Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Heiden Ratner Leaving Team

It was announced today that sophomore men's basketball player Heiden Ratner has decided to transfer from JMU. He saw his minutes drop off this year, and I'm sure he wasn't able to be as productive as he had hoped. In Heiden's two years as a guard at JMU, he was known for his in-your-face, one-on-one defensive style and the spark that he gave the team coming off the bench. Ratner, nicknamed "the Rat," was also known as the hardest-working player on the team and could always be found in the gym. He played in a total of 63 games for 1,021 minutes (averaging 16.2 minutes/game). He scored a total of 240 points, grabbed 100 rebounds and had 65 assists, 43 steals and 4 blocks. We wish you the best, Heiden, wherever you go.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Happy Birthday James Madison!

Fourth President of the United States

Father of the Constitution

Main proponent of religious freedom

Namesake of our university

Happy Birthday to James Madison!

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Men's Basketball Hosts CIT game

JMU's Men's Basketball has made it into the inaugural CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament and will be hosting a first round game against Mount St. Mary's on Wednesday night. More details to come when they're released.

Monday, March 9, 2009

2008-2009 Recap - MBB

We're baaaaaaack. After going 19-14 this season (9-9 in conference). In Coach Matt Brady's first year, he got more wins than Dean Keener did in his first three combined (6, 5, 7). He also got the same number of conference wins as his first three combined (3, 2, 4). Granted, the year before Dean started, JMU went 7-21 (3-15); and, the year before Brady started, (Dean's final year) JMU went 13-17 (but still only won 5 conference games). Brady also brought us our first CAA tournament win since March 7, 2003--not to mention he did this in outstanding fashion, winning 70-48 against William & Mary. Now for a full run-down of the year (stat's rank on the team is in parentheses):

The Coach
Coach Matt Brady
I love this guy. It is obvious that he lives and breathes basketball. He has an incredible amount of basketball IQ, and is the best in-game coach JMU has ever seen. Add to that the ability to land amazing recruits (see further down and an upcoming article on next year) and he has the makings of an amazing coach. But that's just the start...the guy knows how to teach. When he came in, he said he was going to focus on defense...and he did...
2007-2008: Opponent FG% - 48.2%; Opponent 3pt% - 36.9%
2008-2009: Opponent FG% - 42.4%; Opponent 3pt% - 30.8%
We also seemed to (directly or indirectly) improve on free throws, going from 72.1% to 75.4%, but seeing as he has been called the "shot doctor," I would say it was a direct influence. He is a very level-headed guy, even seeming to use technical fouls strategically and not purely out of emotion.


The Upperclassmen
Seniors and leaders of the team.
Juwann James
How could I start with anyone but Juwann? He has been the heart and soul of this team. Juwann, who had been the quiet garbage player (or Junk Yard Dog, as the CAAZone posters affectionately call him) on the team, was left to become the leader of this team. And take that position he did. Through the year, whether it be during practice or games, Juwann would let someone know if they were slacking or playing well. He also stepped up and played his position with force. And what worse could happen to a player like that than not being able to play. Juwann went out with a heart condition that put him out for 11 full games and parts of 2 others. This knocked him out of contention for being first team All-CAA, but he still managed to get second team.
Points - 329 (3) | PPG - 15 (1) | FG% - 57.7 (1) | APG - 0.9 | RPG - 5.1 (1)
SPG - 1 (2) | Blocks - 17 (2)


Kyle Swanston
Kyle, the other crucial senior, seemed to be the key to how the game went. He was our biggest sharpshooter and was also, unfortunately, very streaky. He hit a huge slump in the middle of the season that took him a long time to dig himself out of. When he was off, our team was off. Of our 14 losses, 9 came when he didn't score his average (he didn't play in one of the other losses). This is because when Kyle was scoring, it opened up the court and took pressure off of Julius Wells. When the pressure and coverage was off of Julius, he hit more shots. While less of a leader, he was definitely a key to this team and nothing hurt more than having to see him sit out for his senior game (the only game he missed all year).
Points - 373 (2) | PPG - 11.7 (2) | 3pt% - 41.3% (2) | 3pt made/gm - 2.7 (1)
FT% - 81.6% (7) | Rebounds - 113 (4) | Blocked shots - 9 (3)


