Kent State women’s basketball

With depth, defense and dominance, KSU women roll past Coppin State 77-40

From left: Corynne Hauser, Abby Ogle and Bridget Dunn charge toward the basket. (Photos by David Dermer.)

Kent State’s women spread its points around generously on Wednesday as it routed Coppin State 77-40.

The Flashes’ leading scorer — grad student forward Mikala Morris — just had 12 points, plus five rebounds and four assists. Behind her was another grad stduent, guard Katie Shumate, had 10 points, plus eight rebounds, two assists, two steals and two blocked shots.

Nobody else scored in double figures, but four players scored eight points or nine points. In all, 12 of the 14 players on the roster scored at least two. Only Shumate and junior forward Jenna Batsch played more than 20 minutes.

At his postgame press conference, coach Todd Starkey pondered what having that depth meant for him, the team and individual players.

FINDING GOOD PLAYERS PLAYING TIME

“My biggest challenge this year is how to find good players playing time,” the coach said. “You just look down the bench, you sub in other players, they do something really well. And then we put more subs in, and then I have to get starters back in. It’s a nice problem to have, but it’s a real thing. Those players down the bench could probably start or play major minutes for other teams.

“Those players work just as hard and do the things that we’re asking starters to do. A lot of times, they don’t get the attention. So it’s really good to see those players come in and do well.” 

PLAYING HARD ON DEFENSE

After the teams were tied 4-4 halfway through the first quarterr, Kent State ran off seven straight poinets, then outscored Coppin State by seven more in the second period and overwhelmed the Eagles 26-7 in the third.

Shumate credited defense, which provided six blocked shots, forced 15 turnovers and allowed only 14 points in the paint.

“That’s been a big emphasis for us — talking and playing hard on defense,” Shumate said. “I like the way that we’re playing connected with a lot of energy.

USING THE PAINT

On offense, the Flashes have found part of a solution to their struggles with 3-point shooting: Score close to the basket.

“What we’ve been able to rely on is in is the paint,” Starkey said. “Mikala Morris and Janae Tyler both are really doing a great job of establishing the paint. We want to play through them and look for paint touches and kick outs to rhythm 3s.”

Kent State has averaged 27% on 3-point shooting, though it made 32% on Wednesday. Morris and Tyler have averaged a combined 17.8 points this season.

Kent State is 4-2 on the season. Coppin State is 3-5. The Eagles did beat Pittsburgh 61-56 on Thursday. It was their first win over a Division I team in program history.

NEXT: AT NO. 15 FLORIDA STATE ON SUNDAY

The Flashes travel to Tallahassee for a 2 p.m. Sunday game against No. 15 Florida State, which had won its first five games before losing to Stanford on Friday.

At the M.A.C. Center last season, the Flashes led FSU into the fourth quarter before falling 80-71.

Coppin State game box score

Flashes beat Missouri 67-64 on Hauser’s layup with 12 seconds to go. It’s 4th win for KSU over Power 5 team in last three seasons

Mikala Morris, Kent State’s 6-2 grad transfer from Quinnipiac, just missed a double-double with 18 points and nine rebounds. Both were highs for her in a KSU uniform, though she had scored more several times at Quinnipiac. (Photo from KSU Athletic Communications.)

With 5:13 to go in Kent State’s victory over Missouri Saturday, junior guard Jenna Batsch hit a 12-foot jump shot to start the Flashes toward their fourth win over a Power 5 team in the last three years.

Batsch’s basket made the score 60-57, and for the rest of the game, neither team led by more than three points. For most of that time, neither team led by more than one.

Finally, point guard Corynne Hauser made a layup with 12 seconds left to give KSU a 65-64 lead. Katie Shumate added two free throws with three-tenths of a second left to make the final score 67-64.

Kent State is now 3-2 on the young season. Missouri is 5-2.

BEATING THE POWER 5s

First it was a 75-69 win over UCLA in the Gulf Coast Showcase on Nov. 26, 2021. Two days later it was Kent State 81, Penn State 74.

Last season, it was Kent 69-66 at Oklahoma State.

“Four Power 5 wins in the last three years is a big thing for us,” KSU coach Todd Starkey said. “It should continue to put our program on the map. 

“UCLA, Penn State, Oklahoma State, and now Missouri…These are all programs that have significantly more resources than we do. They can do so much more for recruiting. They have NIL collectives. They have charter flights.”

BIG GAMES FROM MORRIS AND HAUSER

Morris just missed a double-double with 18 points and nine rebounds.

“She really stepped her game up today,” Starkey said. “We needed that from her. She’s been trending in that direction, so I wasn’t surprised by it. But I was really pleased to see it, and all of her teammates are pretty excited about it.”

Hauser had 17 points and eight assists.

“And just one turnover against a really good defensive guard,” Starkey added.

In Friday’s 64-54 loss to Chattanooga, Hauser made didn’t make a basket in six tries.

“She knew she didn’t play well,” Starkey said. “And for her to follow up with this type of performance — especially against that good of a team — is really kind of a monumental thing.”

LOTS OF OTHER HELP

Junior forward Bridget Dunn had seven rebounds and eight points.

“It was great to see Bridget break out of a shooting slump and hit two big 3s, one in the fourth quarter,” Starkey said.

Junior guard Jenna Batsch had a career-high eight rebounds, eight points, two assists and two steals.

Freshman Janae Tyler, who scored 14 points Friday against Chattanooga, had six against Missouri. Morris’s big day limited Tyler’s playing time.

Grad student Abby Ogle had four points, three rebounds, an assist, a steal and a blocked shot.

A FAST START

Kent State jumped to a 14-point lead in the first quarter and led 21-12 at the end of the period.

“It gave us confidence,” Starkey said. “We had kids that hadn’t seen the ball go through the basket in a while. So when you have players making shots early, it gives a boost to the whole team.”

FLASHY STATS

  • Points off turnovers: Kent State 17 (from 11 Missouri turnovers), Missouri 9 (from nine KSU turnovers).
  • Points in the paint: Kent 28, Missouri 20.
  • Rebounds: Kent 39 (13 offensive), Missouri 34 (11 offensive).
  • Second chance points: Kent 13, Missouri 5.

