Month: January 2022

Flashes lose MAC game in last minute for 5th time, falling to Northern Illinois 61-55

Nila Blackford had 24 points and 15 rebounds to lead KSU against Northern Illinois. (File photo by David Dermer for KSU athletics.)

It’s been like watching a horror movie on repeat for the Kent State women’s basketball team.

This time the Flashes lost to Northern Illinois 61-55 on Wednesday to fall to 2-6 in the Mid-American Conference. KSU shot terribly from 3-point distance, still managed to stay in the game, but lost in the last minute.

That’s happened in five of the team’s six conference losses. In the sixth, Kent led early in the fourth quarter but fell 69-60.

The Flashes are in 10th place in the MAC and 10-7 overall. They have lost two straight games. Northern Illinois is eighth at 4-4 and is 7-9 overall. The Huskies have won three games in a row.

“A tough loss,” coach Todd Starkey said after the game. “We just couldn’t buy a shot. Six for 34 on 3s, and I thought probably 30 of the 3s were wide open.”

The coach said there really isn’t a pattern to the last-minute losses other than missing shots.

“There were a few times we gave up a lead and lost,” Starkey said. ” Some we were trying to come back. I don’t think there’s a common thread other than the fact that we’re just not shooting the 3 in conference play.”

28 missed 3-pointers

For three quarters, Kent State took more 3-point shots than 2-point attempts. It kept missing. The Flashes were 4-of-12 from distance in the first quarter, 1-of-9 in the second, and 0-for-5 in the third. Bridget Dunn, who has made and attempted more 3-pointers than anyone on the team, missed 8-of-10. Casey Santoro, Hannah Young and Katie Shumate — all of whom have led the MAC in 3-point percentage at one time this season, combined to go 1-of-10.

Lindsey Thall made three of her six 3-point shots, but she was in foul trouble most of the game and played just 22 minutes.

In non-conference play, Kent State made 42% of its 3-point attempts. That ranked third in the country. Since then, the team has shot 28.4% from distance, second to last in the MAC.

“Six-for-34,” Starkey repeated. “If you go 10-for-34, even 9-for-34 — which still isn’t great — you win the game. We got so many great looks. You think at some point, you’re going to make a few. And they just didn’t go down.”

Blackford’s terrific 4th quarter

When 3-pointers weren’t falling, the Flashes went inside to forward Nila Blackford in the fourth quarter. It almost pulled out the game.

Blackford made 7-of-8 shots — all under the basket. After the Flashes had trailed by 10 points, Blackford finished a 10-0 KSU run with a basket and free throw to tie the game at 53-53 with 1:08 to go. She made another layup about 40 seconds later to tie the score again at 55.

In the most dominating performance by a Kent State player this season, Blackford finished with 24 points and 15 rebounds.

Blackford led KSU in scoring and rebounding last season but has struggled on offense most of this year. She averaged 9.0 points a game going into Wednesday, almost 6.5 points fewer than she did last season. She was making just 38.8% of her shots, down 9 percentage points.

Against NIU, she made 10-of-14 field-goal attempts. She now is close to averaging a double-double, as she did last season, at 9.6 points and 10.4 rebounds per game.

“She’s just got back to doing what she’s capable of,” Starkey said. “I liked her aggressiveness down low. We’re trying to make sure we’re getting her good touches in good spots. And we got good scores from there, but the 3s it opened up just didn’t go down.”

Blackford was going against NIU’s A’jah Davis, who herself averages a double-double and led the MAC and was fourth in the nation in rebounding at 11.9 per game before Wednesday. Blackford drew four fouls against Davis and keep her out of the game for 10 minutes, and she scored when Davis had to back off on defense when she was on the court. Davis finished with seven rebounds.

The last 32 seconds

As Blackford broke free to tie the game at 55, NIU’s Erin Hodges fell to the floor with blood coming from a cut to her head.

Officials looked at a replay for long minutes. In the end, they counted Blackford’s basket but charged her with what Starkey called an “excessive contact” foul. They gave Northern two foul shots, taken by Janae Poisson because Hodges was on the bench, then possession of the ball. Poisson split the foul shots, then was fouled herself. She made both of those to put NIU ahead 58-55.

Kent State called timeout and advanced the ball to the front court.

“We drew up a play, and they executed great,” Starkey said. “We had an option for a 2-point shot and a 3-point shot. Clare Kelly breaks wide open for 3 — another great look — and we just couldn’t make it.”

NIU hit three free throws in the last 15 seconds to finish the game.

A potentially costly injury for NIU

Chelby Koker, Northern’s point guard and the sixth-leading scorer in the MAC, went to the court with an apparently non-contact injury with 8:19 to go. She had to be helped to the locker room by two teammates.

She returned to the bench late in the quarter and sat with an ice pack on her knee. After the game, Starkey sought her out and patted her on the shoulder. Each of her teammates gave her a hug as she sat fighting back tears.

Better injury news for Kent State

Senior guard Hannah Young, who at out the second half of KSU’s Jan. 14 game with Buffalo with an ice pack on her ankle, started and played 27 minutes. She had two points, four rebounds, three assists and a steal. When she was on the court, the Flashes outscored NIU by 14 points.

Box score

The numbers

  • Kent State outrebounded NIU 37-36, the 16th time in 17 games the Flashes have outrebounded their opponent. The other game was a 43-43 tie on the boards.
  • Northern Illinois made 40% of its shots (22-of-55) and 44% of its 3-pointers (8-of-18).
  • NIU’s 61 points were nine below its average. In MAC games, KS allows only 60.4 points a game, third best in the league. But the Flashes have scored fewer than 60 against league competition three times and fewer than 65 in all but one MAC game. They averaged 78 before Christmas.
  • The Huskies scored 10 points off of 12 KSU turnovers. Kent scored eight off of 10 NIU turnovers.

Next: Another week off, then Central Michigan

The Flashes, which had nine days off before the Northern Illinois game, will have another seven games before they play again. They host 11th-place Central Michigan at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the M.A.C. Center.

Central won its second MAC game of the season Wedneday, beating Miami (2-5 MAC, 6-9 overall) 70-59.

Central has won or shared the last five regular-season MAC championships. But the Chippewas are 2-7 in the league and 4-14 overall. They lost three key starters, including MAC player-of-the-year Micaela Kelly, to graduation.

Games postponed by COVID-19 have scrambled the MAC schedule. Only Kent State, Central Michigan and Toledo played the number of games they were scheduled to in the first four weeks of the season. Even then, KSU played four teams not on its original schedule as the league shuffled opponents to play as many games as possible.

Other MAC scores

The top three teams in the standings— Toledo, Buffalo and Western Michigan — all lost.

