Archive for the ‘YSU Basketball’ Category
Butler Avenges 2011 Loss At Youngstown State With A 68-59 Triumph
After a tough loss in Detroit, Butler needed to make a statement to turn their season around. The Bulldogs came out barking, owning the paint, denying the perimeter, and dominating every phase of their matchup against YSU on Thursday. The Penguins trailed by double digits most of the game, cut the Bulldog lead to four in the second half, but couldn’t get any closer, falling 68-59, to fall into a third place tie with the Bulldogs in the Horizon League standings.
In the first half, the Penguins went over thirteen minutes without scoring a field goal. You cannot win a basketball game when you are unable to score. Butler held a 35-25 lead at the half thanks in part to balance. Nine Bulldogs scored at least a point in the opening session. Leading the way was Ronald Nored with five. Youngstown State got six points from both Kendrick Perry and Blake Allen. However, the Penguins went only 2-9 from deep range, which they rely heavily upon.
“I thought that our defensive effort was really solid in the first half”, remarked Brad Stevens. “We wanted to jump out there and take their three-point shooters out of the game and we did a really good job with that tonight.”
YSU Coach Jerry Slocum agreed. “It was as bad of a first half as we have played all year. This is the second time at home that we could not focus or play with the proper intensity.”
In the second half, YSU went down 14 early but roared back on a pair of buckets from Ashen Ward and Perry to cut the Butler lead to 40-34 with 13:28 left in the game. Perry then ran the floor on a break and used a nice hesitation move to put in a two-pointer that saw the Penguins down only four, at 40-36 with 12:18 left.
“It was the exact same sore with the exact same amount of time last as last year’s game when we had the eight point lead”, said Butler Coach Brad Stevens. “I coached as hard as I could to avoid any letdown like last year, and the guys responded and held the lead.”
Roosevelt Jones and Nored hit buckets to stretch the lead back to eight at around the ten minute mark. Butler was setting up a half court offense and then going into a three-man weave ,a la the Harlem Globetrotters. Trailing 47-40, Perry swished a three with 8:24 left in the game. Butler just kept attacking the hoop or shooting the three with no comfortable medium.
Butler pushed the lead back to eight on a charity toss by Jones, but Perry connected quick from the other end to make it a 51-45 game. Chrishawn Hawkins nabbed a three-point play the old-fashioned way with 4:54 remaining and tacked in a two from close range and Butler looked poise to hold their lead, now ahead 59-47. Damian Eargle (above) tried to get YSU back in the game as he was fouled while scoring, but typical of the night, he missed the free throw to leave it at 59-49 in favor of the visiting Bulldogs.
Butler got good offensive production out of Hopkins, who finished the game with 19 points. Nored had a very good game for the Bulldogs as he finished with 8 markers, 11 rebounds, and 6 assists. Jackson Aldridge chipped in 14 more points.
Youngstown State got 21 from Perry, 11 from Eargle, and 10 from Ward. The loss puts YSU at 13-11, and 8-6 in Horizon League play. Nothing gets easier for the Penguins as Valparaiso comes to town Saturday night.
“I think Valpo is the best team in the league”, said Slocum. “I knew we were in for a challenging week. We played well on the road and were really focused, and that was definitely not the case tonight.”
Why The Butler Game Means So Much To YSU Basketball
Rewind your brain a year. Playground bully Butler came to Youngstown State to continue their dominance over a school that had a reputation for football prominence, and little basketball hardware to show off. The Penguins trailed the Bulldogs by eight points before eventually clawing their way back to claim a dramatic and emotional 62-60 win in front of a good crowd last season. The win was significant in many ways.
First off, it is a well-known fact that Butler did not lose another game until the NCAA Championship Game loss. But seeded in deeper meaning, that historic win allowed Coach Jerry Slocum to be a better recruiter. To knock on a door while recruiting with a Butler win in your briefcase usually gets you invited in. The ramifications of that win will be louder in a couple of years when Fletcher Larson, DJ Cole, and Cale Zuiker hit stride.