Pierre Curtis
Pierre is the answer to who is taking charge of this team after Juwann graduates. He has been a solid player all year long, taking over point guard responsibilities when Devon Moore got injured. Pierre also showed during the CAA tournament that he can take over in high-pressure situations to get the job done, scoring a total of 35 points in JMU's two tournament games (went 13-18 from the floor, 3-4 from 3, and 6-6 FT). He is a leader and I have full confidence with him as a senior next year. He is also the only starter to play every game, and one of only two players on the team to play every game.
Points - 298 (4) | FG% - 50.9% (2) | FT made - 105 (1) | FT% - 82% (6) | 3pt% - 39.5% (3)
APG - 2.7 (1) | SPG - 1.3 (1) | Minutes/game - 31.1 (2) | Offensive rebounds/game - 1.4 (2)


The Freshmen
This group of freshmen are the highest scoring freshman class in school history. Not bad for Coach Brady's first recruiting class.
Devon Moore
An outstanding athlete with a great attitude--you will rarely find this guy not smiling, on or off the court. He has outstanding court vision and has the ability to make the players around him better because of this attribute. He can set players up, and has progressed quite a bit this year in cutting down on careless turnovers. Devon definitely has a bright future at JMU and was selected CAA Rookie of the Week once, was voted #2 in Rookie of the year voting in the CAA, and made the CAA All-Rookie team. He is also a great defender and has shown the ability to stick with some of the top guards in the conference. He also missed 4 and a half games because of the flu and a badly bruised wrist.
Points - 295 (5) | PPG - 10.2 (4) | FG% - 49.5% (4) | 3pt% - 29.7% (6) | FT% - 83.3% (4)
RPG - 3.7 (5) | Minutes/game - 32.6 (1) | SPG - 0.8 (4)


Julius Wells
Julius is a very versatile player that has a ton of potential. In high school, he played down low and never got the opportunity to playing in the positions he has this year. Given that, he has played amazingly, putting up game after game of very solid numbers. At times, he has shown some immaturity in attitude and shot selection, but with more experience I really think he could easily be one of the best players in the CAA. He has been our top scorer, but also our highest fouler and has the highest number of turnovers outside of our two top point guards. It's the numbers he puts up, however, in the score column that have astounded the conference, leading him to four Rookie of the Week awards, first team All-CAA honors and the CAA Rookie of the Year award. He is one of only two JMU players to play in every game this season.
Points - 379 (1) | PPG - 11.5 (3) | FG% - 38.6% (9) | 3pt% - 36.9% (4) | FT% - 68.2 (9)
APG - 1.2 (5) | Rebounds - 181 (1) | RPG - 5.5 (1) | SPG - 0.7 (5) | Minutes/game - 29.2 (4)


Andrey Semenov
Semenov is the crowd favorite from Russia. Who wouldn't love a guy that raises his hands for the Dukes on free throws with the rest of the crowd? He is another versatile player that can play many roles for this team. If he adds a little bulk over the off-season he could be a big time player next year. The one knock most people have against him is how much he ends up on the floor. If he adds some more muscle and learns to push through the fouls and continue with the play, he'll be another amazing player for JMU. He is already the best free-throw shooter out of the main rotation of players. Unfortunately, he got knocked on the head a few too many times at Georgia State and had concussion-like symptoms (though it was never diagnosed). Since missing three games, he still hasn't really recovered, and seems hazy and weak when playing. Hopefully it isn't anything serious and he'll be okay with a little rest and conditioning.
Points - 239 (6) | PPG - 8.2 (6) | FG% - 45.1% (5) | FT% - 86.5% (3) | APG - 1.3 (4)
Rebounds - 120 (3) | RPG - 4.1 (4) | Blocks - 20 (1) | Minutes/game - 24.6 (5)


