
Women's Basketball Travels to North Dakota State
12/27/2008 12:15:00 PM | Women's Basketball
Game 11 at North Dakota State ? Monday, Dec. 29 ? 7:00 p.m.
Creighton Bluejays at North Dakota State Bison
Bison Sports Arena ? Fargo, N.D.
Radio & Video: www.gocreighton.com
Series History: Creighton leads 4-1
Last Meeting: NDSU won 68-63 in Albuquerque, N.M., Dec. 9, 2005
Creighton Bluejays at North Dakota State Bison
Bison Sports Arena ? Fargo, N.D.
Radio & Video: www.gocreighton.com
Series History: Creighton leads 4-1
Last Meeting: NDSU won 68-63 in Albuquerque, N.M., Dec. 9, 2005
? This game will be the only contest this year not carried by Spirit 88.9 FM, however www.gocreighton.com will provide an audio link to the NDSU broadcast.
? Live stats and live video for this game and select road games can be found on the CU athletics website at www.gocreighton.com.
? Monday's game is the 200th for Jim Flanery as Creighton's head coach.
? Through games played on Dec. 22, Creighton's strength of schedule ranked 40th among the 341 Division I programs according to CollegeRPI.com. The average SOS of the other nine MVC schools stood at 178.
? Creighton ranks 10th in the NCAA in fewest turnovers per game (14.0).
? Megan Neuvirth was named the MVC Player of the Week (Dec. 22) after averaging 22 points, 13.5 rebounds, 4.5 blocks, 3.5 assists and 3.0 steals per game in wins over UC Davis and Colorado State.
? Chevelle Herring scored a career-high 31 points against Kansas (Dec. 13), moving her scoring average to 22.6 per game against Big 12 opponents this season.
? Creighton has never played a game in North Dakota.
? CU is 4-1 all-time vs. North Dakota State.
Scouting the Bluejays
While Creighton is 4-6 on the year, half of its losses have come to ranked teams and five of the six have come against Big 12 foes ... CU has the strongest strength of schedule in the MVC ... The Jays were picked to finish second in the MVC this year, after finishing just one win shy of a shared MVC title a year ago ... CU returns eight letterwinners and three starters from its 21-12 team which advanced to the second round of the WNIT ... CU ranks 10th in the NCAA with 14.0 turnovers per game and is 24th in the nation with 7.0 three-pointers per game ... Junior Megan Neuvirth leads the MVC and is 23rd in the NCAA with 10.3 rebounds per game, while she tops the team in assists, steals and blocked shots ... Neuvirth scored a career-high 26 points against UC Davis (Dec. 20) and enters the game coming off consecutive double-doubles ... Junior Chevelle Herring leads the team and ranks second in the MVC with 17.2 ppg.
Scouting the Bison
North Dakota State, picked sixth in the Summit League preseason poll, is 4-5 on the year, including losses to Northern Iowa and Denver ... The Bison are 3-1 at home ... NDSU ranks 22nd in the NCAA, shooting 75.5 percent at the free-throw line ... Abby Plucker leads the team with 14.2 points and 6.1 rebounds per game ... Inger Hodgson adds 12.8 points and 5.1 rebounds, topping the team with 18 three-pointers ... Nebraska native Katie Birkel leads NDSU with 4.2 assists per game and averages 9.9 points ... NDSU averages 64.3 points per game.
The Coaches
Jim Flanery (Creighton, 1987) has led his team to four WNIT postseason appearances and three 20-win seasons in his first six seasons at Creighton. In 2003 he became the winningest rookie coach in school and MVC history and led the Jays to the 2004 WNIT Championship. Now in his seventh season at CU, his overall mark is 113-86 (.568). Prior to serving as CU's head coach, Flanery served as CU's top assistant for a decade. He is 0-1 all-time against NDSU and 7-1 against teams currently in the Summit League. Carolyn DeHoff (Arizona State, 1991) is in her first season as a collegiate head coach. Prior to coming to NDSU she was an assistant at Utah, Weber State and Wyoming.
CU-NDSU Series History
Creighton is 4-1 all-time against North Dakota State, while the teams have met just once in the last 22 years. That meeting was an NDSU victory, 68-63, in Albuquerque, N.M., on Dec. 9, 2005 at the Lobo Shootout hosted by New Mexico. The first four meetings in the series were Bluejay wins in Omaha.
