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 Nicole Perroni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicole Perroni. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Perroni headed to Colgate -- -- WEDNESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

NICOLE PERRONI NAMED COLGATE WOMEN'S LACROSSE ASSISTANT COACH


If we asked you where Colgate University was located, about half of our readership would proudly point across the river and tell us Southern Indiana , where the big Colgate-Palmolive clock is that faces Louisville. Nice try, but the school is located in Hamilton, NY...about a 100 miles away from Rohester, NY. Saratoga Race Track and 160 miles away from Newark, NJ. 

The small (pop. 3500) liberal arts university in Hamilton is Colgate...a member of the Patriot League and the newest home for Cardinals LAX great Nicole Perroni. "Ol 88" scored 142 goals in 71 games in her four years playing for the Cards.It's her first coaching gig and it'll be kinda strange not to see Nicole running the turf down on Floyd Street this spring. . 


She was the first staff hireand will serve as an assistant for new Colgate head coach Alyssa Guido. Guid 
said this about the hire of Perroni:

"I'm extremely excited to have Nicole on the staff. Adding her knowlege from her DI days and international experience will add a unique dynamic to the players and the staff." 


Colgate looks to improve over their 2024 season, where they went 3-14 overall and finshed in a four way tie for fifth place in the 10 team Patriot League conference. 

At Louisville her senior year, Perroni was named to the All-ACC squad, She also received second team All-American honors,and IWLCA  All-region first team accolades. 

We contacted, Louisville head LAX coach Scott Teeter about the hire by Colgate...His comments:.."She will do fantastic. I'm very proud of her. Colgate got a good one." . 


The Raider is Colgate's mascot

We wish her the best of luck at "the toothpaste school" and know she'll bring a lot of smiles to Colgate Lax fans. 

paulie

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Perroni Awarded; Rowing at ACCs -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Nicole Perroni an All-American (Again)


After having been named as an Honorable Mention All-American by USA Lacrosse and selected to the First Team IWLCA West/Midwest Region, Nicole Perroni has picked up another honor for her outstanding season. Perroni was second in the ACC in caused turnovers per game (11th nationally) and led the league in ground balls and free position goals per game. Those numbers helped propel her to an Honorable Mention from Inside Lacrosse on their All-America list. The news was announced Thursday.

In addition to those strong stats league wide, Perroni scored 45 goals and had 10 assists this season. She scored a point in 55 straight games and a goal in 54 straight. Both of those look to stand as program records for quite a while. Perroni has been a keystone for the team since Scott Teeter took over, and her time ends with her ranked in the top-ten in program history in draw controls (fourth), turnovers caused (tied for first), goals, points, and ground balls. Louisville will miss the First Team All-ACC midfielder greatly, but we wish her the best going forward. 

Paulie and Jared will catch up with Nicole for an interview today on campus and Jeff will run the article in the Sunday edition of Cardinal Couple.

Cards Send a Boat to Grand Finals


Photo from @LouisvilleROW on X
Louisville rowing is currently competing in the ACC Championships in Raleigh, North Carolina. The program continues to make incremental headway into success in the league. They saw another step toward that yesterday with the qualification of the second varsity eight boat for today's grand final event. The events of the day will wrap up early, with the last race in which the Cards will participate (the V4 petite final) starting at 9:20 AM. Best of luck to the team as they work to earn a strong finish in the ACC Championships. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We should have a full house on board for this foggy morning's podcast episode. With the summer slump nearly in full effect, we don't have much to talk about in the way of results, but we'll carry the joy and excitement of Louisville women's athletics nonetheless. 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
Spotify: Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
Google Podcasts: Link
Overcast (free account required): Link
Pocket Casts (free account and app required): Link
RadioPublic: Link






Until next time, Go Cards!

Case

Friday, April 19, 2024

Lacrosse Falls to Irish -- Softball Visits North Carolina -- FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

The famous Daryl Foust at lacrosse

Happy Friday, Cards fans! Daryl took over yesterday so Jared here stepping in today.


Kokoro Nakazawa Scores 100th Career Goal in Loss to Notre Dame

Kokoro Nakazawa scored her 100th career goal and Nicole Perroni extended her scoring streak to 53 straight games, but Louisville lacrosse fell to #3 Notre Dame 23-10.

Eight Cardinals scored in the game with Nakazawa and Maggie McMahon leading the way with two apiece. Reese Whiteman scored her first career goal in the closing seconds of the match.

Notre Dame raced out to a 2-0 lead but the Cards answered with three straight. A 5-1 run give the Irish a 7-4 lead and the teams would trade goals up to halftime with Notre Dame holding a 9-6 edge.

Louisville scored the first two goals of the second half but Notre Dame then went on a 9-0 run. The Cards would scored to bring their deficit back down to single digits at 18-9 but Notre Dame scored five of the final six goals of the match. A majority of the fourth quarter was placed with a running clock.

A B-52 bomber flies over campus in preparation for Thunder Over Louisville

Louisville finishes the regular season 7-10 and has earned the 9-seed in the ACC Tournament. They will visit 8-seed Virginia Tech on Sunday.

There is some question on if players such as Kokoro Nakazawa, Kylea Dobson, and Olivia Toll will utiizie their COVID-19 eligibility and come back or not.


