Courtesy: UA Sports
CHAPEL
HILL, N.C. – With Shereesha Richards leading the charge with
34 points, the fourth-highest single game total in program history, the UAlbany
women’s basketball team battled #9/8 North Carolina most of the way, falling
short in a 71-56 defeat.
“We
are trying to get better as a team and play at a high level, that’s why we play
these games to see where we are,” said UAlbany coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson. “It was a good
game, I wanted them to fight and see what was inside of them.”
Richards
earned a season-high 34 points, her second highest total in her collegiate
career, with nine rebounds and three steals. No other, including UNC players,
scored more than 16 points in the contest. Richards also moved into
5th all-time in UAlbany history in scoring with 1,219
points.
“I
would like to win every game, and today, it is not about how many points I
scored,” said Richards. “We want to get to that level so we can win these
games.”
“She is a
great person first and a workhorse second, and she is relentless,” said
Abrahamson-Henderson on Richards. “It is a blessing to have her on this
team.”
UAlbany
(7-6) led early in the contest, with UNC (12-1) getting 6-0 and 7-0 runs in the
first half to build a double digit lead. UAlbany was outscored in the second
half by only three.
Tiana-Jo Carter scored seven points with a
game-high 10 rebounds, while Imani Tate also had seven points with three
boards.
For
UNC, Jessica Washington scored 16 points off the bench, adding five rebounds.
Alisha Gray scored 15 points with three steals and seven rebounds, while
Stephanie Mavunga nearly had a double-double with 14 points and nine
rebounds.
At
the game’s start, UAlbany looked to the paint while UNC fired away from three.
Carter hit the opening basket on a putback. UNC got a mini 5-0 run, with
Richards countering with a layup to pull UAlbany within one at 5-4 in the
opening 3:01.
Down 8-5,
UAlbany got a spurt: Richards hit the layup, then with the full court press,
Sarah Royals forced the turnover in the
backcourt, with the pass to Tate turning into a layup for a 9-8
Great Danes lead. After a Gray three, Richards hit another basket to tie the
game at 11.
Following a
Latifah Coleman three for UNC, both sides traded baskets, with Richards
continuing to hit shots and the Tar Heels finding scores in the paint. At
18-17, the home team hit three jumpers in a row, the final pair from Mavunga, to
build a 24-17 lead, inducing UAlbany to call a timeout.
Richards
stopped the run with another jumper, then Royals forced a steal up top the arc,
going coast-to-cast against two UNC players to score a layup to pull UAlbany
within four at 26-22 with 8:19 remaining in the 1st.
UNC
kept UAlbany without points for over the next six minutes while the Great Danes
held the Tar Heels out of the paint, allowing two three-pointers in the same
time span. A UNC free throw made it 33-22 with under two in the
1st.
Carter hit a
layup to stop the UNC streak, with Cassandra Edwards adding a free throw. UNC
hit two baskets in the final 1:16 of the half to lead 37-25 at the
break.
Into the
second half, Richards came back in after foul trouble and started getting
baskets, trading baskets with UNC. A Richards jumper and couple of free throws
pulled UAlbany to be down 44-32 four minutes into the period.
UNC
starting getting hot from the perimeter, hitting its next three attempts, with a
Tar Heel free throw and Richards layup making the score 54-34 UNC under 14
minutes remaining.
UAlbany
called timeout and regrouped. Royals drove down the baseline and hit the layup,
followed by Zakiya Saunders deflecting, stealing and
scoring on her own. Tate added free throws, then Saunders had an arc pass to
Richards to make it an 8-0 run to make it 54-42 as the UAlbany defense held UNC
without points for four minutes.
The
teams kept exchanging baskets as UNC kept a double digit lead. UAlbany kept
finding Richards for shots underneath, while UNC took advantage of the free
throw line. UNC built the lead back up to 17 at 62-45 with 6:38 left to
play.
The
Great Danes kept fighting, using a Carter layup and a Tate basket to pull back
within 13 with five minutes left. UAlbany did not get closer, and despite late
points from Richards and Margarita Rosario, the Great Danes fell
71-56.
UAlbany now
gets set for America East play, traveling to Bangor for a noon game against
Maine on Saturday, January 3rd on ESPN3.
