the high school games here. I think to myself ‘this kid wouldn’t get any playing time on my old team’ when I watch. That isn’t an insult to the area, but Chicago is a much bigger area with many more athletes that are bigger, faster, and stronger. Everybody plays basketball in Chicago. Here it is much smoother and a second sport to a lot of the student athletes. In high school, I was the last guy on the bench, never got any praise, and was relied upon to do all of the dirty work.
Paneech: How did you end up at Youngstown State?
Brooks: I started out at a prep school in Cincinnati. After that, I went to a junior college in Kansas for two years. We won our conference and regional championships there. Coach Wernicki showed up down there and told me that Youngstown was interested in me and invited me on a visit. I liked it here because it was not too big. A big part of me signing on was that I get to go home and play two games in Chicago. I never really got to play ball in front of my family until last year, and I really enjoyed it.
Paneech: When you get to Youngstown State, you meet Jerry Slocum. How is your relationship with him?
Brooks: I came in with an open mind. I won’t lie, it was very hard sometimes. Last year, I understood that I had to learn things before I could be given a lot of playing time. Coach Slocum was very supportive and would tell me not to get frustrated and that my time will come. He always let me know what I needed to do to get better, and I learned to just go out there and listen to him. Coming into this season, it has been better in the sense that I knew what to expect from him. I think he is a great coach and openly lets you know where you are excelling or falling short.
Paneech: What kind of a role do you think you play on this team?
Brooks: Probably doing whatever I have to do to help the team get a win. I have been scoring a lot lately, but that doesn’t mean it is going to continue. Sometimes I have to concentrate harder on grabbing rebounds, sometimes I have to dive after a loose ball. I have to worry about blocking a shot, going for a steal, — really, anything I can do to contribute to the success of this team. As a senior, I have to step up and do some of the things others may not want to do. Ash [Ashen Ward] is the leader, and I am going to do whatever I can to help him be a good leader.
Paneech: Coach Slocum has had bad luck taking junior college guys who sometimes put their personal statistics in front of the team. For him to be as positive as he is this season, he obviously believes in this team. What is different?
Slocum: None of us like to lose. Earlier this season, we lost to Wright State by one, and in the locker room after the game, everyone was really mad. We think we have the best team in the league and want to win the Horizon League. Everyone has been working hard and when we practice sluggish, coach [Slocum] lets us know we are practicing badly.
Paneech: You are dating a YSU women’s basketball player, Melissa Thompson. How in the world – between school, travel, and practice schedules do you two ever see each other?
Brooks: (laughs) She lives in the same building as me, so as soon as I get done or she gets done, we text each other. Then we can meet up and hang out. I have been with her for a year now, it has been really fun.
One Word Answers
Favorite Fast Food Order: 10 Honey Barbecue Wings at Sharks in Chicago.
Favorite Drink: Kool-Aid, Any Flavor.
Favorite TV Show: Pawn Stars, Storage Wars, And ESPN.
Closest Thing To Jordan In The NBA: Lebron James.
Best Friend On The Team: Everybody.
Who Would Win On Jeopardy Out of Damian Eargle, Coach Slocum, and Ron Strollo? Probably Damian Eargle because he is very smart.
How Far Can This Team Go? As far as we want to.
One Word Describing Coach Slocum: Tough.
Worst Class You Have Taken At YSU: Child Development.
Best Class Taken At YSU: Deviant Behavior.
Stores You Have To Go To: Foot Locker and Macy’s.
Breakfast Food: I love to cook. Probably Bacon, Sausage, and Eggs.
Phantoms Offense Clicks Big In 7-4 Victory Over Des Moines
The Youngstown Phantoms followed up a marquee win over first-place Green Bay Friday night with a convincing 7-4 victory over the Des Moines Buccaneers Saturday night to secure the second place slot in the United States Hockey League’s Eastern Conference heading into the holiday break.
The Phantoms (16-4-1, T-second East) got a pair of short-handed goals from Mike Ambrosia and Austin Cangelosi, and five other players – Soren Jonzzon, Dylan Margonari, Alex Gacek, Jordan Young and Eric Sweetman – found the back of the net to give them a win in one of the United States Hockey League’s toughest road arenas. Goaltender Matt O’Connor made 33 saves to enter the break with a league-leading 13 wins.
“Before the game, we said, ‘If we are going to get to where we want to get, we’re going to need to win on the road in a hostile environment,’” Head Coach Anthony Noreen said. “[With the break coming up] we wanted to treat this game like a playoff game.”