NEXT: AT LONG LAST, A HOME GAME

The Flashes host Coppin State (3-3) at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the M.A.C. Center.

“We probably are the only team in the country that hasn’t played at home,” Starkey said. “We’re excited about getting back.”

Coppin State beat Pittsburgh 61-56 Tuesday for the school’s first win over a Power 5 school. Laila Lawrence, a 6-2 junior forward, had double-doubles in that and three of the other four of the team’s first six games.

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Strong fourth quarter and offensive rebounding sent Flashes past Xavier 64-57

Happiness is four guards scoring: (From left) senior Katie Shumate (15 points), junior Jenna Batsch (10), freshman Mya Babbitt (six in a career-high 17 minutes) and Corynne Hauser (15 points).

It was far from a good shooting night for the Kent State women, but the Flashes used strong offensive rebounding and a big fourth quarter to beat Xavier 64-57 on Tuesday night.

KSU is now 2-1 after three road games. Xavier is 0-5.

“We found a way to win on the road against the Big East opponent,” “And we had a terrible shooting night — 34% from the floor, 22% from 3 and 61% from the free-throw line.

“We made some nice adjustments in the fourth quarter and finally came alive for 10 minutes.”

A key moment came in the huddle between the third and fourth quarters, when Kent trailed 46-43.

“We implored them to make sure that we’re crashing the glass,” Starkey said.

The Flashes had seven offensive rebounds in the first half but scored only three points off of them.

“It doesn’t matter if you get the offensive rebound if it doesn’t turn into something for you. So we really wanted to make sure that we were getting not rebounds, but second-chance points.”

Kent State had 18 points in the second half off of 13 offensive rebounds. For the game, Katie Shumate and Jenna Batsch had four each. Bridget Dunn had 10 rebounds, nine defensive, for the Flashes.

In the fourth quarter, KSU held Xavier to 11 points on 3-of-11 shooting.

“We changed the way we were guarding ball screens,” Starkey said. “We went one possession of zone, then we went to a different way to defend screens. It seemed to throw them off a little bit, and it seemed to give us some energy.”

Four guards dominated Kent State’s scoring:

KATIE SHUMATE, after scoring only one point in the first half, finished with 15. She added six rebounds, blocked three shots and had an assist and a steal.

CORYNNE HAUSER had a season-high 15 points with five assists and three steals.

JENNA BATSCH had her third straight game in double figures with 10 points.

MYA BABBITT, a freshman from Papillion, Nebraska, played 17 minutes after only playing two in her first games. She hit two 3-pointers after making two other 3s in the last two minutes of KSU’s game against LSU last week.

“She went in today because we couldn’t shoot the ball,” Starkey said. “And she’s a great shooter. If you’re not shooting the ball well, you give good shooters an opportunity.” 

The Flashes saw a familiar face on the other side in forward Nila Blackford, a two-time all-MAC performer for the Flashes from 2019 to 2022. She transferred to Xavier before the beginning of last season. Tuesday she scored 19 points, grabbed 13 rebounds and blocked three shots.

“It might have been her best game at Xavier,” Starkey said.

NEXT: Off to Florida

The Flashes leave Wednesday for the Daytona Beach Classic. They’ll play Chattanooga (2-1) on Friday and Missouri (4-1) on Saturday.

They will finally play their first home game next Wednesday against Coppin State (3-3).

Flashes’ season ends with 84-56 loss at Syracuse in WNIT. Their final 21-11 record is team’s best since 2005-06.

As she has over the last 15 games, Katie Shumate led Kent State with 18 points and 11 rebounds — her third straight double-double. (Photo from Syracuse Athletic Department.)

As soon as Kent State coaches saw their pairing for the first round of the WNIT, they knew they faced a difficult task.

The Flashes were going on the road to play Syracuse of the Atlantic Coast Conference, which had gone 18-12 this season and was 14-3 in home games.

They were going to face Felisha Legette-Jack, who became Syracuse head coach last summer after 10 years at Buffalo. She went 15-3 against Kent State in Mid-American Conference play.

They were going to take on Daisha Fair, the Syracuse guard who had been all-MAC for three years at Buffalo, averaging more than 23 points a game. She and three teammates followed Legette-Jack to Syracuse.

So the Flashes’ season ended with an 84-56 defeat at the hands of the Orange. Kent State’s final record is 21-11, its most victories since 2005-06. KSU finished fourth in the MAC with a 12-6 record and won its first quarterfinal game in the league tournament since 2010. In the preseason, it beat Oklahoma State of the Big 12 at Oklahoma State 59-56.

“As soon as we got the matchup, we were like — seriously?” coach Todd Starkey said. “It’s tough to play in the postseason on somebody’s home court. A lot of things had to go right for us today, and they probably had to help us a little bit. Neither one of those things happened.” 

Those things did happen in the first quarter, when the Flashes took a 16-13 lead.

KSU guard Katie Shumate scored five points and had seven rebounds, and the Flashes held Syracuse to 28% shooting and no 3-point baskets.

Kent State led 26-25 with 4:24 to go in the second when, but that was it for the Flashes.

Syracuse forced six turnovers in the next four minutes and made 7-of-7 shots, almost all on fast breaks from the turnovers. Kent State got one shot off, a made 3-pointer by Casey Santoro.

Syracuse started the second half on an 18-8 run and outscored the Flashes 46-27 in the second half. Kent State never got within 15 points in the last quarter-and-a-half.

In the end, KSU turnovers meant defeat.

The Flashes had committed fewer than 10 turnovers in seven of their last eight games. (The committed 12 in the eighth.)

But against Syracuse, KSU turned the ball over 19 times, leading to 25 points by the Orange. Syracuse stole the ball 12 times, equaling the most by a Kent opponent all season.

“We had been doing a really good job over the last couple of months of taking care of the basketball, and that kind of betrayed us today,” Starkey said. “But that’s what Syracuse does.”

