Month: March 2021

KSU’s 4th-quarter rally can’t overcome slow start, 19 turnovers as Flashes fall to Buffalo in MAC quarterfinals

Buffalo’s Dayaisha Fair shoots over Kent State’s Lindsey Thall. Fair, the seventh leading scorer in Division I, had 30 points and six steals. (Photo from Buffalo website.)

It took three quarters for the Kent State women’s basketball team to get its offense scoring. But by then, it was too late.

The Flashes scored the game’s first basket, then missed three straight shots and committed three turnovers. Suddenly Buffalo led 12-2.

It didn’t get much closer until the fourth quarter, when the Flashes cut the lead to three twice. But Buffalo answered both times.

The 73-66 loss in the Mid-American Conference Tournament quarterfinals ends Kent State’s season with an 11-9 record. Buffalo (15-8) advances to face regular-season champion Bowling Green Friday in the semifinals.

In the first quarter, coach Todd Starkey said, it seems as if the Flashes “were trying to feel our way into the game.”

“Against the team like Buffalo, you can’t do that,” he said. “You have come out of the gate a hundred miles an hour — just like them.” 

Sophomore forward Nila Blackford said the team lost its focus early on.

“We put ourselves in a really difficult position, especially against a team like Buffalo,” she said. “They got us scrambling, and we lost our composure. When you have so many live-ball turnovers, it’s going to lead to layup after layup. It’s hard to come back from that.”

For the game, Kent State committed 19 turnovers. Buffalo scored 24 points from them. Buffalo had just nine turnovers, which led to only five KSU points.

The fourth-quarter comeback

Trailing by 12 going into the quarter, Mariah Modkins hit a layup, then fed Katie Shumate for a 3-point basket a minute later. The lead was down to seven, and Hannah Young hit a short jump shot to make it 56-53 with 4:35 to go.

Buffalo then made two free throws. A minute later, Dayaisha Fair, Buffalo’s star 5-5 guard, missed a layup but got her own rebound in heavy traffic. She passed the ball out to Jessika Schiffer, who hit a 3-point basket to push the lead back to 61-53.

Kent State had one last-minute push in it. With 1:06 to go, Modkins passed to Lindsey Thall, who hit a long 3-pointer. Twelve seconds later, Modkins hit her own 3, then hit another 20 seconds later. All three shots came from well behind the NBA 3-point line at Rocket Mortgage Arena, and the score was 69-66.

That was as far as Kent State could go. Buffalo made four free throws (and missed three more) in the last 22 seconds to clinch the win.

“We couldn’t quite get over the hump,” Starkey said. “We fought so hard, and we needed some good fortune down the stretch. We didn’t get it on a few key plays in the last couple minutes. But I’m really proud of our team for not giving in.”

For three quarters, shooting woes for the Flashes

Kent State made 10 of its 19 shots (52.6%) in the fourth quarter. But before then, KSU shot only 31.6%.

“We really struggled to shoot the ball for the last eight or nine games,” Starkey said. “I just think everything this season just wore them down, and it really showed in our field goal percentage.

“If we just shoot the ball better, we’re winning a lot of those games. But at the end of the day, you’ve got to put the ball in the basket.

Buffalo’s shooting was the reverse of Kent’s. The Bulls made 57.1% of their shots ion the first half but 33.3% of their shots in the second.

Big games for Young and Blackford

Young, who has started three straight games in place of injured guard Clare Kelly, had a career-high 15 points to lead the Flashes. She made 3-of-5 three-point shots, had five rebounds and drew two offensive fouls on Fair.

“She is making a ton of effort plays,” Starkey said. “And we always talk about scoring as kind of a by-product of playing really hard. We were really struggling to score, and she was able to hit some key shots. It really kept us in the game.”

Blackford had a career-high 18 rebounds. That ties for the ninth most in KSU history and fourth most in the MAC this season.

“I can’t say enough about Nila,” Starkey said. “To get 18 rebounds against this team was phenomenal.”

Buffalo leads the MAC and ranks 15th in the nation in rebounding. Blackford had 10 offensive rebounds — the same number as the entire Buffalo team, which leads the MAC on the offensive boards.

Blackford also had 12 points for her 12th double-double of the season. That’s second in the conference to 13 for Ball State’s Oshlynn Brown, a senior who has been first-team all-MAC for two years.

A much more than Fair performance

Fair is Division I’s seventh-leading scorer, averaging 24.1 points a game. She had 30 against Kent State, making 8-of-19 field goals, 3-of-4 three-pointers and 11-of-14 free throws. She had six steals and four assists. (She’s among MAC leaders in those categories, too.)

Kent’s walking wounded

KSU starting guard Clare Kelly, who missed the last two games because of a foot injury, and 6-4 freshman reserve center Lexi Jackson, fighting a high ankle sprain, both played. Kelly had no points in 16 minutes. Jackson had a basket and three rebounds in nine minutes. Both were “weren’t even close to 100%,” Starkey said.

Wait ’til next year

Kent State returns all starters and 11 of its top 12 players.

“We’re excited about the future,” Starkey said. “We built the program around these two recruiting classes, who are coming through as juniors and sophomores. They’ve been really big so far, and we expect even bigger things in the future.”

Blackford said she was “super optimistic.

“We have learned a lot about ourselves and our team this year,” she said. “I think some of the adversity we have gone through is only going to make us better in the future.

Box score

The rest of the tournament

All four top seeds won.

No. 1 seed BOWLING GREEN trailed No. 8 Eastern Michigan by 10 at halftime but held the Eagles to 16 points in the second half and won 63-47. BG’s Lexi Fleming, the conference player of the year, left the game with a shoulder injury in the second half and scored only four points. Kenzie Lewis, another freshman guard, led the Falcons with 14 points and 11 rebounds.

