Sunday, March 1, 2015

TSU Downs Belmont, 70-53, in Regular Season Finale

Nashville, Tennessee --- The Tennessee State women’s basketball team closed out the regular season with an impressive, 70-53, win over Belmont Saturday afternoon in the Curb Event Center.

With the victory, TSU improved to 15-12 (12-4 OVC) and earned the third seed in the 2015 OVC Basketball Tournament. The win extended TSU’s win streak to seven games.



Briana Morrow led TSU with 19 points while Chelsea Hudson added 17. I’mani Davis chipped in 14 for the Lady Tigers.

Belmont was led by Katie Carroll’s 13 points while Frankie Joubran scored 10.

The Tennessee State defense was stifling to start the game as Belmont was held without a field goal during the opening five minutes. TSU jumped out to an 8-1 lead but the three-point shooting of BU’s Katie Carroll got the opponents back into the contest.

The Bruins cut the deficit down to just one, 20-19, with 6:25 remaining in the half. Over the next several possessions, although the teams traded buckets, the Lady Tigers maintained at least a two-point lead.

The score was, 28-25, in favor of TSU when a 13-3 rally fueled by three-pointers from Brianna LawrenceRachel Allen and Chelsea Hudson gave the Lady Tigers a 41-28 advantage at the half.

TSU shot  51.7 percent (15-of-29) from the field and buried seven triples in the opening stanza.

A three-point play by Briana Morrow got TSU on the board in the second frame and sparked a 9-4 run that increased the lead to 50-32 before the media timeout.

Another old fashioned three-point play by Jayda Johnson swelled the TSU lead to 21 points before a Johnson steal led to TSU going up, 61-36, with a little over 10-minutes left to play.

Over the next five minutes, TSU went without a score and BU took advantage of the drought with a 9-0 run.

The Lady Tigers weathered the storm as I’mani Davis scored four straight points to shift the momentum back to TSU.

TSU will play #6 seed Morehead State in the first round of tournament on Thursday, March 5 at 2 p.m. in the Municipal Auditorium.


COURTESY TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION 

OVC Tournament Field Set, TSU Plays Thursday


2015 OVC Tournament Bracket

2015 OVC CHAMPIONSHIP FAN GUIDE

The 2015 Ohio Valley Conference Championship field is set. The four-day event will take place at the Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tenn., on March 4-7.

The Tennessee State women’s basketball team finished the regular season on a seven-game winning streak and earned the No. 3 seed. The Lady Tigers will face the Eagles of Morehead State in the first round on Thursday, March 5 at 2 p.m.

UT Martin captured its second straight regular-season title and the No. 1 seed in the tournament while SIUE took the No. 2 seed. Belmont earned the fourth seed followed by Jacksonville State, Morehead State, Austin Peay and Eastern Illinois.

The entire tournament can be seen on the OVC Digital Network as well as ESPN3.

2015 OVC Women’s Basketball Championship - Nashville, Tennessee

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 – FIRST ROUND
Game 1 - #1 UT Martin vs. #8 Eastern Illinois  - 12 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)
Game 2 - #2 SIUE vs. #7 Austin Peay – 2 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)

THURSDAY, MARCH 5 – FIRST ROUND
Game 3 - #4 Belmont vs. #5 Jacksonville State – 12 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)
Game 4 - #3 Tennessee State vs. #6 Morehead State – 2 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)

FRIDAY, MARCH 6 – SEMIFINALS
Game 5 – Game 1 winner vs. Game 3 winner – 12 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)
Game 6 – Game 2 winner vs. Game 4 winner – 2 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)

SATURDAY, MARCH 7 – CHAMPIONSHIP
Game 7 – Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 winner – 1 p.m. (OVCDN/ESPN3)

2015 OVC Tournament Bracket

COURTESY TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

TSU Tigers take sole possession of first place with key win over ASU

MONTGOMERY, Alabama  -- Texas Southern moved into sole possession of first place after a big 58-49 win over Alabama State on Saturday.

Defense was a key part in TSU's victory as ASU only shot 21 percent in the second half compared to 43 for TSU, but a big difference in the game was in three-point field goal efficiency.

The Hornets entered the game as the top three-point shooting team in the conference, averaging over six per game and shooting a league-leading 38 percent.

In tonight's action, ASU only made one of their 14 attempts, while the Tigers connected on six of their 19 attempts, outscoring ASU 18-3 in three point baskets.

