Posts Tagged ‘Jerry Slocum’
Youngstown State Breaks Horizon Drought With 71-69 Win Over UIC
The Horizon League is probably the most unrecognized conference in NCAA-DI basketball. UIC was YSU’s opponent on this holiday evening, and UIC had just beaten then-ranked #12 Illinois a couple of games back. The Horizon League is no slouch, ask Duke. As the conference rises in prominence, Youngstown State is trying to evolve with it. The Penguins had not won a conference game in their last 13 chances. Throw out the records and chalk up a conference win for the Penguins, 71-69, over UIC.
The first half featured good shooting by both squads. Youngstown State had a lead as big as nine points in that first half, but UIC marched right back into things before half and the Penguins only lead 34-32 at intermission. The story in the first half was three-pointers. Both teams shot over 40 percent with YSU connecting on 7-17 and UIC nailing 4-7.
Ashen Ward had a career best night for the Penguins. Ward was Mr. Instant in the first half connecting on 4-6 threes and finished the half with 14 points on his way to a career-high in points. Ward hit another three in the opening minutes of the second half, he was on fire. With 16:24 left in the game, UIC nabbed the lead, 40-39, when Robo Kreps hit a free throw to complete a three point play. Ward responded with a deuce to give YSU the lead back on their next possession.
With YSU trailing 46-43, DuShawn Brooks hit a runner from the right side of the key coming in to cut UIC’s lead to one point. Tre Brewer hit a finger roll to put YSU back up by one with just over twelve minutes to go in the game. YSU was not getting many inside chances and had only attempted one free throw up to the 11:32 mark when Vytas Sulskis hit a pair to put YSU ahead, 49-47.
With YSU ahead 57-53 with UIC’s Paul Carter hit a runner from the left side and was fouled by Sulskis. Carter hit the free throw to complete the old-school three and the game was tied again with 8:18. Ashen Ward then hit his sixth and seventh threes of the game to push YSU’s lead to 63-58. With 3:24 left in the game, and YSU holding a very slim lead of 65-64, Brewer gathered an offensive rebound and was fouled trying to put it back. Brewer was unable to connect with either charity toss and UIC ended up taking a two point lead when Carter was fouled while shooting a three.
With 1:41 left in the game, YSU trailed 67-65. Sulskis hit a spinning layup to tie things up at the 1:31 mark. UIC could not score on their end and with less than a minute to go and the score tied at 67 apiece, Ward was fouled and hit one of two to put the Penguins up a point at 68-67 with 41.3 seconds remaining. Carter hit a 15-foot jumper with 24 seconds left to put UIC back up by one in this see-saw battle.
Sulskis was fouled, a blessing for YSU fans because he nails his free throws, hit a pair to give YSU a 70-69 lead with 15.9 seconds to go in the game. Kreps drove the hoop but threw up a wild prayer that barely drew iron. Blake Allen hauled in the rebound with 2.9 seconds to go and was immediately fouled and put to the line. Allen hit one of two to put the Penguins ahead 71-69 with 2.2 seconds to go. UIC inbounded the ball but could not get better than a three-quarter court look and YSU held on for the dramatic win, 71-69.
Youngstown State (6-6, 1-2) was led by Ward, who posted a career-high with 26 points. Ward answered every time the UIC seemed to gain momentum by hitting a huge bucket. Ward finished the game 9-14 from the floor and 7-10 from three-point land.
UIC (5-9, 0-2) got 19 points from Carter who did all he could to keep the Flames in the game down the stretch.
After the game, Jerry Slocum commented on his team’s big conference win. “We got a huge boost from our bench tonight. Ash [Ashen Ward] stepped up and hit some big baskets. They were keeping a close eye on Vytas [Sulskis] and that freed Ash up to get some good looks. We have been asking Ashen to do a little more offensively and to take more shots. The whole team battled hard and we came out with a big win.”
Ward commented on his holiday success. “We took some extra shooting practice and it paid off tonight. Give credit to our bench, they played well and everyone played hard.”
Merry Christmas, Jerry Slocum!
To sit at the media table at Youngstown State basketball games has been awesome. To take pictures along the baseline at Beeghly Center when the YSU Penguins have a home game is a different kind of awesome. You hear both sides of everything because you are real close to the YSU bench, but you hear the commentary of the fans also. People are very critical of Jerry Slocum and quite frankly, I’m sick of hearing the criticism. Here are some reasons why Slocum is the man, and hopefully stays at YSU for a very long time.
At a recent home game, a Penguin player threw a turnover, a horrible decision. The Malone player finished the sequence by making a lay-up and then being fouled. As Jerry Slocum paced the YSU bench area, I looked over and saw the disgust, from the very recent turn of events that just happened on the court, obvious in Slocum’s face.