No. 2 CENTRAL MICHIGAN broke a close game open with an 12-1 run in the second quarter and beat No. 7 Northern Illinois 83-69. Sophomore guard Molly Davis had 24 points and senior guard Micaela Kelly had 23 for CMU. Both had been named first-team all-MAC Tuesday.

No. 3 OHIO edged No. 6 Ball State 61-59. Cece Hooks, the MAC player of the year, had 21 points, and Erica Johnson had 19. Both players suffered severe cramps in the last minute. Johnson had to leave the game; Hooks fought through pain as Ball State had to foul four times in the last 15 seconds to try (and never succeed) to force Ohio to shoot fouls shots.

Bowling Green and Buffalo will play in the semifinals at 10 a.m. Friday. Ohio and Central Michigan will play a half-hour after that game ends, probably about 12:30. Both games are on ESPN+. Finals are at 11 a.m. Saturday on the CBS Sports Network.

The view from Buffalo

Coach Felisha Legette-Jack in her postgame press conference

What a great team win. Our story is not about Kent State or whoever else we’re playing, but it’s about how good we can be if we rely on each other, see each other, trust each other and play for each other. Today we did that, and we beat a pretty good team.

Notes

  • Three other Kent State players scored in double figures. Thall had 13 points and Modkins and Shumate 12. No one besides Blackford and Young had more than four rebounds.
  • The game was the fourth straight year Kent State and Buffalo have met in the quarterfinals. Buffalo has won three times. The better seed has won each season.
  • In the regular season, Buffalo beat No. 1 seed Bowling Green, its opponent Friday, twice.

Blackford is all-MAC 2nd team, Thall all-defensive team, and Thall and Shumate honorable mention

From left: Sophomore Nila Blackford, junior Lindsey Thall, sophomore Katie Shumate.

Kent State sophomore forward Nila Blackford was named to the all-Mid-American Conference second team Tuesday.

Junior forward Lindsey Thall made the league’s all-defensive team for the second year in a row.

Thall and sophomore guard Katie Shumate were honorable mention all-MAC.

The selections were made by league coaches.


Flashes prepare to play Buffalo in quarterfinals for fourth straight season.


Blackford was one of three players in the league to average a double-double. She averaged 15.6 points and 10.2 rebounds per game, both numbers leading the Flashes. Blackford also led Kent State in field-goal percentage (48.7%) and steals (1.3 per game).

The other two MAC players with double-doubles were first-team member Oshlynn Brown of Ball State and third-team member Ce’Nara Skanes of Eastern Michigan.

Blackford is the first KSU player to average a double-double since Tracy Lynn in 1990-91. Only Blackford, Lynn (a 1994 grad), Marvetta Froe (1990), Mary Bukovac (1989) and Margie Zezulewicz (1979) have averaged double-doubles in the 45-year history of scholarship basketball at Kent State.

A graduate of Dupont Manual High School in Louisville, Kentucky, Blackford made the MAC’s all-freshman team last season. She was one of 16 finalists for Kentucky Miss Basketball her senior year.

Blackford’s mother, Nell, played for the University of Louisville women’s basketball team, and her father, William, was a member of the Cardinals’ football team.

Thall made the all-defensive team for the second year in a row and has led the conference in blocked shots for all three of her years in college. This season she averaged 1.5 blocks a game, along with 10.9 points and a career-best 5.3 rebounds.

With at least another season to go, Thall is second all-time for Kent State in 3-point shots made with 165 and third in blocked shots with 145. She went to Strongsville High School, where her mother, Dawn, is the girls basketball head coach.

Despite summer knee surgery that threatened her playing at all this season, Shumate was MAC honorable mention for the second year in a row. After seeing limited action in the Flashes’ first two games, she averaged 30.6 minutes for the rest of the season. Coach Todd Starkey said after last Saturday’s Akron game that Shumate had never been 100% healthy all season.

Shumate is second on the team in scoring with an average of 12.2 points per game, which ranks 23rd in the MAC. She is fourth in the MAC in free-throw percentage at 84.5% and 10th in 3-point shooting at 37.7%.

Shumate went to Newark High School, where her father, J.R., is the long-time girls basketball coach.

Full list of all-conference honors:

Player of the Year 
Senior guard Cece Hooks, Ohio.

Coach of the Year
Robyn Fralick, Bowling Green.

Freshman of the Year
Guard Lexi Fleming, Bowling Green.

Sixth Player of the Year
Junior guard Janae Poisson, NIU, Northern Illinois.

Defensive Player of the Year
Senior guard Cece Hooks, Ohio.

All-MAC First Team
Senior forward Oshlynn Brown, Ball State.
Sophomore guard Dyaisha Fair, Buffalo.
Senior guard Micaela Kelly, Central Michigan.  
Sophomore guard Molly Davis, Central Michigan.
Senior guard Cece Hooks, Ohio.

All-MAC Second Team
Freshman guard Lexi Fleming, Bowling Green.
Senior guard Areanna Combs, Eastern Michigan.
Sophomore forwarrd Nila Blackford, Kent State.
Sophomore guard Peyton Scott, Miami.
Sophomore guard Chelby Koker, Northern Illinois.

All-MAC Third Team
Senior forward Jordyn Dawson, Akron.
Junior guard Kadie Hempfling, Bowling Green.
Sophomore guard Ce’Nara Skanes, Eastern Michigan.Forward
Junior forward Erica Johnson, Ohio.
Sophomore guard/forward Quinesha Lockett, Toledo.

