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 Celene Funke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celene Funke. Show all posts

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Louies Student Awards; THURSDAY CARDINAL COUPLE




NOW BATTING...








Hello readers! Daryl reporting here today. Calendar check... No, it is not the weekend already. It is still only Thursday. I am covering today's write up for Jared (he has definitely covered for me plenty of times in the past) and it's my pleasure to do so!   I want to thank you all for the comments on my post from last week... I appreciate the kind words and enjoy hearing from you! 

I did not end up at the Sky/Fever game this past weekend, unfortunately some car trouble on the way up kept us from arriving on time to see the game... I WILL get to a WNBA game this season to catch a former Card.  I'm not sure where or when but it will happen.  




As the seasons have all wrapped up for UofL sports, the university held its 8th annual Louie's Student Awards for the athletics departments.  This award ceremony recognizes teams and individual players on their achievements on and off the field while at UofL.   The full list of recipients below:


UPS Leadership Award - Female
Makenli Forrest
Track & Field

UPS Leadership Award - Male
Pedro Fonseca
Men's Soccer

Resilience Award - Female
Aliyah Welter
Track & Field

Resilience Award - Male
Max Kennedy
Men's Golf

Comeback Team Award
Volleyball

Humble & Hungry Award
Aliyah Welter
Track & Field

CardsCARE Award – Female
Kaylee Wheeler
Swim + Dive

CardsCARE Award – Male
Zeiko Harris
Men's Soccer

Cardinal Cup – Female
All Girl Cheer

Cardinal Cup – Male
Baseball

Spirit Award – Cheer
Callie Pass

Spirit Award – Ladybirds
Hannah Sears

Highest GPA
Celene Funke
Softball

Meghan Schneider
Field Hockey

L1C4 Award
Celene Funke
Softball

A couple things stood out to me... I want to give a shoutout to Celene Funke after a multiple award evening.  Ive had the 'joy and excitement' of watching Celene grow into her role with not just the softball program but the whole university over the last 5 years.  "The Funk" was very visible in supporting other programs on game-days as well as making efforts for social change all the while maintaining an above average GPA.  I want to thank Celene for the thousands of hours she dedicated to the program.  I have so many great memories of her time with UofL...  congrats to Celene on the honor. 





The other award that stood out to both Jeff and myself was the Volleyball squad receiving the 'Comeback Award'.   Maybe I am unaware of the criteria for this award but I'm not sure I understand the award being given to a team that went to the Sweet 16 in back to back seasons.  Perhaps it was because the season was split between the fall and the spring?? Not entirely sure on that front but the volleyball squad raked in four of the ACC's five major honors when the season concluded.  I know the squad has a lot of expectations for next season.  Perhaps any team that 'came back' to campus for the season was the criteria for receiving the award?  I suppose in a COVID year, that is something to celebrate.  Congrats to Volleyball! 




Speaking of awards... Morgan Bentley, Sarah Hernandez, Gabby Kouzelos, Nadege L’Esperance, Delaney Snyder and Maisie Whitsett were named to the All-ACC Women's Soccer Academic Team.  The six recipients was a program best for Louisville. Congrats to UofL WSOC! 




Louisville Lacrosse placed seven student athletes on the All-ACC Academic Team also. Caroline Blalock, Allegra Catalano, Rachel Florek, Ally HAll, Bella Karstien, Alex McNicholas and Paige Richbourg were part of an all-time program best ! 

Congratulations to these Cardinals who embody the term "student-athlete". We are proud of your achievements here at CARDINAL COUPLE ! 

The ACC Honor Roll, which recognizes all student-athletes with a 3.0  for the current academic year will be released in July 



I am making it a short one today since I will be checking back in tomorrow to push a few buttons. Enjoy the weather out there today, Louisvillians!  It's supposed to remain in the 80s today before its another scorcher of a weekend.  Don't forget the sunscreen!

Go Cards!! 
~Daryl

Saturday, April 24, 2021

Softball Splits Double Header -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Cards Break No. 7 FSU's 16-game Win Streak


Due to the schedule change, Louisville and FSU got a double header underway yesterday around 3:00 PM. While the Cards looked like they might make a game of that first matchup for the first few innings, it was ultimately a game to forget as the Cards fell 10-0 in seven innings. To their credit, Louisville avoided a mercy rule, but just narrowly, as they trailed 7-0 after six. The Cards managed only two hits and a walk on offense, while giving up two errors and 12 hits on the way to the Seminoles' ten runs. Fortunately, there was another game to cleanse the palate.


