Posts Tagged ‘Holiday Road Trip’

Posts Tagged ‘Holiday Road Trip’

NU 57, Towson 48: Huskies start the year with a win

January 4th, 2012

What happened?

Northeastern traveled down to Towson, Md. hoping to open the 2012 calendar year with a victory against a team that didn’t win a game in 2011, and that is what they got. But it wasn’t as easy as it might sound.

Alex Bates earned his first career start, and sunk the first point of the game on a free throw after drawing a foul against the Tigers’ rebound specialist Robert Nwankwo. With the big man leaving the game immediately after the foul, Northeastern was able to score the first six points of the contest and it looked like the Huskies would be able to cruise their way to a win. However, a quick 8-0 run from Towson gave them a lead before NU took it right back with the next seven points. The resulting five-point advantage would be the largest for either team through the rest of the half with Towson pushing themselves to a two-basket lead at the 7:26 mark after their 9-0 push.

A Jervon Pressley layup with just under a minute and a half remaining in the opening frame would cut the Northeastern lead to two, and the teams headed into the locker rooms with the Huskies leading by a slim 25-23 margin. Despite Nwankwo playing a total of two minutes in the first half, Towson held a 21-10 advantage on the boards at the break, and had scored ten second-chance points, but their undoing was seven turnovers that NU had converted into nine points. In comparison, Northeastern had turned the ball over just three times for two Towson points.

In the second half, the Huskies would slowly build their lead against a Towson team that refused to give in. Eventually, Northeastern would take a ten-point lead with 12:07 to go but the Tigers cut that back to two less than four minutes later. A 13-4 rush would give the Huskies their largest lead at any point in the game, an 11-point advantage capped off by a Quincy Ford free throw with a minute to go. Despite a host of substitutions and fouls by Towson down the stretch, a lack of shots and turnovers would run out the clock and send the Tigers to their 33rd consecutive defeat since January 3, 2011. Read more…

Andy Towne Basketball , ,

QuickCast: Mariucci Classic Final vs. Minnesota

January 1st, 2012

Northeastern scores two five-on-three goals while holding #2 Minnesota scoreless on the power play, as the Huskies win the Mariucci Classic 3-2.

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NU 53, UVM 51: Joel Smith Beats Buzzer, Breaks Huskies Losing Streak

December 31st, 2011


What happened?

Still stinging from allowing a season-high 88 points against N.C. State a week prior, the Huskies sought a more complete defensive effort against Vermont on Friday. With both teams sporting a slow and methodical pace, points were at a premium. Junior captain Joel Smith got off to a solid start, scoring eight of his team’s first 12 points and converting his first two three-point attempts. Northeastern used the benefit of some shaky officiating to grab a 23-16 lead with just over five minutes remaining in the first half. The Catamounts cut the deficit to two before Quincy Ford grabbed an airball and put in a layup as the buzzer sounded to give the Huskies a 28-24 edge at halftime.

Smith teamed with backcourt mate Jonathan Lee to push the tempo early in the second stanza and run the visitor’s lead to a game-high nine points. But foul trouble, which had not been an issue in the first half, began to plague the Huskies as Lee, Reggie Spencer and Kauri Black all played the final 10 minutes with at least three fouls each. The Huskies went cold at a most inopportune time, making only one of six field goals and turning the ball over four times between the second and fourth media timeouts of the second half. The Catamounts took advantage of Northeastern’s sloppy play, grabbing it’s first second half lead with 4:09 to play.

Matters went from bad to worse for the visitors as junior captain Lee, the team’s leading scorer, fouled out with 2:06 to play. Fortunately, the Huskies’ big men stepped up in a big way down the stretch, as Quincy Ford blocked a jump shot that led to a fast break layup for Smith and Kashief Edwards converted on a layup in traffic to push NU ahead with 51 seconds to go. After Vermont tied the score 49-49 with under 30 seconds to go, head coach Bill Coen used a timeout to diagram a play. Smith curled around a pick and roll with Edwards, then dished the ball off to the senior transfer, who absorbed contact to put the ball in with nine seconds to go.