Fair had 11 points in the second quarter and 10 in the third. She finished with 24 on 10-of-19 shooting.

“We had some costly turnovers and, and Fair got going,” Starkey said. “That’s not a great combination.

“A lot of people said in the off-season that they didn’t think the Fair could play in the ACC. She averaged 20 a game and was all-ACC first team.” 

As she’s done the entire second half of the season, senior Katie Shumate led the Flashes, this game with 18 points, 11 rebounds, four assists and a steal. It was her third double-double in a row, including both games in the MAC Tournament on her way to all-tournament honors. She averaged 17.7 points and 9.6 over her last 12 games.

“She’s literally been lifting us to higher places,” Starkey said. “She just started playing aggressively. It’s not that I’m surprised that she did any of that. I think it was getting past some of the injuries that she’s dealt with over the last few years and getting finally healthy and playing confidently again.”

Starkey said that it’s “his understanding at this point” that Shumate will return for a fifth season next year.

Santoro was the only other Kent State player in double figures with 13 points. She also had three assists, four rebounds and a steal.

Clare Kelly had eight points for the Flashes, Hannah Young seven and five rebounds, and Corynne Hauser six points.

It was the last game of their college careers for Young, Kelly, Lindsey Thall and Annie Pavlansky.

Thall leaves as Kent State’s all-time leader in made 3-point baskets (267, which is 55 more than second-place Larissa Lurken). She started every game she played in five years, missing five because of illness.

Young made 43.3% of her 3-point shots in her career, 0.2 percentage points KSU all-team leader, Kate Miller, who played a single season in 2001-02.

Young played in the most games in KSU history (142). Thall was just behind with 140.

As he’s done for most of the last two weeks, Starkey praised his four graduating seniors.

“You can’t find a better group of young women — character-wise, classroom-wise or, or what they’ve done on the court,” he said.

Notes

  • Syracuse advances to play the winner of Thursday’s game between Seton Hall and St. Joseph’s.
  • Kent State is now 2-7 in seven WNIT appearances. Both victories have come under Starkey. The Flashes are 1-5 in five NCAA Tournament appearances.
  • 84 points were the most any team has scored against Kent State this season. The 28-point margin was the biggest against KSU.
  • Kent State made 40.4% of its shots, about 2 points below its average, and 25.9% of its 3-pointers, which was almost 9 points below average.
  • Syracuse outrebounded KSU 41-30, outscored the Flashes 41-30 in the paint and had 11 fastbreak points. KSU had zero points from fast breaks.

Box score

Kent State falls to MAC-champion Toledo in tournament semifinals. There’s chance Flashes will play in WNIT next week.

Katie Shumate had her second-straight double-double with 21 points and 12 rebounds in KSU’s loss in MAC semifinals. (Photo by David Dermer for Kent State Athletics.)

Kent State’s Mid-American Conference Tournament ended pretty much the same way its MAC season went.

The Flashes fell to top seed and league champion Toledo 68-58. They’ll now wait until late Sunday night to see if they get a bid to the WNIT. Kent has made the tournament four times in the last seven years, each time with a worse record than their current 21-10 mark.

Toledo, which is 27-4 and the winner of 15 straight games, advances to the MAC Tournament finals at 11 a.m. Saturday on the CBS Sport Network. The Rockets will play No. 2 seed Bowling Green (27-5), which beat Ball State 70-61 in the other semifinal Friday.

The loss to Toledo reflects a lot of the good and bad of KSU’s conference season:

  • The Flashes finished 0-6 against the top three teams in the league, losing three times to Toledo, all by 10 points or fewer. They lost two games to second-place Bowling Green, one by six points and one by nine points, and lost their only game against Ball State by nine points.
  • Kent State was 13-1 against all of the other MAC schools, including the team’s 75-68 quarterfinal win over Northern Illinois.
  • Senior guard Katie Shumate continued her outstanding second half of the season. She scored 21 points and had 12 rebounds, her second-straight double-double in the tournament. In KSU’s last 11 games, Shumate averaged 17.7 points and 9.5 rebounds. Both those numbers would have ranked third in MAC if maintained for a whole season.
  • As they have in every game against the league’s top teams, the Flashes had up-and-down quarters and couldn’t manage a fourth-quarter push to pull out a win. KSU trailed 17-7 after the first quarter and outscored Toledo 20-11 in the second. The Flashes took the lead briefly in the third quarter but saw the Rockets outscore them by nine in the second half.
  • When the Flashes don’t shoot well this season, they struggled. They made just 35% of their field goal attempts against Toledo, about 6 percentage points below their average.
  • When opponents shot well, KSU struggled. Toledo made 46.2% of its shots, about 7 points above Kent’s average defensive performance.

“We were shooting the ball so well coming into the game and, and we needed to shoot it well again,” coach Todd Starkey said. “Today we got the shots for the players that we wanted to get the shots, from the spots that we wanted them them to shoot. They just didn’t go down for us.”

In the fourth quarter, Kent State cut Toledo’s lead to 56-53 on a layup by Shumate with 4:59 to go. But the Flashes made only 2-of-9 shots the rest of the game as Toledo outscored KSU 12-5.

“I thought Toledo had a great defensive game plan for us,” Starkey said. “Offensively they attacked us where we were weakest and, they were able to get to the free throw line, especially down the stretch.”

Shumate keeps sizzling

Along with her fifth double-double of the season, Shumate blocked a career-high three shots, had two assists and made 3-of-5 three-point attempts.

She and junior Casey Santoro spoke for the team in the postgame press conference. Starkey said his four graduating seniors were “pretty broken up.”

Here’s how Shumate summarized the season:

“I’m proud of us this season. We played hard, and we played for each other. I wouldn’t want to have done it with any other girls. It’s tough ending like this, but Toledo’s a really good team.”

On the Kent State seniors

Starkey said his seniors were “better than any coach could hope for, and not only as basketball players.”

“They really have fought hard to get better every single year and done everything we’ve asked them to do,” he said. “And then in the classroom, the team has a 3.71 cumulative GPA. Two of our seniors are pre-med.”