All-MAC Honorable Mention (6 Players due to ties)
Sophomore guard Sydney Freeman, Ball State.
Sophomore guard Katie Shumate, Kent State.
Junior forward Lindsey Thall, Kent State.
Senior forward Gabby Burris, Ohio.
Senior forward Reilly Jacobson, Western Michigan.
Freshman forward Taylor Williams, Western Michigan.

All-Defensive Team (6 Players due to ties)
Freshman guard Nyla Hampton, Bowling Green.
Sophomore guard Dyaisha Fair, Buffalo.
Senior guard Micaela Kelly, Central Michigan.
Senior guard Areanna Combs, Eastern Michigan.
Junior forward Lindsey Thall, Kent State.
Senior guard Cece Hooks, Ohio.

All-Freshman Team
Guard Lexi Fleming, Bowling Green.
Guard Nyla Hampton, Bowling Green.
Guard Cheyenne McEvans, Buffalo.
Guard Madi Mace, Ohio.
Forward Taylor Williams, Western Michigan.

Full MAC press release on postseason honors

Flashes head into MAC quarterfinals Wednesday against Buffalo, happy with their defense but sputtering some on offense

KSU’s Nila Blackford leads the team in scoring at 15.6 points per game and rebounding at 10.2 per game. She’s has 11 double-doubles in KSU’s 19 games and is one of three MAC players averaging a double-double. (File photo by Hayley Steffy of KSU Athletic Communications.)

Kent State’s fate in the Mid-American Conference Tournament likely is tied to how well the Flashes put the ball in the basket.

Fifth-seeded KSU plays fourth-seeded Buffalo at about 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Rocket Mortgage Arena in Cleveland. The game is on ESPN+ and the Kent State Radio Network.

Kent State has won four of its last six games. But in five of them, the Flashes scored fewer than 70 points. In two of their last three games, they made only two 3-point baskets and shot less than 17% from distance. Earlier in the season, Kent made a school-record 16 three-pointers and shot 57% from distance against Ohio. The Flashes still rank third in the MAC in 3-point percentage.

Searching for offense

“It would be nice for us to start making some shots,” coach Todd Starkey said after KSU’s 64-58 win over Akron Saturday. “Defensively, we’ve found our niche over the last couple of weeks. But other than the second NIU game (which KSU won 73-58), we’ve kind of struggled to make shots.

“I think part of that has to do with how long the season has been and playing six of our last eight games on the road. It wears you down.”


Blackford, Thall, Shumate earn postseason MAC honors


Finding a defense

Kent’s defense is playing as well as it has all season.

After the team gave up 84 points and lost by 13 to 10th-place Western Michigan in February, Starkey said, coaches challenged the players, saying:

“Hey, you’re not going to win any games if you defend like this down the stretch. And I think they took that to heart.”

The team also made some technical adjustments to its defense.

“We’ve gotten back to what we’re capable of,” Starkey said. “I think this team is close to being where it needs to be.

“The whole thing comes down to our offensive flow and ability to make shots. If we do and continue to defend like we’ve been defending, I think we have as good a chance as anybody winning the tournament.”

Buffalo again (and again and again)

This will be the fourth-straight year the Flashes and Buffalo have met in the tournament quarterfinals.

In 2018 and 2019, the Bulls beat KSU handily and went on to win the tournament, then won at least one game in the NCAA. The 2018 team reached the Sweet 16.

Last season third-seeded Kent State won 72-66. The No. 1 and No. 2 seeds had lost in the quarterfinals, and KSU looked poised to make a run at first NCAA bid in 18 years.

But COVID wiped out the rest of the season the next day.

Starkey shook his head when he talked about always playing Buffalo.

“It’s just kind of crazy that it’s worked out that way,” he said. “But here we are.”

Buffalo has been a tough opponent for Kent State for many years. The Flashes were 2-18 against UB between February 2012 and last year’s quarterfinals.

But KSU beat the Bulls 65-62 in Kent on Feb. 24.

Starkey calls Buffalo “a very talented, physical, athletic team.”

“They’ve got one of the most dynamic scorers in the country in Dayaisha Fair,” he said. “They’ve got a lot of really good supporting pieces. They can really take you out of a rhythm offensively with their defensive pressure.”

Buffalo ranks 10th in the country in offensive rebounds (16.2 per game) and averages 14.1 second-chance points. Kent State is second to the Bulls in the MAC in rebounding. When the teams met two weeks ago, Buffalo outrebounded the Flashes 37-31; KSU had more offensive rebounds, 13-12.

But Fair makes the Bulls go. She averages 24.5 points a game, second in the MAC and sixth in the country. She is second in the MAC in assists, third in steals and fourth in 3-point baskets per game. Ten days ago she scored her 1,000-point scorer after just 44 games, the 14th fastest ever in Division I.

Fair scored 23 points against Kent State earlier this season, but she missed 12 of her 21 shots against tough defense, especially by KSU guard Katie Shumate. In last season’s quarterfinals, she scored 36 against the Flashes. But no other Buffalo player scored more than six.

Buffalo senior center Summer Hemphill is playing again after missing most of the last two seasons with injuries. Hemphill made her first appearance in two months against Kent State two weeks ago, not scoring in 11 minutes. But last week she averaged 10 points, 7.5 rebounds and 28 minutes in two Buffalo victories. Hemphill was a preseason all-MAC selection.

The state of the Flashes

Starting guard Clare Kelly has missed the last two games with an injured foot, and reserve center Lexi Jackson missed Saturday’s game with a high ankle sprain.

“They’re better than they were yesterday, which was better than the day before,” Starkey said on Monday. “But are they ready to play a game? We won’t know definitively until game time.”

Starkey rested Shumate, who had off-season knee surgery, last Wednesday, and she responded with a strong game against Akron.

