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 Cardinal Couple Radio Hour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cardinal Couple Radio Hour. Show all posts

Saturday, January 15, 2022

Successful Days in the Pool and On Track -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Swimming Defeats 10th-Ranked Indiana


There's been quite a bit to talk about with the other primary sports this season, so some of the more off-the-beaten-path sports have taken a back seat. With only swimming and track in action yesterday, they'll take the spotlight in today's column. Yesterday saw a major top-15 dual meet with Louisville heading up to Bloomington as the 11th (men's) and 15th (women's) ranked squads in the country to take on the 5th and 10th ranked teams from IU. While the men were roundly rebuked for their efforts (95-208), the women's team came away with the upset, winning 182-118.


The Cards came away with 10 event wins in total and had five different swimmers win individual events. Gabi Albiero (hey, that's a familiar last name) led the way with four wins as she took the 50 Free and 100 Butterfly and swam on the teams that won the 200 Medley Relay and 400 Free Relay. On the distance side, Liberty Williams won both distance events and set a school record in the 1000 in the process. Abby Hay won the 200 Fly and the 400 Individual Medley, and Arina Openysheva took the 100 Free. In a rocket start to her collegiate swimming career, Rye Ulett beat her sister Tristen by 0.21 seconds to win the 100 Back. 

In addition to winning the events and the meet, Louisville swimmers set 17 B-cut times and an A-cut time in the 400 Free Relay. Those times will put Louisville swimmers in positions to swim for titles later in the season, so they're important to grab at meets like the one yesterday. Louisville women's swimmers were on fire collectively, and it's good to see positive energy feeding off of itself in that way to elevate everyone. The Cards will host Kentucky in the Ralph Wright Natatorium next Saturday starting at 1PM.

Indoor Track Sees Five Wins and 20 PBs


After opening the indoor season in downtown Louisville, the Cardinal track and field teams headed down to Birmingham for the Blazer Invitational. The event played host to athletes from all sorts of collegiate teams, and Louisville was one of the more successful teams overall. The men's team saw three victories with two for the women.

One of those victories, perhaps unsurprisingly, went to Gabriela Leon in the pole vault. She had to go to a jump-off to secure the victory, but she's made a habit of winning that event. The other win was quite the different story. In her debut in the high jump, Styliana Ioannidou set a mark that tied the fifth all-time jump in program history and took the win. Quite a day for debuts between Ioannidou and Ulett in swimming. 


In addition to the victories, Louisville got podiums from Katie Martin (2nd, 500m) and Aliyah Welter (3rd, pole vault). Individually, the meet brought personal bests for Je'Nyia Burton, Taylor Boggess, Katie Martin, Styliana Ioannidou, Soledad Jean, Claire Bushur, Katherine Coffey, and Zoe Yeast. In a meet that brought personal bests in positions as far down as 16th, it was clear that Louisville was up against stiff competition, and that makes their winning and podium performances even more impressive. 

Louisville will get back into a sports complex next weekend in Blacksburg when they're hosted by Virginia Tech at the Hokie Invitational.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


Could it be? Will we really get all five panelists back on board on the CCRH Podcast for the first time in months? You'll have to tune in for yourself to find out. We'll cover the return to action for the women's basketball team and what to expect in the upcoming weeks. Plus bracketology, engagements, and more. As always, you can check out the live stream of the show by going to the Cardinal Couple YouTube page and clicking on the live video. Jeff usually creates that about an hour before the show, which officially starts at 11 AM Eastern. If the live time doesn't work for you, there are plenty of playback options, so be sure to check out whichever is best for you!

Cardinal Couple YouTube: Link
Anchor (podcast host): Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
Breaker: Link
Google Podcasts: Link
Overcast (free account required): Link
Pocket Casts (free account and app required): Link
RadioPublic: Link
Spotify: Link

Until next time, Go Cards!
Case



Saturday, July 17, 2021

Cards Nominated for Honor -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Forrest and Schneider are NCAA WotY Nominees


Each year since 1991, the NCAA has named a "Woman of the Year". The award is based on academic achievement, athletic excellence, community service, and leadership. Each school nominates its own athletes to their conference office. Each conference office around the country will select one nominee to advance to the next round. At that point, the NCAA Selection Committee (hopefully not the same one as the basketball or baseball tournaments) picks the top-ten from each of the three NCAA divisions. The "Top 30" will all be honored at the final announcement ceremony in October. From the Top 30, the list is trimmed to a Top 9, three from each division, prior to the ceremony. The overall winner will be announced at the ceremony on October 17th in Indianapolis.


Louisville's nominees this season were Makenli Forrest and Meghan Schneider. Forrest will have a good claim at the athletic excellence portion for sure. She's a national champion in the Indoor Weight Throw after claiming gold this year. She also won the event at the ACC level. Adding to her athletic performances, Forrest was named the ACC Indoor Track and Field Scholar Athlete of the Year and was a 2021 Postgraduate Scholar. She sits on Louisville's Student-Athlete Advisory Committee as well.

Schneider graduated with her bachelors degree in May with a 4.0. This came while studying biology with a concentration in subcellular genetics and minoring in Spanish. For her studies, she was named the NFHCA Scholar-Athlete of the Year and received the Elite 90 Award for the NCAA Field Hockey Championship. She was also named a finalist for the Honda Award. On the athletic side, Schneider helped the field hockey team reach their first ever ACC regular season title and their first NCAA Final Four appearance. She was the NFHCA Defensive Player of the Week in October and was named to the All-American Third Team.


Both Forrest and Schneider are excellent candidates for the award, as their community service and leadership don't show on the page but have been evident in their time on campus. We'll keep you updated as the process develops. 

No CCRH This Week


For a variety of personal reasons, and a lack of topics to really dig into, we'll be taking this week off from the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour. In the meantime, come up with some topics you'd like to see us cover in a quiz or dig deeper into on the site. We should be back with the show next week so keep checking the site for updates.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, July 10, 2021

A Brief Women's Soccer Preview -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

How Will WSOC Fare This Season?


As Daryl wrote yesterday, the fall sports have posted their schedules in full as we prepare for the summer slump to end. Women's soccer will be first on the list, as their season opener will be on August 14th against Ball State. The schedule doesn't currently list any exhibition games, so it will be interesting to see if those are added later on or if there is some other reason they are being excluded. Assuming they play a couple of those, the (Fall) 2021 UofL Women's Soccer season should start inside of a month. As such, it seems like a good time to take a look at the schedule and see what Louisville might be able to do.