The missing post player

Starkey said that against a team like Toledo, the Flashes really missed 6-3 post Bridget Dunn, who was lost for the season with a knee injury in January.

“We’ve been able to kind of mask that a little bit,” Starkey said. “But when you get a situation like this down the stretch, we really need Lindsay to be able to defend their bigs. A nd we don’t have any more size to go to.”

Thall is KSU’s only other true post player. Only one other player on the team is taller 6 feet tall.

The view from Toledo

Coach Tricia Cullop, MAC coach of the year for two straight seasons:

“Kent State is very skilled and can really shoot the ball, and we knew it would take a phenomenal defensive effort. I really thought we did a great job of taking away some of the opportunities and also securing rebounds.” 

“I could feel the momentum of our team in that last quarter — like, ‘We’re not gonna let this slip away.'”

Numbers

  • Kent State committed only seven turnovers, the seventh time in eight games it has had fewer than 10. In my 30-odd years of following the team, there have been entire seasons that the Flashes have had no more than four games with that few turnovers.
  • Toledo outrebounded KSU 40-30. Besides Shumate’s 12, Santoro had six and Clare Kelly four.
  • The Rockets had 40 points in the paint to Kent’s 32 and 12 second-chance points to KSU’s five.
  • Toledo senior Jayda Jansen made 6-of-7 shots off the bench and scored 16 points. Guard Sophia Wiard also had 16. Junor guard Sammi Mikonowicz had 12 points and 15 rebounds.

Box score

Flashes move into MAC semifinals with 75-68 win over Northern Illinois

Katie Shumate had a double-double of 20 points and 12 rebounds in KSU’s 75-68 victory over Northern Illinois in the first round of the MAC Tournament. (Photo from KSU Twitter feed.)

Three years ago, Lindsey Thall, Katie Shumate and Clare Kelly sat on a bus in Cleveland, about to head back to Kent to prepare for the semifinals of the Mid-American Conference Tournament.

They never returned to Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse. COVID-19 canceled their season the next day.

This Friday they’re heading to the semifinals for real, having beaten Northern Illinois 75-68 in the first round of this season’s tournament.

The Flashes will play regular-season champion Toledo (26-4), which eked out a 75-74 overtime win over No. 8 seed Buffalo on Friday. The game is on ESPN+ at 10 a.m.

Kent State is 21-9, its most victories in a season since 2005-06.

Kent State lost to Toledo twice in the regular season, most recently a 64-60 defeat in Toledo a week ago. The Flashes led the Rockets going into the last two minutes of that game.

Against Northern Illinois, Kent State never trailed. It led by as many as 14 in the first half, and NIU never got within five points in the second half.

“(2020’s canceled tournament) stings to this day,” Thall said in the team’s postgame press conference. “It just makes us want to take advantage of this opportunity even more. We know we deserve to be here, and we’re just gonna give it all we got for two more games.”

Kent State built a 38-25 halftime lead with defense and a barrage of 3-point baskets. The Flashes made 9-of-18 threes, led by Kelly’s 4-of-4, and held NIU to 34% shooting and just two 3s.

“When we’re defending the way we’re capable of and we’re knocking down shots, we can win games against just about anybody,” coach Todd Starkey said. “It’s hard to defend us when we’re making shots. We can really spread the floor and the way Katie and Lindsay are playing in the paint, it makes it difficult.” 

Four Flashes scored in double figures, led by Shumate’s 20. She also had 12 rebounds for her fourth double-double of the season. She also had three assists, a steal and made 4-of-6 from 3-point distance.

“When Katie Schumate plays that aggressive from the start of the game, it really livens the whole team. She’s been doing that for about almost two months now, playing as as good at basketball as I’ve seen in four years.”

Shumate, who has averaged about 17 points and 8.5 rebounds over KSU’s last 12 games, was named to the all-MAC third team this week.

Kelly scored season-high 16 points and missed only one of her seven shots.

“Claire was catching and shooting without a conscience, and knocking down shots,” Starkey said.

Thall was 7-of-15 shooting, with most of her baskets coming inside. (She owns KSU’s career record for 3-point baskets.) She had two assists, four rebounds and a blocked shot.

Casey Santoro had 12 points, including 7-of-8 free throws in the fourth quarter.

The victory gives KSU a three-game sweep of the Huskies this season. It’s the first time KSU has won three against an opponent since 2001.

The Flashes had beaten NIU 82-61 in January and 73-58 in the final regular-season game last Saturday. Starkey said the team’s strategy was the same as it was four days ago.

“Coaches sometimes tend to overthink — like we need two change something up,” the coach said. “We wanted to make sure we stuck with the same formula. The message to our players is just,’ Play through your shot.’ If they’re good shots, they’re good shots in Rocket Mortgage, just like they are at the M.A.C. Center, just like they’re on the road.”

The view from Northern Illinois

Coach Lisa Carlsen in her postgame press conference:

“Credit Kent State, especially in the first half. They really shot it well.”

“I thought Kent did a great job of really having an answer every time we tried to make it run.” 

“I think Kent is the best defensive team in the league, and they make it really hard, especially on our guards. They probably match up better with Shelby (Koker, NIU’s all-MAC point guard). It’s hard to get her going just because of their length and their ability to stay in front of the basketball.”

Numbers

  • Kent State had 15 assists on 26 baskets. Sophomore guard Jenna Batsch had three in 14 minutes and also had two points and three rebounds. Santoro and Shumate also had three assists.
  • Kent State had just six turnovers, the fifth time in six games the Flashes have had fewer than 10. NIU committed seven. KSU scored five points off turnovers, Northern seven.
  • For the game, Kent made 41.9% of its shots and 42.3% of its 3-pointers. NIU shot 41.5% from the field and 35.3% from 3-point distance.
  • Northern outrebounded Kent State 42-37.
  • A’Jah Davis, a first-team all-MAC selection, led NIU with 26 points and 12 rebounds. Jayden Marable had 20 points for the Huskies.