Softball Travels to North Carolina

In desperate need for as many wins as they can get, Louisville softball hits the road for a three-game series against North Carolina. The Cards enter the weekend 24-19 and 5-10 in the ACC. North Carolina is 28-14 and 8-10 in the ACC.

The Tar Heels have run-ruled 10 opponents this year. They do not have any ranked wins due to being swept by both Clemson and Duke. 

UNC hits .357 as a team. They have recorded 393 hits with 38 home runs. North Carolina has outscored opponents 257-134, nearly doubling up opponents.

Alex Coleman is one of four North Carolina players, batting .457. She also has a team-high 65 hits. Isabella Emerling has been provided the power for the Tar Heels, with 13 home runs and 51 rbis.

All three games are slated for ACCNX with tonight's game beginning at 5:00pm.


Women's Basketball Carousel

In the span of about one hour yesterday during rhe middle of lacrosse, women's basketball news around the country was going wild. Here's all that happened in that period:

-Mackenly Randolph officially signed with Louisville. Randolph is the fifth freshman player to physically sign. She was on campus yesterday.

-Eylia Love entered her name in the transfer portal and will be leaving Louisville.

-Rumors were circulating that Maddie Scherr, who formerly played at Oregon and Kentucky, announced she is transferring to TCU.

-Reports broke that former Louisville and LSU player Hailey Van Lith will be transferring to TCU.

-Former Fresno State and Miami player Haley Cavinder announced she will not play at TCU this coming season, as originally planned, and will now play her final year of eligibility at Miami.

-Hanna Cavinder was talked out of retirement by her sister mentioned above and will player her final season at Miami.


Happy Friday and Go Cards!

Jared

Saturday, April 13, 2024

Cards Experience Tough Road Friday -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Softball Shut Out in Series Opener 


Louisville softball headed to Atlanta to take on Georgia Tech this weekend and got off to a rocky start. While the Yellow Jackets are decently ahead of the Cards in the ACC standings, their overall records are very similar. On paper, it should be a relatively even series. GT didn't care much about paper yesterday, as they stung early and often against the Cards en route to an 8-0 five-inning run rule. All eight runs for GT came in the first three innings, with seven coming in the second and third. 

Alyssa Zabala started in the circle for Louisville, and it was not her day. Zabala walked the first two batters, induced a pop-up, then plunked the clean-up hitter to load the bases. A pair of ground outs ended the inning but a run came home to score. Another walk started the second and a sac bunt moved the runner into scoring position. Back-to-back singles scored a run and then a home run scored three more. A fourth (sixth, in a way) straight hit earned Zabala the hook and Brooke Gray came on to pitch. Gray hit the first batter she faced, but picked up another two outs to get out of the side. 

Louisville got their first runner on base in the third with a Maddi Grant double to open the inning, but two runners were left on base after Daisy Hess took a 2-out walk and Riley Frizell struck out. Gray returned to the circle and got GT's first batter of the inning out for the first time in the game. Unfortunately, a pair of singles were followed by the Yellow Jackets' second three-run homer of the game to set the score at 8-0. Two more quick outs ended the inning but the rout was on. 

Louisville's fourth saw them put two in scoring position via walk, HBP, and fielder's choice, but a flyout had split the runners and the Cards couldn't initiate a two-out rally. After Gray got out of the fourth with just one single, Louisville was down to their final three outs, needing at least one run to extend the game. Katie Thatcher came on to pinch hit for Chelsea Mack and was walked on four pitches. A sac bunt (down 8-0, really?) moved Mack (who took the base back from Thatcher) to second, but Louisville couldn't bring her around to score. 

There isn't much else to say about this one. Cards need to rip off the rearview and face today's game with a clean slate. They'll be back in action today at 2PM before wrapping up the series tomorrow at noon. Both games will be available on ACC Network Extra. 

Lacrosse Falls in Tight Road Finale


Scott Teeter's squad was in Durham yesterday for their final regular season road match of the year. The Cards took on Duke and held a slim 7-6 lead heading into halftime. Louisville was unable to hold onto that lead, unfortunately, as a three goal deficit in the third quarter gave Duke the gap they needed. The Cards tied the Blue Devils 10-all in quarters 1, 2, and 4, but lost the third 4-1, setting the final margin at 14-11. 

Kokoro Nakazawa was the leader for the Cards, tallying five of their 11 goals. She scored the first two goals of the game before Nicole Perroni gave Louisville a 3-0 lead with eight minutes remaining in the first quarter. Coincidentally, Louisville's goal scoring in the game was nearly palindromic. Maggie McMahon scored the fourth goal for the Cards, and their final four goals went McMahon, Perroni, and Kokoro x2. The three central goals were scored by Izzy Seikel, Kokoro, and Negai Nakazawa. 

Maddie McCorkle matched Kokoro with five goals for Duke. The Cards were on the back food the whole game, and Sara Addeche did well to keep the game as close as it was. Duke outshot Louisville 39-26 and won the shots on goal battle 25-17. I'll save you the math: Addeche finished with 11 saves. Part of the Cards' woes was the fact that they were dominated on draw controls. Duke led that category 21-8 and took all eight DCs in the second quarter. Louisville won 5/7 in the first quarter before winning just three for the remainder of the game. If you are on defense immediately, you're going to be under pressure a lot. 

