Posts Tagged ‘Bob Boldon’
YSU Women’s Finale Saturday, Seniors Will Be Honored Before Game
The Youngstown State women’s basketball team will play its final regular season game at Beeghly Center on Saturday against No. 11/12 Green Bay. Tipoff against the Phoenix is set for 2 p.m., and the game will be broadcast live on 570 WKBN and the Horizon League Network. The Penguins will salute seniors Tieara Jones (above), Kenya Middlebrooks and Macey Nortey prior to the game. YSU is coming off a 76-71 home loss to Milwaukee, and Green Bay beat Cleveland State 90-59 on Thursday.
Four of YSU’s last five Horizon League losses have been by five points or fewer. One was in overtime, and another was by a go-ahead 3-pointer with 2.3 seconds left. YSU is averaging 10.8 3-pointers in Horizon League play and 9.4 per game overall. The Penguins rank fifth in the nation in 3-pointers per game and have already broken the school record for 3-pointers in a season. Horizon League Preseason Player of the Year Brandi Brown is averaging 18.0 points and 7.9 rebounds in league play. She ranks ninth in YSU history in points and sixth in rebounds.
Green Bay has won 14 straight games against Youngstown State and is 26-1 all time against the Penguins. The Phoenix won the first 12 meetings from 1993 to 2005, and YSU’s lone win came at Green Bay when the Phoenix was ranked 23rd in the country on Feb. 19, 2005 (60-56). YSU is 0-12 at Beeghly Center against Green Bay with an overtime loss in 2004 and a two-point setback in 2004.
Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.
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 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 Rallies From 15 Down To Force Overtime, But Wright State Gets Win, 71-66
An integral part of any athletic program turning around for the better depends on consistency. Granted, the Youngstown State Lady Penguins have taken steps in the right direction all season. Second-year coach, Bob Boldon and staff have initiated a strong offense where the three-point shot has been a source of good things. Wright State needed overtime to claim a 71-66 win after the Penguins roared back late to tie things up, once down 15.
“I thought we gave a good effort”, said Coach Boldon. “That was a good team sitting all alone in second place. The energy was real good and I was happy our kids had a chance to play in that kind of atmosphere.”
In the first half, the Penguins struggled in the latter portion with their shooting. Seemed like every shot hoisted was clanging and the Guins had trouble even getting shots off a couple of times turning the ball over on shot clock violations. Brandi Brown was the leading scorer for YSU at the break, that comes as no surprise. What does jump out was that as her teams leading scorer she only had four points and no one was tied with her. Kim Demmings paced Wright State with five points and the Raiders were ahead 26-22 at the break.
In the second half, the Penguins showed signs of life on threes by Monica Touvelle and Kenya Middlebrooks to cut into a lead that grew to twelve after the break. With 11:57 left to go in the game, the Raiders were comfortably ahead, 47-36. Molly Fox started to establish inside dominance after being hit with an offensive foul and three traveling calls in the first half. Fox completed a traditional three-point play to lengthen the margin to twelve points at 48-36.
Middlebrooks, shaking off a sluggish first half that consisted of going 0-4 from the floor and five turnovers, collected her second three-pointer of the second half to make it 51-39. Kelsea Fickiesen snared a rebound on offense and and was fouled making the putback, completing a three-point play that made it 51-41 with 8:45 to play. Fickiesen would hit another three that made it a 53-47 game after a good defensive effort. Demmings responded with a 15-foot jumper to give Wright State back a 55-47 lead with 6:45 remaining.
Heidi Schlegel did her best to keep the Penguins alive converting a three-point play with 2:27 to go that made it 57-54 in favor of Wright State. Brown got a rebound with 27 seconds left but the Penguins could not convert trailing 59-57. The Raiders inbounded and Demmings was fouled immediately. Macey Nortey started a drive at the opposing baseline and in 7.9 of the 8.3 seconds that remained, got to the other end and hit a layup to tie the game and force overtime.
“We would have thrown up the white flag in the past”, commented Nortey. “We don’t do that anymore. We learn something each game, win or lose, and if we guard the way we know how, we can compete.”
