Bearcat and Cardinal Women to Meet on Sunday
Contact: Geoff Wiswell
1/14/2005
Micah Harvey is now 11th on UC's all-time assist chart. |
GAME FACTS:
Date: Sun., Jan. 16, 2005
Time: 2:00 p.m. ET
Site: Fifth Third Arena (13,176)
Cincinnati, Ohio
Records: Cincinnati, 5-10 (0-2 C-USA)
Louisville, 10-5 (1-1 C-USA)
Radio: www.bearcast.uc.edu
TV: None
Live Stats: www.UCBearcats.com
Tickets: $5/$3, 513-556-CATS
Series: UL leads, 27-25
Last Meeting: Feb. 28, 2004 at UC
UL 58, UC 48
SETTING THE SCENE: The most prolific series in University of Cincinnati women's basketball writes a new chapter on Sunday, Jan. 16 when the Bearcats host rival Louisville at 2 p.m. in Fifth Third Arena. UC and the Cardinals have faced each other 52 times since 1972. The Bearcats are 5-10 and dropped both of their league-opening contests last weekend. Louisville stands at 10-5 and is 1-1 in C-USA.
CINCINNATI PROBABLE STARTERS PPG RPG APG FG%
F 1 Ashley Brown, 6-0 Fr., Wilbeforce, Ohio 5.9 5.9 0.9 .419
F 14 Emy Ogide, 6-2 Fr., Rockmart, Ga. 2.1 2.4 0.2 .462
G 12 Micah Harvey, 5-7 Jr., Sardinia, Ohio 4.8 1.7 3.6 .303
G 13 Toni Slaughter, 6-0 So., Shelbyville, Ky. 10.6 6.6 1.6 .338
G 32 Karen Twehues, 6-0 So., Minusio, Switz. 9.2 2.5 0.9 .331
LOUISVILLE PROBABLE STARTERS PPG RPG APG FG%
F 31 Missy Taylor, 6-3 So., Connersville, Ind. 15.5 7.7 2.6 .549
C 12 Jazz Covington, 6-3 So., Adel, Ga. 17.2 7.4 1.7 .609
G 21 Angel Bradley, 5-6 Sr., Marietta, Ga. 7.9 6.3 2.6 .383
G 22 Jessica Huggins, 5-4 Jr., New Albany, Ind. 7.7 2.3 3.8 .337
G 50 Joleen Phillips, 5-8 Sr., Louisville, Ky. 4.9 3.8 1.5 .396
STORYLINES:
? UC stands eight wins from reaching the 500-win mark in program history, while Louisville is 11 away.
? Eight different Bearcats have scored in double-figures this year and five players have led the team in scoring in at least one game.
? The Bearcats have held eight of 15 opponents under 65 points, including four of the last seven.
? After recording one point and one rebound in the first six games of the year, freshman Emy Ogide has averaged 3.1 rebounds and 1.2 blocks in the last nine games, including an eight point, nine rebound game vs. Arkansas.
? The Bearcats and Cardinals have played 52 times, the most prolific series for either team. Louisville has won 27 of the games, including both meetings last year and five of 10 in Fifth Third Arena.
? Cardinal center Jazz Covington is fifth in C-USA at 17.2 ppg and second with a .609 shooting percentage.
? U of L leads the league and ranks 20th in the nation with a .462 team shooting percentage.
NOTING NORTH DAKOTA STATE:
? Freshman Ashley Brown posted her first double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds.
? Micah Harvey recorded eight assists to become the 11th Bearcat to reach 250 career assists.
? Bellva May set a career-high with five assists to go with 13 points and four steals.
? The Bearcats made a season-high 29 field goals.
TOP 10 CATS: Juniors Anne Stephens and Micah Harvey are seeing the results of their careers in the UC record books. Stephens now has 37 career blocks to rank 10th in school history, one behind ninth place Angel Minton. Harvey has handed out 250 assists in her career, which is 11th all-time by a Bearcat. She is six away from cracking the top 10.
BLOCK PARTY: Against Arkansas and UAB UC recorded 15 total blocked shots, including eight at UAB for the second-highest single-game total in school history. It trails only the 12 rejections against Miami (Ohio) in Dec. 1983. Anne Stephens and Emy Ogide had 11 of the 15 and rank sixth and 10th, respectively, in C-USA. The Bearcats are averaging 3.9 blocks per game this year, on pace for 106, which would break the school record of 96 held by that 1983-84 squad.