Taylor Roby started in the circle in the second game for the Cards and put up another glowing performance. She opened the game with a strikeout and never really looked back, despite an inning opening error in the third. Her 1-2-3 first inning set the stage for the Louisville offense to jump on top of a strong FSU squad and Carmyn Greenwood did just that. She led off the bottom half of the first inning with a solo shot to left field. After Maddy Newman struck out, Roby and Makayla Hurst put a pair of runners on base with back-to-back singles, but a strikeout and a pop out ended the threat.

The Noles and Cardinals both went 3-and-out in the second which led to that inning-opening error I mentioned in the third. Jenna Servi skied a throw to first from third which allowed the runner to waltz to second base with nobody out. Roby went to work trying to limit the damage and hold onto Louisville's lead, but it wasn't quite meant to be. Three straight groundouts would have been enough to end it, except for the fact that FSU's second baseman was quick and the balls were all to the wrong spot. The first out advanced the runner to third and the next brought her home. 1-1.


Louisville responded with a run of their own in the third, and it was again Carmyn Greenwood setting things up. Greenwood opened the inning with a base hit and sprinted down to second shortly after. Maddy Newman then hit a ball right at the shortstop, freezing Greenwood but allowing Newman to get on base. Infield singles count the same. Roby, uncharacteristically, popped out to third on the first pitch, but Hurst put the ball in play, and good things can happen when you do that. A grounder to the third baseman in the gap could have been a double play, but an errant throw from the second baseman not only allowed Hurst to pull in safely at first base, but it also gave Greenwood the opportunity to scamper home. Charley Butler singled, but a strikeout ended the inning. 2-1 Cards. 

That final run would have been all that Louisville needed. Roby was fantastic, as we saw last week, and she allowed just three more FSU baserunners over the final four innings on two walks and a single. One runner advanced to second, but it was with two outs and the threat was short-lived. Despite not needing anymore runs, the Cards decided to grab some anyway. Former Cardinal Danielle Watson returned to Ulmer for the first time yesterday, and, in the first game, she was sharp. In the second game, not as much. She entered in the bottom of the fourth and retired the first five batters she saw, giving her one out in the bottom of the sixth, with Florida State still just one run back. 


She followed those five consecutive outs with a pair of walks. Celene Funke stepped in, said thank you very much for the baserunners, and fired a double down the left field line to move everyone up two bases. After a strikeout, it appeared Watson may escape with just one added run, but that brought Carmyn Greenwood back up. Greenwood has been one of Louisville's most consistent offensive players, and she continue that last night, sending a single to right field to plate two and give the Cards a 5-1 lead. Roby came back for the top of the seventh and gave the Noles a strikeout, flyout, lineout inning and that was that. 

Louisville knocked off their second top-25 team of the past week, but we'll see if they can continue any of the momentum from this one. Despite being just two games under .500 after their win over Duke last week, the Cards are now six games adrift and need a lifeline. Another big boost or two with wins over FSU could be nice. They'll have today off to prepare for the final two games of the series as inclement weather in the forecast rescheduled today's games earlier this week. The two teams are back in action at 12PM tomorrow on the ACC Network.


Check out Jared's interview with Coach Aprile postgame here: Holly Aprile vs FSU 4.23.21

Field Hockey Could Be Set for NCAA


UNC won their fourth straight game in overtime yesterday when they narrowly escaped Wake Forest. The Demon Deacons were vying for the ACC's automatic qualifying bid and took the Tarheels to two overtime periods before the golden goal session ended on a penalty stroke for UNC. UNC was going to get into the tournament no matter what, but if they had lost yesterday's game, Louisville may have been in trouble. By staking their claim to the AQ, an at-large bid remains open for Louisville, who should be squarely in now. The NCAA selection for the tournament is tomorrow, with play beginning next week.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


I'm out this week but that shouldn't stop everyone else from bringing you the joy and excitement of UofL women's athletics. There's softball, volleyball, field hockey, and more to talk about this week so be sure to tune in to the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour. This week's podcast will be a little late, but you can find the live show on at 11AM on the Cardinal Couple YouTube channel and the show is available to replay there as well. 

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, April 17, 2021

Spring Teams Split Friday -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Lacrosse Struggles Against Syracuse


For 25 minutes against the top-five Syracuse Orange, Louisville lacrosse kept things close. After that, though, it appeared a bit as if the Cards forgot there were 35 minutes of game left. Ultimately, Louisville did not score for those final 35 minutes, while Syracuse scored a quite a few more times. At the end of the day, a close game turned into a 19-5 blowout. The Cards will get another chance at the Orange on Sunday, so here's hoping for a reversal of the double-header results from the weekend against Boston College.