Unlike years past, there is no spring exhibition season to lean on. There were, however, three spring games in which Louisville had all of their 2021 roster available except for the freshmen. The only player that participated in the spring that did not return for the fall, I believe, is Nadege, L'Esperance. The Cards were scheduled to play five games in the spring but COVID cancellations ended the spring season short. The Cards went 1-2 in the spring, defeating Dayton 1-0 before losing to both WKU and Auburn by the same score. Obviously, Louisville is dealing with two huge losses moving into the next era. Emina Ekic was the offense most of the time for the Cards, which is why she's still playing in the city at the top level in the US. The other loss is L'Esperance. Nadege played more of a holding midfield role but her link between the defense and offense was critical in much of Louisville's defensive and offensive setup play. It will be interesting to see whether the formation changes with both of these players gone.

That brings us to the newly scheduled games. They'll be tough to predict without much information about the new iteration of this team, but I'll give it a go anyway. The Cards will play seven non-conference games, with six of them at home. This has become pretty typical for Louisville, given the amazing facility that they have in Lynn Stadium. I'm going to give the Cards 5-2 here. They've been very good in the non-conference over the last few seasons, but I think the road game against St. Louis and the home game against Michigan will come as losses. I'm more confident in the record number than the actual predicted games, though, so if they manage to drop a game to Ball State or Western Kentucky instead, I'll take my correct numbers and run.


The ACC schedule is much harder to predict. Louisville has been sorely in the upper-middle class of the conference for the last few years, and I definitely don't see that changing this season. I'd be pleasantly surprised if I'm proven wrong. The Cards do have a bit of a generous schedule this season, though. They avoid North Carolina and don't play anyone twice. That said, they do still get FSU and Virginia, so it won't be a cakewalk. Their home and away split does fall pretty nicely, though, so lets take a look. Note that I won't be predicting any ties because ties in college soccer are largely random. 

The first two games are on the road against Miami and Syracuse. Assuming the Cards are riding a high from a decent non-conference schedule, this should be a good start to the conference season. Both of these teams are ones that Louisville has not had any trouble with recently, and I feel good about that not changing. 2-0 with two road games out of the way. The conference home opener is against Florida State and I don't feel good about that one at all: 2-1. Next is an interesting game against Wake Forest. The Cards won that one 2-1 at home in 2019, and the two teams didn't play last year. This is one of the tougher games to pick, but I don't think the Cards will lose back to back games at home: 3-1. 

The next stretch will be tough, and I've got Louisville losing three of the next four. The Cards go on the road to play Notre Dame before returning home for NC State and Boston College. I think BC is the only win in that group, and then comes a road game against Virginia... Yeah, right. That puts Louisville at 4-4 with two games remaining. Clemson has been a challenge at times, but I think they find a way to win that one before losing to Duke on Senior Day. 


All in all, that would give Louisville a 10-7 (5-5) record on the season. For what feels like it is likely to be a bridge year, I wouldn't hate it. The real question is whether 15 points would be enough to make the ACC tournament. At that record, I think the Cards would need a good showing in the ACC tournament to make it into the NCAA tournament. Of course, ties can screw all of that and a poorly placed equalizer can result in a drop in points to knock the Cards out of the ACC or give them a bad draw. With just 35 days until the season opener, I'm beginning to get excited about the year ahead.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


I'm back in the booth today, joining everyone else who had a challenging Coaches quiz without me. As it's the summer, we'll stumble along through our topics as usual, but we'll do our best to bring you the joy and excitement of Louisville women's athletics. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show or check out the replay or podcast after the show ends.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, July 3, 2021

College Cup and Holiday Weekend -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Louisville Places 40th in Final Standings




With the conclusion of the Baseball College World Series, the Director's Cup final standings have been released. The big winner was the University of Texas, who took the top spot of the 293 schools with 1252 points. They beat second place Stanford by just under 60 points. Louisville's final score was locked in when they failed to make the CWS, but their spot in the standings wasn't set. The program collectively finished tied for 40th with California at 532.75 points.

The University's press release states that it is the 11th straight season for Louisville finishing in the top-40, but the only time they finished outside of the top-40 since 2006-07 was a tie for 41st in the 2009-10 athletic year. Prior to 2004-05, Louisville finished in the top-100 only once when they came in 97th in 1993-94, the first year of the competition.




In last year's Cup, Louisville finished in the top-10, coming in 8th in a year that scored only the fall sports. In this year's competition, Louisville Field Hockey scored the most points for the program with 83, finishing third in their sport's season. Women's basketball hauled the third most points for the school at 73. Louisville's best spring finisher was women's golf. They netted 35.5 points.  Louisville will attempt to finish better in the 2021-22 year that begins in just over a month.

July 4th Weekend




After last night, we're officially in the most dangerous holiday season in the country. Boating, late nights, fireworks, and drinking can, and do, lead to disaster across the country. As you celebrate the long weekend, we encourage you to stay safe. Enjoy the weekend and check out all of the Louisville alum in the WNBA and NWSL games this weekend!

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast




Speaking of the Fourth of July, I'm off to the annual Madison Regatta to watch boats go fast on the Ohio River. Hopefully that explains my short article this week (plus the complete lack of news out there). The show will go on, though, as the rest of the gang brings you the joy and excitement of Louisville women's athletics.

Jeff and I are working on improving some things behind the scenes to make the show better going forward, and that may begin this week. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show or check out the recording following the show. I'll have the podcast up a bit later this week, but it will be there!

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, June 26, 2021

UofL News Roundup -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Women's Soccer Welcomes New Assistant Coach


A new face will join Karen Ferguson-Dayes's staff on the sidelines next season as the University announced the hiring of Nick Stirrett. Stirrett comes to UofL from Oregon State, where he spent two seasons. The announcement credits Stirrett with helping increase OSU's scoring output from 6 goals to 31 goals in his first season. That will be a boon to the Cards as they look to replace their losses at the front. However, that may have just been coincidence as he appears to focus primarily on goalkeepers and defense. He was a big help there, as well, as the Beavers' sophomore goalkeeper had the fourth-best season in program history in 2019 with six clean sheets and a 0.980 goals against average.


