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College
basketball |
Lincoln
College vs. John Wood College
[MARCH
8, 2002] Amir
Major scored 15 points and pulled down 15 rebounds to lead Lincoln
College to a 63-53 victory over John Wood College in the Region 24
tournament at Lebanon Thursday night. The victory sends
Lincoln College against Lewis & Clark at 1 p.m. Friday.
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Lincoln
College (23-8) limited John Wood to just 19 first-half points and
took a 30-19 lead to the locker room at intermission. John
Wood outscored the Lynx by one in the second half; however, the Lynx
stayed in control throughout.
Joining
Major in double figures for coach B.J. McCullum were Derik
Hollyfield with 12 and James Roberson with 11.
Lincoln
finished the game with 23 field goals in 54 attempts for 43 percent
while John Wood managed to connect at a 34 percent rate, after
making just seven of 27 shots in the first half for 26 percent.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Lincoln
College (63) —
James Roberson 2-6-7-8-11; Josh Clark 1-4-0-0-3; Mike Fowler
1-3-1-2-3; Steve Turner 4-9-0-0-9; Andrew Kehr 0-0-2-2-2; Mike Sams
4-11-0-0-8; Amir Major 6-12-2-2-15; Derik Hollyfield 5-8-0-2-12;
Loyd Bowen 0-1-0-0-0. Totals 23-54-12-16-63. Three-point
goals: Clark, Turner, Major, Hollyfield 2.
John
Wood (53) —
Michael Brooks 1-4-0-1-2; Kellen Fernetti 2-7-0-0-6; Dean Taylor
2-6-1-2-6; Brandon Powell 4-10-3-6-12; Milton Guillory 6-13-0-0-14;
Leon Veal 2-5-0-0-4; Joshua Everage 1-1-0-0-3; Mamadou Cisse
0-9-0-0-0; Abraham Saxon 2-3-2-2-6; Benjamin Schauer
0-1-0-0-0. Totals 20-50-6-11-53. Three-point goals:
Fernetti 2, Taylor, Powell, Guillory 2, Everage.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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College
basketball |
Valley
tabs Donovan for freshman team honors
[MARCH
7, 2002] NORMAL
— Illinois State forward Katie Donovan, the leading freshman
rebounder in the Missouri Valley Conference, was one of five players
selected to the Valley’s All-Freshman Team.
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Donovan,
a 6-foot native of Kingston, Ontario, broke the Redbird freshman
record for offensive rebounds in a season with 75. She averaged 6.1
rebounds per game, No. 13 in the Missouri Valley. She led her team
in rebounding for the season and had five double-figure rebounding
games.
She
also scored 7.8 points per game for the season and 48.3 percent from
the field in Missouri Valley Conference games, ranking No. 8 in the
conference in league game statistics. Among her season highlights
was a 15-point, 14-rebound effort vs. Louisville, plus 11 points and
12 rebounds in the Redbirds’ non-conference win over Northern
Illinois.
Redbird
coach Jenny Yopp believes Donovan will have a large impact on
Illinois State’s future.
"Clearly,
Katie is capable of developing into a versatile, all-around
basketball player," said Yopp. "She is a gifted athlete
who embodies a passion for the game. Our coaching staff is looking
forward to working with Katie, and all of our other talented young
players, to prepare for next season. They are the main reason that
our future looks so bright."
The
Redbirds lose just one player, center Kristi Larson, to graduation.
As it stands now, the 2002-2003 Redbird roster will include two
seniors, five juniors, six sophomores and two freshmen.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Donovan
played some of her best basketball of the season in the final month,
averaging 10.3 points per game in her final seven games and shooting
60.4 percent from the field, hitting 32 of her last 53 shots for the
season. She is joined on the team by fellow rookies Dena Williams
and Genny Mueller from Bradley, Laura Spanheimer from Creighton, and
Jenny Lingor from Southwest Missouri State.
The
league also announced its 10-player all-conference team (Jennifer
Kaczka of Wichita State and Carla Bennett of Drake, both selected
for the third year) and its all-defensive squad, which includes
Latasha Austin of Evansville, chosen for the third straight year.