Duke was ranked #25 in the country coming into the game, so a road matchup was always going to be tough. The win moves them to 10-6 (4-4) while Louisville is now 7-9 (2-6). All 10 teams make the ACC tournament, and Louisville is currently the nine seed. The Cards hold the tiebreaker over Clemson, but lost to VT, so would need the Hokies to lose their last two games to jump them. The best the Cards can do is get to 7th with a victory over Notre Dame in the season finale. That last game will be Thursday at 12pm in Louisville Lacrosse Stadium. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We'll have four on board for this week's show, with Daryl occupied by her obligations with the Louisville Bats. We'll still have an exciting show lined up, with joy and excitement to cover despite the losses. 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
Spotify: Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
Google Podcasts: Link
Overcast (free account required): Link
Pocket Casts (free account and app required): Link
RadioPublic: Link






Until next time, Go Cards!

Case

Saturday, February 17, 2024

Lax Completes Comeback; Softball Splits Friday -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Big Second Half Leads Cards to 14-9 Win


Louisville lacrosse welcomed Marquette into the LLS for the Cards' first home game of the season. Sitting at 0-2 after their road trip to Colorado, Louisville needed a shot in the arm to get their season on track. Despite trailing 5-4 after a low scoring first half, the Cards turned the offense up to 11 in the second to win the half 10-4 and take the game 14-9. 

With a final total score of 23, you might expect early scoring, but that wasn't the case yesterday. Louisville scored the first goal of the game with just five minutes remaining in the first quarter. Negai Nakazawa was the one to get things started, scoring her fourth goal of the season off an assist by Ava Peers. The Cards' lead held for about four minutes before Marquette leveled the game on a power play goal. Coincidentally, it was Negai that earned the yellow card to give the Eagles the advantage. 

That penalty was Louisville's only in the first half. They earned five in the second half, but ultimately were the less penalized team in the game by a wide margin. Marquette earned 11 cards, leading to three powerplay goals for Louisville. Louisville's offense was so in tune in the second half that the Cards actually scored a goal while on the penalty kill as well. 

Marquette scored the first two goals of the second quarter to put Louisville in a hole, but goals by Nicole Perroni and Kokoro Nakazawa tied the game with 8:37 remaining in the half. Two more goals in a row by the Eagles gave Louisville another deficit to overcome, but they were able to only claw back one on a power play to set the halftime score of 5-4. Perroni scored her second unassisted goal of the game with sixteen seconds remaining for that one. 

After the half, the game seemed as though it would go the same way as the first half. It took five minutes for either team to find the back of the net, and it was Marquette striking first in the second half to double their advantage. Kokoro scored a minute later to bring the deficit back down to one (unassisted) but Marquette responded once more. At that point, Louisville grew a bit tired of the back and forth game. The Cards scored the final three goals of the third quarter to take the lead for the first time since the opening goal, with Negai, Kokoro, and Perroni continuing their unassisted runs. The third quarter ended with Louisville taking an 8-7 lead.

The Cards weren't done. Their run continued with the first four goals of the final quarter. Perroni and Negai scored a couple more unassisted goals before Kokoro assisted a Kylea Dobson goal with eight minutes to go. Dobson's was the first goal of the game for Louisville that was not scored by Nicole Perroni or a Nakazawa sister. Izzy Seikel scored the last goal of the Cards' seven goal run with 5:44 remaining (assisted by Tiffany Natoli) to put Louisville ahead 12-7. It was mostly academic at that point. Marquette finally broke the Louisville run by scoring with five minutes left, and they scored the last goal of the game with 52 seconds remaining. Even though those two goals wouldn't have threatened Louisville's lead, the Cards decided to add a bit of insurance with a pair of power play goals to push their score to 14. Dobson and Natoli each scored and assisted the other on those two goals.

Louisville finished the game with five players scoring at least three points. Three players had hat tricks (the Nakazawa sisters and Nicole Perroni) and Perroni finished with four goals. She was 3/4 on free position shots and put all seven of her shots on frame. Dobson finished with two goals and an assist, while Natoli inverted those stats. Perroni's free position shots were critical in the game, as Louisville was 5/10 on their opportunities and Marquette was 0/5. The other stats were largely level. Each team finished with 12 draw controls, Louisville led in turnovers (11-15) and clears (11-10), and Marquette led in ground balls (15-12) and shots on goal (27-24).

Now is a good time to mention Sara Addeche. Addeche talked about how important this full year as the established goalie would be, and she's showing that she deserves the spot. She finished with 18 saves and nine goals against. Being positive in that category is quite good. Doubling up that category is incredibly impressive. Her counterpart for Marquette finished with 10 saves and 14 goals against, showing how important the goalkeeping can be even if the other team can put up more shots. Louisville's offense also did a good job of keeping the ball on the Marquette side of the field (the penalty situation helped), as the Cards took 37 total shots compared to just 35 for Marquette. While Louisville's goal percentage on shots on goal was good, it would be nice to see more of their shots be on frame. An accuracy of 65% isn't bad, but it could be better.

