CARDINAL COUPLE

CARDINAL COUPLE
We report on the joy and excitement of UofL women's sports here. Thanks for checking us out! Click the picture of Louie to hear the latest Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast!!
Showing posts with label Bionca Dunham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bionca Dunham. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Walz Presser Today -- Seniors Quiz -- WEDNESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE



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         JEFF WALZ TELECONFERENCE PRESSER. 

Hear the entire presser at the link below: 

LINK:  JEFF WALZ PRESSER 4/8/20


https://soundcloud.com/user-748907999/dr0000_1787mp3


Here is the YouTube video/audio link: 

LINK:  JEFF WALZ AUDIO AND VIDEO TELECONFERENCE LINK 4-8-20   




WALZ TELECONFERENCE AT 2 P.M.


During the regular season, Coach Walz held a lot of noon press conference (usually on Wednesdays) down at the WBB facility Kueber Center Planet Fitness first floor media room. 

He's back on the Wednesday schedule today, but the venue won't be on Floyd Street, nor at noon. 

He'll be doing a presser remotely from his home at 2 p.m. We'll cover it and I'll post the audio here at the web site later today. Here's the official UofL announcement: 




Louisville women’s basketball head coach Jeff Walz Teleconference Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. ET

University of Louisville women’s basketball head coach Jeff Walz will be available to speak with media representatives via teleconference on Wednesday, April 8 at 2:00 p.m. ET. 

We understand that many sports media are seeking meaningful content.  While we cannot have in-person press conferences during this unprecedented time, we hope this teleconference will aid you in your coverage of UofL women’s basketball.  This teleconferences will be available for replay soon after the event on www.GoCards.com


A QUIZ ON THE SENIORS

It has been a couple of weeks since I've given a quiz to you on Cardinal Sports. So, let's do one today on the five seniors that graduated from the UofL WBB squad.  Answers at the end of today's column. 

1)  Which state was NOT represented as a home state by the five seniors? 

A) Pennsylvania  B) Florida  C) California  D) Kentucky

2)  Which senior red-shirted in 2016-17? 

A) Yacine Diop  B) Bionca Dunham  C) Kylee Shook  D) Jess Laemmle

3) This student-athlete was the tallest of the seniors:

A) Yacine Diop  B) Bionca Dunham  C) Yacine Diop  D) Kylee Shook

4)  I was a gymnast for awhile: 

A) Jess Laemmle  B) Kylee Shook  C) Jazmine Jones  D) Bionca Dunham

5)  I wore #2 after Myisha Hines-Allen graduated

A) Jess Laemmle  B) Bionca Dunham  C) Kylee Shook  D)  Yacine Diop 

6)  My first start came as a freshman against Virginia

A) Kylee Shook  B) Jazmine Jones  C) Bionca Dunham  D) Yacine Diop 

7) I was a 2016 McDonald's High School All-American: 

A) Kylee Shook  B) Jazmine Jones  C) Jess Laemmle  D) Bionca Dunham 

8)  I have two sisters, named Jenna and Julie

A) Jazmine Jones  B) Kylee Shook  C) Jess Laemmle  D) Bionca Dunham 

9)  I scored 26 points twice in my career, against the same team each time

A) Kylee Shook  B) Yacine Diop  C) Jazmine Jones  D) Bionca Dunham

10)  UNC, So.Carolina, Temple, Pitt and Houston recruited me out of high school:

A) Bionca Dunham  B) Yacine Diop  C) Kylee Shook  D) Jazmine Jones

(answers below) 








ANSWERS:  

1)  C
2)  A
3)  D
4)  A
5)  D
6)  B
7)  A
8)  C
9)  B
10)  A


Let us know how you did in the comments section below! 

Have a wonderful Wednesday and listen to "Uncle" Andy's advice, Kentuckians !! 



paulie
xxxxx






Sunday, March 8, 2020

Sunday Cardinal Couple

WBB Falls to Florida State


In a testament to the high expectations on UofL Women's Basketball, the loss yesterday to 4th seed Florida State, a top 25 team, can only be considered a disappointment.  FSU advanced to the championship of the ACC tournament after a down-to-the-wire battle against the Cards, with a final score of 62-60.  There they will meet NC State who advanced over Boston College.

The Cards started out with shooting woes, shooting only 23.5% from the field in the 1st quarter, resulting in an 18-10 FSU lead.  The Cards would turn it around in the 2nd quarter, however and come roaring back with 58.3% shooting, including a perfect 4-4 from beyond the arc.  The 2nd half would somewhat repeat the pattern, with a not-awful-but-also-not-great 35.7% shooting in the 3rd quarter, a quarter that FSU won 18-13.  The Cards would improve to 50% in the 4th quarter to close down that five point lead to the two point winning margin.