Then the heckling starts. I hear people scream about how poor the coaching is. I bite my tongue and shake my head and just glance at the stupidity around me sometimes. Jerry Slocum is one of the most passionate coaches you will find in any sport. He comes to the press conference drained, he leaves it all on the court just like he encourages his players to do. Yet, there are hecklers.
Let’s be realistic about a couple of things. Slocum may not be winning championships, but for the most part his teams are competitive and well coached. Last year he lost everyone except Vytas Sulskis, Ashen Ward and Dan Boudler. This year, Sheldon Brogden has walked away and turned in his uniform. Why? I’ll tell you why. Hard-nosed old-school coaching, that’s why. Slocum works his guys hard. The lazy players quit or become headaches refusing to conform to a stubborn man who is very set in his ways.
Youngstown State is a football school. Eric Wolford is doing a great job rekindling the fire that once burned between goal lines at The Ice Castle. Jerry Slocum has done something Eric Wolford has not done yet, he has won over 600 games.
Slocum could live without media, in fact, I think he actually despises going to press conferences after a loss. Go find some Bobby Knight footage on You Tube and tell me that he wasn’t the same way. Slocum has been a joy to cover and he has never given me any negativity or distress. I do, however, pick and choose times that feel more appropriate when asking a question.
Jerry Slocum is a very private, family man. He takes great pride in his personal relationships and glows when he talks about his wife or extended family. He also takes great pride in what kind of product shows up on the court each game. He is constantly thinking and his scowl is priceless, he wears his heart on his sleeve.
If I were in charge, which I’m not, I would surely try to find out how much longer he wants to coach and throw the paper down for him to sign. I suggest keeping an eye on him during the game, it is really entertaining because he is working on so many different things. He is an ace at riding the refs. Watch how soon YSU gets a make-good call when Slocum questions something less than a minute before, it happens every game. When a YSU player misses a free throw, he will just look at the ground like his stomach just turned. These are admirable qualities you don’t get from a coach. Consider yourselves lucky YSU fans, and Merry Christmas, Jerry Slocum!
Youngstown State Recovers To Beat Malone, 78-62
Youngstown State returned home to play a game a few days after being trounced by Robert Morris, 90-60. To make matters worse, one of the team leaders, Ashen Ward, would be inactive with back spasms. The Penguins last played Malone in 1963, and won that game 117-81. Monday night, parody showed 50 years of progress and the Penguins didn’t post such a lopsided number, but managed to win the game behind stellar efforts from Vytas Sulskis and Damian Eargle.
The first half saw a sluggish Penguins team establish their presence inside. Only four Penguins managed to score in the first half. Damian Eargle and Vytas Sulskis combined for 25 of the Penguins 33 first half points. The other two Penguins to get any points in the opening half were Tre Brewer with five, and Dan Boudler contributing three. Malone held their ground and trailed by only two at the intermission with the score YSU 33, and Malone 31.
Coach Jerry Slocum was handed a pretty cheap technical foul (below) with 6:31 left in the first half to help Malone stay in the game on a four-point swing. Malone was paced by Eric Coblentz’s 12 in the opening half.
Coblentz gave Malone a 41-39 lead when he buried a three for his twelfth point as the Pioneers, who shot 45% from long distance in the first half stayed red hot. Eargle responded with a bucket giving him 16 points, a new career high, to tie the game at 41 with 15:49 left in the game. Sulskis and Eargle continued to propel the offense which pushed the lead to five with 12:00 remaining. Sulskis hit a thunderous running dunk off of the right baseline to force the Pioneers to use a timeout to regroup.
Eargle was a man possessed and created problems for the Pioneers all night long. He was blocking shots, making passes, and scoring. Sulskis hit his season-high 20th point to put YSU up 57-51 with 9:45 left. The pesky Pioneers were surviving behind the arc hitting 50% for the game to this point. YSU held a 64-54 lead with 7:53 remaining in the game.
The Penguins took their largest lead of the game with 6:11 left when Blake Allen hit a free throw giving YSU a 12-point lead with 6:21 left at 67-55. DuShawn Brooks was starting to feel it hitting his second three of the night and recording his eighth point to push the Penguin advantage to 14.
Sulskis (above) finished the game with 25 points, one short of a career high on 10-12 shooting. He also gathered nine rebounds. Eargle would have his best all-around game as a Penguin. Eargle finished with 24 points and 10 rebounds, posting his first double-double of the season. Eargle and Sulskis were virtually everywhere and played scintillating basketball. Tre Brewer also recorded a career-high in both points (13) and rebounds (14).