  • Ohio (5-2 MAC, 11-5 overall) 79, Toledo (8-1, 14-4) 72 at Toledo. Ohio, which beat second-place Buffalo on Wednesday, outscored Toledo 15-2 over the last five minutes. Ohio has won three games in a row.
  • Ball State (5-4, 12-7) 72, Buffalo (5-3, 11-7) 70 at Buffalo. Buffalo missed three layups in the last 12 seconds and has lost three in a row.
  • Bowling Green (4-3, 9-7) 67, Western Michigan (4-2, 10-5) 51 at Bowling Green. BG has won two in a rwo.
  • Akron (5-3, 8-6) 68, Eastern Michigan (1-7, 4-11) 64 at Akron. Eastern has lost six straight and fallen into last place.

MAC standings

The COVID reschedule: Flashes, who haven’t played in 9 days, travel to Northern Illinois, which has played 3 times

Sophomore guard Casey Santoro has scored in double figures in 11 of Kent State’s 16 games. (File photo by David Dermer from KSU website.)

After a nine-day layoff because of COVID-19 rescheduling, the Kent State women return to the court Wednesday at Northern Illinois.

The game has an unusual 11 a.m. (noon Kent time) start and will be broadcast on ESPN+ and the Golden Flashes Radio Network. You can see statistics during the game on the NIU website.

Kent State is 2-5 in the Mid-American Conference, with all losses coming by less than 10 points and three of them coming by fewer than five points. The Flashes are 10-6 overall.

NIU is 3-4 in the MAC and 4-9 overall. The Huskies, trying to make up for early season postponements, have played three games since KSU lost at Buffalo 65-62 on Jan. 11. NIU’s three games came in five days as it lost at Miami last Wednesday, beat Eastern Michigan on the road Saturday and beat Akron at home Monday.

Kent State, Central Michigan and Toledo are the only three teams in the league who played a full schedule for the first four weeks of the season. Other teams had at least one — and as many as four — games postponed by COVID.

The Flashes ended up with different opponents than were on their original schedule four times. The Mid-American Conference rearranged games — sometimes on less than 48 hours notice — to keep teams that were healthy playing.

Northern Illinois guard Chelby Koker, a 5-6 junior, is averaging 18.1 points a game (sixth in the MAC), leads the league (and is eighth in the country) in free-throw percentage at .921 and is third in the MAC in assists per game (4.5). She scored her 1,000th point in Saturday’s win over Akron.

NIU junior forward A’Jah Davis leads the MAC in rebounding at 11.9 a game and in field-goal percentage at .516. She averages 15.6 points a game. Redshirt senior guard Janae Poisson makes 3.2 three-point baskets per game, the most in the conference.

Both Northern and Kent State average about 70 points a game for the season. NIU averages about the same in MAC play, but Kent State averages only 62.1 in conference games only. The Huskies give up an average of 71.4 points in league games; Kent allows 61.4.

The teams rank first and second in the league in rebounding margin; KSU is first in all games, NIU first in MAC games only. Kent State has outrebounded every team it has played this season except for Ohio, which it tied.

KSU junior forward Nila Blackford averages 9.3 rebounds per game, which ranks third in the MAC.

In MAC play, Kent State’s leading scorer is freshman forward Bridget Dunn, who averages 13.6 points per game. In all games, the team’s leading scorer is senior Lindsey Thall at 12.8 points per game. Dunn started four games in place of Thall when the senior was recovering from COVID earlier this month.

Dunn, Thall, sophomore guard Casey Santoro and junior guard Katie Shumate all average in double figures in MAC play.

MAC standings

MAC
W-L
GBPct.HomeAwayStreakOverall
W-L
Pct.RPI
Toledo8-01.0004-04-0W814-3.82457
WMU4-12.5.8001-03-1W210-4.714134
Buffalo5-22.5.7143-02-2L211-6.64766
Ohio4-23.6673-11-1W210-5.66799
Akron4-33.5.5712-02-3L17-6.571171
BG3-34.5002-11-2W18-7.533127
Ball St.4-44.5002-22-2W211-7.611143
NIU3-44.5.4281-22-2W26-9.300212
Miami2-45.3332-30-1L26-9.400180
KSU2-55.5.2861-21-3L110-6.62591
EMU1-66.5.1431-40-2L54-10.286251
CMU1-77.1251-20-5L63-14.176284

The WNET is the NCAA’s statistical ranking system. It emphasizes beating higher ranking teams, rewards teams for winning on the road and takes into account offensive and defensive efficiency. That’s measured as points scored and allowed per possession. It’s one of a several factors used in selecting and seeding teams for the NCAA Tournament.

Notes on the MAC

TOLEDO has beaten MAC opponents by an average of 12.3 points and beat Buffalo, then the league’s only other undefeated team, 75-66 on Saturday.

WESTERN MICHIGAN has lost only at Toledo 76-67 and allows just 56.4 points a game, best in the MAC. But it hasn’t played another team in the top six in the league.

BUFFALO has lost at Ohio 68-66 last night, so it’s 5-2 after a 5-0 start. The Bulls averaged more than 80 points in its MAC wins but scored only 66 in its two losses.

OHIO‘s win over Buffalo was a big one. The Bobcats were the preseason favorite to win the MAC but had lost at home to Northern Illinois and at Miami, both second-division teams. Ohio plays at first-place Toledo on Wedneday.

AKRON lost its opener to Toledo by six points, then won four in a row over second-division teams. The Zips have lost their last two games, both away, to Buffalo and Northern Illinois.

BOWLING GREEN lost by double digits to Buffalo at home and by double digits to Akron and Ohio at home. The Falcons are playing without their best player, guard Lexi Fleming, who suffered an ACL tear the week before the season opened. Fleming was the MAC freshman of the year last season.

BALL STATE has lost its leading scorer, junior guard Anna Clephane, to a knee injury suffered against Kent State. But the Cardinals have won two in a row over Central Michigan and Miami.

NORTHERN ILLINOIS knocked off Ohio at Ohio in the Bobcats’ first game after a three-game pause for COVID and have won its last two games.

MIAMI lost to Buffalo by just five points in its league opener and beat Ohio 63-60. Three of its four MAC losses have been by less than 10 points.

KENT STATE had the MAC’s best non-conference record (8-1) and beat UCLA and Penn State. But the Flashes are scoring an average of 15 fewer points a game in conference play.

EASTERN MICHIGAN has beatenn only last-place Central Michigan and come within five points of only one other team.

CENTRAL MICHIGAN has won or shared the MAC regular-season championship for five years in a row and has had only one losing season in the last 12 years. But the Chippewas have already lost 14 games and are in last place with only a victory over Northern Illinois. None have their losses have been closer than 10 points. CMU lost three key starters from last year, including 2020 player of the year Micaela Kelly, to graduation.

Scoring only 2 points over last 4 minutes, Flashes fall to second-place Buffalo 65-62

Lindsey Thall had 11 points, seven rebounds and four assists in her second game back from COVID-19. She played 35 minutes. (File photo by David Dermer for KSU athletics.)

Kent State has led in the fourth quarter of six of its seven Mid-American Conference games this season and was tied in the seventh.

But the Flashes are only 2-5 in the conference after losing 65-62 at second-place Buffalo Monday night.