Despite Case's suggestion during the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour yesterday that the culprit would be found to be turnovers, the Cards actually won in that stat 12-15.  To be fair to Case's assessment, the comment came as we had watched the end of the game in the studio and FSU did win the turnover stat in the 2nd half.  Overall, though most of the stats were very similar between the two teams.  The biggest discrepancy is probably found in the rebounding stats, and specifically in offensive rebounds which the Seminoles won 14-11 with the result showing up on the scoreboard in 2nd chance points with a 15-7 advantage to the women from Tallahassee.

For individual contributors, Dana Evans and Jazmine Jones had 16 and 15 respectively, with Kylee Shook and Yacine Diop reach double-digits with 10 apiece.  Bionca Dunham rounds out the significant scorers with 6.  'Kasa Robinson had a bucket, and Liz Dixon went 1 for 2 from the charity stripe to round out the scorers for the Cards.

Overall, I would call this a lackluster game overall, with moments of brilliance within in.

The Cards, of course, will get an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament, likely as a 2-seed in the Ft. Wayne Regional.  As a top-16 team, which is still all but completely assured, the Cards will host 1st and 2nd round games at the KFC Yum! Center.  There had been hope that UofL could creep back up into a one seed, but this loss almost certainly forecloses on that possibility.

I believe we will be getting a Paulie special report from Greensboro with his thoughts and recap of the game as well as the Boston College vs NC State game.

Softball


The Softball Cards are playing the home opener weekend at Ulmer and picked up a good win over Northwestern yesterday, 3-1.  Coming off of a heartbreaking 1-2 loss in 8 innings against Illinois on Friday, the Cards were eager for a win.

Jordyn Wolfe and Carmyn Greenwood were the scoring heroes of this one.  The scoring came late in the game for the Cards, not getting anything on the scoreboard until the bottom of the 5th.  Wolfe reached with a double, and advanced to 3rd on a Jenna Servi groundout.  Wolfe would be joined on the basepaths when Madison Ciaccio would draw a walk.  Carmyn Greenwood would rip a double to bring Wolfe and Ciaccio home for the 2-1 lead.

The other run for the Cards came in the next inning.  Caitlin Ferguson got hit by a pitch, and would use her basepath speed to make it home on a Wolfe double.

Chardonnay Harris gets the win in the circle for this one, and did so in style, limiting Northwestern to only a pair of hits.

The Red and Black Challenge will wrap up today with 4 games at Ulmer.  Oakland and Northwestern will start off the day at 10am, UofL will get another shot at Illinois at around 12:15 and then will take a break while Evansville gets to have a run at the Illini.  The Cards will wrap up the Challenge with a scheduled 4:45 start against the Purple Aces of Evansville.
The weather today should be glorious for a day out at Ulmer, come out and enjoy the sun and some great softball.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


Case and I did pop into the library to put out another edition of the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour.  We might call this one, the distracted edition.

We were on the stream live during the last quarter or so of the WBB game, and for much of the Softball game yesterday, both events that we were trying to stay on top of a little bit while we talked.  We had WBB streaming in the studio, as well.

My apologies for a long blank section at the beginning, I just plain forgot to switch to the live audio on my streaming software.  Audio starts at about 3:30.  I'll look into trimming the no-audio video at the beginning out, but that will be a bit of a learning process to do that, so bear with me while I figure it out.

We had a good discussion, accompanied by some great photos from Jared from 3 different sports this week.  We covered WBB, Lacrosse, and Softball.  Check it out below.

-- 
JMcA


Saturday, March 7, 2020

Basketball Advances to ACC Semis; Softball Falls in Home Opener -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Cards Crush the Orange en Route to 71-46 Win


While storyboarding today's article in my head, I kept trying to come up with good orange juice jokes about yesterday's game. Unfortunately, the metaphor became hard to disengage from so I scrapped the idea. The ultimate point is this: Louisville beat the tar out of Syracuse in the first half yesterday, driven by an outstanding team defensive performance. The Cards slacked up a bit in the second half, winning the third and fourth quarters by two points apiece, but the margin that had been created by holding Syracuse to just 13 first half points was more than enough to secure the with little worry.