Box score

The rest of the tournament

No. 2 Bowling Green (26-5) beat No. 7 Eastern Michigan (15-15) 70-36.

No. 3 Ball State (24-7) beat Akron (17-13) 92-68.

Bowling Green and Ball State will play Friday after the KSU-Toledo game, probably about 12:30 p.m. The game is on ESPN+.

The championship game will be at 11 a.m. Saturday on the CBS Sports Network.

Flashes, with 3 postseason honorees, face NIU for 3rd time this season in first round of MAC Tournament

The Kent State starting five (from left, clockwise): fifth-year guard Hannah Young, fifth-year forward Lindsey Thall, senior guard Katie Shumate, freshman guard Corynne Hauser and junior guard Casey Santoro. Hauser was named to the MAC all-freshman team, Shumate was third-team all-MAC, and Thall all-MAC honorable mention. (Photo from Kent Athletic Communications.)

Kent State women’s basketball team will seek to beat Northern Illinois for the third time this season in the first round of the Mid-American Conference Tournament on Wednesday.

The game will start a half hour after the end of the game between top-seeded Toledo and No. 8 Buffalo. That is likely to be about 1:30 p.m. The game is on ESPN+ and the Kent State Radio Network. The rest of the MAC’s first- and Friday’s second-round games are also on ESPN+, starting at 10 a.m. The finals are at 11 a.m. Saturday on the CBS Sports Network. Games are at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland, home of the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Flashes are seeking to play in the MAC semifinals for the first time since 2010. They won their first-round game in 2020, but the tournament was canceled by COVID-19 before the semifinals. KSU missed the tournament last season after they tied for sixth in the conference but lost their chance to go to Cleveland on a tie-breaker.

Kent State goes into the game 20-9, their best record entering the tournament since 2011. The Flashes finished fourth in the conference with a 12-6 record. But the Flashes were 0-5 against the top three teams in the league — Toledo, Bowling Green and Ball State.

Kent State beat Northern Illinois twice by an average of 18 points during the regular season. On Jan. 25, the Flashes won in DeKalb 82-61 and last Saturday beat NIU in the M.A.C. Center 73-58.

On Wednesday, the MAC announced its postseason honors in women’s basketball.

Kent State’s Corynne Hauser made the league’s all-freshman team. Katie Shumate made the MAC’s third team and Lindsey Thall was honorable mention. Hauser is the first KSU player to be all-freshmen since Shumate and Nila Blackford in 2019. Shumate was honorable mention in her freshman and sophomore year. Thall was honorable mention in 2020.

Here are all of the MAC postseason honors:

Coach of the Year: Tricia Cullop, Toledo
Player of the Year: Quinesha Lockett, Senior, Guard, Toledo
Defensive Player of the Year: Nyla Hampton, Junior, Guard, Bowling Green
Freshman of the Year: Sydney Harris, Guard/Forward, Central Michigan
Sixth Player of the Year: Janae Poisson, Graduate Student, Guard, Northern Illinois

All-MAC First Team
Quinesha Lockett, Senior, Guard, Toledo
A’Jah Davis, Senior, Forward, Northern Illinois
Anna Clephane, Senior, Guard/Forward, Ball State
Elissa Brett, Senior, Guard, Bowling Green
Reagan Bass, Sophomore, Forward, Akron

All-MAC Second Team
Yaya Felder, Sophomore, Guard, Ohio
Re’Shawna Stone, Graduate Student, Guard, Buffalo
Ally Becki, Sophomore, Guard, Ball State
Chelby Koker, Senior, Guard, Northern Illinois
Allison Day, Senior, Forward, Bowling Green

All-MAC Third Team
Katie Shumate, Senior, Guard, Kent State
Peyton Scott, Senior, Guard, Miami
Ivy Wolf, Sophomore, Guard, Miami
Sophia Wiard, Senior, Guard, Toledo
Sydney Harris, Freshman, Guard/Forward, Central Michigan

All-MAC Honorable Mention
Ce’Nara Skanes, Redshirt Junior, Forward, Eastern Michigan
Thelma Dis Augustsdottir, Graduate Student, Guard/Forward, Ball State
Taylor Williams, Redshirt Junior, Forward, Western Michigan
Lauren Ross, Redshirt Sophomore, Guard, Western Michigan
Lindsey Thall, Graduate Student, Forward, Kent State

MAC All-Freshman Team
Sydney Harris, Guard/Forward, Central Michigan
Corynne Hauser, Guard, Kent State
Bridget Utberg, Guard, Central Michigan
Olivia Smith, Guard, Eastern Michigan
Jaya McClure, Guard, Ohio

MAC All-Defensive Team
Nyla Hampton, Junior, Guard, Bowling Green
Dominique Camp, Senior, Guard, Akron
Khera Goss, Junior, Guard, Toledo
Taylor Williams, Redshirt Junior, Forward, Western Michigan
Elissa Brett, Senior, Guard, Bowling Green

Kent State beats NIU 73-58 and takes 20-9 record into MAC Tournament next week

Kent State’s four seniors at the Victory Bell. From left: Annie Pavlansky, Lindsey Thall, Hannah Young and Clare Kelly. (Photo by David Dermer from KSU Twitter feed.)

In five years, Lindsey Thall, Hannah Young and Annie Pavlansky have won 79 games with the Kent State women’s basketball team. Clare Kelly joined the team for the last 59 of those victories.

After a 73-58 victory in their last regular-season game on Senior Day Saturday, they and coach Todd Starkey talked about what it all meant.

“You would be hard-pressed to find a senior class that has done more collectively as a group,” Starkey said. “I’m talking about their team GPA, their quality of character, their ability to win games in a really tough league. They’ve been a joy to coach and are ready for whatever comes next in life.”

The victory sends Kent State into the Mid-American Conference Tournament as the No. 4 seed with a 20-9 record (12-6 in the conference). The Flashes will again play fifth-seeded Northern Illinois at about 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland. NIU finished 8-10 in the MAC and 16-13 overall.