Prior to Oregon State, Stirrett worked with goalkeepers and coordinated recruiting at the University of Illinois for three years. He was with Penn State for one year in 2015 and arrived there after a two year stint as the head men's coach at the University of Mount Union. Stirrett seems to have brought success along with him wherever he goes. Because his stints are so short, it's hard to tell whether there is correlation there or whether it is just coincidence. As Gabby Kouzelos enters her final season as a Cardinal, though, I'm sure she'd love to have an outstanding statistical season to improve her stock among the NWSL teams watching. The women's soccer season should get underway in a little over a month, so we'll see how the team looks with Stirrett alongside KFD for the remainder of the summer.

UofL Announces NIL Initiatives


The University has been busy in the background, it seems. Though Governor Andy Beshear did not announce his NIL Executive Order until Thursday afternoon (as Jared wrote about yesterday), UofL has already announced a number of items pertaining to NIL that have already been ongoing or are set for the months ahead and fall semester. From the University's release, the following items are in effect or will be in effect going forward:
  • Throughout the month of June, student-athletes have been offered educational sessions to help aid them in understanding potential opportunities. Now that the EO is official, the sessions will soon include education on the University's rules and disclosure processes. 
  • A pilot NIL law clinic this fall available to all UofL students including athletes needing guidance on their NIL opportunities.
  • A sport administration elective class entitled "NIL in College Sports" offered for the 2021 UofL Fall semester.
  • NIL, social media, and brand management education modules through UofL's "eLevate" partnership with OpenDorse, plus custom athlete assessments based on a student-athlete's current social media account and habits.  Information on that program announced earlier can be found at this link.
  • Life skills programming (speakers, resources) through Athletics' Beyond the Buzzer and Cardinal Select programs.
  • One-on-one consultations & continuing NIL education outreach provided to UofL student-athletes and their parents and guardians.
  • A plan to partner with The College Licensing Company (CLC) & Game Plan for their "Compass" resources---which include online life skills education modules (including NIL related topics), NIL disclosure and reporting platform, and student-athlete career services.
  • Creating a UofL NIL Advisory Board which includes several athletics staff, university staff and faculty members with subject matter expertise on media, marketing, branding, contracts, intellectual property, international student visas and employment, compliance and other areas to serve as an outlet for guidance in the rapidly evolving NIL landscape.
  • UofL athletics administration continues to meet with individual teams and student-athletes to learn about their questions, proposed plans, and help them navigate through NIL opportunities

The University also announced that the NIL initiatives will be headed up by associate athletic director Matt Banker. According to the release, UofL is doing all of these items as they have been deemed permissible by the NCAA. "...the NCAA has indicated the following activities have been permitted by institutions without triggering impermissible institutional involvement in a student-athlete's name, image and likeness activity: (1) Providing educational programming on NIL and associated regulations; (2) Assisting in evaluating opportunities; (3) Assistance with compliance and disclosure expectations; and (4) Assistance in the evaluation of professional service providers."

As the University continues to develop its rules, regulations, and processes regarding athletes' use of NIL, we will continue to increase our understanding of how they will affect sports at UofL and how they may impact our coverage of those sports. UofL announced a particular site,   https://gocards.com/sports/nil, that will be a landing spot for all of their news, educational resources, and updates for NIL related matters. We will be monitoring it closely. If you're interested in reading more about the initial steps the University is taking, you can find the full release here.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


As Jared wrote yesterday, there will be more discussion on the NIL matters today on the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour. The crew will be a bit thinner this week, as Daryl and I drop off for various reasons again, but there's still plenty for the three remaining knuckleheads to discuss. They'll follow up all of their prognostications with another summer quiz, so you won't want to miss that. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show or check out the replay or podcast whenever you can. 

Until next time, Go Cards!

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Louisville Basketball in the Summer? -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Cards to Compete in Red Bull USA 3v3 Tournament


The Louisville Cardinals aren't waiting until October to get back on the court together. While not every player is able to be a member of the team in the 2021 Red Bull USA Basketball 3v3 Nationals, those that are will get important playing time together. Representing the Cards in this event are MyKasa Robinson, Kianna Smith, Payton Verhulst, and Liz Dixon. One of the best things about this lineup is that it means Verhulst will get quality play time and competition with her new teammates without having to wait until the actual season rolls around. The other great thing is that if there is any basketball player made for a 3v3 tournament, it's Kasa. Hopefully this can help her get her offense on track in a more open environment.


Along with Louisville, seven other teams are competing on the women's side. Among them are four other university named teams: Kansas State, NC State, Maryland, and Oregon. The other three teams are also composed of college players, but none of those teams has more than one player from the same school. Of the non-university associated teams, only three of twelve players are still in school. None of the players on the men's side are college aged.

The event will take place in its entirety over the next two days at the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. Today will be pool play with the single elimination tournament taking place tomorrow. Because there are only eight teams on the women's side (there are 15 men's teams), all of the women's teams will advance out of pool play to the quarterfinals. Today's games will be used for seeding. In Louisville's pool are "Force 10", Maryland, and Oregon. The Cards will get their first game underway today at 11:05 against Force 10. They have the first game of the day on the women's side. They'll then take on Oregon at 4:55 and Maryland at 6:35. The quarterfinals begin tomorrow morning at 9:15 and the finals will be played at 2:15PM. Every game in the tournament will be streamed live on the NBA's Twitch Channel (Link here).

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour



The Cardinal Couple Radio Hour returns this week, and, for the first time in a long time, there is a chance at a full house. I only say chance because Daryl has a chance to head to Indy to watch Dana Evans play agaeinst the Fever, so we'll see if that comes to fruition. Either way, we'll have at least four as I return for the first time in a long time. We'll talk about my adventures, the latest news in UofL women's athletics, and we'll have a good old fashioned Cardinal Couple Quiz. Be sure to tune in at 11AM on the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel for the live show. As always, you can check out the replay on YouTube, and since I'm back, the podcast will return to feeds as well. I deeply apologize for its absence. 

