Month: December 2014

A really, really tough one to lose

Kent State did so many things well at Cleveland State Sunday.

It shot 48 percent, equalling its best of the season.

It executed its game plan of getting the ball inside to its taller post players perfectly, with Cici Shannnon, Jordan Korinek and Montia Johnson combining for 33 points.

It outrebounded the Vikings by nine and outscored them by 14 in the paint.

It came from 11 points behind to take an eight-point lead.

It held Cleveland State 8 percentage points below its shooting average.

But it lost the last two minutes as the Flashes made four late turnovers and Cleveland State scored the game’s last seven points. The final score with 69-67.

“We missed Mikell (Chinn) today when Naddiyah (Cross) fouled out,” coach Danny O’Banion said in her post-game interview on Golden Flash iHeart Radio. “They pressed, they turned us over, and that’s how they won.”

Chinn, KSU’s usual starting point guard, missed her second straight game with a concussion. Cross played 32 minutes and had six points, eight assists, three rebounds and four turnovers. She fouled out with 1:51 to go. When she wasn’t in the game, guard Krista White ran the point. As far as I know, White had never played point guard in a game in college or high school before KSU’s game at Duquesne Wednesday.

Besides those last two minutes, some old problems haunted KSU.

“We’re going to look back and really kick ourselves over missed free throws and lay-ups,” O’Banion said.

The Flashes made 10 of 20 free throws. They’re shooting only 57 percent for the season, worst in the MAC.

Cleveland State made 22 of its 35 foul shots. The percentage isn’t great, but that’s a lot of foul shots. KSU fouled 28 times, 11 more than the Vikings. For the season, Kent’s opponents are shooting 11 more foul shots per game and making a higher percentage.

Other points of note:

  • Korinek, an all-state player who averaged a double-double at St. Vincent St. Mary, scored 13 points on six of seven shooting and made her first three-point shot of the season. O’Banion said Korinek was a good three-point shooter in high school and that the team wanted her to shoot more. Korinek played just 20 minutes, as she was in foul trouble most of the game, especially in the first half.
  • Kent State had 17 assists (on 26 baskets). Cleveland State, which leads the Horizon League in assists with 17.1, had only nine.
  • Despite KSU’s rebounding advantage, Cleveland State outscored the Flashes 15-6 in second-chance points, including two crucial ones in the last minute.
  • Kent State had 16 turnovers. That’s better than average for the Flashes, but the turnovers led to 26 Cleveland State points.
  • Larissa Lurken, KSU’s second leading scored, had 12 points on four three-point shots. But she missed six other three-pointers and all eight of her two-point shots. She’s shooting 31.8 percent on the season (32.2 percent on three-pointers). She’s struggled terribly since she scored a career-high 20 against Belmont.
  • Krista White, who had scored 20 points in the previous two games, scored just 4. She took five shots, but the game plan was to go inside to Shannon, Korinek and Johnson.
  • Kent State is off for final exams until a home game against Arkansas State on Wednesday, Dec. 17. It’s KSU’s last home game until conference season starts in January.

Box score

Flashes lose in last seconds

Cleveland State’s Corey Coleman made a four-foot floater with eight seconds to go, Krista White’s layout attempt at the buzzer went off of the rim and Kent State lost 69-67 in Cleveland. The loss drops the Flashes to 1-7 on the season.

Cici Shannon led KSU with 15 points and 9 rebounds. Jodan Korinek had 13 and Larissa Lurken 12.

The Flashes trailed by 11 points with three minutes to go in the first half, but closed it to five at halftime, then took the lede about five minutes into the second half. They led by as many as eight.

But Cleveland State scored the game’s last nine points, putting intense full-court pressure on Kent in the last two minutes to force four turnovers. Point guard Naddiyah Cross fouled out at with 1:51 to go. Mikell Chinn, Kent’s usually starter at point, missed her second straight game with a concussion.

Korinek, who had her best game of her young career, also fouled out. Shannon, Ridout and Melissa Stubbs all had four fouls.

