Kent State women’s basketball

Flashes roll to 4th victory in 5 games with 82-56 win over Ohio. The win clinches 4th place for KSU.

Lindsey Thall had 13 points, including three 3-point baskets, in the KSU win. (Photo by Chris Powers of KSU Athletic Communication.)

After Ohio had scored the last six points of the second quarter Wednesday and cut Kent State’s lead to 35-30, coach Todd Starkey had a message for his team at halftime

“Hey, you’re better than that,” he told them.

Then the Flashes scored the first nine points of the third quarter and added a 13-0 run late in the quarter.

Kent State went on to an 82-56 victory, their fourth Mid-American Conference win by more than 20 points.

The victory clinches fourth place and a fourth seed in the MAC Tournament, which starts March 8 at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland. There’s a distant mathematical chance the Flashes could move up to third seed, but with three games to play, they trail Toledo, Ball State and Bowling Green (all 13-2) by three games.

Kent State is 10-5 in the conference and 18-8 overall. The Flashes have won four of their last five games. Ohio is 4-11 and tied for last place in the MAC. The Bobcats are 6-20 overall and headed toward their worst record since 1999.

That halftime talk

How stern was Starkey?

“Medium,” point guard Casey Santoro said. (Starkey later said he didn’t think it was even that harsh.)

“This is a veteran crew,” the coach said. “I don’t have to yell at them to get them to do the right thing at this point of the year. There has been so much coaching, so many practices, that at this point it comes down to the players and how they want their season to end. So far they’re responded.”

Kent State made 58.6% of its shots and 45.5% of its 3-pointers in the second half. Reserves played more than half the fourth quarter and scored 13 of the team’s 22 points. Every KSU player in uniform got in the game.

Shumate stays hot

Katie Shumate led the team with 16 points and nine rebounds. Over her last eight games, she has averaged 14 points and 8.8 rebounds.

“Katie’s been on a tear, just playing really good basketball, playing with great energy, getting tough rebounds and finishing in the paint.,” Starkey said. “The way that she has consistently been bringing that type of effort has really raised the level of our whole team.”

Shumate led four Flashes in double figures. Santoro had 14, Thall 13 and Corynne Hauser 10. Five other player had at least four points, led by seven each from Jenna Batsch and Tatiana Thomas.

Turnovers trend down

Kent State committed nine turnovers, four coming in the fourth quarter when the game was long decided. It was the third straight game the Flashes had committed fewer than 10. I can’t remember that happening in the 30+ years I’ve been following the team. It hasn’t in Starkey’s seven-year tenure.

“We’ve made a big emphasis on it during practice and it carries over into games,” Santoro said.

Sometimes in practice, she said, a turnover means extra running.

“That’s a big thing,” Santoro said. “You don’t want to run extra.”

Shumate, who has led the team in turnovers at times because she is so aggressive with the ball, said she has tried to adjust her mindset.

“For me, it’s been slowing the game down a little bit in my head,” she said. “I try to stay calm and see on the floor.”

Starkey said coaches really haven’t put more emphasis on curtailing turnovers.

“It’s like like we’re putting a note on the board before the game saying, ‘If you get single-digit turnovers, we’ll take you to Handel’s,'” he said with a laugh. “That’s just that’s the way you play good basketball — limit your turnovers and empty possessions. We had 16 more field-goal attempts tonight, and that’s because we’re taking care of the ball. And we have good guards — players who can handle the basketball.”

Kent State scored 21 points off of Ohio’s 18 turnovers. OU had six points off turnovers.

Numbers

  • Ohio’s Yaya Felder, the MAC’s leading scorer, hit her average of 24 points. But after scoring 10 in the first quarter, she had only two in the second and two in the third. She made 8-of-21 shots. “24 points on 21 shots,” Starkey said. “We’ll take that all day.” KSU also forced Felder into seven turnovers.
  • Kent State outrebounded Ohio 32-31 and had 12 offensive rebounds, which led to 13 second-chance points.
  • Shumate drew eight fouls from Ohio players.
  • Santoro, Hauser, Shumate and Thomas each had two steals. KSU totaled 10, its third highest in MAC play.

Next: Saturday at Eastern Michigan

The Flashes play at 1 p.m. Saturday at Eastern MIchigan, which is 5-9 (13-12 overall) and in a four-way fight for fifth place in the MAC. Whoever finishes fifth will play KSU in the first round of the tournament. Eastern was supposed to host Buffalo Wednesday, but the game was postponed to Thursday because of bad traveling conditions. That means just a day of rest for the Eagles before they play Kent State.

Box score

MAC scores

MAC standings

Kent State pounds Akron 87-46, clinching MAC Tournament bid. It was KSU’s biggest win over Zips since 1998.

Flashes ring the Victory Bell after completing a regular-season sweep of Akron. (Photo from Kent State Athletics.)

Kent State’s 87-46 drubbing of Akron Saturday was filled with super statistics, but coach Todd Starkey chose this to highlight in a Tweet:

The win guarantees the Flashes a spot in the Mid-American Conference Tournament next month. A year ago, Kent State missed the tournament on a tiebreaker among four teams that shared sixth place. The top eight teams make the tournament.

Missing the tournament left “a bitter taste,” Starkey said in his postgame press conference.

On Saturday, Kent State did just about everything a fan, player or coach could want:

  • Its 41-point margin was Kent State’s biggest over Akron since a 95-47 win in 1998. It was its biggest margin over a Division I team since an 88-36 win against Vermont in 2011.
  • It was the most points KSU had scored against a Division I team this season and the second-most allowed by Akron. The Zips had ranked third in the conference in scoring defense.
  • Kent State’s .537 shooting percentage was its second-highest of the season.
  • The Flashes, who have been outscored in the paint by nine of 14 MAC opponents, beat Akron inside 42-12. Akron is a much taller team and outscored KSU 26-22 in the paint in their first game on Feb. 1.
  • In points off turnovers, Kent State outscored the Zips 23-0. KSU committed only seven turnovers, its second-straight game under 10 turnovers. The Flashes committed only four against Buffalo on Wednesday.
  • KSU had a season-high (against D1 opposition) 20 assists by eight players.