The Cards are back on the road today, as they'll take on Lindenwood tomorrow. Louisville defeated the Lions 14-7 almost exactly a year ago in the first ever meeting of the two programs. Lindenwood went on to finish the year 8-10 last season, with their final game being a 17-11 loss to Coastal Carolina in the ASUN tournament. The Lions are off to a hot start this season, with victories over San Diego State (20-6) and Radford (18-5). The Cards will look to display more offense than the Lions' previous opponents, and Addeche will likely be called on quite a bit again. Tomorrow's game is at 1PM and is available on ESPN+.


Softball Wins Early; Suffers First Loss Late


Louisville softball opened the Joan Joyce Classic on Thursday evening with a win over the hosting FAU Owls. They followed that win up with a mercy rule victory in six innings over Seton Hall yesterday morning to remain undefeated on the season at 8-0. Unfortunately, the loss column picked up a tick mark in their rematch against FAU last night, as the Cards took a 3-6 loss into the last day of the invitational today.

Cards Beat Seton Hall 12-4


Bailey Richardson reached on a two-out single for Louisville in the first inning and advanced to third when Riley Frizell singled to follow her. Gabby Holloway, batting fifth in the lineup and trying to do her best Taylor Roby impression, unfortunately struck out to end the inning. Sam Booe took the circle in this one and began her efficient (but short) outing. Two groundouts and a strikeout moved things along quickly. 

After a groundout opened the second for the Cards, the offense began to get to work. Vanessa Miller walked and came around to score on an Ally Alexander double down the line. Chelsea Mack singled to bring Alexander home, and Kylie Goff (leading off in the first game) moved Mack up 60 feet on a ground ball. Daisy Hess hit a ball deep into the shortstop's zone, and was credited with a single. She and Mack both got 60 more feet when the shortstop subsequently botched the late throw to first and Louisville's lead moved to 3-0. Another groundout (neither team got the ball off the grass much early) ended the Cards' second. Booe opened the second with another strikeout before a pair of singles gave the Pirates a runner in scoring position. You guessed it, though: back-to-back groundouts ended the inning.

The third saw Louisville go three-up, three-down in the top half and Jac Hasty replace Kylie Goff behind the plate. Seton Hall managed to keep the ball off the ground in the bottom half, with the exception of their only hit being a single through the middle of the infield. Unfortunately for them, their other batters hit liners to second and first and then flew out to end the inning. The fourth was another exciting inning, with six batters stepping to the plate, and six batters heading back to the dugout. Booe picked up her third and fourth strikeouts in the bottom half of the inning.

With Hasty replacing Goff, she stepped up to the plate in the leadoff spot of the fifth. She then walked back to the dugout with her bat on her shoulder, striking out looking. Hess followed her with a strikeout swinging, but Louisville's offense rallied with two outs. Richardson walked and an error on a Frizell grounder put runners at first and second. Mia Forsythe replaced Frizell on the basepaths and Maddi Grant replaced Holloway at the plate. Only one of those substitutions turned out to be necessary, as Grant smoked a triple to score both runners and move the Louisville lead to 5-0.

Lindsey Mullen replaced Sam Booe in the circle, which turned out to be the wrong call. Seton Hall opened with a double and a single to score their first run. The description is a bit odd, with an error being charged to Hasty and the run scoring on the throw from left field. The hitter also advanced to third on the throw so whatever happened was rather unfortunate. A pop-up gave Mullen her first out, but a single scored a second run, and a double scored a third. Booe and Goff returned as the battery, but the rest threw Booe off, as a wild pitch advanced the runner and a single scored the fourth run for Seton Hall. The fourth run was still charged to Mullen giving her four runs (three earned) in one-third inning pitched. Booe cleaned up the inning to finish her day with 4.2 innings and no runs while giving up four hits and striking out four. She finished with the win, as Louisville still led 5-4.

Louisville's offense responded in a big way to open the sixth. Miller was hit by a pitch to open the inning and stole second. Alexander walked to backfill the base and Madison "Pickle" Winkler had a pinch-hit bunt single to load the bases. Kylie Goff grounded into what should have been an out, but instead reached on a fielder's choice that was too slow by Seton Hall. The Pirates got no outs and Miller came home to score. Daisy Hess singled through the middle, scoring two runs and advancing to second when the centerfielder booted it. Seton Hall made a pitching change, and the Richardson walked on the green pitcher. A sac fly by Frizell gave the Cards a 9-4 lead and Richardson stole second to keep two runners in scoring position. Grant struck out to give Louisville a pair of outs, but Paige Geraghty singled to score a pair. Vanessa Miller, back up after the Cards batted around, singled to score Geraghty and Alexander kept the party going with another single. Winkler tried to score one more for the Cards but her liner was right to the pitcher. Louisville headed to the bottom half with a 12-4 lead, which would be the final. 

Izzy Harrison took over in the circle and closed out the game. A fly out opened the inning, but a walk and single made things interesting. With eight runs in hand, there wasn't much danger. A fielder's choice put the Cards in position to win it with one more out, and Harrison took care of business with a strikeout. 

