Great job, ladies! We are proud of you! Keep it up and go dancing!!!
Great job, ladies! We are proud of you! Keep it up and go dancing!!!
I was there and it my friends was a packed house, that was LOUD!!!! I got there a few minutes into the game and had to sit yes on the courtside row if you will. You could see Anna's facial expressions as she battled inside and was great. Her pressence will be missed, but there is still more work to be done. Ashley is intense and quick as lightening, Washington is a workhorse with a great smile. This group of young ladies are very special, and I am just glad I could say I was there when they cut the nets down!!
DaddyCajun!!!!
Cajun women win West. Hall, players enjoy remarkable turnaround in program
Hell has officially frozen over.
Pigs flew Thursday night.
Common wisdom was that both of those would happen before the University of Louisiana's women's basketball team won a conference title.
Not that program ... one that hadn't had a winning season in 18 years, and one that for over a decade was a running joke in the Sun Belt Conference.
"Honestly, no one ever thought this was going to happen," said Ragin' Cajun senior forward Bernette Tolston. "It was only a dream."
The ghosts of disappointed players past, those floating around the rafters of Long Gym, had never seen anything like it Thursday night ... a packed gym, frenzied fans looking to shake 34 years of frustration and watch their team win a share of the Sun Belt West Division.
Their Cajuns didn't disappoint.
Thanks to Melissa Bratton's career-high 22 points and balanced scoring from the rest of the squad - not to mention a stellar defensive effort - the host Cajuns made history Thursday night with a 59-47 victory over Arkansas-Little Rock.
The win improved the Cajuns to 19-8 overall and, more importantly, to 9-5 in the Sun Belt. UL holds a one-game lead over North Texas (8-6) with only one game to go, and can finish no worse than tied with UNT for the West title even with a loss Saturday in their regular-season finale against Arkansas State.
The Cajuns could have won the crown outright on Thursday, but UNT rallied for a 59-56 win over a South Alabama team that had led that contest virtually the entire game.
Did that result take some of the luster off Thursday's post-game celebration?
After what the Cajun women's program has been through since 1971, not on your life.
"The first thing someone asked me when I took this job was what the hell I was thinking," said Cajun coach J. Kelley Hall. Pointing to his team's mid-court celebration, he added, "this is what I was thinking about."
The rest of the story
Dan McDonald
dmcdonald@theadvertiser.com
This was probably tied for the most exciting UL game I've ever been to. FIRST TIME IN UL HISTORY WE WIN THE CONFERENCE! Awesome, simply awesome. I'm havin the article from today's paper permanently preserved on a laminated plak. Too good to not have hangin on my wall. Geaux UL Lady Cajuns Basketball! Good Luck in the Sun Belt tourney!
God Bless.
Yes, the Ragin' Cajun women's basketball team did the traditional cutting of the net Thursday night, celebrating its share of the Sun Belt Conference's West Division title.
Coach J. Kelley Hall did his part, snipping the final string and letting his University of Louisiana players enjoy the moment.
On Friday, he reminded those same players that their job isn't nearly over.
"We made them aware of that today," Hall said. "I wanted to let them enjoy Thursday night, but there's still a lot on the line."
The Cajuns still have much they can accomplish tonight when they welcome a red-hot Arkansas State squad at 7 p.m. at Long Gym for the final regular-season game for both teams.
UL (19-8, 9-5) can lock down a 20-win season, something the Cajuns haven't done since the 1983-84 campaign, and can wrap up a perfect season at home with a current 12-0 mark at Long Gym and the Cajundome this season. In all, UL has won 14 straight home games dating back to last year.
But, more importantly, a win tonight would give the Cajun squad the undisputed West title and the number one seed from the West for the Sun Belt Tournament which begins Thursday in Denton, Texas.
The rest of the story
Dan McDonald
dmcdonald@theadvertiser.com
Tuesday's weekly press conference for Louisiana's Ragin' Cajun basketball programs was a study in contrast.
Women's coach J. Kelley Hall was basking in the school's first Sun Belt Conference Western Division title and first 20-win season since 1983-84, both achieved with last Saturday's 64-63 victory over Arkansas State at Earl K. Long Gym.