The Role Players
The group that didn't always play the most minutes, but were valuable subs. Coach Brady loves these guys because it gives him the ability to strategically use each player's talents in key situations.
Dazz Thornton
Dazz isn't really as much of a role player as the rest on the list, but he fits best in this category. He has always seemed to possess enough skill to make some noise, but never had the aggressiveness to use it. He scored in the double-digits in only 7 games this year and grabbed a little over 3 boards a game. Dazz just didn't seem to have the conditioning to stay in for long enough to get in rhythm. He definitely was a huge help in some games though, especially the home win over George Mason and the first half of the 2OT loss at Hofstra before he had to leave the game. The addition of Denzel Bowles to the practice roster definitely helped push Dazz closer to his potential though, as five of those seven double-digit games came in basically the last third of the season. Dazz greatly improved his rebounding from last year, but his FG% and free throw shooting dropped down. If he can improve his shooting and get better at handling the ball he will be a valuable player off the bench next year.
Points - 197 (7) | PPG - 6.0 (8) | FG% - 50.3 (3) | FT% - 66.1% (10)
Offensive rebounds/game - 1.1 (T3) | Blocks - 5 (T4)


Ben Louis
Ben is the athlete from "down under." While probably not the most skilled player on the team, he is one of the better athletes, and knows how to channel his inner kangaroo to get some rebounds that a guy of his size has no business getting. His strengths are his ability to get rebounds and steals, make aggressive passes, and to provide a general energy on defense. He is also third on the lineup of point guards and is in the rotation with Pierre and Devon to give them breathers.
Points - 95 (8) | FG% - 40% (7) | FT% - 69.7 (8) | APG - 1.8 (3) | RPG - 2.1 (7)
SPG - 0.9 (3) | Blocks - 5 (T4)


Heiden Ratner
"The Rat" is probably one of the hardest workers on the team. He is constantly in the gym and does whatever he can to help the team. He is one of the best one-on-one defenders on the team and can stick on just about any player in our conference. He is definitely a role player that Brady will send in on defense to give the rest of the team a boost and provide some extra energy. The freshmen this year have cut down on Heiden's minutes (he plays half what he did last year), but even during the minutes he plays he doesn't seem to be as effective (as far as the stat sheet is concerned) as last year. All of his shooting stats have dropped pretty significantly. He is another player that definitely has a solid place on next year's team if he can get his shot back under control.
Points - 60 (9) | FG% - 35.2% (10) | 3pt% - 29.4% (7) | FT% - 52.2% (12)


Matt Parker
Matt is a solid outside shooter, but doesn't have the build or aggressiveness to take advantage of his height. He also has a habit of getting intentional fouls when the other team gets a breakaway on him. Overall, Matt is a pretty good player, he just needs to work on the defensive side of his game to stay in longer next year.
Points - 31 (11) | 3pt% - 42.1% (1) | FT% - 83.3% (4)


The Under 15 Games Club
The walk-ons and season-ending injury list
Scott "Scooter" Renkin
Though he didn't play too much and wasn't the best shooter, Scooter played hard whenever he got in and was a pretty good player. He also never missed a free throw (though he only attempted four) and grabbed a career high three rebounds in 11 minutes in JMU's win against Gardner Webb.
Points - 10 (12) | FG% - 30% (11) | FT% - 100% (1)


Ryan Knight
Ryan only got a chance to play 14 minutes in 10 games this year, and got three rebounds and had one assist.

Abdulai Jalloh
Jalloh was a preseason All-CAA pick, and was apparently shooting lights-out in preseason practices; unfortunately, he injured his shoulder at the beginning of the season messing up his shot. Jalloh played through the pain for six games of the season, but had to stop after that meaning that we were never able to see if Coach Brady was able to reel in his shot selection.
PPG - 7.3 (7) | FT% - 90.9% (2)


Cumulative Season Stats

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Dukes Dominate Tribe

For the first time since 2003, the JMU Men's Basketball team won a game in the CAA Tournament. It was also the Dukes' largest margin of victory of the season, as they won 70-48. Teams had been having trouble adjusting to the Richmond Coliseum's baskets the whole day, but JMU was able to find their shot. William and Mary, on the other hand, was not able to hit their shots and only shot 35.2% for the night, sending them back to straight flipping copies. This was the first time a JMU opponent has shot under 40% since they played UNCW on January 31 and W&M was the only opponent all year not to hit the 50 point mark. This terrible offensive performance by the Tribe also included going 1-18 from behind the arc. It was like they had just gotten splashed in the eyes by a dolphin.

