Dawson Verhines teams up with older brother one last time

By Tom Weber
SIUSalukis.com

CARBONDALE, Ill. – After winning the 2013 Division II juco national championship at Rend Lake College, Dawson Verhines figured he’d never again team up with his older brother, Bronson. The two had played basketball together since childhood, nearly won a state championship in high school, and the national title seemed like a perfect way to cap their careers together.

Dawson Verhines

Dawson Verhines

Then Southern Illinois, in search of a front court player, called Bronson last spring. The 6-foot-6 forward had one year of eligibility remaining. He brought Dawson along to scrimmage with the team, and SIU head coach Barry Hinson actually offered Dawson a walk-on slot a week before granting Bronson a scholarship offer.

“When Southern called Bronson, we were ecstatic because we never even dreamed that we could make it here,” said Dawson, who turned down Division II scholarship offers from McKendree and Missouri Southern to walk-on for the Salukis.

Dawson has far exceeded the expectations for a typical walk-on. He’s played in all 22 games and made two starts. He recalled being discouraged after not getting any minutes in the two exhibition games, but then he suddenly found himself on the floor in the opener against Missouri and even knocked down a 3-point shot.

“I was as surprised as anybody when I got in,” he said. “Coach Hinson threw me in there with five minutes to go in the first half and it’s one of the most scared I’ve ever been.”

Although he averages only 1.4 points per game, he has the best assist-to-turnover ratio on the team (3.20) with 16 assists and five turnovers on the season.

“I know I’m not as talented or as athletic as a lot of my teammates, but I can work hard,” he said. “Coach doesn’t look at me as just a walk-on. If you hustle and work as hard as you can, he’s going to give you an opportunity.”

Dawson went to tiny Woodlawn High School just west of Mt. Vernon, and his graduating class was 40 strong. He started as a true freshman, and as a sophomore point guard directed the team to the state tournament for the first time in school history. They finished second that season and third his senior year.

“People told me if you go to a bigger school, you’ll get more college looks, but I just feel like if you’re good enough to play, schools are going to find you,” he said.

His high school coach encouraged him to play baseball in college, and that was the original plan until Rend Lake’s coach told him he would only be on half scholarship.

“I had it set in mind that I wanted to have all my school paid for, so I talked to the basketball coach, Randy House, and he said he’d pay whatever baseball doesn’t,” Dawson explained.

So during his freshman year, Dawson played both sports, an experience he found exhausting.

“There was a span there for a month where I was going to basketball for two hours, and then I’d hustle over to baseball and finish the last hour and half of practice there, then go home and try to find some energy to do homework,” he said.

When Bronson decided to play basketball at Rend Lake the next year, Dawson gave up baseball.

“We went 14-2 in the conference and we were the only Division II team in our league,” Dawson said. “When we won that, it kind of opened our eyes that man, we could win this (national tournament).”

Dawson, who scored four points in SIU’s upset win over Indiana State last night, said he has no regrets about passing up a scholarship offer to be a walk-on for Southern.

“I didn’t think I’d ever get a chance to play with Bronson again,” he said. “And I didn’t want to pass up an opportunity to play DI basketball at my dream school.”

RLC pitcher Trey Garrett signs to Florida International University

 

INA, Ill. – Rend Lake College sophomore pitcher Trey Garrett recently signed a national letter of intent to play next year at Florida International University in Miami. FIU is an NCAA Division I Program in the Conference USA.

Trey Garrett

Trey Garrett

The 6-foot-1 Benton native is the son of Mike and Julie Garrett. He played for Benton Community High School before coming to RLC, where his arm strength helped him excel on the pitcher’s mound. Coming out of BCHS in 2012, Garrett was one of the top recruits in the state.

Garrett came into the fall with no offers, but after several strong performances at showcase events, he picked up the interest of many Division I schools.

“I didn’t really have a plan for where I was going to go. The fact that it’s in Miami and in warmer weather helped me make that decision,” said Garrett.

Last year as a Warrior, the criminal justice major had 10 appearances as pitcher with seven game starts. The right-hander posted a 5.45 ERA with 22 strikeouts in 36 innings. Offensively, he hit .242 with four doubles, 25 runs, 21 RBI and nine stolen bases.

Garrett also played over the summer for the Richmond RiverRats, a collegiate summer baseball team out of Richmond, Ind., where he made 19 appearances. He ended the summer with a 3.26 ERA at 21 strikeouts in 30 innings.