Last Time vs. North Dakota State
Creighton and North Dakota State met in the Lobo Shootout on Dec. 9, 2005 in Albuquerque, N.M., with NDSU topping the Bluejays 68-63. The Jays wasted a 12-point halftime lead in the defeat, as the Bison opened the second-half on an 18-4 run in the first six minutes after halftime. CU made just one field goal in the final 6:44 of the game and shot just 23.3 percent from the field in the second half. Two active Bluejays played in that contest, as Chevelle Herring made a three-pointer for her only three points of the game in five minutes off the bench. Kristina Voss played 11 minutes and had four points, three rebounds and two assists. Angie Janis led the team with 28 points and 11 rebounds. NDSU senior Jerri Penley also played in that game, logging two points and two rebounds in four minutes.
First Trip to North Dakota
CU's game at North Dakota State marks the first time the Bluejays will play a game in the state of North Dakota. The Jays have played NDSU five times previously, but never on the Bison's home court, while they have also taken on North Dakota four times, all in Omaha.
Kraft Comes Home
Michaela Kraft of Mandan, N.D., joined the Creighton basketball team following season-ending injuries to Michelle Kaus and Sam Schuett. Kraft, a sophomore academically, made her collegiate debut in CU's last game, playing four minutes against Colorado State on Dec. 21. The 5-foot-3 guard was part of five Class A state championships at Mandan.
After Christmas
Creighton plays its final, pre-MVC, non-conference game after Christmas for the first time since the 2003-04 season when it played at Iowa on Dec. 28. The Jays won that contest 84-72 in overtime and went on to win their first four MVC games, including a pair of Valley road wins to start the conference season. The Jays play at Illinois State just three days following their contest at North Dakota State.
Long Trip
Creighton concludes non-conference play at North Dakota State on Dec. 29. Rather than return home following its game in Fargo, CU will head over to the Twin Cities for a day before heading to Normal, Ill., for its MVC opener against Illinois State on New Year's Day. The Jays will then head over to Terre Haute, Ind., on Jan. 2 for a Jan. 3 meeting with Indiana State. The Jays will then travel back to Omaha. Total mileage on the bus for Creighton during the week-long trip ? 1,840.
200
Creighton's game at North Dakota State marks the 200th for head coach Jim Flanery at the helm of the Bluejays. He is the third Bluejay coach to reach the 200 game plateau, following Bruce Rasmussen (343) and Connie Yori (285). Through 200 games, Rasmussen owned a record of 115-85 (.575), while Yori was 117-83 (.585) in her first 200 games at Creighton. Flanery was 113-86 (.568) through his first 199 games.
Neuvirth's Numbers
Megan Neuvirth, an MVC All-Defensive Team honoree in the past, has proven to be far from one dimensional this year as she is enjoying her best season as a Bluejay. The junior forward leads the MVC and ranks 23rd in the NCAA with 10.3 rebounds per game, while she also ranks in the MVC top-10 in several other statistical categories. In fact, she is the only player in the league to rank in the top-10 in scoring (10th), rebounding (1st), three-point percentage (10th), assists (6th), steals (3rd) and blocked shots (3rd). She also tops the MVC with 3.7 offensive boards per game, ranks second in minutes played per game (36.8) and is nine in assist-to-turnover ratio.
Player of the Week ? #2
Junior Megan Neuvirth was named the MVC Player of the Week on Dec. 22 following a pair of dominating performances. Neuvirth logged back-to-back double-doubles against UC Davis (Dec. 20) and Colorado State (Dec. 21). Against UCD, she poured in a career-high 26 points, including a career-best four three-pointers, to go along with 13 rebounds. Against CSU, she finished with 18 points, 14 rebounds, six blocks, five assists and three steals. For the week she averaged 22 points, 13.5 rebounds, 4.5 blocks, 3.5 assists and 3.0 steals per game.
Player of the Week ? #1
Junior Chevelle Herring was named the MVC Player of the Week on Dec. 15 for her play against No. 25 Kansas State (Dec. 9) and Kansas (Dec. 13). For the week she averaged 27 points and four rebounds against the Big 12 foes. She poured in a game-high 23 at nationally-ranked K-State and followed with a career-high 31 points in a one-point overtime loss to Kansas. She also played every minute of both games. For the week she shot 48.7 percent (19-39) from the field, 50 percent (4-8) from three-point range and 75 percent (12-16) from the free-throw line.