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, June 5, 2021

Cardinals Outside of UofL Athletics; WCWS Storylines -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Louisville Swimmers Among Olympic Hopefuls


With the 2020 Tokyo Olympics being postponed to later this year (and still hanging on by a thread), US Olympic qualifying trials are getting underway for various sports to nail down the teams. Among the summer games are those that take place in a pool. Games in a pool during the summer? Professional athletes: they're just like the rest of us. Anyway, the University of Louisville has a pretty good history when it comes to swimming. They're still working toward that first team championship, but individual Cardinals have seen a lot of success at the collegiate level and beyond.


This year, more Cards will hope to add their names to the list of athletes that will get to wear the year's hottest Polo Ralph Lauren outfit (the US Olympic uniform). On the women's side, three Cards are at the event: Christiana Regenaur, Diana Dunn, and Paige McCormick. Regenaur made the finals for the 100M Freestyle yesterday and touched 6th in her race, 9th overall out of the 16 swimmers. Her placement is not terribly relevant based on how they are doing the advancement to Wave II (only the top two advance), but you can advance on time as well. The cut for Wave II is a 55.56. Regenaur's swim yesterday was only a 56.29, so unless she had a better time somewhere during the past year's qualification period, she'll be hoping for another race to attempt to improve or she'll look to go forward in another event.

The only woman racing today for Louisville is freshman Paige McCormick. McCormick is swimming in the 400M IM today. She'll also participate in the 200M Backstroke tomorrow. Regenaur and Diana Dunn will be back in action on Monday for the 50M Free and the 200M IM, respectively.

Cards in WNBA Action



Paulie gave you a look at the result from Thursday night, but the WNBA season is jam packed with games. There are three on the slate today and former Cards will be involved in all three. The day tips off with a Mystics vs Aces matchup at 1PM. If not for injury, this would be an opportunity to MHA vs Angel, but McCoughtery is back on the road to recovery. The game will be broadcast on ABC. Game two is also on ABC, and will tip off at 3PM. In that game, we'll see if Dana Evans can break into some more playing time for her new team. The final game of the evening sees the Connecticut Sun hosting the NY Liberty. That one is at 7PM and is not listed for a national channel. Availability is NESN, YES, and SN1. 

WCWS Providing Tons of Excitement


James Madison has come to win the whole dang softball tournament. After knocking off Oklahoma on opening day of the tournament, the Dukes were at it again last night when they took on the second home team at the tournament. Odicci Alexander was in the circle again and she flashed her glove in addition to her pitching skills. Late in the game, the Cowgirls put down a suicide squeeze and Alexander showed her athleticism as she raced the runner to the plate, diving for the tag herself rather than wasting time trying to get it to the catcher. She made the out and ultimately held on for a 2-1 win. 

The Dukes are now in the driver's seat for bracket one, waiting until tomorrow to face their next opponent. Oklahoma can still make their way to the championship series, but they'll need to win two games today and then beat JMU twice tomorrow to do it. Advantage JMU. The team on the other side in the same position is Alabama. The Tide made headlines last night as well when Montana Fouts took the circle on her birthday. It was a 21st birthday to remember as Fouts threw just the fifth perfect game in WCWS history while Alabama thumped UCLA 6-0. 

All four games today will be broadcast on ESPN, as will tomorrow's Game Ones. If a Game Two is required tomorrow, it will be on ESPN2. The championship series, starting on Monday, will all be on ESPN.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


Paulie alluded to my return yesterday but it's not quite here, yet. Today should be the last week of my hiatus, and I'm excited to return to the booth. It's been a hectic last couple of months, and I'm sure we'll talk next week about where all I've been. The rest of the crew will still bring you a great show this week, as Paulie prepares his next nefarious quiz. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show and be sure to subscribe to the channel to see the rebroadcasts as well as any other video interviews we post to the page.


Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, May 29, 2021

A Short News Day -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

 Hartlage Named All-American


Despite a final couple of rounds she might like to have back in the NCAA Tournament, Lauren Hartlage had a fantastic season. Her 12th place finish at the tournament was the sixth best by a Cardinal all-time and her accolades for the season continue to come in. This week, she was named a second-team All-American by the Women's Golf Coaches Association. Second-team honors are tied for the highest honor a Cardinal has ever achieved, first set by Cindy LaCrosse in 2009. The honors are also the highest of Hartlage's career, though she has been named as an honorable mention All-American three times before. 


Hartlage's career was one of the best at UofL. Per GoCards, she's the fourth Cardinal to be named to an All-Conference team four times. She's also the first Cardinal to average below par for a season. Her final season average of 72.05 strokes gave her the UofL program record for career average at 72.53, just a half stroke over par for her entire career. She also earned the school's best ACC tournament finish this year.

As a fifth-year senior, this is likely it for Lauren Hartlage in a Louisville uniform, but she is poised for success in her post-college career. Already she has been invited to the 2021 Augusta Women's Amateur, and I doubt it will be long before she makes her way to the LPGA. Congrats to Lauren and good luck going forward!

MHA Earns Double-Double in Loss


Myisha Hines-Allen didn't earn the nickname Dooblay while she was at UofL for nothing. Despite a rocky start to her pro career, MHA has now settled in with the Washington Mystics, especially in the continued absence of Elena Delle Donne. Despite carrying a one-point lead into the fourth quarter last night against the Connecticut Sun, the Mystics were unable to close out and ultimately lost 86-81. The team struggled from the field, shooting just 39.4% from the floor collectively. Hines-Allen certainly didn't help, shooting just 3-14 from the field in her 33 minutes. Despite the cold field goal percentage, she still managed to add five free throws to her six floor points to finish with 11, the fourth highest total on the team. She also added ten rebounds for a double-double and turned in three assists. Her +3 was the highest +/- on the team and she played the fourth most minutes.


The Mystics are struggling so far this year, as they're off to a 2-4 start, but they are still working to integrate all of their pieces into the lineup. We'll see how they continue to get on as the season progresses, and we'll keep an eye on MHA and other Cardinals around the league throughout the summer.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast



The Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast returns this week after a scattered week off last week. I'll still be out (my hiatus is nearly over), but the rest of the crew should be on board for the first true summer episode of the show. It may be quiz time, though it still may not, and you'll just have to tune in for yourself to find out. Check out the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show or catch the recording any time after that. If you're looking for the podcast, I apologize. It will for sure return when I do, and we'll work to do a better job after that of keeping it on track when I'm out.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, April 3, 2021

Volleyball Wins ACC Title -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Volleyball Sweeps UNC for Title


Louisville Volleyball completed the spring portion of their regular season yesterday and, in doing so, claimed their third ACC title since joining the league in 2014. The title is their second outright, after they shared the crown with Pittsburgh in 2017. The title gives Louisville the automatic qualifying bid for the ACC in the upcoming truncated NCAA tournament which will feature only 48 teams. The Cards are ranked in the top-15, but were not mentioned in the most recent top-ten power rankings. Louisville will learn their fate during the NCAA's selection show on Sunday at 4PM. The selection show will air on ESPNU. 