Courtesy: UA Sports
FULLERTON,
Calif. – Mirroring the score of last year’s game between the two, the
UAlbany women’s basketball team, led by 18 points off the bench from Zakiya Saunders, took down Cal State
Fullerton 71-49 on the road to finish the California road trip at
2-0.
UAlbany
(7-4) never looked back after taking the lead four minutes into the contest.
The Great Danes shot 56.6% in the game, including 62.5% in the first half, and
held Cal State Fullerton (4-7) to 34.6% from the field.
“It
was our goal to come home for Christmas with two wins under our belt,” said
UAlbany coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson. “The gameplan
was to control their point guard, we wanted to press her and wear her
out.”
Saunders earned a career-high 18 points and three steals off
the bench, hitting eight of her 10 field goal attempts.
“I felt good today, we executed everything that our coaches
told us to do, and we got the victory,” said Saunders. “There were a lot more
opportunities today to catch and shoot outside shots, not just for me but for
everyone.”
Shereesha Richards scored in double digits
for her 11th-straight game, finishing with 13 points and eight
rebounds. Sarah Royals also nearly earned a
double-double with nine assists, her highest single game total in over a
calendar year and moving into fourth all-time in UAlbany history with 354
assists, and eight points. Imani Tate went 6-8 on shooting with 14
points and four rebounds.
For
CSF, Chante Miles scored 13 points and notched seven assists. Kathleen Iwuoha
almost got a double-double with 10 points and nine rebounds.
At
the game’s start, UAlbany primarily looked to the paint while Fullerton sought
shots from the perimeter. The team exchanged early baskets, with at 5-4 home
team, an Erin Coughlin kickout three and a Tate
putback layup putting UAlbany in front 9-5 through the first four
minutes.
UAlbany used
the full court press against the Titans, showing dividends midway through the
half. Following Miles hitting a three, UAlbany hit four baskets in the paint in
a row, the final one with a foul as Richards hit the free throw to complete a
9-0 run and give the Great Danes a 20-10 lead with 10:15 remaining in the
1st.
The
UAlbany guards started getting shot chances, with Royals driving baseline for
the layup, while Saunders hit a trio of jumpers as the Great Danes kept a 30-17
advantage with 5:48 left in the half.
Each side
continued to trade baskets, with Saunders leading UAlbany with long jumpers and
Royals adding shots on running down the baseline. CSF switched tactics and went
for layups against UAlbany’s frontcourt. At 38-25, Margarita Rosario hit a three on the elbow,
followed by Royals hitting a layup. Lakyn Gulley hit a three on the wing with
30 seconds left for CSF to put the halftime score at 43-28 UAlbany.
Tate hit a
jumper just inside the arc to start the second period. CSF forced a couple of
turnovers and converted for a pair of baskets. UAlbany countered with Saunders
free throws, another Royals layup towards the baseline, Royals inbounding to
Saunders for the layup then Rosario hitting the elbow three to cap the run at
9-0 and push the team up 54-32 with 14:14 left in the 2nd.
CSF
pulled to within 15 after another Gulley three to make it 56-41 with 10 minutes
left. Richards hit a jumper as the UAlbany defense did not allow a field goal
for the next six minutes. Tiana-Jo Carter and Tate added more points
in the paint as the run went totaled 9-0 to make it 65-41 UAlbany with 4:50
left.
The
Great Danes got their reserves in the latter stages of the game, with Bose Aiyalogbe and Jessica
Fequiere each playing in the final minutes. UAlbany took the 71-49
victory.
UAlbany will
return home and break for the holidays, taking on Northeastern at the SEFCU
Arena on Sunday, December 28th at 2 p.m.
Courtesy: UA Sports
NEW HAVEN, CONN. – Junior
point guard Evan Singletary hit a three with a tie game and two
minutes left in regulation to send University at Albany men’s basketball (4-6)
to at 64-60 win at Yale (8-4) on Saturday afternoon.
“I thought our guys did a good job, especially
the last six or seven minutes of the game,” said head coach Will Brown. “Our
rebounding, defense and execution was really good the last few minutes against a
really good basketball team. I’m proud of our guys, with nine new players I’m
happy with the way they’ve bought in the last two games.”
Yale turned the ball over early in the game,
with four giveaways to the Great Danes in the first few minutes. The Bulldogs
took an initial 3-0 lead, but UAlbany responded with a 13-4 run. Five minutes
into the game, all five starters for Will Brown had at least two
points.