The game, as I mentioned, did have its positives, as the first segment was fairly close. Syracuse jumped on Louisville's defense early, as the first goal came from Megan Carney just after the two-minute mark. Louisville managed to score just a minute later, with Caroline Blalock's first goal of the day. Meaghan Tyrell would be the next on the board, as she scored her 39th and 40th goals of the season to give Syracuse a 3-1 lead. Louisville was not deterred yet, though, as Caroline Blalock scored again to pull the Cards back within one. It was Blalock's 100th career goal, but it would be the last she would score on the day. 


Syracuse went on a mini 3-1 run over the next five minutes in a strange circumstance that saw all four goals scored by Me(a)g(h)ans. Carney and Tyrell scored for the Orange while Megan Dunn scored her first goal of the season for Louisville. Trailing 6-3, Louisville again showed life by getting a pair of quick goals from Nicole Perroni and Ally Hall. If you're scoring at home, you would know those goals put it at 6-5 with 6:39 remaining in the first half. Given what I mentioned to be the final score, you can probably guess how things went from there. 


Syracuse turned it on from there, with both offense and defense getting on board. The Orange scored four over the final four minutes of the first half and outscored the Cards 9-0 in the second half. Tyrell and Carney both finished with seven goals apiece, leaving just five to be spread between the rest of the team. Rachel Florek finished with seven saves for the Cards, indicating things could have gotten even worse. 


Paulie got with Coach Teeter after the game to discuss Louisville's performance and the look ahead at the next opportunity against the Orange. The two teams will take the field at Louisville Lacrosse Stadium on Sunday at noon on the ACCNX.

Check out Teeter's postgame comments here: Teeter on Syracuse 4.16.21

Softball Takes Game One Against Duke


Taylor Roby threw a gem and got just enough help from the offense as Louisville knocked off the 21st ranked Duke Blue Devils in game one of the four game weekend set. With still three games left in the series, there is plenty of work to do, but after the disappointing end to Louisville's series last weekend, the Cards are happy to get wins wherever they can. The win pulled the Cards to just one game under .500 and they'll need every win they can to improve their standing for a potential postseason run.


Duke opened the game with a fly out but followed it with a one-out single. Kavel stole second to stand in scoring position with one out, but she would move no farther. Roby got the next batter to strike out looking and the third out came on a ground out to first base. In the bottom half, Louisville wasted no time giving Roby some run support. Carmyn Greenwood was first pitch swinging but grounded out to second base. Celene Funke showed a bit more patience and fired the third pitch she saw to straightaway center. It escaped the center fielder, and Funke put on the jets for a one-out triple. That brought Roby to the plate, and Duke chose to pitch to her. That turned out to be a mistake, as Roby shot the first pitch to short where it was mishandled. Roby reached on the error while Funke reached home easily. Duke would escape the first with no more damage, but the Cards led 1-0.


From there, Taylor Roby went to work. Including the first inning, she scattered four hits over seven innings. All four hits were singles, and none came in the same inning. She also gave up no other baserunners, walking and hitting none while Louisville played clean defense to commit no errors. Roby would also strike out five on her way to the complete game victory. She did it all on just 85 pitches. 


Louisville gave her a bit of insurance, which she ultimately wouldn't need, in the bottom of the fourth. Rebecca Chung and Cassady Greenwood opened the inning with a pair of strikeouts, but Louisville went to work with two outs. Charley Butler got started with a two-out triple. Maddy Newman stepped up and hit a ball on the ground but it was right to the third baseman. Butler was held at third, but on the play, Newman was able to reach first. The extra batter was all Louisville needed as Sydney Bickel singled to bring Butler home. Louisville led 2-0.


The two teams would score no more runs, with Duke getting two more singles and Louisville getting no more baserunners. As mentioned before, though, Roby was a stud and the two runs were all Louisville needed. The two teams will get back underway today with the first game at noon on ACCNX. Today's action will be a double header, so the Cards will have a pair of opportunities before wrapping up the series tomorrow. Jared was able to get with Coach Aprile after the win, and you can listen to her comments here: Aprile on Duke 4.16.21.