It is the first time since 2010-11 that Kent State has won 20 games in the regular season.

Here are some thoughts from the seniors after their last game in the M.A.C. Center:

Lindsey Thall, 6-2 forward from Strongsville, Ohio

“We’ve been in this group for so long, and we’ve just gone through so much together. I think it’s taught us a lot about building relationships around you. That’s something so important that I’ll take with me.”

Thall’s undergraduate degree was in biology/pre-med. She is working on her master’s in sports information

Thall has made 264 three-point baskets, the most in KSU history, including two on Saturday. She has blocked 200 shots, second highest in the Kent record book. With her blocked shot Saturday, she became the first player in MAC history to total 1,500 points, 200 three-point field goals and 200 blocks.

Thall has started every one of the 138 games she played in over five years. She missed four games last season because of COVID and one game this year because of illness.

Hannah Young, 5-10 guard from Forest, Virginia (Brookville High School)

“I came in pretty shy. Over the past five years, my teammates helped me break open my shell and just become more confident.”

Young got her bachelor’s degree in physical education in December 2021 and is studying for her master’s. She did her student teaching in Kent schools.

She has played in 140 games, the most ever by a Kent State player. (Thall’s 138 is second.) During her career, Young has made 42.3% of her 236 three-point attempts, which ranks second in school history, and leads the MAC in 3-point percentage this season at .438.

Young said she first saw Thall in an elevator at the Kent State Hotel. They didn’t know who each other was until they got out on the first floor. “We didn’t say a word to each other,” Young said. “Now we’re best friends.”

Annie Pavlansky, 6-foot guard/forward from Cortland, Ohio (Lakeview High School)

“Being here really taught me, especially with Covid and the uncertainty of everything, just to be present. As coach always says, be where your feet are. So just taking advantage of every second and not take any of it for granted.”

Pavlansky got her bachelor’s in middle school education in May 21 and is working on her master’s in K-12 reading/literacy specialization. The last I knew, she had a 4.0 GPA.

Pavlansky played the most minutes of her career this season at 168.

She and Thall live about an hour apart and had met each other when they attended KSU games while being recruited. Pavlansky and Young were freshman roommates. “It didn’t take long for us to become best friends,” Pavlansky said.

Clare Kelly, 5-8 guard from Olmsted Falls

“This group has taught me just how to be a better person. They always have your back, and it makes you want to be that same person for them.”

Kelly has played in 106 games in four years and started 31. Starkey said many times this season that he considered her a sixth starter and said that she could have started for many other teams in the MAC.

Kelly has received her bachelor’s in sports administration and started her master’s.

Kelly and Thall played against each other in high school didn’t particularly like each other. “We got over it,” Kelly said.

Once they went against each other in the opening tip of a game. “I didn’t even touch the ball,” said Kelly, who is six inches shorter than her teammate.

The NCAA’s COVID rules would allow Kelly to play a fifth season, but she said it was time to stop.

Beating the Huskies

Kent State made 13 three-point baskets, its second-highest of the season, in beating Northern Illinois for a second time. (The Flashes won 82-61 in DeKalb on Jan. 25.)

KSU made four-of-nine 3s in the first quarter on its way to a 20-13 lead. After missing all five of their attempts in the second quarter, the Flashes made 9-of-14 in the second half — a 64% clip.

Casey Santoro made 4-of-6 from 3-point distance, equaling her career high for 3s, and led the Flashes with 19 points. She also tied for the team lead with seven rebounds and had four assists and two steals.

Two of Santoro’s 3-pointers came toward the end of the third quarter, when Kent State hit four-straight 3s to put the game out of reach.

“Everybody was celebrating with each other on the court,” Thall said. “It just gives a hundred percent confidence to everybody else.”

Katie Shumate had 17 points for the Flashes and hit three 3-pointers. She also had seven rebounds, which is the fewest she’s had in the last 11 games, to go with two assists.

On to the tournament

“I think we’re in a good place,” Starkey said. “I think this team is ready to do good things. We just have to execute. You can’t have an off game, and everybody you play moving forward is going to be a good team.

“We’re just feeling confident going into it knowing that we can beat anybody. We’re not satisfied by any means, but we couldn’t have asked for a better end to the regular season.”

Here are the tournament matchups. All eight teams play Wednesday, starting with top seed Toledo (25-4, 16-2 MAC) playing No. 8 Buffalo (12-15, 7-11) at noon. A half-hour after that game ends, Kent State will play Northern Illinois.

Then it’s No. 2 Bowling Green (25-5, 14-4) against No. 7 Eastern Michigan (15-14, 7-11). The final game is No. 3 Ball State (24-7, 14-4) against sixth-seeded Akron (17-12, 8-10).

The winners of the Toledo-Buffalo game and the Kent State-NIU games will play at 10 a.m. Friday, followed by the game between the winners of Bowling Green-Eastern Michigan and Ball State-Akron.

The championship game is at 11 a.m. Saturday.

All games except the championship are on ESPN+. The title game is on the CBS Sports Network.

Numbers

  • Thall had 12 points for the Flashes. Kelly had six and Young and Corynne Hauser five each.
  • Northern Illinois outshot KSU 44.2% to 41%. Kent State shot just 26.7% in the second quarter.
  • Kent State committed just seven turnovers, the fifth time in six games the Flashes made fewer than 10. NIU had 15 turnovers, and Kent outscored the Huskies 19-6 off of turnovers.
  • Northern outrebounded KSU 34-31. A’Jah Davis, the MAC’s leading rebounder, had 12 for the Huskies. Davis also had 11 points but on 5-for-12 shooting. She had led the conference in field-goal percentage at .545.

Box score

Final MAC standings

Saturday’s MAC scores

Flashes fade against fourth-quarter press and fall to league-leading Toledo 64-60

Katie Shumate had 19 points, the eighth time in last 10 games she has led Flashes in scoring. (File photo from KSU Athletics.)

Kent State playing a near-perfect second quarter against the Mid-American Conference’s top team and led Toledo until there was 1:11 seconds left in the game.

