North Carolina closed out the regular ACC
Men’s season by thumping Duke in a pretty
rough and poorly officiated game.
For coach “K” to say that Henderson’s forearm to
Hansbrough’s face wasn’t intentional is like
saying a thug on the street ripping off an
old lady’s pocketbook isn’t a robbery.
In recent days the previously kindly
coach “K” has been talking like “Tark the
Shark” and not like the “Wizard of
Westwood”.
But is was not surprising that this
happened in the final minutes of the game
after the officials had called such a lousy
game throughout.
Also the officiating in the ACC
women’s tournament one has to wonder what
elementary schools is the ACC recruiting
their officials because they are terrible –
both men and women.
Here’s the ACC men’s tournament schedule 1st
round Thursday:
Clemson vs. Florida State
noon
Maryland
vs. Miami
2:30 p.m.
Duke vs. N.C. State
7:00 p.m.
Georgia Tech vs. Wake Forest
9:30 p.m.
Quarterfinals – Friday
UNC vs. winner of Clemson vs.
Florida
State
noon
Boston College vs. winner of Maryland vs. Miami
2:30 p.m.
Virginia
vs. winner of Duke vs.
N.C.
State
7:30 p.m.
VA Tech vs. winner of GA Tech vs.
Wake
Forest 9:30
p.m.
Saturday – Semi Finals
1:30 and 3:30 p.m.
Sunday – Final
1:00 p.m.
The Terps are hot and could go all the way
in the tournament but they lack that
outstanding big man to do it.
I think North Carolina will do it
but the Terps are my dark horse candidate in
the race.
UNC’s Ivory Latte is a very good
player but also is one of the biggest hot
dogs I have ever seen, you know she would
make a good mascot for an NBA team.
Why are the officials so bad in the
ACC?
Are they best friends with the
commissioner that assigns them?
In that UNC vs. Maryland women’s game did they ever call a 3
second violation or do they even know what
it is?
There were plenty they could have
called on both teams.
D.J. Strawberry made the All-ACC
second team, James Gist and Ikene Ibekwe
made Honorable Mention.
Thursday night at Michael’s
8th Avenue
– Thursday (March 8th) Ballroom
Boxing returns to Michael’s 8th Avenue with a big boxing
event starring “Irish” Carson McCrouney in
the main event of Ballroom Boxing’s 90th
show.
Also returning is Cory Cummings and
longtime amateur Danny Kisner will be making
his pro debut.
Saturday Night Fight's March 10th
Pikesville
Armory
610 Reisterstown Rd
Doors Open 6:30 & Live entertainment will
start
One of the best bands on the East Coast
Johns Basement
8PM The fights will start with one of the
best Main Events ever held in the Maryland
area
Jessie "The Beast" Nicklow ,
Pasadena,
MD, 9-0
VS
Matt Berkshire,
Morgantown, WV, 8-0
Also Mike Paschall 10-0; Richard Stewart
11-2; Eliase Bouloubassis, Ray Grant, and
Diamond Matt Hill
& making his Pro debut outstanding
Amateur boxer Earl "Mouse" Cole
For tickets call 410-375-9175
or go to BALTIMOREBOXING.COM
Langhorne, Coleman Named All-ACC Tournament
Terps helped Maryland reach the semifinals
Maryland's Marissa Coleman and Crystal
Langhorne were named to the ACC's 10-player
All-Tournament team, which was announced at
the conclusion of the 30th-annual ACC
Women's Basketball Tournament. Both were
second-team selections as they led
Maryland to
the team's fourth-straight semifinal.
Junior Crystal Langhorne was voted to the
all-star team for the third-straight year.
She was named the
Player of the Game in the Terps'
quarterfinal win over Georgia Tech where she
nearly had a double-double, netting 18
points and nine rebounds. In the semifinals,
she had 16 points and five rebounds,
averaging 17.0 points and 7.0 rebounds per
game, while shooting 68.2 percent.
Sophomore Marissa Coleman also had a big
weekend at the tournament. She averaged 17.0
ppg and
9.5 rpg, while shooting better than 58
percent. She posted a double-double against
the Yellow Jackets, tallying 16 points and
11 rebounds. She also added three assists
and two blocks in that game.
She followed up with a 18-point,
eight-rebound performance in the semifinals
vs. North Carolina.