TSU had three players reach double-digits led by Gibbs 16 points. Riley added 14 and Deverell Biggs added 10. TSU out rebounded the Hornets 37-30 during the contest.

With the loss, the Hornets fall one game behind the Tigers with three games left to play.

"I thought we had a good game plan," Head Coach Lewis Jackson said. "We wanted to attack them from the inside out and we were getting some really, really good play from Lewis around the basket. He was kind of having his way early in the first half and those things were working for us."

"We allowed those guys to penetrate too much and we gave up open shots. Those are the things that hurt us. I thought in the second half we rushed some shots early in our offense instead of doing what we were doing, playing inside out and keeping pressure on them. Overall I thought it was a good competitive game."

ASU forced the Tigers into 17 turnovers, which led to 19 points, but was out rebounded 37-30 by the Tigers.

"Defensively we held them to 50-something points we just could not make shots there in the second half," Jackson said. "We had a lot of open looks and could not get any of them to fall and it was a tough loss."

ASU was able to sneak into the locker room at halftime with a 33-31 lead. The difference in the first half was TSU's ability to knock down three of their 10 three point field goals while the Hornets missed all four of their attempts.

Lewis did have a big first half setting his career-high in the game's opening 20 minutes of action with 17 points on seven of nine field goals. He also hit three of his four free throw attempts. Waters had six points, but only played 13 minutes as he picked up two first-half fouls.

The Hornets will have a quick turnaround as they will host Prairie View A&M in their final home game of the season Monday at 7:30 p.m. The game can be heard and watched live on HornetVision at bamastatesports.com.

BOX SCORE

COURTESY ALABAMA STATE UNIVERSITY AND TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

Livingstone Takes Second Consecutive CIAA Men's Basketball Title

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Livingstone displayed its balance in winning a second consecutive CIAA Men's Basketball Title on Saturday, February 28, 2015.

Guard Daryl Traynham scored 23 points and forward Eric Mayo added 22 points, respectively, for the Blue Bears, who upended Winston-Salem State 106-91 in the CIAA Tournament finals at Time Warner Cable Arena. The Blue Bears are the first team since Johnson C. Smith in the 2008 and 2009 seasons to repeat as CIAA champions.

"This is probably the best feeling I've ever had," said Mayo, an All-CIAA player who was on both Livingstone championship teams. "We did it. It means the world right now."



Traynham and Mayo paced five double-figure scorers for the Blue Bears. All-CIAA Guard Eric Dubose scored 18 points and guard Ty Newman, the tournament MVP, scored 13 points. All-CIAA Center Hakeem Jackson chipped in 10 points for the CIAA champions, who shot 57.9 percent from the floor.

Four-time All-CIAA forward WyKevin Bazemore led the Rams (18-10 overall) with 24 points and All-CIAA Rookie Team guard Terrell Leach pumped in 23 points. All-CIAA Forward Donta Harper scored 20 points for the Rams, who shot 51.7 percent.

Both teams split the regular-season series and shared the Southern Division title, but there was no doubt who was the better team Saturday. The Blue Bears (19-9 overall) hurt the Rams inside in the first half of the high-scoring affair. In the second half, the Blue Bears buried the Rams with their three-point shooting.

Bazemore try his best to keep the Rams in the game. He attacked the basket with abandon in the second half, which led to him making 16 of 20 free throw attempts overall. However, the Blue Bears had too much firepower in the end.

The Blue Bears flexed their muscle in the paint as they outrebounded the Rams 37-24. They also canned 6 of 12 three-point attempts for 50 percent and hit 34 of 42 free throw attempts for 81 percent.
The Blue Bears outscored the Rams in the paint (44-34), in bench points (44-27) and off turnovers (30-16) which led to a decisive win.

"This is a great day for Livingstone basketball," Blue Bears' Head Coach James Stinson said. "The guys came out with a purpose. I loved their focus throughout the game. Overall, they persevered and did the job at hand. When I walked into the locker room, they were fully tuned in to what the goals were."

The Rams put a brief scare into the Blue Bears after Leach's three-pointer cut their deficit to 96-88 with 1:14 left. But the Blue Bears finished with a 10-3 run to claim their second straight crown.
Guard Dwight Williams of the Blue Bears got the championship game off to a rousing start. He blocked a shot in transition, then dribbled coast-to-coast for an emphatic one-handed dunk over a Rams' player which left the Time Warner Cable Arena crowd, especially the Livingstone fans, buzzing.