New Kid Blockin' Shots
Megan Neuvirth had 23 career blocked shots through 65 games before this season, with a career-best 15 as a freshman. This year she has already swatted 17 shots through 10 games, including a career-high six blocks against Colorado State on Dec. 21. The six blocks were the most by a Bluejay since Amy Hoffman swatted six at Oregon State on Dec. 2, 2004. The CU record for blocks in a game is seven, done by Kris Kugel on Dec. 20, 1991 at Northern Iowa.
Doubling Her Double-Doubles
Megan Neuvirth started the season with four career double-doubles and started last weekend with two double-doubles this season. With a pair of double-dimes last weekend, she doubled her previous career total and her season total. Neuvirth had 26 points and 13 rebounds against UC Davis and followed with 18 points and 14 boards against Colorado State. She leads the team and ranks second in the MVC with four double-doubles. Of her eight career double-doubles, six of them have come in back-to-back games, including all four this year.
Turnover Topic
Creighton leads the MVC with the fewest turnovers per game, while its 14 turnovers per game ranks 10th in the NCAA this week. Those numbers are all the more impressive when noting the Jays lost four-year starting point Ally Thrall after last season. The Jays averaged 17.3 turnovers per game last year.
Statistical Rankings
Megan Neuvirth leads the MVC with 10.3 rebounds and 3.7 offensive rebounds per game. Chevelle Herring leads the MVC with 38 minutes per game, Neuvirth is second with 36.8 minutes and Kelsey Woodard is third with 36.6 minutes played per game. Neuvirth ranks 23rd in NCAA in rebounds per game. As a team the Bluejays rank second in the MVC in three-point percentage (.368) and three-pointers per game (7.0). CU ranks 24th in the nation in three-pointers per game.
Nelson Ratings
Sophomore center Kellie Nelson has seen her numbers increase lately, while filling in for an injured Kristina Voss. Nelson has played 25.8 minutes per game over the last four contests, averaging 6.8 points and 4.8 rebounds per game. Through her first six games she was averaging 3.7 points and 1.5 rebounds in 12.3 minutes per game.
Strength of Schedule
Prior to Creighton's game at North Dakota State, the Jays' strength of schedule ranked 40th (of 341) according to CollegeRPI.com. The next closest SOS in the Missouri Valley Conference through Dec. 22 was Indiana State's 82. The average SOS of the other nine teams in the MVC is 178, with the worst SOS belonging to Wichita State at 322.
Move Evidence of a Tough Schedule
If having the strongest strength of schedule in the MVC wasn't proof enough of CU's tough slate, here is further. The Jays faced five Big 12 teams, five 20-win teams and four opponents which advanced past the first round of the NCAA tournament last year. In addition to the four NCAA teams (Iowa State, Kansas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma), the Jays also battled two WNIT teams in non-conference play (Kansas, UC Davis).
Herring Named All-Big 12
OK, not really, but junior Chevelle Herring could make a case to earn all-conference honors from the Big 12 this year after her play against the league. In five games against the league this year, she averaged 22.6 points per game. In each of the five games, she was the game's high-scorer, establishing a career-high in three games. She averaged 40.2 minutes per game, while shooting 44.4 percent (12-27) from three-point range and 77.8 percent (21-27) at the free-throw line. Herring scored a career-high 31 points against Kansas, in addition to 24 points against Iowa State and 23 against Kansas State.
30-Point Performance
Chevelle Herring poured in a career-high 31 points against Kansas on Dec. 13, the first Bluejay to score 30 in a game since Sam Schuett had 30 at Nebraska on Nov. 30, 2007. Herring became the fifth different player under head coach Jim Flanery (since 2002-03) to score at least 30 in a game, joining Schuett, Angie Janis, Laura Spanheimer and Christy Neneman. It marked the 10th time a player has scored at least 30 in a game under Flanery, as Neneman accomplished the feat five times with Flanery at the helm.
We're Hurting
Over half of Creighton's original 11-person roster has been affected by injury or illness this season, causing the Jays to add walk-on Michaela Kraft to the team.
First ? DaNae Moore breaks her right hand in preseason practice and misses both of CU's exhibition games.
Second ? Sam Schuett injures her left ankle in practice on Oct. 31, has surgery on Nov. 10 and will miss the season.