Langhorne was a two-time first team honoree
entering this year's tournament. Coleman was
a first team all-tournament selection as a
freshman.
UNC's Ivory Latta and Erlana Larkins, NC State's Ashley Key and Khadijah Whittington
and Duke's Abby Waner were voted to the
first team. Joining Langhorne and Coleman on
the second team were the Wolfpack's Gillian
Goring, UNC's Camille Little and Duke's
Alison Bales.
The Terps await their NCAA Tournament fate
until Monday, March 12 when the tournament
brackets, seedings and locations are
announced. It will be televised on ESPN.
Doron, Langhorne Named Academic
All-Americans
Doron earns Academic All-America honors for
the second time
Maryland women's
basketball players Shay Doron and Crystal
Langhorne have made their marks in the
record books and have carried that over into
the classroom. Both were recently named ESPN
The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-Americans.
Doron was named to the second team for the
second-straight year, while Langhorne was a
third team selection. Maryland was the only team in the ACC with any
selections to the Academic All-America squad
and the only team with with multiple
selections.
In her final season as a Terrapin, senior
Shay Doron has excelled in the classroom
since arriving on campus. A criminology and
criminal justice major, she has been a
member of the ACC Honor Roll every year
while also earning All-ACC honors three
times, including a first team selection as a
sophomore.
Doron was also voted to the ESPN The
Magazine/CoSIDA All-District 2 team three
times, twice earning a spot on the first
team. Ranked second all-time on Maryland's career scoring list, Doron boasts a
3.67
grade point average and has been named to
the Dean's List for six-consecutive
semesters.
First team All-ACC honoree junior Crystal
Langhorne was a third team Academic
All-American selection,
earning national academic honors for the
first time in her career. A communications
major with a 3.4 grade point average, the
United State Basketball Writers Association
(USBWA) and the Associated Press named her
an All-American last year. Langhorne was a
Dean's List student in the spring of 2006,
after helping the Terps win the national
championship. A three-time all-conference
pick, Langhorne earned
all-district honors twice and has been an
ACC Honor Roll student-athlete ever year.
Both Doron and Langhorne were named to the
Academic All-ACC team last year, which takes
into account academic and athletic
excellence.
Maryland has had 40 Academic All-Americans
all-time. Last year, Doron became the first
Terrapin women's basketball player to earn
the honor.
Maryland
is ranked seventh in the latest AP poll and
awaits its NCAA Tournament fate when the
bracket is announced on Monday, March 12 at
8 p.m. on ESPN.
No. 4 Tar Heels Outlast No. 5 Terps In ACC
Tournament Semis, 78-72
Maryland (27-5) now
awaits its NCAA Tournament fate
Notes:
- Four Terrapins scored in double figures.
Marissa Coleman had 18 to lead the team.
Crystal Langhorne had 16, Shay Doron had 13,
and Kristi Toliver had 12. It is the 31st
time in 32 games this season that at
least three Terps have scored in double
digits, and the 25th time that at least four
Terps have scored ten or more.
- Crystal Langhorne scored 16 points in the
game, giving her 1,685 in her career. She
moves into third place on the Maryland all-time list,
passing Christy Winters, who scored 1,679
from 1985-90.
- Shay Doron got the start for the 117th
time in her career, matching a Maryland school record.
She ties Marche Strickland, who started 117
games from 1999-2002.
- Doron's 13 points give her 1,848 in her
career, still second on Maryland's all-time
points list. She is 80 points behind the
team's all-time leader, Vicky Bullett, who
was honored at today's game as an ACC
Legend.
- Doron reached double figures in an ACC
Tournament game for the first time since
last year's quarterfinal victory over
Georgia Tech, when she scored 12. Doron,
whose best output in a tournament game came
in 2004 when she scored 19 on Duke in the
semifinals, scored 13 in today's game.
- Doron moved into seventh place on
Maryland's all-time
assists chart with her three assists in the
game. She now has 404 in her career. She
passed Marcia Richardson, who had 402 from
1981-84.
- Kristi Toliver dished out four assists,
bringing her season total to 149. Toliver
now is tied for the ninth most assits in a
season by a Terp with her teammate Shay
Doron, whbo dished out 149 helpers in
2005-06.
- Laura Harper rejected two Tar Heel shots
during the game, giving her 60 this season.
