Phantoms Win 4-3 Thriller Friday
The Youngstown Phantoms (10-17-1,21pts) battled for a full sixty minutes and they were able to win a thriller as they beat the Sioux City Musketeers (15-11-2,32pts) 4-3. A two point performance (1g,1a) by Adam Berkle and a game winning goal byCody Strang gave the Phantoms their first win of 2011.
The Phantoms got on the board three minutes into the game when Quinn Smith put a shot on goal and Berkle found the back of the net with a rebound shot over the right shoulder of Musketeers goalie Jake Hildebrand. The Musketeers would answer with ten minutes left in the period after Ryan Carpenter passed the puck to Tim O’Brien who beat Phantoms goalie Greg Lewis to tie the game at one. The Phantoms led in shots 10-8 at the end of the first period. Lewis, making his second start of the season, put aside seven of eight shots in the frame.
The second period was scoreless for the first ten minutes but the Musketeers took a 2-1 lead at the 10:04 mark on a power play goal by Max McCormick. McCormick threw the puck in front of the net from behind the goal line and it glanced off the foot of Strang as it found the back of the net. The bad bounce was just one of many that has plagued the Phantoms this season. The Phantoms continued to battle and with 3:47 left in the period, the Phantoms would capitalize on a power play of their own. Chris Bradley was able to move the puck to Berkle who put a one-time slap shot on goal as Ty Loney tipped the puck past Hildebrand for the tying goal. The goal wasLoney’s eleventh of the season and Berkle’s second point of the night. Two minutes later, the Musketeers took the lead once again when Brad Robbins found McCormick who put a wrist shot past Lewis for his second goal of the night. The Phantoms went into the break trailing 3-2 but had 45 seconds of carry over power play time. With two bad bounces in the period, the Phantoms knew they had to move forward.
“With the bad bounces on both the second and third goals we had to remain positive,” said Head Coach Curtis Carr. “Positive thoughts led to positive things and we continued to battle. Our guys have not given up at all this season and our hard work paid off tonight.”
The Phantoms could not capitalize on the power play but just over two minutes into the period Stu Higgins struck for the Phantoms.Mike Ambrosia moved the puck behind the net to Ryan Belonger who found Higgins right in front. Hildebrand wasn’t able to make the stop as a Higgins backhander tied the game at three. Ambrosia got the assist increasing his point streak to five games. With the game tied at three, Strang was looking for redemption late in the third period. After having a goal go off of his foot Strang found the back of the net to give the Phantoms the 4-3 lead. Jiri Sekac fed Strang the puck who placed a beautiful wrist shot over the glove hand of Hildebrand.
“We worked hard all night,” said Strang. “It was finally nice to win one of these games after such a tough month. The goal off my foot made me feel like I let the team down but the game winner was a great way to pick everyone up.”
With the victory the Phantoms gave Lewis his first win on the USHL level. In two games played Lewis has recorded a 3.00 goals-against-average and a .900 save percentage.
“I was kind of nervous at the start,” Lewis said with a laugh. “I did not see a lot of shots in the beginning and I finally fell into a grove later in the game. Hats off to Cody for getting the goal and I am just so happy to pick up the victory.”
The Phantoms play their second home game in as many nights tomorrow against the visiting Muskegon Lumberjacks (12-10-6,30pts).
“Tonight is over,” said Carr. “We deserved this win and our guys should feel really good about this one. We need to come back to the rink tomorrow ready to play and ready to work just as hard as we did tonight.”
#20 Green Bay Gets By Youngstown State, 71-57
When the YSU women play Green Bay is equal to when the YSU men play Butler. Green Bay has been the power of the Horizon League the last couple of seasons. This season, the Phoenix come to Youngstown ranked #20 in the country and Coach Matt Bollant had never lost to a Penguins team. Conversely, new YSU Coach Bob Boldon had never lost to Green Bay, so something had to give. Unfortunately for Boldon, his young Penguins took one on the chin while facing a monumental challenge, falling 71-57 to Green Bay.