Eric Coblentz played very well for Malone and finished with 21 points.
With the win, YSU improved to 5-4 on the season, but more importantly, seemed to pick up the pieces after a disastrous road trip in preparation for North Carolina State and Kent State in the immediate future.
Coach Jerry Slocum was reflective on his team’s effort. “We got past the shackles of a hard loss and ran a lot of motion. We played very well and regrouped. That road trip we just came off of, every one of those teams did well in tournaments last season. Heading to NC State and playing an ACC team will be tough, but I feel Kent State has their best team this season. They will both be very hard games for us.”
Vytas Sulskis reflected on the night. “Me and Damian are roommates and we had good chemistry going tonight. We were finding each other and it wasn’t planned, it just worked that way. I was hot tonight.”
Slocum praised the efforts of both Sulskis and Eargle as well. “Vytas played really well on both ends of the court tonight. He and Damian toughened up on defense and we found a way to get into a rhythm in the second half.”
Youngstown State Moves To 3-1 With Win Over Toledo, 73-67
The new-look Youngstown State University basketball team welcomed another MAC team to Beeghly Center Wednesday. Toledo came into this game 0-5 and was searching for answers. The Rockets left Youngstown scratching their heads, and Coach Jerry Slocum picked up his 632nd career victory. The Penguins remained undefeated at home and improved to 3-1 on the young season with a 73-67 win over Toledo.
Youngstown State looked sharp at times in the first half, but also looked rough during stretches. Coach Slocum talked about what he expected out of the gate tonight. “We had a tough loss the other night, and I was really anxious to see how this team would respond to a tough loss.” True, it was a bit sluggish, but when this team gets going, they are a force.
Vytas Sulskis showed no ill effects of a hyperextended knee suffered at Akron. Sulskis hit three times from long distance and finished the first half with 11 points and four rebounds and would finish the contest with 20 points for YSU. However, the Penguins trailed the Rockets 34-33 at intermission. Toledo got nine first half points from Malcolm Griffin and the Rockets out-boarded the Penguins 21-14 in the opening session. Griffin finished the game with 18 points.
In the second half, Sulskis continued to score as he hit two free throws with 14:14 left in the game to put YSU ahead 45-43. Toledo cut the lead to one when Zack Leahy hit a trey to make it 47-46. Richard Wonell gave the Rockets a three-point lead with just over twelve minutes remaining with an easy bucket in the paint that made it 50-47, Toledo.
Damian Eargle tied the game at 52 and was fouled on an offensive rebound put back attempt on the Penguins next possession. Eargle hit one of the two and then scored his fifth consecutive point on a nifty reverse layup. Eargle made it seven straight points the next trip up the court, and there was no doubt that the Warren G. Harding grad was in the zone. The Penguins would ride the hot hand of Eargle to take a 57-54 lead with 8:23 left in the game. Devonte Maymon hit a pair of free throws to extend the YSU lead to 59-54 with 7:49 left in the game.
Eargle was dominating the game on both sides of the court in the second half. He was scoring, blocking shots, rebounding (on both sides of the court), and passing. Eargle finished the game with six blocks, a career-high, as well as 15 points and six boards and commented on how he is approaching this season after being stuck on the bench all of last season. “I feel like I can get better every game, and I can see myself doing more. We are really feeding off of the energy of the crowd and it seems like there are a few more people coming each time we win.”
With YSU ahead 65-58 with 3:26 left in the game, Griffin stole a pass and drove the floor for a bucket to cut the YSU lead to 65-60.
YSU kept their foot on the gas pedal with a five point lead and 2:42 left in the game. Ashen Ward drilled a three with just under two minutes left in the game to increase the Penguins lead to 70-63. Ward has been the guy who hits the big shot in a couple of instances this season. Eargle also played a key role in preserving the win with a couple of blocks and rebounds in the waning minutes. Slocum credited DuShawn Brooks after the game as the “unsung hero” pointing out that Eargle was the recipient of some nice passes from Brooks at the high post.
After the game, Jerry Slocum talked about what he would be thankful for, and it wasn’t a win. “I am very thankful for my family. I know that all of this can take its toll and it really gets hard sometimes. My wife and my kids have put up with a lot, and I could not be more thankful than to have such a great family.”
Sulskis left the media room with a big smile on his face. “Man, is my turkey gonna taste good tomorrow.”
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.
