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Connie
Myers drives past Amanda Norris
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HIGHLAND HEIGHTS,
Ky. - Balanced scoring keyed Northern Kentucky University’s
78-59 win over Indianapolis on Saturday in Regents Hall.
Five NKU players
scored in double figures as the Norse improved to 14-9 overall,
11-5 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference. Connie Myers poured
in 19 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead NKU, while teammate
Angela Healy added 11 points, 13 rebounds and two blocked
shots.
“We’re a team, and we don’t
center around one person,” NKU head coach Nancy Winstel said
of the balanced
attack. “We have to have everybody, and that is what
happened tonight. And when
that
happened,
I just
thought
we
were really
fun to watch tonight, which is great for them.”
The Norse held
Indianapolis (17-6, 10-6 GLVC) to 29.2 percent shooting
from the field in the first half and built a 33-20 lead at
the break. Myers and Karyn Creager each scored seven points
in the first half.
A 12-4 run early
in the second half allowed NKU to build a 45-26 advantage
with 15:05 remaining. Creager capped the spurt with a conventional
three-point play.
Creager finished
with 14 points and extended her school-record streak of consecutive
made free throws to 24 for NKU, which led by as many as 22
points in the second half. Creager is atop the GLVC in free-throw
shooting at .904.
“I think
this has been our best game defensively and offensively,”
Creager said. “We came out, and we were intense. We denied
well, and our defense is what got our offense going.”
Elizabeth Burrows
scored 13 points and had four assists for NKU, while Sarah
Woods added 10 points and three assists. NKU shot 50 percent
from the field and made 16-of-22 free throws to avenge an
early-season loss at Indianapolis.
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Angela
Healy grabbed 13 rebounds
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“I
think we were 0-4, and we hadn’t won
a game,” Burrows said of the earlier loss at Indianapolis.
“Our confidence was down. Our goal is to get into the NCAA
tournament,
and
we are
trying
our best
to
do
that.
“We know
that each and every game is just vital. I think we are playing
with
more confidence now. We have (Karmen
Graham)
back, and she was only able to play a few minutes, but she
just works
so hard that every time she is out there is a plus.” Brittany Winner
added eight points and three steals for NKU, which forced
Indianapolis into 15 turnovers. The Norse also won the rebounding
battle by a 35-31 margin.
Indianapolis was led
by Sara Riedeman’s
15 points.
NKU is tied for
third place in the GLVC standings with Bellarmine and Lewis.
The Norse will play at Wisconsin-Parkside, which is in second
place
in the GLVC with a 12-5 record, at 6:30 p.m. Thursday.
“It scares me to death because we beat Parkside, so
they are going to be really fired up for us,” Winstel said.
“Lewis is going to be all fired up for us. Everybody is battling
for
positioning,
and then we have Quincy at home, which will be tough. (Missouri-St.
Louis) is going to be tough because they are playing and have
a lot of young players.”
NKU is ninth in
the latest NCAA Division II Great Lakes Region rankings,
while Indianapolis is sixth. The top eight teams in that
poll will advance to the NCAA Tournament in March.
NKU has earned
six consecutive berths in the NCAA Tournament.
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