"I feel I am pretty athletic and I was able to take advantage of it [on the play]," said Williams, who scored eight points. "[My teammates] fed off of it and we won the game."

His dunk jumpstarted the Blue Bears, who went on a 20-9 run for a 24-13 lead on Mayo's jumper. The Rams sliced their deficit to single digits, but the Blue Bears stretched the margin to double digits for the rest of the half.

The Blue Bears established their lead with 58.1 percent shooting and strong play in the paint in the first half. They outscored the Rams in the paint 28-8 and won the rebounding battle 24-11.

The Rams didn't find much success inside, but they stayed within striking distance with their perimeter shooting. They connected on 5 of 11 three-point attempts for 45.5 percent including 3 of 3 shooting behind the arc from Leach.

It was Leach who gave the Rams a spark right before halftime. He launched a three-pointer behind the midcourt line which swished through the nets before the horn sounded. The three-pointer trimmed the Blue Bears' lead to 46-36 heading into the break.

Leach led all scorers with 14 points in the first half for the Rams. Dubose and Williams both scored eight points for the Blue Bears.

Despite the long-range three from Leach, the Rams could not carry the momentum into second half against a Blue Bears' squad which had plenty of depth.

We can go deep into our bench, and it has helped us get over the hump by systematically wearing teams down," Stinson said.

Despite the Rams' hot shooting, Head Coach James Wilhelmi says the Livingstone defense gave his team fits early on.

"It was a 2-3 zone and it did disrupt our flow early," Wilhelmi said. "We had a couple of quick turnovers and we were down eight. From there, it was tough to battle back. We never got into a true flow."

Though winning back-to-back titles is a great feat, the Blue Bears have more goals in sight.

"We can celebrate tonight but tomorrow, we have to get prepared to play in the national tournament," Stinson said. "Our ultimate goal is to get to the Sweet 16 or Elite Eight. We want to continue playing the way we have been playing of late. We have to do the CIAA some justice in getting the job done. The team is starting to see what they can achieve if they play together."

The All-CIAA Tournament team consists of Newman, Dubose and Mayo of Livingstone; Harper and Bazemore of Winston-Salem State; Joe Reid of Shaw, Anthony Gaskins of Saint Augustine's, Joshua Dawson and Anthony Beck of Fayetteville State and Justin Beck of Bowie State.

Livingstone Head Coach James Stinson
This is a great day for Livingstone basketball. The guys came out with a purpose. I loved their focus throughout the game. Overall, they persevered and did the job at hand. When I walked into the locker room, they were fully tuned in to what the goals were.

They know to be able to attain their goal of reaching the national playoffs, they had to win the CIAA.
We wanted to control the paint, and the goal is to outrebound the opponent, to try to be plus 10. We kind of had to slow it down and try to pound it inside.

They hear me talk about the Thomas's, Hill's and Welch's. They get tired of me talking about it. They wanted to etch their own history.

We can go deep into our bench, and it has helped us get over the hump by systematically wearing teams down.

We can celebrate tonight but tomorrow, we have to get prepared to play in the national tournament. Our ultimate goal is to get to the Sweet 16 or Elite Eight. We want to continue playing the way we have been playing of late. We have to do the CIAA some justice in getting the job done. The team is starting to see what they can achieve if they play together.

From beginning to end, it is one of the better performances we've had this season.

QUOTES
LC Player Dwight Williams (about his dunk early in the first half)
I feel I am pretty athletic and I was able to take advantage of it [on the play]. [My teammates] fed off of it and we won the game.
LC Player Cristian Henry
There was never a time I thought we would ever lose this tournament.
LC Player Eric Mayo
This is probably the best feeling I've ever had. We did it. It means the world right now.
I knew [WyKevin Bazemore] was a great rebounder. I was able to keep him off the boards.
Rams' Head Coach James Wilhelmi (about the team's slow start)
"It was a 2-3 zone and it did disrupt our flow early. We had a couple of quick turnovers and we were down eight. From there, it was tough to battle back. We never got into a true flow.