Smith nearly went from hero to goat on the next sequence, however. Edwards missed the ensuing free throw, keeping the score at 51-49 Huskies. Smith was too aggressive in the final seconds, fouling Vermont’s best free throw shooter Four McGlynn with 3.9 seconds remaining and sending him to the line for two shots. McGlynn drained both tries, knotting the score at 51-51. Coen used his final timeout to set up a last second play for his team. Black took the inbound pass and threw it to Smith at half court. Smith spun away from traffic, dribbled to the right wing of the three-point line, and launched an off-balance shot with two seconds remaining. The ball rattled in and out of the cylinder and hung on the back rim before finally falling through as the buzzer sounded, giving Northeastern a dramatic 53-51 victory.

Player of the Game:

Hitting a game-winning buzzer beater to snap a six-game losing streak merits automatic player of the game recognition, but Smith did more than just score the game’s final two points. The sharpshooter was aggressive from the start, taking open shots when available and looking to create offense for others, yet not forcing the issue and falling into turnovers. Smith’s overall stat line was just what the doctor ordered: 32 minutes played, a game-high 19 points, 7 of 14 from the floor, 3 of 7 from downtown, 2 for 2 from the line, 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 block and 0 turnovers. While Smith had a career-high 29 points in the win at St. John’s. it was his effort against Vermont that the Huskies need more of. The junior captain was in control the entire game, rarely made a bad decision with the ball, was reliable defensively, and stepped up in crunch time when his team needed him. Many will remember his three-point barrage against the Red Storm, but don’t overlook what he did against the Catamounts.

The Takeaway:

First and foremost, the Huskies finally ended their losing streak, which extended back to Nov. 30 at La Salle. It was important for Northeastern to pick up a non-conference win before beginning conference play in January. Though the BracketBuster game in February still remains, this marks the scheduled end of non-conference play. All things considered, NU’s 4-6 mark is nothing to write home about, but is a decent beginning to the season.

Second, Joel Smith. At times he can be lights out shooting, other times he struggles to make an impact. Friday he was the perfect mix for the Huskies, doing exactly what his abilities allowed him to do while not trying to do too much or failing but not doing enough. It has been an up and down two month stretch for Smith, but if he plays as he did against Vermont, Coen and company have to be ecstatic.

Third, the defensive improvement. Granted, Vermont does not have the offensive firepower that N.C. State does, but 88 points is too much for the Huskies to be allowing. Northeastern did a much better job on the defensive end, hurrying back in transition and not yielding easy shots. The communication between teammates was solid, as players rotated to compensate for any players who were caught out of position. The team gets an A for solid D.

Fourth, Jonathan Lee. It’s too early to panic, but this does mark the second time in three games he has failed to reach double-digits in scoring. Lee did not play poorly, but as a junior captain and the only experienced point guard on the team, it’s important for him to produce and stay on the court. Some of his fouls in the second half were ill-advised and resulted in disqualification late in a tight game. I have little doubt Lee will bounce back, but it was somewhat disappointing to see the team’s leader foul out in a close game.

Finally, turnovers, or lack there of. Turnovers plagued the Huskies throughout their losing streak, but recently NU has done a much better job of taking care of the basketball. Northeastern turned the ball over 14 times but dished out 11 assists as a team. The closer the assist to turnover ratio is, the better chance this team has to win, and the Huskies look to be headed in the right direction.

Quote of Note:

Bill Coen, on his team ending a six-game losing streak: “I thought we had three of our best practices leading up to this game. Everyone went home and no one was feeling good about how we finished December, but we have the type of character in that locker room where they recommitted themselves, came back with an even stronger resolve, and we said to them in the locker room that that game was won on the practice floor in the days leading up to this game, not particularly in the game. We just got credit for it today.”

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Patrick McHugh Audio, Basketball, Press Pass ,

Press Pass: Basketball at Vermont

December 31st, 2011

Bill Coen talks about a thrilling win that saw the Huskies snap a 6-game losing streak just three days before returning to conference action.

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QuickCast: Basketball at Vermont

December 31st, 2011

In a contest that was close all afternoon, Joel Smith hit a buzzerbeater to give the Huskies a 53-51 victory.

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Huskies Tie Tigers, Move To Finals After Shootout Victory

December 30th, 2011

Minneapolis — It might not have been the way head coach Jim Madigan pictured it, but Northeastern is in the finals of this year’s Mariucci Holiday Classic. After NU and Princeton played three periods and five minutes of overtime to a 3-3 tie, the Huskies bested the Tigers in an eight-round shootout, with Justin Daniels putting the final puck past Mike Condon.