RAPID RETURN: Sophomore Treasure Humphries underwent surgery for a torn ACL in September and has astounded all by making it back to the court in a little over three months. UC's steals leader and fourth-leading scorer last year, she made her debut at Middle Tennessee State on Dec. 29 and scored eight points in 11 minutes with two steals. Humphries is averaging 6.8 points and 2.4 rebounds in her four games with a high of 11 points at USF.
YOUTH MOVEMENT: The Bearcats opened the season with a combined total of 71 games of starting experience. 49 of those games came from Anne Stephens (25) and Micah Harvey (24). For comparison, last year?s team brought 229 games of starting experience into the 2003-04 campaign. Nine of the players on the 2004-05 roster are in just their first or second year at UC.
APPROACHING MILESTONE: Now in its 34th season of play, UC has won 492 games. The Bearcats are vying with four other schools to become the first women's team in Conference USA to reach 500 all-time victories. Southern Miss and Houston are the current leaders with 496. East Carolina (492) and Louisville (489) are right with UC.
CONFERENCE USA SUCCESS: The Bearcats are one of seven teams to have a conference record over .500 throughout the history of Conference USA. UC is 77-59 (.566) in the 10-year history of the league, posting winning league marks in the five years before last year. The Bearcats were 12-4 in the 1998-99 season to claim the regular season championship.
EMERGING EMY: Freshman Emy Ogide (pronounced A-mee O-giday) played in just three of the first six games, recording one point and one rebound. Pressed into extended action against Xavier because of injuries, she responded with two points, three rebounds and two blocks. She has played in all nine games since and started the last three, averaging 2.7 points, 3.1 rebounds and 1.2 blocks in that time. She had a career day against Arkansas, setting new bests with eight points, nine rebounds, four blocks and two assists.
BALANCED ATTACK: UC has gotten contributions from a number of different sources offensively and on the boards. Five different players have led UC in scoring and eight different players have recorded a total of 37 double-digit scoring games. The North Dakota State game was the third this season in which four Bearcats reached double-figures. Also, three players ? Toni Slaughter, Anne Stephens and Ashley Brown ? are recording near or over six rebounds per game.
COMING ON STRONG: Sophomore captain Toni Slaughter had turned on the offense in the last eight games before going scoreless at UAB, averaging 14.8 points in that span and making .400 of her three-pointers. She had failed to score in double-figures in the first four games after averaging 11.8 points in her last eight starts last year. Slaughter also leads the team in rebounding at 6.9 per game. She tied her career-high with 20 points at Evansville and recorded her first double-double with 16 points and 12 rebounds vs. Loyola Marymount.
UNQUESTIONED LEADER: Head Coach Laurie Pirtle is UC's all-time leader in coaching wins and on Feb. 21, 2002, she earned her 250th win leading the Bearcats. She joined DePaul's Doug Bruno as the only C-USA coaches with at least 250 wins at their current school. On Feb. 20, 2004 against East Carolina she became the 54th active coach to win 350 games in a career.
C-USA OPENERS: The Jan. 7 loss at UAB continued UC's struggles in C-USA opening games. Until 2002-03 the Bearcats had never won their conference opener. The Bearcats' 67-48 win over Louisville was UC's first win after losing its first seven Conference USA-opening games. UC is now 1-9 in these games.
TAKING ADVANTAGE: Fully healthy for the first time in her career, redshirt junior Leslie Knoch has become a leader for the Bearcats on and off the court. She is one of four team captains and has started 14 games this year, the first starts of her career. She has scored in double-figures five times this season, with a career high 20 points in the comeback win over Ball State. She ranks 12th in C-USA in assists with 2.9 per game.
DEFENSE AND REBOUNDING: The Bearcats have allowed fewer than 60 points in five games and recorded all five of their wins in those games. In those five games UC has allowed an average of 45.8 points and held its opponents to .323 shooting. In the 10 losses the Bearcats are giving up 71.1 points on .462 shooting. Also, the rebounding margin is +7.8 wins against -6.4 in losses.