2015 CIAA Men’s All-Tournament Team
Name Pos. Class School
Joe Reid Forward Senior Shaw
Anthony Gaskins Guard Sophomore St. Augustine’s
Joshua Dawson Guard Sophomore Fayetteville St.
Ty Newman Guard Junior Livingstone
Justin Beck Guard Junior Bowie St.
Anthony Shelton Forward Senior Fayetteville St.
Eric Dubose Guard Junior Livingstone
Donta Harper Forward Senior Winston-Salem St.
Eric Mayo Forward Senior Livingstone
WyKevin Bazemore Forward Senior Winston-Salem St.

2015 Men’s Most Valuable Player
Ty Newman Guard Junior Livingstone

2015 CIAA Men’s Team Sportsmanship Award
Johnson C. Smith University

BOX SCORE

COURTESY CIAA MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS

Virginia State Powers past Lincoln, Clinches CIAA Women’s Basketball Championship Title

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina -- The wait is over.

With a 73-49 victory over The Lincoln University, the Virginia State University Trojans clinched the 2015 CIAA Women's Basketball Championship. The title win was the first for Virginia State since 2002. The Trojans earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Atlantic Region Tournament with the victory and advance with a 20-9 overall record. The Lady Lions end their season with a 21-8 record.

Jessica Lyons led all players in the game with 16 points while DeAnna Waters chipped in 15 points. Cana Marriott totaled 14 points including four three-pointers while Dashae Jones added 11 points in the victory for the Trojans. The CIAA Tournament Most Valuable Player, Tiffanie Adair grabbed eight rebounds in the win while Lyons added seven rebounds. Virginia State shot 45.8% from the floor in the win.

Virginia State University head coach James Hill Jr. commented, "Our main focused was to continue to do what we do. If we could continue to play defense and box out, we knew we'd be successful...This year our team is more balanced, anyone can score on any night…as long as we get the win that's what matters."

Amani Clark paced the Lady Lions with 11 points in the setback. Lennee Kimbell and Teira Pendleton chipped in six points in the loss while Lisa Saunders, Courtney Smith and Dejah Taylor notched five points each. Courtney Lucas led all players in the game with 10 rebounds. Lincoln shot 27% from the floor over the course of the competition.

The Lincoln University head coach Jessica Kern stated, "…Well, honestly, whatever could have went wrong tonight did…I did enjoy seeing that the fight never stopped from these ladies. I'm proud of them and I know we wanted it to end differently but they never gave up."



Adair opened the contest with a layup on the Trojans' first possession of the contest. Taylor's free throw put Lincoln on the board but jumpers by Waters and Adair gave Virginia State a 6-1 advantage two minutes into the game. Taylor's jumper on the Lady Lions' next possession put Lincoln back within striking distance.

Virginia State used a 9-2 run to pull away 13-5 by the 13:45 mark in the first half. The Lady Lions pulled within four points (15-11) with 10:29 on the clock after Courtney Lucas' bucket. Marriott connected on back-to-back three pointers for Virginia State to give the Trojans a 21-11 lead with 9:29 remaining in the first half.

Wynterra Pittman's tip-in with 8:10 on the clock handed the Trojans a 23-11 lead. Courtney Smith answered with a three-pointer for Lincoln on the Lady Lions' next possession but Virginia State used an11-0 run highlighted by back-to-back three pointers by Jessica Lyons to leave the Lady Lions trailing 34-14.

Pittman's layup for Virginia State gave the Trojans a 37-16 lead with 4:05 on the clock. The 21 point advantage was the largest of the half for the Trojans. The Lady Lions were unable to make a run in the remaining time in the first half and headed into the locker room trailing 39-21.

The Lady Lions shot 27.3% from the floor while the Trojans shot 54.2% in the first half.

Virginia State opened the second half with a jumper by Waters and three-pointer by Dashae Jones to take a commanding 44-21 lead. Two jumpers by Waters and a three-pointer by Jones left Lady Lions trailing 51-21 with 16:04 on the clock.

Back-to-back baskets by Kimbell for Lincoln made the score 51-25 and ended a six minute scoring drought for the Lions. Amani Clark's three-pointer at the 10:53 mark brought Lincoln with 23 points but the Trojans were relentless in their attack.

Trailing 58-35 with 6:23 left in the game, two made free throws and a layup by Pendleton allowed the Lady Lions to pull within 19 points (58-39). Lincoln was unable to overcome the deficit as Virginia State continued to dominate the momentum and the scoreboard in the remainder of the contest to earn the 73-49 victory.