Cleveland State rolled into town last Saturday and embarrassed the Penguins in front of a huge audience. Don’t think the players and coaches have not been chomping at the bit waiting for the chance for redemption in front of a big assembly of fan support this time. Coach Slocum said after the 20-point setback that his team was not able to handle the moment. The moment will be just as important, and this team should bounce back.
The puzzle has been coming together since that significant Butler win. The Penguins had zero players given any preseason accolades, the team was finished to pick in the bottom third, again, and with schools, like Butler, losing so much, it was easy to predict that these Penguins would be in the thick of things heading into the home stretch of the season.
Five Horizon League Players of The Week later, Slocum could be considered for Coach of The Year with the dramatic turnaround. He will need a strong run to close out the season and says that every game left on the schedule will be a dogfight.
“We have a stretch of three weeks where everyone we play is really good”, said Slocum. “we have to keep preparing and getting better.”
“Butler will come in hungry after a tough one in Detroit. This is where the turnaround started for them last year and they will come in here fired up.”
Ironic that virtually nobody would have said at the beginning of the season that Butler needed to win this game to catch YSU with a handful of games left in the regular season. However, that is the reality. Five starters have been recognized for their fantastic efforts, a fete never before accomplished in Horizon League history. It may be the confidence bump this team of Penguins need for a strong stretch run and into March.
Kendrick Perry Named Horizon League Player of The Week
Youngstown State sophomore Kendrick Perry (Ocoee, Fla.) has been Horizon League Player of the Week for Feb. 6, the Horizon League announced on Monday. Perry led the Penguins (13-10, 8-5 Horizon) to a 2-1 road record last week, averaging 25.7 points, 4.0 assists and 3.7 steals per game while shooting 60 percent from the field.
This is the first player-of-the week award of Perry’s career and it marks the first time in Horizon League history and YSU history five different players from one school have earned the accolade. Earlier this season, senior DuShawn Brooks (Dec. 5), junior Damian Eargle (Jan. 2), senior Ashen Ward (Jan. 9) and junior Blake Allen (Jan. 23) all garnered the award.
Coach Jerry Slocum talked about the accomplishment of having five players from his team given the award. “I am very happy for those guys. It speaks well of how much they have improved and have worked very hard to get better. They have committed to all of the hard work and they deserve what they are getting.”
Perry scored a career-high 30 points on 9-of-16 shooting from the field, including four 3-pointers, and 8-of-11 from the free-throw line. He also dished out four assists and had two steals. His 30-point effort was the first since DeAndre Mays scored 30 points against Loyola on Jan. 9, 2010. He is also the first sophomore to score at least 30 points since Mike Alcorn scored 35 against Pitt-Bradford on Feb. 24, 1992.
In the 72-68 loss at UIC, which was the Penguins third game in six days, Perry scored 19 points on 7-of-15 shooting from the field. He almost rallied YSU to a frantic comeback scoring eight points in 35 seconds to cut a nine-point deficit down to two.
Perry connected on 11-of-14 from the field with two 3-pointers for a game-high 28 points in an 80-63 win over Loyola. He also dished out six assists and collected a career-high seven steals against the Ramblers. He is the first player to record at least six steals in a game since Marlon Williamson tallied six against UMKC on Dec. 21, 2002.
With 11 steals on the week, Perry set a new Youngstown State sophomore record with 56 on the year. The total is the second-best single-season mark in school history, trailing only the 64 of Marlon Williamson in 2002-03. Perry’s 2.4 spg ranks second in the Horizon League, while the point guard ranks second in scoring (15.7 ppg), third in assists (4.1 apg) and first in assist-turnover ratio (2.2).
This is quite an accomplishment for the team picked to finish seventh by the Horizon League voters. YSU hosts Butler this Thursday with the tipoff set for 7:05 p.m. and the game will be carried on the ESPN3 internetwork.