THANKS TO JARED FOR TODAY'S LAX AND SOFTBALL PHOTOS !! 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


We're back this week with plenty to talk about. We had an NCAA tournament win for volleyball and plenty of softball games, in addition to the WNBA Draft and lacrosse and field hockey. As always 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 podcast or replay after the show. Be sure to subscribe to the YouTube channel for more content as well, and subscribe to and rate the podcast to get the word out about Cardinal Couple.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, April 10, 2021

Softball Splits Double-Header with Georgia Tech -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Cards Win Game 1 but Drop Game 2 in Extras


In a late decision made by the two teams, this weekend's schedule was adjusted to try to account for future weather. Yesterday became a double-header day on such late notice that the ACCNX could not carry the second game. I'm pretty sure all you have to do is push a button to make the stream go live, and we know the infrastructure was there because the first game was aired, but that is the reason that was given for the game being unaired. So it goes. 

In the first game, the Cards got started early. Carmyn Greenwood opened with an infield single. Celene Funke knocked a ball into right field to make it back-to-back hits, but Greenwood was thrown out trying to stretch from first to third. Funke, fortunately, was able to make it up to second to at least keep a runner in scoring position. Unlike much of the rest of the season, Louisville was finally able to take advantage with RISP, as Taylor Roby stepped in and blooped a third straight single into left. Funke turned on the jets to get home and the Cards led 1-0. A fielder's choice and a strikeout ended the inning.


After helping her own cause in the top half, Roby came out in the bottom of the first and went to work from the circle. That first inning saw just one runner reach on a two-out walk. A groundout ended the inning. Through six innings, Roby was extremely effective, allowing a total of five baserunners. The biggest GT threat came in the sixth, when they put a pair of runners on base, but a double play ended the inning. 

In the midst of Roby's great start, Louisville's offense decided after a couple of quiet innings that they didn't want to stop after just one run. In the fourth, the Cards woke back up. Roby led off with a walk and was pinch run for by Jordyn Wolfe. A popup gave the Cards one out but they wouldn't be deterred. Wolfe stole second and then reached third on a wild pitch. Taryn Weddle grounded in the infield and GT tried to make the play at home, but Wolfe was too quick. Weddle reached first on an RBI fielder's choice. Charley Butler stepped into the box and pulled a 1-2 pitch down the left field line and over the fence for a two-run homer. Rebecca Chung flew out, but a pair of two-out singles chased the Georgia Tech starter, bringing in a new pitcher for the turnover of the Louisville order. Carmyn Greenwood welcomed the new pitcher to the field with a two-RBI double, before Funke grounded out to end the inning. Louisville led 6-0.

It was good that the Cards decided to add some insurance. I mentioned that Roby was excellent through six innings because it was the seventh where things got dicey. The Louisville defense opened the bottom of the seventh with an error and Roby followed that with a walk to put a pair of runners on. Concerning, but not too much threat, since Louisville had a six run lead. A popup and a strikeout tamped down concerns even more as the Cards were now one out away from closing the game out. Georgia Tech wasn't ready to quit yet, though. A single loaded the bases and Roby plunked the next batter to score an unearned run. Left fielder Cameron Stanford (not a friendly last name for Cards fans at the moment) then stepped in and crushed a two-out grand slam. All four RBI were unearned thanks to that opening error, but unearned runs count the same on the scoreboard. It was now 6-5. Coach Aprile made the decision to bring on Gabby Holloway to secure the last out, which she did with some effort, inducing a full-count groundout. Cards win 6-5.


In the second game, it was the Yellow Jackets who decided to score a first inning run. Holloway, already warm from her save, got the start in game two. The Cards opened the game by going down in order, but not before giving the GT pitcher some work. Despite just three batters coming to the plate, Louisville forced Blake Neleman to throw 19 first inning pitches. Those 19 ultimately wouldn't make too much difference for Neleman, as she would go on to throw 145 total as she pitched a complete 11-inning game.

Holloway walked the first batter for GT, who would end up being the only baserunner of the inning. Fortunately for GT, they didn't need other baserunners to score her. Louisville was unable to successfully "strike 'em out, throw 'em out" on the next batter as Roper stole second. Roper used her speed to impressively advance to third on a groundout to the left side, and came home on a two-out passed ball. A groundout ended the inning with the Techsters ahead 1-0.

Both pitchers continued their impressive game, each allowing only a couple of base runners as the innings wore on. In the fourth, Louisville took advantage of the fact that one of those baserunners was Celene Funke. Funke opened the inning with a triple, but was very nearly stranded. Fortunately, a pair of popups were split by a groundout, which was productive enough to send the speedy center fielder home. Louisville tied it at one.


