Posts Tagged ‘Bob Boldon’
Brandi Brown Horizon League Player Of The Week
Youngstown State sophomore forward Brandi Brown has been honored as the Horizon League Women’s Basketball Player of the Week for the week beginning Nov. 22, the conference announced Monday.
Brown averaged 20 points and 8.5 rebounds in helping Youngstown State snap a 34-game losing streak and win back-to-back games for the first time since the 2007-08 season.
Brown notched her first double-double of the season – and 15th of her career – in Youngstown State’s 71-57 victory over Bucknell on Wednesday. She scored 16 of her game-high 23 points in the second half in just 13 minutes. She added 11 rebounds and two steals, and she was 7-for-8 from the free-throw line.
Brown then scored a game-high 17 points while posting six rebounds, two assists, two blocks and a steal in YSU’s come-from-behind victory over Ohio on Saturday. One of those assists came when she grabbed a defensive rebound and hit Macey Nortey on a fast-break lay-up with 55 seconds remaining that gave YSU its first lead of the second half.
Brown, a native of Pomona, Calif., leads the Horizon League in scoring with 20.2 points per game. She also ranks seventh in rebounding and ninth in 3-point field goals per contest.
Youngstown State’s last Horizon League Player of the Week was Jen Perugini on Feb. 28, 2005.
Last season, Brown was pretty much robbed for Horizon League Newcomer of The Year as she was voted runner-up despite leading the conference in more statistics than the eventual winner of the award.
Lady Penguins End Drought With 71-57 Triumph!
With the Holiday Season in the air on the Eve of Thanksgiving, Youngstown State’s Lady Penguins were scraping for reasons to be thankful. The team had not won a game in its last 34 attempts, or 627 days, although seem much improved over last season. Drought Be Gone! The Lady Penguins used 87.5% free throw shooting and some hustle from the role players to get by Bucknell.
Bucknell lost 71-45 the last time these two teams met in 1992. The margin would not be quite as big but was meaningful in so many ways. It marked Bob Boldon‘s first victory as new coach. It broke the drought of 34 losses in a row. Perhaps the most important thing the win did was give a group of scrappy girls who never quit an inkling of confidence to build on.
In a statistically even first half, the Penguins looked better on offense than they had Saturday against IPFW, yet trailed 30-27. Brandi Brown was doing her best to end the drought with six boards and seven points at intermission. Newcomer Heidi Schlegel also had seven for the Penguins at the break. Bucknell was paced by Joyce Novacek‘s nine points and five rebounds.
Monica Touvelle hit a three-pointer at the 15:29 mark of the second half to give YSU a five point lead at 39-34. Next trip down the floor, Kenya Middlebrooks drilled a three, and at the 13:52 mark, the Penguins were in front by the score of 42-38. YSU held the lead until the 11:20 mark when Cosima Higham drove the lane to put the Bison up by a point, 45-44.
Liz Hornberger his a three from the corner to give the Penguins back the lead at 49-47 with 10:23 to go. Hornberger hit her second three of the half to put YSU back on top 52-50. Middlebrooks extended the lead with her ninth point of the night to extend the lead to 54-50 with 7:06 left in the game, and hold the phones, the chilled champagne might get uncorked in Youngstown.
With 5:36 left, Schlegel kept the Penguins safely ahead with her drive to the hoop that made it 57-53. YSU was getting some bounces, finally, and upped their lead to 60-53 on a pair of Macey Nortey free throws as the Penguins were 15-18 from the line to this point.
With 1:54 left in the game, Youngstown State enjoyed a 64-55 lead and was just looking to run the clock out. Free throw shooting was great all night and Schlegel hit a pair to move the lead to 66-55 with just over a minute left in the game. Nortey stepped up and followed suit with a pair to make it 68-55. The Penguins went 21-24 from the line to get the win and improve to 1-3 on the season.
After the game, Coach Boldon was complimentary and happy for the team. “They deserved to win tonight because of how hard they worked at practice this week. I am a believer that hard work at practice should translate over to wins on game day, and they earned this starting two days ago. I am very happy for the players and they will celebrate this victory, hopefully not too much, because we have practice at nine in the morning.”