The
Valley’s All-Freshman Team is elected by vote of the league’s
coaches, media relations representatives and two media members from
each team’s market. Since the league began choosing the team in
1994, Donovan joins teammate Steph Reichle (2000), plus former
Redbirds Jenny Schmidt (1996) and Corinne Vossel (1995), as members
of Missouri Valley Conference All-Freshman teams from Illinois
State.
[ISU
news release]
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Illinois’
Williams named to USBWA All-District V Team
[MARCH
7, 2002] University
of Illinois guard Frank Williams was one of 10 players named to the
United States Basketball Writers Association All-District V Team.
Visit the links below to view the USBWA All-America and All-District
teams.
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The
USBWA has released its 2001-02 All-America and All-District teams:
http://www.sportswriters.net/usbwa/news/
allamerica020306.html
http://www.sportswriters.net/usbwa/news/
alldistrict020306.html
Also,
the association has announced the winner of its annual Most
Courageous Award:
http://www.sportswriters.net/usbwa/news/
courageous020306.html
Please
visit the USBWA website for more information at http://www.usbwa.com.
[USBWA
news release]
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High
school
basketball |
LCHS vs.
Lanphier
[MARCH
6, 2002]
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Boys
Lincoln
15 25 37 52
Lanphier
15 25 41 64
Lincoln stats
Schonauer
2-1-6, Schrader 8-0-22, Farmer 4-3-12, Bunch 1-2-4, Young 2-4-8
Three-point
field goals: Schrader 6, Schonauer, Farmer
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[to top of second column in
this article] |
[Photos by Bob Frank]
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College
basketball |
Lincoln
College hoopsters make all-conference team
[MARCH
6, 2002] Two
Lincoln College basketball players were selected to the Collegiate
Conference of Central Illinois all-conference team as announced by
coach B.J. McCullum.
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Selected
from the Lynx squad were Derik Hollyfield and Steve Turner.
Hollyfield,
a 6-4 freshman guard, averaged 16.3 points per game for the Lynx
while pulling down an average of nearly four rebounds per game and
handing out 2.5 assists per game.
Turner,
a 6-3 freshman guard, averaged 12.5 points per game while
averaging five rebounds and two assists per contest.
Joining
the Lynx pair on the all-conference team were Phil Jones, Spoon
River; Keith Parks, Parkland; David Roos, Illinois Central; Virgil
Akers, Danville; Reuben Statum, Illinois Central; Tony Weeden, Lewis
& Clark; Zack May, Lewis & Clark; Mamadou Cisse, John Wood;
and Cedric Miles, Illinois Central.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Jones
was named the player of the year and Weed was picked as the freshman
of the year. Tony Wysinger, Illinois Central, was named the
coach of the year. Illinois Central won the conference crown
with Lincoln finishing second.
Lincoln
opens play in the regional tournament March 7 at 1 p.m. against the
winner of the John Wood-Lincoln Land contest.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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Illinois
Big Ten tournament notes
[MARCH
6, 2002]
[Click
here for background information (in Adobe Acrobat).]
[Click
here to download Adobe Acrobat reader.]
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Big
10 announces $1 million scholarship donation
For Families of Freedom Scholarship
Fund™
[MARCH
6, 2002] PARK
RIDGE — Following the national tragedy on Sept. 11, 2001, the Big
Ten Conference through its intercollegiate athletic department
revenues pledged a $1 million scholarship contribution to assist the
families of those affected by the terrorist attacks. On Sunday,
March 10, Big Ten Commissioner James E. Delany will make a
presentation to Lumina Foundation for Education and Citizens’
Scholarship Foundation of America™ to provide undergraduate and
graduate degree scholarships at Big Ten Conference member
institutions.
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The
contribution will be administered by CSFA as a sub-fund to the
Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund™. The conference’s donation
shall be called the "Big Ten 9-11 Scholarship Fund." The
$1 million contribution will be drawn from conference reserves,
which are generated as a result of football and men’s basketball
participation in NCAA, bowl and regular-season television
opportunities.
The
presentation will be made during the Big Ten Men’s Basketball
Tournament final at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Ind. Delany
will present a check to Martha D. Lamkin, president and CEO of
Lumina Foundation, and Fred Vogel, executive vice president of CSFA.
"Many
lives were lost on Sept. 11 and many more lives were forever changed
as a result of these attacks," said Delany. "The Big Ten
Conference is honored to have the opportunity to make a $1 million
educational contribution to the surviving family members of those
who lost their lives on Sept. 11, 2001."
