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Connie
Myers drives for a basket
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HIGHLAND HEIGHTS,
Ky. - Winning streaks are nothing new for the Northern Kentucky
University women’s
basketball program, but this one could not have come at a better
time.
NKU extended its
current win streak to three Saturday by routinely dispatching
Southern Illinois at Edwardsville, 62-45, in Regents Hall.
The Norse
held SIUE to just 23.8 percent shooting from the field in
the second half and improved to 3-5 overall, 3-3 in the Great
Lakes Valley Conference.
The
Norse have now posted three straight victories against
GLVC opponents to block out the
memory of an 0-5 start. And it’s been a group effort
by NKU.
“Our strength
is the power of the group,” NKU head coach Nancy Winstel
said. “On any given night, anyone can step up
and make the play.”
That’s exactly what happened Saturday.
SIUE (5-5 overall,
1-3 GLVC) led by as many as eight points in the first half,
but the inside
attack of Connie Myers and Karmen Graham rallied NKU to a
31-29 advantage at the break. Myers scored 12 of her game-high
23 points in the first half, while Graham added five
points.
Those two also
keyed a run in the final minute that turned a 29-27 SIUE
lead into the two-point halftime edge for NKU.
Myers scored on
a breakaway while being fouled with three seconds left before
the half to tie the score at 29-29. She missed the ensuing
free throw, but freshman Nicole Chiodi kept the ball alive
and Graham followed with a basket at the buzzer to give the
Norse
a
31-29 advantage.
Despite shooting 52.2 percent from the field and holding NKU
to 37.9 percent from the floor, SIUE found itself trailing
by two points at halftime. Winstel thought
the two plays to end the first half made a big difference in
the game.
“Six seconds
left on the clock and (Graham) makes a great defensive
play. Connie
races
down the floor and scores and gets fouled, and then Nicole
Chiodi gets her hand in, and (Graham) hits a shot at the buzzer.
It was huge,” Winstel said. “It gave us
some energy, it gave us some momentum coming back into the
second
half.
“In
the second
half,
I think
we just made things happen.”
Myers and Graham
combined for NKU’s first
six points of the second half as the Norse built a 37-30 lead.
Angela Healy later keyed a 10-0 Norse run with a pair of
baskets
as NKU
increased
its lead to 49-36 with 9:52 remaining.
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Karmen
Graham powers past Tanya Guell
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NKU’s
defense limited SIUE to five field goals in the second half.
In fact, the Cougars managed just one basket for
more than seven minutes during one stretch after halftime.
Myers grabbed a
game-high 14 rebounds for NKU, which won the battle of the
boards by a 37-29 margin. The Norse shot 41.8
percent from the field and forced 19 SIUE turnovers.
“I think they are one of the first teams that hasn’t
doubled down on me,” Myers said of the SIUE defense. “I tried
to go baseline more because coach told me when I go middle,
I
have
two people
on
me. But when
I go baseline one-on-one, that helps, too.”
Graham finished with nine points and seven rebounds, while
Nikki Perkins added eight points and three assists as NKU gave
Winstel her 498th career coaching victory.
Winstel is 498-197 in 25 years as a head coach and ranks sixth
on the NCAA Division II list for victories. She is 459-156
in 22 years at NKU.
“ I thought Karyn
Creager’s two threes were huge in the first half,” Winstel
said. “She just went in there and shot the ball. I thought
Nikki played solid. We just have to keep getting better.”
Myers now has 955
career points at NKU, and she is looking top become the 21st
member of the Norse’s 1,000-point
club.
Julianne McMillen led SIUE with 10 points. NKU upped its
lead in the all-time series against SIUE to 17-7.
NKU will play host
to the inaugural Sunday Challenger Classic Dec. 20-21 in
Regents Hall. The Norse will face Shaw (N.C.)
at 7:30 p.m. in the first round.
Glenville State will take on Fort Valley (Ga.) State in
the other first-round game at 5:30 p.m. Dec. 20.
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