But the Rockets forced two turnovers and made four foul shots in the last minute and escaped with a 64-60 win over the Flashes.

The win, Toledo’s 12th in a row, clinches at least a first-place tie for the Rockets. Toledo is 15-4 in the MAC and 24-4 overall. The Rockets play second-place Bowling Green in Toledo Saturday in the last game of the regular season.

Kent State has clinched fourth place in the conference with an 11-6 record (19-8 overall). The Flashes will end their season Saturday with a Senior Day game against Northern Illinois at the M.A.C. Center.

Kent State didn’t make a basket for the first nine minutes of the game and trailed 14-8 after Katie Shumate hit a 3-point shot with 30 second to go in the quarter.

But in the second period, Kent State made 10-of-13 — including 6-of-7 three-pointers. The Flashes led 36-27 at halftime and held that lead until a Toledo press put KSU on its heels in the fourth quarter.

KSU led by eight going into the final quarter. But Toledo closed the score to 54-51 with 3:44 to go, then took the lead on two foul shots by Nan Garcia with 1:11 left. Garcia’s points came after a steal by UT point guard Sophia Wiard, who again stole the ball eight seconds later and made two free throws of her own.

The Flashes never caught up.

The Flashes committed their fifth team foul with 3:44 to go.

“They were certainly the aggressor in the fourth quarter,” coach Todd Starkey said. “They were able to get to the bonus really quickly.

“It changes the way that you’re able to defend when the other team is in the bonus with that much time left. You’re trying not to foul, not to put them at the free throw line.”

Toledo made 13-of-15 free throws in the fourth quarter.

“The free throw situation played right into their hands because the clock stopped, and they could get their press set,” Starkey said. “So it was kind of the perfect storm of what they wanted and against the way we wanted to play.”

Kent State didn’t turn the ball over against the press for the first six minutes of the quarter, but it took the Flashes out of their offense.

“The press really took us out of rhythm,” Starkey said. “We stopped attacking and played way too tentative. We didn’t execute our press offense. We’d get the ball to a guard, then everybody ran down the floor instead of executing passes up the court to try and score. That’s not how we want to do things. We really want to attack the basket.”

That big second quarter

Starkey’s view:

“We obviously missed a ton of shots in the first quarter, but Katie’s 3 at the end of the quarter was big for us. We look up, and we’re only down 14-8. We’re like: ‘Well, we didn’t do anything right, but we’re still right there. Take a deep breath and start playing.’

“We started playing more aggressively in the second quarter. Obviously, we knocked down a bunch of shots, but they were good rhythm shots for us.”

Shumate keeps rolling

Katie Shumate had 19 points and 8 rebounds to lead Kent State. She has led KSU in scoring in eight of her last 10 games and led in rebounding all 10. The Flashes are 7-3 over that time.

“She’s playing great basketball right now,” Starkey said. “If she stays in that mode, we can continue to defend and we get some other players to step up in the tournament, we’re going to be in good shape.”

Shumate also had two assists, made 4-of-4 free throws and blocked two shots.

Casey Santoro was the only other KSU player to score in double figures with 11. Hannah Young had nine points and tied Shumate for the lead in rebounds with eight. Lindsey Thall had eight points and made two 3-pointers.

Winless against the Big 3

Kent State finishes the regular season 0-5 against Toledo, Bowling Green and Ball State, the top three teams in the MAC standings. The Flashes lost their first three games against that group by nine points each, lost at home to BG by six, and lost at Toledo by four. (Kent State played Ball State only once.)

Numbers

  • Kent State made 36.2% of its shots, but almost all of that was in the second quarter. The Flashes were 2-for-16 in the first quarter, 3-for-13 in the third and 4-for-12 in the fourth. After making 6-of-7 three-pointers in the second quarter, KSU was 0-for-8 in the second half.
  • Toledo made 6-of-13 shots (46%) in the first quarter and 7-of-15 (47%) in the fourth. In the second and third, the Rockets were a combined 8-of-26 (31%).
  • Toledo made just 2-of-14 three-pointers, its lowest performance of the season in number and percentage (.143). The Rockets were 0-for-6 in the second half. So neither team made a 3-point basket in the second half.
  • Toledo outrebounded the Flashes 40-32. The margin came entirely in the fourth quarter (13-4).
  • Kent State’s string of four games with fewer than 10 turnovers came to an end. The Flashes had a still very respectable 12. But Toledo, which also had 12 turnovers, outscored KSU off of them 14-7.
  • Kent had nine assists, its lowest total (by five) in six games.
  • The Flashes made 15-of-17 free throws while Toledo made 20-of-24.

Box score

Next: Senior Day against Northern Illinois

The Flashes host the Huskies at 2 p.m. Saturday on Senior Day at the M.A.C. Center. It will be the last home game for Lindsey Thall, Hannah Young and Annie Pavlansky, all of whom have played five years for the Flashes. It’s also the final game for Abby Ogle, who transferred to Kent last season.

True seniors Katie Shumate and Clare Kelly are eligible to return for a fifth year because of NCAA rules created during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nothing is official yet, but the indications I’ve seen seem to say they’ll be back.

Northern Illinois is 8-9 in the MAC in fifth place and is 16-12 overall. Kent State beat NIU 82-61 in DeKalb on Jan. 25. If the MAC Tournament began today, the two teams would play in the first round.

Northern beat Eastern Michigan 73-63 on Wednesday.

Around the MAC

In a battle between second-place teams, Bowling Green beat Ball State 71-66 in overtime at BG. The game was the first nationally televised regular-season game in MAC history.

Bowling Green is 14-3 in the conference and 25-4 overall. The Falcons play first-place Toledo in Toledo on Saturday and could tie for the championship with a win.

MAC scores

MAC standings

Overpowering second quarter from Shumate and KSU lead Flashes to 75-66 win over Eastern Michigan

Along with her game-high 23 points, senior Katie Shumate led KSU in rebounding with nine. She’s had nine or more rebounds in six of her last seven games. (Photo by KSU website.)