A West tie was clinched with a Thursday win over Arkansas-Little Rock, and the Saturday triumph made it an outright title and No. 1 seeding for the March 4-8 Sun Belt Tournament in Denton, Texas.
Robert Lee's Cajun men are the defending Sun Belt champions, but they enter the tournament on the heels of a pair of road losses at Arkansas State and UALR that dropped UL to the No. 2 seed in the West.
"I think we did as good as we can do as far as the seeding for the tournament," said Hall, whose Cajuns open at 11 a.m. on Saturday against the winner of Friday's Florida International-New Mexico State game.
"And, by winning, we put North Texas, Western Kentucky and Middle Tennessee on the other side of the bracket. We did all we could do with things we could control and things we could take care of.
"To be honest, I think we can win this thing."
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
NEW ORLEANS – After leading their respective squads to the best record in the league, a pair of juniors have been named Sun Belt Conference Player of the Year for men’s and women’s basketball.
Denver center Yemi Nicholson and Western Kentucky guard Tiffany Porter-Talbert won the league’s top honors on Wednesday, as the All-Sun Belt Conference teams were announced.
The teams were voted on by Sun Belt school head coaches as well as a selected media panel, and will be presented this weekend at the 2005 Aéropostale Sun Belt Conference Men’s and Women’s Basketball Championships in Denton, Texas.
On the men’s side, four of the five first-team selections were juniors. Other juniors joining Nicholson on the first team include Florida International forward Ivan Almonte, Louisiana guard Tiras Wade and Western Kentucky guard Anthony Winchester. Sophomore New Orleans guard Bo McCalebb, who was the league Preseason Player of the Year, was also on the first team.
Other individuals winning specialty awards include Denver head coach Terry Carroll, who was named Coach of the Year, Louisiana guard Orien Greene (Defensive Player of the Year), Wade (Newcomer of the Year) and Western Kentucky guard Courtney Lee (Freshman of the Year).
On the women’s side, Arkansas State’s Brian Boyer and Louisiana’s Kelley Hall were Co-Coaches of the Year. Middle Tennessee senior Patrice Holmes was selected Defensive Player of the Year, while Western Kentucky forward Crystal Kelly (Freshman of the Year and South Alabama guard JoAnna Williams (Newcomer of the Year) round out the awards.
First team All-Sun Belt members include Porter-Talbert; Holmes; Kelly; Arkansas-Little Rock’s Jocelyn Love; Arkansas State’s Ali Carter; Adrianne Davie and Rudi Sims; Florida International’s Milena Tomova; Louisiana’s Anna Petrakova and Western Kentucky’s Leslie Logsdon.
Porter-Talbert has had a brilliant year for the Lady Toppers. Leading the squad to its third straight Sun Belt East Division title, Porter-Talbert is third in the league in scoring (18 points per game), second in steals (2.4), seventh in rebounding (7.1), and 12th in assists (2.7).
Nicholson, meanwhile, is one of the most improved players in the country. The 6-10 post player, who averaged 7.5 points per game and 4.3 rebounds per game as a sophomore, is putting up 18.7 points (third in the league), 8.7 boards (second) and is the only player in the league averaging more than three blocks per contest.
In Sun Belt-only games, Nicholson averaged 21.2 points and 9.7 rebounds and 4 blocks per contest.
He helped lead the Pioneers, who were picked to finish last in the West Division according to a preseason coaches poll, to their first ever Sun Belt West Division title.