In the overtime, Demmings took over hitting two quick baskets to put Wright State ahead, 63-59. With 3:339 left in the extra session, Middlebrooks was fouled and hit a pair of charity tosses to make it 63-61. Nortey again went the length of the court on a fastbreak to tie the game. Demmings, however, responded with a three to untie the game. Fox was whistled for fouling Brown with 1:39 left, sending her to the line, where she hit both free throws to tie the game at 66 apiece. Not to be outdone, Demmings converted another old-fashioned three-point play to give the Raiders a 69-66 lead with 38.5 seconds remaining.
Brown (above) finished the game with 11 points and 8 rebounds for YSU (9-11, 3-6). Melissa Thompson followed up a career-effort with another decent start for Boldon, finishing with 8 points. Schlegel came to life late to finish with 10. Middlebrooks ended up with 10 points and did well to put aside her shaky first half, showing good composure to mentally regroup at halftime and produce in the second half. The Penguins went 12-46 from three-point land, second all-time in attempts.
Wright State got 14 points and 10 rebounds from Fox and 25 big points from Demmings. The Raiders improved to 14-7 overall and 7-2 in the Horizon League.
Next up for the Lady Penguins is a February 2 game against Valparaiso at the Beeghly Center. Tipoff is set for 7:05.
YSU Women Drop 75-50 Decision At #11 Green Bay
The Youngstown State women’s basketball team played the 11th-ranked team in the country to within 15 points in the first 30 minutes before Green Bay pulled away to win 75-50 on Thursday evening at the Kress Events Center. YSU trailed just 53-38 at the 9:56 mark, but the Phoenix went on a 20-5 run over the next 6:46 to separate itself from the Penguins.
YSU’s Brandi Brown led all scorers with 21 points and finished with 10 rebounds. Kelsea Fickiesen, making her second career start, was next in line with nine points. She also had nine of YSU’s 28 turnovers, which Green Bay translated into a 33-5 edge in points off turnovers.
Lydia Bauer finished with 19 points, and Adrian Ritchie scored 17 points while making three of Green Bay’s eight triples. YSU shot 45.2 percent overall, and Green Bay shot 49 percent. The Phoenix went 19-for-28 from the free-throw line while YSU was just 6-for-10.
The Penguins opened the second half on an 8-3 run to make the score 39-28 and force Green Bay to call an early time out. YSU still trailed just 56-40 with nine minutes left following a Brown bucket, but the Penguins scored just three points in the next six-and-a-half minutes. By that time, the Phoenix had built a 73-43 advantage.
Youngstown State will play at Milwaukee on Saturday at 3 p.m. Eastern. The game will be broadcast live on 570 WKBN.
YSU Lady Penguins Claw Back To Force Overtime, But Fall In the End, 77-68
Coach Bob Boldon said at the beginning of this season that his Lady Penguins would go through peeks and valleys as part of a long-term process. Thursday’s loss to Loyola was just that, a game of transition. Three years ago, trailing by 14 with more than a half to play resulted in 30+ point losses. Saturday afternoon, YSU went back to the drawing board against a very good UIC team, and fought their way back into a game they appeared to have no chance at winning with three minutes left, forcing overtime. The game was a valley, then a peek, then a valley again. UIC took control for good in the overtime, hitting some threes and stopping YSU when they needed to as they escaped with a 77-68 win.
“Our kids did a good job today, even in the overtime”, said Boldon. “Yesterday we had a good practice and they were just getting after it, so it was nice to see that carried over from yesterday.”
In the first half, the Penguins raced out to an 11-3 lead only to watch in evaporate. A few minutes later, they were trailing 16-13. Brandi Brown scored half of the Penguins points in the opening stanza pouring in 12. UIC’s Taylor Foulks was killing the penguins with 14 first half points, going 4-4 from three-point range. After 20 minutes, the Penguins trailed 30-24. Foulks also hit a couple of key three-pointers in the overtime session to help preserve the win.
In the second half, Foulks hit another three that upped the UIC lead to 43-36 with 11:43 left in the game. UIC increased the lead to 50-39 just under the ten minute mark when Jasmine Bailey pulled up and hit a jumper from the line. Monica Touvelle did all she could hitting a three to cut it to 50-42 on the ensuing possession.
Kenya Middlebrooks, one of the Penguins best shooters, spent most of the second half on the bench with four fouls. Touvelle hit a three and connected on the baseline for two to cut the lead to 57-49. Kelsea Fickiesen then connected on a drive that would cut the lead to six at 59-53 with 3:15 remaining in regulation.