Coach Todd Starkey called it a “lackluster” first quarter, and the Flashes trailed Eastern Michigan on the road 22-13.

In the end-of-quarter huddle, he challenged his team “to be the aggressor.”

The Flashes responded with as good a second quarter as they’ve played this season. Senior Katie Shumate responded with some of her best basketball in her four-year career.

Shumate scored KSU’s first 11 points of the quarter, making five-straight shots. Her personal four-minute run tied the game 24-24, and Kent State never trailed again on its way to a 75-66 victory.

The win was Kent State’s fourth straight and eighth in its last 10 games. With a week left in the regular season, the Flashes are in fourth place in the Mid-American Conference with an 11-5 record. They are four games ahead of Akron and Northern Illinois, who are tied for fifth.

KSU is two games behind Bowling Green and Ball State, who are tied for second. BG was upset by Buffalo at home 84-66 Saturday. Toledo took sole possession of first place with a 72-70 victory at Ball State.

Kent State and Toledo play Wednesday night in Toledo.

Kent State’s overall record is 19-8. That ties for the most victories in the regular season in Starkey’s seven seasons in Kent. The Flashes won 20 in 2018-19, but that included a victory in the WNIT.

Kent State has at least three games left.

KSU outscored Eastern 24-6 in the second quarter and didn’t allow a field goal until 1:54 before halftime.

“Defensively, we were really good collectively,” Starkey said. “And Katie was just kind of feeling it. She was going out and making plays for herself, and we were running some stuff for her as well.”

After halftime, the coach said, “We were able to play a solid game the rest of the way.”

Shumate’s marvelous month

Shumate’s game ended the best month of her career. She had 23 points, equaling her best output of the season. She had nine rebounds for the sixth time in February and now ranks 10th in the MAC in rebounding at 6.5 a game.

Against Eastern, she made 9-of-13 shots, hit 3-of-4 three-point attempts, had three assists and a blocked shot, and drew six fouls from EMU players.

“For the past month, she’s been one of the best players in the league,” Starkey said. “It’s determination — ‘I know my team needs me.’ That’s a mental decision, and it’s not easy. She’s playing with a lot of confidence and consistency, and I think it’s raised the level of everybody’s play.

“Katie is somebody who’s battled through some nagging injuries for the last few years, and she’s about as healthy as she’s been since her freshman year.”

Shumate had off-season knee surgery after her freshman season. At one point, it looks as if she wouldn’t play at all her sophomore year. But she ended up starting 17 of 19 games and averaged 12.2 points a game.

Shumate has been a model of consistency — and inconsistency — in her four seasons. She averaged 12.3 points her first season and made the MAC all-freshman team. She averaged 12.2 the next season and 12.1 the year after that. This season she’s averaged 11.6.

But game-to-game can be a different story. She averaged 6.3 points and 5.1 rebounds in the first eight games of the MAC season. Since then, she’s averaged 16.2 points and 8.8 rebounds.

In the fourth, it was Young

Graduate student Hannah Young scored 10 of her 17 points in the fourth quarter. Her total was her second highest of the season.

Young has started every game the last two seasons and this year averages 26.8 minutes a game, fourth on the team. She scores 8.6 points a game and explodes every four or five games. She had 20 against Miami on Jan. 11, 16 against Akron on Feb. 1, 12 against Akron on Feb. 18 and 17 Saturday.

“Hannah really had a nice game,” Starkey said. “In the first half, she was forcing a few drives. We told her we wanted to use her to space the floor, and she made the adjustment and played in rhythm for the rest of the way.”

Young made 3-of-4 three-point shots against EMU. She leads the MAC in 3-point percentage (.444 overall and .489 in MAC play).

Taking back the paint

Eastern starts two players taller than 6-2. A third, Ce’Nara Skanes, is 6-foot and ranks third in the MAC in rebounding.

In their first game with Kent State, the Eagles outscored KSU 48-26 in the paint. (KSU still won 79-66.) In Saturday’s game, the Flashes won in the paint 32-28.

“It was a point of emphasis,” Starkey said. “This team has done a really good job of trying to do what we ask them on defense. Give a lot of credit to our assistant coaches. They’ve put really good scouts together down the stretch. And we did a really good job throughout 40 minutes of play against one of the better front courts in the conference.”

The turnover tale

Kent State committed nine turnovers and had fewer than 10 for the fourth game in a row. For perspective, 10 of the 11 other MAC teams had at least 11 on Saturday.

“Our ball control’s been really good, ” Starkey said, “and that’s something that we’re going to need moving into our last two regular-season games and then on into the conference tournament. It’s a really good sign for us.” 

Numbers

  • Kent State played nine people, one of its lowest totals of the year. All scored. Lindsey Thall had nine points, Clare Kelly eight and Jenna Batsch five.
  • The Flashes made 50.6% of their shots, their fifth-highest percentage of the season against Division I teams. Eastern shot 51.2%, the highest of the year against Kent State. EMU’s made 6-of-10 three-pointers, the highest percentage of the season against Kent. But the 10 attempts were the second-fewest by an opponent this season.
  • KSU had 16 assists, tied for fourth highest of the season. They’ve had five-straight games with 13 or more. Freshman Corynne Hauser led Kent with five and leads the team for the season with a 3.5 average, which is 10th in the MAC.
  • Eastern outrebounded the Flashes 28-23. No Kent State player but Shumate had more than three.
  • Guard Olivia Smith led the Eagles in scoring with 20 points, making 6-of-7 shots.

Box score

Next: At first-place Toledo on Wednesday

The Flashes haven’t yet beaten any of the three teams ahead of them in the standings. They get their last chance Wednesday against first-place Toledo (14-2 MAC, 23-4 overall). The Rockets beat Kent 77-68 in Kent on Jan. 14.

“It’s going to be a tall task to win on the road at Toledo,” Starkey said. “Both of us are coming into this game as improved teams and have the opportunity to do some big things.”

The Flashes end the regular season at home at 2 p.m. Saturday against Northern Illinois.

MAC scores

MAC standings