As for yesterday's match, Louisville came out attacking early, as they jumped out to a 6-2 lead before UNC began to claw back. The Tarheels would get closest at 7-9 before Louisville went on a run to stretch their lead. Ultimately, the Cards would use a few point spurts, outscoring the Heels about 4-1 en route to a 25-15 first game victory. It wasn't all good for the Cards in the first game, as Ayden Bartlett went down with an apparent knee injury. This gave Cici Rush and Claire Chaussee a bit more playing time as the two would appear in all three sets following the injury. 

The second game was much tighter. Louisville was again able to pull out to a 12-8 lead, but UNC was not so easily deterred this time. The Heels pulled back level and the two teams traded points into the 20s. UNC grabbed a game point at 24-23, but Louisville was able to fight it off with a huge block by Amaya Tillman. After a couple of more trades, Louisville finally won the game at 28-26. The second game was Louisville's best attacking game, yet ended up being the closest of the three. The close loss gave UNC a big motivational boost heading into the third game.

The Tarheels came out hot, zipping out to a 7-1 lead. Louisville held strong, though, and three straight errors (two blocks) brought Louisville right back into the game. After a few more traded points and a tie at 11, UNC took a 12-11 lead for their last lead of the match. From there, Louisville went on an 8-1 run to snag a 19-12 lead, which UNC could not overcome. The Cards cruised from there to a 25-18 victory. 

On the whole, Louisville had an encouraging match in their final regular season action before the NCAA tournament. They hit for .288 and held North Carolina to just .080 hitting. The Tarheels did outblock the Cards at 9-8, though Louisville's were a bit more timely. The stat that still needs cleaning up has been persistent for Louisville throughout the season, and that is on the service side. The Cards finished with six aces compared to ten errors. The Heels finished with four and four. Louisville will need to clean that up to ensure advancement in the NCAA tournament. 

Stanford vs Arizona for the Title


It's a shocking all PAC-12 final in the NCAA Women's Tournament after a pair of buzzer beaters missed for South Carolina and Arizona led wire-to-wire against UCONN. No Cardinal Couple Pick'em Brackets selected this title matchup.

The first game of the night saw a pair of teams desperate to get through, as South Carolina fought back from multiple large deficits against Stanford. The Cardinal held the lead for most of the game and were the beneficiaries of a few helpful non-calls. The two worst offenses came when a blatant kicked ball was missed and led to a runout that gave Stanford a five point lead with under two minutes to go. A couple of plays later saw a full shove in the back go uncalled which prevented a South Carolina layup. On that possession, the Gamecocks were probably better served by not getting that call, as the out of bounds play resulted in a three pointer. 

Despite the calls seeming to all go against USC, they can't cry foul too much, as they still had multiple chances to win. They led by one with under 45 seconds to go but quickly ceded the lead. A turnover on the drive to the basket with 13 seconds left set up a foul fest to end it. With two fouls to give, USC had a couple of chances to steal out of bounds rather than send Stanford to the line. They did just that, stealing and driving with five seconds left. A layup attempt fell off the rim and fell to Aliyah Boston who had just enough time to catch and shoot as the buzzer went off. The ball clanked off the back iron and Stanford escaped.

In the nightcap, Arizona struck early and often. The Wildcats scored the first basket of the game, a three pointer, and never looked back. UCONN closed the gap to 9-8 with just under three minutes remaining in the first quarter before a 7-2 run gave Arizona a 16-10 first quarter victory. They would go on to win the second quarter by four and carried a ten point lead into the half. The third quarter saw the most scoring for both teams, and it was also the only quarter UCONN would win. The Huskies scored 21 in the third, beating the Wildcats by one in the segment. It wouldn't be enough to spark a big run, though, as Arizona got their one point back in the fourth quarter, winning by ten in a game that was never really in doubt.

The title game on Sunday will be the third matchup between Stanford and Arizona. The Cardinal won the first two games by 27 and 14 points. The Wildcats will look to continue the trend of cutting that deficit and make it a closer game. Stanford reaches their first title game since 2010-11 and is seeking their first championship since 1991-92. Prior to this year, Arizona had reached the Sweet 16 just once and had not made the tournament since 2005. If you're looking for a Cinderella, you'll have to pull for a team with the same name as the team down the road.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


What a week it has been! From the Sweet 16 and Elite 8 to the volleyball ACC title, Cardinal Couple has been there for it all. We'll do our best to break it all down in this week's Cardinal Couple Radio Hour. With softball and lacrosse being on the road, we should have a full house for the first time in awhile. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show, or check out the podcast or rebroadcast following the show's airing. As always, we look forward to bringing you the joy and excitement of Louisville women's athletics.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, March 20, 2021

Softball Falls in 11 Innings; Tennis Slump Continues -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Louisville Stumbles Across Finish Line in Marathon Game Against Clemson


Eleven innings is a lot of innings for a baseball game. It is even more innings for a softball game. That's how long Louisville and Clemson went before the Tigers finally pulled ahead in the top half and Louisville was unable to match. Ten innings of scoreless softball, punctuated by great pitching and sometimes not so great baserunning had many fans just hoping for the Cards to somehow scrape across the plate to end it after three hours. It was Clemson that ultimately drew first blood and took home a 4-0 win in the series opener.


Louisville had the opportunities in this one. Prior to Clemson's offensive explosion in the top of the 11th, Louisville led with seven hits compared to just two for Clemson. The Cards also benefitted from a pair of errors while only committing one themselves. Getting players all the way around to score was Louisville's issue, as they ultimately left 11 runners on base and struck out 14 times. If you're wondering whether or not that kind of offensive output was something Coach Holly Aprile would accept, I'd point out that there was no postgame interview for this one due to the intense conversations Coach was having with her players following the final out.