Javier Duren drained a three to put Yale
within three, but a turnover on the other end kept the Bulldogs from gaining
much ground.
With the Purple & Gold pushing the ball up
the floor, Yale continued to struggle in the turnover column. A fast-paced game
helped UAlbany take an early 10-2 lead in points in the paint.
The Great Danes hit a shooting drought mid-way
through the first half, which ended thanks to good defense. Peter Hooley picked off a Yale pass at mid-court,
and Richard Peters followed up with a tip-in to extend
the UAlbany lead to 18-14 with 8:30 on the clock.
Will Brown’s squad was willing to concede
outside jumpers to Yale’s forwards, but the Bulldogs began making them with five
minutes to go in the half. Wheeler Baker hit a long three from Mike Rowley to keep the Bulldogs at bay.
Yale tied the game late in the first, but
Singletary streaked down the lane for the lay-in to regain the lead. The Great
Danes entered the locker room at the break with a one-point advantage,
29-28.
The Bulldogs came out shooting well in the
second half, making their first three shots. Yale took the lead for the first
time since the opening moments of the game, and Brown called timeout to regroup
down 35-31.
James Jones’s squad led by as many as eight
points with 13 minutes left. The Bulldogs committed just three turnovers in the
opening 13 minutes of the second half.
Sam Rowley began to come alive on the offensive end,
converting on a traditional three-point play with just under 10 minutes to go.
Hooley poured on five-straight points of his own.
Ray Sanders drew his second charge on Armani Cotton
at the 7:34 mark to get UAlbany back on track defensively, and the Purple &
Gold began to mount a comeback.
After Hooley made two free throws with 5:10 on
the clock, UAlbany climbed within three points, 56-53. A seven-point swing on a
9-0 run over less than two minutes put the Great Danes back on top. Hooley tied
the game at 56 thanks to a traditional three-point play on a steal from Sam Rowley.
Sam Rowley gave UAlbany its first lead since the
beginning of the second half, 58-56 with 3:32 to go on two made free throws. The
Bulldogs came down the floor to make two free throws of their own to tie the
game at 58. The two freebies from Justin Sears marked Yale’s first points in
three minutes. Yale went without a field goal for the final 6:10 of
play.
With the game tied at 58, Sam Rowley missed the go-ahead jumper; but Sanders
flew in to grab the offensive board, the ninth and most important of the contest
for UAlbany.
Rowley hit the rim to reset the shot clock,
setting up another opportunity to take the lead. Singletary stepped back off of
a ball screen, and Yale failed to hedge and put a hand up. The junior sank the
three from the top of the key to put UAlbany ahead.
“To be honest, I knew I would take the shot
once [Yale] switched on the screen,” said Singletary. “He didn’t put a hand up
so I just rose up and shot it.”
After Sears made two free throws, Singletary
went to the other end to make two of his own. The score remained a three-point
lead in favor of the Purple & Gold with 28 seconds left.
The Great Danes fouled Javier Duren outside
the three point line, forcing him to the charity stripe with both teams in the
double bonus. Duren missed both free throws, and the Bulldogs were subsequently
forced to foul Sanders. Sanders made one of two to make it a two-possession
game, 64-60 and put the game away.
Three Danes concluded the game in double
figures, including Singletary (19), Sam Rowley (15) and Hooley (13). Singletary went
6-for-8 from the field and 3-for-4 from three. Over his last two games, the
junior is averaging 20 points on 11-for-14 (.786) from the field, 6-for-7 (.857)
from three and 12-for-13 (.923) from the free throw line.
Hooley and Rowley each had 11 second-half
points, while Rowley and Singletary combined to go a perfect 11-for-11 from the
free throw line in the final 20 minutes. Rowley led the team in rebounds (6) and
steals (4).
“Two games ago we were on the wrong track,”
said Rowley. “After the game today, it’s nice to accomplish what we’ve come to
accomplish the last two games. We’ve done a good job of altering our
mindset.”
UAlbany took a 36-14 advantage for the game in
points in the paint, and handed the Bulldogs their first home loss of
2014-15.
The Great Danes return to SEFCU Arena on
Monday, Dec. 22 to face Fairfield (4-6, 2-0 MAAC) at 7:00 p.m.