The
Big Ten Conference Council of Presidents/Chancellors unanimously
supported the contribution to the Families of Freedom Scholarship
Fund™. "This scholarship fund represents our commitment to a
hopeful future for those individuals so tragically affected by the
Sept. 11 attacks. The Big Ten Conference is honored to offer these
scholarships and the full resources of our respective institutions
during this time of need," said Dr. Myles Brand, president of
Indiana University and chair of the Big Ten COP/C.
"Ensuring
educational opportunity is the greatest gift we can give to
others," said Vogel. "On behalf of the Families of Freedom
Scholarship Fund™ and the families of the victims, I thank the Big
Ten Conference Council of Presidents/Chancellors and its member
institutions for their extremely generous gift."
CFSA,
the nation’s largest nonprofit scholarship organization, is
coordinating the overall fund initiative, receiving all monies
raised and administering the scholarship program over the life of
the fund.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Headquartered
in Minneapolis and St. Peter, Minn., CSFA carries out its mission of
expanding access to educational opportunities and encouraging
academic achievement through its Dollars for Scholars®, Scholarship
Management Services™ and the ScholarShop® programs.
Since
its founding in 1958, CSFA has distributed over $776.2 million to
more than 748,000 students through its scholarship and other support
programs. For the fifth year in a row, Smart Money, the Wall Street
Journal’s magazine of personal finance, has ranked CSFA as one of
the 17 most efficient nonprofits in the country. Worth Magazine also
has named CSFA as one of America’s 100 Best Charities in its
December 2001/January 2002 issue.
Lumina
Foundation for Education, headquartered in Indianapolis, Ind., is a
private, independent foundation, which strives to help people
achieve their potential by expanding access to an education beyond
high school. Lumina Foundation pledged the initial $3 million that
created the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund™.
"I’m
pleased that my fellow Midwesterners have joined this worthy effort
to help families devastated by the events of Sept. 11," Lamkin
said. "As this contribution demonstrates, hoops and heart are
hallmarks of the Midwest and Indiana. Because education provides an
opportunity to overcome life’s obstacles, the Families of Freedom
Scholarship Fund™ may open doors for these families who have
suffered such a great loss."
The
Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund™ has been created to provide
education assistance for postsecondary study to financially needy
dependents of those killed or permanently disabled as a result of
the terrorist attacks on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001, and during the
rescue activities relating to those attacks. Former President Bill
Clinton and former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole are serving as
co-chairs of the campaign fund effort.
For
more information see www.familiesoffreedom.org,
e-mail familiesoffreedom@csfa.org
or call 1 (800) 335-1102.
[Big
Ten news release]
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Twos
day basketball
[MARCH
5, 2002] Basketball
fans will have a tough time choosing between two big basketball
events Tuesday evening.
Pictures:
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• The Lincoln Railers play Springfield Lanphier in IHSA sectionals at
PCCC in Springfield. The game can be heard via Lincoln Daily News
on FIX 96 at 7:30 p.m.
Good
luck, Railers!
• Out at Lincoln Christian College’s new Laughlin Center, Habitat for
Humanity of Logan County hosts the popular Harlem Ambassadors for a
fund-raiser at 7 p.m.
The
Nail Benders, composed of all local talent, will be playing for
Habitat for Humanity of Logan County. The team is comprised of Will
Tomlinson, Kent Cross, Neal Leesman, Matt Haseley, Brad Aper, Dayne
Oltman, Kory Conrady, Jeremy Bruce, Terry Hoe of Bradley University,
Steve Peterson of Bradley, Ben Lovat of Bradley, Jesse Smith of
Bradley, Phil Dehner, Billy Barton and Randy Unger.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Team
sponsors are Lincoln IGA, Lincoln A.G. Edwards, State Farm
Insurance, Holiday Inn Express, Lincoln Christian College and
Lincoln Christian Church.
Sponsors
of players are George Dahmm Construction, Farmers Bank of Emden,
Leesman Construction, Lyle Fout Construction, Lee’s Home
Furnishings, attorney William B. Bates, "Holers," Jim
Xamis Ford and Ray La Hood.
Reduced-price
advance tickets are available at $10 for adults, $7 for senior
citizens and $5 for children under 12. Tickets at the door will be
$12 for adults, $9 for senior citizens and $7 for children under 12.