She passed Kris Krichner, who had 59 blocks
in 1979-80, for the third most blocks in a
season by a Terrapin.
- Crystal Langhorne reached double figures
for the ninth time in nine career ACC
Tournament games. She finished this game
with 16 points.
- Marissa Coleman, who poured in 18 points
in the game, also has reached double figures
in each of her five career ACC Tournament
games.
- Coleman's 18 points were a career high for
an ACC Tournament game. She set her previous
high of 16 most recently yesterday in the
quarterfinal victory over Georgia Tech.
Fourth-ranked North Carolina broke open a tied game with two minutes
left and beat fifth-ranked Maryland 78-72 Saturday in the semifinals of
the ACC Women's Basketball Tournament in the
Greensboro Coliseum.
The win sends the Tar Heels, the defending
ACC champions, to the championship game set
Sunday at 1 p.m. against N.C. State.
"We didn't get rattled, and we made some big
shots when we needed to," said North Carolina coach Sylvia Hatchell, whose
team is now 29-3.
Maryland, which never led, tied the game at
67-all on Kristi Toliver's jumper from the
top of the key with 2:01 left on the clock.
But
North Carolina
dominated the rest of the way. It started
with point guard Ivory Latta finding LaToya
Pringle open under the basket to take the
lead for good with 1:34 remaining.
"Coach called the play, I saw LaToya in
there and I threw it to her," Latta said.
Latta was then on the receiving end of an
assist from teammate Alex Miller, who
grabbed a crucial rebound with 1:05 left and
Latta scored on an all-alone fast break.
Pringle then partially blocked a shot by
Shay Doron with 35 seconds left, and UNC
salted away the win with four free throws by
Latta, two by Miller and one by Little.
Latta led the winners with 19 points,
followed by Jessica Breland with 14, Erlana
Larkins with 12, and Pringle and Camille
Little with 11 each.
North Carolina
center Erlana Larkins chalked up a
double-double with 10 rebounds to go with
her dozen points.
Maryland, now 27-5, put
three different post players on Larkins
throughout the game.
"Sometimes it's Laura Harper, sometimes it's
Langhorne, and sometimes it's Perry,"
Larkins said. "I'm a big woman, but three
women coming at you the entire 40 minutes,
it kind of wears you down."
Hatchell had high praise for Larkins,
noting, "I've called her many times my
warrior, and she is. When we need her, she's
there."
Maryland coach Brenda Frese said, "It was just
a tremendous game for both teams. We didn't
want to go home, but I'm proud of our
effort. A Final Four game--that's what it
felt like."
Maryland, the defending
NCAA champion, trailed 37-30 at the half and
by 10 points in the second half before
mounting a furious rally to tie the game.
"Jessica Breland was their X-factor today,"
Frese said. "It speaks volumes for their
depth."
Breland went 5-for-6 from the field and hit
3-of-4 free throws in just 16 minutes of
play.
"Jessica was a McDonald's High School
All-America," Hatchell said. "Today was not
a fluke. She's going to play like she did
today and probably better."
Doron said it was tough finishing her career
without an ACC championship, but added if
the Terps had to lose Saturday to win
another national championship, she would
take it.
"I'm looking at the big picture," Doron
said.
Marissa Coleman led Maryland with 18 points
and eight rebounds, followed by Crystal
Langhorne with 16 points, Doron with 13 and
Toliver with 12.
Coleman said, "Toward the end of the game,
we let them get some crucial rebounds."
Hatchell said down the stretch, her Tar
Heels showed mental toughness--and played as
a team.
"We had 20 assists out of 28 field goals
made," Hatchell said, pointing out that's
good team basketball.
Hatchell said another key to the victory was
having Little guard Toliver.
"I was proud down the stretch when Maryland made their
comeback, and we did a couple of things that
really made a difference and were able to
pull the game out. Maryland is so good at so many areas of the
game. You take one thing away, they make up
for it with something else. Those kids can
shoot the lights out, especially Toliver and
Shay and Coleman. They got hot at the end."
The North Carolina
coach said she watched most of N.C. State's upset of Duke in the first
semifinal.
"Those kids from N.C. State--it was absolutely unbelievable,"
Hatchell said. "When they gave Kay (Yow)
that award (after the game), the other head
coaches, we were talking, and we decided
that we are going to invest in a movie about
these last few weeks for N.C. State, because
it's been an incredible run for them.