YSU Women Lose Heartbreaker to Butler, 65-63
Youngstown State University and Butler came into a basketball game with nearly identical records. They played nearly an identical first half on the stat sheets, and consequently, this game went right down to the wire. When the dust cleared and the threes finally finished flying, Butler came away with a 65-63 win. Mandy McDivitt hit a big three with 2.3 seconds left to provide the difference in the game that could have really gone either way.
“Give her [McDivitt] credit”, exclaimed Boldon after the game. “She made, in my opinion, a very tough shot. From a purist perspective, it is a nice moment that she will remember for the rest of her life. From my perspective, it stinks.”
In the first half, YSU opened the lead to as big as eight, but the Bulldogs erased the deficit and took a halftime lead of 29-27. Heidi Schlegel had nine points to lead the Lady Penguins scoring attack. Brandi Brown had eight on 3-4 shooting and a pair of free throws. Butler got ten first half points out of Devin Brierly and nine more out of Mandy McDivitt. Statistically, the first half stats showed that the records of these two teams wasn’t the only thing they had in common. Butler chucked up 17 threes, while the Penguins attempted 15. Neither team attempted more than four first half free throws and both seemed reliant on the long ball.
In the second half, Butler changed up the defensive scheme and they were using a full-court press to slow YSU down. It worked as the Penguins scrambled to cross mid-court and had about half of the normal time on the shot clock to run their half court offense. Butler opened the second half with an 11-3 run and by the time the second half was below ten minutes, the Bulldogs held a 50-43 lead. Brierly and McDivitt were getting their threes to fall to increase the lead over that period of time.
Macey Nortey connected on a three with 9:20 to go in the game to make it 50-46. Sarah Hamm hit a bucket for Butler with just over two minutes to go in the game that stretched the lead to 58-55, but the next trip up the floor, the Lady Penguins tied the game at 58 on a three from Monica Touvelle. Hamm regained the lead fo Butler with another layup to make it 60-58.
Kenya Middlebrooks, aka ‘Miss Clutch’ lately, drilled a three with just over a minute to go in the game to give YSU their first lead since the first half, but it was short-lived as Butler was able to work the post for another easy deuce to regain a 62-61 lead. With 28 seconds left in the game and the Penguins trailing by just one, Brown drove to the hoop and was fouled. The Horizon League Preseason Player of The Year promptly swished two charity tosses to give her team the 63-62 lead. Butler failed to score and with nine seconds left in the game, Schlegel was fouled. Schlegel missed the front end of the one-and-one. Butler rebounded and McDivitt hit a big three to give the Bulldogs a a two-point lead with 2.3 seconds remaining.
YSU inbounded to half court where Brown caught the ball and quickly dished it to Nortey on the right between the circles. Nortey, with pressure in her face, could not get the ball to an open Middlebrooks in the right corner with enough time to get a shot off and Butler survived the last-ditch effort.
The Penguins got 23 points from Brown, who again provided the majority of the spark for the Penguins offense. Schlegel (above) finished the game with 13 markers. Kenya Middlebrooks had a balanced effort for the Penguins as she scored 7 points, had 5 rebounds and 3 assists.
Butler got good production out of tgeir senior guard, Brierly, who finished the contest with 22 points. McDivitt played big off of the Bulldog bench, contributing 18 points.
“We wanted to take Hamm out of the game”, said Boldon. “We were successful in doing so but we were not able to stop everything else, they beat us in other ways. You pick and choose your battles and it this loss is still a part of the process.”
The Lady Penguins hit the road for a pair of games, heading to UIC and Loyola. They return home to face Milwaukee on February 16.
YSU Lady Penguins Get 20 From Brandi Brown To Turn Valpo Away, 64-58
Brandi Brown scored 20 points and gathered 10 rebounds to record her eighth double-double of the season (the 35th of her career) and scored in double digits for the 47th time in 51 games. Statistically speaking, it almost sounds like Brown could be the Horizon League Player of The Year. Youngstown State jumped on the back of a familiar horse in Brown, to get by Valparaiso, 64-58.