In the first half, Julie Wojta scored 20, and YSU scored 20. Unfortunately, the other Green Bay players chipped in 18 additional points and YSU trailed 38-20 at the half. Wojta (pictured above) was dominant in the paint. The Phoenix had 22 rebounds (ten offensive) in the opening half, YSU had ten (zero offensive). Green Bay also scored an impressive 23 points off of 18 YSU turnovers.
In the second half, Green Bay showed no signs of letting up. Kayla Tetschlag and Celeste Hoewisch offered an alternative to Wojta with a couple of buckets on consecutive possessions. The good news for YSU fans was that this team never hung their heads or quit. YSU cut the lead to 16 with 15:04 left in the game at 47-31 when Boki Dimitrov hit a three. Maryum Jenkins (below) hit a three with 11:04 left to cut the lead to 13. Brandi Brown scored her 11th point with 10:19 left to cut Green Bay’s lead to 11 and the Penguins deserve a big pat on the back for showing a lot of heart.
The last three times the Lady Penguins have shot 50% or better , they have lost. All three of those losses have been to Green Bay.
Green Bay pushed the lead back out to 15 with 7:03 remaining in the game and never looked back building a 68-47 lead with 4:04 left in the game.
Green Bay improved to 14-1, (3-0 HL) and didn’t have their “A” game but enough to win this one. Wojta paced the Phoenix with 24 points and seven boards. Hoewisch also knocked in 18 points. Green Bay converted 32 Penguin turnovers into 43 points.
Youngstown State (2-12, 0-3 HL) played respectfully. Tieara Jones finished the game with 12 points, Brandi Brown had 15 points, and Dimitrov 13 to lead YSU.
After the game, Boki Dimitrov addressed why the Penguins lost. “It is not acceptable to have 32 turnovers. Things have changed and we have a good leader. Coach Boldon inspires us to act on his leads. “
Boldon discussed the monster that is Green Bay. “They are a great team, very well-coached and what I would want our program to be like someday. They ran a secondary trap that we have not seen and their girls are very fast and just reload to the ball. They are the best team that we have played all year and we get to play them again.”
Unhappy New Year For Youngstown State, 83-53 Losers To Loyola
Youngstown State University had just ended 2010 on a high note with a dramatic win over UIC. Then something happened, 2011 showed up, and so did Loyola. Unfortunately, the Penguins struggled on both ends of the court in a very lethargic performance to open a new calender year and lost to the Ramblers, 83-53, to drop to 1-3 in the Horizon League.
In the first half, Youngstown State seemed a step slower on the offensive end and at least two steps slower on defense. Loyola shot 63.6% from the floor, while the Penguins could only muster 32%, including 1-8 on three-pointers. Loyola opened a seventeen point lead within the first ten minutes of the first half and maintained that margin coasting to a 40-22 lead at intermission. Tre Brewer had a team-high six first half points for YSU, which just seemed out of sync the entire half. Ben Averkamp posted 13 first half points for the Ramblers.
The second half started much the same way that the first half ended. Loyola was ahead 49-26 with 15:58 in the game when DuShawn Brooks did what he could to keep the Penguins in the game hitting a jumper from the top right side of the key. As luck would have it, the Penguins ran into a buzz saw. With 13:31 left in the game, Loyola had a 56-31 lead, but more importantly, they were shooting 67.7% in the game to this point. When a team shoots greater than 55%, they are hard to defeat. With Youngstown State gasping for straws on offense, they would have had to keep Loyola at bay on the defensive end, but were unsuccessful with either side of that two-fold game plan.
Frustration was evident in the second half. Vytas Sulskis fouled out with just under ten minutes left in the game. The Penguins were trying, but were also committing hard fouls and playing out of their comfort zone. With 6:51 left in the game, YSU was simply playing for respectability and pride. Loyola was ahead 71-43. YSU got a decent second half from Brooks who played hard on both ends. Coach Slocum threw up the white flag with about five minutes left when he emptied the cupboard and let some of the low-minutes guys get some experience.