FAU Gets Revenge 6-3


Following the first game, Louisville was the away team in the evening matchup as well. They got to work early on offense with a Goff single and a Hess double to take a 1-0 lead. Hess was picked off at second, which was unfortunate, since Frizell homered to give Louisville a 2-0 advantage. The third run would have proved to have been useful. A flyout and a single followed, but a batter's interference call ended the inning. Alyssa Zabala started for Louisville and got off to a bumpy start. A bunt single opened the inning and a two-run homer tied the score. Two more fly balls were fortunately caught for outs, and Zabala settled in to close the inning with a strikeout. 

Louisville tried to get back up to speed offensively in the second with two singles split by an error to load the bases with nobody out. Goff reached first, but it came at the expense of an out at home. Hess was able to score one on a single, but a grounder ended the side with Louisville holding a 3-2 lead. Zabala seemed to be back in the swing of things with a groundout and lineout split by a single to open the inning. Unfortunately, a triple tied the game and a walk ended Zabala's day. Brooke Gray took over in the circle, but for the second time yesterday, a cold pitcher gave up a wild pitch. Gray's gave up Zabala's fourth run of the game, and she finished the at bat with a walk. Gray collected herself and got a flyout to end the inning. FAU led 4-3, and Louisville would not recover. 

The next two innings saw a combined three runners reach base. Louisville picked up a single and FAU earned a walk and single. Technically FAU singled twice in that time, but the runner was thrown out after the single to end the third inning. Louisville opened the fifth with a single and had two runners on after a walk, but a flyout and a groundout ended their threat. Gray was relieved by Sam Booe in the bottom of the fifth, but opened with an HBP. She was able to clean it up, weathering a later single to get out of the inning with no runs.

Louisville put a runner on to open the sixth and tried small ball to tie the game. Unfortunately, a sac bunt with one out gives you a runner on second with two outs. A pop out ended the inning. FAU started the sixth with a single and Booe picked up two quick outs, with the runner advancing to second. Holly Aprile tried to ensure the out to maintain the one-run deficit by bringing in Gabby Holloway to pitch, but it didn't quite turn out. A single scored the runner from second and a walk and single scored another. Down 6-3 with one inning to go, Louisville had the top of the order up, but a strikeout and groundout opened the inning. Richardson tried to start a two-out rally with a single but a popup ended the game. 

Louisville was back in action early this morning, taking an 8-0 win over Maine in a 9am start. They're taking on Michigan in a second morning matchup immediately after to close the invitational. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We'll have four on line for this week's show, as Daryl fights off a late-winter bug. We'll talk the up(?) and down week for Louisville women's basketball and the wins for the spring sports.  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
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

Friday, April 21, 2023

WBB Adds Nina Rickards -- Lax Falls to Notre Dame -- Tennis Falls to FSU -- Softball on the Road -- FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Our musical chairs of taking over articles continues. While Paulie was originally covering for Daryl, Paulie ended up taking the day off. Daryl was working her duties at Louisville Slugger Field as the Bats recorded a rare win. Katy and I made our way downtown for the game but did not see Daryl.

Nina Rickards Commits to Louisville


Louisville women's basketball picked up another player in the transfer portal yesterday. Nina Rickards joins the Cards after four years at Florida, per her Twitter.

The 5-9 guard from Queens, N.Y. started nearly every game in her career with the Gators. Last season, Rickards averaged 12.1 points per game while shooting 40% from the floor. While not known for her three-point shooting, Rickards was reliable from the free throw line, knocking down nearly 76% of her attempts.

Jeff Walz and Co. are up to nine confirmed players for the 2023-2024 season with hopes to add a couple more before the season starts up.

Lacrosse Concludes Regular Season with Loss at Notre Dame


Louisville lacrosse wrapped up the regular season with a 15-9 loss at #7 Notre Dame. The Cards finished the season 5-11 with a 2-7 ACC record.

Notre Dame started strong, claiming the opening quarter 8-0 including a goal 14 seconds into the game.

The Cards did get on the board early into the second quarter before the Irish extended their lead to 10-1. Louisville would close out the quarter on a 3-0 run to go into the half 10-4.

Louisville closed their deficit to 12-9 midway through the fourth quarter before Notre Dame scored the final three goals of the match. Nicole Perroni was able to snag one of Louisville’s nine goals, setting a program record with a goal scored in 35 consecutive games.

The ACC Tournament begins Sunday with Louisville hosting Duke at 2:00 p.m.

Tennis Falls to Florida State in ACC Tournament


After an upset over Syracuse to close out the regular season and an upset victory over Boston College, Louisville women's tennis fell to Florida State in the second round of the ACC Tournament.

The Seminoles started off taking the doubles point. They then won on courts two, four, and six to claim the victory. Courts one, three, and five remained unfinished after it became impossible for Louisville to win the match.

Louisville finishes the 2022-2023 season with a 10-15 record. Eight of the 10 members of the roster completed their senior season so Coach Mark Beckham will have some work to do on the recruiting trail and in the transfer portal.

Softball Travels to Virginia


Fresh off a win at Western Kentucky, Louisville softball is back in action with a series at Virginia. The Cards enter the game with a 29-14 record.

The Cavaliers carry a similar record at 29-15. They took down James Madison in a midweek game but fell in a three-game series at Florida State prior to that.