ALL-SUN BELT CONFERENCE MEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM
FIRST TEAM Pos. Hgt. Class School
Ivan Almonte F 6-6 Jr. Florida International
Bo McCalebb G 6-0 So. New Orleans
Yemi Nicholson C 6-10 Jr. Denver
Tiras Wade G 6-6 Jr. Louisiana
Anthony Winchester G 6-4 Jr. Western Kentucky
SECOND TEAM
Brandon Freeman G 6-2 Sr. Arkansas-Little Rock
Orien Greene G 6-4 Sr. Louisiana
Brian Hamilton F 6-6 Sr. Louisiana
Leonard Hopkins G 6-3 Sr. North Texas
Dewarick Spencer G 6-4 Sr. Arkansas State
THIRD TEAM
Rodney Billups G 5-10 Sr. Denver
Michael Cuffee G/F 6-5 Sr. Middle Tennessee
Mike Dean G 6-3 Sr. Middle Tennessee
Mario Jointer G 6-3 Jr. South Alabama
J.J. Montgomery G 6-5 Sr. Arkansas State
Player of the Year: Nicholson, Denver
Defensive Player of the Year: Greene, Louisiana
Newcomer of the Year: Wade, Louisiana
Freshman of the Year: Courtney Lee (G/F, 6-4), Western Kentucky
Coach of the Year: Terry Carroll, Denver
ALL-SUN BELT CONFERENCE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM
FIRST TEAM Pos. Hgt. Class School
Ali Carter G 5-9 Jr. Arkansas State
Adrianne Davie C 6-3 So. Arkansas State
Patrice Holmes G 5-9 Sr. Middle Tennessee
Crystal Kelly F 6-3 Fr. Western Kentucky
Leslie Logsdon G 5-11 Sr. Western Kentucky
Jocelyn Love G/F 6-0 So. Arkansas-Little Rock
Anna Petrakova C 6-3 Sr. Louisiana
Rudy Sims G 5-7 So. Arkansas State
Tiffany-Porter Talbert G 5-7 Jr. Western Kentucky
Milena Tomova F/C 6-3 Sr. Florida International
HONORABLE MENTION
Ashley Blanche G 5-4 Jr. Louisiana
Erika Bobo G 5-8 Jr. North Texas
Genevieve Delk F/C 6-0 Sr. South Alabama
Krystle Horton F 6-2 So. Middle Tennessee
Tia Stovall F 6-1 Jr. Middle Tennessee
Player of the Year: Porter-Talbert, Western Kentucky
Defensive Player of the Year: Holmes, Middle Tennessee
Newcomer of the Year: JoAnna Williams (5-10, Jr., G), South Alabama
Freshman of the Year: Crystal Kelly, Western Kentucky
Co-Coaches of the Year: Brian Boyer, ASU; J. Kelley Hall, Louisiana
http://basketball.sunbeltsports.org/x/article/3665
Louisiana holds off FIU rally
DENTON, Texas - Here's to extended seasons.
Louisiana's Ragin' Cajuns kept their remarkable campaign alive here Saturday with a nerve-wracking 61-60 quarterfinal victory over Florida International in the Sun Belt Conference Tournament.
The victory, the first in Sun Belt Tournament competition in UL history, sends the 21-8 Cajuns into an 11 a.m. Monday semifinal against the winner of a quarterfinal today between Arkansas State and South Alabama.
Senior Anna Petrakova converted a three-point play with a running, scoop-shot basket and a free throw with 30 seconds to play for the winning points, capping off a 24-point, 10-rebound day for the All-Sun Belt senior center.
"We did exactly what Coach told us to do on the play," Petrakova said. "We just executed it.
"When I got the ball, I knew it would be a 1-on-1. I wasn't planning on shooting it that way. It was just where the defender was.
"The ball went in, and I think it was a little bit of luck that it went in."
That was enough to withstand a tournament-record 32-point performance by FIU's Milena Tomova, but just barely.
"It was a very tough, physical game," coach J. Kelley Hall said. "It was also tough mentally on the players.
"Both teams used not too many players. Going in I felt we had a lot of rest, and I wanted to use my seniors as much as possible. They deserved the opportunity to play the most time."
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
Petrakova awarded another chance Cajuns' star overcomes foul trouble
DENTON, Texas - She's off the hook.
Senior center Anna Petrakova was upset with herself at halftime of Saturday's quarterfinal game against Florida International in the Sun Belt Conference Tournament.
She had picked up her third foul with 2:27 remaining in the half when Louisiana's Ragin' Cajuns were in control of the Panthers, and she watched in agony from the bench as FIU scored the final nine points of the half to creep within 31-24 at intermission.
Worse yet, the senior center knew she'd have to play the final 20 minutes on pins and needles.
