Month: September 2020

Flashes get 6-3 Big Ten transfer, add 2nd recruit, a N.J. guard

The Kent State women’s basketball team has added a 6-3 transfer from Penn State and received its second verbal commitment from the Class of 2021.


MORE ON THE TEAM: After almost six months, Flashes return to the court.


Bexley Wallace: Pickerington to Penn State to Kent State

Bexley Wallace is a 6-3 post player who Prospect Nation rated the No. 91 prospect in the nation in the class of 2018. She will sit out this season because of NCAA transfer rules.

“She’s a very skilled, savvy and confident post player,” coach Todd Starkey said. “She’s played against some of the best players in the country since she was young.

“Being in the Big Ten for a couple of years, she’s used to a high level of competition. She comes in with a great pedigree and skillset.

In 2015, Wallace was a member of the USA Basketball under-16 national team. That team went 4-1 and won a bronze medal in international competition with other teams from the Americas. A story in the Columbus Dispatch said Wallace was getting interest from college coaches when she was 13.

Wallace’s high school team, Pickerington Central, has one of the strongest programs in Central Ohio. In her senior year, it won the Ohio Division I championship and had four players who went on to Division I basketball.

As best as I know, Wallace is the first Kent State’s first player from Pickerington Central. In Starkey’s last three recruiting classes, he’s brought in players from some of the best high school programs in the state: Solon (junior guard Mariah Modkins), Newark (sophomore guard Katie Shumate) and Bellevue (freshman point guard Casey Santoro). 

Wallace’s statistics in high school and at Penn State weren’t particularly special.

At Penn State, she averaged just over a point and a rebound per game. She started three games over two years and averaged about eight minutes in 51 games. Her best games were six points and five rebounds against Big Ten co-champion Iowa last season and nine points and five rebounds against Florida State in her freshman year.

In high school, she averaged about eight points and seven rebounds over four years. In her freshman year, she averaged a career-best 10.1 points a game. Her junior year she averaged 9.0 rebounds.

“She’s not a feature-scorer type player,” Starkey said. “That’s not what her game or mindset is. She’s balanced in all areas of the game, and that’s what makes her a really strong player.” 

Wallace is Kent State’s second Big Ten transfer in two years. 6-4 post Linsey Marchese joined the Flashes last season after two years at Indiana. She sat out the season because of transfer rules. I’ll be surprised if Marchese is not one of the team’s top rebounders and scorers this year.

Marchese, Wallace, 6-2 junior Lindsay Thall, 6-2 sophomore Nila Blackford and 6-4 freshman Lexi Jackson will give Kent State what likely will be the tallest team in school history. I’ll have a post on the implications of that soon.

Lexy Linton: N.J. guard for the Class of ’21

Kent State’s second verbal commitment for 2021 is 5-8 guard Lexy Linton from Mt. Holly, New Jersey.

Linton, who announced her commitment by Twitter in August, is a bit of an under-the-radar recruit. I didn’t find her on any all-state teams online, nor did I find another Division I offer to her online.  I did see stories saying D1 teams had shown interest. The Courier-Post, one of the larger papers in south Jersey, called her one of the area’s “players to watch in 2019-20.”

She averaged a little less than 15 points a game her sophomore and junior seasons at Rancocas Valley High School. For her senior year, she’ll play for Jackson Memorial High in Ocean City, which went 23-4 last season and reached the state quarterfinals.

Her highlight video is one of the most interesting I’ve seen. The first half dozen plays are all of her stealing the ball or blocking shots. (Most are of players shooting.) Linton has long arms and looks very quick. She’s reminiscent of Alexa Golden, Kent State’s director of basketball operations who led the KSU defense for her four years as a player.

In an interview online, she said she sees herself as a point guard, but it’s clear from her video she could also play shooting guard or wing.

Linton’s father, Garry, is the founder of TakeFlight Basketball, which runs basketball skills and training clinics in New Jersey. Lexy is featured a number of his training videos. 

Kent State coaches can’t comment on recruits until they have signed a letter of intent in November.

Earlier in the summer, 6-3 post player Bridget Dunn of Carmel High School outside Indianapolis became KSU’s first 2021 commit. Dunn averaged 12.3 points and 9.9 rebounds as a junior and made the state basketball coaches association’s 15-member all-junior team in 2020.

Here’s the post on Dunn after her commitment.

The recruiting trail

Starkey said his staff is still recruiting

“We’ve got two scholarships available, and we’re still working,” he said.