For more information, contact Habitat at P.O. Box 714 or phone (217)
732-6234. Tickets can be purchased in Lincoln at the IGA, A.G.
Edwards and Union Planters Bank.
[LDN
and Habitat news release] |
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College
basketball |
Cook
honored by Big Ten coaches and media
[MARCH
5, 2002] PARK
RIDGE — For the second straight year, a sophomore collected the
Big Ten’s highest honor, as Indiana’s Jared Jeffries was chosen
as the conference Player of the Year in voting by both the coaches
and media. University of Illinois junior Frank Williams was honored
as the Player of the Year for 2001 and received first-team honors
this year. Lincoln’s
Brian Cook, also a junior at Illinois, was one of five players named
to the second team.
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Jeffries,
the league’s only unanimous All-Big Ten First Team pick this
season and the 2001 Freshman of the Year, is the second Hoosier in
the past three years to be named conference Player of the Year. A.J.
Guyton was honored in 2000. Jeffries led Indiana to a share of its
first Big Ten championship since 1993 while topping the league with
2.13 blocked shots per game and ranking among the top 10 in
rebounding (second, with 7.9 rpg), steals (sixth, with 1.50 spg) and
scoring (seventh, with 15.1 ppg). The IU sophomore led his team and
was the only Big Ten player to appear in the top 10 in each of those
categories.
Other
individual honors include Wisconsin’s Bo Ryan being named the Big
Ten Coach of the Year by the media, the first Badger head coach to
earn that distinction. Ryan led Wisconsin to a share of its first
Big Ten championship in 55 years, as the last UW league title came
in 1947.
A
pair of Minnesota players earned individual honors, as Rick Rickert
was named the conference Freshman of Year, and Travarus Bennett
shared Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year accolades with Indiana’s
Dane Fife. Rickert is the first Gopher to be named Big Ten Freshman
of the Year. He led all conference freshmen in scoring (14.1 ppg)
and blocks (1.30) while rating third in rebounding (5.3 rpg).
Bennett and Fife are also the first players from their respective
schools to earn conference Defensive Player of the Year honors
(selected by the coaches), as Bennett led the Big Ten in steals with
2.31 per game and Fife rated seventh with 1.50 picks per contest in
league games only.
The
all-Big Ten choices for 2002 featured youth, as eight members of the
first and second teams have eligibility remaining, while each of the
four conference co-champs was represented. The first team all-Big
Ten squads selected by both the coaches and the media featured these
players: Jeffries, Illinois’ Frank Williams, Michigan State’s
Marcus Taylor, Ohio State’s Brian Brown and Wisconsin’s Kirk
Penney. Jeffries was the only unanimous selection, while Williams
was the only player to earn first-team honors for the second
straight season.
The
complete list of the All-Big Ten awards follows.
2001-02
All-Big Ten Men’s Basketball Team
As
selected by Big Ten coaches
First
team
Brian
Brown, Ohio State
Jared
Jeffries, Indiana*
Kirk
Penney, Wisconsin
Marcus
Taylor, Michigan State
Frank
Williams, Illinois
Second
team
Brian
Cook, Illinois
Tom
Coverdale, Indiana
Brent
Darby, Ohio State
Reggie
Evans, Iowa
Rick
Rickert, Minnesota
Third
team
Robert
Archibald, Illinois
Willie
Deane, Purdue
Tavaras
Hardy, Northwestern
Luke
Recker, Iowa
Dusty
Rychart, Minnesota
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Honorable
mention
Travarus
Bennett, Minnesota
Winston
Blake, Northwestern
Charlie
Wills, Wisconsin
Player
of the Year
Jared
Jeffries, Indiana
Freshman
of the Year
Rick
Rickert, Minnesota
Co-Defensive
Players of the Year
Dane
Fife, Indiana, and Travarus Bennett, Minnesota
*
unanimous
Repeat
performers
First
team: Williams
Second
team: Evans
Note:
Jeffries was named to the coaches’ second-team in 2001, Cook
was a third-team pick, and Brown and Recker were honorable mention
selections.