Courtesy: UA Sports
MALIBU,
Calif. – The UAlbany women’s basketball team held Pepperdine without a
basket for a span of 17:34, using a 26-2 run to beat back the Waves 62-36,
earning Katie Abrahamson-Henderson’s 100 victory
with the program.
“I
am happy for Sarah [Royals] and Margarita [Rosario] and all the young women that
have been part of this,” said Abrahamson-Henderson on her 100th win.
“It is humbling.”
UAlbany
(6-4) held Pepperdine (5-6) without a field goal in the final 5:34 of the first
period, extending that mark well into the second half. UAlbany, from the first
to second half, went on a 26-2 run, later extending to a 32-4 run, to build up a
29-point lead. UAlbany never trailed in the contest.
“Defense was
the key today,” said Abrahamson-Henderson. “Being focused on our gameplan was
key; our gameplan was to put pressure on the ball, and we wanted to press and
trap all game.”
The
Great Danes shot 51.2% in the game, holding Pepperdine to just nine field goals
and 25% on shooting. UAlbany did not allow any Wave to score more than seven
points and had its strongest defensive performance since February
19th, 2014, when the Great Danes defeated Binghamton
86-35.
Shereesha Richards had her
10th-consecutive double digit scoring game, earning 16 points, six
steals and five rebounds. Imani Tate shot 6-9 from the field for 15
points, four assists and seven rebounds, while Zakiya Saunders went 5-7 on field goals for
10 points. With an assist to Richards 2:43 in, Sarah Royals extended her streak to
75-straight games with an assist.
“It
is always great to come out and get a win, my teammates played hard and we got a
great victory,” said Richards. “It was important to get a victory after coming
all the way out to California.”
For
Pepperdine, Kim Jacobs and Olivia Ogwumike each scored seven points. Tessa
Emerson scored four points and grabbed seven rebounds.
At
the start, UAlbany focused on attacking the paint plus forced turnovers the
other side. With Tiana-Jo Carter and Richards each
contributing four points, the Great Danes built an early 10-4 lead.
Pepperdine
quick fired a couple shots and pulled to within one at 10-9. Tate stopped the
run with a free throw; on the next possession, UAlbany pushed in transition and
found Tate for the pull-up at the line. Each side added one basket in the
following four minutes as UAlbany led 15-11 with under eight minutes in the
first half.
At
16-12, Pepperdine hit a couple of baskets to tie the game, leading UAlbany to
call a timeout and regroup.
Saunders
buried a 15-footer on the elbow out of the timeout to start a run for UAlbany.
Again UAlbany went to the paint, with Richards following with a pair of layups
and Royals adding a floater. Before the half expired, Saunders hit another long
jumper at the buzzer, capping the streak at 10-1 as UAlbany did not allow a
Pepperdine field goal in the period’s final 5:43. UAlbany took a 26-17 lead
into the locker room.
Tate
extended the run for UAlbany with a couple of free throws. After a Pepperdine
free throw, Saunders hit a jumper, followed by Richards with a swipe and score
and one.
The
UAlbany zone defense continued to force long shots and misses for Pepperdine.
Tate and Richards added baskets, with Royals adding the corner three for a quick
seven points. After two Pepperdine free throws, the UAlbany zone continued to
hold its opponent without a basket as the Great Danes tallied a 32-4 run to make
it 48-22.
Later,
UAlbany went up 51-22 off an elbow three from Margarita Rosario. Kim Jacobs netted a
jumper with 8:10 left in the 2nd as UAlbany held Pepperdine without a
field goal for a span of 17:35.
After Carter
hit a layup, Pepperdine went on a 9-1 streak. UAlbany held off Pepperdine the
rest of way, holding the Waves without points for the final three minutes.
Jessica Fequiere had three points off a free throw and a
transition layup as UAlbany finished with a 6-0 run to win the game
62-36.
UAlbany will
stay in California and take on Cal State Fullerton on Sunday, December
21st at 4 p.m. ET (1 p.m. PT) to finish the six-game road
trip.
Courtesy: UA Sports
ALBANY,
N.Y. – Former UAlbany midfielder Ryan Feuerstein is the latest Great Dane to
get a chance at the professional ranks, being drafted by the Rochester Rattlers
in the Major League Lacrosse (MLL) Supplemental Draft on Wednesday.