Brandi Brown, who finished the game with 23 points and 11 rebounds was happy to get a win. “It feels amazing. It’s a humongous reward for how hard we have been working. When everybody plays their role and listens to Coach Boldon, we can win.“
YSU Look Into The Future: Zach Humphries
Zach Humphries thinks that this is a great time to be in school. He claims the the job market is soft and that if he opts to pursue an MB Degree that he will be better suited for the real world when that time comes. I first met Humphries at a YSU home football game in the 2009 season. He was a polite and quiet kid who would deliver stat sheets to the assorted media personnel covering the games. Not ever knowing what his title or role was, I talked with him to find out what kind of program the college has created to utilize the talents of people like Zach.
Rewind to 1985, I was a freshman enrolled at Youngstown State pursuing a Telecommunications degree. There were some of the same extras that there are today like intramural sports, fraternities, and too many others to mention. However, I admit, I am jealous of the opportunities given to Zach as a Sports Information intern. I would have loved to work for people like Trevor Parks, Jamie Hall, and John Vogel for a grade. I would have enjoyed calling a YSU game for the HLN or Sirius Satellite Radio. I would have loved working with a professional the likes of a Robb Schmidt or a Rick Love.
The reality was, back then, there was nothing. No link at all between the communications department and anyone. You went to Bliss Hall, learned to cue up a record and follow an on-air log, and not much else. We were pacified with a hard-wired radio station called WUGS which was only heard in three locations of campus, one being Arby’s in Kilcawley Center. They left the volume on three and no one heard anything that we did, ever. Humphries knows that he is pioneering new opportunities for the next wave when he is gone, and I respect that. Having studied journalism, Humphries is a multi-functional type who has great upside when his time comes. I’m a fan.
I recently got to sit with Humphries and talk with him about these opportunities, where they may take him, and what his plan of attack is for the future.
Paneech: What has happened in the past year that takes you from passing out copies at sporting events to doing the play-by-play a year later?
Humphries: I have learned a lot from Trevor [Parks], Jamie [Hall], and John [Vogel], as well as Todd Mounce when he was here. All of those people have seen what I am capable of and created more opportunities for me. As a result, I am getting on the air and calling some games. All of the little things we are starting, like The Penguin Rundown, we are passing on to the younger students so that they can carry on into the future and even expand. You can only learn so much in the classroom in this field and you have to get out there and do some hands-on things before you can think about getting a job.
Paneech: Tell me about some of the programs that exist.
Humphries: The Horizon League Network (HLN) is great because it focuses on some of the smaller varsity sports. Everyone hears about the football and the basketball, but the HLN will do a lot with the soccer, tennis, and volleyball that do not get much attention from the larger media outlets. We have the access to jump right in and get interviews for the website. Speaking of, the new website is phenomenal and features a lot of technological progressive features.
Paneech: Do you see, or have you had, problems with coaches. I’ll give you an example of what I mean. The unwritten rule is that when the Men’s Basketball Team plays poorly, leave Coach Slocum alone. Rank your favorites for me from one to five with Slocum, Boldon, Wolford, Pasquale, and Burrows.
Humphries: I think it just comes down to being a good communicator. There are certain people who will come right up to you and start talking and there are others that you just have to know how to approach. I feel I am a good communicator and that helps me gather interviews from the shy as well as the outgoing. Pasquale is definitely the easiest. I would probably put Wolford next, then Boldon. I really haven’t had a chance to talk with Coach Burrows as much as the first three. Slocum is definitely the hardest. He wins games, look at his record, he one of the winningest coaches in Division-I Basketball. I just feel he is harder to approach and uses a different set of people skills than most others. Boldon, who is fairly new, complimented me a couple of times already and Wolford always acknowledges that he sees the Penguin Review and says nice things. They are all different, but all very good people.
Humphries (left), pictured with Roy Jones Jr. (center), and Todd Mounce (right), is the kind of guy who likes the new challenge, likes to make the inroads, and is closer to being the finished product than the work in progress. Robb Schmidt, a veteran media mogul, recently called a game with Humphries and commented on Zach’s performance. “Zach is one of the kids that has taken this opportunity to heart and really made the most of it. He is a youngster who is really more mature than a college student doing games while still cutting his teeth. It is obvious that he cares, but the most important thing is that he prepares. Broadcasting is a hands-on thing and you can only read so much about it. Zach has had the opportunity to experience some of those things on the internet and radio where he can see what he has done and learn from those mistakes. John Ridell, Zach, and these other students are really setting up something special for incoming students to have at Youngstown State.”