When it comes to this spring season, Garrett says he’s looking forward to helping the Warriors have a successful season.

“Hopefully we can get a bunch of wins this year and go further in the postseason,” he said.

Head Coach Tony Etnier added, “Trey is a gifted athlete who played the outfield and pitched for us last year. This summer in the Prospect League, his ability as a pitcher really took off. The increase in his velocity and the development of a legitimate out pitch is what attracted so many Division I 1 programs this fall. I am very happy for Trey and think that Florida International will be a great fit for him next year.”

For more information, contact Etnier at 618-437-5321, Ext. 1282. For all things athletic at the Lake, visit www.rlc.edu/warriors.

Lady Vols romp past Lincoln Trail

 

BY JOHN D. HOMAN

Logan Media Services

CARTERVILLE – Four players hit for double figures and every player on the active roster scored as the John A. Logan College women’s basketball team romped past visiting Lincoln Trail College Saturday afternoon, 94-51.

The Volunteers built a commanding 42-26 lead at the intermission and played even better in the second half, notching an additional 52 points over the final 20 minutes.

Top scorer was sophomore guard Briya Wilborn with 12 points. Du Quoin native Jessica Hirsch, BreAnn Denny and Daryus Franklin each tallied 10 points. Aneta Sloma, Shae Jamerson and Diann Sales contributed nine points apiece. Ashley Yateman checked in with seven points. Marissa Nix and Alison Webb hit for five. Sarah Bailey added four. Rebecca Grimeau and Carterville High grad Andrea Kesler had two points each.

For the game, the Vols connected on 32-of-72 shots from the field (44 percent), including 6-of-17 from beyond the arc. Hirsch, Sloma and Franklin each bagged a pair of triples. Logan made good on 24-of-36 free-throw opportunities (67 percent).

The Vols also outrebounded Lincoln Trail, 45-28.

JALC head coach Marty Hawkins was pleased with the way his team performed.

“We really dominated today, especially what I would call the third quarter. We scored 29 points over a 10-minute span,” he said. “On the other end of the floor, we defended the dribble the best we have all year and rebounded well. Jamerson and Sales gave us a great lift off the bench. They were all over the boards.”

Logan is now 6-9 overall and 3-4 in the Great Rivers Athletic Conference. The Vols play at Shawnee College in Ullin Wednesday.

Missouri State pulls away late to beat Saluki Men’s Basketball, 69-63

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. – Jarmar Gulley scored 17 points, including a key put-back off a missed free throw with two minutes remaining to lead Missouri State to a 69-63 win over Southern Illinois on Saturday.

Tyler Smithpeters

Tyler Smithpeters

As they’ve done so often this season, the Salukis (6-15, 2-6) played well in spurts but could not string together 40 minutes of winning basketball. Desmar Jackson scored 14 of his game-high 18 points in the second half, as Southern led by as many as five points. He surpassed Walt Frazier for third place in scoring by a two-year player at SIU and now has 888 career points.

The tide turned in Missouri State’s favor midway through the second half when freshman sharpshooter Austin Ruder got hot from 3-point. He made back-to-back 3-balls in the span of a minute to turn a three-point MSU deficit into a 54-51 lead with 7:38 remaining. The Bears (14-6, 4-4) never trailed thereafter.

“We played all five starters 30-plus minutes and we ran out of gas,” said SIU head coach Barry Hinson of his team’s inability to closeout the game. “I burned every timeout I had to rest our guys. We had huge breakdowns defensively. It’s not like we don’t know (Ruder) can shoot.”

The most encouraging sign for Southern was the play of freshman Tyler Smithpeters, who scored 16 points and added five assists in his first-career start. He was 4-for-7 from 3-point after entering the game only 5-of-17 on the season.

“We talked about living with eating some threes from Southern because they haven’t shot it well,” said MSU head coach Paul Lusk. “Obviously, Smithpeters was very good tonight. That changed the game. He gave them 16 that was unexpected.”

Hinson has been desperately searching for a long-range threat this season, as Southern ranks among the worst 3-point shooting teams in the nation. At least for one night, Smithpeters showed he has that ability.

“As my dad would say, for the most part this year we couldn’t hit a bull in the butt with a bass fiddle,” Hinson joked. “(Tyler) certainly played well.”

Southern stayed within striking distance in the final eight minutes of the game, but a key turning point was a Gulley put-back off a missed free throw by Dorrian Williams with 2:02 to go. Gulley slipped past Jalen Pendleton for a bucket that extended MSU’s lead to 63-56. Although Anthony Beane countered with a 3-pointer for Southern, the Salukis could never get it to a one-possession game.