A majority of top prospects have made verbal commitments, but many teams are still looking for players. Ball State, Buffalo, Central Michigan, Northern Illinois, Ohio and Toledo also have two recruits who have committed publicly. Western Michigan, Akron and Bowling Green each have three, and Eastern Michigan four. Typical size of a class is three or four.

It’s been a hard recruiting season for Starkey and other coaches. 

Recruiting been in an NCAA “dead period” since COVID-19 shut down college basketball in March. That means that coaches can’t go to off-campus events like AAU Tournaments, can’t do home visits with recruits or can’t have recruits visit them on campus officially or unofficially.

So coaches have been working entirely by phone and online. One out-of-state KSU recruit posted a screenshot of her talking with the four Kent coaches, her and her parents. 

Coaches build a list of potential recruits three or four classes out and had seen many players before last March. Kent State, for example, offered Indiana commit Dunn a scholarship in summer 2019. I’m sure they had seen her in AAU or high school games.

But players who recently came to a school’s attention have been evaluated only through video and phone calls to them and their coaches. 

Many AAU tournament operators, who in normal charge visiting college coaches hundreds of dollars in fees, this year streamed games on video — and charged coaches for access to the feeds. Most players have highlight videos online; a recruiter can usually get full-game video from a high school or AAU coach. 

But it’s pretty unlikely that KSU coaches had ever seen Linton, the guard from New Jersey, in person.

In-person observation makes a difference. Starkey and Associate Head Coach Fran Recchia told KentWired’s Kathryn Rajnicek last spring that they like to look at things you can’t see on video — how players act during warmups and after a game, how they act on the bench, how they react when they’re taken out of a game.

A father of a Texas all-state guard KSU had been recruiting heavily complained about the NCAA rule on Twitter in summer, saying how difficult it was to evaluate a school long distance. (His daughter eventually chose Abilene Christian in Texas.)

“It’s been very, very challenging,” Starkey said. “I think it’s more challenging for the recruits and their parents — to be able to try to make an informed decision when not being able to go to campus and talk to coaches and players in person. We’ve been on so many Zoom calls. You try to simulate as much of that as you can, but it’s just not the same.”

At last, Flashes are back on the court together

The team after it beat Ohio last March to clinch a tie for the MAC East title.

By Carl Schierhorn

COVID-19 had kept the Kent State women’s basketball team apart for more than five months.

This week they’re back on the court together.

Through AAU and instructional leagues, most players had been in organized basketball almost year-round since they were in elementary school. Coaches, too.

Not since I was a kid have I gone five months without basketball,” coach Todd Starkey said in an interview last week.

For the players, “it was tough,” the coach said. “We had conversations with them via Zoom and FaceTime and phone calls every week, touching base and talking with them about mental and physical health.

“They tried to work out on their own. Some had access to weights, some didn’t. Some players had access to baskets. It was challenging, but I think that by and large, they all handled it fairly well. They’re glad to have that phase of it behind them, at least for the time being.”

When the NCAA approved a Nov. 25 start to games last week, they also approved an expanded preseason workout schedule. Until formal practice starts Oct. 10, teams can spend 12 hours a week on strength and conditioning, team meetings and on-court drills. In previous seasons (and this fall before this week), it had been eight hours with severe limitations on on-court activities.

The Flashes, like all Kent State teams, returned to campus weeks later than at many other MAC schools, apparently because KSU safety protocols were more stringent than at other places.

Players started with a COVID test when they returned to campus. (All passed.) Then the team used a four-tier system of “re-entry,” as Starkey called it.

First, one player worked with one coach. Then the team was split into “pods,” where a small group players lived and worked out together. That would have allowed easier contact tracing if someone became infected or was exposure to the virus. Then the size of the pods was increased. Finally, all team members and coaches could work together.

“We’ve been very deliberate and gradual in bringing them back to basketball movements, and coaching and terminology,” Starkey said. “It’s been a process.”

Reworking the schedule

The team had essentially finished its schedule of games before the NCAA moved the start of the season two-and-a-half weeks later.

Starkey isn’t exactly starting over, but there’s work to do.

“There’s a lot of questions that we have to get answers for before we can even start to piece together what Nov. 25 to conference play is going to look like,” Starkey said. “It’s a complicated puzzle.

“We’ve just now reached out today to try and figure out some of those pieces. And we’re waiting to hear back on contract situations. It’s a bit of a mess.

The NCAA is limiting teams to 28 regular season games if they play in a multi-team tournament. Last season the limit was 31.

The MAC will play a 20-game conference schedule, leaving a maximum of eight non-conference games. Starkey doesn’t think his schedule will have that many.