"I felt a little restrained (in the second half)," Petrakova said. "When you have fouls to spare, you can take risks. But when you have three you have to be careful. I tried to be productive on defense without fouling."
Petrakova's foul total stayed at three while she scored 24 points and pulled down 10 rebounds. She also scored the crucial basket and free throw with 30 seconds to play as the Cajuns held on for a 61-60 victory.
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
DENTON, Texas - Less than one week removed from their photo finish at Earl K. Long Gym, Louisiana's Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team and Arkansas State will square off again this time in the semifinal round of the 2005 Aeropostale Sun Belt Conference Tournament.
The game will be played at 11 a.m. (CST) on Monday, March 7 in the Super Pit here on the University of North Texas campus. ESPN Plus will produce the contest which will be carried in the Lafayette viewing area on Cox Sports TV (cable channel 27).
ASU downed South Alabama 61-53 in the quarterfinals Sunday afternoon to reach Monday's game. The Indians (19-9) used a 20-0 run to end the game - erasing a double-digit lead in the process - in advancing to Monday's contest against No. 1 West seed Louisiana-Lafayette.
Louisiana-Lafayette (21-8) advanced into Monday's semifinal with a 61-60 win over FIU Saturday afternoon. An Anna Petrakova three-point play with 30.7 seconds left capped off an 8-0 run that rallied the Cajuns from a five-point deficit with less than three minutes left to play.
The two teams met in the regular season finale on Saturday, Feb. 26. Ashley Blanche delivered the game-winning jumper as time expired to give the Ragin' Cajuns a 66-64 victory over ASU and the outright Sun Belt Conference Western Division championship. It was the program's first win over ASU under head coach J. Kelley Hall.
The Cajuns and Indians have met once before in the Sun Belt Tournament. ASU posted a 78-35 win in the first round of the 1994 event in Bowling Green, Ky.
Louisiana is venturing into the semifinal round of the Sun Belt Tournament for the first time in program history. On Saturday, the Ragin' Cajuns picked up the program's first-ever league tournament victory with the win over FIU. ASU is making its ninth appearance in the semifinals.
With a win on Monday the Cajuns would tie the program record for single-season victories at 22 (set in the 1983-84 season) and reach the championship round on Tuesday, March 8.
Monday's semifinal round game can also be heard on the radio via SportsRadio ESPN 1420-KPEL AM. Jay Walker, the "Voice of the Ragin' Cajuns", will call all of the action from the Super Pit.
LOUISIANA SI
DENTON, Texas - Louisiana's Ragin' Cajuns have been traveling in rarified air this season.
If they can defeat Arkansas State in today's 11 a.m. Sun Belt Conference Tournament semifinal, they'll boldly go where no UL women's team has gone before.
The 21-8 Cajuns edged Florida International 61-60 on Saturday, getting the first Sun Belt Tournament win in school history and just the second conference tournament victory ever.
Reaching Tuesday's championship game would be another quantum leap in coach J. Kelley Hall's third-year at the helm.
"I don't think we were nervous for FIU," Hall said. "I think we were prepared to play and were rested.
"We were the West champions, but FIU was ranked about 100 points ahead of us in the RPI ratings. With Arkansas State, it's the same thing.
"Nobody believes we can do it. We'll just have to do it again."
If today's contest comes close to the season finale between UL and ASU, it will be a classic. The Cajuns' Ashley Blanche won that one 66-64 on a last-second jumper before a packed house at Earl K. Long Gym to clinch an outright Western Division crown.
"It was just a great Division I basketball game," said ASU coach Brian Boyer. "People asked me if our team did something wrong, and we really didn't. We played really well.
"People talk about Western Kentucky, Middle Tennessee, and I guess us, but I'm convinced nobody's playing better in the Sun Belt right now than Louisiana-Lafayette.
"Anna Petrakova is among the best centers in the Sun Belt, and Blanche is a good point guard who they surround with good shooters. And, Tiffany Washington is a great complementary forward."
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
Is the Lady Cajun semifinal on the radio/internet? I would love to listen to the game at work...
There are currently 3 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 3 guests)