KSU led Buffalo by seven points with 4:11 to go but missed its last seven shots and went 2-of-4 free throws in the final four minutes. Buffalo made 4-of-5 field goals in that time and got seven free throws from Dyaisha Fair, the nation’s fourth-leading scorer.

KSU’s record drops to 10-6 and is in eighth place in the MAC. Buffalo is 10-4 and 4-0 in the conference.

Besides the last four minutes, key things to know about the game:

  1. The five MAC teams that have beaten Kent have a combined conference record of 18-4.
  2. Buffalo forced 17 KSU turnovers, including one that led to the Bulls’ go-ahead basket with 1:05 to go.
  3. KSU forward Nila Blackford had 11 points and nine rebounds, but she was in foul trouble much of the game and played only 21 minutes.
  4. Kent State starting guard Hannah Young, who had five points and four rebounds in the first half, injured her ankle in the second quarter and didn’t return.
  5. Bridget Dunn led KSU with 13 points, including three 3-pointers. Casey Santoro and Lindsey Thall joined Blackford with 11 points.

“It’s tough to come up short again,” coach Todd Starkey said. “Buffalo is a really good team, and it’s a tough place to win. But we had the opportunity to win the game. We just have to quit making so many mistakes down the stretch.

“We’ve had a lot of winnable games — all five of our losses have been by an average of about five points. So we have to get that fixed.”

The crazy, often changed MAC schedule

The coach said that four games in eight days — three of them on the road — had taken a toll on the team.

“Our kids are drained,” he said. “They’ve given me everything, and we’re still losing close games. It’s frustrating.

“We need some rest. This team ishas not been healthy since we’ve get gotten back from Christmas break. We’ve had significant changes to our schedule, injuries and sickness.

KSU has gotten new opponents four times so far in the MAC season when their opponents had COVID problems, something Starkey has said is mentally hard on the team.

Senior forward Lindsey Thall, who had started 83-straight games for Kent State, missed four games as she recovered from COVID. Starting guard Katie Shumate has been playing on an injured leg, and against Buffalo, starter Hannah Young went down with an ankle injury in the second quarter.

The Flashes are scheduled to get the next nine days off. Because of the MAC’s schedule shuffle for COVID, Kent State won’t play until it travels to Northern Illinois for a Jan. 26 game.

That will be a start of a series of games against teams currently in the second division of the league. The five games KSU has lost have been to teams currently in first, second, third, fourth and fifth place in the league. Those teams have an 18-4 record. Kent State’s next five games are against teams currently 4-13 in the MAC.

While Kent State rests, most of the rest of the MAC will be playing a lot of games to make up for postponements. Every other team in the league but Toledo and Central Michigan will play five games in the next 11 days. (Central, Toledo and KSU are the only teams to have played a full six-game schedule so far.) Buffalo, Miami and Ohio will have played six games in 13 days by Jan. 29.

Starkey said the team was stuck in Buffalo overnight because of the 20 inches of snow on the ground there.

Close all the way

The teams were within five points of each other almost the entire game. The game was tied nine times and the lead changed hands six.

Buffalo led going into the fourth quarter, but Casey Santoro and Thall started the quarter with 3-point baskets, then the Flashes found success feeding Thall and forward Nila Blackford close to the basket for layups.

A Thall basket with 4:11 to go gave KSU a 60-53 lead, but that was pretty much the end of the Flashes’ scoring.

Both of the forwards missed close-in shots in subsequent possessions.

“We ran good stuff,” Starkey said. “We got good looks low. We just needed one or two more of those to go in.” 

Foul shots by Fair made it 61-60 Kent with 1:05 to go. Buffalo pressed applied a full-court press, and forward Summer Hemphill forced the inbounds pass to go wide and out of bounds. Seven second later, Hemphill scored on a jump shot in the foul lane to give Buffalo the lead.

“I probably should have called time out” when KSU looked in trouble on the inbounds pass, Starkey said. And on Hemphill’s go-ahead basket, “They ran an action that we knew about, and we didn’t guard it.”

The Flashes missed good looks on 3-pointers on their next two possessions, and Fair made three free throws in the last minute to end the scoring.

How the starting lineup played

BLACKFORD had 11 points and nine rebounds, but foul trouble limited her to just 21 minutes. She also had an assist and a steal and blocked a shot.

THALL, in her second game back from COVID, had 11 points, seven rebounds, four assists and a steal in 35 minutes.

SANTORO had 11 points, including three 3-point baskets. For the first time this season, she had no assists. She also had no turnovers.

BRIDGET DUNN led KSU in scoring for the third-straight game with 13 points, including three 3-pointers

KATIE SHUMATE had eight points and three assists.

HANNAH YOUNG was among KSU’s leaders with five points and four rebounds when she went to the ground fighting for a rebound. After lying on the floor, she walked gingerly to the bench and spent the rest of the game with an ice pack on her ankle. “She’s hurting,” Starkey said, but he didn’t have a further update on her condition.

Young has started every game this season and is KSU’s third-leading rebounder. She also averages 7.6 points per game. Junior Clare Kelly, senior Mariah Modkins and freshman Jenna Batsch filled in at her guard spot for the rest of the game.

Running the numbers

  • Despite trying to attack Buffalo’s defense inside, the Flashes drew only 11 fouls and made 8-of-12 free throws. “There was a lot of contact down there,” Starkey said. “We didn’t get a single call in the fourth quarter.” 
  • Buffalo scored 14 points off Kent turnovers; the Flashes had eight off of 11 UB turnovers.
  • Kent State made more than 40% of its shots (23-of-557) for the second game in a row after not reaching that mark for its first five MAC games. Buffalo made 42% of its shots.
  • KSU had eight 3-pointers to Buffalo’s seven. But the Flashes missed 17 shots behind the arc. Buffalo was 7-of-16.
  • Kent State outrebounded Buffalo 39-30, marking the 15th time in 16 games the Flashes have outrebounded their opponent. KSU had 14 offensive rebounds but managed only eight second-chance ponts Buffalo had six second-chance point after eight offensive rebounds.
  • KSU led Buffalo 12-4 in points in the point at halftime. But Buffalo made a concerted effort to go inside to the 6-2 Hemphill in the third quarter, when she had nine points. Fighting foul trouble, Hemphill had zero in the first half. In the end, points in the paint were 26-26.
  • Fair led all scorers with 26 points, two point above than her MAC-leading average of 23.8. But it took her 23 shots to reach that total, and Kent’s defense helped force her to miss 16. Fair also had seven rebounds and five assists.

Monday’s other MAC game

Miami (1-2 MAC, 5-7 overall) upset preseason-favorite Ohio (2-2, 8-5) in Miami 63-60. Ohio was 1-for-17 from 3-point distance. Sophomore Katie Davidson had 17 points for Miami, 11 above her average.