As
selected by Big Ten media
First
team
Brian
Brown, Ohio State
Jared
Jeffries, Indiana*
Kirk
Penney, Wisconsin
Marcus
Taylor, Michigan State
Frank
Williams, Illinois
Second
team
Brian
Cook, Illinois
Tom
Coverdale, Indiana
Willie
Deane, Purdue
Reggie
Evans, Iowa
Rick
Rickert, Minnesota
Third
team
Adam
Ballinger, Michigan State
LaVell
Blanchard, Michigan
Brent
Darby, Ohio State
Luke
Recker, Iowa
Dusty
Rychart, Minnesota
Honorable
mention
Robert
Archibald, Illinois
Boban
Savovic, Ohio State
Sharif
Chambliss, Penn State
Player
of the Year
Jared
Jeffries, Indiana
Freshman
of the Year
Rick
Rickert, Minnesota
Coach
of the Year
Bo
Ryan, Wisconsin
*
unanimous
Repeat
performers
First
team: Williams
Second
team: Cook, Evans
Note:
Blanchard was named to the media’s second team in 2001, Brown and
Jeffries were third-team picks, and Recker was an honorable mention
selection.
[Big
Ten news release from Scott Chipman]
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’Birds
fall to Creighton in Valley tournament semifinal
[MARCH
5, 2002] ST.
LOUIS — Randy Rice, with 14 points, led three Redbirds in
double-figure scoring, but Illinois State’s hopes for a fifth
State Farm-Missouri Valley Conference Tournament title were dashed
by Creighton’s hot shooting in a 90-63 Bluejay win on Sunday in a
tournament semifinal game.
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Kyle
Korver scored 18 of his 20 points in the first half and led a
barrage of 3-point field goals for Creighton as the Bluejays took
command of the game in the first half. Shawn Jeppson and Baboucarr
Bojang each had 11 points for Illinois State, while Terrell Taylor
backed Korver’s play with 19 points. Six Creighton players had at
least one 3-pointer.
The
third-seeded Redbirds, 17-14, had two good runs at Creighton in the
first half, fueled by Rice’s 11 points. CU led 8-2 when the
Redbirds went on a 9-0 run to take an 11-8 lead on Baboucarr Bojang’s
3-point play with 14:35 left in the half.
The
Jays edged ahead 26-21 before Tyler McKinney fired in back-to-back
3s to start a 15-0 spurt that put Creighton ahead 41-21. Rice and
Jeppson hit 3-pointers in an 8-0 ISU run to slice that lead to
41-29, but Korver hit another 3 and Creighton led 47-31 at
intermission.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Creighton,
21-7, the No. 2 seed, guaranteed its advance to the title game with
an opening 23-4 flurry after halftime. The Jays tied the Missouri
Valley Conference Tournament record with 13 3-point field goals made
for the game. The Jays hit 58.3 percent from the field and 21 of 26
free throws.
Illinois
State, which has won 10 of its last 13 games, allowed a season-high
90 points, shot just 42 percent from the field and was out-rebounded
35-22 despite Bojang’s game-high eight boards.
Creighton
went on to defeat No. 1 seed Southern Illinois 84-76 in the final on
Monday.
[ISU
news release]
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Jeppson’s
shot sinks Drake
[MARCH
5, 2002] ST.
LOUIS — Shawn Jeppson beat the final buzzer with a 25-foot
turnaround, fall-away 3-pointer to lead Illinois State past Drake
64-63 on Saturday in the quarterfinal round of the State
Farm-Missouri Valley Conference Tournament.
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Jeppson,
who scored 18 of his 24 points after halftime and hit eight of his
final 10 shots, helped the No. 3-seeded Redbirds, 17-13 overall,
overcome a 29-point performance by Drake guard Luke McDonald to
advance Illinois State to the tourney semifinals for the 20th time
in 21 years.
Drake
had led 7-6 after a Jeppson steal and layup with 14:27 left in the
first half. Lonnie Randolph’s layup started an 11-0 Bulldog run,
which ended when McDonald drained a long 3-pointer with 6:33 left.
The
No. 6-seed Bulldogs, 14-15, hit five of 12 3-pointers as the
cold-shooting Redbirds suffered through a seven-minute scoring
drought, missing nine straight shots. McDonald had 14 points at
halftime as Drake held a 33-21 advantage. ISU made just nine of 25
first-half field goals.