I would say neither team would threaten again until the seventh, but that would only be partially true. Louisville didn't threaten in the top half as much as they just acted. Roby led off the inning with a home run to give the Cards a 2-1 lead, but the rest of the order couldn't manage more than a single to end the inning. Still, it was enough to give the Cards a late chance to win.

Unfortunately, Georgia Tech had some more seventh inning luck in store. The Jackets opened with a single, and the next batter hit the ball right back to Holloway. Her throw was errant, allowing runners to stand on first and third with nobody out. Jenn Leonhardt came on to pitch. Another passed ball scored the tying run and put the winning run on second base before Leonhardt picked up three straight outs to end the inning. Free softball time. 

Neleman continued her dominance in the circle, holding Louisville to no more than one baserunner per inning. Two of those were Taylor Roby, both on walks, as the Yellow Jackets did not want to pitch to her anymore. To her credit, Leonhardt was able to match Neleman's effort for a few innings. Unfortunately, the eleventh inning put an end to that. Roper reached on an error to open the inning, but that baserunner wouldn't matter as Stanford fouled off a pair of two-strike pitches before sending the next one over the left field fence. Walk-off winner.


Louisville and Georgia Tech are scheduled to continue the weekend series tonight at 7PM, a first pitch time that was just announced this morning. Tonight's game will be carried on the ACCNX. Louisville would really like to pick up a couple of more wins in this series before the schedule gets tough again over the next couple of weeks.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


We're back again this week with plenty to discuss as always. The condensed seasons have kept us busy this winter and spring, and that hasn't ended just because basketball season wrapped up. We'll talk field hockey, lacrosse, and softball, while also touching on news from basketball and the NCAA Volleyball Tournament draw. We might even have another rant about NCAA inequities as the organization couldn't make it a month without stepping in it once more. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for the live show, or check out the rebroadcast or podcast following the show's ending.

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Softball Falls Short, Tennis Narrowly Wins, and More -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Softball Drops Two to Open ACC Play


With the podded system created for ACC play this season, softball will see a lot of double headers. Fortunately for them, that means they'll get plenty of opportunities to show their abilities in back-to-back games in a way they didn't yesterday. Taking on NC State to open their conference season, Louisville softball fell 8-4 and 4-3 to put them at 0-4 on the season. There is plenty of time to recover, have no doubt, as the Cards are right back in action today, starting with a match against Virginia at 11AM before getting another crack at the Wolfpack at 3PM. Both games should be on the ACC Network Extra. Let's take a look at yesterday's results.


Cards Let Wolfpack Snag Big Lead; 8-4


Acting as the home team, Louisville took to the field first and promptly gave up a two runs in an inning that included an opening walk, a pair of steals, and a double. After getting out of it, Taylor Roby, who started in the circle, was able to reset the game for herself when she hit a two-run homer to score herself and Carmyn Greenwood to tie the game. Both teams saw a walk but stranded a runner in the second, and the NC State opened up the game. They scored two in the third, two in the fourth, and a single run in each of the fifth and sixth innings to build an 8-2 lead. Louisville tried to claw back in the sixth, but could just scratch across two runs, stranding runners on second and third with a strikeout. That saw the inning end at 8-4, which is how the game would end an inning later. The Cards would get Celene Funke and Roby on base in the seventh, but could do nothing to advance them around to score.

7th Inning Rally Falls Short; 4-3


The second game flipped the dugouts and got off to quite a different start. Louisville got a one-out double and a two-out walk but couldn't bring either runner home and so headed to the bottom half with no runs. It looked like they'd start NC State off the same way, retiring the first two batters on a line drive and a strikeout, but a two-out walk was followed by a wild pitch to put a runner on second. A single scored her, and a two-out homer gave NC State a 3-0 lead leaving the first. After NC State's two-out fireworks, neither team threatened much until the bottom of the fifth when NC State loaded the bases with two outs. A ground-out ended the inning. 

In the top of the sixth, Louisville's offense returned when Taylor Roby hit her second home run of the day and of the season. That made it 3-1 and a bit more in reach, but the Wolfpack returned the favor with a lead-off home run of their own in the bottom half. The next batter reached on an error, but a caught-stealing was followed by a pop-out and a strikeout to end the inning. Louisville did their best to extend the game in the seventh, albeit with some help from NC State. Payton Hudson walked to open the inning but was followed by two quick outs. NC State had a chance to end the game on a grounder by Carmyn Greenwood, but an error put runners on first and second. Roby singled them both in to make it 4-3. Cassady Greenwood also reached on an error to put runners on first and second (odd coincidence), but Charley Butler's fly to right didn't have the juice or placement to get to the ground or out of the fence. A catch ended the game.