Another positive for SIU was the play of redshirt freshman Bola Olaniyan, who also made his first-career start. He had eight points and eight rebounds, including five offensive boards in the first half. Along with Sean O’Brien, the Salukis started three freshmen in the same game for the first time since Kevin Dillard, Ryan Hare and Justin Bocot started the final nine games of the 2009 season.

Missouri State moved into a tie for third place, an impressive achievement considering their best offensive and defensive player, Marcus Marshall, suffered a season-ending knee injury two weeks ago.

“At the end of the day, we get the win,” Lusk said. “It’s not going to pretty for us at times, but we’re finding a way to win games.”

For Hinson, it was another emotional return to Springfield, where he coached Missouri State for nine seasons from 2000 to 2008.

“I had a lot of animosity after I left here after I got fired, I wasn’t very mature and I didn’t want to come back here,” he said. “For whatever reason, I let that go. I came back the other night and I felt as home as I’ve ever felt, just like I still lived here for nine years. I want to apologize to the people of Springfield and southwest Missouri and Missouri State University for the animosity, because I do love this place.”

Salukis women top Evansville 66-57 behind Pierre’s double-double

CARBONDALE, Ill. – The Southern Illinois women’s basketball team got a much-needed 66-57 win over Evansville on Sunday afternoon at SIU Arena. Southern outhustled the Purple Aces, getting 26 offensive rebounds and forcing 22 turnovers. SIU’s defense held Evansville to only two field goals from the eight-minute mark until the game was decided.

Dyana Pierre recorded her eighth double-double this season with 24 points and 14 rebounds.

Dyana Pierre recorded her eighth double-double this season with 24 points and 14 rebounds.

“I don’t think we played well, but we played hard. That’s probably what I’m most pleased with,” head coachCindy Stein said afterwards. “We fought the entire game to come up with the loose ball or the rebound or the stop or the free throw.”

Dyana Pierre came into the game without a double-double in four-straight games–her longest stretch of the season without a double-double–and she responded with a monster game, pouring in 24 points and grabbing 14 rebounds. Pierre was immediately trapped upon catching the ball throughout the game. In the first half, the traps held her to 3-of-11 shooting. In the second half, she scored 16 points on 7-of-9 shooting.

While it was Pierre’s offense that carried Southern through the second half, it was the team defense and rebounding that gave the Salukis the opportunity to overcome their five-point halftime deficit. SIU hauled in an incredible 26 offensive rebounds; Evansville ended with only 32 total rebounds. The Salukis forced a season-best 22 turnovers. The combination of offensive rebounds and forced turnovers resulted in 22 more field goal attempts for Southern.

Southern Illinois, usually the team that is trying to break a press, employed a full-court trapping press in the second half, a move which energized the Salukis and wore on the Aces. The Salukis pressure and intensity came at the perfect time in the second half; a crucial 12-3 run in the final minutes turned a three-point deficit into a six-point lead.

“Coach talks a lot about out-scrapping people,” junior guard Mercedes Griffinsaid. “I think that’s what we did tonight. We outworked them. We got all the hustle plays. That’s basically what the game came down to.”

Evansville’s freshman star Sara Dickey came in as the MVC’s leading scorer and showcased her talent, scoring a game-high 30 points to keep Evansville in front for most of the game. She had 28 points with eight minutes remaining, but Griffin and the rest of the Salukis held her to only one field goal down the stretch.

“I’m worried that she is in our league for another three years,” Stein said. “I wish she would graduate very soon, but I think a lot of (stopping Dickey down the stretch) was Mercedes Griffin. Mercedes did a great job of staying with her and denying her the ball. We knew they were going to try to get her the ball in the last three minutes of the game, but Mercedes continually worked hard to make that a struggle for (Dickey).”

In addition to guarding Dickey down the stretch, Griffin stuffed the stat sheet with 11 points, three assists, two blocks and five steals. Her final steal of the game led to a runout layup that sealed Southern’s second conference win this year, already surpassing last year’s regular season total.

As has become customary this season in MVC play, all nine available players played, and eight played double-figure minutes. Jordyn Courier played great down the stretch, ending up with nine points and three assists–all in the second half. Guard Hannah Shores hauled in nine rebounds and added seven points and three assists. Azia Washington just missed a double-double, recording nine points and eight boards.