Brown was determined to keep her team alive as she gathered an offensive board and made a shot to cut theUIC lead to 61-56 with 1:25 remaining in the game. YSU used full-court pressure to add some heat, but UIC managed to get the ball downcourt and hit some foul shots down the stretch. Middlebroks hit a three to make it 63-59 with 1:02 left in favor of the visiting Flames. A five second call gave the Penguins the ball back but Fickiesen threw an errant inbound pass to turn it over.
Touvelle scored her season-high 14th point to make it a one point game on another three with 15.9 seconds to make it just 63-62. Full court pressure caused a turnover on the inbound and YSU got possession with a shot to win the game. Fickiesen was fouled on a drive and sent to the line for a couple of free throws. After missing the first of two, UIC played ‘ice the shooter’, using a timeout. Fickiesen hit the second to tie the game with 11.3 seconds remaining. UIC brought the ball up but Fickiesen intercepted the pass and drove as far as she could before letting a hurried shot hit the front of the rim as the buzzer sounded ending regulation and forcing overtime.
Brown finished with 25 points on 11-16 shooting, she also hauled in eight rebounds for the Penguins. Touvelle finished with a career-high 19 points and seems to be emerging as another weapon Boldon has with the ball. YSU falls to 8-8, and 2-3 in league play.
“Our turnovers killed us”, said Touvelle. “We are trying to cut back on them. I had a big turnover in the overtime and we can’t make those mistakes and expect to win. I missed more shots than I made, but my teammates encouraged me to keep shooting.”
For UIC, Bailey gathered 22 points and Foulks added an additional 23 caroms. The Flames improved to 10-7 (3-3, HL) and looked like the better team until the collapse.
Loyola Women Trip Up Lady Penguins, 82-77
The Youngstown State women are headed into the hardest part of their schedule, and it got off to a rough start at the Beeghly Center on Thursday. Loyola built an early ten point lead and never led by less than that until very late in the game, cruising to a 82-77 win over the Lady Penguins.
YSU made it interesting late, but the Ramblers weathered the storm for the win. When asked if his team may have pulled it out if there were a couple more minutes to play, Coach Bob Boldon remarked, “If it would have went twenty minutes longer, they probably would have scored 100, I’m not sure what we would have ended up with.”
In the first half, Loyola continuously took advantage of an aggressive Penguins defense by working the ball to either wing and throwing cross-court passes to wide open shooters. Three-point shooting was the key to the Penguins woes on offense in the first half. YSU shot a dismal 3-18 from long range. Kelsea Fickiesen hustled for the Penguins in the first half and seemed to be in a higher gear than her teammates. Fickiesen had seven rebounds, three on the offensive end, to keep the Penguins in the game.
“We were not getting our shots to fall early on”, said Fickiesen. “When you shoot and miss a couple of shots, you have to keep shooting.”
In the second half, Loyola’s Monica Albano, who torched the Penguins for over 50 points in two games last season, caught a little fire. The Penguins did a good job keeping Albano in check with only two first half points. However, Albano was able to score 15 second half points. Every time that YSU looked to be making a move, Albano would make a shot or pass that contributed to the lead growing.
The Penguins continued to scratch and claw to that magic ten point barrier but could not get past it. Heidi Schlegel had a nice put back off of an offensive rebound, and then hit a three to cut Loyola’s lead to 50-37 with 14:10 left to go. With just over nine minutes to go, Monica Touvelle hit a three to pull the Penguins to within ten at 58-48.
Loyola just kept answering everything the Penguins did right on offense with buckets on their next possession, almost on cue. With 5:07 left, Brandi Brown hit a pair of free throws to keep YSU in the right neighborhood at 69-58. Typical of the way the night went, the Ramblers scored on their next chance to nullify any Penguin gains. Simone Law was eating the Penguins alive in the paint.
With the Penguins down 73-60, Brown caught a Kenya Middlebrooks pass on a fastbreak chance and scored. Loyola again responded when Katie Kortekamp breezed to the hoop for an easy bucket. Middlebrooks connected on a three with 1:35 left to cut the lead to 77-68. Fickiesen hit a three with 23.7 left to make it a 79-74 game.
Youngstown State (8-7, 2-2) got 26 points from Brown, including an impressive 12-13 from the free throw line. Middlebrooks and Touvelle contributed nine points each.