Box score

Flashes head to Buffalo, where 2nd-place Bulls are coming off 3 COVID postponements

After missing four games because of COVID-19, senior forward Lindsey Thall returned to the lineup Saturday and scored 12 points against Eastern Michigan. (File photo by David Dermer from KSU website.)(

Things to know about Kent State’s Monday matchup with Buffalo:

  1. The game is rescheduled from a Jan. 9 game postponed by COVID-19 and starts at 5 p.m. in Buffalo. It will be streamed on ESPN3 and the Golden Flashes Radio Network, with live statistics available during the game on the Buffalo website.
  2. Buffalo comes into the game at 9-4 and 3-0 in the Mid-American Conference. Kent State is 10-5 and 2-4 in the MAC.
  3. Buffalo has had three games in a row postponed because of COVID-19 problems on the team. The Bulls haven’t played since Jan. 5 and are likely to be rusty and recovering from illness.
  4. Kent State will be playing its third game in six days. It will be interesting to see the effects of Buffalo’s layoff and Kent’s schedule.
  5. Buffalo ran up big scoring numbers in its three MAC wins — 92-75 over Central Michigan, 88-83 at Miami and 82-66 at Bowling Green.
  6. Until its 83-58 win over Eastern Michigan Saturday, Kent State had struggled to score in league play, averaging fewer than 60 points. But the Flashes have allowed the third fewest points in the MAC.
  7. Kent State’s game against Eastern was reminiscent of its 8-1 non-conference season, which included wins over UCLA and Penn State. Key to Monday’s game is whether the Flashes can maintaian that.
  8. Buffalo has the country’s fourth leading scorer in junior guard Dyaisha Fair, who averages 23.6 points a game. She scored 40 against Bowling Green.
  9. Fifth-year forward Summer Hemphill, who missed the better part of three seasons with a knee injury, is at full strength and is averaging 16.2 points, 8.6 rebounds and 1.5 blocks per game.
  10. Kent State has five players who average at least 9.4 points per game and a sixth who averages 7.8. The Flashes have outrebounded their opponents in every game this season except one, which was a 43-43 tie.
  11. After Monday’s game, Kent State is scheduled to be off for nine days. Buffalo, on the other hand, will play five games in 11 days to make up for its postponements.

KSU breaks loose in 2nd half and whips Eastern Michigan 83-58

Junior forward Nila Blackford had 15 points and 12 rebounds and made 7-of-8 free throws. (Photo by David Dermer for KSU athletics.)

For the first time in 2022, Kent State has played like the team that started the season 8-1.

With good shooting the entire game and great second-half defense, the Flashes overwhelmed Eastern Michigan 83-58 Saturday at the M.A.C. Center.

KSU had gone 1-4 to open the MAC season, never scoring more than 64 points and never making 40% of its shots. Against Eastern Michigan, the Flashes scored its most points against a Division I team this season and shot 51.9% from the field, its highest of the season.

Kent State held EMU to 18 points and 17.8% shooting in the second half while it scored 42 points on 13-of-21 shooting (61.9%).

The Flashes are now 10-5 on the season overall. Their 2-4 MAC record puts them in eighth place in the MAC. Eastern Michigan is 4-7 and 1-3 in the conference.

Besides the shooting and defense, other key points from the game:

  • Four Flashes scored in double figures, led by freshman forward’s Bridget Dunn’s career-high 19. Sophomore guard Casey Santoro had 15 points. Junior forward Nila Blackford also had 15, along with 12 rebounds.
  • Senior forward Lindsey Thall returned to the lineup after missing four games because of COVID-19. She had 12 points.
  • The Flashes led 41-40 at halftime, when coach Todd Starkey told them how weak their defense had been. Eastern Michigan made 2-of-13 shots in the third quarter.

“2-of-13,” coach Todd Starkey read aloud as he looked at the box score. “That will win you a lot of basketball games. I’m really proud of our defense in the second half against a good offensive team.

“It’s nice to see the offense flow come back together again. 10-for-22 from the 3-point line is how we were shooting it earlier in the season. I recognized the team that was on the court again in the second half.”

A shutdown second-half defense

Eastern Michigan had taken a 23-19 first-quarter lead and shot 45% in the first half.

That brought a stern lecture from Starkey at halftime.

“I had no idea how we were winning at halftime,” Starkey said. “It felt like we were down by 10 or 12 the whole first half.”

So the coach told them:

“We’re not playing defense at all. We’re not doing a great job of talking. We’re missing assignments. They’re getting straight-line drives to finishes.

“If you guys start playing on the defensive end, we’re going to be able to score the ball. We just have to make sure we’re getting some stops and playing connected defense.”

KSU’s Katie Shumate blocked Eastern Michigan’s first shot of the third quarter, and EMU missed nine of its next 10 shots.

Kent State, meanwhile, made 8-of-13 shots in the quarter, including 5-of-8 three-pointers.

“Getting stops gave us a lot more enthusiasm on the offensive end,” Thall said, “which is why we were able to pull away.”

Buffalo had averaged 73.3 points a game, fourth in the MAC, going into Saturday and was second in the league in field-goal percentage at 44.6%.

Lindsey Thall is back

Still not in full game shape, Thall played only 16 minutes. But she made 5-of-10 shots and 2-of-5 three-pointers and had three rebounds, two assists, and a steal.

“She gives the rest of her teammates confidence when she’s out there,” Starkey said. “She knows where to be and can tell people where to go when we’re setting up the offensive. She knows how to talk defensively and sees their plays coming early.

“I don’t think the only reason we won is because Lindsay miraculously showed back up on the court. But I think her presence has a lot to do with why we play well when she’s in.”

Thall said it had been “honestly, rough sitting out.”

“But I got to see a different perspective watching the games. I think that helped,” she said.

Thall said she felt “fine” and was “super excited to be out on the floor today.”

A 6-2 senior from Strongsville, Thall had started all 83 games of her career before COVID sidelined her. She is KSU’s leading scorer at 13.0 points per game, though Casey Santoro (12.8-point average) and Katie Shumate (12.5) are right behind her.

Saturday’s scorers

Freshman Bridget Dunn, who started when Thall was sick, posted her fourth straight game scoring in double figures. In the three games before that, she had 15, 13 and nine. She is KSU’s leading scorer in conference games at 13.7 points per game.

Saturday’s 19 points came from making 7-of-10 field-goal attempts, 3-of-5 on 3-pointers and 2-of-2 on the foul line. It was four points higher than her previous high, which she had reached three times this season.

“It’s been a great opportunity to be out there as a freshman,” Dunn said. “I’ve been learning from watching Lindsey — like they say, be like a sponge and absorb as much as you can. With her back now, I think me, Lindsey and Nila together are going to be a great trio.”

Starkey said he was looking forward to the three of them playing together.

‘I think the in-game experience for Bridget has been really good for her and her confidence, and she has a better understanding of what we’re doing on both sides of the ball,” the coach said.

Blackford had arguably her best game of the season with 15 points and 12 rebounds. It was her fourth double-double of the season.