Kent State remains in fourth place in the MAC with a 9-5 record (17-8 overall). Akron drops to 6-8 in the conference and 15-10 overall. The Zips are tied with Northern Illinois for fifth. NIU beat first-place Ball State 84-77 Saturday in one of the bigger upsets of the MAC season. Ball State, Bowling Green and Toledo are now tied for first at 11-2.

“I’d say it was the most complete game of the conference season, for sure,” Starkey said. “We’ve been kind of looking for this type of game — a defensive effort together with a really good offensive game. And it’s great to get it on a rivalry Saturday.” 

Winning with assists

Good passing was the key to Kent State’s offensive explosion against Akron, which primarily plays a zone defense.

“The best way to beat the zone is with ball movement and off-ball movement,” freshman guard Corynne Hauser said. “So we had cutters going and out, moved the ball quickly and got it to the open person.”

“We were just keeping that constant movement in and out of the paint,” said senior guard Katie Shumate. “It was hard for them to adjust and be in the right spots. So we were seeing holes in the middle, then finding our people for their shots.”

KSU’s assists set the tone for the offense.

“When you’re getting assists, you’re really playing with your teammates,” Hauser said. “You’ve got each others’ back. You’re not worried about getting touches. You’re not afraid to move the ball because you know it’s coming right back to you. 

Starkey’s analysis:

“When shots are coming from a direct assist from your teammates, it creates a connection and boosts the whole group.”

Assists, the coach pointed out, only come when a team is making baskets — and the Flashes were making everything early in the game.

A sizzling start

Kent State made 12-of-16 shots in the first quarter, including 3-of-3 three-point attempts, as it raced to a 28-10 lead. Shumate was 5-of-6 at halftime, Husdr was 4-of-5 and freshman Tatiana Thomas was 3-of-4.

“When you see a lot of people on the team on the floor knocking down 3s, you just have confidence that the next one going in,” Shumate said.

Shumate’s surge

Shumate finished with 18 points and 10 rebounds — her second double-double in four games. She has stepped up her game after sophomore forward Bridget Dunn was lost for the season with a knee injury against Northern Illinois on Jan. 25.

Since then, Shumate, who is 5-foor-11 with long arms, has averaged 8.7 rebounds a game.

“Coach Sharkey got me focused just going for every rebound — offenses and defensive — and trying my best to get our team the ball back,” Shumate said. “I think it’s all just playing hard.” 

Shumate has also averaged 15 points a game over the last six games.

Her recent statistics are “first-team all-conference numbers,” Starkey said.

The view from Akron

Coach Melissa Jackson in her postgame interview:

“If (Kent State) can shoot the ball like that, they can beat anyone. We’ve been really successful in zone, but this is probably the one team that I don’t want to play a lot of zone against because of their shooting. They space the floor and are really different from any other team in our league.

“When you have Thall and Kelly and Santoro shooting NBA 3s, they’re hard to guard. When they’re so hot, you’re closing out hard — and then they’re capable drivers as well.

“Shumate’s a hell of a player and can get to the rim. I thought Thomas came in and gave them some good minutes and we all know how good Hauser is. She’s got my vote for freshman of the year.” 

Notes

  • Kent State had edged Akron 57-55 in Akron 17 days ago and now leads in the Wagon Wheel Challenge 4-1.5. Schools get a point each for winning in each of 14 sports. If the teams play twice — as in basketball — they get a half point for each win.
  • Freshman Tatiana Thomas had career highs in points with eight and blocked shots with three. She also had seven rebounds.
  • Graduate student Hannah Young had 12 points and hit 2-of-3 three-pointers. For her career, she has made 42.1% of her 3-point shots. That is second in KSU history to Kate Miller, who made 43.5% in her single season of 2001-02.
  • Junior Casey Santoro had 11 points, four assists and two steals.
  • Twelve players got in the game for Kent State; 10 scored. No one played fewer than four minutes or more than 28.

Next: Wedneday at home against Ohio

The Flashes play Ohio at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the M.A.C. Center. Ohio is tied for last in the conference with Buffalo and Central Michigan at 4-10. The Bobcats, 6-19 overall, beat Central 83-75 on Saturday. In the first meeting between Kent State and Ohio on Jan. 7, the Flashes won 60-44 in Athens.

Box score

MAC standings

Five minutes of shutdown defense at the end give Flashes their first win at Buffalo since 2011

Sophomore forward Jenna Batsch scored a career-high 13 points in a career-high 25 minutes in KSU’s 72-69 win over Buffalo. (File photo by David Dermer from KSU website.)

Kent State trailed Buffalo for 34 of the first 35 minutes of Wednesday’s game, but a zone defense at the end of the game helped the Flashes win their first game since 2011 on the Bulls’ home court.

KSU’s 72-69 win keeps the Flashes’ solid grip on fourth place in the Mid-American Conference with five games left in the regular season. A win over Akron at the M.A.C. Center on Saturday would clinch a spot in the MAC Tournament for the Flashes.

Kent State is 8-5 in the MAC and 16-8 on the season. Buffalo is 4-9 in the league and 9-13 overall.

The Flashes went to the zone defense after Buffalo guard Re’Shawna Stone had scored 33 of the Bulls’ 66 points, mostly on drives to the basket.

“They were carving us up in man coverage,” KSU coach Todd Starkey said. “The zone slowed them down and took them out of their offensive rhythm. We got three or four straight possessions where we stopped them, and we did a good job on the defensive glass down the stretch.”