A trip to Cleveland

The Flashes make their first trip to Cleveland since 2009 to take on Cleveland State, a team with a 4-3 record that includes victories over Toledo and East Carolina.

The Vikings return four starters and their top three scorers from last year’s 14-16 team. They’re led by 5-foot-10 senior forward Imani Gordon, a preseason all-Horizon Conference selection. She averages 12.9 points and 6.9 rebounds per game. Their leading scorer is 5-8 senior guard, who is averaging 15.7 points per game and 41 percent in three-point shooting. Three other players average between 9 and 10 points a game.

As a team, Cleveland State makes 37.5 percent of its three-pointer shots and 43.4 percent shooting overall. The Vikings lead the Horizon League in assists with 17.4 per game on an average of 28 field goals a game. They’re averaging only 13 turnovers but force only 15. They’re being outrebounded at about seven a game. Their only three players taller than 5-foot-10. None has played more than 14 minutes a game.

Kent State starting point guard Mikell Chinn, who missed the Flashes’ game at Duquesne last week with a concussion, is “day-to-day” on whether she’ll be back in the line-up, according to coach Danny O’Banion. Chinn leads the MAC in assists with 5.5 a game and last year led Kent State in steals. If she doesn’t start, freshman Naddiyah Cross will. Cross had four points, three assists and six turnovers against Duquesne. Twice this season Cross has had six assists in a game. Krista White, who had never played point guard before filling in at Duquesne, is the back-up.

Sophomore guard White, who has scored 20 points in two straight games, now is KSU’s leading scorer at 11.1 points per game. Larissa Lurken is second with 11.0. None of KSU’s post players, who had been expected to lead the team offensively this season, average more than nine points a game. Forward Montia Johnson leads the team with 8.3 rebounds per game and is fourth in the MAC in offensive rebounds.

Kent State, which is 1-6, is 11th in the MAC in scoring and 10th in scoring defense. It is seventh in field goal percentage and 11th in field goal percentage defense. It’s second to last in three-point baskets per game and last in foul shooting. It’s third in offensive rebounding, fourth in blocked shots and fifth in assists.

The 3:30 p.m. game is the second of a double header. The Cleveland State men play Western Illinois at 1.

Audio starts at 3:20 on Golden Flash iHeart Radio and Akron Fox Sports 1350. Video is on ESPN3, which you can get on the Internet if you have a ESPN on a cable network.

A discouraging game

It’s hard to write a blog post after a game like Wednesday’s 86-60 loss at Duquesne..

It was Kent State’s largest margin of defeat in a 1-6 year. Duquesne hit a three-point shot in the first minute, Kent State missed a 15-foot shot and Duquesne scored again. Soon it was 9-1. It was 10 points at halftime, and the Dukes’ lead just kept growing in the second half.

The best thing you can say about the game is that guard Krista White showed her 20-point game against Dartmouth was no fluke. She scored 20 more, 17 in the first half.

The worst thing about the game was that senior starting point guard Mikell Chinn didn’t play because of a concussion she suffered in California. Chinn averages only one point a game, but she does lead the MAC in assists at 5.5 per game. Freshman Naddiyah Cross started instead and played 36 minutes against a Duquesne team dominated by juniors and seniors. Cross had four points, three assists and six turnovers. When she went to the bench for a rest, White seemed to play the point, something she’s never done. It was a game where Kent really could have used Rachel Mendelsohn, the reserve guard who blew out her knee before the season started.

The second worst thing you can say about the game is that 6-4 center Cici Shannon and 6-2 freshman forward Jordan Korinek combined for zero points. Shannon, KSU’s second leading scorer, didn’t even get a shot off in her 10 minutes. At times, coach Danny O’Banion went with a five-guard line-up.

After the game, O’Banion talked on Golden Flash iHeart Radio about her team’s “growing pains driving her nuts,” but her players are in the locker room working hard every day. “You can’t turn freshman into seniors overnight,” she said.