Feuerstein
was selected by the Rattlers in the 4th round and 31st
overall in the draft. The supplemental draft is held in December for teams to
fill rosters after protecting their first 23 players. Over 800 players entered
the draft, including 100, like Feuerstein, that had not previously played in the
league last season.
A
two-time All-America East midfielder, including earning First Team honors in
2014, Feuerstein played at UAlbany from 2011-14, starting the last two seasons.
In his collegiate career, he scored 43 goals and 13 assists for 56 points,
adding 111 ground balls and 21 caused turnovers. His senior year, he finished
with 22 goals, seven points, 43 ground balls and nine caused
turnovers.
In
his time at UAlbany, he helped the Great Danes win a pair of America East
titles, scoring a pair of goals in each America East Tournament win in 2014. He
scored a goal and scooped five ground balls in UAlbany’s NCAA Quarterfinal game
vs. Notre Dame.
Last season,
UAlbany lacrosse players Miles Thompson and Ty Thompson each were drafted and suited up
for the Rattlers. Miles Thompson played nine games for the Rattlers, scoring 12
goals and seven assists. Rochester was the league regular season champion with
a 10-4 record, falling to the Denver Outlaws in the title game.
The
supplemental draft was held via teleconference by the league and its
teams.
Courtesy: UA Sports
ALBANY, N.Y. – University at
Albany men’s basketball (3-6) didn’t let a four-game losing streak keep them
from their third straight Albany Cup on Saturday night, earning a 77-68 victory
over cross-town rival Siena. Evan Singletary and Peter Hooley combined for 41 points to lead the
Great Danes. Will Brown’s squad went 29-for-32 (.906) from the charity
stripe.
“It’s always a close and intense game,” said
Brown. “Our mindset was to control tempo. If we had opportunities against their
pressure, that’s the way were going to go. We wanted to make them defend and mix
up our defenses. They’re very talented, and we needed to play this game at our
tempo.”
With the pace of play slow in the early-going,
the teams missed six shots between them in the opening moments of the contest.
Richard Peters made one of two free throws in his
second consecutive start to get UAlbany on the board.
The Great Danes held the Saints scoreless for
the first three minutes, forcing Siena to foul. By the under-four media timeout,
Siena had three team fouls on 1-for-8 (.125) shooting.
Jimmy Patsos kept the pressure up on the
full-court zone press, forcing two Great Danes turnovers. Ray Sanders counteracted with solid defense of his
own, tipping a Saints pass and going the distance for a dunk to get the Purple
& Gold crowd on its feet.
By the time Siena’s Lavon Long committed his
second team foul at the 14:09 mark, the Saints had four team fouls while UAlbany
remained clean in the foul column.
The shooting woes continued for Siena, as an
0-for-3 clip from Rob Poole added to a 3-for-14 (.214) field goal percentage for
the Saints after nine minutes of play. Will Brown’s squad was 5-for-11
(.455).
Outstanding defense continued to pave the way
for the Purple & Gold in the first half, as a Sam Rowley rejection on Poole sent Sanders down the
floor for a lay-in and a 14-8 lead.
Siena guided UAlbany into the bonus at the
8:54 mark, after Javion Ogunyemi got caught with two fouls in four
seconds.
Poole did not stay down after missing early
shots, the senior captain made a three to put Siena within five points, 18-13
with 8:45 on the clock.
Peter Hooley responded with a three of his own
moments later with the shot clock winding down on the right baseline, extending
UAlbany’s lead to eight points.
After Hooley’s three, the Great Danes went
cold from the field over the next 4:30. Free throws from Hooley and Evan Singletary kept the lead with
UAlbany.
Mike Rowley converted on a three-on-two fast break
opportunity to snap the field goal drought with 3:15 remaining in the
half.
Hooley made another three in front of the
Siena bench just over one minute later, forcing Patsos to call timeout to
regroup looking to claw back in the game.
The Great Danes wrapped up the first half with
a 34-27 lead on 10-for-20 (.500) shooting. UAlbany matched its season high in
first-half field goal percentage against the Saints. Siena committed 10 team
fouls, while UAlbany was charged just five. The Great Danes went 11-for-12
(.917) from the charity stripe.
Just 49 seconds into the second half,
Singletary went to the hoop for the left-handed lay in and a nine-point lead.