“This is a team that hasn’t stopped believing that we can get better and get victories,” Stein said. “That’s a credit to them. I would love to say that there is some magic potion we’ve given them, but there’s not. We haven’t changed the way we’ve coached them. They have kept a great attitude and continued to work hard, so the credit goes to them for staying in

SIU women fall to Indiana State 63-44

By John Lock
SIUSalukis.com

CARBONDALE, Ill. – The Southern Illinois women’s basketball team brought hustle and defense against preseason MVC favorite Indiana State on Sunday afternoon, but the Salukis couldn’t generate enough offense to get a win. Indiana State improved to 5-0 in the Missouri Valley Conference with the 63-44 win at SIU Arena.

Mercedes Griffin played 39 minutes and scored 15 points in the loss.

Mercedes Griffin played 39 minutes and scored 15 points in the loss.

“I really liked the way our kids rallied,” head coach Cindy Stein said. “We still need to learn to finish people off.”

The Salukis (3-14, 1-5 MVC) started hot and built an 8-2 lead out of the gate. Indiana State responded with a 5-0 run, and the game remained a one-possession game for most of the first half. The Sycamores closed the half on another 5-0 run to push the lead to eight points at the break.

Southern Illinois’ defense kept it in the game for the first 35 minutes. Two days after allowing Illinois State to shoot 53 percent, SIU held Indiana State to 38 percent shooting for the game–the lowest shooting percentage SIU has allowed in conference play. Anna Munn, who entered the game eighth in the MVC in scoring at 14.0 points per game, was limited to seven points on 2-of-7 shooting.

Indiana State extended the lead to 13 points with 9:18 left in the game, but Southern fought back and got within seven points with eight minutes to play. The Sycamores responded with a 10-0 run to put the game out of reach.

SIU was led by Mercedes Griffin, who had 15 points and five rebounds in 39 minutes. The junior guard added two steals and was 5-for-6 from the free-throw line. Griffin, who averaged 5.2 points in the non-conference season, is averaging 12.3 points over her last four games.

“I really enjoyed the play of Mercedes Griffin,” Stein said. “I know she had seven turnovers, but gosh, she played hard. She was a leader out there. She kept us together. I felt like the brightest part of the game was her effort throughout the entire game.”

Azia Washington added 10 points and six rebounds, and Dyana Pierre led the team with eight rebounds and added eight points and two assists.

But Southern’s offense couldn’t get going during the game. SIU shot just 35 percent from the field (17-of-49) and did not make a 3-pointer (0-for-7) for the first time since playing Southeast Missouri State on Dec. 4. The Salukis committed 27 turnovers on the night and had four four-minutes stretches without a field goal, including only one field goal over the final eight minutes of the game.

“We did it to ourselves,” Griffin said. “They sped us up by full-court pressing us and trapping us randomly. I felt like we just rushed our passes.”

The Sycamores held Dyana Pierre, who entered the game averaging 14.2 points per game on 53 percent shooting, to eight points on 3-of-10 shooting. Pierre was just 1-for-5 in the first half and scored six of her eight points after halftime.

“They did a great job on (Dyana),” Stein said. “They put a lot of pressure on her. I felt like Dyana took herself out of the game at times, especially mentally, but she regrouped and came back and did some good things.”

Southern has a week off before facing Evansville next Sunday at 2 p.m. at SIU Arena.

Saluki men’s basketball travels to Bradley for Friday night match up

Southern Illinois (3-12, 1-3 MVC) vs. Illinois State (2-11, 1-2 MVC)
 Date Friday, Jan. 17, 2014
 Time 6 p.m. CST
 Location Carbondale, Ill. — SIU Arena
 Video Saluki All-Access
 Radio
Saluki Sports Network | 97.7 FM (Carbondale)
 Notes Southern Illinois | Illinois State | MVC
 Season Stats Southern Illinois | Illinois State | MVC
 Live Stats Gametracker | Valley Scoreboard
 Social Media @SIU_WBasketball | @ISUWBB

FOR STARTERS
The Southern Illinois women’s basketball team takes on Illinois State at 6 p.m. CST on Friday night at SIU Arena. The Salukis (3-12, 1-3 Missouri Valley) are looking for their second conference win of the season and first victory over the Redbirds since the 2007-08 season. The game will be broadcast on 97.7 FM in Carbondale, with Bryce Williams (play-by-play) and Logan Lee (analysis) calling the action.