Third ? Michelle Kaus tears her left ACL for the second time in eight months against Nebraska on Nov. 17. She underwent surgery on Dec. 18 and will miss the remainder of the season.
Fourth ? Megan Neuvirth is struck with an illness which caused her to lose weight. Tests for mono were negative, however she did received an I-V before the game at Oklahoma (Dec. 3), but played all 40 minutes that night.
Fifth ? Kristina Voss sprains her left ankle early in the first half at Kansas State (Dec. 9), plays just two minutes that game and misses the Kansas contest (Dec. 13).
Sixth ? Kelsey Woodard suffers a cut above her right eye in a collision during the Kansas game on Dec. 13, misses a key seven-minute span in the second half, before returning to the floor with stitches.
Voss is Streaking
Senior center Kristina Voss has made 18 consecutive free-throw attempts entering CU's three-game road trip. A career 71.9 percent free-throw shooter to begin the year, started the season with an 0-for-4 performance at the line and was 4-for-10 after two games. Since that game, she has made 18 straight attempts at the charity stripe to move to 22-for-28 (.786).
40-40-40 Club
Chevelle Herring, Megan Neuvirth and Kelsey Woodard each played all 40 minutes in Creighton's game at Kansas State on Dec. 9. It marked the first time since Dec. 29, 2005, that three Bluejays played at least 40 minutes in a game, as Angie Janis (40), Kristi Woodard (41) and Ally Thrall (45) all played that much in a 67-64 overtime win at Northern Iowa. It was the first time under Jim Flanery that three players had played an entire game in the same contest.
No Rest for the Weary
With a small roster, it's no surprise that three Bluejays are atop the MVC leader board in minutes played per game. Chevelle Herring has played every minute in three of CU's last four games and she now leads the MVC with 38 minutes played per game. Megan Neuvirth ranks second in the MVC with 36.8 minutes per game and Kelsey Woodard ranks third in the league with 36.6 minutes played per game. In addition to the trio leading the MVC in minutes, DaNae Moore and Kellie Nelson established career-highs in minutes played in consecutive games recently. Moore played 33 minutes at Kansas State (Dec. 9) and 34 against KU. Nelson played 26 at K-State and 36 against KU, while Kelsey Crites also played a career-high 29 minutes against Kansas.
Welcome Aboard
With season-ending injuries to senior Michelle Kaus (knee) and junior Sam Schuett (ankle), the Bluejay roster was down to nine. It's now back to 10 active players with the addition of walk-on Michaela Kraft. The 5-foot-3 guard from Mandan, N.D., joined the team recently, but has not seen action in a game as of yet. As a prep at Mandan High she was a part of five Class A state championships.
Lonely No Moore
Freshman DaNae Moore is no longer the lone freshman on the Bluejay roster, as Michaela Kraft has joined the team as a walk-on. Alone, Moore represented the smallest freshman class in school history to start the season. While Kraft is in her second year at Creighton, athletically she is listed as a freshman.
This Chevy Drives Well
Junior Chevelle Herring leads the team and ranks second in the MVC with 17.2 points per game, including 22.6 points per game against Big 12 schools. She scored in double figures in seven straight games (Nov. 17-Dec. 13), including four games with at least 20 points and the first 30-point game by a Bluejay in over a year. On Nov. 17 against Nebraska she scored a then career-best 19 points on 9-of-22 shooting from the field. She followed with a then career-high 24-point outing against No. 24 Iowa State (Nov. 23). Against KU (Dec. 13), she again led all players with a career-high 31 points, finishing 11-of-18 from the field.
IV for Intravenous, Not the Numeral
Despite receiving an IV before the game at sixth-ranked Oklahoma (Dec. 3), Megan Neuvirth played a career-high 40 minutes (and followed with 40 minutes played at K-State on Dec. 9). She established a then career-high by making all three of her three-point attempts at OU. The junior also led the team with six rebounds and led all players with four steals and two blocked shots against the nationally-ranked Sooners.
Need a Three From Woody
Sophomore Kelsey Woodard went 0-for-7 from three-point range at Oklahoma on Dec. 3, the poorest shooting day from long range in her career. The Jays lost to fall to 0-2 this year when Woodard does not make a three. The Jays went 3-5 last year when Woodard did not make a three-pointer. The Jays are also 0-5 over the past two years when Woodard does not make a field goal in a game, as she was held without a field goal in CU's loss to Iowa State on Nov. 23.