Illinois
State trailed by as many 15 in the first half and trailed 47-37 with
11 minutes left before Baboucarr Bojang hit a jumper to start a 12-0
run punctuated by a Jeppson 3-pointer with 7:45 left, which gave the
Redbirds their first lead of the game, 49-47.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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The
teams battled to 56-56 into the final three minutes, when a McDonald
driving shot and an Andry Sola layup gave Drake a 60-56 lead with
1:54 left. Shedrick Ford hit two free throws for ISU, and McDonald’s
final basket of the game, a trey, put the Bulldogs ahead 63-58.
Gregg
Alexander, who had 13 points, hit a 3-pointer from the corner with
57 seconds left to cut that back to 63-61. Then Randy Rice stole the
ball from McDonald to set up ISU’s final possession. Jeppson
missed a driving layup with eight seconds left, but the ’Birds got
the ball back for the final time as Drake’s Greg Danielson landed
on the baseline with the rebound.
"Shawn
made an unbelievable shot," said Redbird coach Tom Richardson.
"Greg’s shot was big-time from the corner before that. Randy
Rice made a big-time defensive play, so we had a number of things
happen to lead up to that play."
The
win slated Illinois State to meet No. 2 seed Creighton in a
semifinal matchup.
[ISU
news release]
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College
basketball |
Illini
win miraculous
Big Ten championship
By Jeff
Mayfield
[MARCH
4, 2002] Led
by Lincoln’s Brian Cook on Sunday afternoon, Illinois showed the
world why they are named the Fighting Illini.
|
Down
by nine points in Minnesota with just over three minutes to play, it
looked like the final nail was going into the Orange and Blue
coffin.
Suddenly
there were reports that both Lazarus and the Illini were coming back
from the dead. And when Frank Williams stripped the ball away and
Cory Bradford drilled one of his five 3-pointers on the day,
Illinois was down by only one with 6.9 seconds to play.
Frankie
then hushed the crowd in an aptly named sold-out arena by sending a
high-arching banker that floated softly through the twine.
Why
do I say aptly named? Because the barn is known as
"Williams" arena!
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Frank’s
shot set off a wild celebration throughout the state, which
hopefully will sober up by Friday!
Lincoln’s
Brian Cook did all he could to set up the celebration by registering
a double-double, tallying 22 points, 11 rebounds and four blocked
shots.
Illinois
finishes league play tied for the Big Ten championship with
Wisconsin, Indiana and Ohio State! The Illini get the No. 3 seed and
will face the Penn State-Minnesota winner Friday night at 8:10 p.m.
How
sweet it is!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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Field
set for Big Ten tourney
[MARCH
4, 2002] PARK
RIDGE — The field is set for the 2002 Big Ten Men’s Basketball
Tournament that will take place Thursday-Sunday, March 7-10, at the
Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Ind. Co-Big Ten champion
Wisconsin (18-11, 11-5) earned the No. 1 seed after winning a
tiebreaker among four teams. Fellow conference winner Ohio State
(20-7, 11-5) nabbed the No. 2 seed. With a win over Minnesota on
Sunday afternoon, Illinois (23-7, 11-5) collected a share of their
second straight league crown and the No. 3 seed in the tournament,
while co-conference champ Indiana (19-10, 11-5) was awarded the No.
4 seed.
|
All
four teams received a first-round bye, along with No. 5 seed
Michigan State (19-10, 10-6), and will start tournament play on
Friday, March 8.
The
fifth annual 2002 Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament will tip off
for the first time in the state of Indiana with a local flavor, as
No. 8 Purdue (13-17, 5-11) will face No. 9 Iowa (16-14, 5-11), the
defending tournament champion, at 2 p.m. EST on Thursday, March 7,
on ESPN2. The four previous conference tournaments were contested at
the United Center in Chicago.
The
second game of the tournament will feature No. 7 Northwestern
(16-12, 7-9) against No. 10 Michigan (10-17, 5-11) at 4:30 p.m. EST
on ESPN.
The
final game on Thursday will be No. 6 Minnesota (16-11, 9-7) and No.
11 Penn State (7-20, 3-13), with a 7:10 p.m. EST tipoff on ESPN
Regional.
Day
two will begin with the No. 4-5 contest at 11:30 a.m. EST (ESPN2),
as Indiana will face Michigan State, which has won five straight
games and emerged victorious in two other conference tournaments.