Tennis Opens Conference Play with Victory


Louisville hosted Syracuse yesterday for their first ACC match of the year. This has been a place in the past few years where things have fallen apart for the Cards, but a strong showing early could boost their morale going forward. Fortunately for Louisville, their doubles play may be the spark they need for the remainder of the year. They opened yesterday's match by winning the doubles point, clinching that portion of the match for the sixth straight time. They've played six matches. The Cards won the doubles point pretty strongly as well, finishing 6-1 and 6-2, while leading 5-4 in the unfinished match.


On the singles side, things got a bit more interesting. The Cards jumped out to a quick 3-0 lead with wins in the first two singles matches to finish. Then, Syracuse won the next three matches, all coming back from a 1-0 set deficit to win in three sets. At 3-3, it came down to Rhea Verma, who narrowly lost her first set on a tiebreaker. She went on to win 6-1, 6-2 to give Louisville the fourth point they needed and a victory in conference play. That moves the Cards to 4-2 overall, and they'll be back in action tomorrow at 11AM against Boston College.

More Roundup


The swimming team claimed eight top-8 finishes and a bronze medal in the 400 medley relay to move into third place in the team standings. At 683.5 points, they're 105 points clear of fourth-place VT but sit 196 points behind NC State in second. Virginia is in their own class with 1047 points. The Cards will have a chance to hold onto third and try to chase down the Wolfpack as the final day of competition begins with prelims today at 11AM. The finals are schedule for 7PM and the entire event will be streamed on the ACC Network Extra.


Volleyball will have to wait another week to get their spring season started as their match with Lipscomb has been canceled. The ASUN, in an effort to get more conference games played, shifted their schedules around, landing a conference matchup on this weekend for the Bison. Louisville's match was seen as lower priority, so they got the boot. The Cards will now start the spring season next week against Notre Dame as they move straight into conference play.


Cardinal Couple Radio Hour


Well we were all wrong when we spent last week lamenting what we suspected to be the end of Louisville women's basketball's regular season due to Covid-19. We'll endeavor to be more correct this week on the Cardinal Couple Radio Hour as we recap the win over Pittsburgh as well as all of the other news and events in Louisville women's athletics this week. Tune in to the Cardinal Couple YouTube Channel at 11AM for our live show or check out the replay or podcast following the recording. 

Until next time, Go Cards!
-CH-

Friday, June 12, 2020

Celene Funke Named To 2020 Academic All-America Softball First Team -- FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE


FUNKE EARNS THIRD STRAIGHT CoSIDA AWARD

Another triple for Louisville Softball student-athlete Celene Funke.


This one doesn't come from her powerful bat in the cozy confines of Ulmer Stadium, though. She's been named to the 2020 Academic All-America Softball Team selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America. Celene becomes the program's first three-time Academic All-American selection. 

The honor requires a student-athlete must be a varsity starter or key reserve, maintain a cumulative G.P.A. of 3.30 (on a scale of 4.0) and have reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at his/her current school. 

Funke, a graduate student working on her MBA in finance, earned her bachelor's degree in finance in May 2019 with a cumulative 4.0 G.P.A . It's the third CoSIDA All-America Award for the Cardinal center-fielder....2018 and 2019 the previous years of recognition. Being the program's first three-time Academic All-America selection, Funke takes on an additional challenge this year -- having been selected to be President of the Student Athlete Advisory Council. 

We suggest they cue up "Hail To The Chief" on the Ulmer Stadium sound-system for her walk-up music when Cardinal Softball goes back to games in February of 2021. 

Hailing from Carmel, IN, Funke has been a three-year starter for the Cards. She was a Senior CLASS Award candidate in 2020. She was leading the Cards in stolen bases in the 2020 season (11 for 13 ) when her senior season came to a halt after 23 games, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Funke led the nation in triples in 2019 with 13. That number is a school record and she stands third on the Louisville career list for triples with 18. She's also third on the all-time stolen base list with 62. 

The 2020-21 Student Athlete Advisory Council President will return to the field for UofL for another season, electing to use a fifth year of eligibility granted by the NCAA because of the pandemic. 