Louisville set the tone for the game early, opening with a 7-0 run to put Syracuse on their heels. Though the Orange would go on to keep the score close in the quarter, trailing only 14-8 at the break, the writing was on the wall that they may be in danger. That point was driven home when Louisville opened the second quarter with an identical 7-0 run to stretch the lead to double digits. Instead of clawing back, Syracuse was left to watch the Cards continue their dominance in the quarter by outscoring the Orange 13-5 for the remainder of the quarter. At the half, Louisville led 34-13.
Louisville's defense paced play, as the Orange shot just 17.2% from the floor in the half and only four players scored. Three of them had just two points, and Kiara Lewis was about the only person keeping the Orange in from being even worse off. In addition to the poor shooting, Louisville was outrebounding Syracuse 28-17. The Cards weren't shooting much better, at 37.5%, but the rebounding margin was ensuring no second chances on Syracuse's increased number of missed shots.

Both teams were better offensively in the second half, with Syracuse nearly eliminating their turnovers (just four in the second half). Louisville was loose with the ball, but shot nearly 50% from the floor and already had a 20 point cushion. Of course, Coach Walz is not likely to be thrilled by a 19 turnover performance, but a conference tournament win is what it is. Despite the higher turnover numbers, Louisville still managed to win the second half by four points, 37-33, and got minutes for most of the bench. In the conference tournament, where games are back to back, player rest is important wherever you can find it.

Louisville was led yesterday by Dana Evans' 23 points in 31 minutes. Evans was just 8-17 from the floor but shot 6-10 from three to contribute heavily to Louisville's 12-23 effort. Also contributing to that effort was Bionca Dunham, who hit her first career three as the shot clock wound down from an Elizabeth Balogun assist, her only one of the game. Also working hard throughout the game was Jazmine Jones, who finished with a double-double, snagging 11 points and 10 rebounds. Jaz also dished four assists, the highest mark on the team yesterday.

The CASE Report

C-Care: Louisville did not take particularly good care of the ball, as mentioned previously, finishing with 19 turnovers. Syracuse protected better, turning it over just 12 times, and the Orange force just 17.1 turnovers per game. Turning the ball over more times than the opponent and more times than the opponent's average is worth no letter.

A-Assists: Similar to the above, the 19 turnovers are really going to hurt the Cards here. The assists stat is about more than just assisted baskets, it's about how well you're passing the ball. If you out turnover your assists 19-14, you weren't making very good passes or good passing decisions. On the flip side, Louisville wasn't shooting lights out for the game, so the 14 assists on 27 made baskets is still good for a better than 50% assist rate. Lowercase 'a'.

S-Steals: Louisville, despite playing lockdown defense in the half court in the first half, was not very active on the ball. For the game, the Cards came away with just six steals, three in each half. That's fewer than the Orange and fewer than the benchmark. No letter.

E-Efficiency: Louisville's improved second half shooting performance wasn't enough to claw their way up to the benchmark of 45%, as they would finish at just 42.9% (though the 52.2% from three was nice). The Cards also didn't get to the line very often, but they did make nearly the most of their opportunities there, going 5-6. Lowercase 'e'.

That rounds out the Cards performance in the CASE Report at _-a-_-e, which is not a great showing. Looking at just those statistics, it looks like a poor game for Louisville. If I had to guess Paulie's FRED Report, I'd say they earned an F-R-e-D, with the biggest knock being the high turnover rate. That just goes to show that a box score review can give you different impressions of a game depending on which stats you prefer to value. 

Either way, Louisville will clearly need to play better today to continue their chances to complete the double conference championship. The Cards get a rematch against the Seminoles today, who thoroughly handled Wake Forest yesterday to the tune of 76-47. According to Paulie's reporting from inside the building, the Demon Deacons couldn't get off of the floor fast enough, as FSU bullied them for much of the second half. The Cardinals' semifinal game will tip-off at 12PM, and will be the first game of the day, so no fear of being delayed. Tune in to ESPNU for the game, or set your radio to 790 KRD.

Be sure to check out Paulie's report below for a rundown of all of yesterday's action from the Greensboro Coliseum.

Softball Falls to Illinois in Extra Innings


It was an exciting opening game for the 2020 home season at Ulmer Stadium. Unfortunately, the excitement ended in favor of the wrong team after a hard fought battle. Louisville took an early 1-0 lead but were unable to extend the lead before Illinois tied it. Despite numerous opportunities, for both sides, the game headed to extras tied at 1. The Illini struck first in the top of the eighth to take a 2-1 lead, and Louisville was unable to answer, giving the Cards a loss in their home opener. 

Louisville opened the game quickly, as Taylor Roby sat down the Illinois side with two strikeouts and a grounder and Celene Funke knocked a leadoff single into center field. Funke moved to second on a steal and to third on a passed ball, before a Carmyn Greenwood bunt single brought her home. According to Jared Anderson, Funke had been pleading her case to steal home, but to no avail. After a Roby walk, Greenwood moved to third on an error, but a strikeout and foul out ended the inning with Louisville holding the 1-0 lead. 