When told after the game it was her 35th double-double, Brown could only say, “Wow, I did not know I had that many.”
“This was different pressure tonight because we are usually not expected to win. We know we have to play hard regardless of whether we are a favorite to win or an underdog”, said Brown.
Brown tallied six first half points to lead the Penguins to a one-point advantage at the midway buzzer, 21-20. The Penguins were their own worst enemy in the half, despite having a lead. Shooting 1-12 from three-point range and 39.1% from the field, YSU did not convert any Valparaiso turnovers into points. The Crusaders got eight first half points from Laura Richards. Valpo struggled as badly as YSU in the opening stanza shooting only 32%.
In the second half, YSU opened a ten point lead, 38-28, with 12:09 remaining in the game. Monica Touvelle hit a three from the corner to supply the margin. Valpo (5-16, 1-9) closed in a bit going on a 5-0 run to make it 38-33, but Kelsea Fickiesen went on her own little 5-0 run to push the lead back to a comfortable ten points.
Tabitha Gerardot did her best to keep her Crusaders in the game. Gerardot scored 10 points over a five minute span that found Valparaiso trailing only 54-52 with 3:16 left in the game. Kenya Middlbrooks hit the dagger free throws to make it 60-55 with 13 seconds to go to secure the lead and the game for Youngstown State (10-11, 5-6). She went back to the line with a 60-58 lead and promptly drilled another pair for insurance.
It was not an easy game on the eyes. Both teams struggled at points, Youngstown State was just able piece together more in streaks and runs at a time than Valparaiso.
For the Penguins, Brown paved the way with 20 points. Touvelle, who finished with 11 points, and Fickiesen, who contributed 9 markers, did a good job scoring in the clutch when it seemed the Penguins were in peril.
“I was a little frustrated tonight”, said Coach Boldon. “It is hard to play good after the great atmosphere we had here Saturday night with two teams playing great basketball to go into a weeknight game where at times, we played okay. Success is something we are still learning here. There is not a whole lot of winning on the resumes of our players.”
Gerardot was sensational in the second half scoring all of her 15 points. She also gathered 9 rebounds for the Crusaders. Valpo only used six players the entire game. Ashley Timmerman contributed 14 points for Valpo.
The Penguins return to action at home on Saturday afternoon when they will square off against Butler. The game will be followed by The Game of Hope that Tony Spano has been working his butt off coordinating.
YSU Men Bounce Back To Beat Milwaukee, 73-65, Behind Kendrick Perry’s 30
Sophomore Kendrick Perry scored a career-high 30 points and led the Youngstown State men’s basketball team to a 73-65 victory over Milwaukee on Tuesday evening at U.S. Cellular Arena. Perry, who connected on 9-of-16 shooting from the floor and made four 3-pointers, is the first player to score 30 points since DeAndre Mays scored 30 in 2010 and the first sophomore to score at least 30 points since Mike Alcorn posted 35 points in 1992.
Senior DuShawn Brooks and junior Damian Eargle each scored 14 points while senior Ashen Ward grabbed a game-high nine rebounds. With the win, the Guins improve to 12-9 overall and 7-4 in the Horizon Leauge and move into sole possession of third place in the league standings.
The 12 wins are the most since the 14 victories in 2006-07 and the seven league victories match a team high since joining the league in 2001-02. The Penguins won seven league games in 2006-07 and in 2008-09.
The Panthers led by one, 24-23, with five minutes left in the first half, but a 3-pointer by Nate Perry, a triple by Ward, and another 3-pointer by Nate Perry sparked a 9-0 run and put the Guins up, 32-24, with 2:53 to go. Kendrick Perry, who scored 16 of his 30 points in the second half, canned three straight free throws to put the Guins up nine, 35-26, before a Paris Gulley tip-in with one second left cut the Penguins lead to 35-27 at the half.