SIU VS. ILLINOIS STATE
Illinois State holds a 56-44 lead in the series, which began in 1962. The Redbirds have won 11-straight games in the series, and the Salukis are looking for their first win over Illinois State since a 72-69 road win over the Redbirds on March 6, 2008. Last year, the Salukis lost a tight three-point game at SIU Arena but got blown out by 48 points in Normal, Ill.

PROMOTION
The Salukis will hold Faculty and Staff Appreciation Night for Friday’s 6 p.m. tip against the Redbirds. The pursuit of high education depends on high-caliber professionals who carry out the mission of the university each and every day. As a way to say thank you, tickets are just $2 for all SIU employees.

In addition, fans can get merchandise at the SIU Team Store for 20 percent off at Friday’s game only by redeeming a coupon at bit.ly/SalukiSale.

SCOUTING THE REDBIRDS
Illinois State enters the game at 2-11 overall and 1-2 in MVC play. Illinois State starts four guards and a forward and comes into the weekend as the lowest-scoring team in the conference, averaging 56.3 points per game; however, the Redbirds rank third in the conference in scoring defense, holding opponents to just 67.2 points per game.

Chloe Nelson is the only Illinois State player to score in double-figures, and she averages 13.7 points per game. She also ranks eighth in the conference in assists, averaging 3.0 per game on the season. Octavia Crump leads the team in rebounding at 6.5 per game.

COACH STEIN ON THE REDBIRDS
“Illinois State is coming on strong right now. I think they’ve gotten through the growing process with the new staff. They are making better adjustments on the floor, knowing what Coach (Barb) Smith wants. You can see that in their play. They have a lot of hustle and are going to play a lot of kids. They play with a lot of energy, and now they’re playing with a lot of execution, so they will be a tough challenge for us.”

LAST TIME OUT FOR EACH TEAM
In their only game last weekend, the Redbirds lost a close, three-point game to the preseason No. 2 team in the Valley, Indiana State. Illinois State led by a point at the halftime break, but Indiana State quickly got a lead in the second half and held the Redbirds at bay in the low-scoring 47-44 Sycamore win.

The Salukis have posted mixed efforts in each of the first two weekends of MVC play. Two weekends ago, SIU won the conference opener in a thrilling 100-96 double-overtime game over Bradley. Two days later, Southern couldn’t keep up with Loyola in a 60-48 loss.

Last weekend, SIU played what head coach Cindy Stein deemed the team’s most balanced effort of the year in a 74-72 loss at Drake, where the Bulldogs won on a putback with 1.5 seconds left. Two days later, however, Northern Iowa shot 50 percent from the field and ran away from SIU in route to an 87-53 win in Cedar Falls.

GRIFFIN DISHING DIMES
Mercedes Griffin has stepped up in the point guard role during conference play. Griffin totaled 14 assists in 11 non-conference games (1.3 per game); but in just four MVC games this year, Griffin has racked up 17 assists (4.3 per game), which ranks third in the Missouri Valley. Griffin dished a career-best seven dimes to go along with her career-high 16 points in SIU’s 74-72 loss at Drake.

WASHINGTON COMING ON STRONG
Azia Washington has come on strong lately for SIU. After scoring no more than eight points in the first five games of the season and no more than 14 in the first nine games of the season, Washington has scored 19 or more points in four of the last six games and averaged 17.8 points per game in those games.

She posted her first double-double of the season with 27 points and 15 rebounds in SIU’s double-OT win over Bradley. Against UNI, Washington scored 15 first-half points, the only Saluki with more than two points at the break.

D. PIERRE: DOUBLE-DOUBLE MACHINE
Dyana Pierre has made herself a double-double machine for the Salukis. Pierre has recorded a double-double in three of the last five games for SIU and has seven double-doubles in 15 games this year. In two years at SIU, Pierre has totaled 16 double-doubles. Against Bradley, Pierre put up 33 points and 18 rebounds, including eight offensive boards. In 15 games this year, Pierre has scored in double-figures 12 times and has recorded double-digit rebounds in eight games.

PIERRE AND WASHINGTON BOARDING
Dyana Pierre and Azia Washington, the only two Salukis two have started all 15 games this year, have become two of the top rebounders in the MVC. Pierre ranks second in the conference in rebounding at 9.3 per game and 10.0 boards in three conference games so far. Washington ranks sixth in the conference in rebounding in all games at 7.3 rebounds per game and ranks seventh in conference play, averaging 7.8 boards per game. Washington’s 7.3 rebounding average would lead six teams in the Valley, and her and Pierre are the only duo in the conference that both rank in the top seven in the MVC in rebounding in both all games and conference-only games. With Washington and Pierre leading the way, SIU leads the conference in defensive rebounding (28.3) and ranks third in offensive rebounding (15.0) in MVC play.