Leading scorer and rebounder Nila Blackford also had been wearing down. But because planned rest and foul trouble, she has averaged just 23 minutes over the last two games. She still scored 21 points in 21 minutes against Akron.

The rest of the field

The tournament is as wide open as it’s been in many years. Bowling Green, picked 11th in the coaches’ preseason poll, unexpected won the conference. But the Falcons lost in overtime to Buffalo on Saturday.

Every other team in the league lost at least six games. No team goes into the tournament with more than a two-game winning streak. Several schools have had recent COVID-19 problems.

Here’s a quick look at Wedneday’s games:

No. 1 seed BOWLING GREEN (14-4 MAC, 18-5 overall) vs. No. 8 EASTERN MICHIGAN (7-7, 10-9). BG had won five in a row before it lost to Buffalo Saturday. Eastern, which had serious COVID problems in February, lost its last three games. Bowling Green beat EMU 71-64 when the teams met in December.

No. 2 CENTRAL MICHIGAN (13-6 MAC, 15-8) vs. No. 7 NORTHERN ILLINOIS (10-8, 12-11). The teams just played at Central Michigan Saturday, and the Chippewas rallied from 10 points down at halftime to win 74-68. Earlier in the season, NIU had beaten Central 104-73.

No. 3 OHIO (11-6 MAC, 13-7) VS. No. 6 BALL STATE (12-8, 14-10). Ohio had four games canceled because of COVID before it lost to 11th-place Akron and beat last-place Miami last week. Ball State won three of its last four games, the loss coming in double overtime to Central Michigan. Ohio and BSU split their regular-season games.

Team comparisons

All statistics are conference games only, which are more current and reflect similar competition.

  • Records: Kent State 11-8 (MAC 10-6 and fifth place.) Buffalo 12-9 (MAC 11-6 and fourth place.) Kent State is 5-5 over its last 10 games and beat 11th-place Akron 64-58 on Saturday. Buffalo is 6-4 over its last 10 games and has won two straight. It beat first-place Bowling Green 69-68 in overtime at BG on Saturday.
  • NET ranking: Kent State is 153rd of 343 Division I teams. Buffalo 96th. New this season, the NET is the NCAA’s mathematical ranking system and helps make decisions on tournament invitations and seedings. It emphasizes wins over quality opponents, especially on the road. It takes into account offensive and defensive “efficiency,” which it figures by a team’s and its opponents’ points per possession. It then adjusts for the quality of opponent and where the game was played. NET is short for NCAA Evaluation Tool.
  • Strength of schedule: Kent State 109th of 343 teams. Buffalo 179th. (According to WarrenNolan.com)
  • Scoring average: KSU seventh in MAC at 69.9 points per game. Buffalo fifth at 74.6.
  • Defensive average: KSU third at 70.1. Buffalo sixth at 71.2.
  • Field-goal percentage: KSU ninth at 39.9 (third on 3-pointers at 35.2%). Buffalo sixth at 41.4 (ninth on 3s at 31.0).
  • Field-goal defense: KSU eighth at 42.5 (eighth on 3s at 33.2%, averaging 8.0 3s a game). Buffalo second at 39.4 (seventh on 3s at 32.9, averaging 5.8).
  • Free throw shooting: Kent State 11th at 67.6%. Buffalo fifth at 73.7.
  • Rebounding margin: KSU second at +8.1. Buffalo third at +3.8. Buffalo leads MAC in offensive rebounding at 15.1 per game. Kent is second at 13.9.
  • Turnover margin: KSU 10th at -2.7. Buffalo fifth at +2,0. KSU 11th in steals at 5.8. Buffalo sixth at 8.1.
  • Assists: Kent State 10th at 11.3. Buffalo fourth at 13.4.
  • Blocked shots: Kent State first at 3.2. Buffalo fifth at 2.7.

Top players

Kent State

  • 6-2 sophomore forward Nila Blackford. 14th in MAC at 15.6 points per game. Fifth with 50.0% field-goal percentage. Third in rebounding at 10.2. Just named to the all-MAC second team.
  • 5-11 sophomore guard Katie Shumate. 12.8 points per game. 10th in MAC in 3-point percentage at 37.7%. Fourth in free-throw percentage at 84.5%. Just named all-MAC honorable mention.
  • 6-2 junior forward Lindsey Thall. 10.6 points. 12th in MAC in 3-point percentage at 37.2%. 14th in 3-pointers per game at 1.7. First in blocked shots at 1.5 per game. Just named to MAC all-defensive team for the second year in a row and all MAC honorable mention.
  • 5-8 sophomore guard Clare Kelly. 10.6 points. 11th in MAC in 3-point percentage at 37.3%. 14th in 3-pointers per game at 1.8.
  • 5-1 junior guard Mariah Modkins. 6.6 points. 16th in MAC in 3-point percentage at 36.4%. 15th in assists per game at 2.8.
  • 5-4 freshman guard Casey Santoro. 7.8 points, 2.5 assists.
  • 5-10 junior guard Hannah Young. 4.1 points, 4.3 rebounds.
  • 6-4 freshman center Lexi Jackson. 2.6 points, 3.2 rebounds.

Buffalo

  • 5-5 sophomore guard Dayaisha Fai. (24.1 points, second in MAC and sixth in Division I. Second in assists at 5.2. Third in steals at 2.8. Fourth in 3-pointers per game at 2.5. Just named to all-MAC first team.
  • 5- freshman guard Cheyenne McEvans (11.3 points per game, 6.1 rebounds, 2.5 assists). Just named to the MAC all-freshman team.
  • 6-3 sophomore center Elea Gaba (7.4 points, 4.1 rebounds).

We will have fans in the stands

Quarterfinal attendance is restricted to a limited number of fans invited by players and coaches.