Buffalo didn’t score from the time Kent State tied the game at 66 with 4:05 to go until Stone hit a 3-point basket with 54 seconds left. Meanwhile, the Flashes were scoring on their last four possessions:

  1. 66-66: Lindsey Thall scored on a reverse layup four feet from the basketball
  2. 68-66: Katie Shumate stole the ball and passed forward to Jenna Batsch for a fastbreak layup.
  3. 69-66: After two offensive rebounds by Hannah Young, Shumate sinks one of two free throws.
  4. 71- 66: Casey Santoro makes a layup off of an out-of-bounds play.

After Stone hits her 3 to make it 71-69, Corynne Hauser makes a free throw, and Stone’s last-second 3-pointer missed badly.

Batsch, Santoro, Shumate and Thall were difference-makers.

BATSCH, who had averaged 2.5 points and 10.8 minutes before the game, played 24 minutes — including key time at the end of the game — and scored 13 points.

“Because of her length, she’s one of our better zone defenders, ” Starkey said. “She did a really good job of contesting shots, and her 13 points was big off the bench for us.”

Batsch made her first three shots and had eight points in the first half, when Kent State was struggling to score.

SANTORO’s team-leading 16 points were her most of the season. She was 6-of-11 from the field, 2-of-4 from 3-point distance, and had four rebounds, two assists and a steal.

“She had a couple of big, big shots — including those back-to-back 3s,” Starkey said.

SHUMATE led Kent State with nine rebounds and had three assists, a steal and a blocked shot. She has averaged 8.2 rebounds over eight games since sophomore forward Bridget Dunn went down with a knee injury Jan. 25. Dunn, a 6-3 forward, had been KSU’s leading rebounder.

“I challenged Katie,” Starkey said. “I said, ‘Bridget’s out. We need someone to fill that gap.’ Katie’s answered the bell. She’s really turned the corner on that and really helped us out.”

Shumate also scored 11 points.

THALL, Kent State’s leading scorer, had two points in the first half and was 0-for-3 from 3-point distance, where she does much of her scoring. In the second half, KSU used her at much closer range. In the third quarter, Thall made 4-of-5 shots from within 10 feet. She finished the game with 15 points, three assists and a blocked shot.

“With Bridget out, we try to protect Lindsey,” ‘Starkey said. “When we got to the third quarter tonight and she wasn’t in foul trouble, we wanted to emphasize playing through her. When we do that, we get better shot selection.”

STONE’S 36

Buffalo’s Stone, a 5-6 guard, is a transfer from Division II Glenville State. She was Division II player of the year last season. Her numbers Wednesday were a sight: She made 13-of-20 shots, 3-of-5 three-pointers, and had five rebounds and three assists. She drew nine fouls on Kent State players. She was, Starkey said, “a one-woman wrecking crew.” Her 36 points tie for the second-highest in the MAC this season. (Highest is 40 by Ohio’s Yaya Felder.)

A LONG DROUGHT IN BUFFALO

The game was the first time Starkey had won a game in Buffalo in his seven years as coach. The last time Kent State had won there was on Jan. 8, 2011, when Bob Lindsay led the team. Since then, the Bulls have won 25-of-30 games (home and away). Many of those games were when Felicia Legette-Jack was Buffalo’s coach. She left last summer to become head coach at Syracuse, her alma mater, where she is 16-10. Legette-Jack took five Buffalo players with her, and only one of her players remains at Buffalo.

Kent State is 32-23 all-time against the Bulls and won the first 19 games of the series, which started in 1999.

NUMBERS

  • At halftime, Buffalo had outrebounded Kent State 22-16 and outscored the Flashes 28-16 in the paint. KSU more than reversed that in the second half and finished with a 37-36 edge on the boards and a 42-40 margin in the paint.
  • Kent State had four — yes, just four — turnovers. That’s the lowest I can remember in the 32 years I’ve followed the team. Starkey said it was a point of emphasis after Buffalo scored 16 points off of KSU turnovers in Kent’s 64-63 win over the Bulls in January.
  • Kent State’s bench, led by Batsch, senior Clare Kelly and freshman Tatiana Thomas, outscored Buffalo’s reserves 26-4. Only seven Buffalo players got in the game, and one played only five minutes. Four played more than 35 minutes.
  • Kelly’s 3-pointer in the first quarter was the 100th of her career.

Box score

UPSET ALERT

Bowling Green dropped out of a first-place tie in the MAC when it lost to Northern Illinois 85-81 at home.

The Falcons and Toledo are now tied for second at 11-2, a game behind 12-1 Ball State.

MAC scores

MAC standings

NEXT: A WAGON WHEEL CHALLENGE SATURDAY

The Flashes host Akron at 2 p.m. Saturday. Akron is in fifth in the MAC at 6-7 and is 15-9 overall. The Zips outscored Eastern Michigan 16-4 in the fourth quarter to win 72-70 Wednesday in Akron.

Kent State beat Akron 57-55 in Akron on Feb. 1.

Flashes fall to first-place Bowling Green 75-69, continuing to struggle against MAC’s top teams

Clare Kelly’s dive to the floor for a loose ball shows how hard-fought Kent State’s loss to Bowling Green was. (Photo by David Dermer from KSU Twitter feed.)

Bowling Green, Ball State and Toledo have dominated Mid-American Conference women’s basketball this season.

Kent State sits alone in fourth place but hasn’t been able to beat the top of the league.

The Flashes came their closest Saturday but lost to first-place Bowling Green 75-69 at the M.A.C. Center.

KSU had lost to the Falcons by nine in BG (11-1, 22-2 overall ), lost by nine at co-leader Ball State (11-1, 21-4) and lost by nine to third-place Toledo (10-2, 19-4).

The Flashes are 7-1 against the rest of the league and 15-8 overall. They’re two games ahead of fifth-place Western Michigan and Akron.

“We’ve played with the best teams in the league,” coach Todd Starkey said. “We want to beat the best teams in the league. It takes a little bit more. We’re right there. We still haven’t played our best basketball yet. We have an opportunity, but the window’s closing. The time is now for us to flip that switch and get to that next gear I know we still have.”