The Dukes, however, were on Friday night, especially in the second half. The first half saw JMU hitting 50% from the field and only 14.3% (1-7) from behind the arc. This gave them a 32-25 lead. They got hot the second half, though, and shot 59.1% from the field and an outstanding 62.5% for 3 (5-8). Junior Pierre Curtis had an outstanding game, going 7-8 (including 1-1 from 3), made all 4 of his free throws, grabbed 6 boards, and got a steal. Senior Juwann James played great and had 12 points, going 5-7 (though only hitting 2-5 on free throws) and grabbing 3 rebounds and 2 steals. Senior Kyle Swanston also had a great game going 3-5 from behind the arc, had 4 rebounds and got a steal. The trio of Julius Wells, Dazzmond Thornton, and Devon Moore each had 8 points and 4 rebounds. They Dukes were able to fully clear the bench at the end of the game, allowing all the players some tourney experience.

It was an awesome and commanding start for the Dukes. The two seniors after winning their first game in the CAA tournament in their careers probably felt like they were on a boat. Juwann was quick to make sure they were focusing on getting through Monday. He'll have to make it till then if he wants to be a champ and drink some Santana. While it is still very unlikely that they would be able to make it through that big blue watery road of the CAA tournament, if the Dukes play like they did yesterday, like Kevin Garnett, anything is possible.

DNR | RTD | Box Score
Photos

Friday, March 6, 2009

CAA Men's Basketball Awards Announced

Tonight the awards for this year's CAA Men's Basketball teams were announced. Among JMU's winners were:

Juwann James, senior forward, Second Team All-CAA
15.8 ppg, 0.9 assists/game, 5.1 rebounds/game, 0.8 blocks/game, 1.1 steals/game
After playing the first game of the year, Juwann missed the next seven after being diagnosed with pericarditis, an inflammation of the tissue surrounding the heart. He then collapsed at the home ODU game later in the season and would miss the next four games. One would have to think that if he hadn't missed those 11.5 games (plus part of the game at Mason) he would have been in the first team. He was deserving of it, and, after the leadership and consistency, he should have gotten first team. Regardless, congratulations to Juwann as he is an amazing and classy player that has suffered through a lot.


Julius Wells, freshman forward, Rookie of the Year and All-Rookie Team
11.8 ppg, 1.2 assists/game, 38.7% 3pt, 5.5 rebounds/game, 0.7 steals/game
After winning the Rookie of the Week award an astouding four times, Julius was almost a shoe-in for ROY (though Devon gave him some good competition). Julius was also one of only two JMU players to play in every game of the regular season (Pierre Curtis was the only other one and was the only player to start every game) scoring a total of 366 points this year. Congrats to Julius and thank you for such a great season.


Devon Moore, freshman point guard, All-Rookie Team
10.1 ppg, 3.1 assists/game, 31.4% 3pt, 3.6 rebounds/game, 0.8 steals/game
Devon (along with Juwann) has been called the most crucial part of the team. As pointed out in the article yesterday about him being cleared to play, this team seems to play its worst basketball when he is out. We lost all three conferences games that he didn't play in and we lost the double-OT game to Hofstra after he was injured mid-way through the second half. He makes all the other players play better, is a great defender, is one of the only JMU players that can penetrate to the basket off the dribble, and has necessary ball-handling skills that can't be overstated. Finished the regular season with 274 total points. Congratulations to Devon for the award--we couldn't be getting him back at a more crucial time.


Where I think we got overlooked:
1) Juwann not being higher. I discussed it above. Partially understandable because he was out part of the season, but how can you say he wasn't deserving of that First Team spot?

2) Andrey Semenov not being on the All-Rookie Team. I guess I can understand this, because we already have two of the six and they need to spread it around, but I think he could have easily gotten in. He also finished with 230 points and was part of the highest-scoring freshman class in JMU's D-I history.