"Hopefully, some of that emotion will run
out. We know we've got to play a great game
tomorrow because N.C. State will be sky high."
Six National Champion Field Hockey Terps
Named Academic All-ACC
Kristina Edmonds repeats
Six members of the National Champion field
hockey team were named to the Academic
All-ACC team, the Atlantic Coast Conference
recently announced. Among the six honorees
were Honda Award winner and National Player
of the Year Paula Infante and first team
All-American Kristina Edmonds.
To be eligible for consideration, a
student-athlete must have earned a 3.0 grade
point average for the previous semester and
maintained a 3.0 cumulative average during
her academic year. A total of 31
student-athletes were selected to the
academic all-conference squad.
The six honorees are tied for the second
most of any of the six teams. Senior Paula
Infante, a Physical Education major, was
named the national player of the year for
the second-straight season. Senior Kristina
Edmonds is on the team for the
second-straight year. She is a Kinesiology
major and was also an All-ACC performer this
season.
Sisters Ameliet and Berber Rischen, Emily
Trycinski and Kim Ziegler were also named to
the team. A junior, Ameliet is a Biological
Sciences major and Berber is a graduate
student at the Smith School of Business. As
a freshman, Ameliet started in 22 of the
Terps' 25 games and scored six goals. Berber
transferred from Kent State University to complete her collegiate
eligibility. She started in every game,
scoring seven goals and dishing out 11
assists, which ranked second on the team.
She was also named Mid Atlantic All-Region.
Trycinski scored the only goal in the
championship game vs.
Wake Forest, giving Maryland its second-straight NCAA title. A
kinesiology major, she tallied a career-high
seven goals in her final season as a
Terrapin. Ziegler is an engineering biology
major and also scored a career high five
goals on the season, making 10 starts.
Eight Field Hockey Terps Earn National
Academic Recognition
Terps garner the most academic squad members
in the ACC
Eight members of the NCAA Champion Maryland
field hockey team were earned a place on the
National Field Hockey Coaches Association
National Academic Squad. Junior
Kendall
Beveridge and senior
Megan Fox
are on the team for the third-consecutive
year. Maryland is one of 55 NCAA Division I field
hockey squads who have achieved a team grade
point average of 3.0 or above for the fall
2006 semester.
To be eligible for the National Academic
Squad, a student-athlete must have achieved
at least a 3.0 for the fall 2006 semester.
Kendall
Beveridge is a marketing and
business management major and earned a 4.0
in the fall.
Megan Fox
also earned a 4.0 in marketing and business
management. The two are the 17th and 18th
players in the history of the program to be
named to the National Academic Squad at
least three times.
Sophomore
Sarah
Scholl and redshirt-sophomore
Kimberly Ziegler earn the academic honor for
the second time. A letters and sciences
major, Scholl earned a 3.15 GPA, while
starting 19 of 25 games for the Terps on the
forward line. Ziegler, also a forward,
earned a 3.71 GPA in biological engineering
in the fall and scored a career-high five
goals on the season. She was recently named
to the Academic All-ACC team.
First time honorees are freshman
Kate
Effland, freshman
Kristina
Foster, freshman Alicia Morawski
and sophomore
Danielle
Keeley.
Five Terrapins in all earned 4.0 GPA's
during the fall semester, while also
capturing the 2006 NCAA Championship.
Seniors
Emily
Trycinski and Honda Award winner
and National Player of the Year
Paula
Infante were among the five. Both
were also recently selected Academic
All-ACC.
RIVERDALE BAPTIST MARCH MADNESS
Coming up on March 17th Riverdale
Baptist will be hosting their own “March
Madness” with an auction, baseball
tournament, celebrity athletes, Dunk Tank
and door prizes.
Special guests will include Orlandis
Gary (Riverdale grad and great running back
with the Denver Broncos); Reggie Williams (Georgetown U. and Denver Nugget star and a host of
others).
Autographed memorabilia include a Darrell
Green football, vacation and spa packages,
sporting event tickets, etc.
Time of the event is 1:00 to 5:00
p.m., silent auction is from 1:00 to 3:30
p.m., live auction at 4:00 p.m.
For more information contact Lisa Colmus at
301-249-7000 ext 151 or
1colmus@rbschool.org
Proceeds to benefit the new RHS athletic
complex.