Everything is aimed at the MAC Tournament, which starts March 8.

“If we continue to keep our heads right and play our best basketball in Cleveland, we can beat Bowling Green, we can beat Ball State, we can beat anybody in the league,” Starkey said. “I thought our team played well enough to win today. We just had to put a few more possessions together on the offensive end.”

The Flashes and Bowling Green were never separated by more than eight points, though BG led for 35 minutes. Kent State had a one-point lead at the end of the first quarter, trailed by six at halftime and got within three in the third quarter and two in the fourth. A 3-point basket by Casey Santoro cut the lead to 72-69 with 36 seconds left, but then BG hit four-straight free throws.

“It was super frustrating because it only takes a couple plays to get past them,” said graduate student Lindsey Thall, who led the team with 15 points. “We were within two and three points multiple times, and we couldn’t capitalize on any of their mistakes. So we just have to learn from that and go play better next time.”

Kent State scored only 11 points in the fourth quarter, making 3-of-11 shots and 1-of-5 three-point attempts.

“We were finding pretty good looks,” said freshman Corynne Hauser, who had 13 points and seven assists in the game. “We just weren’t knocking down our shots. And the defense they were playing kept us out of the paint, so we were relying on 3s to get us into the game.”

Both teams shot very well in the first half. Bowling Green, led by Alissa Brett’s 5-of-5 shooting from 3-point range, made 7 of 13 three-pointers (53.6%) and 16-of 28 overall from the field (57.1%). Kent State was 44.8% from the field and 28.6% on 3-pointers.

But in the second half, BG was 0-for-6 on 3-pointers and 32.1% overall. KSU shot 50% in the third quarter but 27.3% in the fourth.

Numbers

  • Casey Santoro had three 3-pointers and scored 11 points for the Flashes.
  • Bowling Green, which ranks second in the country in turnover margin, scored 18 points off 19 KSU turnovers. Kent scored 11 off of nine BG turnovers.
  • Kent State outrebounded the Falcons 36-30. Katie Shumate led KSU with eight rebounds, the third-straight game she has led the Flashes. The Flashes had 11 offensive rebounds and outscored BG 11-2 on second-chance points.
  • The Falcons outscored Kent State in the paint 36-26.
  • Brett led BG in scoring with 20 points but had only three in the second half. Alison Day scored 17 and Nyla Hampton 15 for the Falcons.

Box score

The view from BG

“It was a great basketball game. Kent State’s a really good team,” Bowling Green coach Robin Fralick was quoted on the BG website. “It was a very back-and-forth game, and I thought we did a great job of getting timely stops and timely scores.”

“We showed some grit today. Defensively, we were able to withstand some stretches when we were not scoring. And then, later in the fourth quarter, we were able to come up with some really timely baskets.”

Next: Wednesday at Buffalo

The Flashes play at Buffalo at 7 pm. Wednesday. The game will be on ESPN+ or ESPN3. Buffalo (4-8 MAC, 9-12 overall) lost to last-place Central Michigan 72-71 at home on Saturday. Kent State beat the Bulls 64-63 in Kent in its MAC opener on Jan. 4.

MAC standings

MAC
W-L
Pct.MAC
Home 
MAC
Away 
All 
games
BGSU11-1.9177-04-122-2
Ball St11-1.9176-05-120-4
Toledo10-2.8335-05-219-4
Kent St7-5.5834-23-315-8
Akron5-7.4173-32-414-9
WMU5-7.4173-22-510-13
EMU5-7.4173-32-413-11
Buffalo4-8.3332-32-39-12
NIU4-8.3333-31-512-11
Miami4-8.3333-41-49-16
CMU3-9.2503-40-55-18
Ohio3-9.2501-52-45-18

Saturday MAC scores

  • Bowling Green 75, Kent State 69 at Kent.
  • Ball State 61, Akron 56 at Akron.
  • Central Michigan 72, Buffalo 71 at Central.
  • Ohio 72, Northern Illinois 71 at Ohio.
  • Toledo 71, Miami 586 at Miami.
  • Eastern Michigan 68, Western Michigan 58 at Eastern.

Katie Shumate’s double-double leads fourth-place Flashes past Central Michigan 68-63

Katie Shumate had her first double-double of the season and second-straight 20-point game. (File photo from Kent State Athletics.)

It wasn’t Kent State’s best game of the season by far, but senior guard Katie Shumate’s double-double led the Flashes past Central Michigan 68-63 Wednesday at the M.A.C. Center.

Shumate had 20 points and a career-high 12 rebounds for KSU. Against Ball State on Saturday, she had 22 points and nine rebounds. It was the second time in her career that she had scored 20 points back-to-back.

The victory puts Kent State in firm control of fourth place in the Mid-American Conference. The Flashes are 7-4, two games ahead of Akron and Western Michigan. KSU trails third-place Toledo (9-2) by two games. Ball State and Bowling Green tied for first with 10-1 records. Kent State plays Bowling Green at 2 p.m. Saturday at the M.A.C. Center and on ESPN3.

Central Michigan is 2-9 in the MAC (4-18 overall) and tied for last place with Ohio.

“I thought our grit at the end was really good, and we started executing our offense a little bit down the stretch,” coach Todd Starkey said. “Katie played really well down the stretch.”

Shumate had 12 points and drew five fouls in the fourth quarter. She scored Kent State’s final 11 points. For the game, she made 6-of-8 shots and 7-of-8 free throws, had two assists and blocked two shots. Her 12 rebounds were second-most by a Kent player this season. First was Shumate’s 13 against Ohio. 

Kent State led 30-27 at halftime after a first half that saw neither team lead by more than six points.

Central Michigan started the second half with a 13-2 run and led 50-42 with 5:45 to go in the third quarter. But Kent State finished the quarter on a 17-4 run of its own.