She made 4-of-8 field-goal attempts and went 7-of-8 from the foul line, where she had struggled last season and this. The game boosted her free-throw percentage from 47% to 52.5%.

She ranks third in the MAC in rebounding at 9.3 per game (11.7 in league games).

“Nila did a good job of not forcing things, especially in the second half when she was getting double team,” Starkey said. “She did a good job of not turning it over, not panicking, getting the ball back out. 15 points, 12 rebounds — that’s what we come to expect of Nyla, and she did it in a very efficient way today. She really had a great second half defensively as well.”

Casey Santoro had 15 points on 4-of-8 shooting, 3-of-5 on 3-pointers and 4-of-5 on foul shots. She led the Flashes in assists with four.

Clare Kelly just missed double figures with nine points. She led the Flashes with four steals, the most for any Kent State player this season.

Eight KSU players played at least 16 minutes. All of them scored.

Box score

Running the numbers

  • The 25-point win was KSU’s biggest margin of victory since 2017, when the Flashes beat Miami 78-51.
  • Kent State outrebounded EMU 31-30, the 14th time in 15 games this season the Flashes had beaten their opponent on the boards. (The 15th time was a 43-43 tie.)
  • The Flashes outscored Eastern 18-10 off turnovers. The Eagles had 16 turnovers, KSU 15.
  • Eastern had only one assist in the second half and six for the game.
  • Redshirt senior Areanna Combs led EMU in scoring with 13 points, four below her average.

Playing for Pat — and Alice Starkey

The game was part of a “We Back Pat” initiative, named after hall-of-fame coach Pat Summitt of the University of Tennessee. Summitt was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease at age 59 while she was still coaching. She died in 2011. A Foundation named after Summitt supports research, resources for patients and caregivers, and education on Alzheimer’s.

Starkey’s mother, Alice, died on Tuesday after suffering from Alzheimer’s for several years.

In his postgame radio interview, Starkey dedicated the game to his mother, “his biggest fan.”

“It’s been tough,” Starkey said, “I’m grateful for the support from the Kent State family, my extended family and friends. You know, you feel like maybe you’re prepared for it to happen — until it happens, and then it just kind of hits you.”

The “Play for Pat” game was scheduled long before his mother’s final illness.

Next: a Monday game in Buffalo

The Flashes will play at 5 p.m. Monday in Buffalo. The game was postponed by COVID from Jan. 8. It will be KSU’s third game in six days. Buffalo has had its last three games postponed by health problems on the team.

The Bulls are in second place in the MAC with a 3-0 record (9-4 overall)

Other MAC scores from Saturday

  • Akron (4-1 MAC, 7-4 overall) 83, Ball State (2-3, 9-6) 76 at Akron.
  • Ohio (2-1, 8-4) 76, Central Michigan (1-5, 3-12) 65 at Central.
  • Toledo (6-0, 12-3) 73, Northern Illinois 52 at Northern.
  • Miami, Bowling Green, Buffalo and Western Michigan were idle because of COVID.

KSU breaks loose in 2nd half and whips Eastern Michigan 83-58

Junior forward Nila Blackford had 15 points and 12 rebounds and made 7-of-8 free throws. (Photo by David Dermer for KSU athletics.)

For the first time in 2022, Kent State has played like the team that started the season 8-1.

With good shooting the entire game and great second-half defense, the Flashes overwhelmed Eastern Michigan 83-58 Saturday at the M.A.C. Center.

KSU had gone 1-4 to open the MAC season, never scoring more than 64 points and never making 40% of its shots. Against Eastern Michigan, the Flashes scored its most points against a Division I team this season and shot 51.9% from the field, its highest of the season.

Kent State held EMU to 18 points and 17.8% shooting in the second half while it scored 42 points on 13-of-21 shooting (61.9%).

The Flashes are now 10-5 on the season overall. Their 2-4 MAC record puts them in eighth place in the MAC. Eastern Michigan is 4-7 and 1-3 in the conference.

Besides the shooting and defense, other key points from the game:

  • Four Flashes scored in double figures, led by freshman forward’s Bridget Dunn’s career-high 19. Sophomore guard Casey Santoro had 15 points. Junior forward Nila Blackford also had 15, along with 12 rebounds.
  • Senior forward Lindsey Thall returned to the lineup after missing four games because of COVID-19. She had 12 points.
  • The Flashes led 41-40 at halftime, when coach Todd Starkey told them how weak their defense had been. Eastern Michigan made 2-of-13 shots in the third quarter.

“2-of-13,” coach Todd Starkey read aloud as he looked at the box score. “That will win you a lot of basketball games. I’m really proud of our defense in the second half against a good offensive team.

“It’s nice to see the offense flow come back together again. 10-for-22 from the 3-point line is how we were shooting it earlier in the season. I recognized the team that was on the court again in the second half.”

A shutdown second-half defense

Eastern Michigan had taken a 23-19 first-quarter lead and shot 45% in the first half.

That brought a stern lecture from Starkey at halftime.

“I had no idea how we were winning at halftime,” Starkey said. “It felt like we were down by 10 or 12 the whole first half.”

So the coach told them:

“We’re not playing defense at all. We’re not doing a great job of talking. We’re missing assignments. They’re getting straight-line drives to finishes.

“If you guys start playing on the defensive end, we’re going to be able to score the ball. We just have to make sure we’re getting some stops and playing connected defense.”

KSU’s Katie Shumate blocked Eastern Michigan’s first shot of the third quarter, and EMU missed nine of its next 10 shots.

Kent State, meanwhile, made 8-of-13 shots in the quarter, including 5-of-8 three-pointers.

“Getting stops gave us a lot more enthusiasm on the offensive end,” Thall said, “which is why we were able to pull away.”

Buffalo had averaged 73.3 points a game, fourth in the MAC, going into Saturday and was second in the league in field-goal percentage at 44.6%.

Lindsey Thall is back

Still not in full game shape, Thall played only 16 minutes. But she made 5-of-10 shots and 2-of-5 three-pointers and had three rebounds, two assists, and a steal.

“She gives the rest of her teammates confidence when she’s out there,” Starkey said. “She knows where to be and can tell people where to go when we’re setting up the offensive. She knows how to talk defensively and sees their plays coming early.

“I don’t think the only reason we won is because Lindsey miraculously showed back up on the court. But I think her presence has a lot to do with why we play well when she’s in.”

Thall said it had been “honestly, rough sitting out.”

“But I got to see a different perspective watching the games. I think that helped,” she said.

Thall said she felt “fine” and was “super excited to be out on the floor today.”

A 6-2 senior from Strongsville, Thall had started all 83 games of her career before COVID sidelined her. She is KSU’s leading scorer at 13.0 points per game, though Casey Santoro (12.8-point average) and Katie Shumate (12.5) are right behind her.

Saturday’s scorers

Freshman Bridget Dunn, who started when Thall was sick, posted her fourth straight game scoring in double figures. In the three games before that, she had 15, 13 and nine. She is KSU’s leading scorer in conference games at 13.7 points per game.