YSU began the second half on an 8-2 run to built its lead to 13 points, 43-30, after a layup by Fletcher Larson with 17:12 to go. After the Panthers cut the deficit to nine, Brooks, who scored 11 points in the second half, started an 13-5 run with a 3-pointer and ended it with a layup to give the Guins an 18-point lead, 61-43, with 6:48 remaining. Milwaukee whittled the lead down to six, 67-61, with 1:55 to go, but two free throws by Perry, a dunk and two free throws by Eargle sealed the game for the Penguins.
YSU will continue their three-game road trip against UIC, Thursday, Feb. 2, at 8 p.m. in Chicago, Ill.
YSU Basketball Profiles: Kenya Middlebrooks
The role players have arguably been responsible for the dramatic turnaround for this years Youngstown State Lady Penguins basketball team. Everyone knew that Brandi Brown was good, and Coach Bob Boldon said at the beginning of the year that others will have to step up as teams sharpen their focus on shutting down Brown. Kenya Middlebrooks, a senior, has done exactly that. Middlebrooks now holds the record for three-pointers made in a game with eight treys and finished with 30 points against Detroit, not too shabby for a ‘role player’.
Paneech: Let’s start out by talking about this season. Has it been as big a success as you and your fellow Lady Penguins would have hoped for?
Middlebrooks: I think that season has been a successful one because we have a little more experience. This is the coaches second year and we were able to adapt to what he wants from us and pass that along to the incoming players.
Paneech: You played under Cindy Martin. It was not a productive period in YSU basketball history. Enter Coach Boldon, new assistants, and a new system. How hard is it to buy in with a changing of the guard?
Middlebrooks: It’s very difficult because you went two years putting all of your trust into a coach and a system. Our record did not reflect what we wanted to accomplish. With Coach Boldon, I kind of took on a different role and had to learn to shoot threes because that is what his system incorporates. It was difficult to learn, but it is nice to see results.
Paneech: You mentioned three-pointers. You have that big square net device that rebounds the ball and you shoot sometimes 100 of those threes toward that thing before or after any given practice. Do you ever see that apparatus in your mind during a game?
Middlebrooks: (laughs) No, we don’t visualize it during a game. We have a couple of different things that we use including that particular piece of equipment. We also use a machine that will measure the arc of our shots to make sure we are getting the right amount of height on a shot. I never really thought about arc a couple of years ago, it was more ‘shoot if you are open’, now we concentrate on threes because we are more reliant on them.
Paneech: How “in-tune” is this staff with the players? I know if I ask Coach Boldon why Brandi sneezed in the second half, he would give me an accurate and honest answer.
Middlebrooks: We are very in-tune. This second year has been much easier. We have gotten to know all of them a bit better during the offseason. During the season, we work very hard with them on different drills. I would say that we know them pretty good and they know us just as well.
Paneech: In high school, were you the best player on your team? Also, do you think when people get to the college level that they can’t all be the best player on a team anymore?
Middlebrooks: I played my high school ball in Toledo and was a pretty decent player. It wasn’t really that difficult of a transition because when players get to the college level, I don’t feel that they come with a big ego. You adapt to a role and the coaches tell you what contribution they expect from you. I didn’t even know about this place when I was a senior in high school. My head coach knew Bernard Scott and sent him a tape. I came to see the campus and was offered a scholarship, who was I not to take it? (laughs)
Paneech: This team has been labeled by the Horizon League as a lemon. Brandi Brown gets named Horizon League Preseason Player of The Year, and your team gets picked to finish last. Winning games, the role players have been the difference, agree?
Middlebrooks: Brandi is always a key factor because we always get things going through her. I don’t think it is an issue though, when our shots fall, we are winning games. When they don’t fall, we have to get back in the gym and continue working on our shots.
Paneech: Who is your best friend on this team and why?
Middlebrooks: I call her ‘babe’, and she is Macey Nortey. We have grown up together since freshman year in the dorms. We have been through a lot as far as different coaching staffs and players coming after us and leaving before us. She is my best friend, and I can tell her anything, I love her.