Wisconsin,
which earned its first No. 1 seed in the five-year history of the
tournament, will begin its quest for its first tournament title, at
2 p.m. EST on ESPN2 against the Purdue-Iowa victor.
No.
2 Ohio State will also aim for its first tourney crown, on Friday at
6:40 p.m. EST (ESPN Regional) versus the Northwestern-Michigan
winner.
The
second day will conclude with No. 3 Illinois facing the
Minnesota-Penn State winner at 9:10 p.m. EST (ESPN Regional), as the
Illini aim for their third berth in the tourney final in the last
four years.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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The
Big Ten Tournament semifinals will take place on Saturday, March 9,
with the first game beginning at 1:45 p.m. EST on CBS. Game two will
start 30 minutes following the conclusion of game one, at
approximately 4:05 p.m. EST.
The
tournament will conclude with the championship game on Sunday, March
10, at 3:30 p.m. EST on CBS.
Iowa
became the lowest-seeded team to win the Big Ten Tournament last
season, as the sixth-seeded Hawkeyes won four games in four days to
clinch the tournament crown and an automatic NCAA championship
berth. Iowa’s win ended a string of two straight Big Ten
Tournament titles by Michigan State, as the Spartans won it all in
2000 and 1999, while Michigan won the inaugural event in 1998.
A
limited number of full-session ticket packages for the 2002 Big Ten
Conference Tournament are still available and on sale for $225 to
the general public. Tickets are available at the Conseco Fieldhouse
box office, Ticketmaster charge-by-phone numbers and www.ticketmaster.com.
Click
here to see the tournament brackets, with teams, dates, times
and television (in Adobe Acrobat). [Click
here to download Adobe Acrobat reader.]
[Scott
Chipman, Big Ten Conference]
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High
school
basketball |
Class AA regional
[MARCH
2, 2002]
|
Boys
Lincoln
9 20 34 58
Champaign
Central
14 17 27 44
Lincoln stats
Bunch 3-6-12,
Farmer 6-12-28, Komnick 0-0-0, Wilder 0-0-0, Peters 0-0-0, Schonauer
1-0-3, Schrader 3-0-7, Welch 0-0-0, Young 1-6-8
Totals 14-24-58
Three-point
field goals: Farmer 4, Schonauer, Schrader
From their second regional win, the
Railers move on to face Springfield Lanphier, second- ranked in the
state, on Tuesday evening in Springfield. |
See more pictures
of the game
|
|
College
basketball |
[MARCH
2, 2002]
|
Women
Lincoln
Christian
23 38 — 61
Marantha
Baptist
30 37 — 67
Lincoln Christan stats
Robbins 6-1-14, Urton 0-3-3, Szoztek
2-0-4, Wright 7-5-20, Wertin 3-1-8, O'Malley 2-4-8, Devore 0-0-0,
Jewell 2-0-4
Totals 22-14-61
Three-point
field goals: Robbins, Wright, Wertin
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Hoops
hysteria
By Jeff
Mayfield
[MARCH
4, 2002] While
I enjoyed growing up in Southern California and skateboarding and
hittin’ the beach with my buddies out there, it doesn’t even
compare with March Madness!
|
And,
yes, they have great basketball out there. In fact, some of the
all-time great hoopsters and current Hall of Famers hail from that
region. It’s just that the weather is so nice there most of the
time, that nobody cares about going indoors to watch
anything, much less basketball.
On
the other hand, here in the Midwest the world is an entirely
different planet! I woke up this morning, picked Payne up out of his
bed and went to turn on Clifford the Big Red Dog (what else would
you be watchin’ at that time of the morning?). The weather update
on the screen said that the temperature outside was 1 and that the
wind chill was minus 12! Payne wanted me to flip to SportsCenter to
get caught up on all the tourney results nationwide, and I gladly
obliged him! What else are you gonna do in these weather conditions?
Railers
get third crack
This
year’s Railers have clawed, scratched, outworked, out-hustled,
out-coached and outplayed their opponents en route to yet another
20-win season.
As
we travel the state so many have told us what it would mean for
their local high school team to have even one 20-victory campaign.
So regardless how the rest of the season goes, the LDN salutes this
year’s Railers! Nice going, fellas!
