Kent State women’s basketball

On the road again: Flashes play Youngstown State on Saturday

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Kent State’s Asiah Dingle Drives on Duquesne’s Amanda Kalin during Tuesday’s game, won by KSU 77-75. Dingle had 12 points, four assists and two steals. (Photo by David Dermer.)

Both Kent State and Youngstown State got the victories they wanted in their openers.

Now the teams meet Saturday in the second big road challenge for the Flashes this season. The game is at 1 p.m. in the Beeghley Center at YSU.

A second-half rally brought KSU from 13 points behind to a 77-75 win at Duquesne Tuesday. Senior Megan Carter hit a four-foot floater with 0.2 seconds to go for the game-winning basket.

Youngstown routed Canisius 87-59 behind a triple-double from junior guard Chelsea Olson, who had 13 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds.

This game should be very different for the Penguins. Canisius hasn’t had a winning season since 2008-09 and had lost to YSU three straight times.

Kent State has beaten Youngstown all three years Todd Starkey has been head coach. Last year KSU destroyed the Penguins 62-34 in Kent, the Flashes’most lopsided win of the year against a Division I team  and the most lopsided loss of the year for YSU.

KSU held Youngstown to 17.2% shooting in that game. Carter led the Flashes with 20 points; Mariah Modkins, starting in place of an injured Asiah Dingle, had 14.

Youngstown State went on to a 22-10 season and a berth in the WNIT. The Penguins were 15-1 at home last season.

The Penguins lost their top two scorers from last season to graduation but have added 5-5 transfer guard Ny’Dajah Jackson from Providence, who led YSU in scoring with 22 points Tuesday. 5-8 redshirt freshman guard Taylor Petit scored 15 and 6-3 senior forward Mary Dunn had 13. Dunn was first-team all-Horizon League last remember; Olson was second team.

Here’s link to YSU story on Canisius game, which in turn links to the box score, comments from coach John Barnes and players, the team roster and schedule and more.

Like Duquesne, Youngstown is a successful program, averaging 18 wins a season over the last five years.

Against Duquesne, five Kent State players scored in double figures, something that happened only once last season. Sophomore forward Lindsay Thall scored 22, freshman guard Katie Shumate 17, Dingle and Carter each had 12, and freshman forward Nila Blackford had 11. Blackford led the Flashes with nine rebounds.

KSU made 52.6% of its 3-point shots, include five of six in the second half. Thall made six of nine, one basket off the school record. Shumate made two of two.

In the second half, Kent State shot 53.9% overall and outrebounded Duquesne 17-15 after being beaten on the boards 29-13 in the first half.. In the game, KSU forced 21 Duquesne turnovers and scored 24 points off of them.

To follow the game

The game is at 1 p.m. at the Beeghly Center, which is at 224 W. Spring St. in Youngstown. It’s “Food Can Drive” game. Tickets are $5 if you bring a canned good. Others, they are $12. Here is information on tickets, parking and more from the YSU website.

Audio starts at about 12:45 p.m. on  Golden Flash iHeart Radio.

Video is streamed on ESPN3, which is a free streaming service if you get EPSN.

Live statistics during the game are available through Youngstown State website.

Kent State team site, which has links to roster, schedule, statistics and more.

Youngstown State site, with links.

 

 

Here we go: Flashes travel to Duquesne Tuesday for 2019-20 opener

Dingle drive

Point guard Asiah Dingle is one of two Flashes who made last season’s MAC all-freshman team. The other is Lindsay Thall, who’s Not 44 in the background. (Photo from KSU website.)

Tuesday is Game 1 of what looks to be a promising season for the Kent State women’s basketball team.

The Flashes play Duquesne, a traditionally strong program that lost four starters to graduation. The game is at the PPG Paints Arena, home of hockey’s Pittsburgh Penguins, and will start at about 8:30. It’s the second game of a double header with the Duquesne men, who play Princeton at 6 p.m.

Kent State returns 83 percent of its scoring from a team that went 20-13 last season and beat Green Bay in the first round of the WNIT. It was the Flashes’ first postseason win in 23 years. The 20 wins were the team’s most 2011.

Duquesne went 19-13 last season, which actually was second worst in the last 10 years. But the Dukes graduated their top three scorers. Leading returnee is point guard Libby Bazelak, who averaged 7.4 points and 3.1 assists last season. Also returning is 5-10 guard Nina Aho, who played five games last season before an injury. Coach Dan Burt calls Aho, who started 15 games as a freshman, the key to the Duquesne season.

Top freshman is 6-2 wing Amaya Hamilton. Two other freshmen are 6-2 and 6-4, giving the Dukes size the team didn’t have for the last four years.

“We lost a tremendous amount,” Burt said at the Atlantic 10 Conference press day. “We’re completely unproven. We’re not as talented as we’ve been in the past. But we have great size and length and our commitment to one another is outstanding.

“We’re going to have to be different to be good. We haven’t been in this position for a long time because we always had returners. In one way it’s scary, and in another way, it’s absolutely refreshing.”

Link to A10 story on Duquesne press day.