The 36-27 advantage was the largest for the Great Danes at that
point.
Hooley kept up the pressure on the three-point
line, hitting another outside the arc and draining two free throws for five
early second-half points.
Lavon Long was charged with his fourth
personal foul at the 14:31 mark, but the Saints were 3-for-4 from the field in
the early going of the second 20 minutes.
UAlbany looked to slow the pace, but a Poole
three brought the Saints within nine points. The Great Danes had extended the
lead to as many as 12.
Dallas Ennema was not phased, getting down the
floor for a three of his own. The sophomore forward completed the four-point
play after getting fouled by a much smaller defender.
With the fouls stacking up again in the second
half for Siena, UAlbany found itself in the bonus at the 9:49 mark.
A Sam Rowley lay-up put UAlbany in front 58-46 with
nine minutes to play. Fellow Aussie Hooley gave the Great Danes their biggest
lead, 61-47 on a three moments later.
Singletary proved to be solid at the free
throw line, going 8-for-8 late to extend the lead to 15, 66-51 with four minutes
remaining.
Hooley and Rowley connected again on an
out-of-bounds play out of a UAlbany timeout. The co-captains put the lead back
at 14 after a Poole three.
The charity stripe dictated the remaining
three minutes of the game, as the Great Danes went 9-for-10 from the free throw
line to take their third consecutive Albany Cup, 77-68. The Purple & Gold
made 29 free throws, while Siena made just 15.
“I remember my first Albany Cup,” said Hooley.
“We had a good lead, nearly 20 at the half and we ended up losing the game. That
really hurt me even on the sideline. I realized how big of a deal this game
really is, but this is just another game. I’m glad we saw it as another game and
got a good result.”
Singletary (21), Hooley (20) and Ennema (10)
all recorded single-game highs in point for the season. Singletary and Hooley
become the first players to score 20 or more points in a 2014-15 game for the
Great Danes.
Next up for UAlbany is Yale, on Dec. 20 at
2:00 p.m., in New Haven.
Courtesy: UA Sports
ALBANY,
N.Y. – With Imani Tate and Tiana-Jo Carter holding the fort in the
first half, Shereesha Richards led UAlbany to outscore
Siena 49-27 in the second period, including a 27-2 streak, for the 76-57 Great
Danes victory to secure the team’s fifth-consecutive Albany Cup.
“Shereesha
[Richards] being in the game was big, our press was working and we were more
aggressive,” said UAlbany coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson, who has led the
team to Albany Cup victories in all five years of her tenure. “It started with
our press; we knew they did not have many players, and a lot of [our] players
got steals.”
UAlbany
(5-3), down 30-27 at the break, shot 61.3% in the second half and had 37 points
in the game off turnovers to Siena’s (3-4) 11. Richards, sidelined in the first
half due to foul trouble, scored 20 points off 9-12 shooting in the final 20
minutes.
“I
was mad that I got myself two fouls, but my teammates had my back in that half,
and we were fine in the end,” said Richards, who moved into 6th
all-time in UAlbany history with 1,120 points.
Tate also
had 20 points in the game, with 10 in each half, adding five boards and three
steals. Carter shot 8-12 from the field for a career-high 16 points and three
steals, scoring 10 points in the first half.
“In
the second half, we had more fun with the press, and there was no panic after
the first half,” said Tate.
For
Siena, Margot Hetzke scored 16 points, adding five rebounds. Tehresa Coles
tallied 14 points, seven rebounds and three steals.
Tate was the
go to target on the first couple of possessions, scoring off the screen from
Carter and later off the backboard driving down the baseline. Despite some
early foul trouble on Richards and Tate, UAlbany held an early 8-5 advantage
five minutes in.
The
next couple of minutes saw each team have trouble connecting on offense.
Erin Coughlin hit a one-handed layup on a
drive to the basket, which was countered by Siena free throws. Siena took the
lead 11-10 at 9:30 elapsed.
Carter put
UAlbany back in lead with a layup underneath while double teamed. Siena hit
threes the next couple of possessions, adding a Kollyns Scarbrough jumper for an
8-0 run and a 19-12 advantage.
Foul trouble
continued to trouble UAlbany as Siena built its advantage to 10. UAlbany
attacked the paint to pull forward, with Carter, Tate and Carter hitting baskets
in succession, with Coughlin hitting the open three on the elbow to pull the
team with one at 26-25 with 3:06 left in the half. Some late Siena free throws
made it 30-27 Saints by the end of the half.