But you can buy tickets for Friday’s semifinals and Saturday’s finals.

Only about 6,000 of the 19,000 seats at Rocket Mortgage Arena will be available because of COVID restrictions.

MAC Tournament Central

You can find ticket information, the tournament bracket, links to ESPN+ for all games, statistics, rosters and more on the MAC tournament website.

Following the game from home

Video stream on ESPN+ starts at about 1:30 p.m. (or 30 minutes after preview game ends). Service costs $5.99 a month and includes all women’s tournament games except finals, which are on the CBS Sports Network. It also includes men’s quarterfinals, other mid-major tournaments and many spring sports.

Online radio starts at about 1:15 p.m. on the Kent State Radio Network. David Wilson is the announcer.

Live statistics will be on the MAC website during the game.

Links

Preview from Kent State website, including links t roster, statistics, schedule and more.

Detailed media game notes from Kent State.

Preview from Buffalo website, with links.

Media notes from Buffalo.

MAC statistics.

Young’s 15 rebounds, Blackford’s 21 points lead KSU past Akron and into MAC quarterfinals to play Buffalo

For the fourth straight season, Kent State will play Buffalo in the MAC Tournament quarterfinals.

The Flashes beat Akron 64-58 Saturday to finish the regular season in fifth place in the MAC. They were 10-6 in the MAC season, 11-8 overall.

Buffalo beat first-place Bowling Green 69-68 in overtime Saturday at BG to claim fourth place. The Bulls ended 11-6 in the conference, 14-8 overall.

Kent State beat Buffalo 72-66 last season in the final game before COVID-19 canceled the tournament. The Bulls won the two previous years and went on to win the tournament and advance to the NCAA tournament.

The Flashes beat Buffalo 65-62 in Kent two weeks ago in the only meeting between the two teams in the regular season.

Young, Blackford and Shumate lead the way

Sophomore forward Nila Blackford played 21 minutes, her fewest this season, and still scored 21 points.

Junior guard Hannah Young played 32 minutes, the most of her career, and had 15 rebounds. That tied Blackford for the most rebounds by a KSU player this season.

Sophomore guard Katie Shumate played 37 minutes after sitting out Wednesday loss to Bowling Green to rest aching legs. She scored 15 points.

With starter Clare Kelly on the bench with a foot injury for the second game in a row, Young starting her second game of the season.

She led a 48-24 dominance for Kent State on the boards with seven offensive and eight defensive rebounds.

“If I try to rebound, it all comes together,” Young said after the game. “I feel like that’s my role on this team.”

In Saturday’s game, Young said, “When I saw the ball, I just went to grab it. A lot of is is just effort based, but it is a lot of watching the ball and anticipating where it’s going to bounce off.”

Coach Todd Starkey said Young’s rebounding was “huge in a tight game like this.”

“Hannah had learned what her niche is,” he said. “This year she’s had great rebounding numbers from the guard position. She’s just aggressive. In rebound, you have to treat every shot like it’s a miss. She certain does.

“We’re really happy for her. She’s a hard worker and a great teammate.”

Kent State’s 24-rebound advantage was its biggest of the season. The Flashes had 22 offensive rebounds, also a season high, and 21 second-chance points. Buffalo had eight.

Young also had five points, an assist, a steal and a block. She took a charge that fouled out Jordyn Dawson, Akron’s leading scorer and rebounder, in the fourth quarter.

Blackford’s efficient game

Blackford picked up her third foul early in the second quarter played only five minutes in the first half, then sat out the beginning of the third quarter. But when she got back on the court, she was — in Young’s words — “a beast.”

She scored 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting in the fourth quarter, including a basket off of an offensive rebound with 1:47 to go to give KSU a somewhat comfortable 60-55 lead. In the game, Blackford made 8-of-10 shots and 5-of-6 foul shots. Blackford had been struggling at the line and missed seven free throws in KSU’s three-point loss at Miami last week.

‘It was good for her to see the ball go through the basket, especially from the free throw line,” Starkey said. “She’s a good free-throw shooter; it’s just that she’s been in her head a little bit.

“She did a really good job defensively without fouling and did a really good job of finishing.” 

Shumate comes back with a purpose

Shumate had knee surgery last summer and at one point in the preseason, it wasn’t clear whether she would be able to play at all this season.

But she played every game until she sat out at Bowling Green and averaged more than 30.7 minutes a game in MAC play.

“She looked a lot fresher out there than she has the last couple of weeks,” Starkey said. “And it was like a fire was burning in her when she was watching that Bowling Green game when she could have helped out.

“But she agreed that she needed the rest. It was important to give her a kind of pseudo bye week so she could be at her best.”

Shumate made her first three shots as the Flashes raced to an 18-2 lead late in the first quarter.

“When she plays like that consistently, she’s an all-conference player,” Starkey said.

Shumate also was the primary defender on Jordyn Dawson, Akron’s leader in scoring, rebounding, assists and steals.

Dawson got into foul trouble early and finished with eight points on 2-of-12 shooting, two rebounds, on assist, one steal and three turnovers.

“Katie defended her really, really well,” Starkey said. “When she sits down and guard with her length and her ability to move, she’s one of the better perimeter defenders in the league.”

Shumate led Kent State in assists with three and steals with two. She also had six rebounds.

The big lead vanishes

After Blackford picked up her second and third fouls within 16 seconds in the second quarter, Buffalo outscored KSU 13-2 for the rest of the half and cut the Flashes’ lead to 29-25.

“We were playing with great flow and tempo, and that kind of slowed some things down,” Starkey said. “They also did a good job of changing the way they guarded Katie.”

Shumate had 11 points through the middle of the second quarter and only four after that.