The Tigers came in at 16-2 and ranked in the top-25, so there could be not doubt that this would be a tough matchup. However, Louisville let their chances slip from the very beginning, a habit that will not lead to success against top teams and, if it continues, will prevent Louisville from becoming a top team themselves. The first inning saw the Cards sit the Tigers down in order with a groundout followed by two strikeouts. When Louisville stepped to the plate, Carmyn Greenwood led off with a walk and immediately stole second. Jordan Wolfe grounded out without advancing the runner, but Taylor Roby was walked on four straight pitches. With runners on first and second, the Cards struck out looking back-to-back to end the inning.

From the second inning to the top of the seventh, both teams combined for five baserunners. Neither team had more than runner on base at any given time and no runners advanced past second. It was a true pitchers duel, as strikeouts and groundouts abounded. The bottom of the seventh saw Louisville's next chance. From this point on, any Louisville score would win them the game. The seventh saw Cassady Greenwood reach on an error but she was out on a fielder's choice grounder by Elana Ornelas. Ornelas was able to advance to second on a passed ball, but she was stranded to end the inning. Onto extras they went.


The Tigers found new life and motivation in extra innings. Their best chance of the game to that point came in the top of the eighth, when they put runners on first and second with nobody out. Fortunately, Louisville was able to work out of the jam, following a foul out with two swinging strikeouts to end the threat. The bottom of the eighth saw Louisville get three runners on base, their most in any inning, but one of those runners reached on a fielders choice. A strikeout ended their threat with runners on first and second. 

The ninth saw a runner reach third for the first time all night. Clemson's Ansley Gilstrap led off with a nine-pitch walk and advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt. The next batter struck out looking, but Gilstrap stole third to find herself 60 feet from home with two outs. Louisville got out of it with an infield pop-up. In the home half, another great opportunity slipped away from the Cards. Makayla Hurst led off with a single to the outfield but was tagged out at second trying to stretch it into a double. Tough baserunning choice for the lead-off batter in a walk-off inning situation. Cassady Greenwood followed that by reaching on a throwing error and Ornelas made it two-on with one out by singling up the middle. The runner on first to open the inning might have been pretty important to Louisville at this point. Unfortunately, Celene Funke popped out and Maddy Newman flew out to end the inning.

The tenth was the least eventful of the extras, as both teams went three-up, three-down. Clemson's were a lot more threatening, as all three players flew out. Louisville had a pair of groundouts and a strikeout. The momentum had pretty much fully swung at this point. The eleventh inning spelled doom for Louisville. Clemson led off with a single and followed it with an RBI triple. 1-0 might have been enough to end the game right then given Louisville's offensive issues last night. However, the Tigers weren't done. A strikeout was followed by a single to score the runner from third and extend the lead to 2-0. A 2-run homer stretched that lead to 4-0, and Clemson kept looking to pile on as a walk was followed by a single to give them two on and just one out. Thankfully, a popout and a groundout ended the nightmare inning. 


Louisville's bottom half effort just couldn't match the big inning by Clemson. A lead-off single was followed by a strikeout and a walk. With runners on first and second and just one out, Louisville was in a position to try to claw back some runs, but they were destined not to score last night. Another strikeout was followed by a lineout to end the game. Cue the aforementioned Aprile anger and the look ahead to today's second game. The Cards will get another chance to get a big win and stay above .500 on the season as they take the field at noon today. It'll be available on ACCNX or, if you're up for it, it should be in the 50s and sunny by first pitch.

Tennis Can't Correct Slide


It's been a tough go of it for the Louisville women's tennis team recently. After a decent start in non-conference and back-to-back wins in the conference schedule, Louisville looked like they might be in a position to make some noise for the first time in conference play. Unfortunately, the Cards are 1-6 since those two conference opening wins, as they dropped their fourth straight yesterday against FSU. Raven Neely scored the sole point for Louisville as the Cards fell 1-4. They were swept in the doubles matches and trailed in one of the two unfinished singles matchups. After the hot start, Louisville is clinging on to try to salvage the season as they now sit at 6-8 overall and 3-6 in conference. The Cards will have one more road match at Miami tomorrow before they return home for a pair of non-conference matches against Xavier and UT Martin where they will try to rebuild their confidence before the final conference stretch.

Women's Swimming at NCAAs



The fourth and final day of the NCAA meet is today. Louisville's team currently sits in 13th overall. A pair of ACC teams in Virginia and NC State lead the meet, followed by Texas in third. Kentucky and UNC are tied ahead of the Cards in 10th. Louisville doesn't have any superstar names as we have grown accustomed to over the last few years, but the newcomers are showing a lot of improvement. The Cards scored two podiums in consolation finals on Thursday, but those are the only major items they've had to show to this point. Still, that 13th position is out of 34 teams to have scored so far, so they are keeping pace with some of the other teams despite a lack of showy finishes. The prelims for today begin at 10AM and finals begin at 6PM. Both will be available via watchESPN. 


Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


We're back this week, but we'll be without Daryl as she preps for the noon first pitch at Ulmer. We've got plenty to discuss, as it has been a busy week for the Cards and the NCAA tournament is set to start (be sure to get those pick 'em brackets in!). Tune in to the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour live at 11AM via the Cardinal Couple YouTube page or check out the replay either on YouTube or as a podcast. We'll bring you the joy and excitement of UofL women's athletics as we do every week (and there might even be some spicy NCAA trash talk, given the week that was in San Antonio). 

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, March 6, 2021

A Very Busy Friday -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Fourth Quarter Surge Lifts Cards Over Deacs


While the final plays weren't quite as unnerving as in the previous meeting in January between Louisville and Wake Forest, the ACC Quarterfinal matchup between the two teams had plenty of tense moments. Though the final score might imply a comfortable win, the game was tied at the end of the third quarter, after Wake refused to go away. Plenty of words will be written elsewhere about the officiating of this game, and had the result turned out differently, I might devote more words to it myself. As it was, Louisville turned a seven point first quarter lead into a fourth quarter tie and then turned that into a double-digit win. The bottom line is that the Cards advanced to today's semifinal round, so let's take a look at the game.

The first quarter saw Louisville jump out to a hot start. The Cards scored on their first possession and quickly turned that into a 7-2 lead. By three and a half minutes into the game, the lead had stretched to 11-4 and Louisville looked like they'd run away with the game. The teams traded blows throughout the remainder of the first quarter with the Cards holding the aforementioned seven point lead at 17-10. It was an inauspicious start for Louisville, with Dana Evans hitting her first three and a reasonable 5-2 foul difference. After that, though, things got weird. 