Saturday’s 19 points came from making 7-of-10 field-goal attempts, 3-of-5 on 3-pointers and 2-of-2 on the foul line. It was four points higher than her previous high, which she had reached three times this season.

“It’s been a great opportunity to be out there as a freshman,” Dunn said. “I’ve been learning from watching Lindsey — like they say, be like a sponge and absorb as much as you can. With her back now, I think me, Lindsey and Nila together are going to be a great trio.”

Starkey said he was looking forward to the three of them playing together.

‘I think the in-game experience for Bridget has been really good for her and her confidence, and she has a better understanding of what we’re doing on both sides of the ball,” the coach said.

Blackford had arguably her best game of the season with 15 points and 12 rebounds. It was her fourth double-double of the season.

She made 4-of-8 field-goal attempts and went 7-of-8 from the foul line, where she had struggled last season and this. The game boosted her free-throw percentage from 47% to 52.5%.

She ranks third in the MAC in rebounding at 9.3 per game (11.7 in league games).

“Nila did a good job of not forcing things, especially in the second half when she was getting double team,” Starkey said. “She did a good job of not turning it over, not panicking, getting the ball back out. 15 points, 12 rebounds — that’s what we come to expect of Nyla, and she did it in a very efficient way today. She really had a great second half defensively as well.”

Casey Santoro had 15 points on 4-of-8 shooting, 3-of-5 on 3-pointers and 4-of-5 on foul shots. She led the Flashes in assists with four.

Clare Kelly just missed double figures with nine points. She led the Flashes with four steals, the most for any Kent State player this season.

Eight KSU players played at least 16 minutes. All of them scored.

Box score

Running the numbers

  • The 25-point win was KSU’s biggest margin of victory since 2017, when the Flashes beat Miami 78-51.
  • Kent State outrebounded EMU 31-30, the 14th time in 15 games this season the Flashes had beaten their opponent on the boards. (The 15th time was a 43-43 tie.)
  • The Flashes outscored Eastern 18-10 off turnovers. The Eagles had 16 turnovers, KSU 15.
  • Eastern had only one assist in the second half and six for the game.
  • Redshirt senior Areanna Combs led EMU in scoring with 13 points, four below her average.

Playing for Pat — and Alice Starkey

The game was part of a “We Back Pat” initiative, named after hall-of-fame coach Pat Summitt of the University of Tennessee. Summitt was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease at age 59 while still coaching, and she died in 2011. A Foundation named after Summitt supports research, resources for patients and caregivers, and education on Alzheimer’s.

Starkey’s mother, Alice, died on Tuesday after suffering from Alzheimer’s for several years.

In his postgame radio interview, Starkey dedicated the game to his mother, “his biggest fan.”

“It’s been tough,” Starkey said, “I’m grateful for the support from the Kent State family, my extended family and friends. You know, you feel like maybe you’re prepared for it to happen — until it happens, and then it just kind of hits you.”

The “Play for Pat” game was scheduled long before his mother’s final illness.

Next: a Monday game in Buffalo

The Flashes will play at 5 p.m. Monday in Buffalo. COVID postponed the game from Jan. 8. It will be KSU’s third game in six days while Buffalo has had its last three games postponed by COVID.

The Bulls are in second place in the MAC with a 3-0 record (9-4 overall)

Other MAC scores from Saturday

  • Akron (4-1 MAC, 7-4 overall) 83, Ball State (2-3, 9-6) 76 at Akron.
  • Ohio (2-1, 8-4) 76, Central Michigan (1-5, 3-12) 65 at Central.
  • Toledo (6-0, 12-3) 73, Northern Illinois 52 at Northern.
  • Miami, Bowling Green, Buffalo and Western Michigan were idle because of COVID.

Flashes, looking to find footing in MAC after 1-4 start, host Eastern Michigan Saturday

Sophomore forward Bridget Dunn leads KSU in scoring in its five conference games, averaging 12.8 points per game. (File photo from KSU website.)

Kent State comes home to the M.A.C. Center to play Eastern Michigan at 1 p.m. Saturday.

The Flashes are 1-4 in the Mid-American Conference and 9-5 overall. All five of their league games have been decided by fewer than 10 points. KSU lost at Ohio 70-64 on Wednesday after leading going into the fourth quarter.

Eastern Michigan is 1-2 in the conference and 4-6 overall. The Eagles have had three MAC games postponed by COVID-19.

The game will be streamed on ESPN3 and on the Golden Flashes Radio Network. Live statistics are available on the KSU website.

EMU’s Areanna Combs, a 5-10 redshirt senior wing, ranks in the top 15 in the MAC in six categories: scoring (10th at 17.2), shooting percentage (12th at 41.1%), foul shooting (11th at 78.5%), assists (16th at 3.9) and steals (fourth at 2.7).

Eastern’s Ce’Nara Skanes, a 6-foot redshirt sophomore, ranks first in the MAC in shooting percentage (54.3%) and seventh in rebounding (8.5 per game). Daniel Rainey, a 5-10 senior guard, is fourth in the MAC in 3-point baskets per game (3.2) and fifth in 3-point shooting percentage (45.1%).

Kent State’s top scorers are 5-11 junior guard Katie Shumate, who averages 13.0 points a game, and 5-4 sophomore guard Casey Santoro, who averages 12.8). Senior forward Lindsey Thall averages 13.1, but she has missed four straight games as she recovers from COVID. It’s unclear whether she’ll be able to play Saturday.

The game is a “We Back Pat” contest in honor of legendary Tennessee coach Pat Summit, whose career and life were cut short by Alzheimer’s disease. It’s of special meaning to the Flashes and coach Todd Starkey, whose mother died this week after suffering from Alzheimer’s.

Ohio surge in fourth quarter sends KSU to 70-64 defeat and to 1-4 in MAC play

Hannah Young had her third double-double of the season with 10 points and 10 rebounds. (File photo by David Dermer from KSU team archives.)

All five of Kent State’s Mid-American Conference games have been decided by less than 10 points, and the Flashes have lost four of them.

The latest was a 70-64 loss at Ohio University on Wednesday. The Flashes led by two points going into the fourth quarter but couldn’t score a basket for five minutes near the end of the game.

Kent State is now 9-5 on the season but 1-4 and tied for 10th place in the MAC. Ohio is 7-4 and 1-1 in the MAC. The Bobcats have had three league games postponed because of COVID-19.

Key things to know:

  1. KSU committed a season-high 19 turnovers, 15 because of Ohio steals. The turnovers led to 19 Ohio points.
  2. The team shot under 30% from 3-point distance for the fourth time in five MAC games. In non-conference play, KSU was one of the best 3-point shooting teams in the country.
  3. For the first time this season, the Flashes failed to outrebound its opponent. Rebounding was 43-43, but OU outrebounded Kent State 12-5 in the fourth quarter.
  4. Junior Katie Shumate led KSU with 18 points. Freshman Bridget Dunn tied a career-high of 15 points for the second-straight game and had a career-high eight rebounds. Hannah Young had 10 points and 10 rebounds.