It's hard to imagine center field at Ulmer without the presence of "33" prowling the premises. She's been a constant delight and joy to interview as a Cardinal student-athlete and a guiding force on Holly Aprile's squad.  

We here at Cardinal Couple give her a "triple" hats-off in congratulations and admiration for the academic and athletic achievements she's earned at Louisville. In previous chats with her, we've learned she's quite interested in being an entrepreneur in the business world once her time at Louisville is completed. 

Being a promoter in the entertainment or business world should be another base-circling, stellar progression for the affable, energetic and engaging Funke. We can't wait for her final season of achievements and her endeavors after her career at Louisville. We're confident "it'll be a hit" for "Funk" and she'll "triple" any enterprises success and profits. 


paulie
xxxxx 



Friday, May 15, 2020

Teleconference with Softball's Holly Aprile, Caitlin Ferguson and Celene Funke -- FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE


SOFTBALL SPEAKS

FUNKE
A great opportunity to take part in a teleconference Thursday with Louisville head softball coach Holly Aprile and senior student-athletes Caitlin Ferguson and Celene Funke. 

The nearly 30 minute teleconference provided a lot of information on a wide variety of subjects. We heard Holly reveal her thoughts about both Funke and Ferg, her thoughts on the 2021 squad and lineup adjustments and her analysis of the shortened 2020 season.  

Holly also discussed the task behind replacing Ferguson at short-stop and a possible look at all the infield positions for rearrangement to best suit the needs of the team.  


FERG
From the two student-athletes, we heard then discuss the decisioning behind whether to stay for the additional granted year or to go and the reasoning behind the choices. Caitlin discussed why she is not using the additional season (she's going on to pursue pharmaceutical studies) and Celene outlined her reasons to come back for another year.

A great question and answer session yesterday and some very thoughtful and meaningful words from all three participants. 

You can watch the teleconference in its entirety at the link below:  

LINK:  HOLLY, CAITLIN AND CELENE


HOLLY
We wish Caitlin the best in her further pursuit of academics and a eventual career.

For Celene, the best season ever in her final year and success in her role as President of The Student Athletic Advisory Committee in 2020-21. 

We hope Holly has her best season ever at Louisville (or anywhere!) 


Thanks to the UofL S.I.D.'s for organizing the teleconference!  

Have a fantastic Friday! 


paulie
xxxxx

Thursday, May 14, 2020

Funke Returns -- Duvall to NKU -- THURSDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Funke Returns

Celene Funke and UofL officially announced that the center fielder would return for a fifth season.  The Carmel, Ind., product saw her senior season cut short to due the outbreak of COVID-19, so she qualified for an extra year.

We have known for some time that Funke was planning to return for another year, but we were waiting on the process of Funke submitting the request to UofL and then the NCAA for clearance of that extra season.

Funke is scheduled to be on a teleconference today with fellow graduated senior Caitlin Ferguson and Louisville Softball head coach Holly Aprile today. Paulie will have the recap tomorrow here at CARDINAL COUPLE



On the decision to return, Funke states:

"I am excited that I will be returning for a fifth year! I would like to thank Coach Holly Aprile, Vince Tyra, the ACC, the NCAA and all other support staff that have made this fifth year possible," Funke released in a virtual letter.  "I am extremely blessed to have the opportunity to play in front of CardNation for one more year."

I think I speak for all of the Cardinal Couple crew when I say that we are thrilled to see her return for one more year!



Duvall Transferring to NKU


Lindsey Duvall announced last night on Instagram (@little_duv5) that she will be continuing her basketball career at Northern Kentucky University.  She announced recently her plans to leave Louisville to further her skills at another university, which Coach Jeff Walz supported the entire way. She later confirmed the transfer to the Norse in a Twitter exchange with Paulie.

"Excited for the next step but thankful for the ones that led me here! #NorseUp," Duvall said.

We are sad to see the Bullitt East product and 2017 Miss Kentucky Basketball leave us, but also wish her the best in her final two years of eligibility. Duvall averaged 23 minutes a game last year for the Cards and 5.2 points per game.

Norse head coach Camryn Whitaker has not released an official statement yet.


SCHEDULING AND A QUESTION FOR YOU


2020-2021 UofL WBB opponents have not been released, but Walz loves to face in-state teams, including four last season, so there is a good chance we may still see Duvall play in person before her career ends.

Most collegiate programs are starting to look at scheduling changes and playing schools in a closer proximity to each other, because of travelling concerns created by the CoronaVirus and also because of decreased revenues.