A point for the Wagon Wheel Challenge

The win earns Kent State a point in the Crystal Clinic Wagon Wheel Challenge between Kent and Akron. Each team gets a point when it beats the other in any sport.

Since KSU and then Zips met just once in women’s basketball this season, the Flashes get the full point. (It’s usually a half point per game in a two-game series.)

Best I can tell, this year’s challenge is tied at 3-3. Kent State has won points in football, volleyball and women’s basketball. Akron beat the Flashes in cross country, men’s indoor track and women’s indoor track.

The challenge is independent of the physical Wagon Wheel, which goes to the winner of the Kent State-Akron football game.

Box score

Video highlights

Full video replay of game on ESPN3

Notes

  • Freshman Lexi Jackson, who has been KSU’s top post reserve over the last seven games, didn’t play because of a high ankle sprain suffered in practice Friday. Kelly sat out her second-straight game with an injured foot. Starkey said he was hopeful both could play on Wednesday.
  • The Flashes had fans in the stands for the first time this season. Attendance was announced at 134, all of whom sat in the upper bleachers of the M.A.C. Center. A change in the university’s COVID-19 policy allowed players and coaches to invite two people teach.
  • Going back to last season, Kent State held Akron without a field goal for 18 minutes and 39 seconds. In last year’s game, won by the Flashes 68-50, Akron didn’t make a basket for the last 9:31 of the fourth quarter. Saturday Akron didn’t make a field goal until 52 seconds were left in the first quarter. (That’s courtesy of Jay Fiorello, the assistant athletic communications director who handles women’s basketball.)
  • It was the last home game for seniors Monique Smith and Margaux Eibel, who rang the Victory Bell for the team afterwards. Smith played a season-high 15 minutes, had two points, five rebounds, an assist and two steals.

Final 2020-21 MAC Standings

MAC
W-L
Pct.MAC
Home 
MAC
Away 
All 
games
BGSU14-4.7788-26-218-5
CMU13-6.6847-36-315-8
Ohio11-6.6475-47-313-7
Buffalo11-6.6476-25-414-8
Kent St10-6.6256-14-511-8
Ball St12-8.6004-58-114-10
NIU10-8.5565-35-512-11
EMU7-7.5003-44-310-9
Toledo8-12.4005-63-612-12
WMU5-14.2634-51-96-15
Akron4-14.2222-62-87-14
Miami3-17.1502-91-84-20

Saturday’s MAC results

BUFFALO ran to a 32-16 halftime lead at first-place Bowling Green, then saw a 25-11 BG fourth quarter tie the game at the end of regulation. In the overtime, Buffalo’s Dyaisha Fair hit a layup in the last minute to give the Bulls a 69-68 overtime win.

“To go on the road and beat a really good team gives us great energy leading into the MAC Tournament next week,” Buffalo senior center Summer Hemphill said on the UB website.

CENTRAL MICHIGAN stormed from behind in the fourth quarter to beat Northern Illinois 74-68.

NIU had beaten Central 104-73 in DeKalb in January, and took a 12-point lead in the first quarter Saturday. But the Chippewas outscore Northern 25-13 in the fourth quarter.

OHIO’s Cece Hooks had the second triple-double in school history to lead the Bobcats past Miami 84-70. Hooks had 31 points, 11 assists and 10 steals.

Ohio shot a season-high 57.6% from the field. The other Ohio triple-double came earlier this season by redshirt junior Erica Johnson, who has been battling an injury and scored 11 points off the bench Saturday.

BALL STATE outscored Western Michigan 47-33 in the second half to win 76-69.

Junior forward Thelma Dis Agustsdottir scored 19 points for BSU. Oshlynn Brown had 14 points and 17 rebounds for the 3th double-double in her career.

TOLEDO was the only non-tournament team to win Saturday, knocking off Eastern Michigan 59-55 in Toledo. Quinesha Lockett had 22 for the Rockets, her 13th 20-point game of the season.

11th-place Akron visits Kent Saturday in last game of regular season

Kent State ends its regular season with a 2 p.m. Saturday game against Akron at the M.A.C. Center.

There actually may be a few fans at the game. The university changed its policy this week to allow players and coaches to give tickets to two family members or friends. The rest of us will have to watch on ESPN3 or listen online on the Kent State Radio network.

Kent State goes into the game in fifth place in the Mid-American Conference with a 9-6 record. But the Flashes could finish anywhere between third and eighth depending on results of Saturday games.

If the Flashes beat Akron, they can finish no worse than fifth. They could move into fourth if Buffalo loses at first-place Bowling Green and into third if Ohio loses at home to last-place Miami.

No matter what, Kent has qualified for the MAC Tournament quarterfinals at Rocket Mortage Arena in Cleveland on Wednesday.

Akron is in 11th place at 4-13 but is coming off a 71-67 win over Ohio in Akron on Wednesday. It was OU’s first game back after three cancellations because of COVID-19 problems on the team.

When Kent State lost 82-65 at Bowling Green Wednesday, coach Todd Starkey rested starting guards Katie Shumate and Clare Kelly. Shumate hadn’t been 100% all season after having knee surgery last summer. Kelly had an injured foot.

Shumate is KSU’s second-leading scorer at 12.1 points a game; Kelly is fourth on the team at 9.4 points. Both are good defensive players.

After Wednesday’s game, Starkey didn’t know the status of either for the Akron game.

“Both will be game time decisions,” he said. He said the important thing is to have them both ready for the tournament.

Akron started the season 3-0 but lost its first three MAC games and has never been far from the bottom of the league.

Jordan Dawson, 5-11 senior, leads the Zips in scoring (16.3 points per game), rebounding (7.2), assists (4.0) and steals (2.2). Sophomore forward Lonasia Brewer averages 10.8 points.