Illinois got their first baserunner on a walk in the third inning, but nothing would come of it. Meanwhile, Louisville managed just two singles spread over the next two innings to keep the score at 1-0 going into the fourth. Illinois (8-9 coming into this one) finally got their offense going with a bit of help from the Louisville defense. A hit-by-pitch put a runner on first with one out, and she quickly advanced on a steal and a throwing error. A ground ball to Caitlin Ferguson at short looked like it might help keep Illinois off the board, but a throwing error scored the run. Illinois wasn't done pushing yet, as a single up the middle put runners on first and second with one out. A line-out to third got the second out, but on the attempted double-play, the runners advanced to second and third. Roby was able to strikeout the batter at the plate to keep the game tied at one.

The next couple of innings looked much like the previous two, with both teams struggling to get runners on base. In the bottom of the sixth, Louisville threatened when Carmyn Greenwood singled aboard and moved to second on a sacrifice bunt. Unfortunately, she was thrown out trying to steal third and the threat ended. The Cards again put a runner on second in the bottom the seventh, but couldn't score a walk-off. To the eighth they went.

Louisville looked poised to take care of Illinois quickly in the top half, after a liner and a ground-out gave the Illini two quick outs. However, a two-out single was followed by a double that found a gap to score the go-ahead run. Louisville got out without any more damage but three grounders in the bottom half sealed the final score at 2-1, Illinois.

This one was a pitcher's duel to the end, with Taylor Roby going head-to-head with Illinois' Addy Jarvis for all eight innings. Roby pitched well, allowing just the two runs on four hits and two walks while striking out five. Unfortunately, Jarvis was just as good. She allowed just six hits and one walk while striking out eight Cardinals. Roby's bad luck came in the eighth as two of her four hits allowed combined for the winning run. 

Louisville is back in action at 12:15 today when they'll take on the Northwestern Wildcats. They'll get two more games tomorrow, with a rematch against Illinois on the docket, followed by a game against Evansville.


Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


For the third week in a row, get ready for a Cardinal Couple Radio Hour brought to you by just Jeff and me. Paulie is obviously down in Greensboro, and Jared is off gallivanting around wherever. He'll probably be snapping photos at Ulmer. It'll be an afternoon show again this week, as we'll get the live show started at 1:30. We'll talk all of the happenings throughout this week, as well as the games ongoing during the show. Check out the Cardinal Couple YouTube page for the live show as well as the replay any time after the show ends. 

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

As always, be sure to check out more of Jared Anderson's photos of Louisville athletics and more on his website.

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Sunday Cardinal Couple - Gameday vs UNC

Gameday vs UNC


Chapel Hill, NC is the venue.  The Cards women's basketball team will be tangling with the Tarheels of North Carolina at 1pm today.

The Tarheels past three games have been a bit of a roller coaster, with a big win over Miami, 78-58 this past Thursday, a 14 point loss to Florida State last Sunday, and a 6 point upset win over then undefeated NC State the Thursday previous.  The Tarheels are 13-4 overall, with the loses coming to the previously mentioned Florida State, a mid-conference-pack Virginia Tech two weeks ago, and a couple of eye-raising non-conference loses to Yale and Alabama.

The win over NC State shows us what this team is really capable of, and what the Cards need to be prepared for.  They will bring a balanced attack, with three in double figures scoring totals against the Wolfpack, and another pair that came up just short.  Led by the senior squad of Shayla Bennett, 20 points; Taylor Koenen, 14 points and 11 rebounds; and Madinah Muhammad, 13 points, expect the Tar Heels to stay calm and collected in the face of Louisville fast pace of play and pressure defense.  Pace of play may still be a factor as UNC doesn't seem to go deep on their bench, only playing eight total against NC State, so there's a chance that UofL could just wear them down.  Look for runs towards the end of the game.

Will Vince venture over from Durham to Chapel Hill today? 
Carmichael Arena can be an intimidating facility to play in, and outside of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky, you won't find a more basketball crazy state than North Carolina.  1,100+ is a decent crowd for a game in Boston College, expect more like 2,500 for a big game Sunday matchup with the vast majority wearing baby blue.

Cardinal Couple Writer Emeritus David Watson threw down a bit of a hot take, but with really great points to consider about this game in Friday article's comments.  I will certainly echo some of his concerns with Bionca Dunham's availability, though she was dressed and potentially available for the Boston College game, so that does suggest that she could be available and able to contribute well against the Tar Heels as well.  Her presence on the boards is always big for the Cards.