Brooks (above) was top scorer for YSU with 13. Damian Eargle also scored ten points and gathered five boards in the loss. Josh Chojnacki contributed a career-best seven points for YSU. The Ramblers got 18 points from Walt Gibler and 17 from Averkemp. Loyola shot over 60% from the floor as a team.
After the game, Jerry Slocum called the performance “one of the worst losses I can remember.” Slocum also went on to say that the Penguins showed little heart and character in the loss. “The energy was bad today, and we got outplayed badly.”
Loyola Coach Jim Whitesell was surprised at how easy the win came. “Usually when we play here, the games are donnybrooks and go down to the wire. I feel for Jerry, I was just there the other night against Cleveland State. We challenged our big guys [Averkamp, Polka, and Gibler] to step it up and they responded.”
YSU heads off to Valpo and Butler before returning home to face Wilburforce on January 11.
Phantoms Drop Another Tough One, 5-4, At Indiana
The Youngstown Phantoms (9-17-1,19pts) could not finish the year 2010 with a win as they lost a tough one to the Indiana Ice (13-10-2,28pts) by the score of 5-4. Mike Ambrosia recorded an assist extending his point streak to four games in the losing effort.
After a quiet ten minutes to start the first period, Phantoms forward John Fritsche was sent to the penalty box for tripping at 10:22. The power play was killed off by the Phantoms but the momentum gained while on the man advantage gave the Ice they edge they needed. David Johnstone tipped a pass from Ferlin behind Matthew O’Connor to take the 1-0 lead. Just over four minutes later on a Phantoms power play, Cody Strang banged home an Adam Berkle rebound for his sixth goal of the season. The secondary assist on the tying goal was credited to Jiri Sekac.
Forty-one seconds after the Phantoms goal, forward Ryan Belonger took advantage of a misplayed puck by Ice netminder Casey DeSmith to put the Phantoms up 2-1. The goal was unassisted and it was Belonger’s ninth goal of the season. With 1:42 remaining in the first period, Berkle was issued a two minute penalty for elbowing. Before the Phantoms touched the puck to stop play, Ice forward Will Aide dropped the gloves with Berkle in response to his thrown elbow. On the ensuing Ice power play, Ferlin was able to tie the game at two right off the faceoff in the Phantoms zone. The goal was Ferlin’s second point of the first period and it was assisted by Blake Coleman. At the end of the first, the two teams were tied at two but the Phantoms were able to outshoot Indiana 14-9.
“We responded really well tonight,” said Head Coach Curtis Carr. “After a tough game after the break and the game against Des Moines our guys came out ready to play tonight. It was a tough day of travel and to play a hot Indiana team they way we did, there is nothing but positive things to say after this one.”
Tempers continued to flare as the Phantoms and Ice moved toward the midway point of the second period. With Indiana outshooting the Phantoms 8-5 with 11:35 remaining in the period, Andrew Sinelli dropped the gloves with Ice forward Chris Martin. The Phantoms were a post away from taking the lead when Quinn Smith took a feed from JT Stenglein and made a fantastic move around an Ice defender. Smtih’s shot rang off the far post leaving the game tied at two.
About a minute later on a Phantoms power play, DeSmith made a great save to deny Sekac and on the ensuing dump into the Phantoms zone O’Connor played the puck right to the stick of Ice forward Coleman. With O’Connor out of the net and up around the hash marks, Coleman had a wide open net to shoot at as he gave Indiana a 3-2 lead on the shorthanded goal. Responding to what could have been a back breaking goal Phantoms forward Ty Loney scored to tie the game at three. The Phantoms goal was assisted by Sekac giving him his second assist of the night. The second period ended with the Phantoms on the power play giving them thirty seconds of carry over time. The Phantoms again outshot the Ice 15-10 giving them a two period advantage of 29-19.