Come to the Crusaders Field House
Gym,
1133 Largo Road,
Upper Marlboro on March 17th for
a great event and great time.
Wishing all our loyal customers a Happy
Saint Patrick's Day
2007
Lots of fun at Killarney House and Galway Bay all week
starting March 11th thru March 18th
Reservations for lunch and dinner highly
recommend for Saint Patrick's Day
Entertainment Line up at
Killarney House
Sun 11th: St. Pats Brunch with dancers at
2:30
Mon 12th: "Neighbor Night" Ray Weaver
Tues 13th: TIPSC in pub
Wed 14th: Angie Miller
Thur 15th: Ray Weaver
Fri 16th: Jordan Page
SATURDAY 17TH
TIPSC
Ray Weaver
Ray Murphy and the Irish Rovers
Sun 18th: St. Pats Brunch with dancers at
2:30
Also are you planning a group event at your
home
Don't forget our special
Corned
Beef and Cabbage Meals "To Go"
prepared at either restaurant and will feed
up to Ten
Guests
$89.99
Slainte
WE GET
LETTERS…
Bill,
I just wanted take a few moments and let
everyone know that the "So You Wanna Be a
Sports Talk Show Host" contest at WNST-1570
has concluded. Unfortunately, I did not win
the contest. However, there is certainly no
shame in finishing in the "Final 4" when
considering over 100 applicants.
To be honest, I've been through enough
processes that were "fixed". It was truly
refreshing to be part of something
legitimate. The truth is the best performer
won. I was incredibly impressed by Mike
Popovec's routine. But, he's a pro and has
been at the craft for nearly 10 years - and,
yes, he's only 26 !!!!!!
As the website (www.wnst.net) indicates,
there are no losers. I've been offered a
position at the radio
station. Specifically, I've been offered a
Sunday morning show. I would emphasize on
NASCAR through August, and switch gears for
the Ravens 2007 campaign, in September. This
gig would also entail a "Daily NASCAR
Minute" heard during the week, as well as my
own blog. Needless to say, this is a very
generous offer.
I want to take these final moments to thank
each of you for supporting me in this
endeavor. I'd like to ad a special thanks
to Jason Jubb, who really worked in
partnership with me in the two months. He
recorded all of the musical CD's, as well as
my initial demo disc. We've had countless
phone calls, back and forth, regarding the
contest. Thanks, Jubb.
Finally, I've realized that communications
is my "thing". I'm preparing a package for
dissemination to corporations and government
agencies throughout the area. No offense,
but I could SMOKE the spokesmen for ANY of
the major metro police departments. I just
need a chance. Unfortunately,
spokesmen positions commonly go to someone
who's befriended the boss. Or, in some
other cases (AAPD ?), a handsome guy who's
less articulate than Billy Bob Thornton, in
"Sling Blade". It's not what you say .....
it's how you say it.
By the way ...... the Orioles will be BAD
again, this year. For anyone who's listened
to me, then you'll know my opinion on the
bullpen. It will let them down. As for the
Ravens, they're winners and will continue to
be.
Stay tuned.
Rex
Hi Bill,
Also, the Steve Ports Trio will be at:
The Au Pointin Stil (Irish Pub) in Timonium
on March 16; and
Castlebay Irish Pub in
Annapolis on St.
Patricks Day (March 17).
I hope all is well with you!!!
Steve
Dear Steve,
A little depressed but otherwise okay.
Bill
Bill,
Happened on your site by accident when I
went to ask.com to see if I could find out
why Don Rickles was once known as Don "Glasshead"
Rickles. Skimmed the material on Sports
Beat and started seeing all kinds of
nostalgia from my days as a kid on
northeast Florida Ave.
in DC. My older brother delivered the Daily
News. Earliest sports reporting I remember
was Shirley Povich. Also used to read the
ads for entertainment headliners at the 14th St NW clubs. That was late 1940's and
that is where I remember seeing ads (Blue
Mirror club, I think) for comedian Don "Glasshead"
Rickles. Couldn't figure out what it meant
then and still can't today. But I was amazed
to confirm very recently that the Don
Rickles we all know and love today is one
and the same from postwar Washington, DC. I
am in Houston, Texas
now but I will continue to check out St.
Marys Today. I finished growing up in
Clinton, Surrattsville class of 1953.