At a timeout in the middle of the third quarter, things “got a little heated in the huddle,” Starkey said in his postgame radio interview with Tyler Henry.

“I looked them in the eye and had a few choice words to say to them,” he said. “I really challenged their level of toughness because we were kind of sleepwalking there. And the team responded.”

Corynne Hauser had 14 points for the Flashes. Hannah Young had eight, including two key putbacks. One came at the buzzer in the third quarter to cap KSU’s comeback. The other came in the fourth quarter when Central had cut KSU’s lead to three. Young also had five rebounds, three steals and a blocked shot.

Clare Kelly also had eight points for the Flashes and Lindsey Thall seven, along with three blocked shots.

Numbers

  • Kent State made 47.1% of its shots, six points above its average, but just 26.3% of its 3-points. Central Michigan shot 38.5% from the field and 26.7% from 3-point distance.
  • Central outrebounded KSU 43-29 and had 21 offensive rebounds. The Chippewas scored 15 second-chance points to Kent’s six.
  • CMU’s Rochelle Norris, the MAC’s tallest player at 6-5, had 16 points, 12 rebounds and blocked two shots. Sydney Harris, the league’s top-scoring freshman, had 19 points, two above her average.
  • Kent State struggled against Central’s full-court press, especially in the third quarter, and committed 17 turnovers for the game. The Chippewas had 18 turnovers of their own. Central outscored Kent on points off turnovers 18-16.

Box score

KSU spots first-place Ball State a 9-point lead and loses by 9 on the road

Katie Shumate had 22 points, her highest total since the fourth game of the season, and nine rebounds in Kent State’s 80-71 loss to Ball State. (File photo from Kent State Athletics.)

Statistically, Ball State has the best offensive in the Mid-American Conference.

Statistically, Kent State has the best defense.

Offense won Saturday as Ball State beat the Flashes 80-71 for its seventh victory in a row. The Cardinals are tied for first place in the MAC with Bowling Green at 9-1 and is undefeated at home in 12 games this season. BSU is 19-4 overall.

Kent State is in fourth place in the MAC at 6-4 and is 14-7 overall. Saturday’s loss ended the Flashes’ three-game winning streak.

“They’re a really good team, and defensively we weren’t nearly as good as we needed to be,” coach Todd Starkey said. “They shot 51% from the floor for the game. You’re not going to beat the best team in the league on their home court when they shoot that field goal percentage.”

Ball State averages 80 points and 50% shooting a game in MAC play. Kent State gives up 63.4 points; its opponents make an average of 41.4% of their shots.

The Cardinals made 66.7% of their first-quarter shots on way to a 29-20 lead.

“We lost the first quarter by nine, we lost the game by nine,” Starkey said. “So felt like we outplayed them for three quarters. But we just got down early against the best in the league.”

Between the first quarter and the end, there were scoring runs aplenty between the two teams. Kent State cut the margin to three in the second quarter, then Ball State went up nine before Casey Santoro made it 43-36 with a shot in the last seconds of the half.

In the third quarter, the Cardinals pushed the lead to 16 before Kent State rolled off 11-straight points in two-and-a-half minutes. Four of those points came on consecutive free throws by Hannah Young. She was shooting consecutive technical fouls after BSU’s Alex Richard was called for taunting after a defensive play, then called for another technical for protesting the taunting call.

Kent State got it within three points early in the fourth quarter, then BSU pushed its lead out to 11 before Kent State rallied to make it 74-69 with 49 seconds to play.

“We had three different opportunities to pull within one possession and a couple of opportunities to actually tie the game,” Starkey said. “We had a good look at a 3, executed some nice things, but just couldn’t quite make up the difference.”

Kent State was badly beaten inside, where Ball State outscored it 44-28 in the paint and made 68% of its 2-point shots. Much of that came when forward Lindsey Thall got into foul trouble. Thall, who is KSU’s leading scorer at 11 points a game, played only 10 minutes in the first half and 24 minutes in the game. She scored two points and got off only four shots.

Freshman Tatiana Thomas, playing in Thall’s absence, picked up four fouls in six minutes and didn’t get a rebound.

“It was really tough for us, as thin as we are in the post,: Starkey said. “Once we’re in foul trouble, they pounded it in there.”

Thall is the only true forward left on the KSU active roster. Sophomore Bridget Dunn, who had been leading Kent State in rebounding before she hurt her knee against Northern Illinois two weeks ago, is out for the season, Starkey said. (On Monday, Starkey asked that we correct this to say Dunn was “probably out of the season.”)

Saturday senior guard Katie Shumate picked up some of the slack inside with 22 points and nine rebounds. Her total was the most points she had scored since the fourth game of the season. In MAC play, Shumate had scored in double figures only twice (11 points both times).

Shumate was Kent State’s leading scorer last season, second-leading scorer the year before, and third-leading her freshman year. She averaged about 12 points a game all three years. Every year she has had games in which she scored more than 20 points in a game and games in which she scored fewer than five.

“Katie kind of played on a mission today, and we need that to continue,” Starkey said.

Junior point guard Casey Santoro also played an aggressive game, with 16 points on 5-of-7 shooting, four assists and two steals. His point total was five higher than her previous best this season. Freshman guard Corynne Hauser came on strong in the second half, scoring eight of her 10 points.

Numbers

  • Kent State made 41% of its shots, almost exactly its season average.
  • Neither team shot well from 3-point distance. Ball State’s percentage was 26.1%, and Kent State’s 28%.
  • Ball State outrebounded the Flashes 38-29. In MAC play, KSU has been outrebounded in seven of its 10 games.
  • Five Ball State players scored in double figures, led by Madelyn Bischoff’s 20.

Box score

Next: A two-game homestand

The Flashes host Central Michigan (2-8 MAC, 4-17 overall) at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The game will be on one of the ESPN networks, but it hasn’t been posted yet. Central lost to Eastern Michigan 68-54 at Central on Saturday.