3) Brady not getting Coach of the Year. This is the only one where I legitimately think JMU got gypped. He took a team that hadn't had a winning season in 9 years, took them 18-13 overall and 9-9 in conference, and brought in the CAA ROY, another CAA All-Rookie Team member, and another freshman that would have been in had it not been for the other two. Oh, and he had this winning season with his First-Team All-CAA preseason player (Abdulai Jalloh) on the bench for a majority of the season, his star gutsy senior out with heart problems for basically 12 games, the other senior in a shooting slump for the entire middle of the season and a concussion for the last home game of the season, one of his star freshman out for the final 4.5 games of the regular season after having the flu a couple times earlier in the season, one of his other freshman out with concussion-like symptoms and one of his few big men out with the flu for a game and a half. Even through all that he has this team inspired and the program re-energized. The only reason he didn't get it is because Bruiser Flint's team (Drexel) was picked to finished last in the conference in preseason voting. Because of this gross oversight by the coaches, Coach Brady didn't get the award. What Matt Brady has done at JMU is nothing short of remarkable.

JMU got a great mention in Who's Who in the CAA from the DC Examiner:
Who’s dangerous » James Madison. The Dukes (18-13) have lost their last three CAA games, but will be a threat if freshman point guard Devon Moore (wrist) and freshman forward Andrey Seminov (concussion) have recovered. JMU’s best inside threat, Juwan James, is back after missing four games with a chest ailment. First-year coach Matt Brady has done a brilliant job guiding his injury-riddled team to its first winning season in nine years. “I always have to check my trainer to see who’s practicing,” said Brady.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Women's Basketball #3 in CAA

The Lady Dukes (21-8, 14-4) finished off the regular season last night with a 74-65 win at UNCW. Sophomore Dawn Evans seems to be recovering from her ankle sprain just fine as she went 9-20, including 4-8 from behind the arc, and hit all four of her free throws for a game high 26 points (17 in the second half). Sophomore Jalissa Taylor earned herself a double-double, scoring 13 points and grabbing 11 off the boards. She also had 3 blocks and only 2 personal fouls (this will be a huge stat to watch during the tournament because, without Lauren Jiminez, we need her out of foul trouble). Redshirt junior Sarah Williams turned in 11 points (4-8, 1-1 FT) and 5 rebounds. Sophomore Courtney Hamner and freshman Kiara Francisco both added 9 points. While senior Kisha Stokes only had 4 points, she had 7 rebounds and also got two crucial steals at the start of the second half. With this win JMU will be the #3 seed going into the CAA tournament at the Convo next weekend. The games that JMU is playing in or could play in are bolded.

JMUSports.com | Box Score

2009 CAA WOMEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

THURSDAY, MARCH 12

#8 Towson vs. #9 UD Noon
#5 UNCW vs. #12 GMU 2:30 p.m.
#7 Hofstra vs. #10 W&M 5:00 p.m.
#6 Northeastern vs. #11 GSU 7:30 p.m.


FRIDAY, MARCH 13

Gm. 5 #1 Drexel vs. #8/#9 winner Noon
Gm. 6 #4 ODU vs. #5/#12 winner 2:30 p.m.
Gm. 7 #2 VCU vs. #7/#10 winner 5:00 p.m.
Gm. 8 #3 JMU vs. #6/#11 winner 7:30 p.m.


SATURDAY, MARCH 14

Gm. 9 Winner of Game 5 vs. Winner of Game 6 Noon
Gm. 10 Winner of Game 7 vs. Winner of Game 8 2:30 p.m.


SUNDAY, MARCH 15

Women's Championship Game 3:30 p.m.

CAASports.com article

LET'S CRAM THE CONVO!!!!

Devon Is Back

JMU's freshman point guard Devon Moore was back practicing Wednesday night. He will have one more day of practice before heading to Richmond for the CAA tournament (JMU plays its first game Friday night at 6pm against William & Mary). Devon Moore has become an integral part of this team and improves the rest of the team just by being in. It also allows for there to be two great ball handlers to be in at the same time (Pierre Curties being the other) which really opens up the floor and cuts down on turnovers. Devon also has a great ability to take the ball to the basket off the dribble better than anyone else on the team. As an example to show how crucial he is to this team: our worst four losses this season have been Davidson, @Mason, VCU, and @Delaware...Moore was out for the latter three. The only game the Dukes have won when Moore was out was against Gardner-Webb. He is an integral part of this team and it will be a huge lift to have him back.