Inconsistency has been the calling card for the Cards this year.  Coach Walz even hinted at it pre-season at the basketball luncheon when he said the team was at about a two on a one to ten preparedness scale when they would normally be at about a five.  We've seen the progression of this team over the course of the season so far, but they clearly aren't fully put together, yet.

Which team will show up?  The team that beat Oregon and dismantled Miami?  Or the team that struggled at UT Martin and lost to Ohio State?  Which Cardinals will step up?  Will this be a Jaz Jones game?  Will Dana Evans continue to pour in the three pointers?  Can Yaya Diop continue to spark the energy when she's on the court?  Will Kasa wither the UNC offense with her frenetic defense?  I'm hoping for all of the above, but we'll see at 1pm.

The game will be on The Deuce, ESPN2.  We get Pam Ward and LaChina Robinson for play by play and color, perhaps one of the best combo's in the game, in my opinion.  Of course, Nick and AJ are always an option on the radio, as well.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


What? They're talking about UofL women's sports again? 
The trio of Paulie, Case, and myself visited the spectacular NorthEast Regional Library branch again for the latest episode of the CCRH.  The audio issues are much improved, though I'm still not completely happy with where they are.

I have figured out how to monitor all of the different audio levels in my earbuds, but there's just enough delay in them that it makes it near impossible to participate in the conversation while listening to them to get levels adjusted.

Check out the latest episode below:





-- 
JMcA

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Cardinal Couple - WBB Gameday and More

WBB Gameday vs Wake Forest


The Wake Forest Demon Deacons come to the KFC Yum! Center to play today at 2pm.  The Deacs come in on a three game win streak, and a mixed strength of schedule.

Of those last three, the best win probably was over Georgia Tech (12-3, 3-1), with Duke and Clemson both sitting at 1-3 in conference.  The loss in conference was a close one against Miami.  In the non-conference part of the schedule, wins over Dayton and Florida are certainly respectable, but a loss to East Tennessee State is a little concerning.

Wake Forest has already developed a feel for tight conference games in this young conference season with all four of those decisions being by five points or less.  Give the Deacs credit for grit and not giving up.

The high scorers for the Deacons are Ivana Raca (6'2" F) at 16.3 per game, Alex Sharp (6'1" G) with
12.7, Gina Conti (5'10" G) with 11.3, and Christina Morra (6'2" F) checking in with 8.2.  Wake has no one listed on their roster as a center.  They do have 6'4" Maya Banks listed as a Forward, but she doesn't see a huge amount of playing time.  The rebounding threat, and Wake statistically outrebounds their opponents, comes from Raca and Sharp.  Una Udoh (6'1" F) is the biggest blocking threat, but with only 12 on the season, that doesn't look to be a major consideration.  Raca, Sharp, and Conti can all hit threes with reasonable efficiency, but Sharp is the best sharpshooter on the squad, draining over 40% of her shots from distance.

How would I game plan for this game?  Well, I haven't been able to catch any of their games yet, but I would be looking to get touches by either or both of Bionca Dunham and Kylee Shook down in the paint on every trip down the court.  Wake doesn't seem to have size that can deal with them.  I wouldn't expect the four guard lineup from Louisville today, unless we see Wake start to punish the Cards from three range.

The game will be streamed on the ACC Network Extra with tip-off at 2pm.  Take your pick of game promotions as they seem to be a bit overloaded today.  Disney Day, Spirit Day, Faculty Appreciation Day, and the $10 Family Meal Deal are all on the calendar for today. We always recommend that you check out Nick Curran and Adrienne Johnson and their descriptive account of the Cards WBB squad on Cards Radio 790 AM WKRD.

Head downtown this afternoon to see the best sports squad
on the Belknap Campus do work against a challenging ACC foe. The WBB squad won't be back in the YUM! for 11 days after this afternoon's contest, so catch them today!


Track and Field


Track and Field took to the indoor track at Purdue in the inaugural Gene Edmonds Memorial Invitational and saw quite a few successes with eight wins on the second and final day.

Gabriela Leon took wins in both Pole Vault and Long Jump with the Cards also picking up 3rd and 4th place in both of those events.

Rashida Harris took first in Shot Put on the women's side, with Christian Buckley getting the win on the guy's side.

Kayla Alexander took the victory in the 60 Meter Hurdles, and Sharnae Alston broke the tape in the 60 Meter Dash.

Guys wins to round out the eight victories went to Trey Allen in the High Jump, Sterling Warner in the 60 Meter Dash, and Cameron Stephens in the 3000m.