Two opponents have already backed out of games. The Flashes were scheduled to play at Ohio State, a return trip from OSU’s visit to the M.A.C. Center last season. But Starkey doesn’t know if that game going to happen. He said he has no plans at this point for a multi-team tournament, though “nothing is off the table.”

“I don’t think we’ll get to 27,” he said. “We’ll probably have four or five non-conference games.

No Kent State Classic

The event in which Akron and Kent State played the same teams over two days won’t happen this year. It’s not because of the change in NCAA scheduling rules.

“We’re having trouble getting two teams to commit because we both continued to get better,” Starkey said. “When we both weren’t quite as good, everybody wanted to play us. Now it’s harder to get people to come in and play us back to back.”

The idea of the event was to alternate between Kent State and Akron, where it was the “Akron Classic.” Last season the Flashes and Zips played Michigan and Purdue Fort Wayne in Akron. The year before Northern Kentucky and Oakland plays Akron and Kent at the M.A.C.C.

No basketball on Election Day

The NCAA Division I Council last week also decided that teams can’t play or practice on Election Day, Nov. 3. It’s a move Starkey strongly endorses.

“We were going to do it anyway,” the coach said. “We’ll have 100% voter registration on our staff and team within a week.

“That’s something we’re really focused on, talking with our team about being proactive and involved on educating yourself. We’re not telling them what to think. That’s on them. We’re just providing them the opportunity to get out and vote, for sure.”

It’s official: Nov. 25 start for college basketball

The Kent State women’ celebrate their first-round win over Buffalo in the MAC Tournament. That was March 11, the last
game the team played before the COVID-19 pandemic ended the season. (KentWired photo by John Conley.)

College basketball games can start on Wednesday, Nov. 25, the day before Thanksgiving.

The NCAA Division I Council Wednesday approved the date for men’s and women’s basketball.

Games aren’t required to start then; it’s just the earliest teams can play.

Practice will start on Oct. 14, with 30 practices allowed before the season. Teams can up to 12 hours a week of strength and conditioning, team meetings, and team and individual drills between Sept. 21 and Oct. 13.

Women’s teams can schedule 23 regular-season games, plus one multiple-team event of up to four games. Without the multi-team even, they can schedule 25 games without a multiple-team event. Last season teams could play 27 games. Kent State played 29. Men’s team can play one more game.

“Teams tend to play an average of two games a week, so the fact we’re shortening the season necessitated the reduction in games so we’re trying to jam more in a shortened season,” said M. Grace Calhoun, Division I council chair and Penn athletic director.

The council recommended teams play at least four non-conference games.

Teams have to play a minimum of 13 games, seven fewer than previous years. Some schools have discussed playing a very abbreviated schedule to limit exposure to COVID-19 and for financial reasons.

Teams won’t be allowed to have preseason exhibition games or scrimmages. Kent State had two scrimmages against Division I opponents last season. In 2018, they had an exhibition against a Division II team and a scrimmage.

The later start is designed to limit athletes exposure to the COVID-19 virus.

The NCAA men’s and women’s basketball committees had recommenced a Nov. 21 start. But the council decided on Nov. 25, when almost three-quarters of schools will finished on-campus classes.

Kent State is one of them. Classes and exams will be completely online after Thanksgiving. With classes online, student athletes can study from anywhere.

With many fewer students in town, athletes would be less likely to interact with others who might be infected.

The start date is three weeks later than the Kent State women’s team first game last season.

“The new season start date near the Thanksgiving holiday provides the optimal opportunity to successfully launch the season,” said Dan Gavitt, NCAA senior vice president of basketball, as quoted by ESPN. “It is a grand compromise of sorts that focuses on the health and safety of student-athletes.”

National media outlets have consistently reported that more multi-team events in an NBA-like “bubble” format are likely. In those, multiple teams — perhaps as many as 20 — could play at a single site with a controlled environment and heavy COVID testing.

ESPN has said it could host four such events at its Orlando site, where the NBA has played.

The later start leaves about five weeks for non-conference games. 

Kent State likely will announce its non-conference schedules in the next few weeks. I’m sure KSU coaches already have had discussions with prospective opponents and tournaments.

MAC play for KSU’s women will start on Wednesday, Dec. 30, at Toledo. (Link to Kent women’s MAC schedule.) The Kent State men will open at Eastern Michigan on Saturday, Jan. 2. (KSU hasn’t posted its men’s MAC schedule, but the full MAC men’s schedule is here.)

The NCAA tournament is still set for 68 teams and 14 sites in March and April, although there has been unofficial discussion of consolidating the sites into “bubbles.”