Jonzzon put Youngtown on the board just 34 seconds into the first period, netting his first goal in a Phantoms uniform. Des Moines (10-11-1, fifth West) answered just 73 seconds later when Mac Olsen deflected a centering feed from Garret Allen just past O’Connor to knot things up at one apiece.
Margonari retook the lead just 2:19 into the second when Cangelosi fed him in the slot on an odd-man rush. Less than two minutes later – and short-handed to boot – Cangelosi blew past the Des Moines defense and beat Kasdorf with a low wrister on the blocker side to put the Phantoms up 3-1. But the Buccaneers came roaring back, scoring two unanswered goals to tie it again. Kevin Irwin redirected a puck past O’Connor while short-handed at the 12:35 mark and less than four minutes later, Trent Samuels-Thomas poked one past him in the midst of a scrum to tie the game at 3-3.
The Phantoms found themselves on a short-handed 2-on-1, but Cangelosi sent his shot wide. The puck, however, took a fortuitous bounce off the end boards and floated right onto Ambrosia’s stick, and he threw it on net and past Kasdorf, who was caught out of position, to give the Phantoms the 4-3 advantage heading into the third period.
At the 2:40 mark in the third, Gacek intercepted a failed Buccaneers’ clearing attempt on the right-wing half wall and beat Kasdorf with a wrist shot for his second goal in as many nights. The Buccaneers pulled Kasdorf in favor of backup Christian Frey, but he did not fare much better, and Young beat him with a point shot less than two minutes later to stretch the Phantoms’ lead to 6-3.
Anthony Greco made it a 6-4 game when he beat O’Connor on a 5-on-3 power play at the 6:41 mark, but Sweetman regained the three-goal lead when he beat Frey with a wrist shot from the left point. O’Connor weathered the remaining Buccaneers chances, and the Phantoms skated off with their third straight road win.
The Phantoms resume USHL play on Dec. 28 when they take on the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders in Iowa. The puck drops at 8:05 p.m. EST.
YSU Can’t Find Rhythm In 86-77 Loss At Toledo
Junior Blake Allen scored a game-high 22 points and sophomore Kendrick Perry added 19 but the Youngstown State men’s basketball team could not overcome a slow start and dropped an 86-77 loss to Toledo on Saturday evening at Savage Arena. YSU shot just 26.5 percent in the first half, fall to 6-4 overall while Toledo improves to 7-3.
Junior Damian Eargle just missed a double-double with 13 points and nine rebounds. He also had five blocks and sophomore Nate Perry scored a career-high 10 points off the bench.
YSU, which shot 56.3 percent and outscored Toledo, 49-47, in the second half, trailed by as many as 17 in the first half, 11 at halftime and 13 with 18 minutes left in the game, but used an 18-6 run over a four-minute span to get within one, 49-48, with 13:50 left. Two layups by Allen and one by freshman Shawn Amiker brought the Guins within seven, 43-36, with 16:14 to go.
The Rockets built the lead back to nine, 49-40, but a jumper by Eargle, an old-fashioned three-point play by Perry and a 3-pointer by Perry brought the Penguins within one. YSU made 12 of their first 17 shots in the second half, were within one on two more occasions, 54-53, with 11:16 left and 56-55 at the 10:26 mark. Toledo, though, capitalized on a technical foul called on YSU and scored 12 straight points to boost its lead back to 13, 68-55, with 7:46 remaining. Perry’s second 3-pointer with 3:47 to go cut the deficit to nine, 76-67, but the Penguins would not get any closer.
Allen, who scored 16 of his points in the first half, scored YSU’s first eight points of the game that gave the Guins an 8-5 lead with 16:28 left before halftime. Allen connected on 5-of-8 shooting from the field, including four 3-pointers, while the rest of the team made just 4-of-26 (15.3 percent) field-goal attempts.
The Penguins visit Akron, Monday, Dec. 19, at 7 p.m. at the James A. Rhodes Arena in Akron, Ohio.
Phantoms Knock Off Top Dog Green Bay, 5-3
Earlier this week, Youngstown Phantoms right wing Ryan Belonger said the team might need a lucky bounce to beat the first-place Green Bay Gamblers. On Friday night, the Green Bay native provided that bounce. Belonger redirected a rocket point shot from Mike Gunn off of his skate with 13:06 remaining in the third period to give the Phantoms (15-6-1, T-second East) a 4-3 lead en route to an eventual 5-3 win over the Gamblers (19-4-1, first East) in the Resch Center. Luck, however, had little to do with it.