Zach Humphries is a name you will hear more of if you follow sports. Check out the Penguin Review on the YSUSports.com website and enjoy the hard work that is being put in.
Brown’s 29 Not Enough As YSU Women Fall 73-61 To IPFW
The Youngstown State University Women’s Basketball Team opened their home schedule on Saturday afternoon. Working on busting up a 34 game losing streak, the Lady Penguins welcomed IPWF to the Beeghly Center. The new coaching staff was in place and Bob Boldon knew that the only way to go was up. Down as many as 14, the Penguins tied the game with four minutes left, before eventually falling 73-61.
In the first half, the Mastodons took advantage of their size in the low post. Stephanie Rosado scored 12 points and gathered seven rebounds. The 6’2″ Junior forward squandered few chances when the ball was in her neck of the woods. YSU got six points each from Brandi Brown and Maryum Jenkins in the opening half, but as a team, Youngstown State really struggled shooting only 27% from the floor and only hitting two of 13 from three-point range. Conversely IPFW shot over 40% from the floor to compile a 34-22 lead at the intermission, which was also their biggest lead of the game.
As the second half progressed, the Penguins cut into the twelve-point lead more than once. With 11:48 left in the game, the Penguins had the lead down to ten as Macey Nortey had a runaway lay up off of a Mastodon turnover. Heidi Schlegel cut it to eight at 51-43 with 8:56 left in the game on a nice cut to the hoop.
At the 6:54 mark, Anne Boese drilled a three to put the Mastodons back up by 10. The Penguins fought hard to stay in the game, and Brown nailed a three with 5:58 left in the game that suddenly found the Penguins only down three, at 54-51. Brown hit a drive at the 5:20 mark to cut the lead to just one, and the people made some noise for the home team. Brown, on a major roll, kept the hot hand and tied the game at 55 when she followed her own miss for a put back and her 25th point.
IPFW did not roll over or go away. The Mastodons went on a 7-0 run to take a 64-55 lead with 2:44 left in the game and never looked back. The Mastodons were paced by Rosado, who tallied 22 points in the victory. IPFW also got good a game from Jordan Zuppe who had a huge rooting section of her own, and 15 points.
Youngstown State was led by Brown who finished the game with 29 points, which is a career high, and nine rebounds. Jenkins and Nortey contributed eight points each.
IPFW, which stands for Indiana and Purdue at Fort Wayne, Indiana, improved to 2-1 on the season. The Penguins fell to 0-3. After the game, Coach Boldon addressed the media with the problems plaguing his team. “It’s a new system and I can’t expect us to look perfect. I can assure you that we will not look perfect against Bucknell on Wednesday. We didn’t play very good basketball in the first half and we need to get better at every facet of the game. It’s a work in progress.”
Brown commented on her best-ever game. “It is a new offense. Last season I was strictly a post player, whereas this year Coach Boldon trusts everyone on the team to shoot threes. I like the versatility and know that being multi-dimensional is good for the offense.”
2010 YSU Women’s Basketball Preview
I’ll throw the prediction out there first. The YSU Lady Penguins are going to win 10 games this season. Someone unfamiliar with the programs recent tailspin would scoff at a ten win season. Those who haven’t seen this program celebrate a victory since 2008 understand that a few wins are steps in the right direction.
On a recent visit to a practice, I wondered how much the returning players remembered from last season. New Coach, Bob Boldon, blew his whistle for a quick water break. As the players approached the water dispenser, they went a little out of the way to say hi to me. Big deal? To me, it was a nice gesture, but it proved that if they can remember a sports blogger from last season that they also retained a few memories to fuel and inspire a hard work ethic going into 2010.
Gone are the two boys who had to practice with the team so there would be enough bodies for a five-on-five drill. Gone is Cindy Martin. Gone is the attitude that it just can’t be done.