“We’ve got to stop beating ourselves,” coach Todd Starkey said in a radio interview after the game. “We turned the ball over way too much. We gave them way too many second-chance opportunities.

“That’s Ohio’s game. They’re going to try to turn you over and score, and they’re going to crash the offensive glass. It was 19 to 9 in points off turnovers. That’s really the game there.

“So it’s another disappointing loss where we kind of gave it away. You just shake your head because we can’t get out of our own way right now.”

How the game slipped away

The Flashes led by three after the first quarter, by one at halftime and 46-44 going into the fourth quarter, and the game was tied 56-56 with 5:39 to go.

Then the Flashes missed five shots in a row until Bridget Dunn cut an Ohio lead to 62-61 with a 3-point basket with 32 seconds to go.

But OU’s Cece Hooks, last season’s MAC player of the year, scored on a short jumper four seconds later. Then Hooks forced a tie-up that gave the ball back to Ohio with 30 seconds to go. All Kent State could do after that was foul.

In the fourth quarter, Hooks had 14 points on 6-of-7 shooting, four rebounds and two steals. Her team outscored KSU 10-3 off turnovers and 14-4 in the paint, mostly off turnovers or on hard drives to the basket. The Bobcats made 10-of-17 shots in the quarter.

Hooks finished the game with 28 points, 11 rebounds and three steals.

Stolen away

Ohio’s 15 steals were the most against Kent State since the 2017-18 season, and they came in a season when KSU had cut down its turnovers considerably. Going into the game, KSU had a +1.2 turnover margin.

But Ohio leads the league in steals and turnover margin. Hooks, who was among four OU players who had at least three steals, leads the conference in that category.

At halftime Wednesday, all eight KSU turnovers were on OU steals.

Battle of the boards

The Flashes had outrebounded every team they played this season and were up seven rebounds on OU in the fourth quarter. But OU outrebounded Kent 12-5 in the fourth quarter and held the Flashes without an offensive rebound. The Flashes had 13 offensive rebounds in the first three quarters.

Overall rebounds were 43-43, and the teams were even at 9-9 on second-chance points.

Shumate, Dunn and Young lead the Flashes

Katie Shumate’s 18 points were her most since Dec. 8. She made 8-of-21 shots, had two 3-point baskets, five rebounds, two assists and two steals.

Bridget Dunn equaled her career-high of 15 points for the second game in a row and had a career-high eight rebounds. She made 6-of-12 shots and 3-of-8 three-pointers. Dunn has started in place of senior Lindsey Thall, who missed her fourth-straight game because of COVID.

Hannah Young, a 5-10 senior guard, had her third double-double of the season (and her career) with 10 points and 10 rebounds. She made 4-of-5 shots and 2-of-2 three-point attempts. She leads the MAC in 3-point percentage at 57.7% (15-of-26).

Mariah Modkins played 16 minutes, her most in a month, largely because Casey Santoro got into first-half foul trouble Modkins led KSU with four assists.

Box score

Next: Eastern Michigan at the M.A.C.C. on Saturday

The Flashes play Eastern Michigan (4-6, 1-2 MAC) at 1 p.m. at the M.A.C. Center. On Tuesday, Eastern lost 83-73 to Ball State (9-5, 2-2) at home. KSU beat Ball State 54-51 at Ball State on Saturday.

Other MAC scores

  • Akron (6-4, 3-1) 66, Miami (4-7, 0-2) 53 at Miami.
  • Toledo (11-3, 5-0) 74, Central Michigan (3-11, 1-4) 49 at Toledo.
  • Bowling Green, Northern Illinois, Western Michigan and Buffalo were all idle because of COVID difficulties.

MAC standings

Notes

  • Kent State shot 39.4% from the field, its best of the MAC season. But the Flashes were only 8-of-28 from 3-point range (28.6%). The two teams combined to miss 42 three-point attempts. Ohio was 9-of-31 (29.0%) from distance.
  • Kent State shot only seven free throws, making four. Ohio was 5-of-13 from the line.
  • Hooks is 10 points away from becoming Ohio’s all-time leading scorer.
  • OU’s Erica Johnson, a preseason all-MAC pick, played her first game in a month. She made 2-of-18 shots (2-of-14 on 3s). She had eight rebounds and four assists. Johnson had averaged 20.3 points a game before she was sidelined by COVID.
  • Starkey left after the game for Indiana, where his mother died on Tuesday.

In another change of schedule, Flashes play at Ohio Wednesday

Nila Blackford has 37 rebounds in Kent State’s last three games and ranks third in the conference in rebounding. (File photo by David Dermer for KSU athletics.)

Wednesday is another game with an unexpected opponent for the Kent State women.

The Flashes were scheduled to host Bowling Green at the M.A.C. Center. But COVID-19 on the BG roster postponed that game, the third contest in a row KSU has played a team not originally scheduled.

KSU will travel to Ohio University to play the Bobcats, who were scheduled to play Buffalo, which has its own COVID outbreak. Kent State and Ohio were originally scheduled to play Jan. 19, so the Flashes will have a different, yet-to-be-determined opponent, then.

The game starts at 7 p.m. and will be streamed on ESPN3 and on the Kent State Radio Network. Live statistics are available on the OU website.

The Bobcats were league coaches’ preseason pick to win the MAC. Their first three league games were postponed because of COVID. Ohio lost its first MAC game on Saturday to Northern Illinois 71-68.

Ohio is 6-3 overall and 0-1 in the MAC. Northern Illinois is 4-7 and 1-2.

Kent State is 9-4 and 1-3. The Flashes lost their first three MAC games by close margins, then won at Ball State 54-51 on Saturday. All that came after an 8-1 non-conference season that saw the Flashes ranked as high as 12th in the College Insider Mid-Major Poll.

But since then, the Flashes’ offensive has pretty much vanished. KSU averaged 77.8 points a game in non-conference play. In the MAC, the Flashes 56.5 points and made just 32.9% of their shots.

KSU’s defense has kept it competitive. The Flashes have allowed on 59.3 points a game, third best in the conference and limited opponents to 38.1% shooting, also third in the league. They rank first in the MAC in 3-point defense, where opponents have made just 26.8% of their shots.

But KSU’s own 3-point percentage, which was third-best in Division I at 42% going into conference play, is 27.2% in league games. That’s last in the conference.

KSU forward Nila Blackford has 37 rebounds in her last three games and ranks third in the MAC in rebounding. But her scoring and shooting are down substantially from last year, when she led KSU with 15.6 points per game.

Ohio is led by last year’s MAC player of the year, Cece Hooks, a 5-8 fifth-year guard. Hooks is second in the MAC in scoring (21.6 points per game), fourth in shooting percentage (49.7), first in steals (3.6) and ninth in rebounding (7.7). She is 37 points away from becoming the top scorer in Ohio women’s basketball history record. She has 2,412.