Pop Quiz: Can you name the four in-state teams UofL played last season?  Two of them were at home and two of them were on the road.

Remember to stay safe!  Gloves and masks can be your ally when used properly.

Happy Thursday and Go Cards!

Jared

Friday, May 1, 2020

The Louies -- FH Announces Signees -- FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

The Louies


Last night, Louisville Athletics held their annual Louie Awards.  Vince Tyra kicked off the night and was preceded by Sean Moth.  Then, Celene Funke (Cards Softball), Jazmine Jones (Cards WBB) and "Fresh" Kimble (Cards MBB) took over.

Tyra provided us with some positive updates.

 UofL had the highest GPA in the ACC.  Of course, with how often we talk about academic accomplishments, this comes as no surprise, but still a good reason to be proud of our student-athletes.  Also, UofL was on pace for the highest finish in school history in the College Cup standings.

Here is a list of the awards and their recipients:

Female Freshman of the Year: Aiko Jones, volleyball

Male Freshman of the Year: Alex Binelas, baseball

Male Sophomore of the Year: Matthias Schmid, golf

Female Sophomore of the Year: Makenli Forrest, track and field

Record Breaking Performance: Nicolas Albiero, swimming and diving

Breakthrough Athlete: Tutu Atwell, football

Comeback Athlete of the Year: Andrej Barna, swimming and diving

CardsCare Community Service Team: Lacrosse (women) / Baseball (men)

CardsCare Community Service Individual: McKenzie Kelley, ladybirds

Humble and Hungry: Sarah Hernandez, soccer

Pep Band Member of the Year: Allison Doimer

Cheerleader of the Year: Kristen Wells

Ladybird of the Year: Sarah Parker

Men's Cardinal Cup: Baseball

Women's Cardinal Cup: Lacrosse

Male Junior of the Year: Jordan Nwora, basketball

Female Junior of the Year: Mercedes "Mechi" Pastor, field hockey

Female Senior of the Year: Jazmine Jones, basketball

Male Senior of the Year: Dwayne Sutton, basketball

Male Leadership Award: Cody Cochran, soccer

Female Leadership Award: Meghan Nay, golf

Moment of the Year: Volleyball Upsets #2 Texas to Advance to Elite Eight

Inspiration Award: Football

Female Adidas High Performance Athlete of the Year: Dana Evans, basketball

Male Adidas High Performance Athlete of the Year: Reid Detmers, baseball

L1C4 Louie Award: Blanton Creque, football

A huge round of "well done" and congratulations to these recipients. And, to all the hard-working student athletes at UofL, for setting the bar, achieving it and making a difference.


Field Hockey Announces Three Signees


A bright spot to the week was field hockey announcing three new players to join the Cards for the 2021 season.  All three join us from across the Atlantic Ocean.

Paulina Mayer joins the Cards from Manheim, Germany.

Charlie Van Oirschot hails from Haarlem, The Netherlands.

Aimee Plumb, comes to Louisville from Canterbury, England.

Cardinal Couple will reach out to see if we can hear from Justine Sowry in the next few days regarding the three commits.

Field Hockey posted a 16-6 record in 2019 and made it to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.


Maybe, maybe not.

On a side note, Breanna Stewart and Sabrina Ionescu had a discussion on who would have won the NCAA Championship this year.  Both agreed it would have been Oregon.  My thoughts?  Not so much.

More like a team that wears Red and Black.

Let's not forget that UofL WBB defeated Oregon, on a neutral court, 72-62 to win the Paradise Jam in the Virgin Islands. Louisville won the regular season ACC Title and Kylee Shook went for 18 points and 15 rebounds against the Ducks. Dana Evans delivered two huge, three-point daggers against the Oregon defense and had 17 points and six assists.

What's your thoughts?



Welcome to May

It is the first day of May, in case social quarantining has you a bit nebulous and confused as to the who, what, where, when and why's of daily life.

A Friday, and a huge day here in the city of Louisville, as the Kentucky Oaks would have been run at Churchill Downs. The first Friday in May is the second most attended day of the year at Churchill Downs...in normal times...and features the best three-year-old fillies in the world "running for the lilies".

It's also Breast Cancer Survivor Day and those brave individuals/survivors of this terrible disease would normally be honored at the track with a walk down the stretch -- as a predominately pink-dress crowd gives them some love and encouragement as they parade in front of the gtandstands and clubhouse. 

Happy Friday, Happy Original Oaks Day, stay safe, and Go Cards!

Jared

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.