CLOSE LOSSES
Five of Southern’s losses have come by single-digit margins, including four games decided by four points or fewer. Twice, SIU has has lost a two-point game with an opponent jumper with 1.5 seconds remaining, dropping games to Austin Peay and Drake at the last second.

BLOCK PARTY
Sophomore center Dyana Pierre vaulted into the top-10 all-time in blocks in SIU history with her four blocks against Bradley on Jan. 2. After posting the fourth-most blocks in a single-season in school history in 2012-13 (36), Pierre now ranks eighth all-time with 63 career blocks, surpassing Saluki Hall-of-Famer Sue Faber with three blocks against Loyola. Pierre currently has 27 in 2013-14 and averages 1.8 per game, which ranks second the Valley. Pierre averages 2.0 blocks per game in MVC play, which is tied for third in the conference. Pierre leads a Saluki team that ranks third in the conference with 3.9 blocks per game.

SIU DEFENSE TIGHTENING
Southern has improved its defense from a season ago. After allowing 74.5 points per game in 2012-13, head coach Cindy Stein’s crew is allowing only 70.8 points this year, a 3.7 points-per-game improvement even after giving up 96 points in a double-overtime win over Bradley and 87 to UNI. The Saluki defense currently ranks sixth in the 10-team league after placing 9th in scoring defense last season. The team’s field goal percentage defense ranks third in the conference this year (.414). The Salukis held Drake, who entered their Jan. 10 matchup as the best 3-point shooting team in the MVC, to just 4-for-21 from long range (19 percent).

The Last Meeting
Illinois State 71
Southern Illinois 68
February 14, 2013
Carbondale, Ill.
Illinois State survives Salukis 71-68
Southern Illinois guard Rishonda Napier’s desperation 3-point attempt as time expired missed the mark, and Illinois State survived the Saluki women’s basketball team 71-68 Thursday night at SIU Arena.

SALUKIS FG% ON THE RISE
In addition to defending better, the Salukis are also shooting better from the field than a year ago. The team’s field goal percentage is up to .384 from .377, led by Washington and Pierre. Pierre ranks second in the conference, shooting 52 percent from the field, while Washington ranks sixth (.487).

SALUKIS WIN WILD 20T GAME
Southern’s thrilling 100-96 double-overtime win over Bradley on Jan. 2 was a game that will be remembered not only by fans but by the SIU record books as well. Southern broke the school record in shot attempts with 92 against the Braves, toppling the previous record of 91 set on Nov. 21, 1980 vs. SEMO. SIU’s triple-digit plateau was the first time the Salukis had crossed the 100-point plane since Mar. 5, 1984 — the same game the school record for points in a game was set (101 vs. Indiana State). The combined 196 points scored registers as the fifth-most single-game points in a Valley game ever. The trip to double overtime was the first such game for SIU since Feb. 23, 1983 (Missouri, L, 83-76), and only the third in school history. Sophomores Dyana Pierre (33 points, 14-of-22 shooting) and Azia Washington (27 points, 12-of-19 shooting) set new career highs in both points, shots and shot attempts, and senior Sidney Goins (18 points) set a new career-high in three point field goals (6) and three-point attempts (14).

RIDING THE PINE TO VICTORY
The Salukis only scored eight bench points in its double-overtime victory over Bradley, but those eight points were crucial to SIU’s success in the late stages of the game. Junior Ariel Haynes’ lone point became the game-tying point to cap off an SIU comeback over the final minutes of the game. Haynes was fouled with 55 seconds to play and put on the free throw line, where she hit the first to tie the game 77-77, but missed the potential game-winner on her second attempt. In the second overtime, SIU received two surprising performances from freshmen Carlie Corrigan and Kim Nebo after three Saluki starters (Pierre, Shores and Washington) had fouled out. Corrigan took control of the game with 1:20 to play in the second overtime, when she got a layup to fall after being fouled on her hard drive to the rim. She missed the free throw, but Nebo was there to pick up the board. Nebo missed the putback, but Corrigan was on the other side of the glass for a rebound and another shot attempt, which fell as she was fouled again to tie the game at 94-94. After Griffin’s layup to take the lead with 14.4 seconds, Nebo proved invaluable on the ensuing BU possession. After BU’s Catie O’Leary missed a layup with six seconds, Nebo came down with the game-winning rebound and was promptly fouled. She sank her free throws for the final points of the game to push SIU into triple digits.