Paneech: What are your reflections of Youngstown State University?
Middlebrooks: I really love it here. People say a lot of bad things about this area, but the campus is great, small enough that I can get to class pretty quickly and the weather is the same as Toledo. There are a lot of different cultures here though and I have really enjoyed my time here. My grades are in the A-B range, I will be graduating in May. Then I will try to find a job in social work in the Youngstown area or Toledo.
Paneech: In the past, you had the famous obstruction on your face, the glasses. Now that Heidi Schlegel and Kelsea Fickiesen are around with their face shields, has the pressure been removed?
Middlebrooks: I have worn the goggles since my freshman year of high school. I have had plenty of time to adjust and everything is the same, I am used to them. My last coach wanted me to wear contacts so bad, but I like to be a little different on the court and having the goggles on makes me different.
Paneech: It is a hard balance for today’s student athlete to keep the grades up and to keep the performance level up, a very demanding pair of requirements. What is a typical day like?
Middlebrooks: Well, I wake up, go to class then go to practice and then get to back to class. I then go to either the library or the lab in Cushwa to study. I get done at about nine, then I head to the dorm and continue to do more work. I am usually up until 11. I call home everyday and I like to cook a lot.
Paneech: Yeah? What do you like to cook?
Middlebrooks: Oh man… anything. Beef stew, steaks, chicken, pork chops — just a whole bunch of fattening foods. I like to cook greens and cornbread.
Paneech: What are you watching on television?
Middlebrooks: I have shows that I watch weekly or daily. I watch Desperate Housewives and Grey’s Anatomy. I like Jersey Shore, any real-world show. I used to watch American Idol, but now I only watch when they have the auditions at the beginning.
Paneech: Interesting, Desperate Housewives. So if you were to equate the characters on that show to people on your team and coaches you who would play what roles?
Middlebrooks: Susan Delfino (Teri Hatcher) would be Heidi Schlegel. Liz Hornberger would probably be Bree Van de Kamp (Marcia Cross). Lynette Scavo (Felicity Huffman) is a tough one, I would say Tierra Jones could fit that role. Gabrielle Solis (Eva Longoria) would definitely be Brandi. If you watch Brandi, she loves clothes, nails, all that stuff, just like Mrs. Solice. Coach Boldon would probably fit the role of a Tom Scavo because he has kids and his life revolves around them and he loves them very much. Coach Schrader loves to gossip, she is great, but she could be Mrs McClusky.
One Word Answers With Kenya Middlebrooks
Favorite Color: Purple.
Favorite Breakfast Food: Hot Pizza.
Fast Food Order: Smoky Bones – Smoked Wings, Ribs, Fries, and Cornbread.
Favorite Drink: Blue Gatorade.
Worst Class Here: Psychology.
Best Class Here: Human Behavior I & II.
Worst Habit: Biting My Nails.
NBA Player: Dwayne Wade.
Dream Destination: Jamaica.
One Bad Thing In The World Worth Changing: Homelessness.
Biggest Phobia: Snakes.
YSU Men To Face Austin Peay In BracketBusters Game
The Youngstown State men’s basketball team will visit Ohio Valley Conference member Austin Peay in the 2012 Sears BracketBusters announced on Monday evening.
The Penguins (11-9, 6-4 Horizon) and Governors (9-14, 6-4 OVC) have met 14 times while the Guins were members of the OVC, but have not faced each other since 1988. Youngstown State owns an 8-6 advantage in the all-time series but the Governors have won the last four meetings. YSU has not won in Clarksville, Tenn., since a 62-57 victory on Feb. 16, 1984.
The Penguins own a 4-4 record in BracketBusters games and are 1-0 against the Ohio Valley Conference, defeating Eastern Kentucky, 66-61, on Feb. 17, 2007.
Dates and times for the game will be announced at a later date, but the location is set, as well as the matchup.