“You can’t make that many mistakes and expect to win”, said Coach Boldon. “You get what you deserve. We lost to a very good team, although their record may not show it. They exploited our defense. They were very well coached and their offense was significantly better than our defense..”
Loyola (7-9, 2-3) was led by Law who finished with 21 points. Albano knocked down 17 points. Troy Hambric had another 12 for the Ramblers.
The Penguins welcome a talented UIC team to Youngstown for a 2:05 game on Saturday.
YSU Women Fall At Butler, 73-64
Butler used a 19-5 run in the second half and got 14 second-half points from Devin Brierly in a 73-64 win over the Youngstown State women’s basketball team on Thursday evening at Hinkle Fieldhouse.
YSU grabbed its first lead of the second half at 49-48 with 10:08 remaining, but the Penguins did not make another field goal for almost four minutes. By that time, Butler had gone on a 12-2 spurt to take a 60-51 lead. The Bulldogs had one 3-pointer in the first 30 minutes and five in their final stretch, four of which came from Brierly.
Brandi Brown had 23 points and 12 rebounds, both of which were game highs. Heidi Schlegel and Monica Touvelle both finished with 11 points. Brierly had 19 points to lead four Bulldogs in double figures.
Butler led by as many as seven early in the second half and held a 48-43 advantage with 12 minutes left. YSU scored the next six points and took a 49-48 lead on Melissa Thompson’s bucket in transition. Butler called a time out, and Mandy McDivitt hit a trey to start the decisive run.
Butler shot a season-high 50 percent and was one point shy of its highest scoring total of the campaign. YSU shot 35.8 percent and was outscored 32-18 in the paint and 19-8 in second-chance points.
Youngstown State will play at Valparaiso on Saturday at 2:35 p.m. Eastern. The game will be broadcast live on 570 WKBN.
YSU Women End Nine-Game Drought Against Cleveland State, 70-48
The last time Youngstown State University beat Cleveland State was January 27, 2007. On the last day of 2011, the Lady Penguins put together a good team effort, defeating the Vikings, 70-48, and headed into 2012 tied for first in the conference at 1-0. It also marked the first time YSU has won a conference opener since 2008. It’s a shame that 2011 is almost over, a year that will surely be earmarked as a giant step forward for the Lady Penguins basketball program.
In the first half, the Penguins opened up with a 14-2 run with 11:27 left in the half. Monica Touvelle (below) went 4-4 from three-point range and led all scorers with YSU heading to their locker room ahead comfortably, 35-22. Brandi Brown had seven rebounds and six points in a half that saw all active members of the Lady Penguins see some minutes.
“It’s nice to get everyone involved”, remarked Coach Bob Boldon after the game. “They have all done the work in practice all week and deserve to be on the floor.”
In the second half, the Penguins started strong and held a 48-34 lead with 10:54 remaining in the contest. Boldon’s offense looked lethal at times with just a couple of lapses in the second half. Cleveland State cut the YSU lead to eleven at 50-39 with 9:23 left on a Shalonda Winton drive to the hoop.
An earthquake shuttered the Beeghly Center during the second half but play continued. “Was that an earthquake?” said Brown. ” I am used to those being from California, I just thought someone fell.”
With the score 51-40, Brown drilled a three from the corner that got nothing but net. The Penguins held a 54-42 lead with five minutes to go. Brown would extend the lead to 63-42 with just under three minutes left draining a pair of free throws after being fouled driving the length of the court with a steal. The Vikings nevr got closer than 15 after the six minute mark of the game.
Brown finished the game with 23 points and 12 boards to notch her fifth double-double of the season and the 32nd of her career. YSU also got an array of statistics from everyone including Touvelle’s four three-pointers, 16 points and five rebounds from Heidi Schlegel, and six assists from Macey Nortey. The Penguins shot 42.6 from the floor and cashed in 28 more points off of Vikings turnovers.
“It feels good to go into a New Year with a win”, said Brown. “We really executed well as a team and it was a good win for us.”
Cleveland State got 17 points from Winton and eleven more from Imani Gordon. The Vikings slipped to 5-7 and 0-1 with the loss.
The Lady Penguins (7-5, 1-0) head West to face Butler on Thursday and Valparaiso on Saturday afternoon.