My best regards to you and yours
Duke Coleman
Dear Duke,
He used to put a large fishbowl on his
head…He played the Merryland Club at 1405
“L” Street, NW in downtown DC.
I believe it was Oliva Davis who
owned the club.
Bill
SPORTS NOTES
John Mappas, who had a decent season on his
return as men’s basketball coach at Chesapeake College on the Eastern Shore, was a recent visitor to
Southern Maryland and he had a celebrity
chauffer driving him from the shore and on
his tour.
I understand the pro wrestling/musical team
the “Insane Clown Posse” is making a
comeback and will be at the Baltimore Rams
Head on March 15th.
Our deepest sympathy goes to the family of
Clem Labine, an outstanding pitcher on the
Dodgers in the 1950’s.
Cecil won the Maryland men’s JUCO
championship beating Allegany 88-78 in the
title game.
Thom Loverro has another top book out called
“Hail Victory – An Oral History of the
Washington Redskins”.
Well Mickey Vernon, Gil Hodges and Jim Kaat
lost out again when the “Hall of Shame”
Veterans Committee didn’t select them or for
that matter anyone.
Since 61 Hall of Famers are on the
committee of 84 why not remove three of them
from the Hall every time the committee
doesn’t select someone and also remove the
14 broadcasters and 8 writers and replace
them on the committee.
Our deepest sympathy goes to the family of
Robert Antonetti, Sr., former head of the
elections board of
Prince George’s and Howard Counties.
Also to the family of Herman Brix who
played Tarzan in the movies and later
changed his name to Bruce Bennett.
Harvard fired men’s basketball coach Frank
Sullivan, Illinois State fired men’s roundball coach Porter
Moser and there will be more to follow.
If these and other schools are smart
they would come after John Mappas, John
Wiley, Bill Lewitt or Villa Julie’s coach
Brett Adams all are ready to move up.
The Pittsburgh Penguins are rumored headed
to
Kansas City.
Why not Baltimore?
The State High School playoffs are this weekend.
Villa Julie College
men’s basketball team lost to Johns Hopkins
84-72 after leading by 18 at the half.
Guests on my “Inside Sports” TV show were
Paul Wilson, new owner of the Washington
Glory (fast pitch women’s softball team) who
graduated from Frederick HS and Christa
Dalakis, a catcher and outfielder who
graduated from George Mason University (she
also plays on the Greek National team and is
founder and owner of Tyson’s Corner based
“Breakaway Fitness”).
Coming up on April 25th at
Michael’s 8th Avenue it’s a live auction
to benefit
Anne
Arundel County’s “Take Back our Streets”, art,
sports, music memorabilia and more up for
auction.
For more information call
410-766-7723.
The “Oldtimers Baseball Association” will be
holding their “Spring Dance” on April 25th
at the Del Capri.
For more information call Howie
Meyers at 410-538-3827.
The regular meeting of "Talkin' Baseball"
will be held on Saturday, March 10 at 9AM at
Barnes and Noble,
4300 Montgomery Rd.
(Longate
Shopping Center) in Ellicott City, MD.
Our speaker will be Ted Leavengood
who will discuss his book "The 2005
Washington Nationals: Baseball returns to Washington, DC". Come with a friend.
Our deepest sympathy goes to the family of
Larry Politz (Coolidge 1958).
Also our deepest sympathy goes to the
families of the following:
Doris Hess Russell (Holy
Cross Academy grad)
Hazel Reynolds (Central HS (DC) grad)
Craig Williams (Anacostia HS grad)
Adalius Thomas Ravens to
New England
Tony Pashos Ravens to Jacksonville
Ovie Mughelli Ravens to Atlanta
All three big losses to the Ravens despite
the Ravens denying it.
Its iffy with Jamal Lewis staying
also.
I wonder how Harpo feels about those
moves?
BULLDOGS VICTORIOUS OVER JOHNSON C. SMITH
Bowie State
Advances to Tournament Semi-finals
Bowie State
fought off a gallant defensive effort by
Johnson C. Smith to defeat the third seeded
Golden Bulls, 68-62, Thursday night to
advance to the semi-finals of the CIAA
Basketball Tournament at the Charlotte
Bobcat Arena.
The win ups Bowie State’s record to 19-10 and ends Johnson
C. Smith’s season at 16-9.
Entering the contest as the sixth seed in
the tournament, the Bulldogs led for all but
38 seconds of the first half.