Kent State’s lineup is still somewhat up in the air. Senior Megan Carter, the team’s returning scorer at 15.9 points per game, suffered an injured thumb in practice about 10 days ago. Senior Ali Poole (8.8 points per game) injured a knee in summer workouts and didn’t practice most of fall. “We’re optimistic,” coach Todd Starkey said Friday.

Almost certain to start are the Flashes’ two members of was season’s MAC all-freshman team, point guard Asiah Dingle (12.9 points per game) and forward Lindsay Thall (10.3). Dingle stepped up her game substantially on the team’s summer exhibition trip to British Columbia. Thall led the MAC in 3-point percentage and blocked shots last season.

Freshmen Katie Shumate, a 5-9 guard from Newark, Ohio, and Nila Blackford, a 6-2 forward from Louisville, also are potential starters. Shumate was second on the team in scoring on their Canadian trip; Blackford led the team in rebounding.

Blackford also led the team in scoring and rebounding in the team’s scrimmage last weekend at the University of Pittsburgh. NCAA rules don’t allow Starkey to talk in detail about scrimmages, but he did say:

“I learned we could still be a pretty good basketball team when we didn’t shoot the ball well. I think that’s kind of validations of what we have the potential to be.”

As he has since summer, Starkey worries about the team’s lack of experience. Tuesday’s starting lineup could well include two freshmen and two sophomores, though both sophomores started almost every game last season.

“We’re going to make some mistakes because our freshmen are going to play considerable minutes. That’s will affect our ability to execute certain things because of lack of experience.

“But when we play connected, communicate on the court and move the basketball, we’re going to be difficult to deal with.”

Duquesne beat Kent State 77-72 in Kent last season, overcoming a KSU lead with a 18-9 run at the beginning of the fourth quarter.

“We beat ourselves,” Dingle said. “It’s time for some payback.”

How to follow the Flashes

The game will start a half hour after the end of the Duquesne men’s game against Princeton. ‘that should be about 8:30 p.m. PPG Paints Arena is a little less than a two-hour drive from Kent. Here is a link to directions and parking from the arena website. Tickets are $25; one ticket gets you in both games.

Audio starts at about 8:15 p.m. on  Golden Flash iHeart Radio. David Wilson is the announcer.

Video is streamed on ESPN+, which costs $4.99 a month. You can sign up at the link. Most KSU non-conference games and a number of league games are on ESPN+, as are similar games for other MAC schools and many other mid-majors. Some men’s games are also on the channel.

Live statistics during the game are available through Duquesne website.

Preview from Kent State team site, which has links to roster, schedule, statistics and more.

Preview from Duquesne team site, with links.

A complete look at KSU’s non-conference schedule.

A season preview from Allen Moff of the Record-Courier published Monday.

Next up

The Flashes travel to Youngstown State Saturday for a 1 p.m. game that will be streamed on ESPN3.

Flashes eighth in preseason ‘power rankings’

Hustle Belt, the website that covers Mid-American Conference sports, ranked KSU eighth in its preseason women’s basketball power rankings. Ohio, the consensus top team in the league, was ranked first. Central Michigan was ranked second.

Hustle Belt said KSU’s rebounding was suspect. The Flashes lost their top two re bounders from 2018-19 — 6-4 center Merissa Barber-Smith and four-year starting guard Alexa Golden. I wouldn’t be surprised if the Flashes’ top two rebounders were freshmen — 6-2 forward Nila Blackford and 5-11 guard Katie Shumate. Blackford led KSU in rebounding on its British Columbia trip.

Ohio was the league coaches’ consensus No. 1 in their preseason rankings, with Buffalo and Kent State second and third in the East and CMU and Northern Illinois first and second in the West. Toledo was third.

Hustle Belt ranked Ohio first, Central second, Toledo and Northern Illinois tied for third, followed by Buffalo, Eastern Michigan, Miami, Kent State, Ball State, Akron, Western Michigan and Bowling Green.

Link to the rankings. 

 

 

Flashes open season Saturday at Northern Kentucky, 9-22 last season

korinek-vs-utSenior Jordan Korinek in action last season. She’s became Kent State’s 21st 1,000-point scorer last season and is the only active MAC player at the level going into this season. (Photo from kentstatesports.com)

The Kent State women open their 2017-18 season Saturday at Northern Kentucky, the first step in life without Larissa Lurken and — for a semester — without Megan Carter.

Lurken, who graduated in May, was MAC player of the year in 2016-17 after what almost certainly was the best season in Kent State basketball history, men’s or women’s. Her 23.5 scoring average was sixth in the country and highest in KSU history. She placed among MAC leaders in 9 of 13 statistical categories. If a team ever had a go-to player, it was she.

Carter, a redshirt sophomore, came on strong at the end of last season as a point guard. She never started but played more minutes than the woman who did, Naddiyah Cross. Starkey calls her the team’s most dynamic perimeter player.

But because of struggles in some lab classes in her former pre-med major, she’s academically ineligible. Coach Todd Starkey said this week that working around her absence was one of the hardest tasks of the non-conference season. (“The players would certainly say so, too,” Starkey said.