The second quarter opened with Olivia Cochran picking up her second foul. Mykasa Robinson scored the first points of the quarter to stretch Louisville's lead to nine, but Wake kept clawing back. When Hailey Van Lith hit a three pointer to make it 22-16, the Cards went cold. They went on to miss their next six shots before finally scoring again on a Norika Konno fast break layup with 2:41 remaining. They then made the remainder of their shots in the quarter, including two more three-pointers, to lead by four at the break. Over the course of the cold slump, Kianna Smith and Elizabeth Dixon also picked up their second fouls.

In the first half, the Cards shot just 36.8% from the floor, just ahead of the Demon Deacons' 34.8. Louisville committed just three turnovers compared to ten from Wake and the foul discrepancy was 10-4. Looking at the overall foul called numbers, things don't look so bad. However, Wake Forest shot 15 free throws in the first half. Louisville shot zero. For Wake to commit no shooting fouls over a 20-minute first half is, um, unlikely. Either way, Louisville still held a four point lead into halftime. It wasn't the comfortable seven point cushion they had after the first quarter, but with a six-plus minute shooting slump, you'll take it.

The only problem with that was that the third quarter didn't get better. Though another three by HVL gave the Cards another seven point lead and Dana's second three of the game pushed it to six a bit later, Wake would ultimately come back to take the lead in this one with 45 seconds remaining in the quarter. It was eerily reminiscent to the end of game sequence earlier this season when the teams traded baskets over a one point lead. After Kianna Smith gave the Cards a one point lead with 24 seconds left, an Ahlana Smith foul led to a 1-2 effort at the line for Wake to tie it at 44 going into the fourth quarter. We had a barnburner ahead of us it seemed.


Jeff Walz put something in the team's Gatorade before the fourth quarter. After a clunky start to the quarter, HVL scored the first points on a fast break layup with 8:29 remaining. The subsequent possession saw Wake tie the game again on, you guessed it, free throws. Louisville then went off. The Cards scored the next 13 points of the game over a four minute stretch to put the Demon Deacons in quite a hole with 4:15 remaining. There was no slump to follow the big run, and even though Wake Forest finally scored again, Louisville refused to cede their double digit lead. The closest it got for the remainder of the game was ten. 

I said I wasn't going to spend a lot of time on the refs, so I won't. I mentioned the 15-0 free throw discrepancy in the first half, and it didn't get better. The final spread was 23-2. Louisville saw Dixon to the line one time and she missed them both. Wake was 18-23 from the charity stripe. This game was only close because of that difference, I can say that quite confidently. Well, that difference and the fact that Dana Evans struggled to even get out of the gate. The ACC Player of the Year shot just 3-15 from the floor, 2-7 from three. She did chip in seven assists, though, leading the team. 


The Cards were carried by HVL, a statement that is very likely to be repeated over the next three years. Hailey finished with 24 points on 9-15 (6-10) shooting and added five rebounds, three assists, and four steals with no turnovers. Drool. For the freshman to come up clutch when Louisville needed her to is very encouraging going forward where every game matters. And it isn't just that she put up a gaudy stat line. Every time Louisville needed a big boost, Jeff Walz dialed Van Lith's number. No one else scored more than Dana's eight points. It was a performance from HVL that everyone has been expecting this season, and we can all only hope it becomes the new normal. 

The CASE Report


C - Care: Despite the frustrating nature of this game, Louisville actually took decent care of the ball, with just the three turnovers mentioned in the first half. The third quarter saw a pretty big jump, and the Cards finished with 11. It was still a pretty decent showing. Louisville was only able to force Wake into 14, but 11<14 so that's half a point. That said, Wake's defense ranks 315th in the country, forcing just 12.6 turnovers per game. Louisville's 11 is far more than 60% of that, so the Cards finish with a lowercase 'c'.

A - Assists: Louisville's assist game was on point yesterday, and they very nearly picked up the capital A in this category. The final tally was 20 assists on 28 made baskets. A 71% assist rate is nothing to slouch at. If they had gotten it to 75, I made have made an exception for just missing the 2.0 ATO (1.8). However, since they were well on their way to the capital A in the first half (71% assist rate and 3.3 ATO) but committed so many second half turnovers, I can't do it. Lowercase 'a'.


S - Steals: Nine steals isn't terribly many, but it's more than the bar (7.5) and more than Wake (3). Louisville was able to come up with big steals in big places to keep Wake from taking too much advantage of the Cards' shooting woes and HVL led the team with four. Capital 'S'.

E - Efficiency: Louisville's second half shooting performance was a strong effort at 54%, dragging the first half's 37% out of the mud. However, it wasn't enough. The final shooting percentage was 43.8, just under the benchmark of 45%. That said, a 42.9% from beyond the arc gave the Cards a huge boost. 0-2 is basically unscorable. The Cards can't control not getting to the line but given the game flow, it's critical to score when you get the chance. I'll still award a lowercase 'e' for the second half performance and the outside shooting.

That gives Louisville a c-a-S-e for the game, a decent effort from the Cards. They'll need to perform a bit better overall going forward this year, but to get through the grit of the first three quarters and boom in the fourth like they did is very encouraging. Louisville will get Syracuse in today's semifinals at Noon on the ACC Network. 


As for the bracket challenge, the results are just about set, with almost all remaining brackets in play having the same results in these last three games. Worldwide Jeff leads the pack at 8-1 and has Louisville defeating NC State in the final. A host of players sit at 7-2 with the same result in the final. Dave-O Watson leads the opposition, sitting at 7-2 with NC State coming out victorious over the Cards in the final. While there aren't many players still up for the chance to win, the final result looks like it will come down to the last game.

Softball Dominates Bradley 18-1 Over Two Games


Basketball took up the majority of the column today, rightfully so, but there's still plenty more going on. Softball began hosting the Cardinal Classic to open Ulmer Stadium for the season yesterday with a pair of evening games against Bradley. They bullied the Braves for a couple of hours. Neither game made it to the top of the sixth, and neither had the Cards concerned for any reasonable amount of time. We'll see if they can carry that momentum into today's games, but, in any case, Louisville was rolling yesterday.