(Photos today from Jared, Paulie, godeacs.com and gocards.com) 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


We continue to work on the new format for the CCRH.  Digital Audio recording and streaming is really hard and fiddly to get right.  We were at the NorthEast Regional Branch of the Louisville Free Public Library yesterday, and while the equipment was a little limited, and the space was...cozy...for three of us, we were able to stream a show.  The audio starts out...not great, though it does improve some later in the show.  In general, we liked the space and I'll be working with the staff at LFPL to bring other improvements to our show and their overall setup.

I've done a bit editing work on the following audio-only link, that should be a bit easier to listen to:
https://ccrh.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/podcast-audio/2020-01-11%2011-00-16.mp3

If you want to see the slideshow of Jared's photos from the Duke game, the video with them in it is below.  The slideshow starts at just over 18 minutes into the video.


-- 
JMcA

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Louisville WBB squeezes out Orange 62-58 -- MONDAY CARDINALCOUPLE


FRANTIC FOURTH FALLS CARDS WAY IN FOUR-POINT WIN



Louisville women's basketball returned to the KFC YUM! Center Sunday and battled a tough, physical Syracuse squad for 40 minutes before finally gaining their first ACC win of the season in front of 10084 fans.

This one was expected to be close, and was.  Jazmine Jones stepped up huge for the 12-1 Cards with 24 points to give Louisville the win in their opening ACC tilt. 

The 'Cuse led 20-19 after one, thanks to 7-13 shooting (53.8%) and hitting the three-ball (3-6). Syracuse forward Digna Strautmane nailed two from the deep and had eight points in a 10-minute session where the visitors grabbed a 8-2 opening lead, allowed Louisville to go on a 8-0 run to tie it at 10-10 and weathered a eight-point first quarter from Jazmine Jones.


Coach Walz demonstrates the "self fist bump" to Dana 
Defense ruled in the second quarter, with neither team shooting better than 22.7%. Louisville gained a 31-25 lead late in the second quarter, Jones and Konno doing the scoring, but Syracuse battled back and cut it to one at 31-30 on a three with 30 seconds left in the half. It stayed that way as the teams went into the break.

Imagine a half where your top two scorers have no points. Evans and Shook were held scoreless in the first 20. Jaz was on fire, with 18 points on 7-9 shooting but Syracuse had a "three grab" lead in rebounds and this contest was far from settled. 



Louisville went to work on gaining some separation in the third period.

A Shook three with 5:58 left in the quarter pushed Louisville out to a 43-35 lead and a Evans three gave the Cards their biggest advantage of the night at 48-37 with three minutes left in the quarter. Things were looking promising after 30 minutes and UofL held the 50-43 edge. A 19-13 quarter for the Cards, six different players had scored and Louisville had forced six turnovers in the first ten minutes of the second half. I was hoping for a dominating, pull-away-from-the-foe fourth quarter, but...

Syracuse refused to go away. 

Back-to-back threes from the Orange's Teisha Hyman knotted the score up at 54-54 with 5:23 to play. After the media timeout, the Cards got a huge three from Evans and retook the lead at 57-54. Syracuse responded with two baskets and held their first lead since midway through the second quarter at 58-57. 

Coach Walz spoke of chopping wood at his Friday presser. On Sunday, "Q" team was doing the chopping late and they were in a serious position of being able to yel "timber" by knocking down the #7 Cards. 

2:37 remained and Louisville was without Jones, who was having a cramped muscle attended to on the sidelines. 



JJ. re-entered a minute later and drew a foul off Gabrielle Cooper. Jones sank both attempts. After Balogun missed two free throw attempts with 31 second left, "E" wisely pursued the last free throw miss, got the rebound and connected with a two-pointer inside.

61-58 Cards.

 "E " would get two more free throws awarded with 12 seconds left and sank one for the 62-58 final score. A final Syracuse three missed the mark and the Cards had survived a Sunday afternoon thriller. 



FRED REPORT

FREE THROWS -- The Cards went 14-20 from the free throw line (70%) and that's the standard we (at least) want to see. Jaz was automatic on them, making seven of eight. Five out of eight in the decisive fourth quarter, while Syracuse attempted zero in the final ten minutes. I'll give the lower case "f" as the letter assignment. 