JCSU broke the third tie of the first
half with a 4-0 run in the final minute to
take a 30-26 lead into the locker room at
halftime.
The Golden Bulls faced a key loss
early in the game when CIAA Rookie of the
Year Jerry Hollis went down with an ankle
injury. Ryan Scott picked up the slack for
JCSU, leading all scorers at the half with
10 points.
BSU’s Tyronne Beale and Orlando
Wright each contributed nine points for the
Bulldogs but CIAA Player of the Year Gil
Goodrich was held scoreless at the half.
In the second half,
Bowie
State made an adjustment
which allowed Goodrich to run the offense
and become more involved. Bowie State out-rebounded Johnson C. Smith 25-13
in the second half, which set up more second
chance opportunities.
Without Hollis in the game for JCSU,
the Golden Bulls had limited offensive
options in the second period.
Goodrich got involved by scoring as well as
getting his teammates the ball in scoring
position. With 4:10 left to play, Wright
would hit a critical three point basket that
would put Bowie State up 56-54, and the Bulldogs would not
trail again in the contest.
Beale had a game-high 17 points and eight
rebounds before picking up his fifth foul.
Goodrich finished with 14 points, eight
rebounds, and eight assists; despite having
nine turnovers and shooting just 16 percent
(two-of-12) from the field.
Joshua Johnson was also productive
for the Bulldogs, contributing 11 points and
nine rebounds.
The Golden Bulls had only two players finish
with double figure points. Scott finished
with 13 points and Edmund Rainey added 11
points and nine rebounds.
NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL ENDS
BOWIE STATE’S
SEASON
North Carolina Central gave its head coach,
Joli Robinson, a nice birthday gift on
Friday - a CIAA semifinal victory over Bowie State.
Robinson celebrated her birthday by
watching her Lady Eagles take a 76-65 win at
Charlotte Bobcats Arena to reach the CIAA
championship game for the first time since
2001. The top-seeded Lady Eagles led from
start to finish in improving their record to
24-5 overall.
With victory well in hand, the fans sang
"Happy Birthday" to an elated Robinson in
the closing minutes. After the game, the
cheerleaders also serenaded Robinson with a
birthday song before she walked happily off
the court.
The play of her team also put the
NCCU coach in a good mood. They jumped on
the Lady Bulldogs from the beginning and
held a double-digit lead for much of the
first half. Though the Lady Bulldogs stayed
within stiking distance at times in the
second half, the Lady Eagles were too
talented and too deep.
"I anticipated that the Lady Bulldogs
would battle hard," Robinson said. "But we
did what we needed to do at the beginning
[of the game]."
As usual the Lady Eagles were led by their
contingent of talented players. Cassie King
scored a game-high 25 points and LaQuanda
Williams added 14 points. Jasmine Newkirk
chipped in 12 points and LaVonna Hailey and
Jori Nwachukwu both contributed 9 points
each.
Bowie State Head Coach Doug Robertson was
one of the few people in the arena who
wanted to spoil Robinson's birthday, but he
has the utmost respect for her.
Robertson also has respect for his
fifth-seeded Lady Bulldogs, who dressed nine
players. Standout forward Allyson Swailes
sat much of the second half as Robertson
went with a smaller lineup, yet the Lady
Eagles couldn't put them away. After
trailing by double digits most of the game,
the Lady Bulldogs pulled within seven points
at 61-54 with 4:09 left but that was as
close as they would get.
"Our players were fatigue a little
but a game such as this, with media
timeouts, helped us," Robertson said.
Sherika Thomas scored 21 points and Markeya
Watson added 20 points and nine rebounds for
the Lady Bulldogs, who finished their season
at 18-11.
Genet Moore added 14 points,
including 4 of 7 3-pointers, for the Lady
Bulldogs, who shot 50 percent from the
floor.
But the Lady Bulldogs allowed the
Lady Eagles to shoot 50 percent.
"When we decided to go small, we
thought we could force them into a jump
shooting game, but they penetrated to the
basket," Robertson said.
The penetration helped the Lady
Eagles get to the free throw line 28 times
where they made 21. The Lady Bulldogs were 8
of 15 from the free-throw line. The Lady
Bulldogs also committed 24 turnovers which
the Lady Eagles converted to 22 points.
In the end, the Lady Eagles had too
much talent, depth and motivation.
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