The Huskies led the semifinal game three different times, and each time Princeton responded to even the score with a power play strike. Though NU outshot the Tigers 41-26, Princeton went 3 of 8 with the extra man to hang in the game.

The Huskies opened the scoring late in the first period when Braden Pimm put home a shorthanded goal from Mike McLaughlin. The game marked McLaughlin’s return to the lineup after missing five games with a broken jaw. Princeton, however was able to convert under a minute later on the same man advantage, getting a goal from Jack Berger.

It wasn’t until 4:35 into the third period that another goal was scored. Vinny Saponari, who had one of his best games as a Husky moved in on the net and slipped the puck past Condon’s short side, putting NU on top 2-1. But once again the Tigers evened things up, getting a power play goal from freshman Tyler Maugeri to even the score.

Under a minute after Maugeri’s goal, Pimm found the back of the net for the second time. For his eighth goal of the season, Pimm put home a centering pass from Cody Ferriero and Steve Quailer. It didn’t take long for the Tigers to respond for the third time as Kevin Ross scored his first career goal, the game’s third in under two minutes.

Both teams had good chances later in the period and in overtime but neither could put home a deciding goal and the game ended in a 3-3 tie.

In the shootout to determine which team would advance to the final, neither team scored in the first seven rounds until Daniels finally won the battle for NU.The Huskies will face Minnesota in the final tomorrow at 8 p.m. EST. The Golden Gophers defeated Niagara 5-1 in the other semifinal.

Our Observations

  • The Huskies continue to struggle on the power play, going 0-7 with the man advantage on the night. They are one of the worst units in the country, converting at a paltry 8 percent.
  • McLaughlin was eager to get back in the lineup after missing 5 games. He made an impact right away by assisting on Pimm’s shorthanded goal and blocking shots during Princeton’s power play opportunities.
  • Saponari had a hard-working game for NU, making some hustle plays on both ends of the ice. His goal was his second of the season and first since he scored in the second game of the year at Maine.
  • Chris Rawlings didn’t have his best game, allowing more than two goals for the first time since mid-November when the Huskies lost at UMass. NU will need Rawlings on his A-game tomorrow night if they want to have a chance at bringing home the title.

Quotable

“We knew that Princeton works hard, they skate hard, they come at you, I didn’t think we matched their intensity at periods of time and I thought it was an ugly win from our perspective. We executed poorly, we had way too many penalties, we were undisciplined in our play and every time we got a lead, we’d throw it right back to them.”
- Jim Madigan

Full post-game interview:

Memo-8.m4a

“I was a little rusty in the first but I got my lungs back under me and I felt fine after that. Whenever you come back after being out for six weeks it helps to get a point right away and get the confidence back, it felt good. We know we have a lot more than that. Princeton played well, but we’ve got to turn it around and have a better game tomorrow.”
- Mike McLaughlin

Full post-game interview:

Memo-7.m4a

Jared Shafran Hockey ,

QuickCast: Mariucci Classic Semifinal vs. Princeton

December 30th, 2011

The Huskies give up three power play goals and finish regulation 3-3 but survive a tense shootout to advance to the Mariucci Classic championship.

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WRBB Sports Hockey, QuickCast ,

This week on WRBB Sports (Updated)

December 26th, 2011

Friday, December 30

4:15 p.m. – Huskies Basketball Pre-Game
4:30 p.m. – Northeastern Basketball: Huskies at Vermont Catamounts
from Patrick Gym in Burlington, Vt.
with Patrick McHugh and Andy Towne

4:45 p.m. – Huskies Hockey Pre-Game
5:00 p.m. – Northeastern Hockey: Mariucci Classic – Huskies vs. Princeton
from Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minn.
with Alex Faust, Jared Shafran, and Ben Horner
Available on WRBB Sports Extra; joined in progress on WRBB-FM

Saturday, December 31

6:45 p.m. – Huskies Hockey Pre-Game
7:00 p.m. – Northeastern Hockey: Mariucci Classic – Final
from Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minn.
with Alex Faust, Jared Shafran, and Ben Horner

WRBB Sports Basketball, Hockey , , , ,

Huskies avoid turnovers, but still fall 88-59 to NC State

December 24th, 2011

What happened?

The ugliness of basketball that was on display at Louisiana Tech’s Thomas Assembly Center on Tuesday night stayed in Ruston, Louisiana, but the result wasn’t much prettier for Northeastern.