REBOUNDING -- A rare night where the Cards were actually out-rebounded 43-37. No one accumulated more than six (Diop and Dunham). The Cardinal centers were responsible for just six combined. A stronger boards effort (besides Dunham hard work) was needed and I'll assign no letter here

EFFORT/EXECUTION -- Louisville committed just five turnovers and Coach Walz will take that any night. Three point-shooting still needed a boost (4 for 14) but a points-off- turnovers domination (16-3) and Jazz's spot-on efficiency from the floor (8 for 12) led to a Cardinal win and that deserves a capital "E". 

DEFENSE -- It was a strong defensive effort for UofL when you consider the visitors scored just 58 points, shot just 35% and committed 17 turnovers. Syracuse star Kiara Lewis was held to 14 points on 5 for 14 shooting and the Orange took just 23 threes, about 12 less than their average. I'll gladly award a capital "D" because solid defense was a huge key in the win. 

FINAL FRED TALLY:   f-_-E-D


THEY SAID IT

Post-game Quentin Hillsman link:   https://youtu.be/Z_XUyBANPCk

Post game Jeff Walz, Jazmine Jones and Bionca Dunham. LINK:  https://youtu.be/kmVisGRrEF8


SO...



The third win in a row where the Cards have played to the level of the foe. Coach Walz warned us in the post game presser we can expect more of these nail-biters and, as long as they results in "W"s...I'll take my blood pressure pill and deal with it. 

A game where the two "dependables" didn't launch until late and an afternoon where Jaz returned to early season form. Louisville struggled early, got it under control but then watched as Syracuse battled back into the contest. 

It's a nerve-wrecking way to get wins, although exciting at times. If this is the way Louisville is going to continue to rack up "W"'s , I'm recommending Pepto-Bismol. Rolaids and stress relief massages be offered in the concession stands and the media room. 


Bionca Dunham puts on her hard hat and does work every time out. Not much of it is flashy or eye-popping, but she's rapidly turning into this year's Sam Fuehring type of ballplayer. Elizabeth Balogun showed some flashes of brilliance Sunday like the ones that got her the ACC Freshman of the Year award last season. Her continued jelling into this team's style and mode of operation. 

Syracuse just may be the best 6-6 team in the nation. There is no quit in them and, let's face it, the record books don't list emotional or psychological wins, but the Orange probably got both Sunday. They'll be fine in the ACC, no need to fret over them. 



Everybody Clap You Hands ! (clap clap clap clap clap...)
One game at a time. One win at a time.

Nothing spectacular or domineering counts just as much in the "W" column as a 30-point blowout. We'll accept these Cards we've been dealt and hope they continue to win games. 

ACC. Always Competitve Conference


PHOTOS BY JARED ANDERSON


paulie
xxxxx

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Louisville Women's Basketball is 49 days away -- TUESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE


SIZING UP THE SENIORS


The University of Louisville Women's Basketball squad plays their first game of the season in 49 days.

Seven weeks. 

Snuck up on you, right? Western Kentucky comes to the Ville to face Jeff Walz's squad on Nov 5th. (Tuesday) for a 7 p.m. match. 

That's also National Doughnut Day, so plan accordingly.

You'll remember last season, when the Cards opened the season in Bowling Green and left "the Hill" with a 102-80 win. Asia had a big night with 33 points and Arica Carter added 19. Sam Fuehring added four points. 56 points from three seniors. 


This year's seniors totalled 33 of the Cardinal points that night. Yacine Diop led the way with 11 (OK, she's listed as a graduate, but since it's her final season as a Card, but put her in with the senior group). Kylee Shook finished with 10 points. Bionca Dunham put in four points, Jaz Jones also went for four points and JJess Laemmle played but didn't score. 

So what about this group of five for 2019-20? 

We can speculate that Jazmine Jones will be an important and needed player on this squad. Just where she plays will depend on the number of guards Walz decides to play at one time, but the explosiveness, leaping ability and smooth jumper she possesses will most likely be part of the starting five.

Jaz needs to be careful about getting herself in foul trouble...she led the team with 91 in 36 games last season.  The 7.6 points per game and 23 minutes per night on the court are easily achievable again for her this ...but i see her topping those numbers, with the "terrific three" graduated. It's truly time for "J.J. Airlines" to take flight.

And, if she's "in the groove" and ready to go, the Cards would be well-advised to feed her the ball. Equally comfortable as a guard or wing, she's a player you can't slack off or back off on when you're playing defense against her. She'll make you pay, and collect interest on the balance due. How she does on the "three ball" could dictate her success level also.

The Cards have a proliferance of three-ball makers on the roster.  



Yacine Diop knows this is her last chance to make an impression of WNBA and European league scouts, and she fully gets and understands the team concept, which is one of Walz's golden rules. She's a player that doesn't necessarily need to start to be a contributor and she showed she can takeover a game offensively during her time at Pitt. You have to be a little bit worried about her left knee, but, given the depth of this squad, I fully expect to see her out on the court around 20 or so minutes a game and I wouldn't be surprised at all if she was a double figure scorer for the Cards.  