No off-campus recruiting for rest of 2020

The D1 Council also extended the recruiting “dead period” through Jan. 1. There has been a dead period in place since March, with no official campus visits, no home visits by coaches, nor coaches’ going to AAU games or team practices during that time.

This extension that some coaches and high school players won’t be able to have face-to-face contact with coaches before students can formally commit to a school in the Nov. 11-18 early signing period. Nor will some coaches have ever seen some players in live competition.

Telephone and online contact is allowed. And many coaches saw players in AAU games when they were younger. Recruits also made unofficial visits in pre-COVID times.

“While the Council acknowledged and appreciates the growing desire to resume in-person recruiting,” Calhoun said. “council members ultimately concluded the primary concern right now must be protecting the current student-athletes on our campuses,”

A Thanksgiving-week start for basketball?

Flashes celebrate after clinching MAC East co-championship with win over Ohio last season. There will be no divisional championships for anyone this year. The MACwill play as a single 12-team league this season. It had been the last Division I conference with divisions,

Updated with revised date.

Circle the date: Nov. 21.

That’s could be the opening day of the 2020-21 basketball season.

Reports from several national outlets Monday said the NCAA Division I committee is poised to approve at that date, which is the Saturday before Thanksgiving. The council is scheduled to vote on the idea Wednesday. Here’s Monday story from cbssports.com.

The Nov. 21 date, four days earlier than an earlier proposal, is about two-and-a-half weeks later the first game in previous (pre-COVID-19) seasons. The delay allows schools to start games after most universities have emptied campuses for the fall.

As at many other schools, Kent State classes and exams will be completely online after Thanksgiving. With classes online, student athletes can study from anywhere.

With almost no other students in town, athletes would be less likely to interact with others who might be infected.

NCAA officials thought the earlier date could allow more multi-team events in an NBA-like “bubble” format, CBS reported. In those, multiple teams — perhaps as many as 20 — could play at a single site with a controlled environment and heavy COVID testing.

The later start leaves about five weeks for non-conference games.

Because of the uncertainly, Kent State hasn’t announced a non-conference schedule for either men’s or women’s basketball.

With the MAC going to a 20-game schedule (see below), the Flashes likely will have up to eight non-conference games. We’re likely to know a lot more in a few days.

All this, of course, assumes there is not another COVID-related shutdown of some kind.

The MAC schedule

Kent State starts the Mid-American Conference season at Toledo on Wednesday, Dec. 30.

The 20-game MAC season is up from 18 in past years. That’s a home-and-home series with all but two other teams.

There will be no divisions. The top eight teams will advance to the conference tournament in Cleveland in March. There will be no first-round tournament games on conferences sites.

The new conference schedule is designed to cut down on travel costs and virus exposure in commercial travel.

The schedule has no bye weeks. All teams play every Wednesday and Saturday for 10 weeks.

After the opener with Toledo, the Flashes play at Eastern Michigan on Saturday, Jan. 2. The team is likely to stay on the road. Toledo and Eastern are less than an hour apart, and KSU will still be on winter break.

Home opener is Wednesday, Jan. 6, against Northern Illinois, followed by a home game against Ball State on Saturday, Jan. 10.

The Ball State game is the only meeting of the season with the Cardinals, which finished second in the MAC last season. Kent State also play defending MAC champion Central Michigan only once. That game is Saturday, Feb. 13, in Mount Pleasant.

The Flashes end with a home game against Akron on Saturday, March 6. It will be the first time KSU has ended the regular season against the Zips since 2011. The league tournament will start the next Wednesday.

Kent State’s conference schedule

(Times to be announced)

  • Wednesday, Dec. 30. At Toledo.
  • Saturday, Jan. 2. At Eastern Michigan. 
  • Wednesday, Jan. 6. Northern Illinois.             
  • Saturday, Jan. 9. Ball State.                
  • Wednesday Jan. 13. At Akron.            
  • Saturday, Jan. 16. Western Michigan.               
  • Wednesday Jan. 20. Toledo.            
  • Saturday, Jan 23. At Northern Illinois.
  • Wednesday Jan. 27. At Buffalo.
  • Saturday, Jan 30. Eastern Michigan.
  • Wednesday, Feb. 3. At Ohio.
  • Saturday, Feb. 6. Miami
  • Wednesday, Feb. 10. Bowling Green.
  • Saturday, Feb. 13. At Central Michigan.
  • Wednesday, Feb. 17. At Western Michigan.
  • Saturday, Feb 20. Ohio.
  • Wednesday, Feb. 24. Buffalo.
  • Saturday, Feb. 27. At Miami.
  • Wednesday, March 3. At Bowling Green.
  • Saturday, March 6. Akron.