YSU Men One Rebound Short Against Akron, 91-84 (OT)
Youngstown State traveled West on I-76 looking for perhaps their biggest answer as to how good they could be against a quality team like Akron. The Penguins fought really hard and looked good. Brett McClanahan hit a 3-pointer as he was falling backwards at the end of regulation to force overtime. McClanahan’s three came after two missed three attempts as YSU held a three point lead with just seconds left. In overtime, the Zips got the bounces and the calls enabling them to walk away with a hard-fought 91-84 win over the much-improved Penguins team.
Vytas Sulskis poured in 20 points but missed most of the end of regulation and some of the overtime with a banged-up knee. “I will be okay'” said Sulskis after the game, “I hyperextended it [knee] when I fell, but I am fine.” Devonte Maymon and Ashen Ward each had 14 points, and Kendrick Perry chipped in eleven for Youngstown State.
“This hurts”, said Maymon. “That is some really bad luck we had out there tonigfht for them to get off three three-point shots in the last ten seconds. One rebound away.” Maymon and Ward drilled key buckets to put YSU ahead in regulation.
I can tell the YSU Basketball Universe that this isn’t last years team. This is a scrappy bunch who move the ball and function as a unit. They could win 20 games this season, easily. They are that good and are still getting better.
Dan Boudler also had a career-best night with nine points and five rebounds and Sheldon Brogden added a career-high nine for the Guins.
Maymon’s three put the Penguins ahead 77-74 with 27 seconds left. Needing a three to tie, the Zips started firing. First Daryl Roberts missed, offensive rebound by Zeke Marshall who kicked it back outside the arc to Steve McNees who also fired a three and missed. Marshall snagged another offensive board and found McClanahan just outside the right part of the circle in front of the Akron bench. McClanahan barely got the shot off on time and the backboard turned red and time just froze. When the sphere hit the twine, the Zips faithful at James A. Rhodes Arena blew the roof off.
During the overtime, Akron scored the first five points to go ahead 87-82 and never looked back.
The Penguins (2-1) return home on Wednesday and will play somewhere in the neighborhood of 7:30. The girls welcome Bucknell before the Men’s game at Beeghly Center.
YSU Improves To 2-0 With 64-53 Win Over Buffalo
Youngstown State University (1-0) showed flashes of just how good they could be. Buffalo (1-0) was coming off of an 18 win season and have been a force in the MAC over the past couple of seasons. This game was played with a lot of new bodies on both rosters and seemingly the team that committed the most mistakes would probably lose. Youngstown State did a great job down the stretch converting free throws and maximizing opportunities on their way to 2-0 for the first time since 2004, posting a 64-53 win.
The first half was a strong one for Youngstown State. Buffalo raced out to an early 10-2 lead, but YSU scored the next 13 points unanswered showing an array of weaponry that Coach Slocum has envisioned in his “potential meter“. Vytas Sulskis hit a three forcing Buffalo to use a timeout and capping the 13-0 Penguins run.
YSU had a 12 point lead with 4:30 left in the first half before Buffalo cut into the Penguins lead and only trailed by three points at the intermission. Devonte Maymon had ten first half points to lead Youngstown State. Sulskis chipped in with eight, and newcomer Tre Brewer added six. Buffalo was paced by Jawaan Alston and his seven points and four rebounds. At the half, the Penguins looked impressive and held a 32-29 lead.
YSU maintained a three point lead throughout the first part of the second half. With 11:57 left in the contest, the Penguins were ahead by the count of 42-39. Buffalo was really struggling from the free throw line connecting on only nine of 23 to this point in the game. Youngstown State’s kryptonite was the 14 turnovers committed.
With 7:31 left in the game, Youngstown State had a 46-43 lead. Neither team could capitalize on the other’s struggles. Javon McCrea hit a lay-up to cut the lead to one and Buffalo had a chance to take the lead but turned the ball over. Ashen Ward capitalized on the Penguins next possession by hitting a bucket while being fouled and converting the free throw to give YSU a 49-45 lead with just over six minutes to play.
One thing the Penguins did extremely well in this game was rebound. Dan Boudler grabbed one on offense with 4:41 left in the game and tipped it back in. On the Bulls next possession, Kendrick Perry created a steal and drove the length of the court to give YSU their biggest lead of the second half at 53-45. Alston kept his Bulls in it with a basket to cut the lead to 53-49 with 3:19 remaining. Ward hit a three with 2:00 left in the game to increase the Penguin lead to 58-49.
YSU was led by Maymon who knocked in 13 points. Eargle and Brewer gathered 24 rebounds for YSU. Buffalo was paced by Alston and Barnett who poured in eleven points each in falling to 1-1 on the young season.