She has a strong drive and motivation working in her favor, not one who likes to be denied and her experience makes her a candidate to see minutes in close games and when things are a bit out of sync on the court. Her experience with the Senegal squad this summer was a great test and learning experience for her and is a huge weapon for Walz. 

Kylee Shook is the leading returning rebounder (second behind Sam Fuehring last year) and she will be counted on to help fill Sam's role from last year. You need that blue collar, go-to-work in the paint brawler for rebounds and Kylee has the height. Does she have the battle mentality? She's also one who can take a post outside and make a defense pay from long range. The best combination would be to see that grit in the paint and the ability to step out and drill the long range jumper. And, her knee problems/soreness from last year seem to be alleviated with post-season treatment and procedures.  

If it were me, I'd probably start her and rest assured...knowing that there was height and talent on the bench to come in and pick up where she left off when she leaves the game.

That being said, she only started three of 36 games last year. Walz found it better for her to watch a few minutes on the bench before entering.  Development time is over, though. Time to go show what you've learned and earn the paycheck  After interviewing her a couple of weeks ago, I came away with the impression that she's focused and ready to assume that role of the paint punish-er.  Kylee also likes to throw "block parties"...she led the squad in blocked shots last year and you can expect to see a lot more of those this year. Kylee getting aggressive would be impressive. 



Bionca Dunham drew 31 of the 36 starts last year as one of Fuehring's partner in paint pounding and has always seemed to work well with Shook inside. Her 169 rebounds were third on the squad and she had a lot of success in getting follow up points and offensive rebounds. 

There has been speculation that she and Shook might be #1 and #1A in the paint at the power forward slot (if the NCAA clears another Cardinal for participation). One thing about "B", though, is you know she's going to bring the battle with her anytime she steps on the court. On a roster that has so many weapons that Walz could open an armament store, it'll be interesting to see how he uses her skills. Another huge key is this: 

If you're in the paint, you can expect to get fouled and you need to convert from the line when you're sent there.

We'd like to see her become a 70%+ free throw shooter this year. She's been working on it in the off-season. After all, you can only take the "3 is better than 2" Walz free-throw theory so far. That 64% average that she shared with Jaz has to go up. 


Jess Laemmle knows her court-time will be limited this year but it hasn't affected her work effort one bit. She can run the point, direct other players and provide a lot of inspiration and knowledge to the younger guards on the team. She's always been a huge fan favorite and the regular basketball fan seldom sees the hard work she puts in during practices. She probably won't be the starting point guard, but she'll have a wealth of advice for the guards when they come out of games. She sees, observes, analyzes and shares. 

When called upon, she's an aggressive defender, can drill the three and direct the sequences on the court offensively and defensively. A player like Jess is vital to a team's continuity and cohesion. Our "Attack Yorkie" will be there and helping everyone else get better. She's the perfect example of a team player. 


It's been quite fun, informative and revealing to interview these five seniors this summer. I'd like to thank them, for graciously participating, and WBB S.I.D. Nick Evans for doing the leg work in setting up times and venues, plus taking the photos of me and the players. We did these in three different venues. If you missed any of the interviews, I've listed them below.  

LINK:  YACINE DIOP INTERVIEW

LINK:  JESS LAEMMLE INTERVIEW

LINK:  KYLEE SHOOK INTERVIEW

LINK:  BIONCA DUNHAM INTERVIEW

LINK:  JAZMINE JONES INTERVIEW 





I hope my speculation and theories here come to somewhat of a fruition...but, please remember that this is a very deep and talented roster and there are 11 other players that are hungry, committed to succeed and eager for court time. 

This is the deepest roster that Walz has ever had here at Louisville and he and the coaches will be put to the test to utilize time management and combination skills like never before. I expect to see a whole lot of early combination variations as they get to know what works the best and who can do what with who, and when and where the players are most suited. And, you can expect to hear the always excellent Walz rhetoric on "what's what" as the season progresses. 

Who can come in and do what "the big three" did last year and produce like they did? 


Got some different takes than I? (After all, Coach is constantly trying to improve my "not ready for prime time" basketball IQ and theories). Sound off in the comments. It's never too early to start talking season assessments, hopes and expected performances.

Even for the village idiot like me. 

You got a take, a hope, an observation or thought? Let's talk about it! 

49 days. We'll start looking at the underclassmen next week. 


paulie
xxxxx