The Zips rank ninth in the MAC in scoring at 68 points a game and 10th in scoring defense at 73.7. Kent State is eighth in scoring (68.8) and sixth in defense (72.2).

MAC Standings

Through games of Wednesday, March 3

MAC
W-L
Pct.MAC
Home 
MAC
Away 
All 
games
BGSU14-3.8248-16-218-4
CMU12-6.6676-36-314-8
Ohio10-6.6254-47-312-7
Buffalo10-6.6256-24-413-8
Kent St9-6.6005-14-510-8
NIU10-7.5885-35-412-10
Ball St11-8.5793-58-113-10
EMU7-6.5383-44-210-8
Toledo7-12.3684-63-611-12
WMU5-13.2784-51-86-14
Akron4-13.2352-62-77-13
Miami3-16.1582-91-74-19

Saturday’s MAC games

  • Akron at Kent State.
  • Buffalo at Bowling Green.
  • Northern Illinois at Central Michigan.
  • Western Michigan at Ball State.
  • Miami at Ohio.
  • Eastern Michigan at Toledo.

With 2 starters resting from injuries, Flashes fall at Bowling Green 82-65

Freshman Casey Santoro, starting her second game of the season, scored a career-high 16 points. She also had five assists and five rebounds. (File photo by Hayley Steffy of KSU Athletic Communications.)

Sometimes, coach Todd Starkey decided, a healthy and rested team in next week’s MAC Tournament is more important than a game in the last week of the season.

With starting guards Katie Shumate and Clare Kelly sitting on the bench, Kent State lost at first-place Bowling Green 82-65.

Kelly was resting an injured foot; Shumate was resting a surgically repaired knee she’s been playing on all season. Both should be ready for the tournament quarterfinals next Wednesday. It’s unclear whether they’ll play in the last game of the regular season Saturday against Akron in Kent.

The Flashes had already qualified for the quarterfinals at Rocket Mortgage Arena in Cleveland. The league is so balanced — the second-through-eighth place teams have all lost at least six games — that first-round seeding isn’t that significant.

Kent State could finish anywhere between third and eighth. (MAC wrap-up and standings are at end of this post.)

“I’m not saying this was a meaningless game,” Starkey said in an interview from the team bus on the way home. “But there’s a risk-reward factor. You have to balance whether it is more important to try and go all out at BG at the expense of wearing your players down even more.”

Kent State played 11 games in February, more than any other MAC team. Twice it played three games in a week. KSU was the only team in the league not to have a scheduled day off as it tried to make up for seven games postponed in January because of COVID-19.

Bowling Green, on the other hand, hasn’t had any COVID problems on its team. It has played only three games total in the last three weeks because of a bye and COVID problems on other teams.

In the first quarter, Bowling Green made 67% of its shots and 56% of its 3-pointers. The Falcons kept making baskets all night. They finished 13-of-23 from 3-point distance for 56.5%, more than 21 points above their season average.

“We’ve got our two best perimeter defenders out,” Starkey said, “and BG is a really perimeter-oriented team. And they shot the lights out. Even the ones that were contested were going in.”

Kent State kept it to about a 10- or 12-point game until about five minutes to go, but the Flashes never had a scoring run in them.

Freshman Casey Santoro scored a career-high 16 points in her second start of the season. She also had five assists, five rebounds and a steal.

Fellow freshman Lexi Jackson, a 6-4 center, also had her career high in scoring with 10 points, including two 3-point baskets.

“The freshmen did some nice things,” Starkey said, “and we’re looking for them to continue to develop. This has been a really tough year for freshmen. They haven’t been able to get nearly as much social interaction as freshmen usually do. So they’ve been trying to figure things out through all this. I’m proud of both of them, fighting through that mental grind.”

Junior Hannah Young got her first start of the year and carried the Flashes through the first half, scoring all 10 of her points and getting six of her seven rebounds. She was in and out of the second half as she fought severe leg cramping.

Nila Blackford, Kent State’s leading scorer and rebounder, had only four points. She had never scored fewer than nine this season.

Blackford had scored 23 points when BG beat Kent 80-79 in overtime in February. This time the Falcons concentrated on her.

“Every time she touched the ball, she had two or three players on her,” Starkey said. “She would admit she didn’t play her best game, but she played her least minutes, too.

“We were resting her by design. She’s been tired, and her legs have been bothering her, too. We were just trying to look at the big picture.”

Blackford still led Kent State with seven rebounds.

Lindsey Thall had 12 points. She had two 3-point baskets, four rebounds, a steal and a blocked shot.

Help from the bench

Besides Young, Santoro and Jackson, who are normally the first players off the bench, Kent State got a lot of minutes from its reserves.

Junior wing Annie Pavlansky played 19 minutes, second-most in her career, and had six points. She hit two 3-point baskets in three attempts and had four rebounds, an assist and a steal.

Junior Linsey Marchese, a 6-4 transfer from Indiana, played 12 minutes. That was her most action in two months She had two rebounds and an assist.

Margeaux Eibel, a former walk-on who earned a scholarship, played five minutes and had an offensive rebound and two steals.