YSU Men Hit The Road For A Few
The Youngstown State men’s basketball team (11-9, 6-4 Horizon League) embarks on its longest trek of the season – a seven-day, three-game road trip – when it visits Milwaukee, Tuesday, Jan. 31, at the U.S. Cellular Arena. Tipoff is set for 8 p.m. (EDT) and will be broadcast on 570 WKBN-AM.
This is the 31st meeting between Youngstown State and Milwaukee in an all-time series that dates back to 1972. Milwaukee leads the series 24-6. The Guins snapped a four-game losing streak to the Panthers with a 68-66 win on Jan. 20 at the Beeghly Center. The last time the Penguins won in Milwaukee was a 68-65 win on Dec. 10, 2006. The last time YSU swept the season series against Milwaukee was during the 2006-07 season.
After Milwaukee, the Penguins travel to UIC for a Thursday night game. The road trip ends on Sunday with a game at Loyola which tips off at 2 p.m.
If the Penguins are to have any shot at winning the Horizon League, they need to win at least two out of these three games as Butler and Valparaiso loom next week for a pair of big home games.
Cleveland State Cruises Past Cold-Shooting Youngstown State, 67-47
In front of the fourth largest crowd in the history of the Beeghly Center (6,311), Youngstown State couldn’t get synchronized and fell to Cleveland State, 67-47. The Vikings played great defense and the Penguins, as Coach Jerry Slocum said at the post-game press conference, ‘self-imploded’. The Penguins struggled mightily from behind the arc in this one, going 4-24.
“We got beat in every facet of this game tonight”, said Slocum. “I don’t think we handled the moment very well. We played outside of our basketball IQ and they didn’t play any different than they did the first time.”
In the first half, things were tight with Cleveland State holding a 15-12 lead with eight minutes played. The Vikings would close out the half with a 26-7 run to establish a commanding 41-19 lead at the half. Cleveland State applied full-court pressure almost the entire first half, which didn’t seem to bother YSU as much as the Penguins struggling to run their normal half-court sets in half the time.
Only five Penguins, the starters, (Damian Eargle, Ashen Ward, DuShawn Brooks, Kendrick Perry and Blake Allen) scored in the first half. The Penguins were a dismal 2-14 from behind the arc. Conversely, Cleveland State was hot, nailing 6-8 long balls. Trevon Harmon and Anton Grady had nine and eight points respectively for the Vikings in the first half.
In the second half, Cleveland State kept their foot on the gas pedal. With 11:28 to go in the contest, the Vikings were firmly in control of the game with a 56-35 lead. The tremendous half-court defense of the Vikings was forcing YSU into taking a lot of shots they normally would not. The game would also evolve into a very physical battle with plenty of hard fouls, pushing, and shoving.
YSU sliced the CSU lead to 17 when Kendrick Perry hit a ten-footer to make it a 58-41 game with 7:17 remaining. The Vikings were able to weather the storm and recover before Slocum emptied the YSU bench with about three minutes to play.
“Our big wins did not make our year”, remarked Slocum. “Last week when we beat Milwaukee, I told you that it would not make our year. This loss will not break our year. Give them credit, they are a very good team, but our play tonight didn’t help our chances.”
Cleveland State (18-4, 8-2) got 10 points from Harmon, 8 each from Pogue and Charlie Lee, and Anton Grady had a big night scoring 14 points and pulling down 11 boards. The Vikings clamped a stronger grip on first place in the Horizon League with the win. Furthermore, the Vikings nullified YSU’s win earlier this season at Cleveland State.
“We came in with a chip on our shoulder”, said the Vikings Jeremy Montgomery. “We knew we had to stay focused on defense and keep the pressure on to shake things up. Our full-court pressure forced them into quicker sets and that is what we drew up for this game.”
YSU, suffering one of their poorest shooting efforts of the season, got 11 points from Allen, and ten each from Perry and Eargle. Eargle also recorded five blocks in the contest. The Penguins slipped to 11-9, and 6-4 in the Horizon League.
Youngstown State hits the road to face Loyola, UIC, and Milwaukee.