Each side
exchanged shots to start the second half, with a couple of early Siena
transition baskets giving the home team a larger lead. Carter hit a couple of
layups to pull UAlbany closer, with Siena adding a trio of baskets to go up
42-33 in the half’s opening four minutes.
Down 44-36,
UAlbany looked to its junior captain down low. Richards battled with Siena’s
frontcourt players, hitting three layups en route to UAlbany tying the game.
Tate hit a layup and one, with Richards adding a layup, then Carter adding a
couple.
UAlbany kept
forcing turnovers with the full court press as Tate, Richards and Carter
contributed baskets, with Sarah Royals adding free throws. The run
went to 27-2 as UAlbany surged ahead 63-46 as the Great Danes held Siena without
a field goal for 8:28.
The
teams went back and forth in the following minutes, with UAlbany leading 71-50
with 3:08 remaining. Coles and Hetzke hit free throws as Siena got to within 16
at 77-55 with two minutes left. UAlbany did not allow a field goal in the final
5:11 and held off Siena the rest of the way, winning 76-57.
UAlbany will
face its third MAAC team in the row on Monday, December 15th, heading
to Hamden, Connecticut to play Quinnipiac at 7 p.m.
Courtesy: UA Sports
ALBANY, N.Y. – University at
Albany sophomore midfielder Paula Heuser was named the 2014-15 Honda Sport Award
Winner for Field Hockey, Chris Voelz, Executive Director of THE Collegiate Women
Sports Awards announced on Thursday.
“First, I would like to thank the committee
for this recognition of my dedication on and off the field,” said Heuser. “I
could not have won this award without the effort of the coaching staff everyday
and my hard-working teammates. It is a fantastic honor for me, and I’m glad I
had the opportunity to be part of such an amazing team this season.”
The sophomore becomes the first all-time Great
Dane to earn the Honda Sport Award, after being named the NFHCA National Player
of the Year. Heuser is the first underclassman all-time to be named D-I Player
of the Year. She is also a two-time NFHCA All-American and America East
Midfielder of the Year.
"Everyone at UAlbany is incredibly proud of
Paula, and all that she has accomplished this season," said University at Albany
Director of Athletics Mark Benson. "She was an instrumental part of UAlbany's
first trip to the NCAA Final Four, and individually ranked among the best in the
nation all year. Her accomplishments both on and off the field speak highly of
her character, and we are honored to have her as part of the Great Dane
family."
In 2014, Heuser broke the all-time
single-season UAlbany record in goals (29) and points (69). She led the nation
in total goals and points, ranking top-two in the nation in goals per game and
points per game for six consecutive weeks to end the season. Heuser tallied an
all-time league tournament best nine points in two games en route to the America
East title, earning Most Outstanding Performer honors.
Heuser was selected by over 1,000 NCAA member
institutions for the prestigious award, beating out Lauren Gebhart (Penn State),
Kelsey Harbin (Stanford) and Roisin Upton (UConn).
“For all of the awards Paula’s won, she is
particularly deserving of the Honda,” added head coach Phil Sykes. “Not only is she an incredible player,
but her humility on the field sets a great example for the rest of our team.
Paula’s skill level, work ethic and determination put her on another level in
our sport.”
The CWSA presents the Honda Sports Award
annually to top women student-athletes in 12 NCAA-sanctioned sports. Honda
Sports award winners will be presented with the honor during on-campus
presentations throughout the year and all Honda Sports award winners become a
finalist for the prestigious 2015 Honda Cup award presented in June.
THE Collegiate Women Sports Awards has honored
the nation’s top NCAA women athletes for 38 years, recognizing superior athletic
skills, leadership, academic excellence and eagerness to participate in
community service. Since commencing its sponsorship in 1986, Honda has
provided more than $2.8 million in institutional grants to the universities of
the award winners and nominees to support women’s athletics programs at the
institutions.
Courtesy: UA Sports
BALTIMORE – UAlbany
returners Lyle Thompson and Blaze Riorden have been named 2015
Inside Lacrosse Face-Off Yearbook Preseason All-Americans, the
publication announced on Tuesday.