But critical to Wednesday’s game will be the status of redshirt junior Erica Johnson, a 5-11 guard who, like Hooks, was a preseason all-MAC selection. Johnson missed OU’s game with Northern Illinois as she recovered from COVID. She is fourth in the MAC in scoring at 20.3 points a game and leads the league in assists at 5.8 per game.

Kent State is also hoping for a recovery from COVID by senior forward Lindsey Thall, who has missed KSU’s last three games. Thall is second on the team in scoring at 13.1 points per game and second in rebounding at 7.0. Before missing this this month, she had started all 83 games of her career.

Finally! This time, Flashes pull one out in the last minute to win first MAC game, 54-51 at Ball State

KSU’s freshman Bridget Dunn equaled her career-high with 15 points, including eight in a row to start the fourth quarter. (KSU athletics file photo by David Dermer.)

Kent State still hasn’t found its shooting eye, but the Flashes found a way to win their first Mid-American Conference game of the season on Sunday.

The team beat Ball State 54-51 for its first win in Muncie in 25 years. The Flashes had lost 13 in a row since a 78-66 victory on Feb. 19, 1997. When the MAC played in divisions, KSU often would play Ball State every other year. In that same time period, the Flashes won 12 of 14 games in Kent. (The league abolished divisions last season.)

The game was very much like Kent State’s three losses to open the MAC season, except this time the Flashes found a way to win in the last minute. The game was low-scoring and close all of the way, and KSU still struggled shooting.

Key things to know about Sunday’s game:

  1. Casey Santoro hit a layup with 17 seconds to go to give the Flashes a 52-51 lead. After Ball State missed a 3-point attempt, Katie Shumate made two free throws with three seconds left.
  2. Kent State held the Cardinals to 32.1% shooting, the lowest of any of KSU’s Division I opponents this season. 51 points was the second-lowest KSU has allowed against Division I. It was Ball State’s poorest shooting and second-fewest points of its season.
  3. Playing about 50 miles from her hometown, KSU freshman Bridget Dunn equaled her career high of 15 points to lead the Flashes.
  4. KSU made less than 35% of its shots for the fourth game in a row and went 4-for-26 on 3-point shots.

Kent State is 9-4 on the season and 1-3 in the MAC. Ball State is 8-5 and 1-2 in the conference.

“I still don’t think we’re playing particularly well, but this time our defense held up, and we were able to make just enough shots,” coach Todd Starkey said. “We did a good job of being resilient. We had multiple times we could have given in.” 

The last minute

Kent State had lost its previous two games when it missed shots in the last minute. This time Casey Santoro made one.

The Flashes hadn’t scored in more than four minutes when Santoro drove from the top of the key and made a basket as she leaned away from a crowd underneath. That gave KSU a 52-51 lead.

After Ball State missed a 3-pointer, KSU’s Katie Shumate was fouled and made both shots. BSU was able to get a shot off at the end, but it wasn’t close.

“Casey hadn’t been able to get to the basket most of the game,” Starkey said. “But she found a way to get in there. It was a great, great play when we really needed it to happen.”

Dunn leads a team effort

Forward Bridget Dunn was an all-state player in Carmel, Indiana, about 50 miles from Ball State. In front of more than 30 former teammates, friends and family members, she scored 15 points to lead the Flashes.

At the beginning of the fourth quarter, Dunn hit back-to-back 3-pointers, then stole the ball on Ball State’s next possession. After Kent State got two offensive rebounds, Dunn put in a layup off of a pass from Hannah Young. In 90 seconds, Kent State had gone from being one point down to being seven points ahead.

“It was great Bridget to play well in front of her hometown friends,” Starkey said.

Dunn has started for three-straight games in the absence of senior Lindsey Thall, who is recovering from COVID-19. Dunn has averaged 11.7 points in those games. In the previous two games, the freshman averaged 14 and is KSU’s fifth-leading scorer at 8.5 points per game.

Starkey was pleased with performances from all of his key players.

Nila Blackford has 10 points and 15 rebounds. She also had 15 rebounds against Western Michigan last Saturday and had 17 against Akron Wednesday. Blackford was KSU’s leading scorer last season at 15.5 points per game. She’s averaging five fewer this season and her shooting percentage is down almost 10 percentage points. She is third in the MAC in rebounding this season at 9.3 per game.

“She’s been struggling to finish, but she’s been coachable and is starting to make adjustments,” Starkey said. “I’m please with her effort. We really need her rebounding.”

Young made all five of her shots and just missed a double-double with nine rebounds.

Shumate had nine points, seven rebounds, two assists and two steals.

“Katie played really hard during the whole game,” the coach said. “She’s been playing hurt, and I’m really proud of her toughness today.”

Shots still aren’t falling

The Flashes just made 20-of-58 shots for 34.5% and made 4-of-26 three-point attempts (15.4%).

Going into MAC play, the Flashes were making 42% of their 3-point shots and ranked third in the country. In four MAC games, they have made 25-of-92 three-point attempts or 27.2%. That ranks last in the conference.

“We just aren’t making open looks,” Starkey said. “I mean, we shoot 43% as a team from the 3-point line, the first nine games of the season, and all of a sudden it goes away. I can’t help but think COVID has something to do with that. This team still has not got back to full strength.”

The Flashes missed more than 10 days of practice before Christmas after a COVID outbreak sickened more than half the team.

KSU’s 54 points were the fewest the team has scored all season. Ball State’s 51 were its fewest.

Running the numbers

  • Kent State outrebounded its 13th straight opponent, posting a 43-32 advantage on the boards. The Flashes had 15 offensive rebounds and scored 12 second-chance points.
  • KSU outscored Ball State 30-14 in the paint. The Flashes made 50% of their shots from there, much better than their previous three games. Ball State shot just 30% in the paint.
  • KSU had a season-high 18 turnovers, with 12 coming in the first half. Ball State also finished with 18 turnovers and outscored KSU 10-6 off of turnovers.

Next: Bowling Green at the M.A.C. Center on Tuesday

The Flashes play defending MAC champion Bowling Green at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The Falcons are 6-6 on the season and 1-2 in the MAC. Saturday they lost at Akron (2-1, 5-4) 79-69 as the Zips’ Jordyn Dawson posted a triple-double. KSU had lost to Akron 62-61 in Kent on Wednesday.

Other MAC scores (all from Saturday)

  • Northern Illinois (1-2 MAC, 4-7 overall) 71, Ohio (0-1, 6-4) 68 at Ohio. OU was the preseason MAC favorite but had had its three previous games postponed because of COVID. It also was missing second-leading scorer Erica Johnson.
  • Eastern Michigan (1-1, 4-5) 80, Central Michigan (1-3, 3-10) 60 at Eastern.
  • Toledo (4-0, 10-3) 76, Western Michigan (2-1, 8-4) 67 at Western. Toledo is tied for first in the conference with Buffalo, which was idle Saturday because of COVID.
  • Miami also didn’t play because of coronavirus problems.

Box score