Enter a new coach, a new attitude, a couple of new recruits, and a high-tech three-point shooting machine. Enter girls who were hurt or had transfer issues. Enter the bus while there is room, because it will be full in a few years.
Rachel Manuel and Kaitlyn March are the two players who graduated. The returning women from last year are Macey Nortey, Kenya Middlebrooks, Boki Dimitrov, Makala Gasparek, Maryum Jenkins, and Brandi Brown. The new faces are Shea Johnson, Kaitlin Rohrs, and Melissa Thompson who missed last year with injuries, and Youngstown native Tieara Jones sat out while meeting academic requirements as a transfer. There are also three incoming freshmen – Liz Hornberger, Heidi Schlegel, and Boardman High graduate Monica Touvelle.
Coach Boldon is a good choice. Talking to him is like talking to someone you have known for a couple of years. After a couple of conversations with him, I applaud Ron Strollo on a solid selection to replace Martin. Boldon is high on the three-point shot. Expect every girl on the roster to be able to chuck up a long ball at any time. There is a lot of motion in Boldon’s Playbook. This is going to be a fun offense to watch once all of the pieces are in place and the players gain confidence in the system.
Can this team win? “We have to change our culture. We have to develop and get better. Nobody wants to win more than the team wants to win. Nobody wants to win more than I want to win”, exclaimed Boldon.
Brandi Brown has been named to the Preseason Horizon League Second Team. Coming off of a freshman season rarely seen at any college, Brown was the only player in the conference to average a double-double. She was robbed of the Horizon League Newcomer of The Year award last season, and handed the runner-up ribbon in a statistical oversight. I’m still not sure if all of the voters were from Detroit or if the award is given to a freshman on one of the best teams. Either way, Brown will vindicate my sentiments with another big year.
Expect a higher-quality and more refined team to win at least ten games this season.
YSU Tidbits
- The 2010 YSU Football season closes out this Saturday with a home game against Indiana State. The game will honor seniors who played football, marched in the band, or cheered this season.
- South Dakota has accepted an invitation to join the Missouri Valley Football Conference beginning with the 2012-13 academic year. USD received a formal invitation from Conference Commissioner Patty Viverito last Wednesday and accepted on Thursday.
- Youngstown State junior Kelsey Kempton was named First-Team ESPN the Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-District IV, announced by the Academic All-America® Committee. Kempton, who carries a 4.0 grade-point average with a major in exercise science, is the first Youngstown State women’s ssoccer player to be named to the first-team and just the second player in history to earn academic all-district honors.
- Youngstown State freshman Allison Ludwig was named to the Horizon League Women’s Soccer All-Newcomer Team. Ludwig, who missed five league games due to a broken hand, tied a YSU freshman record and ranked fourth in the Horizon League with eight goals in 2010.
New YSU Women’s Basketball Coach, Bob Boldon, Knows Nothing Is Easy
Nothing is easy. Taking over something that never worked right in the first place and trying to fix it is even harder. Bob Boldon has accepted the challenge of reviving a deflated YSU Women’s Basketball program with open arms. In fact, Boldon expects to win, as soon as possible. Hard to believe that the Sophomore girls on this team have never won a game. In fact, going into this season it will be almost two full years since the team’s Juniors can recall what it was like to win. Boldon is refreshing. I was ready to suit up for him after our talk, he will provide motivation and technique that this program has sorely missed.
Paneech: Let’s start out talking about where you have been and what you have picked up to help you become better prepared to be a Division I basketball coach.
Boldon: Lambuth was my second head coaching job. It was good, because it helped me realize all of the things that I did wrong at my first head coaching job. We played in a National Championship game, which was a great experience. My first job was at Monticello, a team that only won one conference game the year before I got there, it was complete rebuilding project. We finished in third place my first year. Every team I ever coached could score, offense comes easy to me, but I realized that I needed to become a better defensive coach.
Paneech: Presently, you have taken on the “Bill Parcells” role of taking a mess and making it happen. Will it work at YSU?
Boldon: I want to be successful, and there are going to be people who say it can’t be done. I have a staff with expectations to be successful. It’s hard to make any real predictions until I get to know the players. I expect to win every game we play. My staff and I have watched almost all of last year’s conference games, and defense is an issue. Offensively, the shooting percentages were horrendous. We are going to be a good three-point shooting team, and that is something that can’t just happen, magically. The players have to take responsibility and games are won on days like today, not on the day of a game.