Virginia is 8-10 in the ACC, currently putting them in eighth place. Louisville's 10-4 conference record places them fourth.

With nine games remaining in the regular season, Louisville needs just six wins to match their 35-win season in 2019, the highest in the Holly Aprile era.

Tonight's game is set to start at 6:00 p.m. and will be aired on ACCNX.

Happy Friday and Go Cards!
Jared

*Photos per Louisville Athletics*

Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Lax Wins at Vandy -- Softball Hosts Bellarmine -- ACC WBB Tournament -- TUESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Lacrosse Survives Late Surge to Defeat Vanderbilt



Despite a late run by Vanderbilt, Louisville Lacrosse was able to hang on for the win, 15-12. Kylea Dobson scored a career-high six goals to help the Cards get the win and improve to 3-2 on the year.

Nicole Perroni scored a season-high four goals while Kokoro Nakazawa logged a hat trick. Negai Nakazawa scored the other two goals for the Cards as only four different players recorded a goal for Louisville in the match.

Madi McKee had a strong showing with 12 draw controls and two assists. Perroni had two assists while Tiffany Natoli and Kokoro Nakazawa each recorded one assist.



The Cards raced out to a 3-0 lead three and a half minutes into the match before Vanderbilt got onto the board with a goal. Louisville commanded a 6-1 lead at the end of the first quarter.

Vandy went on a 3-0 run to start the second quarter before Louisville used a 3-0 spurt to push their lead back out. Vandy netted one more goal shortly before halftime, but Louisville held a 9-5 advantage.

While we don't know what was said in the locker room at the break, it must have been inspiring. Scott Teeter's squad raced out of the gate to start the second half, scoring three goals over a 10-minute span. Vanderbilt broke the run with a goal before Louisville scored a pair of goals in an eight second stretch to command a 14-6 lead heading into the final period.



Louisville made a substitution at goalkeeper for the fourth quarter with Sara Addeche coming out and Aubrey Bagenstose going in. The Commodores took advantage of the change as they used a pair of 3-0 runs split by a Louisville goal to rally. The final Vanderbilt goal came with 1:52 remaining in the match before Louisville held on to claim the win.

Addeche allowed six goals along with four saves in her 45:00 of play, earning her win number three this year.

Louisville comes home after a 1-1 road trip. The Cards hosts Cincinnati on Friday at 4:00 p.m. and then Pitt on Sunday at 4:00 p.m.


Softball Hosts Bellarmine




Fresh off a strong 4-1 weekend in Orlando, Louisville softball comes home for the first time this season when they take on crosstown rival Bellarmine. First pitch is slated for 5:00 p.m. and admission is free. The early start time will unfortunately draw a smaller-than-normal crowd.

Louisville enters the game with a 10-4 record on the year and are in the receiving votes category of the most recent Coaches Poll.

Bellarmine is 1-13 on the year with their lone win coming against Sacred Heart University. The Knights went 10-41 in their first year in Division I last year.

In their lone meeting (excluding exhibition games), the Cards defeated Bellarmine 8-1.

You can catch this one on ACCNX.


ACC Women's Basketball Tournament and ACC Pick Em

IMPORTANT NOTE. IF YOU USED THE ALLY FINANCIAL BRACKET TO FILL OUT THE CONTEST... THEY MESSED UP WEDNESDAY'S GAMES. IT SHOULD BE WAKE FOREST VS VIRGINIA, CLEMSON VS PITT and BOSTON COLLEGE VS GA TECH. 

WE NEED VIVIAN, JOE HILL, SONJA, NICK O, BEN JONES, CURTIS FRANKLIN and K.S. TO CHECK YOUR ENTRIES FOR WEDNESDAY GAMES AND LEAVE ANY CHANGES YOU WANT TO MAKE IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION.

THANK YOU.....PAULIE AND JARED







We are just one day away from the ACC Women's Basketball Tournament, with the first game starting at 1:00 p.m. om Wednesday. With the exception of the ACC Championship, which will be aired on ESPN, all games will be on ACC Network.

Louisville will play on Friday at 11:00 a.m. and will face either 5-seed Florida Sate, 12-seed Wake Forest, or 13-seed Virginia.




While Paulie will not be able to make the trip down this year we have an alternative in the works that will hopefully be announced soon.

With the ACC Tournament being back, it means that the Cardinal Couple ACC Pick Em is back as well. We've already started receiving entries and there is still time to get yours submitted. You can add your picks on here or send them via email at eupherjared@gmail.com. Any entries sent via email will be put in the comments section as well so everyone can follow along. The cutoff time for entries is noon ET on Wednesday.

A $25 Cracker Barrel Gift Card prize for the winner and a $15 Taco Bell gift card for the runner up !




WE'D LIKE TO THANK CRACKER BARREL AND TACO BELL FOR THEIR SPONSORSHIP !!


Happy Tuesday and Go Cards!
Jared

Saturday, February 11, 2023

Softball Splits; Lacrosse Drops Heartbreaker -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Softball Opens with Win, Falls to UK


Louisville softball got their season off to an interesting start yesterday in Clearwater, Florida. That start included back-to-back games to open their schedule with the second coming against a ranked rival. The Cards opened with South Alabama at 11AM, with the game against Kentucky scheduled to start at 1:30PM or 30 minutes after the conclusion of the first game. At the same time as Louisville faced South Alabama, Kentucky took on St. John's on a different field at the same complex, so the Cards don't have that as an excuse. However, their games couldn't have gone much differently.