Next Saturday Kent State will play the other first-place team, Bowling Green, at 2 p.m. at the M.A.C. Center. KSU lost at Bowling Green (9-1, 20-2) 66-57 on Jan. 21 at BG.

MAC standings

MAC
W-L
Pct.MAC
Home 
MAC
Away 
All 
games
BGSU9-1.9006-03-120-2
Ball St9-1.9006-03-118-4
Toledo8-2.8005-03-217-4
Kent St6-4.6003-13-314-7
Akron5-5.5003-22-314-7
WMU5-5.5003-22-310-11
Buffalo4-6.4002-32-39-10
EMU4-6.4002-32-312-9
NIU3-7.3002-31-411-10
Miami3-7.3002-31-48-15
CMU2-8.2002-30-54-17
Ohio2-8.2000-42-44-17

Saturday MAC scores

  • Ball State 80, Kent State 71 at Ball State.
  • Western Michigan 76, Akron 71 at Akron.
  • Eastern Michigan 68, Central Michigan 54 at Central.
  • Bowling Green 88, Miami 59 at BG.
  • Toledo 66, Ohio 55 at Toledo.
  • Northern Illinois 72, Buffalo 62 at Buffalo.

Flashes knock off Akron 57-55, outscoring Zips on foul shots and off turnovers

Graduate student Hannah Young led Kent State to a Wagon Wheel victory with 16 points and six rebounds. (File photo from KSU Athletics.)

A key part of Kent State’s defensive mantra is “Defend without fouling.”

That and crucial points from Corynne Hauser and Katie Shumate in the last minute gave the Flashes a 55-53 victory at Akron Wednesday. Kent State is now in sole possession of fourth place in the Mid-American Conference at 6-3 and is 14-6 overall. Akron is in fifth place at 5-4 and 14-6 overall.

Hauser hit a 12-foot pull-up jump shot with eight seconds to go to give KSU a 55-50 lead. After the Zips made a 3-point basket, Shumate sank two free throws with seven seconds left. Akron made an irrelevant basket as time expired.

Akron came into the game averaging almost seven more points a game from free throws than its MAC opponents, leading the league. But on Wednesday Kent State outscored the Zips 19-12 at the foul line.

“We work on a lot of defensive strategies in practice — all the fundamental stuff,” said grad student Hannah Young, who led the Flashes with 16 points and six rebounds. “After repetition and repetition, it just translates into the game. So when you’re out here, you don’t really have to think too much about it.”

It was Kent State’s third-straight victory and fifth-straight strong defensive game. The Flashes lead the MAC in scoring defense. Only one MAC team has scored more than 70 points against the Flashes.

“Defensively we did a great job,” coach Todd Starkey said. “Our game plan was to really try and attack them, make them defend without fouling.”

Two Akron starters fouled out early in the fourth quarter.

Kent’s defense also earned the Flashes a 17-7 margin in points off turnovers. KSU turned the ball over only nine times, a season-low. Akron had 18 turnovers.

Hauser’s basket with 13 seconds left wasn’t exactly a set play.

“Earlier, I had been trying to get to the rim, and it wasn’t really working,” Hauser said. “My pull-up is my bread and butter, so I just went to that when I saw it was open.”

The key to the play, Starkey said, was getting the right match-up.

“We got the switch that we wanted,” the coach said. “So Corynne was going against Rachel Martindale (who is 5-8) instead of Lane Ferrell (who is 6-2).”

It was Hauser’s second game-winning shot of the season. In November, she hit a layup with five seconds left in KSU’s win over Oklahoma State.

Starkey said that Young, the night’s leading scorer with 16 points, is playing the best basketball of her five-year career.

“She’s a player that’s worked her tail off for every year she’s been here,” Starkey said. “She’s got progressively better, and she’s having her most consistent year. Tonight she knocked down some huge 3s and got some big rebounds for us.”

Shumate had 11 points and three steals for the Flashes. Hauser and grad student Lindsey Thall each had nine points, and freshman Tatiana Thomas had eight.

Running the numbers

  • The Flashes outscored Akron 19-7 in the third quarter to take a double-digit lead. Akron outscored KSU 25-14 in its comeback attempt in the fourth quarter.
  • Kent State missed 20 layups in 30 attempts. Akron was 14-of-28 on layups.
  • The Zips outrebounded Kent State 43-30, the Flashes’ biggest deficit of the season. Akron has five players taller than 6 foot. With 6-3 sophomore Bridget Dunn out with an injury, Kent State has two.
  • KSU made 17-of-55 shots for 30.9% and hit 4-of-14 three-pointers (28.6%). The four 3-pointers tied for KSU’s lowest total of the season. Because of the game, the Flashes dropped to second in the league in 3-point shots made per game (8.1).
  • Akron hit 19-of-50 shots for 38% and was 5-for-17 on 3-pointers (29.4%). The Zips shot 53.4% (8-of-15) in the fourth quarter.

Box score

Next: At first-place Ball State Saturday

In an unusual 11 a.m. league game, the Flashes play at Ball State on Saturday on ESPN3. The Cardinals are 8-1 in the MAC (18-4 overall) and tied with Bowling Green for first place. Ball State beat Northern Illinois 76-68 on Wednesday in Muncie.

The game will be Kent’s fourth on the road in its last five games.

MAC standings

Wednesday MAC scores

Flashes win 2nd-straight MAC game by 20-plus points for 1st time since 2002

Graduate student Hannah Young rings the Victory Bell after scoring 10 points in Kent State’s 64-38 win over Western Michigan Saturday. (Photo from KSU Twitter feed.)

Kent State’s 82-61 victory at Northern Illinois on Wednesday was big — 22 points.

Its 64-38 victory over Western Michigan Saturday was bigger — 26 points.

Together, the games were the first time since 2002 that the Flashes had beaten two Mid-American Conference teams in a row by more than 20 points.