The
Railers proved once again that what they may lack in size and
athleticism, they make up for in preparation, execution and made
free throws. Champaign Central is well coached and had a good game
plan, but when Lincoln hits 24-of-25 free throws you’re not going
to beat them.
We
will go on record to say that if LCHS converts 24-of-25 charity
tosses against Lanphier Tuesday night, they will walk off the court
with an upset of epic proportions. It appears that no one thinks
that they could ever beat this Lanphier team. And yes, it does have
the potential to get ugly, but people said the same thing about the
David-Goliath matchup until the blabbering bully went facedown in
the dirt.
The
Lions will still have to hit the shots and make the plays and prove
that they really are the No. 2-ranked team in the state. And there
is no reason to suspect that they are not that good. Some even say
that they are the best team in the state and will have no problem
runnin’ the table on their way to a state championship.
If
they do it, we say, more power to them. Their coach Craig Patton,
who is a former Lincoln coach, seems to be a nice enough guy; we
would certainly wish him well IF they were to travel that road.
However,
in order to travel that road they must get by the Railers first.
Others have countered and said that Lincoln just saved Champaign the
embarrassment of taking another shellacking from the Lions; that, on
paper, these guys are one of the best teams ever in our state.
I’m
sure glad that no game we’ve ever been involved in was played on
paper! No one knows how a team is going to react, especially after
last year when everyone was saying the exact same things. We recall
that some other team went on to win the sectional title.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
We’re
not saying that it would be easy to spring such an upset. It would
take a near flawless performance. It would mean patiently breaking
down one of the better presses that we’ve seen in a while. It
would mean limiting the Lions to one shot per possession. It would
take great overall team defense, moving feet so quickly as to not
let dribble penetration take over the contest. It would mean
contesting every shot and trying to force the opponents into taking
off-balance, forced shots maybe quicker than they are ready to do
so. It would take deliberate offensive flow, with good ball movement
and excellent screens to free up the best shooters at just the right
times. It would take a spectacular effort in the post both
offensively and defensively. And it would take a huge coaching
effort to even allow one’s self to even believe that an upset is
even in the realm of possibility.
A
wry smile has just come across our collective face. All the pressure
in the world is on Lanphier. Everyone expects them to win and to win
big… Well, maybe not everyone…
Will ISU
keep playing?
The
Redbirds won a thrilling contest over Drake Saturday night when
Shawn Jeppson hit a 3-point prayer as time expired, leading ISU to a
win over Drake. But the dreams hit the skids Sunday when Creighton
took it to ISU big in the semis. Actually it sets the stage for the
MVC’s two best regular-season teams to battle it out Monday night
to see who gets the NCAA automatic bid.
But
what about ISU’s postseason chances? ISU’s SID, Todd Kober and I
have been speculating for the last couple of weeks that ISU really
is deserving of an NIT bid. IF you look at the record over the last
10 games and consider how they have overcome injuries, and then if
you look at a pretty decent RPI… I guess you could say that we’d
be pretty disappointed if they don’t get an invite. It could
result in a very difficult game on the road, but we’ve always
believed that any postseason experience is a good experience. And
what it could do for next year’s team would be huge. We’re
keepin’ our fingers crossed for an engraved invitation!
Gratuitous
manipulation
PLEASE
join Greg Taylor and I Monday night on FIX-96.3 from 6 to 7 pm. Greg
is ALREADY in Indy sending good Illini vibes all over the place in
order to allow the Illini a deep tournament run. Tonight’s agenda
will include high school sports, and obviously the IHSA A and AA
tourneys; college sports — U of I, ISU, LC and LCC reports; Cub
and Cardinal spring training updates; prize giveaways; and a whole
lot more.
Call
us at 648-5510 or toll free (877) 963-9669.
Team of
the week:
The
Illinois Fighting Illini, winners of back-to-back Big Ten
championships. On behalf of your loyal LDN staff, CONGRATULATIONS!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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Announcements
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Pony
League sign-ups
[FEB.
28, 2002] The
Lincoln Pony League will have their sign-up period for both baseball (boys) and
softball (girls) over the next three weekends, beginning this Saturday, March 2,
and continuing on March 9 and 16. Sign-ups will be in the lobby of the
Lincoln Rec Center from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Anyone
interested in playing ball this summer can get signed up during those times.
Representatives of the Lincoln Pony League will be on hand to answer any
questions and to assist with the sign-ups.
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