The Phantoms could not capitalize on their carry over power play but on their second man advantage of the period Stu Higgins put a one timer in the back of the net to give the Phantoms a 4-3 lead. Ambrosia and Ben Paulides were credited with the assists on Higgins’fifth goal of the year. Eleven seconds later Daniil Tarasov beat O’Connor to tie the game back up at four. Tarasov benefited from a fluky bounce in front of the net as the puck made its way across the line. The Ice were then able to take the lead on their own power play as Tarasov scored his second of the game to give the Ice a 5-4 lead with six minutes to play. Like the fourth goal, the puck this time bounced off of a Phantoms player in front of the net before it crossed the line. The Phantoms pulled O’Connor with under a minute to play but the equalizer was never found as the comeback effort was spoiled by Indiana. The Phantoms were outshot in the third period 14-8 but held the advantage at the end of the game 37-33. The Phantoms recent history repeated itself against the Ice as three of the five Indiana goals came off of bad bounces on its way into the net.
“I have never seen so many bad bounces against one team,” said Carr. “In my entire hockey career I have never seen this many bounce in one season. We are not making excuses but it would be nice if one or two or those bounces would go our way.”
The Phantoms return to the Covelli Centre on January 7 and 8 for games against the Sioux City Musketeers and the Muskegon Lumberjacks. January 7 is Mac ‘N’ Cheese Night sponsored by the Second Harvest Food Bank of the Mahoning Valley and January 8 is Military Appreciation Night. Both games start at 7:30 p.m. and tickets are available by calling 330-747-7825.
Youngstown State Breaks Horizon Drought With 71-69 Win Over UIC
The Horizon League is probably the most unrecognized conference in NCAA-DI basketball. UIC was YSU’s opponent on this holiday evening, and UIC had just beaten then-ranked #12 Illinois a couple of games back. The Horizon League is no slouch, ask Duke. As the conference rises in prominence, Youngstown State is trying to evolve with it. The Penguins had not won a conference game in their last 13 chances. Throw out the records and chalk up a conference win for the Penguins, 71-69, over UIC.
The first half featured good shooting by both squads. Youngstown State had a lead as big as nine points in that first half, but UIC marched right back into things before half and the Penguins only lead 34-32 at intermission. The story in the first half was three-pointers. Both teams shot over 40 percent with YSU connecting on 7-17 and UIC nailing 4-7.
Ashen Ward had a career best night for the Penguins. Ward was Mr. Instant in the first half connecting on 4-6 threes and finished the half with 14 points on his way to a career-high in points. Ward hit another three in the opening minutes of the second half, he was on fire. With 16:24 left in the game, UIC nabbed the lead, 40-39, when Robo Kreps hit a free throw to complete a three point play. Ward responded with a deuce to give YSU the lead back on their next possession.
With YSU trailing 46-43, DuShawn Brooks hit a runner from the right side of the key coming in to cut UIC’s lead to one point. Tre Brewer hit a finger roll to put YSU back up by one with just over twelve minutes to go in the game. YSU was not getting many inside chances and had only attempted one free throw up to the 11:32 mark when Vytas Sulskis hit a pair to put YSU ahead, 49-47.
With YSU ahead 57-53 with UIC’s Paul Carter hit a runner from the left side and was fouled by Sulskis. Carter hit the free throw to complete the old-school three and the game was tied again with 8:18. Ashen Ward then hit his sixth and seventh threes of the game to push YSU’s lead to 63-58. With 3:24 left in the game, and YSU holding a very slim lead of 65-64, Brewer gathered an offensive rebound and was fouled trying to put it back. Brewer was unable to connect with either charity toss and UIC ended up taking a two point lead when Carter was fouled while shooting a three.
With 1:41 left in the game, YSU trailed 67-65. Sulskis hit a spinning layup to tie things up at the 1:31 mark. UIC could not score on their end and with less than a minute to go and the score tied at 67 apiece, Ward was fouled and hit one of two to put the Penguins up a point at 68-67 with 41.3 seconds remaining. Carter hit a 15-foot jumper with 24 seconds left to put UIC back up by one in this see-saw battle.