Twice the Double-Doubles
In addition to Megan Neuvirth's 17 points and career-high 16 rebounds at Saint Louis (Nov. 25), Kristina Voss added a double-double of her own. Voss chipped in 10 points and 10 rebounds for her fourth career double-dime. They were the first pair of Jays to have double-doubles in the same game since Neuvirth and Sam Schuett pulled off the feat on Feb. 3, 2007 at Northern Iowa.
No Gripes From Crites
After not appearing off the bench in Creighton's game against Iowa State (Nov. 23), Kelsey Crites impressed off the pine at Saint Louis (Nov. 25) and against Denver (Nov. 30). The junior swiped a team-leading and career-high four steals at SLU. She also added four rebounds, four points and three assists in just 20 minutes at SLU. She followed with seven points and seven rebounds in 21 minutes against Denver.
No Bench Scoring
For the first time under head coach Jim Flanery, the Creighton bench was held scoreless in the Jays' 63-59 loss to Iowa State on Nov. 23. Three times previously the Bluejays had notched two points off the bench since 2002-03, with the last coming against Kansas in 2005. Creighton's bench is averaging 8.8 points per game this year and has scored less than 10 points four times in six games. Last year the Bluejay bench scored less than 10 points twice in 33 games.
ACL-U
That's Anterior Cruciate Ligament University, not that other ACLU. When Michelle Kaus tore her ACL against Nebraska (Nov. 17), it marked the latest in a long line of ACL tears for Bluejays. Kaus also tore the same ACL last March. No longer a Bluejay, Abby Henry tore her ACL in the preseason last year and missed the entire season. Megan Neuvirth tore her ACL in CU's final game of the 2006-07 season and Kelsey Crites tore her ACL in Creighton's sixth game of the 2006-07 season. Even the women's basketball sports information contact, Rob Simms, tore his ACL in May of this year.
Milestone Reached
Michelle Kaus pushed her career three-point total to 101 with three makes against Nebraska last Monday. In so doing, Kaus became the 12th player in school history to eclipse 100 career three-pointers.
Hot Shooting, Bad Injuries
Senior Michelle Kaus has now suffered two torn left ACL's in an eight month period, the first ending her 2007-08 season last March. The most recent occurred on Nov. 17 against Nebraska, ending her 2008-09 season. In both instances, Kaus had been on fire from long range right before the injury took place. Last year Kaus connected on 16-of-30 shots from three-point range (.533) in her final eight games before the injury. This season, she was 6-for-9 (.667) from long range.
Be Careful Kristina
Should Michelle Kaus choose to take a medical redshirt and return next season, that would make senior Kristina Voss the only member of the five-person class to make it through her career in four seasons and without a season-ending injury. Kelsey Crites, Chevelle Herring and Megan Neuvirth are all fourth-year juniors, having already redshirted because of injuries. While Voss has not suffered a season-ending injury, she did sustain a sprained ankle at Kansas State on Dec. 9 and missed the Kansas game on Dec. 13.
Season-Ending Injuries
For the fourth consecutive season the Bluejays have lost at least one player to injury for the entire season. This year junior Sam Schuett suffered an ankle injury in practice on Oct. 31 and will be forced to miss the season following surgery on the left ankle on Nov. 10. Senior Michelle Kaus tore her left ACL on Nov. 17 and will also miss the season. Chevelle Herring (2007-08), Kelsey Crites (2006-07) and Megan Neuvirth (2005-06) were the previous players to go down with season-ending injuries. Crites played six games in 2006-07, while Herring and Neuvirth did not play a game the seasons they were injured.
Adjust the Numbers Again
When the season started, the Jays returned 75.9 percent of their rebounding, 66.1 percent of their scoring and 61.1 percent of their assists from last year's squad. However, subtract Sam Schuett's stats from the mix and the numbers drop to 59.1 percent of rebounding, 54.3 percent of scoring and 49.3 percent of assists. Schuett led the team with 6.8 rebounds per game last year, was third in assists and fifth in scoring Then subtract Michelle Kaus' numbers from the equation and the numbers fall to 55.4 percent of rebounding, 48.5 percent of scoring and 47.1 percent of assists from last year are now active on the roster.