Mike Ambrosia had a pair of goals to go along with an assist, while JT Stenglein and Alex Gacek also scored for the Phantoms. Austin Cangelosi added a pair of helpers on both of Ambrosia’s goals while Matthew O’Connor made 26 saves to secure his 12th win of the season.
“Is it nice to get a win going against what’s probably the best team in the league? Absolutely,” Head Coach Anthony Noreen said. “But I don’t think we treated it very different from any other game.”
“It was a good confidence builder to know we have the ability to do it, but it took 20 guys going hard for 60 minutes to do it”, said Noreen.
The Phantoms did not take long to get on the board, taking a 1-0 lead just 2:23 into the first period off of Gacek’s fifth of the season. Daniel Renouf stepped into a slap shot from the top of the right circle and the rebound caromed to Gacek on the backdoor. The Miami University commit got it on his backhand, spun around to bring it on his forehand and threw it past Green Bay goaltender Ryan McKay into an open net.
The Gamblers tied it up a little more than three minutes later when Alex Kile found Sheldon Dries alone in the front of the Youngstown goal after a failed Phantoms clearing attempt. Grigory Dikushin put Green Bay up 2-1 at the 12:41 mark on an odd-man rush after a great feed from Peter Maric.
Belonger nearly tied it up with 15 seconds left when Cangelosi dropped it to him in the slot, but the Green Bay native’s backhand was knocked away by McKay and the Gamblers carried that lead into the first intermission.
Stenglein knotted things up on the power play 7:50 into the second period. The Greece, N.Y., native walked around the Gamblers defenseman to go in alone on McKay and then reached around the netminder to push the puck into the back of the net.
“He just willed that puck in,” Noreen said. “He had a bad angle coming in and his only chance to score was to walk around the goalie and he did that and put it in with one hand.”
Alexander Dahl earned a penalty shot when he was hauled down by Jordan Schmaltz after sneaking past the Green Bay blue-liner, but McKay made the save on his backhand attempt to preserve the tie.
Green Bay then retook the lead on a power play with 6:51 to go in the second. The Gamblers simply outmanned the Phantoms down low in front of the net and Sam Herr dug it out of a scrum and swept it past O’Connor. But just 79 seconds later, Ambrosia tied it once again. Cangelosi put a puck in Ambrosia’s wheelhouse and the Phantoms captain’s shot deflected off a defender’s stick past McKay. The teams ended the second period locked at 3-3.
After Belonger’s goal gave the Phantoms the lead, Ambrosia sealed the game with his second of the night. Cangelosi fed it to him on the half wall and he fired it low and past McKay to make give the Phantoms the two-goal cushion.
“I tell the guys all the time that if they want to know what our team is all about, just look at No. 14,” Noreen said. “Just the way he acts off the ice, watch the way he plays the game and watch what he does in crucial situations down near the end. Then, to hear him after the game in the locker room say, ‘this is what we expect to do, it’s no big deal’ – that’s the reason he’s our captain.”
YSU Football Players Honored, Kurt Hess Earns Player of The Year Award
Youngstown State sophomore quarterback Kurt Hess (above) was selected as the team’s John Delserone Most Valuable Player and Outstanding Offensive Player while senior defensive tackle Andrew Johnson was tabbed the team’s Outstanding Defensive Player for the 2011 season.
Hess (Dayton, Ohio) was a first-team All-Missouri Valley Football Conference selection becoming the first quarterback in school history and just the second sophomore in league history to earn the honor. For the season he set the school record for single-season touchdown passes (26), completion percentage (64.5), 200-yard games (eight), touchdown passes in consecutive games (11) and touchdown passes in a game (five vs. Missouri State). Hess had a career-high 187 completions for a career-best 2,468 yards during the campaign.
He is the first Penguin since Brandon Summers in 2008 to earn top offensive player and team MVP in the same season.
Johnson (Detroit, Mich.) was a second-team All-MVFC selection in 2011 and was named the team’s Outstanding Defensive Player and Jermaine Hopkins Defensive Lineman of the Year. led the team with 6.5 sacks and 11.0 tackles for loss. It was the most sacks registered in a regular season since Harry Deligianis had seven in 1997. He finished the year with 39 total tackles, including 27 solo stops. It marks the second straight year that a senior defensive tackle (Torrance Nicholson in 2010) has received both honors.