Western’s 38 points were the fewest allowed by Kent State since a 46-31 defensive battle against Robert Morris in 2017. They were the fewest allowed by Kent State against a MAC team since a 78-33 romp over Buffalo in 2005.

Kent State is now 5-3 in the MAC (13-6 overall) and tied for fourth place with Akron, which is 14-5. The Zips beat Buffalo 69-47 Saturday.

Kent State and Akron play in Akron on Wednesday.

KSU took a 22-12 lead in the first quarter and never allowed more than 13 points in a quarter. The Flashes allowed only five points in the third period.

Kent held Western Michigan to one 3-point basket in 17 attempts. Overall, the Broncos shot only 27.3% in the game. That’s the lowest KSU has allowed this year against a Division I team. Northern Illinois made 29% of its shots against Kent State on Wednesday.

The two defensive performances moved Kent State into the top rank in MAC staistics.

  • Against MAC opponents, KSU is allowing 62.4 points a game, lowest in the MAC. In all games, it’s 60.5, also best in the league.
  • League opponents are making only 26.3% of their 3-point attempts, the lowest in the league. In all games, it’s 30.5%, which ranks sixth.
  • Overall shooting percentage against the Flashes by MAC teams is 40.5%, second to Akron. All opponents average 37.7%.

Lindsey Thall and Clare Kelly led Kent State with 12 points each. Hannah Young had 10. Freshman Tatiana Thomas had eight points and five rebounds in 13 minutes of play.

Katie Shumate led KSU in rebounding with 10 as the Flashes outrebounded 48-29. Thall and Kelly each had five assists and Corynne Hauser four, leading the Flashes to a total of 19.

Both the rebounding margin and total assists are season-highs against a Division I team.

Every KSU player in uniform got in the game and 11 scored. Eleven players played more than nine minutes; No one played more than 26.

Western is 4-4 and sixth in the MAC and 9-10 overall. The Broncos were without guard Lauren Ross, who was leading the league in scoring before she suffered a season-ending knee injury last Saturday.

Box score

MAC standings

There are no quotes in the story because I missed the game because of a family emergency, since resolved. When KSU puts the postgame press conference online, I’ll add a separate story.

Aggressive start sends Flashes to 27-13 lead and 82-61 victory over Northern Illinois

Graduate student Lindsey Thall scored 26 points, the most by a KSU player this season and the third most of her career. She made 5-of-9 three-point attempts. (File photo from KSU Athletics.)

After falling behind 21-10 against Bowling Green last Saturday, Kent State coach Todd Starkey wanted a much better start against Northern Illinois.

His Flashes delivered in a big way. In the first quarter, KSU made 6-of-7 three-point attempts and 10-of-15 field-goal attempts and raced to a 27-13 lead. Kent State didn’t stop until it had beaten the Huskies 82-61.

The score was the team’s biggest margin of victory in a road game this season and the second biggest of the year against a Division I team. The win moves Kent State into a tie with Akron and Western Michigan for fourth place in the Mid-American Conference. KSU is 4-3 in the league and 12-6 overall.

Ball State and Bowling Green are tied for first at 6-1; Toledo is third at 5-2.

“We wanted to make sure that we were the aggressor from start to finish,” Starkey said. “In our losses to Miami and Bowling Green, we played way too passive on the offensive end to start the game.”

It was a matter of “playing with more intention — put pressure on the other team to defend you without fouling,” the coach said.

Kent State made a season-high 54.9% of its shots and equaled its season-high on 3-pointers at 45.8%

The Flashes’ defense was just as intense as its offense.

Northern Illinois made fewer than 30% of its field-goal and 3-point attempts.

“We’ve executed our defensive game plan well for three games in a row,” Starkey said.

The key to the defense, the coach said, was making things difficult for NIU’s two all-MAC players — center A’Jah Davis and guard Chelby Koker. Davis leads the league in rebounding and is eighth in scoring; Koker is seventh in scoring.

“We wanted to crowd them both — to really make their touches difficult,” Starkey said. “Our guards were key to that.”

Starkey singled out KSU point guard Casey Santoro for her coverage of Koker, who scored 21 points but made only 5-of-14 shots. Davis made just 5-of-13 shots.

Kent State graduate student Lindsey Thall played one of the best games of her career. She had 28 points, the most for a Kent State player this season and the third most of her five-year career. She made 9-of-13 shots and 5-of-9 three-pointers, along with having two assists.

“She did a good job of screening tonight, and that got her more open,” Starkey said. “On the other side of those screens, (guards Casey Santoro, Corynne Hauser and Clare Kelly) were able to start getting downhill. (NIU) had to help off of Lindsay, or it would’ve been a layup.

“The guards did a good job of finding (Thall) behind them. Lindsey was prepared before the ball got to her hands and shot with confidence.”

Kelly’s 13 points and three 3-pointers marked her third-straight game in double figures and multiple 3-point baskets.

“She’s letting the game come to her a little bit more,” Starkey said. “Earlier in the year she was forcing things sometimes, trying to be aggressive. But just the quality of the shots wasn’t as good. Now she’s letting the game come to her a little bit better, and it’s paying off.”

Santoro had 13 points to go with four assists, two steals and 6-of-6 foul shooting. She led Kent State with eight rebounds, even though she’s the shortest player on the team at 5-foot-4.

Hauser had 12 points, her fifth straight game in double figures. She is now averaging 10.2 points per game, second on the team.

Two post players go down to knee injuries

NIU’s Davis and Kent State’s Bridget Dunn both had to leave the game with knee injuries.

Dunn, a 6-3 sophomore, lay on the floor for several minutes after she fell while battling Davis for a rebound. She was taken to the locker room and later returned to the bench with an ice pack one her knee and her leg rapped in celephane.

Dunn leads KSU in rebounding. She and Thall are the only true post players on the KSU roster, though they don’t usually play at the the same.