A NEW START
The 2013-14 season is the first at SIU for head coach Cindy Stein, who inherited a team that went 5-26 in 2012-13 and didn’t win more than eight games in the previous four seasons. Stein comes from Illinois Central College, where she coached ICC to a 32-4 record and a third-place finish at the NJCAA Division II national tournament during her lone season in 2012-13. Prior to Stein, ICC had gone 16-16 in 2011-12. Stein’s coaching profile includes a successful 12-year stint at Missouri and a three-year period at Emporia State to start her head coaching career. Over 16 seasons as a head coach, Stein holds a 282-206 (.578) record, three NCAA Tournament appearances, a Sweet 16 run in 2001 and three trips to the WNIT — all at Missouri.

STEIN AT MISSOURI
First-year SIU head coach Cindy Stein spent 12 successful seasons in Columbia, Mo., at the helm of Missouri’s women’s basketball program from 1998-2010. Stein inherited a Tiger basketball team that went 11-16 in 1997-98 and turned that around to 21-10 and a trip to the Sweet 16 by only her third season at Mizzou in 2000-01. Stein’s run with the Tigers saw 185 wins, five WNBA Draft selections and seven postseason appearances — including three NCAA Tournament appearances (2001, 04, 06). Stein’s players earned 24 All-Big 12 honors (four First-Team) and 46 Academic All-Big 12 nods.

NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK
Coach Stein brings a brand new support staff with her to Carbondale. Andrea Gorski (associate head coach), Kat Martin (assistant coach/recruiting coordinator), Christelle N’Garsanet (assistant coach), Amanda Hanneman (video coordinator) and former Saluki head coach Julie Beck (director of operations) round out the new crew in the Boydston Center offices. Gorski comes from Concordia University, where she turned around a sub-.500 club into a national NAIA powerhouse in five seasons. Martin comes from Kishwaukee College, where she was the associate head coach for six seasons. N’Garsanet, a former standout of Stein’s at Mizzou and a 2006 WNBA Draft selection, spent two years at Illinoic Central College — including Stein’s 32-4 season in 2012-13. Hanneman is also a former player of Stein’s at Mizzou from 2006-10, and she spent the last two seasons as an assistant coach at Sonoma State. Beck returns to Carbondale for her 30th year in Saluki Athletics as the director of operations. Beck was an assistant coach under Saluki Hall of Fame head coach Cindy Scott from 1981-1998, took over as head coach from 1998-2000, and worked in marketing and group sales for Saluki Athletics an additional 10 seasons after her coaching career ended.

SALUKIS VOTED TENTH
Southern Illinois was voted to finish tenth in the Missouri Valley Conference in 2013-14 in a preseason poll release on Oct. 30 at media day at Loyola University in Chicago. Indiana State was chosen to win the Valley crown with 26 first place votes, followed by Wichita State in second place with 13. Southern was voted to finish eighth in 2012-13, but finished tenth at the end of the season after posting a 5-26 record, which included a 1-17 conference record.

PIERRE JOINS SWAT TEAM
Dyana Pierre moved onto the SIU single-season during her freshman season in 2012-13 with 36 total blocks, the fourth-best total in school history. Pierre blocked a career-best five shots Nov. 17, 2012, against Loyola, making her only the second SIU player in the last 12 years (CiCi Shannon) to block five shots in a game. That total is tied for the eighth-highest single-game total in SIU history.

SALUKI RADIO NETWORK
The flagship station for Saluki women’s basketball is WVZA 105.1 FM, although 10 regular season games will be broadcast on WHET 97.7 FM due to conflicts with SIU men’s basketball broadcasts. Bryce Williams is in his second season as the full-time radio broadcaster for Saluki women’s basketball, while Logan Lee enters his first season as the team’s color commentator.

FOLLOW US
The official Twitter of Saluki women’s basketball is @SIU_WBasketball. This account features team news as well as live in-game updates. Fans can also follow Saluki Athletics @SIUSalukis for news on all SIU sports.

SALUKI ALL-ACCESS
Coverage for every Saluki women’s basketball game is available online though Saluki All-Access at www.SIUSalukis.com/allaccess. A live audio stream will be available for every game and live video will be available for all home games. Saluki All-Access also has on-demand content for all 18 Saluki sports.