Kentucky cruised to a 14-4 run rule over St. John's. The Red Storm took a 3-0 lead into the bottom half of the first, which UK quickly erased with a 2-out grand slam. In the meantime, Louisville struck first against USA in the third inning. On the play, Korbe Otis stood at first, having earned a one-out single before Taylor Roby fouled out. With two outs, Otis was running on contact, which came lightly off the bat of Hannah File. The ball blooped over Otis's head, and fell in front of South Alabama's second baseman, who was playing off. As Otis rounded second, the second baseman fumbled the ball, taking a play for File at first out of the question. Recovering, she prepared to throw the ball home as Otis didn't slow down. The throw was way off target, allowing Otis to score and File to reach second. Vanessa Miller went down swinging to end the inning, but the Cards held a 1-0 lead.

That lead was quickly erased by an unearned run by South Alabama in the bottom half. What goes around comes around, they say. Louisville got a strikeout to start the inning, but back-to-back singles put runners on first and second. A grounder looked like it would end the inning harmlessly, but newcomer Daisy Hess (a transfer from Georgia State) made an uncharacteristic error. The high school Gold Glover and three-year starter at shortstop for GSU stepped on the bag for the first out but airmailed the throw to first to allow the runner rounding third to score. Louisville got another grounder to end the inning, but the score was tied at one. 

Neither team was able to break through for the remaining four innings of regulation ball, with Louisville grabbing two singles and reaching on an error and South Alabama picking up two walks. The Cards took to the plate first in the eighth, with a runner standing on second, per the international tiebreaker rules. To Louisville's great benefit, the previous batter had been Korbe Otis, who advanced to third on a wild pitch quickly. Taylor Roby doubled to score Otis and was pinch run for to continue the attack. After a strikeout, a dropped flyball put runners on the corners for catcher Sarah Gordon. Gordon doubled down the left field line to score them both and give the Cards a 4-1 lead. A flyout and a strikeout ended the inning and Louisville took to the field. USA would score one in the bottom half, as it's pretty difficult not to score a runner from second with no outs. In fact, USA used two outs to score her, getting an advancing ground ball and then a sacrifice fly. With nobody on and two out, Alyssa Zabala picked up her third strikeout to finish the inning and grab her first win as a Cardinal.

As I said, Kentucky was a little more rested than Louisville, but neither team could claim much momentum. Even though Louisville had just picked up an extra inning win, Kentucky scored seven runs in the bottom of the fifth inning to complete their game one run-rule. The #20/17 Wildcats wasted no time getting back to business. After sitting Cards down in order in the top of the first and having their leadoff batter ground out, the Cats put three straight players on base with a single, an outless fielder's choice, and a double. A passed ball helped set up the fielder's choice and a fielding error by the catcher on the double allowed the second run to score. After a groundout advanced the runner to third, another double brought her home. Another groundout ended the inning, but Louisville was quickly in a 3-0 hole. 

Louisville finally got a runner on base to leadoff the third inning, but she was caught stealing to quickly end that threat. Defensive issues came back to bite the Cards again in the bottom half of the third. After a single and a walk had runners on first and second with two outs, a throwing error by the pitcher on what should have been the third out allowed both runners to score and pushed the Kentucky lead to five. The fourth inning saw six up, six down, and Louisville finally got their second base runner to open the fifth when Roby singled. Again, the runner was quickly erased, this time on a lineout double play. 

The bottom of the fifth unraveled for Cassie Grizzard, who hit a batter to open the frame, gave up a four pitch walk after a steal, and saw a 2-2 pitch skied to center for the walk-off home run to end the run-rule shortened game. Though they had only two strikeouts, the Cards also had just two hits. They committed three errors, leading to four of Kentucky's eight runs. The Cats are good, and Louisville will get another shot at them this season, but this is a game to forget. Fortunately, there are positives to take from game one of the day, and Louisville is allowed to have a short memory early in the year. The Cards are back in action today at 1:30PM against Southern University and later at 4 against another ranked SEC team. This time it's Mizzou. The gocards website includes a video link, but the stream can be a bit hit and miss.

If you would like to follow Softball today, TRY THIS LINK HERE

Lacrosse Drops Four-Goal Lead Against Denver


Louisville lacrosse opened their season against Denver yesterday, and the game is beginning to feel like a given on the schedule. Unlike in years past, Louisville looked very prepared early in this one. While the Cards have played Denver close before, it didn't exactly feel like they threatened to win. That was different yesterday, as Louisville opened the scoring and held a 3-0 first quarter lead. Unfortunately, their offensive firepower ran out much too early, and the Cards fell 5-4.