NIU’s Davis, who is eighth in Division I in rebounding, went down late in the third quarter. She also returned to the bench with ice on her knee.

Both teams won’t know their player’s status going ahead until medical tests over the next few days.

Points in the paint

Kent State outscored its opponent in the paint for the first time in eight Division I games. The Flashes had 28, NIU 24.

Box score

Next: Western Michigan on Saturday

The Flashes will host WMU at 2 p.m. Saturday at the M.A.C. Center. Like Kent, Western is 4-3 in the MAC (9-9 overall). The Broncos lost 62-51 at home to Eastern Michigan on Wednesday.

Wednesday MAC scores

MAC standings

Missing ‘shot after shot after shot,’ Flashes fall 66-57 to Bowling Green on the road

Freshman Tatiana Thomas had four points and five rebounds and drew three offensive fouls in her best game against a Division I opponent. (File photo from Kent State Athletics.)

To coach Todd Starkey, there’s a simple reason for Kent State’s 66-57 loss to Bowling Green Saturday:

“I don’t think it’s a complicated storyline,” he said. “In my coaching career in 25 years, I’ve never seen more of a lid on a rim. We missed shot after shot after shot. We missed 3s, we missed layups at the basket. And then when we got to the free throw line, we missed there as well.”

Kent State didn’t make a basket for the first six minutes of the game. The Flashes committed seven turnovers and missed their first seven shots. It was 11-1 after six minuytes and 24-10 after the first quarter.

KSU made just 31% of its shots and 25% of its 3-point attempts for the first three quarters.

“It wasn’t because they were going on big scoring runs,” Starkey. “They were scoring periodically, they hit a couple of big shots. But we had opportunities to answer. We didn’t make shots.”

Kent Stete missed 8-of-18 free throws for the game; the Flashes had missed just 9-of-56 free throws in its previous four games combined. On Wednesday, Kent State had made 52% of its shots and 49% of its 3-pointers against Eastern Michigan.

Bowling Green is 5-1 in the Mid-American Conference (16-2 overall) and is tied for first place with Ball State (15-4 overall). BG has won all nine of its home games.

Kent State is 3-3 in the MAC (11-6 overall) and tied with Buffalo for sixth place. Toledo, Akron and Western Michigan are tied for third at 4-2.

Starkey acknowledged that BG played good defense.

“They sped us up on a number of shots, but when we got good looks, we didn’t knock them down,” the coach said. “There was a time in the third quarter where we had to have missed six or seven almost uncontested layups. It was kind of comical. At that point, you just kind of throw your hands up and say, ‘What are you gonna do?'”

Kent State’s own defense played well. BG’s 66 points were the second-fewest it has scored this season (the fewest was 61 against No. 6 Indiana). 66 was also 17 points below its league-leading average. Kent State’s 57 points were the third-fewest scored by a Bowling Green opponent.

Freshman Tatiana Thomas’s best game

The Flashes got a defensive boost from Tatiana Thomas, a 5-10 freshman from Bolingbrook, Illinois. Playing in just her fifth game of the season, Thomas took three offensive charges, scored four points and grabbed five rebounds (second high for KSU). Thomas’s 11 minutes of playing time were her most against a Division I team.

“We got a really nice spark from Tatiana,” Starkey said. “She’s a talented player and still trying to find her way. So it was really nice to see her come off the bench and do some nice things, especially defensively, for us.”

Thomas got some of her playing time because starting guards Katie Shumate and Hannah Young both got into foul trouble in the first half. Young and Shumate are KSU’s second- and third-ranking rebounders. Thomas outrebounded them both.

Beating the turnover queens

Bowling Green leads Division I with a plus-9.9 turnover margin. Saturday the Falcons committed 20 while KSU into 19. It was the first time this season BG had committed more turnovers than its opponents.

Kent State had seven turnovers in the first six minutes and 10 in the first quarter, but committed only nine from the second quarter on. KSU had two turnovers in the second quarter and one in the third.

“We really wanted to limit live ball turnovers that led to baskets, which is one of their staples,” Starkey said. “We did a much better job of taking care of the ball after the first quarter.”

All-time, Bowling Green is 31-13 against Kent State at home and 60-37 overall.

“It’s a tough place to win.” Starkey said. “If you win at Bowling Green, you’re stealing one. And we couldn’t steal one today because we didn’t shoot the ball well.”

Running the numbers

  • Lindsey Thall led Kent State with 15 points, though she struggled with fouls and played only 25 minutes. Corynne Hauser had 13 points and Clare Kelly 10.
  • Bowling Green had two players with double-doubles: forward Jocelyn Tate with 14 points and 11 rebounds and guard Elissa Brett with 11 points and 13 rebounds.
  • BG outrebounded Kent 41-34. Sophomore forward Bridget Dunn led KSU with seven. She also blocked three shots, tying a career-high.
  • The Falcons made 43.4% of their shots, about three points below their average and their lowest percentage at home this season. Their 3-point percentage was 33.3, also 3 points below average.

Box score

Next: At Northern Illinois on Wednesday

Kent State makes its longest conference road trip (430 miles) to play the Huskies (2-4 MAC, 10-7 overall). The game is at 7 p.m. Kent time, 6 p.m. in DeKalb. NIU lost to Eastern Michigan (2-4, 10-7) 66-61 in overtime at Eastern on Saturday. Wednesday’s game will be on ESPN+ or ESPN3, but that hasn’t been posted yet.

Other MAC scores

  • Toledo (4-2 MAC, 13-4 overall) 76, Akron (4-2, 13-4) 63 at Toledo.
  • Ball State (5-1, 15-4) 71, Central Michigan (1-5, 3-14) 62 at Ball State.
  • Western Michigan (4-2, 9-8) 68, Buffalo (3-3, 8-7) 56 at Buffalo.
  • Ohio (1-5, 3-14) 84, Miami (2-4, 7-12) 73 in overtime at Miami.

MAC standings

MAC statistics