Taylor Roby got the start in the first game, and Bradley threatened right off the bat. A single and a walk gave Roby runners on first and second with no outs to deal with. She rose to the challenge, though, getting a pop-up, fielder's choice, and strikeout to end the inning. Louisville's offense then ended the game in the bottom of the first. Carmyn Greenwood started with an infield single and then advanced to second on a sac fly from Celene Funke (I've never seen that for someone not named Billy Hamilton in recent memory). A Roby walk was followed by a Chung single to score Carmyn and Cassady Greenwood singled to score Roby. Louisville led 2-0 with two on and one out. A steal and a walk loaded the bases, and everyone advanced 60 feet on a wild pitch. Another walk loaded the bases again and a sac fly scored another runner and turned the order over. Another wild pitch brought home one more before Carmyn Greenwood struck out. Louisville led 6-0.

In the second, Bradley was able to claw one run back, getting runners to second and third with two outs before single through the infield scored a runner. Roby got another groundout to end the side. In the bottom of the second, Funke was walked the hard way (hit by pitch on a 3-0 count, oof). She was caught steeling, though, and Jenna Servi came on to pitch hit for Roby. She promptly doubled to center and after a Chung foulout, Cassady Greenwood singled in Servi and was brought home herself by a Hurst double. Louisville led 8-1 after two. 


A total of two runners reached over the next three innings before Louisville took to the bat for the bottom of the fifth. The Cards promptly loaded the bases on three straight hits and walked off the game with a full count walk to Maddy Newman. 9-1 in the fifth triggered the mercy rule and the teams went their separate ways to get ready for the second game. The first game lasted just under two hours and started at 4, giving the two teams about half an hour to collect themselves for the 6:30 first pitch of game two.

Gabby Holloway got the start for the Cards in the second game and got things off to much less eventful start. She picked up outs in all three ways, getting a strikeout, groundout, and flyout in order to put down the side. Louisville's bottom half wasn't nearly as eventful either, though a Celene Funke triple (drink) was followed up by an RBI double from Rebecca Chung. Makayla Hurst reached on an error, but Chung got caught in a pickle between third and home to end the inning.

Holloway put in another 3-up, 3-down inning in the second and Louisville got to work in the bottom half. Taryn Weddle was hit by the first pitch she saw and when Charley Butler tried to sacrifice bunt her over, the catcher threw the ball into the outfield. Runners stood on first and second but couldn't advance when Holloway lined out to first. Maddy Newman walked to load the bases and Carmyn Greenwood picked up a painful RBI with an HBP. Funke grounded out to first, but it was enough to avoid the double-play and score a runner before Taylor Roby hit a 3-run bomb to clear the bases. Chung lined out but Louisville led 6-0.


Holloway allowed her first runner in the third inning when she gave up a two-out double. The runner advanced to third on a passed ball but a lineout ended the threat. The Cards went right back to in the bottom half again. A groundout was followed by two walks when Holloway stepped in and sent the ball to center. The center fielder struggled getting the ball in, as did the pitcher, and Holloway reached third on the errors while Butler and Weddle both scored. Leonhardt stepped to third to pinch run and was brought in on Maddy Newman's groundout. Louisville loaded the bases on three walks to the top of the order, but Chung grounded out to the pitcher for the force out at the plate and the scoring ended. Louisville led 9-0 after three. 

Leonhardt took over in the circle and although she walked the first batter she saw, she struck out four of the next six she faced in the final two innings. Louisville got a runner on base in the bottom of the fourth on a walk, but didn't take the batter's box in the bottom of the fifth. 


The two wins put Louisville at 5-6 overall and gives them the chance to get to .500 today when they take on Depaul at noon. The Blue Demons are 5-4 overall and won their last game over St. Louis 8-5. They haven't played the schedule Louisville has, but they do have a bit of confidence coming in. Louisville should have confidence in droves after yesterday's performances. This one should be available on ACCNX so be sure to split screen it with the basketball game.

Field Hockey Drops Spring Opener


After a very strong fall performance, Louisville field hockey got back underway yesterday as they prepare to play a spring NCAA tournament. Their first match was against tough conference foe UNC, and it didn't quite go as Coach Sowry might have hoped. The Tarheels scored early and late in the first half and those two goals were all they would need to ice the game. With a penalty corner in the first two minutes of the game, UNC put Louisville on the back foot early. The Cards had their chance to tie with a corner of their own just a minute later, but Mercedes Pastor's shot was blocked. 

The Tarheels put on a pressure campaign over a six minute stretch in the final ten minutes of the second period that saw multiple shots wide or blocked. With two minutes to go in the half, they earned another penalty corner and Erin Matson was able to capitalize for the second time on the day. The goals in this game were her 14th and 15th of the season. 


Louisville was unable to make anything happen offensively for the remainder of the game and the 2-0 score at halftime held until the final whistle blew. The Cards actually led UNC in shots at 16-14 and shots on goal at 9-5, but the goalkeeping for the Heels was just too much for the Cards to overcome. Disappointingly, Louisville also led in penalty corner attempts at 10-5. They went 0-10 while UNC went 2-5. That's how you lose games, and it's surely a sore point for Coach Sowry this morning. 

Louisville was not shutout in the fall season or in all of 2019, so this ends a run of 34 straight games with a goal scored. Their last goalless game came against Albany in a 1-0 loss on October 21, 2018. The Cards are still in a good position to fight for high NCAA tournament seeding as this loss puts them at 8-3 on the season. Two of their three losses have come against UNC and the Tar Heels lead the season series 2-1. Louisville may get as many as two more chances against them, as the ACC will host an ACC Championship game on April 24th, prior to the NCAA tournament. The Cards get back on the horse tomorrow when they head to Muncie, Indiana to take on the Cardinals of Ball State. That game is at 1PM.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


We're live again this week at an extra special time of 10AM. We've forgotten when Daylight Savings Time starts so we figured we'd just go ahead and bump up the show. In actuality, though, it's a busy Saturday, so we wanted to get the show out prior to all of the fun and excitement getting underway at 12. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 10 today for the live show or check out the replay after it ends. As always (well, mostly always), you can subscribe to the podcast to get episodes pushed directly to your device after they're posted. Be sure to subscribe to the YouTube channel as well, as the crew posts interviews there often.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-