TALE OF TWO HALVES: The Arkansas game, in which UC held the Lady'Backs to 22 first half points but was outscored 44-25 in the second half, was a microcosm of one of the Bearcats' chief struggles this year. The Bearcats are holding opponents to 27.0 points in the first half, while scoring 28.3. In the second half, however, UC has allowed an average of 35.7 points while scoring just 29.3. Six opponents this year have posted 40 or more points after halftime and UC has reached 30 points in just six second stanzas. The Bearcats have led at halftime of seven games, but are just 3-4 in those contests.
GETTING TO THE LINE: After taking just 39 free throw attempts (9.8 per game) in their first four games, the Bearcats have gotten more aggressive. They have taken 204 in the last 11 games for a 18.5 average per game. Though the Bearcats have still taken 74 fewer than their opponents. UC is 3-0 when taking more free throws than its opponents.
A DAY FOR THANKS: The day before Thanksgiving left much to be thankful for in Bearcat basketball at Fifth Third Arena. In the afternoon, the UC women came back from a 14-point deficit with fewer than nine minutes left to top Ball State, 62-58. Leslie Knoch's career-high 20 points led the comeback effort. Later that night, the men trailed Northern Iowa by 18 with 10 minutes left, but UC evened the score and eventually won, 76-70, in double overtime. The greatest comeback in Fifth Third Arena history was led by Jihad Muhammad's 23 points, nine coming in the final 2:50 of regulation.
ALL OR NOTHING: When it comes to three-point shooting, UC is rarely average. In just three games this year have the Bearcats shot between .300 and .380 from behind the arc. Four times they have made at least 38 percent, including 11-of-27 (.407) vs. Alabama State and 7-of-13 (.538) against Michigan State. Eight times, including the last six games, UC has struggled, shooting under 30 percent. In the last six games UC is 19-of-94 (.202). Last season, the Bearcats ranked 19th in the country with a .366 team three-point percentage, which was a school record, as was the 177 made treys.
STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE: The Bearcats will play 14 games this year against teams that reached the postseason in 2004. As a result, UC's schedule was ranked as the 38th toughest in the nation by the WBCA/Summerville RPI. UC's 2004-05 opponents had a combined 438-326 record for a .573 winning percentage last year.
DEFENSIVE LOCKDOWN: The 31 points scored by Detroit in UC's 60-31 win on Nov. 21 was the 11th-fewest ever allowed by the Bearcats. It was the lowest total by a UC opponent since Robert Morris scored 29 on Nov. 20, 2001. It was also the fewest points ever scored by Detroit. The seven blocked shots by the Bearcats equalled the second-best UC single-game total at the time.
ROAD WEARY: 25 of UC's last 37 losses have occurred away from Cincinnati. UC has lost 17 of its last 21 road games. The Bearcats have averaged 9.9 fewer points scored on the road this year than at home.
CLOSE CALLS: UC was 3-8 last year in games decided by six points or fewer, but won on two of the last three occasions. The season opener at Toledo, where UC lost a 12-point halftime lead and was defeated by five, and the 62-58 comeback win over Ball State continued the trend of close games. The Bearcats lost 16 games last year by an average of just 8.6 points.
HOME SWEET HOME: Since Fifth Third Arena became the home of UC basketball in 1989, the Bearcats have gone 147-78 (.653) on their home court. Over the past seven years they have been nearly unbeatable at home, posting a 100-24 mark (.806). UC went 15-1 at home in 2001-02, the best-ever mark. The Bearcats put together a school-record 21-game home win streak from Jan. 1, 2002 until a loss to Tulane on Feb. 2, 2003.
POWER CONFERENCE: Last year Conference USA produced an all-time high of 17 postseason basketball teams (6 NCAA Men, 4 NCAA Women, 2 NIT, 5 WNIT). Only the Big East with 19 (6 NCAA Men, 8 NCAA women, 4 NIT and 1 WNIT) and the Big 12 with 18 (4 NCAA Men, 7 NCAA Women, 5 NIT and 2 WNIT) produced more postseason basketball teams last March.
POSTSEASON TRADITION: The Bearcats have reached postseason tourney play seven straight times, with this era accounting for all but two of the postseason appearances in school history. Four of the seven have been to the WNIT, including last year. The seven-season streak is the longest active streak in Conference USA.
UP NEXT: The Bearcats host a pair of Conference USA games next weekend when they host Houston on Friday, Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. and and TCU on Sunday, Jan. 23 at 1 p.m.