After about two minutes, the Huskies were still in the game with the score tied 5-5. To that point, each team had traded a two-pointer for a two-pointer, then a triple for a trey. Quincy Ford and Reggie Spencer had each recorded a block, and they were keeping up with the Wolfpack’s pace. Then, NC State went on an 11-0 run, making it 16-5, that lasted nearly three and a half minutes and never looked back. Two baskets later, it was back within seven for NU, but that’s the closest they would get. At halftime, it was 38-25.

The first three points of the second half went to the Huskies on Joel Smith’s 3-pointer, but the ‘Pack followed that with another 10-0 run to push their lead to 48-30. As late as 8:37 to go, it was a 15-point difference, but NC State gave themselves a 26-point advantage before a batch of substitutions that took all of the starters for both teams out of the game for the final two minutes of play. After that point, it was all offense as the team combined for 14 points in that time. The Wolfpack bench won that frame, 8-6, and pushed the team’s lead out to a game-high 30 before finally coming away with the 29-point victory.

Player of the Game:

It’s hard to really come up with a player of the game for Northeastern. Though the team didn’t play poorly, the limited offensive attack was fairly well-balanced and the defense wasn’t really there. Strictly by the numbers, Jon Lee would be the one to earn the honors after tying Joel Smith with a team-high 15 points. He also pulled down 6 rebounds, 2nd-most on the team to Quincy Ford (10). Lee made 7 of his 12 shots, including 1 of 3 from long distance.

The Wolfpack also came out with a balanced attack, making it difficult for the Huskies to key in on one or two players defensively. Richard Howell posted a double-double with 14 points and 12 rebounds, almost exclusively in the paint. C.J. Leslie helped him out in the post, matching Lorenzo Brown’s 16 points for a game-high. Leslie also had 8 boards.

The Takeaway:

North Carolina State was clearly the better team on the floor. Their size, length and athleticism along with their well-coached raw talent were too much for Northeastern to handle. Despite the 29-point loss, the Huskies actually played better than in the 3-point loss on Tuesday when they led for most of the game, including 19 minutes in the second half. It was the sixth straight loss, marking the third consecutive year that saw a losing streak of at least five games from late November into December. Last season, the final loss of the streak came in Cancun on December 22 – the same date as this game in Raleigh. The year before, it was on December 23 in Hawai’i.

Turnovers, or the lack thereof, was a definite positive for Bill Coen and his team. After five straight game in which they turned the ball over at least 20 times, Northeastern gave it back to their opponent only 10 times on Thursday to match a season-low (also at St. John’s, 11/26). Before getting too excited about that, though, remember that three of those turnovers came in the first four minutes. At that point, NC State already had a comfortable lead and there was never any need for them to put on pressure to force turnovers. The Wolfpack also does not typically force all that many turnovers, so while it jumps off the scoresheet as something to be happy with, NU needs to show that they can hold onto the ball in a few more games to show consistency before believing the problem is solved.

Along with Howell and Leslie, the constant threat of Scott Wood and, at times, Alex Johnson, as distance shooters on the floor kept the Huskies from being too aggressive down low. As a result, the rebounding suffered and North Carolina State won the battle of the boards, 41-28, the largest margin against Northeastern so far this season. Northeastern took advantage of long bounces on their missed three-point shots, which there were 14 of, and picked those rebounds up near the perimeter. They weren’t very aggressive going after loose balls under the basket, seemingly because they were afraid that if NC State was able to pick it up, they would be much faster in transition and would be able to take advantage of an empty backcourt if the Huskies didn’t hustle back on defense after missed shots.

Finally, the team’s shooting percentage has been well below average over the past two games. On Tuesday, both teams complained about the ball not being completely round, and on Thursday, they were simply playing against a defense that didn’t allow many good shots. The reportedly misshapen ball also affected free throw shooting on Tuesday, when Northeastern shot just 43% from the line. In Raleigh, however, the team was back to a much better 82% at the charity stripe. There are reasonable explanations for each of those games, but it’s something worth pointing out and keeping an eye on over the next few games.

Quote of Note:

Bill Coen, on the team’s balanced scoring: “We moved the ball a little bit better tonight…I thought we did execute and we took better care of the basketball than we have been doing.”

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Andy Towne Basketball, Press Pass ,