Sulskis was fouled, a blessing for YSU fans because he nails his free throws, hit a pair to give YSU a 70-69 lead with 15.9 seconds to go in the game. Kreps drove the hoop but threw up a wild prayer that barely drew iron. Blake Allen hauled in the rebound with 2.9 seconds to go and was immediately fouled and put to the line. Allen hit one of two to put the Penguins ahead 71-69 with 2.2 seconds to go. UIC inbounded the ball but could not get better than a three-quarter court look and YSU held on for the dramatic win, 71-69.
Youngstown State (6-6, 1-2) was led by Ward, who posted a career-high with 26 points. Ward answered every time the UIC seemed to gain momentum by hitting a huge bucket. Ward finished the game 9-14 from the floor and 7-10 from three-point land.
UIC (5-9, 0-2) got 19 points from Carter who did all he could to keep the Flames in the game down the stretch.
After the game, Jerry Slocum commented on his team’s big conference win. “We got a huge boost from our bench tonight. Ash [Ashen Ward] stepped up and hit some big baskets. They were keeping a close eye on Vytas [Sulskis] and that freed Ash up to get some good looks. We have been asking Ashen to do a little more offensively and to take more shots. The whole team battled hard and we came out with a big win.”
Ward commented on his holiday success. “We took some extra shooting practice and it paid off tonight. Give credit to our bench, they played well and everyone played hard.”
Phantoms Fall to Des Moines, 5-4, For Sixth Loss In A Row
Embarrassment. It is a word that humbles, but has an upside in the way of motivation sometimes. The Youngstown Phantoms, coming off of a 7-2 loss to Indiana were embarrassed. Des Moines warded off an early flurry of goals and kept their composure to beat the Phantoms, 5-4. It should be noted that Youngstown played much, much better against Des Moines than they did against Indiana one night earlier. No embarrassment on this night, just a very hard-fought loss.
The opening face-off usually starts the “feeling out” period of a hockey game. Teams will often try to detect the strengths and weaknesses of an opponent. Just 33 seconds into this game, the Phantoms were done feeling out Des Moines. Mike Ambrosia connected from close range for his fifth goal of the season to put the Phantoms up early. Ryan Belonger fed Ambrosia for an assist and the puck had just enough on it to scoot past Buccaneer goaltender, Michael Shibrowski (next photo down).
Less than three minutes later, Cody Strang got himself in on the action for the Phantoms. Jiri Sekac, who missed last night’s contest due to inclement weather, picked up an assist when he set Strang up for his fifth of the season. The goal, just 3:12 into the game, put the Phantoms ahead 2-0.
Youngstown stayed hot and got a third even-strength first period goal. Ty Loney took the team lead with his ninth goal of the year to put the Phantoms ahead 3-0. Loney’s unassisted goal came at the 15:32 mark of the first, and the Phantoms looked to have things under control. Before the period ended, Des Moines found the scoreboard when Kevin Irwin scored unassisted to cut the score at intermission to 3-1.
In the second period, Des Moines continued to fight back when Irwin recorded his second goal of the game, this time on the powerplay, something the Phantoms have really struggled against, to cut the lead to 3-2 in favor of the host Phantoms. later in the second, the Buccaneers tied the game when Mitch Cain scored at the 10:47 mark of the second period. Cain’s sixth goal was assisted by Justin Selman and Peter Stoykewych.
The Phantoms finally cashed in on a powerplay with just 39.2 seconds left in the second period. Sekac took a beautiful pass from Strang to score from close range just outside of the goal crease. Jordan Young also picked up his seventh assist of the season on the goal that gave Youngstown a 4-3 lead heading into intermission.
In the third period, Des Moines scored a pair of quick goals to claim a 5-4 lead. The first was a Doug Clifford powerplay goal. Clifford got assists from Ethan Prow and Austin Coldwell. The game-tying goal was scored 2:02 into the final period. Cain picked up his second goal of the game, also a powerplay opportunity. Chris Joyaux and Kevin Irwin claimed assists on the go-ahead goal for the Buccaneers.
The Phantoms got a two-man advantage in the last few minutes of the game and another one-man advantage to end the contest, but were unable to capitalize and tie the game. With the 5-4 loss, Youngstown fell to 9-16-1 and lost their sixth in a row. Des Moines improved to 11-8-2. The Phantoms outshot the Buccaneers 32-28. Give the home team credit for a better effort and really leaving it all on the ice.
Disastrous Second Period Hurts Phantoms, 7-2
The Youngstown Phantoms needed a break. Heading into this contest with the Indiana Ice, the Phantoms had dropped four contests in a row, all on the road. It seemed like an eternity since the Phantoms had a home game (December 4), which incidentally was the last time this team won. A three-goal second period doomed the home team as Indiana collected an even-strength, a powerplay, and a shorthanded goal over the last seven minutes of the frame to post a 7-2 win Tuesday.
Indiana scored at the 13:36 mark when Blake Coleman fired a shot that hit the post and apparently went in. Coleman’s goal was a powerplay score and he was assisted by Brian Ferlin and Danlil Tarasov. For Coleman, it was the 11th goal of the season.
The Phantoms wasted little time knotting the contest at the 14:39 mark of the opening period. Dylan Margonari connected for his third goal of the year, an even-strength chance. Mike Ambrosia picked up an assist on the Phantoms game-tying score. The first period would come to a close in a 1-1 deadlock. The Phantoms and Ice were playing very physical hockey and there was no shortage of hits or near fights throughout the game.
Youngstown would grab a 2-1 lead early in the second period when Ryan Belonger stayed hot and scored for the fourth time in the last ten games. Ambrosia picked up his second assist of the night and sixth of the year.
The roof then caved in on the Phantoms. Indiana scored three second period goals in the last seven minutes of the stanza to take a 4-2 lead into intermission. Adam Erne connected for an even-strength goal with an assist from Peter Schneider to tie the game. Sean Kuraly then broke loose for the Ice to net a shorthanded goal. Kuraly gathered a loose puck near center ice and raced toward the net beating Matt O’Connor for the go ahead goal. Tarasov put an exclamation point on the strong period connecting on another powerplay, this time Ferlin got the assist to put the Ice in front 4-2 after two periods.
At the 18:32 mark of the final period, Indiana tacked on another goal to increase the lead to 5-2. Jarrod Rabey picked up the third powerplay goal of the night for the Ice. Just over a minute later, Coleman got his second of the game, an even-strength tally, and the rout was on. Chris Martin (not from Coldplay) tacked on a late goal to wrap the scoring up at 7-2 in favor of the Ice.
With the loss, the Phantoms fell to 9-15-1. Indiana improved to 12-10-2 with the victory. The Ice outshot Youngstown, 30-25. Youngstown welcomes Des Moines for a rare Wednesday night game at the Covelli Centre.
“We have to come ready to play 60 minutes. It seems like something goes wrong that we do not recover well, and we need to”, said Curtis Carr after the game. “We compete with the best teams in the league and what happened here tonight does not reflect what kind of team we have.”
Merry Christmas, Jerry Slocum!
To sit at the media table at Youngstown State basketball games has been awesome. To take pictures along the baseline at Beeghly Center when the YSU Penguins have a home game is a different kind of awesome. You hear both sides of everything because you are real close to the YSU bench, but you hear the commentary of the fans also. People are very critical of Jerry Slocum and quite frankly, I’m sick of hearing the criticism. Here are some reasons why Slocum is the man, and hopefully stays at YSU for a very long time.
At a recent home game, a Penguin player threw a turnover, a horrible decision. The Malone player finished the sequence by making a lay-up and then being fouled. As Jerry Slocum paced the YSU bench area, I looked over and saw the disgust, from the very recent turn of events that just happened on the court, obvious in Slocum’s face.
Then the heckling starts. I hear people scream about how poor the coaching is. I bite my tongue and shake my head and just glance at the stupidity around me sometimes. Jerry Slocum is one of the most passionate coaches you will find in any sport. He comes to the press conference drained, he leaves it all on the court just like he encourages his players to do. Yet, there are hecklers.
Let’s be realistic about a couple of things. Slocum may not be winning championships, but for the most part his teams are competitive and well coached. Last year he lost everyone except Vytas Sulskis, Ashen Ward and Dan Boudler. This year, Sheldon Brogden has walked away and turned in his uniform. Why? I’ll tell you why. Hard-nosed old-school coaching, that’s why. Slocum works his guys hard. The lazy players quit or become headaches refusing to conform to a stubborn man who is very set in his ways.
Youngstown State is a football school. Eric Wolford is doing a great job rekindling the fire that once burned between goal lines at The Ice Castle. Jerry Slocum has done something Eric Wolford has not done yet, he has won over 600 games.
Slocum could live without media, in fact, I think he actually despises going to press conferences after a loss. Go find some Bobby Knight footage on You Tube and tell me that he wasn’t the same way. Slocum has been a joy to cover and he has never given me any negativity or distress. I do, however, pick and choose times that feel more appropriate when asking a question.
Jerry Slocum is a very private, family man. He takes great pride in his personal relationships and glows when he talks about his wife or extended family. He also takes great pride in what kind of product shows up on the court each game. He is constantly thinking and his scowl is priceless, he wears his heart on his sleeve.
If I were in charge, which I’m not, I would surely try to find out how much longer he wants to coach and throw the paper down for him to sign. I suggest keeping an eye on him during the game, it is really entertaining because he is working on so many different things. He is an ace at riding the refs. Watch how soon YSU gets a make-good call when Slocum questions something less than a minute before, it happens every game. When a YSU player misses a free throw, he will just look at the ground like his stomach just turned. These are admirable qualities you don’t get from a coach. Consider yourselves lucky YSU fans, and Merry Christmas, Jerry Slocum!
Akron Handles YSU Women, 70-56
The much-improved Youngstown State Lady Penguins welcomed their longtime geographic rival, the Akron Zips, to town for a finals week matchup. The game was tied at 55 with just under five minutes to play, but Akron was able to clamp down and improve to 6-4 on the season, as they posted a 70-56 win at Youngstown State.
Akron carried a 31-25 lead into the locker room at the half thanks in part to shooting 44% from the floor. Rachel Tecca led a balanced Zips attack in the first half with seven points. Youngstown State got eight first half points from Boki Dimitrov including a couple of threes that kept YSU at a single digit deficit. The Penguins launched 18 threes in the first half, hitting five. The Zips also held a 20-14 rebounding advantage at the intermission.
The Penguins cut the Zips lead to 35-33 when Tieara Jones scored inside and was fouled. Jones scored her tenth point to cut the Akron lead to one point at the 12:49 mark, but but Tecca responded on the Zips next possession to keep the lead at three. Jones, a product of Rayen High School, again connected with 11:52 left in the game to make the score 41-40 in favor of Akron. Jones was having one of her best nights as a Penguin.
Sina King gave Akron a 45-40 lead on a layup, but Kenya Middlebrooks hit a three coming back to keep the Penguins close. Macey Nortey, who seems to hustle her heart out every game, had a steal and drove the court for a layup, and was fouled. Nortey hit the free throw putting the Penguins in front for the first time in the second half at 46-45.
Middlebrooks was in a zone, hitting threes at will, she had three of them in a six minute span, including one at the 7:15 mark to put the Penguins back in front, 52-51. Brandi Brown’s presence seemed like enough for Akron to really concentrate on shutting her down, allowing the role players like Middlebrooks, Nortey, and Jones ample chances to score.
Jasmine Mushington stepped up for the Zips and hit a couple of big baskets to give Akron back the lead at 59-55 with 3:54 left in the game. Akron’s 9-1 run put the Penguins into fouling mode with 1:24 left in the game. The Zips coasted home holding the Penguins to just one point over the final four and a half minutes.
Akron was paced by Tecca’s 19 points and 11 boards. Youngstown State got 15 from Jones and 14 from Middlebrooks. The Penguins finished 9-39 from three-point land. With the loss, YSU fell to 2-7 and will not play at home again in 2010.
After the game, Coach Boldon spoke about his team’s collapse down the stretch. “We look at film and see the things we do well, and the things we don’t do so well, and we are doing more things not so well right now.”
Tieara Jones talked about a piece of the machine giving way each possession. “We play good defense, but if four people are on the same page and one breaks down, it can hurt the whole team and we had some of that tonight. It wasn’t any one person in particular, just one of the four on the court would break down and it cost us.”
Youngstown State Recovers To Beat Malone, 78-62
Youngstown State returned home to play a game a few days after being trounced by Robert Morris, 90-60. To make matters worse, one of the team leaders, Ashen Ward, would be inactive with back spasms. The Penguins last played Malone in 1963, and won that game 117-81. Monday night, parody showed 50 years of progress and the Penguins didn’t post such a lopsided number, but managed to win the game behind stellar efforts from Vytas Sulskis and Damian Eargle.
The first half saw a sluggish Penguins team establish their presence inside. Only four Penguins managed to score in the first half. Damian Eargle and Vytas Sulskis combined for 25 of the Penguins 33 first half points. The other two Penguins to get any points in the opening half were Tre Brewer with five, and Dan Boudler contributing three. Malone held their ground and trailed by only two at the intermission with the score YSU 33, and Malone 31.
Coach Jerry Slocum was handed a pretty cheap technical foul (below) with 6:31 left in the first half to help Malone stay in the game on a four-point swing. Malone was paced by Eric Coblentz’s 12 in the opening half.
Coblentz gave Malone a 41-39 lead when he buried a three for his twelfth point as the Pioneers, who shot 45% from long distance in the first half stayed red hot. Eargle responded with a bucket giving him 16 points, a new career high, to tie the game at 41 with 15:49 left in the game. Sulskis and Eargle continued to propel the offense which pushed the lead to five with 12:00 remaining. Sulskis hit a thunderous running dunk off of the right baseline to force the Pioneers to use a timeout to regroup.
Eargle was a man possessed and created problems for the Pioneers all night long. He was blocking shots, making passes, and scoring. Sulskis hit his season-high 20th point to put YSU up 57-51 with 9:45 left. The pesky Pioneers were surviving behind the arc hitting 50% for the game to this point. YSU held a 64-54 lead with 7:53 remaining in the game.
The Penguins took their largest lead of the game with 6:11 left when Blake Allen hit a free throw giving YSU a 12-point lead with 6:21 left at 67-55. DuShawn Brooks was starting to feel it hitting his second three of the night and recording his eighth point to push the Penguin advantage to 14.
Sulskis (above) finished the game with 25 points, one short of a career high on 10-12 shooting. He also gathered nine rebounds. Eargle would have his best all-around game as a Penguin. Eargle finished with 24 points and 10 rebounds, posting his first double-double of the season. Eargle and Sulskis were virtually everywhere and played scintillating basketball. Tre Brewer also recorded a career-high in both points (13) and rebounds (14).
Eric Coblentz played very well for Malone and finished with 21 points.
With the win, YSU improved to 5-4 on the season, but more importantly, seemed to pick up the pieces after a disastrous road trip in preparation for North Carolina State and Kent State in the immediate future.
Coach Jerry Slocum was reflective on his team’s effort. “We got past the shackles of a hard loss and ran a lot of motion. We played very well and regrouped. That road trip we just came off of, every one of those teams did well in tournaments last season. Heading to NC State and playing an ACC team will be tough, but I feel Kent State has their best team this season. They will both be very hard games for us.”
Vytas Sulskis reflected on the night. “Me and Damian are roommates and we had good chemistry going tonight. We were finding each other and it wasn’t planned, it just worked that way. I was hot tonight.”
Slocum praised the efforts of both Sulskis and Eargle as well. “Vytas played really well on both ends of the court tonight. He and Damian toughened up on defense and we found a way to get into a rhythm in the second half.”


