SALUKI NEWS ONLINE
SIUSalukis.com is the official website for SIU Athletics. It is the best source for up-to-date information on the Saluki women’s basketball team. Rosters, box scores, cumulative statistics, pre-game notes and other materials are available on the site. You will need Adobe Acrobat to read PDF files.

IN NOVEMBER
SIU is 43-71 during the month of November since the 1974-75 season.

IN DECEMBER
SIU is 99-114 in the month of December since the 1974-75 season.

IN JANUARY 
SIU is 159-153 in the month of January since the 1974-75 season.

IN FEBRUARY
SIU is 171-147 in the month of February since the 1974-75 season.

IN MARCH
SIU is 51-64 in the month of March since the 1974-75 season.

RLC announces basketball schedule change

Due to a scheduling conflict with the Southern Illinois Junior High School Athletic Association State basketball tournament, the game that was previously scheduled for Monday, Feb. 10 between Rend Lake College and Southeastern Illinois College is being rescheduled for Monday, Feb. 3.  The women’s game will begin at 5:30 p.m. and the men’s game will immediately follow at 7:30 p.m.

Logan pulls upset at Vincennes

BY JOHN D. HOMAN
Logan Media Services

VINCENNES, IND. – The John A. Logan College men’s basketball team has a completely different look than it did two months ago. Call it the look of a winner. The Volunteers notched their sixth straight win with an eye-opening 75-64 win over the nation’s No. 6-ranked Vincennes Trailblazers (15-2) Wednesday night.
The victory ended Vincennes’ 52-game home win streak, one short of a school record. Logan, meanwhile, improves to 8-5 overall.
While there were many heroes for the Vols on this night, none shined brighter than freshman guard transfer Tre Green, who poured in a season-high 21 points.
“Tonight, it just felt like we were a better team,” Green said. “It wasn’t just me. It was a total team effort. And it feels great to get a win here on their home court.”
Three other teammates of Green hit for double figures, including Martavian Payne (13), A.J. Riley (12) and Darien Walker (11). DeVaughn Johnson also came up big down the stretch with seven points. Jordan Martin added six.
JALC trailed 28-25 at the half before going on a 16-2 run at the start of the second half and never relinquished the lead.
“We’ve got guys that can step up and make plays,” said a jubilant second-year Vols head coach Kyle Smithpeters. “All we really did in the second half was turn up the intensity on defense and started hitting more of our shots.”
Smithpeters, who played for and coached with Vincennes head coach Todd Franklin when the two were at Southeastern Illinois, said the win over his mentor was “bittersweet.”
“I’ve got a lot of respect for him. He helped me get my career started, but coaching against him…it’s the nature of the beast in this business,” Smithpeters said.
Logan will play at 3 p.m. Saturday at Rend Lake.

Salukis add three football transfers

CARBONDALE, Ill. – Saluki Football head coach Dale Lennon has announced the addition of three transfers to the roster for the 2014 season. The three transfer student-athletes are center Garrett Clark, defensive end Kevin Holmes and quarterback Mark Iannotti.

Clark and Iannotti will be juniors, and Holmes will be a redshirt freshman for the 2014 season. All three transfers are currently enrolled and attending spring semester classes at SIU.

Garrett Clark

Garrett Clark

Clark is a 6-foot-3, 295-pound center who is transferring from FBS Southern Miss. A native of Jacksonville, Fla., he appeared in seven games and made four starts for the Golden Eagles in 2013. He has played the last two seasons at Southern Miss after redshirting in 2011. Clark played his senior year at North Gwinnett (Fla.) High School and was rated a three-star recruit by Rivals.com, Scout.com and ESPN.

Mark Iannotti, a 6-foot-3 quarterback, joins the Salukis from Eastern Michigan. He threw one pass as a sophomore in 2013 and appeared in one game as a freshman in 2012. Iannotti is out of Schaumburg, Ill. As a senior for Schaumburg High School, he completed 67 percent of his passes for 1,398 yards and 12 touchdowns compared to three interceptions. He also rushed for 1,052 yards and 11 touchdowns. He was rated a two-star prospect by Rivals.com, Scout.com and ESPN.

Kevin Holmes is listed at 6-foot-3 and 230 pounds. He originally committed to Savannah State University. After sitting out last season, he will be a redshirt freshman in 2014. As a senior at Salem (Ga.) High School, Holmes recorded 96 tackles, including six sacks, and forced two fumbles.

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