Junior center Mark Pratt (Tooele, Utah) was a second-team All-MVFC selection in 2011 and was tabbed the team’s Jim Zdelar Offensive Lineman of the Year. Pratt started all 11 games at center in his first year with the program. He was the leader of an offensive line that helped the Guins average a school-record 36.2 points per game and a school-best 458.6 total offensive yards per game.
Sophomore punter Nick Liste (Niles, Ohio) was named the Jeff Wilkins/Paul McFadden Specialist of the Year. Liste averaged 39.8 yards per punt on 53 attempts. Of his 53 attempts, 16 were placed inside the opposition’s 20-yard line while eight went for 50 yards or more.
Senior quarterback Marc Kanetsky (Hubbard, Ohio) was named the recipient of the Dr. Pat Spurgeon Torch Bearer Award and the Four Square Academic Award. Kanetsky was a four-year special teams standout as the team’s holder on placement kicks. He also served as a reserve quarterback and threw touchdown passes as a sophomore and a senior.
Sophomore Torrian Pace (Chantilly, Va.) was selected to receive the Dr. Neal R. Frost Outreach Man of the Year Award. Pace was a reserve tailback and member on special teams for the Penguins in 2011. He has been active on campus as a member of the YSU SAAC the past three years.
Senior tight end David Rogers (Kent, Ohio) was named the Ron Stoops Most Inspirational Player. A fifth-year senior, Rogers wore No. 13 during the season to honor a friend who was killed in Afghanistan. Rogers also returned to be a key contributor following a severe injury in the 2009 season finale at North Dakota State.
Freshman wide receiver Christian Bryan (Irwin, Pa.) was selected as the program’s Newcomer of the Year. Bryan, an honorable-mention All-MVFC pick and member of the conference’s all-newcomer team, led all of FCS freshman with 719 receiving yards in 2011. He was one of 20 finalists for the Jerry Rice Award, which is given to the nation’s top FCS freshman.
Also, for their efforts in the 56-14 Homecoming victory over Western Illinois, the starting offensive line of Andrew Radakovich, Lamar Mady, Pratt, Chris Elkins, and Eric Franklin were the recipients of the YSU Football Alumni Group’s Difference Maker Award.
YSU Men Drill 14-Threes To Tie Record Again, But Fall 80-72, At Buffalo
Youngstown State tied the school record for most 3-pointers in a game for the third time this season, but dropped an 80-72 decision to Buffalo on Saturday evening at Alumni Arena. Youngstown State falls to 6-3 while Buffalo improves to 6-2.
The Penguins, who made 14 3-pointers, were led by sophomore Kendrick Perry‘s double-double of 18 points and 10 assists and 17 points from both senior Ashen Ward and junior Blake Allen (above). Perry connected on 7-of-18 shooting from the floor, including three 3-pointers. Allen made five 3-pointers, Ward made three, Nate Perry had two and DuShawn Brooks added one each.
Although YSU shot 40 percent from behind the arc (14-for-35), they had no answer for the inside presence of Buffalo’s Javon McCrea and Mitchell Watt, who scored 29 and 20 points, respectively. McCrea, who connected on 14-of-17 from the field, also grabbed a game-high 13 rebounds.
The Penguins trailed by just one, 62-61, after a layup by Perry at the 8:38 mark and by six, 67-61, after a 3-pointer by Buffalo’s Tony Watson and two free throws from Watt with 7:43 left.
An offensive rebound and layup by McCrea extended the Bulls’ lead to eight, 69-61, with 5:10 remaining. Ward (above) hit three late 3-pointers to get YSU, who trailed by as many as 10, 74-64, within six, 78-72, with 12 seconds left but Buffalo made two free throws down the stretch to seal the win.
The Penguins used a 13-5 run to build a 26-18 lead midway through the first half after the Bulls knotted the game, 13-13. A 3-pointer from Allen and two from sophomore Nate Perry spark the Guins first-half spurt. Buffalo, though, outscored the Penguins 12-4 to take a 30-29 lead at the 6:17 mark after a dunk by McCrea.
Kendrick Perry, who scored 15 points in the first half, and Allen put the Guins back up by four, 36-32, after a pair of treys with 4:17 left. After Buffalo scored six straight points to take a 38-36 lead, Perry drained a 3-pointer with three seconds to give YSU a 39-38 halftime lead.
The Penguins take a break for finals before visiting Toledo, Saturday, Dec. 17, at 7 p.m. in Toledo, Ohio.