While our guys are probably sapped of energy at this point given all the injuries and illnesses this season, I think they are ready to play some inspired basketball. As long as they can stay healthy from this point on, it will be the healthiest they've been almost all season. They've had a week off which will have helped them regain some energy. Andrey Semenov, who has seemed a little foggy at times during recent games after he was out for dizziness, has had time to clear his head. Dazz has had time to get over the flu and get back into good condition. I have to believe that after the final two games of the regular season (tying for the longest losing streak this season - shocking, right?) Coach Brady will have had some time to get this team focused again. I really like our chances to get back into our groove in our game on Friday against William and Mary. If everyone is healthy, we keep the turnovers under 15, and Kyle Swanston hits at least 30% of his 3's (opening up everyone else) I think we can get out of our first-round slump.

Women's Lacrosse Moves Up To #17

The JMU Women's Lacrosse team (2-0) moved up to #17 in the coach's poll this week and is ranked #14 by LaxPower's computer ranking system. We also have the #15 RPI in the nation. While it is still early on for polls like this to be too accurate, with good wins over Virginia Tech and Yale, this year is definitely looking like a good year for the Lady Dukes. Wednesday's match against Longwood was postponed due to some winter weather, but they will play next Tuesday in Orlando, Fla. against #11 Notre Dame.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Diamond Dukes Garner CAA Honors

The Dukes, who started the season off with 3 straight losses, have rebounded to take their record to 5-4, including wins over Liberty (11-2) and Maryland (5-1) and went 2-1 in a series against Lafayette this past week. Outstanding performances in those games helped two of the Diamond Dukes to win CAA honors. JMU sophomore short stop David Herbeck was the CAA Co-Player of the Week:

Herbek, a short stop, continued his offensive onslaught, hitting .524 (11-for-21) while driving in 12 runs and scoring six. He hit two doubles, one triple, and one home run for an .857 slugging percentage and also had three walks and a hit by pitch for a .600 on-base percentage. Herbek’s week included the walk-off game-winning RBI in Saturday’s 10-9 win over Lafayette. That game also ran his career-long hitting streak to 14 games. He has also achieved multiple hits in eight of nine games this season.

Thus far in the CAA, Herbek ranks second in batting average (.514), first in hits (19), second in runs (10), first in doubles (5), first in triples (2), first in RBIs (15), first in total bases (34), second in on-base percentage (.571), and first in slugging percentage (.919). He also has two homers, four walks, and three stolen bases in three tries.

Sophomore pitcher Turner Phelps won the CAA Pitcher of the Week award this week after his performance in game one of Saturday's double-header:

Phelps turned in one of the strongest pitching performances of his brief career, striking out eight in a seven-inning, complete-game one-hitter against Lafayette, a 5-0 win. It was the second career complete game for the right hander to improve to 2-0 for the season and 10-0 in his career. A slow roller that barely made it halfway down the third-base line in the sixth inning was all that prevented Phelps from the ninth no-hitter in JMU history. In addition to his CAA honor, Phelps was also honored as a Pitcher of the Week by the website “Recruiting Closer.”

Through two weeks of action in the CAA, Phelps ranks first in wins (2), first in innings (13.1), first in strikeouts (17), first in complete games (1), first in shutouts (1), and third in opponent batting average (.140).

JMU had two games rained out early in the week, but will return to the diamond this weekend in a four-game series at Stetson.


JMUSports.com article | Baseball Schedule

Coach Brady Interview #3

Here is the third interview of Men's Basketball coach Matt Brady by John Theobald (Feb 26):
1) What are the main differences between the MAAC and the CAA in your opinion in terms of fan support, gameday atmosphere, alumni support, etc ?

The biggest differences, to me, are the better resources, arenas and crowds that the CAA attracts to its venues. The other difference, and it is significant, is that most of the programs here in the CAA have a much larger and stronger demographic, in part, due to the very large alumni base each school yields. JMU really has state-wide appeal. In the MAAC, that is definitely not the case. It is more local community based.

