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Akron’s Dawson is MAC player of year, Toledo’s Cullop top coach. Flashes fail to win any postseason awards

For the first time in seven years, Kent State was shut out of postseason Mid-American Conference awards.

Here’s the list, announced by the MAC office Monday. Awards are voted on by league coaches. Thoughts on Kent State’s non-selections are below that.

Player of the year

Coach of the year

Freshman of the year

Sixth player of the year

Co-defensive players of the year

All-MAC First Team

All-MAC Second Team

All-MAC third team

All-MAC honorable mention 

All-Defensive Team

All-Freshman Team (6 Players due to ties)

What happened to Kent State?

Kent State was 10-10 in the MAC and 18-11 overall. That’s not great but hardly awful. So how did no one from the Flashes win anything?

The Flashes had no real star player this season. Its leading scorer was junior guard Katie Shumate, who averaged 12.1 points per game. Four other KSU players averaged between 11.3 and 9.4 points.

In MAC statistical rankings, here’s the best Kent State did:

Rebounding: Junior forward Nila Blackford sixth at 9.0 per game.

Shooting percentage: Blackfod fifth at .467.

Three-point percentage: Lindsey Thall sixth at 39.2%, sophomore Casey Santoro seventh at 38.8% and freshman Bridget Dunn eighth at 38.5%.

Assist/turnover ration: Santoro fourth at 1.8 assists to every turnover.

Thall had made the all-defensive team the last two seasons, and I thought she might have a shot at the all-defensive team again. But her blocked shot total was down this season. Dunn was clearly one of the top seven or eight freshmen in the conference, but her stats were a little below the ones who made the team. I think she’ll be all-MAC before she graduates.

Blackford averaged five pointer and 1.5 rebounds less than she did when she made second-team all-MAC last season. Shumate was 19th in the MAC in scoring. Santoro averaged 10 points as sixth player, but Toledo’s Noveroske had a bigger impact on a championship team.

The last time KSU had no player honored was 2014, which was the third straight year under former coach Danny O’Bannion where no Kent player got an award.


 

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