Paneech: What kind of player will you go out and look for? A three-point specialist, a defensive stopper, a good rebounder? Where is the biggest need at right now?
Boldon: We are looking for shooters and want to improve the offense immediately. We will get better defensively by working hard at it and learning proper positioning, but the shooter is something we want. As far as I know there will be 14 girls here on the first day of school ready to go. Anything less than that number would really be a surprise to me. Shooter is on the top of the list.
Paneech: How demoralizing is it for a player on a team to go 0-30 and can they be turned into winners after that?
Boldon: I think they have embraced the fresh start. They know that this new staff has set forth different expectations, and at least those expectations are coming from a different person, if nothing else. Going through a year like that had to be tough and moving forward I’m sure it is something that none of them want to experience ever again.
Paneech: Have you adjusted to Youngstown yet? Are there things here that you like already?
Boldon: We are here now and we have been ordering in a lot trying to get the house in order, it is a wreck. I keep hearing about how I have to get to the Canfield Fair and how much my kids will enjoy it.
Paneech: Yeah, the Canfield Fair is pretty unique, it is one of the few places you can go pet a pig and be eating a sausage sandwich five minutes later.
Boldon: (laughing) Yeah, that is a little bit ironic I guess. I like the community and the people are very supportive. My staff and I try to go different places and have lunch, it’s been really good so far. The community is really buzzing about the football team and that new staff, and their season comes first, and I am excited as it is one of my favorite sports. The football team at any college set the tone and can get people geared up for the Winter sports.
Paneech: You go through the interview process with Mr. Strollo (above), does he tell you that you have to win and win now? Does he want you to build from the ground up? Or does he want anything better than the last few years to be the band-aid for now?
Boldon: Mr. Strollo showed the same expectations as I did in that we both want to win ball games. There is nobody in this administration who wants to win more than I do, and I say that for my staff as well. They all left jobs to come here and turn this around, and they did not come here to lose. The idea that it is going to take three, four, or even five years is something that we are not going to lean on.
Paneech: Do you ever play those little nightmare scenarios in your head where you are coaching that first game and look around to see about twenty people?
Boldon: Not really. If there is nobody at our first couple of games, I can’t say I blame them for not coming. I’m not in a rush to get to Jacob’s Field these days. After we win a couple of games, I would expect the interest to grow.
One Word Answers
Favorite Beverage: v-8 Splash.
Worst Habit: Biting My Nails.
Favorite Meal of The Day: Lunch, but I like ’em all.
Best Basketball Movie Ever: Hoosiers.
Biggest Phobia: Snakes.
Best Show On Television: The Mentalist.
Favorite NBA Team: The Cavs.
Game You Want To Make An Impression With: Opener vs Pitt.
Favorite Fast Food: Subway.
YSU Announces Hiring Of New Women’s Basketball Coach
Youngstown State University announced the hiring of Bob Boldon as the new Lady Penguins basketball coach. Boldon, who grew up in Louisville, Ohio, was a standout point guard for Walsh University. Coach Boldon has ten years of experience coaching basketball, five at the Division I level. His most recent venture was in the role of top assistant coach for Division I Florida Gulf Goast University.
Boldon is in a unique situation with the new task he has accepted. On one hand, there is nowhere to go but up as the Lady Penguins are coming off an 0-30 season and hold the longest losing streak in Division I. On the other hand, he will have to establish his ways to two other coaches recruits while trying to sign a few student-athletes to attend YSU.
“I am very excited about the opportunity to be the next head coach at Youngstown State University,” Boldon said. “Mr. Strollo has a great vision not only for the future of the women’s basketball program, but the entire athletic department. I am excited and honored to be a part of it. I am also thrilled that my family and friends will have an opportunity to share in the excitement of re-establishing a winning tradition for the women’s basketball program at YSU.”
Boldon has coached at Akron, Walsh, Gannon, Wilmington, Lambuth, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, and the University of Arkansas at Monticello. His track record would suggest he is a good fit for the current situation of YSU basketball because he seems to go into struggling programs and turn them around for the better.