Preseason Picks
The Bluejays have been picked to finish second in the MVC preseason poll as voted on by league coaches, media and sports information directors. The Jays were picked to finish sixth in last year's preseason poll, and ended the year in fourth. The last time the Bluejays were tabbed for a second-place finish was 2004-05, and then went on to finish second. In fact, each of the previous three times the Bluejays were tabbed for a second-place finish (1993-94, 2003-04 and 2004-05), the Jays did finish in second place. Illinois State is the unanimous MVC preseason favorite, earning all 40 first-place votes.
We're Back
The Bluejays return eight letterwinners and four players who started at least 15 games last year, while they lose three letterwinners and two starters. Gone are Tyrai Bronson and starters Sara Cain and Ally Thrall. Returning starters Kristina Voss (32), Megan Neuvirth (21), Kelsey Woodard (19) and Sam Schuett (15) were all regulars in the starting lineup, while Michelle Kaus also started 11 contests last year.
Welcome to Creighton
The Jays welcome three newcomers to this year's roster, sophomore Stephani Rhoten of Canyon, Texas, freshman DaNae Moore of Apple Valley, Minn., and Michaela Kraft of Mandan, N.D. Rhoten, who attended Seward County (Kan.) Community College last year, is Creighton's first junior college transfer since Taya Allen in 1998-99. Allen was named the MVC Newcomer of the Year that season. Moore, a high school teammate of Bluejay senior Michelle Kaus at Eastview High School, alone made up the smallest freshman class in CU women's basketball history, before she was joined by CU's third newcomer Kraft. Kraft joined the team as a walk-on after the season started.
Rhoten's Road to Omaha
Stephani Rhoten has three years of eligibility remaining at Creighton after playing her freshman season at Seward County CC in Liberal, Kan., last year. Rhoten averaged 14.2 points, 6.1 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 3.0 steals per game in her only junior college season. The guard was named second-team all-conference and honorable-mention all-region after leading both the conference and region in assists.
Nebraska Flavor
Six of Creighton's 11 players on this year's roster are from Nebraska ? Bellevue natives Chevelle Herring (East) and Kelsey Woodard (West), Omaha products Kellie Nelson (Westside) and Sam Schuett (Millard West), along with Katie Frank (South Sioux City) and Megan Neuvirth (West Point Central Catholic).
Women's Turn at Qwest Center
Creighton will play the first regular-season women's basketball game in Qwest Center Omaha history when the Bluejays host Drake on Friday, Feb. 27. The Jays have previously played two exhibition games, both wins over Central Missouri, at the Qwest Center.
Finch Flies Home
The MVC's most prolific three-pointer shooter has returned to the Creighton bench this year. Dayna Finch, a 2004 Creighton graduate, is back on the Bluejay bench as an assistant coach, following a two-year stint at Northern Colorado and two seasons as a graduate assistant at Nebraska. Finch's 294 career three-pointers made remains the MVC record, while her 1,260 career points rank 13th in school history. She replaces Rekha Hollomon, who took a position on Baylor's basketball staff.
So Long Civic
Creighton is playing in its final season at the Omaha Civic Auditorium, as it is slated to move into the new, on-campus Ryan Center and D.J. Sokol Arena prior to next season. The Bluejays went 11-1 at the Civic last year and is 63-23 at home in their seven seasons under head coach Jim Flanery.
About Our New Home
Creighton is currently building an on-campus facility for basketball and volleyball. The Ryan Center and D.J. Sokol Arena, a 75,600 square-foot facility, will house a gym seating 2,500 to 3,000, athletics staff offices, locker rooms, ticket offices, athletic training and meeting rooms, a media workroom and much more. Construction on the facility located just two blocks north of the Civic Auditorium at Webster and Florence Blvd. (19th Street) is expected to be completed in August, 2009.
Neuvirth's Near Triple-Double
While it was only exhibition play, Megan Neuvirth's performance against UNO on Nov. 4 was impressive. The junior had 14 points, career-best 14 rebounds, five steals and tied her career-high with eight assists. She's approached a triple-double before, with 14 points, 11 rebounds and seven steals against Indiana State on March 1, 2007 and nine points, eight rebounds and eight assists against Evansville on Feb. 15, 2007. Only two Bluejays have ever recorded a triple-double in the regular-season ? Becky Flynn (Jan. 11, 1994) and Laura Spanheimer (Jan. 8, 2004).
Players Mentioned
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