2) Recently on the CAAZone there was a poll conducted asking who is the #1 player JMU could NOT afford to lose. In your opinion who is that player? (please find a large piece of wood to knock on after answering)

Well, we have already lost the two players, for significant time periods and CAA games, that JMU cannot afford to lose. Juwann James and Devon Moore. Hopefully, Devon could return by the CAA tourney and Juwann stays healthy. Two very big ifs, especially in light of the way the season has gone to date.

3) Assuming we will be playing from day 1 of the tournament, do you think our conditioning and preparationg has prepared us to make a long run?

Our backcourt is not very deep, our overall athletic ability as a team is only fair (in my opinion) and our health is still a major concern. That being said, our goal is to do whatever it takes in our game on Friday to play on Saturday. If we get to Saturday, we will use that same approach to advance to the next game. We have enough ability to advance but these other issues are real. We will need to play extraordinarily well to win games in Richmond. If we are healthy, I can tell you nobody we'll be excited to draw the JMU Dukes.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

#22 in D-I Director's Cup

Every year the NACDA (National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics) rates the top athletics programs in each division every year. Taken into consideration are mainly the top 25 polls and points are given out based on those rankings (more info). Currently, the Dukes are tied at #22 with Oklahoma State in the Learfield Sports Directors' Cup (Learfield Sports being the main sponsor this year). 20 sports are used in the rankings (10 mens' and 10 womens' sports). JMU recieved points for the following sports so far: Women's Field Hockey (finished 9th, 25 points), Men's FCS Football (finished 3rd, 83 points), Women's Soccer (finished 9th, 64 points).

Other schools of note:
UVA - #11, the only other school in the state ranked in the top 30
WVU - #21
W&M - #32, the second highest program in the CAA
Richmond - #50
Virginia Tech - #63
Appalachian State - #87
George Mason and Northeastern - #94
Delaware - #136

Director's Cup Homepage | Standings - Jan 13 (PDF)

Monday, March 2, 2009

Kenny Brooks and Dawn Evans

With the Lady Dukes' latest win against ODU, Kenny Brooks now has a career record of 142-70 over his 7 year career (with one game, tournament and possible postseason play left).

02-03: 16-10 (11-7)
03-04: 13-18 (7-10)
04-05: 18-11 (10-8)
05-06: 24-7 (14-4) WNIT: 1st round
06-07: 27-6 (16-2) NCAA: 1st round
07-08: 24-10 (14-4) WNIT: 3rd round
08-09: 20-8 (13-4)

That's only one losing season and four straight seasons with 20+ wins!

Some other accolades:
* Postseason appearances the last three seasons

* NCAA Tournament at-large selection

* Top 25 national ranking

* Colonial Athletic Association and Virginia Coach of the Year accolades

* Two CAA championship game appearances

* The last two CAA Players of the Year (Meredith Alexis, Tamera Young)

* Two Associated Press All-America honorable mentions (Alexis, Young)

* 12 all-conference selections

* More than 120 career wins

* A first-round WNBA draft pick (Young)

* All-time leading scorer in JMU and CAA history (Young)

* Career rebounding leader in JMU and CAA history (Alexis)

* Nation-leading 30-game home winning streak, second-longest in school history

* Wins over two Top 25 teams in one season, a first for the JMU program

* Two 2007-08 victories over 2008 NCAA Sweet 16 teams

* More than 80 school records broken

* His players rank 1-2-3 on JMU's career scoring list (Young, Alexis, Lesley Dickinson), 1-2 on the career rebounding list (Alexis, Young) and 1-2 on the career assist list (Jess Cichowicz, Andrea Benvenuto)

* Half of the 32 30-point games in school history are by his players

* First player in JMU history to earn first-team all-conference honors three times (Young)

* Second player in CAA history and first JMU player to earn all-conference honors four times (Alexis)

* First women's basketball player to win JMU's Athlete of the Year award since 1991 (Alexis)

* Three All-CAA selections in 2006 and 2007, the first time since 1996 that three Dukes were named all-conference

* JMU season attendance records

* Third team to sweep ODU in a season since they joined the CAA


Let's hope Kenny is here for the longhaul and isn't thinking of leaving anytime soon. