Posts Tagged ‘Blake Allen’

Allen Sets YSU Record For Three, But Penguins Fall In Triple OT To UIC

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In the midst of a five-game homestand, perhaps the most crucial stretch of the season for YSU, the Penguins rode Blake Allen into the record book, but failed to hit free throws at critical times in an 88-83, triple overtime loss.

“This is  hard one to take”, said Slocum.  “We played well enough to win, but poorly enough to lose.  We met the enemy tonight, and the enemy was ourselves.”

The first half was outright sloppy.  YSU was winning 1-0 at the 15:00 mark and trailed 4-3 with eleven minutes to go in the half – neither team was hitting shots.  The Penguins mustered enough offense to take a 19-16 lead to the locker room at the break.

Kamrin Belin hit a couple of threes and a free throw to put up seven first half points for the home team.  Gary Talton posted five first half points for UIC, who as a team managed to shoot 27.5% from the field.  In contrast, YSU shot only 25%.

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In the second half, UIC tied the game at 21 each when Talton drove, hit a bucket, and drew a foul on Blake Allen.  Talton would hit the free throw to give UIC their first lead of the second half at 22-21 with 17:01 left in the game.

Belin seemed like the go-to guy for the Penguins.  After he missed a three, he gathered his own rebound, put up a shot, grabbed that miss and tipped it in while being fouled to tie the game at 25.

The Flames seemed to have a size advantage in the paint with big Josh Crittle (above).   Damian Eargle had his hands full with the bulky low-post presence of Crittle.  Coach Slocum was moving Bobby Hain in and out of the game to deal with Crittle when possible.

A pair of Allen three-pointers put YSU ahead 33-29, but the Flames went back to Crittle in the low post who rumbled to the hoop for an easy deuce.  Allen, however, was feeling it in the second half and posted his third three, this time he was fouled as it dropped.  Allen converted the free throw to put YSU up 37-31 with 11:59 to play.

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Allen set the school record for threes with the make.  The new record of 200 threes made, broke the record of 198 which was held by Craig Haese from 1997-2001.  Currently, Allen ranks second in the Horizon League with 63 three-pointers.

“I am proud of Blake”, said Slocum.  “He is probably the hardest working player I have ever coached.”

UIC wasn’t having any compassion for the record book and trailed by eight, but managed to tie the game at 68 with 6:52 left to play.  Daniel Barnes completed an old-fashioned three point play for the Flames.

Kendrick Perry (below) hit a big three with just under two minutes left to give YSU a 57-53 lead.  UIC would answer and YSU had the ball back with a two point lead and 44 seconds remaining but failed to get a quality shot.  UIC got the ball back with 19.3 seconds left.  After a couple of timeouts, Talton hit a runner with .8 left in the game to force overtime.

Free throw shooting would spell doom for the Penguins in the overtime.  D. J. Cole had a chance to cut into three-point lead with a pair of free throws, but only made one of two.  Later, Eargle, who finished the game 1-9 from the line missed a pair.

Perry rode in on his white horse to hit a three with .1 seconds to play and force a second overtime.  The junior forward had a hand in his face and was floating right to left in the air when he released the game-tying bomb.

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In the second overtime, Cole drove for a bucket, and then Perry hit a couple of free throws to make it 70-66 with 3:37 left to play.  With just over a minute left to play, Perry hit a couple more free throws, but a UIC three tied the game at 72.  That’s the way the second overtime would end.

In overtime number three, Crittle appeared to pick up his fifth foul, but the refs conferred and said the foul would be charged to Hayden Humes instead.  The reason this was significant was because the Penguins wasted a whole timeout planning something without Crittle around.  Eargle missed both free throws, and then Crittle hit a pair to put UIC on top 78-74.

Perry drove, scored, and got fouled.  With 1:05 left in the game, Perry hit the charity toss to make it a 78-77 UIC lead.  Barnes then hit a dagger three to make it 81-77.  The Penguins would not convert on the next possession and went into foul mode.   On an intentional foul, Eargle appeared to have caught an unintentional elbow that may have broken his nose.

Trailing by four with 16 seconds left, YSU forced a turnover on an inbounds pass but failed to convert and UIC was able to cap the marathon.

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YSU (14-11, 6-6) got 16 points from Allen in his record-setting performance.  Belin had a good offensive game contributing 14 points. Perry raked in 29 points and Eargle had 5 points, 7 rebounds, and 4 steals

For UIC, Talton had 23 points, Barnes finished with 20, and Crittle knocked in 18.  With the win, UIC improved to 15-10, 6-6 in league play.

YSU Climbs Back Into Horizon League Race With 80-68 Win Over Valparaiso

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Youngstown State University seems to be getting a grip on this whole basketball thing lately.  The Penguins played a fantastic defensive game against league-leading Valparaiso and came away with an 80-68 win.  Kendrick Perry spearheaded the charge with 28 points but had plenty of help on both sides of the court.

To say the Penguins were able to play physical in the post would be an understatement in the win.  Damian Eargle, Bobby Hain, Cameron Belin, and the rest of the Penguins did a fantastic job of taking Kevin Van Wijk and Ryan Broekhoff out of their usual dominant rhythm that has driven the Crusaders all season.

“It really was a great effort defensively”, said Slocum.  “Our guys really gutted it out and played well.  It was just a great team effort, probably as good as we have had all year.

In the first half, YSU really did a nice job of guarding the perimeter and the paint.  When Valpo would try to kick the ball out, a Penguin would be waiting.  When Valpo tried to feed the low post, they were met with heavy resistance – each trip down the floor.  Nothing came easy for the Crusaders.  YSU got six points out of Kendrick Perry and six more from Belin (below) in the half.

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The Penguns took a 39-28 lead into the half.  Valpo never had a lead in the entire game as YSU started on a 12-4 run.  From that point on, Jerry Slocum seemed to hit all of the right buttons and was able to maintain that large of a lead throughout the opening half.

In the second half, more of the same from YSU.  The Penguins had a 44-33 lead with 16:46 left to play and had maybe their two shakiest possessions of the game to that point, but Valparaiso was unable to gain any significant ground.  With 11:21 left in the game, Shawn Amiker took a nice feed and connected on a bunny while drawing a foul.  Amiker hit the free throw to increase the lead to 54-41.

Slocum knew the sun was shining on his team as Ryan Weber, who entered the game 1-16 from three-point range, buried a big three to increase the Penguin lead to 14.

Valpo would not go away quietly.  With a shade over five minutes left in the game, the YSU lead was whittled to ten points at 65-55.  Blake Allen nabbed a huge offensive rebound in which the Penguins got a fresh clock and capped off with a Belin three to push the lead back to 13.

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Perry remained the heart of the YSU offense.  The junior tallied 28 points and snared 11 rebounds.  Belin added 15 points, and Eargle played another well-rounded game on both ends, with  for the upstart Penguins (13-8, 5-3).  YSU started conference play 1-3, but have since rattled off four straight to get back into the big picture.

“We were feeding off of the energy of this crowd tonight”, said Perry.  “The fans were booing the refs when they made bad calls, they were cheering us when we made our shots, they were really loud tonight.”

Van Wijk ended the game with 14 points for the Crusaders who dropped to 6-2 in the conference and 16-6 overall.  Broekhoff added 10, but those totals are well below the numbers those two have been putting up this season.

“KP was very special tonight”, said Slocum at the post-game press conference.

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YSU will now head to Detroit for a Friday rematch with the Titans who destroyed YSU by 41 the last time they met on January 10.

When asked if his Penguins would head to Michigan with a chip on their shoulders, Slocum responded, “We are a much different basketball team now.  We are really looking forward to the challenge of going there to play, hopefully we have enough in the tank physically to play our best.”

“We will definitely have a chip on our shoulders”, said Perry.

YSU Gets Big 68-61 League Win Over Wright State

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Youngstown State University Coach, Jerry Slocum, has said more than once that his Penguins needed to learn to be a better team at home.  Against a quality team like Wright State, the Penguins delivered their best effort, which was plenty.  The Penguins used a complete arsenal on the Raiders to claim a very satisfying 68-61 win on their home floor.

“This was a classic Horizon League game”, said Slocum.  “I am happy that everyone who was here finally got to see what I have gotten to see on the road.  It was not a perfect game and we did turn the ball over 18 times, but we played very tough.”

In the first half, YSU did a good job with fundamentals.  The ‘Guins shot 75% from the line, saw balanced scoring, and did a really good job rotating on defense.  In the entertaining first half, YSU had a lead as big as six at the 5:10 mark.  Wright State kept bouncing back, however.  When the smoke cleared, it was YSU that headed to the locker room with a 28-25 lead.

The thing to keep in mind about this Wright State team was that it shows tremendous balance.  No starter for the Raiders averaged more than 11.4 points per game.  This was a true “team” and a tough opponent who only lost once in six league games.  Credit Slocum and staff for doing a good job keeping the defensive assignments straight.

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With the Penguins ahead, 38-33, D.J. Cole hit a three from the left wing to give the Penguins their largest lead of the game at 41-33.  After a Raider timeout, the Penguins went back to work and used a full shot clock as Cole found Blake Allen for an easy layup.

Cole Darling connected on a pair of free throws for Wright State with 11:49 left in the game to make it a 43-37 lead.  The suddenly combustible Penguins then turned the ball over.  Jerran Young hit one of the free throws to make it a five point game.  Kamren Belin hit a big bucket to give the Penguins a more comfortable lead at 45-38.

Wright State had cut the lead to 46-42 with 6:40 left to go.  Allen drilled a three from the top of the key to snuff out the Raider rally and put the Penguins up 49-42.  Belin then connected on a pair of charity tosses to push the lead back to nine.  Allen then drilled another three to extend the lead to 12, the largest of the game, with 4:39 left to play.

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The Penguins got another solid effort from Damian Eargle.  The all-time Horizon League leader for blocked shots added to his total with 5 stuffs.  He also scored 18 points and gathered 6 rebounds.

“It was a tough game”, said Eargle.  “They have no one player to stop and have a very good team, so you never now who could beat you.  It was definitely hard to prepare.”

The Penguins (11-8, 3-3) got another good game out of Allen, who finished with 17 points, 15 coming in the second half.  His buddy from Florida, Kendrick Perry, added 14 points.  Belin had a nice game off of the bench and chipped in with ten.

Wright State got 18 points from Young.  The Raiders fell to 5-2 in the conference and 14-6 overall.

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The Penguins are at home for two more games against Cleveland State on Saturday and Valparaiso next Wednesday.

Slocum commented on the upcoming matchup against Cleveland State.  “Obviously, that game has meaning.  They will come in and play tough, and you know it may not be pretty, but it will be a fight.”

Slocums Present Bests Slocums Past, 93-50

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Jerry Slocum launched a good coaching career at Geneva.  He won championships and solidified a small legacy as mentor of the Golden Tornadoes in his nine years at the helm.  Now in his eighth season at Youngstown State University, Slocum is starting to prosper.  On Thursday, his past was mismatched by his present as the Penguins coasted to a 93-50 win.

During a timeout with just over two minutes left in the game, the YSU public address announcer declared that Slocum had just moved into second place on the all-time wins list at YSU.

“I honestly did not know about that”, said Slocum.

The Penguins wasted little time racing out to a double-digit lead before halftime.  Blake Allen and Bobby Hain had ten points each in the opening half to propel YSU to a commanding 47-24 lead.  More impressively, the Penguins bench logged 29 first half minutes.

“I thought it was great to see our bench get a lot of playing time tonight.  They work very hard in practice and Bobby [Hain] is probably the best passer on the team and showed he can play inside or down low.  Everyone played well and I liked the business-like approach and unselfish play”, echoed Slocum.

One of the weirder statistics of the game was the fact that YSU only committed one foul in the first half.  They also scored twelve points off of Geneva turnovers and 24 points in the paint.

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In the second half, Geneva felt the sting of the whole Penguin array.  There was a Kendrick Perry breakaway facial dunk.  There was a Shawn Amiker slam a couple of minutes later, and Damian Eargle swatting balls away like a Chinese ping-pong medalist.

On one hand, it was nice to see what the Penguins can do when firing on all cylinders, they are a very exciting basketball team when it all clicks.  On the other hand, it was a rewarding victory because the bench was able to get so many quality minutes.

At the 12:48 mark of the second, Ryan Weber had back-to-back breakaway steals for dunks to increase the Penguins lead to 74-32.  It was at that point of the game that Slocum pulled all of his starters to ensure good health and to keep the reserves active.

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In the blowout win, the Penguins got balanced scoring.  Hain led the way with 16, Allen added 15, Perry had 11, and Amiker knocked in ten.  Eargle had five blocks for the Guins who improved to 5-4 on the season.

Geneva has a great story on their team.  Brian Rice, from New Castle, PA, is a 43-year old freshman for the Golden Tornadoes.  Rice did 20 years of active military duty and has enrolled at Geneva.  He made the basketball team and played very hard, even when the outcome had been determined.

Slocum talked about what it was like playing his past.

“It [Geneva] is a place I love.  I was there for nine years.  It is a wonderful school and I am glad we could help them a little and have them here.”

The Penguins next game is on Saturday at the Covelli Centre in the first game to be played off campus since 1972.  YSU will welcome Hiram to town for the experimental contest.  After the Hiram game, YSU heads back to the road after finals and will have to stash their Christmas presents on the bus with games at South Florida on the 18th and Bethune-Cookman on the 21st.

YSU Falls In OT To Kent, 85-78

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Youngstown State was glad to be playing anywhere but Pittsburgh, and seven days off meant a well-rested team could handle some overtime.  Unfortunately for the Penguins (3-4), Kent State was up to the challenge and came out on the right end of a very competitive basketball game, 85-78.  The Penguins demise in the game was a 4-20 shooting performance from three-point range.

“We had chances in a hard fought ball game, but we did not shoot well from three and we are not playing good in big moments”, said Jerry Slocum.

In the overtime, both teams lit it up, but a three-point play by Kent’s Darren Goodson with 2:21 left gave the Flashes (5-2) a 78-74 lead.  After cutting it to a two-point game, the Penguins threw the ball out of bounds and had to go into foul mode.  Kent State did well to convert and hold a lead.

The Penguins and the Golden Flashes played a pretty even first half.  YSU got ten points from Damian Eargle and ten more from Kendrick Perry (above) in the opening stanza.  KSU got nine apiece from Mark Henninger and Randal Holt, but it was the Penguins who headed into the locker room ahead, 36-34.

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Kent State used a 13-3 run to open the second half.  Holt knocked down a three which gave the Flashes their largest lead in the contest at 47-39 with 16:14 left to play in the game.  Kamren Belin cut the lead to 47-43 with just over 15 minutes to go on a nice drive from the right of the paint, in.

Perry than did what he does best, throw the Penguins on his back for a stretch of time when everything seems to be going wrong.  First Perry hit a three to make it 49-46, and on the next possession, he hit a runner straight down the lane to trim the Kent lead to one.  Perry then hit a three with 12:14 left in the game to give YSU a 51-50 lead.

DJ Cole (above) gave the Penguins a spark when he grabbed  rebound and went the length of the floor, finishing his drive with a wicked crossover dribble.  The basket pulled the Penguins to within one at 59-58 with just over eight minutes to play.

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With 5:37 left in the game, the Penguins tied the game at 63 when Blake Allen knocked down a three with a hand in his face. The next basket either team would score came at the 2:36 mark, three minutes later, when Eargle connected on a pair of free throws that gave YSU a 65-63 lead.

Melvin Tabb completed the traditional three-point play to put Kent back on top.  Belin would tie things up on a free throw with 1:14 left.  Kent got the ball in a tie game with 26 seconds left,and after a timeout, failed to convert forcing an overtime.

“We have played a lot of really good teams”, added Slocum.  ” I do feel like we have beaten ourselves in each loss though.”

YSU was paced by Perry who finished with 26 points.  Eargle finished up with 18 points and 10 rebounds, and Allen chipped in 12.

“They made a couple more plays then we did”, said Perry.  “We have to get better at finishing games.”

Kent State got a good night out of Chris Evans who finished with 24 points.

YSU Men Extinguish Red Flash, 75-60

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Riding the wave of a 2-0 road start, Youngstown State got to play a home game.  The Penguins responded in an adequate way – with a win.  YSU scored 42 points in the first fifteen minutes of the second half to pull away from Saint Francis and coast to a 75-60 win to push their record to 3-0 for the second season in a row.

“The key to the game was the first seven to eight minutes of the second half”, said Jerry Slocum.  “We preached on the way home from Georgia that we have to keep our identity and know how to handle winning.  We need to stay grounded in our fundamentals and our team play.”

The Penguins and the Red Flash played a pretty even 18 minutes to start the game.  YSU trailed by four points with 7:52 left in the opening session, but were able to close the half strong enough to carry a 29-24 lead into the locker room.  Kendrick Perry paced Youngstown State with 11 points.

The Red Flash got nine points from Stephon Whyatt and another eight from Stephon Mosley, but no more than three points from any other player.  The Red Flash started the game doing a very good job on defense, but the Penguins adjusted to assert their skills.

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Senior guard Blake Allen (above) heated up in the second half.  Allen connected on a three with 15:01 to play that gave YSU a 42-30 advantage.  The next Saint Francis possession, Kamren Belin stole the ball and went coast-to-coast for the easy layup to push the Penguin lead to 14.  After a defensive stop, Allen connected for another three to give YSU their biggest lead of 17 points.

Allen talked about his regimen between practices.

“I get in the gym every chance I get”, said Allen.  “I shot anywhere from 800-900 free throws in the last two days.”

The Penguins were the beneficiary of good half-court defense forcing the Red Flash into ten second half turnovers.  In fact, YSU scored 22 points off of Red Flash turnovers in the game.

Meanwhile, Perry kept consistently knocking down buckets for the Penguins.  KP had the whole array going as he was hitting twos, threes, free throws, and layups.  He would finish the game with 19 points, seven rebounds, and three assists.

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Perry and Allen spearheaded an outburst that made it 67-46 with 7:09 left to play in the contest.  Allen’s sixth three in eight tries and a pair of Perry charity tosses boosted the Guins to their largest lead.

Allen knocked down six threes on his way to 18 points and Damian Eargle played a good all-around game as he knocked in 12 points, blocked two shots and garnered five rebounds.

The Red Flash were lead by Whyatt who would finish the game with 18 points.

The Penguins head back to the road for three games in three days starting Monday at North Dakota State, then head back East to face James Madison on Tuesday, and conclude the swing Wednesday night at Duquesne.

“Our schedule is simply a gauntlet.  All three of those teams we play in three days are very good teams with high basketball IQ’s”, said Slocum.

 

Penguins Improve To 2-0 After Upsetting Georgia, 68-56

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Expectations were higher than usual heading into the 2012-13 basketball season for Jerry Slocum‘s Youngstown State Penguins.  Reality drawn from those expectations has been over the top.  Just two nights after defeating George Washington, the Penguins went into Georgia and bit the Bulldogs, 68-56.

Kendrick Perry (above) had 23 points (17 in the second half) to lead the Penguins.  Newcomer Kamren Belin posted 17 points and Damian Eargle rattled off a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds.

The Penguins defensive effort was tremendous as YSU forced Georgia into 15 turnovers.  The YSU defense also held the Bulldogs to 17 total field goals and a 32.1 shooting percentage for the game.

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After trailing by eleven at the half, Georgia was able to cut the YSU lead down to three, 32-29, but a jumper by Eargle, a free-throw by Perry and a 3-pointer by DJ Cole, the first of his career, put the Guins back up 38-29, with 11:43 left.

YSU then used a 13-4 run and led by as many as 18 after a four-point play by Perry made it 51-33 with 7:48 to go.  Georgia never got within 10 the rest of the way.

The Guins shot 38.5 percent from the field and held the Bulldogs to a 12.5 field-goal percentage in the first half.

Shawn Amiker scored the first four points for the Penguins as they jumped out to an 8-0 start.

After the Bulldogs cut the deficit to 12-6 at the 9:16 mark, the Penguins defense allowed just one more field goal the rest of the half. Georgia scored its final six points at the free-throw line.

Belin gave the Penguins a jump start hitting a jumper and a 3-pointer to push the YSU lead to 10 points,  19-6, with 4:40 to go.

YSU Men Win Big Road Opener, 80-73, At George Washington

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Youngstown State started the 2012-13 season on the right foot with a big 80-73 road win at George Washington of the Atlantic-10.  Blake Allen paced the Penguins with 19 points, including four three-pointers, but the bench and free throw shooting to close the game out made the difference.

Damian Eargle was fouled with 40 seconds left in the game as he sank a shot to break a 71-71 tie.  Eargle hit the free throw to complete the three-point play and put YSU ahead.

Allen’s 3-pointer with 2:40 left put Youngstown State ahead 71-65, but the Colonials charged back with six straight points, the last of which was an  Isaiah Armwood dunk following a Penguins’ turnover. Armwood led George Washington with 18 points.

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Youngstown State made six free throws in the final 25 seconds, and the Penguins escaped victorious after nearly blowing a late lead.  The bench played a big role in the season opening win.

Newcomer Bobby Hain played 27 minutes off of the bench and contributed 19 points and 11 rebounds for the Penguins.  DJ Cole picked up the slack off of the bench for Kendrick Perry who did not make a basket in nine shot attempts.  Cole played 28 minutes and scored twelve points and had a pair of big steals.

With the win, his 75th at YSU, Jerry Slocum tied Mike Rice for third on the school’s all-time wins list.

Not much time to celebrate this one as the Penguins head South for a game with the Georgia Bulldogs on Monday.

2012-13 YSU Men’s Basketball Preview — 20 Wins?

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The 2011-12 Youngstown State Penguins basketball team exceeded expectations to some degree.  Coming off of a winning season with a 16-15 record, the nucleus remains.  Head Coach Jerry Slocum has survived some tough times and is now able to reap the benefits of his hard work.

Kendrick Perry, Damian Eargle, and Blake Allen all return for Slocum this season. Ashen Ward and DuShawn Brooks have finished their careers.  Perhaps the biggest role to fill this year will be the leader role vacated by Ward.

“Kendrick, Blake, and Damian have all stepped up into leadership roles”, said Slocum.  “They have really raised the bar as to where they want this team to be.”

Slocum often complimented the way Ward was a leader both on and off of the court.

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Unfortunately for the Penguins, like last year, the schedule is a mess.  Last season YSU only hosted 13 of their 30 games and got to host a playoff game.  The fact that they had a winning season, going 10-4 at home, shows how good that team really was.

This year, the schedule was finalized in September.  September, 2012.  Some of the scheduling problems had a lot to do with Butler leaving the Horizon League.

“We start with five of six on the road this year”, said Slocum.  “I have continually been upset that our kids are put into that situation, and it is going to be an equally tough task this year.”

The season starts on November 10th at George Washington and two nights later in Georgia to face the SEC Bulldogs.  After a home game, the Penguins play three games in three days (November 19-21) against North Dakota State, James Madison, and Duquesne.  Three of those five teams have been in the NCAA Tournament in the past three years.

In January, the Penguins get to repeat the touring as four of their first five conference games are on the road.

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Coach Eric Wolford and some of his football players have been quoted as saying that they have to do things one week at a time, one game at a time.  Don’t dwell, don’t gaze forward, just focus on the task at hand.

When asked, Slocum agreed with the theory, and then some.

“We don’t look past our next practice”, said Slocum.  “Whether it is conditioning, shooting, or understanding things, we cannot look a day past or forward.  When we work hard, everything takes care of itself, but it is a daily thing for us.”

Kamren Belin, Larry Johnson Jr., Bobby Hain, Ryan Weber, and Ronnye Beamon are all new players in the system.  Allen, Perry, and Eargle are joined by Shawn Amiker, DJ Cole, Josh Chojnacki, Danny Reese, Fletcher Larson, and Mike Podolsky to round out the roster.

“We went from 6’6″ and 6’6″ to 6’7″ and 6’10” at the four sport”, exclaimed Slocum.  “By adding some length, I think we are taking care of rebounding, which was a concern.  We are just bigger.”

Bigger expectations too.  I will predict the Penguins win 20 games this season.  For an exact call, let’s say 20-13, meaning they would play into the third round of their playoffs.

“I don’t sit around wondering which games we will win”, said Slocum.  “Our goal is to be playing the last week of our conference tournament this season.  If we play the way I know we can – unselfishly, and do the right things, there is no reason why we can’t be playing that far into the tournament.”

YSU Men’s Basketball Notes

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  • Youngstown State junior Damian Eargle has been named to the CollegeInsider.com Mid-Major All-Defensive Team, the website recently announced.  Eargle set the Horizon League single-season blocks records for all games and league-games only. Eargle finished with 116 blocks, including 65 in Horizon League play. He also owns the Horizon League career record for blocks in conference play at 122.
  •  The 6-foot-7 forward led the Horizon League and ranked third in the country with 3.7 blocks per game.  Eargle recorded a block in 30 of 31 games last season, had 26 multi-block games and posted at least five blocks on 12 different occasions, including an eight-block performance against UC-Riverside on Nov. 18, 2011.  A 2012 Horizon League All-Defensive Team, selection, Eargle averaged 11.1 points per game and grabbed 7.5 rebounds per game.
  • Youngstown State men’s basketball Head Coach Jerry Slocum has announced that Kamren Belin (Atlanta, Ga./Walton), 6-foot-7, 225-pound forward, has signed a National Letter-of-Intent to continue his basketball and academic career at Youngstown State University.  “When I visited Youngstown State it just felt right and I really clicked with the players on the court,” Belin said. “It’s a good league and I think we have a chance to do something big.”
  • Besides being an outstanding basketball player, coach Jerry Slocum was impressed by Belin as a person.  “We are very excited to have Kamren join our program,” Slocum said. “He is a quality person and a very gifted all-around basketball player.”

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Several players were handed some well-deserved postseason accolades.  Among the recipients were:

  • Sophomore Kendrick Perry, a All-Horizon League First-Team selection, won the Dom Rosselli Coaches Awardfor the team’s most valuable player and also earned the Assists Award. Perry led the team with 121 assists.  Perry, who was just the fifth player in league history to lead the league in scoring and steals, led the Guins with 16.8 points per game.
  • Senior Ashen Ward, now a wideout for Eric Wolford, who averaged 10.0 points per game, was awarded the Tony Vivo Hustle Award and the Bill Dailey Leadership Award.
  • Junior guard Blake Allen, who averaged 12.8 points per game and led the Horizon League with 91 3-pointers made, won the Free-Throw Award with a free-throw percentage of .732.
  • Eargle was awarded the Leo Mogus Rebouding Award for leading the team in rebounding with 7.5 rebounds per game. Eargle also led the Horizon League with 121 blocks and was named to the league’s All Defensive Team.
  • Sophomore Mike Podolsky, who owns a cumulative grade-point average of 4.0, was the recipient of the Four-Square Club Scholar-Athlete Award.

Congratulations to Coach Slocum and staff and players on a fantastic season!