The members of the CIAA All-Tournament Team include:

Name Pos. Class School
Amber Curtis Guard Jr. Livingstone
Cierra York Guard Sr. Livingstone
Lady Walker Forward/Center R-Soph. Virginia Union
Kesheria McNeil Guard Jr. Winston-Salem State
Verdine Walker Center Sr. Shaw
Zephrah Pam Forward Sr. Lincoln
Tiffanie Adair Forward Sr. Virginia State
Amani Clark Guard Jr. Lincoln
Dashae Jones Guard Sr. Virginia State
Jadda Jeffries Guard Sr. Elizabeth City State

2015 Women’s Most Valuable Player
Tiffanie Adair Forward Sr. Virginia State

2015 CIAA Women's Team Sportsmanship Award
Bowie State University

BOX SCORE


Gallery: Lincoln - Livingstone in CIAA women's basketball action


COURTESY CIAA MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Virginia State Trojans Releases 2015 Football Schedule

ETTRICK, Virginia  --  The VSU Athletic Department released their 2015 Trojan Football schedule on Monday, February 16.

The Trojans have a strong 2015 schedule with first year Head Coach Byron Thweatt.  "We have a very challenging schedule this year. Opening up with three quality non- conference programs should prove beneficial for us in terms of our ability to establish a new identity in 2015," said Coach Thweatt. "The CIAA is a very tough conference and hopefully we can benefit from having 4 conference games at home."

VSU kicks off their 2015 campaign at home against California University (PA) on Saturday, September 5. This is their second consecutive season opener against a PSAC opponent. The Trojans will then travel to Grenville, TN for their first ever matchup against Tusculum College on Saturday, September 12. On week three, VSU three will come back home to Rogers Stadium to face Kentucky State University on Saturday, September 19.

Following the Kentucky State game, VSU will get into conference play facing Fayetteville State University on Saturday, September 26 at Rogers Stadium.

VSU will welcome Trojan Alumni for Homecoming 2015 on October 17. The team will take on Bowie State University at 2 p.m.

The final regular season home game will be on Saturday, November 7 against VSU's longtime I-95 rivals, Virginia Union University.

For more information on the 2015 Trojan Football season, visit www.govsutrojans.com.


2015 VSU FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
DATEOPPONENTLOCATIONTIME
September 5, 2015California PA UniversityEttrick, VA1:00 p.m.
September 12, 2015Tusculum CollegeGreeneville, TNTBA
September 19, 2015Kentucky State University
(Military Appreciation Day)
Ettrick, VA2:00 p.m.
September 26, 2015Fayetteville State University
(Faculty/Staff Appreciation Day)
Ettrick, VA2:00 p.m.
October 3, 2015St. Augustine's College
(Take A Kid to the Game Day)
Ettrick, VA2:00 p.m.
October 10, 2015Elizabeth City State UniversityElizabeth City, NCTBA
October 17, 2015Bowie State University
(Homecoming)
Ettrick, VA2:00 p.m.
October 24, 2015Lincoln UniversityLincoln, PATBA
October 31, 2015Chowan UniversityMurfreesboro, NCTBA
November 7, 2015Virginia Union University
(Senior Day)
Ettrick, VA2:00 p.m.
November 14, 2015CIAA Football ChampionshipsTBDTBA
November 21, 2015NCAA Play-OffsTBDTBA
 
HOME GAMES IN BOLD


COURTESY VIRGINIA STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

NCCU rips Bethune-Cookman, wins MEAC regular-season title

DURHAM, North Carolina  -- Led by stars Jordan Parks and Nimrod Hilliard, N.C. Central slammed Bethune-Cookman 72-49 on Senior Day at McLendon-McDougald Gymnasium, clinching the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference regular-season title and the No. 1 overall seed at the upcoming MEAC Tournament in Norfolk, Virginia.

The regular-season title is the second straight for the Eagles, who went on to win the MEAC Tournament a year ago and gain the league’s only berth in the NCAA Tournament.

The Eagles have won 32 conference games in a row, the longest streak in Division I, and extended their home winning streak to 34 games in the process.

The Eagles improved to 22-6 overall and remained unbeaten at 14-0 in MEAC play. Norfolk State (18-11, 11-3 MEAC), which had a bye Saturday, had been the only remaining threat to NCCU’s bid for the No. 1 seed but had to win its final two regular-season games and hope NCCU lost its final three MEAC games in order to remain in contention.