Nicole Perroni was the first on the board for the season, surprising no one, as she scored in less than five minutes. Negai Nakazawa, Kokoro's younger sister, scored to put the Cards up 2-0 and Perroni struck again to make it 3-0 with just eight seconds remaining in the frame. The second quarter was much less eventful, with neither team able to score again until Louisville increased their lead to four with a Lauren Figas goal with 2:25 remaining. If you had told Scott Teeter or anyone else that it would be their last goal of the day, they'd surely be shocked and dismayed. Those feelings would come to pass. It took Denver fewer than 30 seconds to answer the fourth goal, cutting the lead to 4-1 with just under two minutes until halftime. Louisville held on to the break and went to the locker room feeling good. Remember, no one had told them yet that they wouldn't score again.

The third quarter played out much like the second, with neither team making much offensive headway. Lauren Black scored a second goal for the Pioneers with 3:05 remaining in the third, but Louisville still held a two-goal lead. Unfortunately for the Cards, a two-goal lead entering the late stages of a game is among the most dangerous leads you can have psychologically. Two goals feels comfortable, but just one quick goal cuts your advantage in half and gives the opponent more motivation. Such was the case in the fourth quarter of this one, as Denver scored at the 9:49 mark and equalized just 44 seconds later. All of the sudden, Louisville went from a two-goal lead to a tied game and Denver was rolling. Such is the psychological snowball effect. In just under a minute and a half more, Denver scored the go-ahead goal, the ninth and final goal of the match. Neither team was able to attack successfully for the remaining eight minutes of the match, but only one team needed to. After scoring the first four goals of the match, Louisville gave up five straight to end their chance at a top-ten upset.

There is a lot to be encouraged about with this match. Similarly, there is plenty to be discouraged about. Denver is a top-ten team (ranked 9th), and the Cards should have beaten them. They scored early and often, but they weren't able to keep up the scoring later in the game, despite having seven shots in both halves. One of the discouraging stats is the turnovers, as Louisville had 25 in the game, ten more than Denver. Another issue was draw controls late. After winning the draw control battle 3-1 in the first quarter, the Cards lost it 6-3 over the remaining three quarters. Those draw control losses can lead directly to goals, as was the case on the quick Denver run.

Louisville has today off before they host Colorado tomorrow. The game is at Noon and will be available on ACC Network Extra. The Cards will look to bounce back from the tough loss and regain some momentum. It's a short non-conference season, as Louisville will get Lindenwood next Sunday before starting conference play against Virginia on the 25th. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We're without Daryl this morning, but after recovering from travel last week, I'm back to make it four on today's show. With spring sports getting fully underway, we'll have more than enough to talk about to fill the hour. 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
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

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

SUPER SENIORS -- TUESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Good morning all!

Daryl stepping in for Jared this Tuesday.   He wasn't feeling great and I happen to be off this evening with a few thoughts on my mind from the day as I drove back home from UofL Golf Club from the 2022 Press Box Golf Scramble.  I mentioned on the show and here before that this is the event that got me into golf.  It was my 4th time in the event and I am glad to be still a part of it.  There were some familiar faces out there, but definitely not enough women actually playing.  Volleyball head coach Dani Busboom Kelly was out there! I think 4 women played total.   The event did include a slight rain delay, with about 10 minutes of solid downpour. 



Excellent drainage system at the course, however, and that green was clear in 5 minutes after the storm.  But it did make for some muddy walks as we were cart path only! 


SUMMER SPORTS THOUGHTS

For today's summer subject, I wanted to do a broad stroke shout-out to a senior from each squad that I think has established their leadership role for the upcoming seasons and could kick their respective teams into the next gear for the 2022/23 year. 


WSOC




Maisie Whitsett (San Diego, California) - With the most minutes played and game appearances/starts for UofL in the 2021 season, the 5-9 Midfielder/forward is about to begin her fifth season with the Cardinals.  She connected on 2 goals of her own last year and assisted in 2 others for 6 points, 5th on the team in offensive production. 


VBALL




Aiko Jones (Kingston, Jamaica) - The 6-2 opposite and second leading scorer returning will see her fourth season begin with the Cards in a couple weeks.  Jones will pick up where she left off in 2021 with some of the blocking responsibilities and leading the team with 39 aces. 


LAX




Nicole Perroni (Whitby, Ontario) - The midfielder will be the leading scorer to return for the Cards from the 2021 season.  She played in all 18 games with 17 starts and finished the season with 50 goals, seven assists, 57 points, 64 draw controls, 34 ground balls and 28 caused turnovers. 


WBB




Mykasa Robinson (Ashland, Kentucky) - The defensive specialist will be the glue to help hold the rest of the squad together in almost any situation.  Averaging 3 points and 3 rebounds in the 2021 season, its well-known Mykasa is not a stat-sheet filler.. but she gets the w's in the Win column for UofL.  


FH



Mattie Tabor (Louisville, Kentucky) - The 5-8 forward is tied for third on the team with six goals in 2021.  Five of her goals were game-winners, standing second in the ACC in that category.   


SOFTBALL




Taylor Roby (Mount Washington, Kentucky) - The team's homerun leader with 15 in the 2022 season announced her return to the diamond for the Cards using her fifth year option.   Roby is the leader in RBIs returning for the team and lead the work in the circle with a 15-11 win-loss record and handled most of the pitching duties for the Cards. 


Happy Birthday Dana Evans!

The Chicago guard, Gary, IN native is celebrating her 24th birthday on 8/1/2022



Have a great Tuesday!

~Daryl