Other notes:

  • Duquesne is a good team. It’s now 4-3, with its losses coming to Wisconsin-Green Bay (No. 2 in this week’s Mid Major poll), Princeton (the No. 3 Mid Major) and Syracuse, which is 5-1. The Dukes have won 20 games for six straight years. They beat Kent a little worse — 94-63 — at Kent last season.
  • Kent State had 20 turnovers, Duquesne 10. Duquesne had 12 steals, Kent 1.
  • After dreadful free-throw shooting in California, the Flashes were 21 of 27. White was 9 of 11.
  • Guard Melanie Stubbs had 11 points and five rebounds in 22 minutes, all season highs.
  • Freshman guard Madison Ridout made 2 of 3 three-point shots. Leading scorer Larissa Lurken missed all four of hers.
  • KSU had nine assists, a season low.

Box score

Duquesne 86, Kent State 60

Duquesne jumped to a 9-1 lead, led by 10 at half time and went on to an 86-60 victory over the Flashes in a Wednesday morning game in Pittsburgh.

It was the largest margin of defeat for Kent State this season, which is now 1-6. Duquesne is 4-3, but two of its losses have come to Wisconsin-Green Bay and Princeton, which are ranked second and third among Mid Majors. The third loss was to Syracuse.

Krista White led Kent with 20 points for the second straight game, with 17 of those points coming in the first half. Melanie Stubbs had 11 points and Larissa Lurken 10. Freshman Naddiyah Cross started at point guard in place of senior tri-captain Mikell Chinn, who suffered a concussion in practice during Kent State’s trip to the Cal Poly Holiday tournament over Thanksgiving. Cross had four points, three assists and four turnovers.

A morning game in Pittsburgh

Kent State heads to Duquesne Wednesday for its third mid-weekday game of the season.

The Flashes, who are 1-5, play at 11 a.m. as part of Duquesne’s “Education Day,” which brings kindergartners through eighth graders to campus. The last game I remember like this was back in the Lindsay era — a trip to Michigan State to play in front of several thousand screaming elementary school kids.

Kent is 1-1 in these unusual mid-day games. Its only victory came at home last Tuesday morning against Belmont. It lost its opener on the read at South Dakota State University.

Duquesne is 3-3. It lost its first three games, including losses to the University of Milwaukee at Green Bay (No. 2 in this week’s Mid-Major Rankings) and Princeton (No. 3 in the same rankings). The third loss was to Syracuse.

Since then, the Dukes have won three in a row, including a win at Ball State Sunday.

The Dukes beat Kent State at Kent last year, 94-63.  Raegan Moore scored a career-high 35 points and set a new school record and tied an Atlantic 10 record by recording nine 3-point baskets. Moore has graduated, but Duquesne has a new three-point shooter in 5-8 junior guard April Robinson, who has made an average of three per game and is shooting 47 percent from behind the line. As a team, Duquesne is shooting 41 percent. averaging 6.3 three-point baskets per game.

Robinson leads Duquesne in scoring with 16.8 per game. Deva’Nyar Workman, a 5-10 junior guard, is second in scoring at 12.8 points per game and leads the team in rebounding with 6.7 per game. She has averaged only 24 minutes a game. 6-4 senior center Jose-Ann Johnson averages 10 points.

As a team, Duquesne is averaging 76.5 points and giving up 75. That’s higher in both categories than Kent State, which is averaging 54.2 and giving up 64.3. Kent State’s leading scorer is wing Larissa Lurken, who is averaging 11.2 points per game. Montia Johnson leads the Flashes in rebounding at 8.7. Mikell Chinn’s 5.5 assists per game leads the team and the MAC, as does Cici Shannon’s three blocks per game. Krista white’s 2.7 steals per game is third in the MAC.

Audio broadcast of the game starts at 10:50 on Golden Flashes iHeart Radio and Akron Fox sports 1350. Video is through the Duquesne website. Live stats will be available here.