Thompson earned First Team All-America
preseason honors, while Riorden picked up Honorable Mention All-America. The
All-America list was announced on the IL website and will be in the
Face-Off Yearbook.
Thompson had arguably the top season ever in
Division I lacrosse last season, earning co-Tewaaraton Trophy honors with 51
goals and 77 assists for 128 points, the highest single season total in DI
lacrosse history. He scored at least four points in all 18 games last season,
including 11 contests with at least seven points.
Riorden, the All-America East First Team
goalkeeper last season, finished third in Division I with 16.27 saves per game
and 12th in DI with a 54.9 save percentage. He earned all 12
victories for UAlbany in goal and had at least nine saves in 16 of the team’s 18
contests, including 13 saves with just six goals in the win over
Loyola.
Yesterday, the UAlbany men’s lacrosse team was
ranked #13 in the publication’s preseason Face-Off Top 20.
Courtesy: UA Sports
ALBANY, N.Y. – On the heels
of being named an NFHCA All-American for the second straight year, University at
Albany field hockey midfielder Paula Heuser was selected as the Longstreth/NFHCA
Division I National Player of the Year on Tuesday morning. She is the first
non-senior all-time to earn NFHCA Division I National Player of the Year
honors.
Heuser has earned a number of postseason
honors, and is the first Great Dane all-time to win NFHCA National Player of the
Year honors. The midfielder is the NFHCA Northeast Region Player of the Year,
and earned NCAA All-Tournament honors following UAlbany’s run to the NCAA
Semifinals. She is a two-time NFHCA All-American, NFHCA All-Region first team
pick, as well as the two-time America East Midfielder of the Year.
Heuser was the America East Tournament’s Most
Outstanding Performer after recording an all-time tournament record nine points
in two games. The sophomore led the league in points per game and goals per game
throughout the regular season, and topped the nation in both categories entering
the NCAA First and Second Rounds.
The midfielder broke the 15 year-old record in
UAlbany all-time single-season points against Yale on Oct. 26. Heuser also ranks
third all-time in career points with 114, in just her sophomore season. She
concluded 2014 with 29 goals and 69 points to her credit.
Heuser is the first sophomore to garner the
prestigious honor in the five-year history of the NFHCA National Player of the
Year Award. All four previous awardees were in their final year of eligibility
at their respective institutions.
Courtesy: UA Sports
ALBANY, N.Y. – University at
Albany field hockey standouts Paula Heuser and Maxi Primus were named 2014 NFHCA All-Americans, the
coaches association announced Monday. Primus earned a spot on the third team,
while Heuser was the first Great Dane to be selected to the first team in the
Division I era.
Heuser has garnered a number of postseason
honors, and is a second-year All-American. The sophomore was named to the second
team in 2013. The midfielder is the NFHCA Northeast Region Player of the Year,
and earned NCAA All-Tournament honors following UAlbany’s run to the NCAA
Semifinals. She is a two-time NFHCA All-Region first team pick, as well as the
two-time America East Midfielder of the Year.
Heuser was the America East Tournament’s Most
Outstanding Performer after recording an all-time tournament record nine points
in two games. The sophomore led the league in points per game and goals per game
throughout the regular season, and topped the nation in both categories entering
the NCAA First and Second Rounds. The midfielder broke the 15 year-old record in
UAlbany all-time single-season points against Yale on Oct. 26. Heuser also ranks
third all-time in career points with 114, in just her sophomore season. She
concluded 2014 with 29 goals and 69 points to her credit.
Primus was an NFHCA All-Region first team
selection, after posting 20 wins in her sophomore season. She was the America
East Goalkeeper of the Year after ranking top-10 in the nation throughout the
season in goals against average and save percentage. She shutout two nationally
ranked opponents in No. 8 Stanford (Sept. 14) and No. 20 Maine (Oct. 25). The
sophomore was a four-time America East Defensive Player of the Week awardee and
has garnered the weekly honor six times in her career. Primus was also an
America East All-Tournament team selection.
With 20 wins and 10 shutouts to her credit
this season, she is the all-time winningest single-season goalkeeper in UAlbany
program history, and tops the UAlbany Division I ranks in single-season
shutouts.
This is the second consecutive season Phil Sykes has had two players named NFHCA
All-Americans. Heuser is the second Division I Great Dane to earn All-American
honors in consecutive seasons.
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