Box score

Notes

  • Four Bowling Green players scored in double figures, led by sophomore guard Elissa Brett with 19. Angela Perry and Clare Glowniak, both post players who come off the bench, combined for 23 points on 9-of-16 shooting.
  • Kent State made 22-of-60 shots for 36.75%, about 3 points below its average. Its 10-for-28 (35.7%) on 3-pointers was right at its average.
  • The Flashes outrebounded BG 39-28. They had 14 offensive rebounds and scored 12 second-chance points. BG had only two offensive rebounds.
  • But BG outscored KSU 32-20 in the paint. Bowling Green bench players outscored Kent’s reserves 43-16.
  • Turnovers were almost even. BG scored 14 points off of 14 Kent turnovers. The Flashes scored 12 off if 13 Bowling Green turnovers.
  • Bowling Green was picked to finished 11th by MAC coaches in their preseason poll. Instead, the Falcons won their first title in seven years and the 15th in school history. That’s the most of any MAC school.
  • Even though they had clinched the MAC title with a win at Akron Saturday, Falcon players cut down the nets after the game in front of family members and few friends allowed in the game.

The MAC race

The loss drops Kent State (9-6 and 10-8 overall) into fifth place in the conference.

But depending on Saturday’s results, they still could finish as high as third or as low as eighth.

Central Michigan moved into second place with an 87-81 double-overtime win at seventh-place Ball State. CMU started the game with eight players because of COVID protocols. It ended with only the five on the floor. The other three players had fouled out. 

Third-place Ohio lost 71-67 at 11th-place Akron in the Bobcats’ first game after three COVID cancellations. Kent State plays Akron at home Saturday.

Buffalo moved past KSU into fourth place with a 75-70 home win over Miami.

Northern Illinois moved past Eastern Michigan into seventh with a 75-66 win over the Eagles in DeKalb.

Ninth-place Toledo won 82-73 at 10th-place Western Michigan.

MAC Standings

Through games of Wednesday, March 3

MAC
W-L
Pct.MAC
Home 
MAC
Away 
All 
games
BGSU14-3.8248-16-218-4
CMU12-6.6676-36-314-8
Ohio10-6.6254-47-312-7
Buffalo10-6.6256-24-413-8
Kent St9-6.6005-14-510-8
NIU10-7.5885-35-412-10
Ball St11-8.5793-58-113-10
EMU7-6.5383-44-210-8
Toledo7-12.3684-63-611-12
WMU5-13.2784-51-86-14
Akron4-13.2352-62-77-13
Miami3-16.1582-91-74-19

Flashes head to 1st-place Bowling Green, hoping to avenge overtime loss in February

Clare Kelly (20) passes to Nila Blackford. Kelly is 12th in MAC in 3-point percentage at 37.4%. Blackford is sixth in overall field-goal percentage at 47.9%. (File photo by Hayley Steffy of KSU Athletic Communications.)

Three weeks ago, Kent State lost to Bowling Green 80-79 in a meeting between what was then the top two teams in the Mid-American Conference standings.

The two teams meet again at BG on Wednesday in the first game of the last week of the regular season. The game is on ESPN+. Online radio is on the Kent State Radio network.

Since then, BG (13-3 MAC, 17-4 overall) has won two games, had two games canceled because of COVID-19 on the other teams, and clinched the league title.

After the BG game, Kent State lost its next two games, then won three in a row, then lost Saturday at the buzzer to last-place Bowling Green.

The Flashes (9-5, 10-8 overall) are in fourth place. But the MAC race is so close that they could finish anywhere between second and eighth, depending on the results of the league’s last two games.

On Saturday, 11th-place Akron visits Kent State in the final game of the season. The MAC Tournament starts next Wednesday at Rocket Mortage Arena in Cleveland. Because of COVID, no fans will be allowed for Wednesday’s quarterfinals, but limited attendance will be allowed for Friday’s semifinals and Saturday’s finals.

Bowling Green is the second-best defensive team in the conference, allowing just 63 points a game. But the 79 points KSU scored in February equaled the most any team has scored against the Falcons this season. The 72 points Kent scored in regulation in that game was the fourth-high any team has scored against BG.

The Falcons won the game at Kent on a layup by Angela Perry with two seconds to go. BG’s Nyla Hampton blocked a shot attempt by Kent State’s Nila Blackford at the buzzer that could have won the game for the Flashes.

BG guard Lexi Fleming is the overwhelming favorite for MAC freshman of the year. She averages 17.5 points, 4.8 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 2.6 steals per game. Guards Kadie Hempfling (12.5 points per game, 6.2 rebounds) and Elissa Brett (10.7 points, 6.5 rebounds) are the Falcons’ top rebounders.

Bowling Green leads the MAC in turnover margin (plus-6.24) and steals per game (11.05).

Kent State ranks 10th in the league is turnover margin (minus-3.18) and last in steals (5.71). But in the first meeting between the teams, the Flashes committed 12 turnovers, BG 13.

Blackford, a 6-2 sophomore forward from Louisville, leads KSU in scoring (16.0 points per game) and rebounding (10.7) She is third in the conference in rebounding and has 11 double-doubles in 14 MAC games.

Sophomore guard Katie Shumate averages 12.3 points a game, and junior forward Lindsey Thall averages 11.2. Thall leads the MAC in blocked shots (1.6 per game) for the third year in a row.

MAC Standings

Through games of Saturday, Feb. 27

MAC
W-L
Pct.MAC
Home 
MAC
Away 
All 
games
BGSU12-3.8007-15-216-4
Ohio10-5.6675-25-312-6
CMU11-6.6474-47-213-8
Kent St9-5.6435-14-410-7
Ball St11-7.6112-69-113-9
Buffalo9-6.6004-25-412-8
EMU7-5.5832-45-110-7
NIU9-7.5635-34-411-10
Toledo6-12.3333-63-610-12
WMU5-12.2944-41-86-13
Akron3-13.1881-62-76-13
Miami3-15.1672-81-74-18

Wednesday MAC games

  • Ohio at Akron.
  • Toledo at Western Michigan.
  • Eastern Michigan at Northern Illinois.
  • Central Michigan at Ball State.
  • Miami at Buffalo.
  • Kent State at Bowling Green.