A festive Jerry Slocum addressed the media after the game. “Anytime you can win a game when you shoot under 40%, you did a good job battling. This is as good of a team win as we have had in a very long time around here. Damian [Eargle] and Trey [Brewer] really stepped up getting some big rebounds for us down the stretch, that is what wins games.”
Junior Ashen Ward, who had a career-high 13 points, echoed the sentiments of the coach. “Winning is fun, and we are having fun because we are winning. Everything is easier when you are winning, practices are fun. Guys are buying in and things are working well so far this year.”
Penguins Start 2010 The Right Way
The Youngstown State University has undergone a major transformation. Between graduation and the departing transfers, there were only a few familiar faces with any experience. One face that hasn’t changed is that of Jerry Slocum. Slocum pretty much had to rebuild the team from the ground up. Vytas Sulskis, Ashen Ward, and Dan Boudler were really the only guys who returned with game experience from last season.
YSU parlayed some new chemistry with some clutch free throw shooting down the stretch to get to 1-0 and defeating Samford at The Beeghly Center by the score of 64-61.
Samford University stopped in for a visit Friday night in the opener for both teams. The pace was flat for both teams in the early going and by halftime, the score would be tied five times and there was one lead change. Basically, Youngstown State had the lead for the first half of the first half. Samford took the reigns and held on through halftime. Vytas Sulskis looked good for the Penguins in the first half. Nearly all other Penguins looked inconsistent and sluggish.
As a team, the Penguins were really struggling, throwing up 17 three point shots in the first half and only connecting on two.
At the 15:20 mark of the second half, YSU held a 34-31 lead. Sulskis and Devonte Mayman had nine points apiece for the Penguins to this point. Kendrick Perry hit a three to give the Penguins the lead at 37-34. On their next possession, DuShawn Brooks buried a three to increase the lead to 40-34 with 12:15 remaining.
Jeffrey Merritt did his best to keep Samford in the game. Merritt gathered an offensive rebound and hit a shot while being fouled to cut the lead to three. Maymon hit a drive falling while being fouled and somehow connected to put the Penguins ahead, 51-42 with 6:06 left in the game.
Samford’s Josh Davis buried a three-pointer with 3:34 left in the game cutting YSU’s lead to just three points at 56-53. Next trip down the floor, Merritt drove the middle, drew a foul, and got his shot to fall. From there, Brooks took over for YSU, first tipping in a missed shot and then nailing a three with 1:47 left in the game to put the Penguins ahead 61-57.
Merritt buried a three with 11.7 seconds left in the game cutting the YSU lead to just one point at 61-60. Merritt was high-scorer for the Bulldogs with 19 points, and he also grabbed 11 rebounds.
Sulskis was intentionally fouled with 9.8 seconds left and hit both free throws to increase the YSU lead to 63-60.
DuShawn Brooks was impressive in his Penguins debut, scoring 20 points and grabbing six boards. Devonte Maymon was also tough knocking down 15. Sulskis finished the game with 13 points and ten boards for his third career double-double.
After the game, a cheery Coach Jerry Slocum addressed what effected his team early. “I don’t know if it was so much being sluggish as it was emotional. We were really jacked-up tonight and once things calmed down we were better at knocking down our shots.”
Sulskis shared the sentiment of Slocum. “Last season we would have hung our heads and would not have responded. This year is much different we are more like a family and stayed together, pulled through when it counted most.”
YSU gets back into action on Tuesday with another home game, welcoming in Buffalo. Tipoff is 7:05.
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.
YSU Men’s Basketball Team Announces Signing Of Josh Chojnacki
Youngstown State Head Coach Jerry Slocum proudly unveiled the signing of Josh Chojnacki to a National Letter of Intent. Chojnacki (pronounced “shuh-NAK-ee”) comes from Erie, PA., where he was a standout for Mercyhurst Prep. The 6’9″ recruit was named a Class AA First-Team All-Pennsylvania selection last season.
Last season, Chojnacki averaged 21.6 points and 11 rebounds per game and finished his career as the second leading scorer in Mercyhurst Prep history compiling 1,321 points and as the school’s all-time rebounder with 775 in his four letter-winning years.
“In the Horizon League, when you have a post player that can step out and hit the perimeter jump shot, which Josh does extremely well, and have the ability to score around the basket it makes for a very special player,” Slocum said.
Chojnacki, who joins Kendrick Perry in the 2010-11 recruiting class, carried a 3.9 grade-point average in high school and plans on pursuing a degree in business while attending YSU.
“Youngstown State has been recruiting me since my junior year and I felt a real connection with Coach Slocum and (Assistant) Coach (Michael) Wernicki,” Chojnacki said. “I liked the campus, and it’s close to home so my family can see me play.”