The Flashes, 19-13 last season and defending MAC East champions, still have a lot of firepower against Northern Kentucky, which was 9-22 last season but has nine new players on its roster.

6-2 senior forward Jordan Korinek, a preseason all-MAC East selection, is back. She averaged 15 points a game last season (18 in the second half) and is the only active 1,000-point scorer in the conference. Forward McKenna Stephens, back as a graduate student for a redshirt eligibility season, started every game but one last season. She made 44 percent of her three-pointers in conference play last season, best in the MAC, has a deadly 15-foot jumper and can rebound and score inside.

“Everybody who scouts us knows we’re going to play through Jordan,” Starkey said on Kent State’s Flashtalk radio show Thursday. “We just have to make sure we’re moving her around enough so it’s not predictable where she’s going to be. If we go two consecutive trips without the ball touching her hands, we’re not doing what do need to do.

“She doesn’t need to shoot every possession, just touch the ball. When people collapse on her, it opens up things for others, and if she can go one-on-one down low, she’s hard to defend.”

On the perimeter, Starkey said, the Flashes hope to get scoring from redshirt sophomore Tyra James, who is back after missing last year with an injury. James, an athletic 5-11 player, was third on the team in scoring a 9.4 points a game two seasons ago. Starkey also mentioned sophomore Ali Poole, another 5-11 guard who Starkey said had a very good off-season. Poole averaged 4 points in 14 minutes a game last season. She was a big scorer at Carrollton High School and scored in double figures three times last year, including 17 points and 5 for 5 shooting from three-point distance at Wright State.

Starkey said freshman Monique Smith, a 5-10 guard/forward from San Diego, could help the scoring through offensive rebounding and on fast breaks.

Beyond that, we’re likely to see Cross at point guard and Alexa Golden, a two-year starter and defensive specialist, at a guard spot. Golden did some good three-point shooting at the end of last season. Starkey would like to see her keep that up.

We also should see a good bit of Merissa Barber-Smith, a 6-foot-4 junior who averaged three rebounds in seven minutes a game last season and was third on the team in blocked shots. She had 11 rebounds against Western Michigan and 13 against Michigan , both teams with strong front lines, in less than a half of play.

Northern Kentucky is what Starkey called “a hard scout.” NKU has only four players back from last year’s team, which finished seventh in the Horizon League.  Redshirt sophomore Molly Click led them with 13 points in a 94-55 romp over NAIA Division II Asbury in an exhibition game Saturday. Click was on the Horizon all-freshman team two years ago but was hurt in the first game of last season.

Six other players scored in double figures, including three freshmen. Senior guard Mikayla Terry, who was the only junior or senior to play, had 11, five assists and six turnovers. 5-10 freshman Kailey Coffee led the Norse with eight rebounds. 6-3 freshman Grayson Rose, who played at Garfield High School in Garrettsville, about 10 miles from Kent, had seven rebounds and 12 points.

Northern Kentucky is smaller than KSU in the post and a little larger at guard.

The game is the first of a road-heavy non-conference schedule for the Flashes. Kent has only two home games before MAC play starts. It plays five away games and five games at neutral sites, including two in the Akron Classic next weekend. Last season the Flashes were 7-7 on the road and 6-6 in the preseason.

The game preview on the team’s website, which has links to the roster, schedule, record book, etc.

Game preview from the Northern Kentucky website, with links to roster, schedule, etc.

To follow the game

The game starts at 1 p.m. Saturday and is on ESPN3. You can watch it online if you subscribe to ESPN on cable or satellite TV.

Audio starts at 12:50 p.m. on Golden Flash iHeart Radio.

Live statistics will be available through the Northern Kentucky website.

Notes

  • Northern Kentucky is in Covington, across the river from Cincinnati. Here are directions if you’re thinking about making the trip. The team’s nickname is the Norse. Mascot is a Viking.
  • On the Flashtalk broadcast, Starkey said tentative plans for next season are for the Flashes to open with a weekend visit to North Carolina on Friday and North Carolina State on Sunday. The coach has said many times he believes in a tough non-conference schedule; that’s quite a start.
  • Starkey wasn’t ready to name a starting line-up when I met with him this week. Korinek, Stephens and Golden, all starters last season, almost certainly will open the game. Cross, who has started 62 games over three years, probably will, though Starkey was experimenting with James at the point in practice. My guess on the fifth starter would be James if Cross starts at guard and Poole if she doesn’t. It’s possible Smith, the freshman guard/forward, could be in the lineup. I doubt she will be Saturday; I’m pretty sure she will at some point this season.
  • Kent State’s next game is at 5:15 p.m. Tuesday at Youngstown State. First home game isn’t until Thursday, Nov. 30, when the Flashes host Detroit Mercy.
  • Here’s a preview on the Flashes from Hustle Belt, the website that covers the MAC. The site picked KSU third in the MAC East (coaches picked the Flashes second). An interesting insight from the preview: KSU was third in the conference in turnovers last season; that’s something they’ll need to improve on this year.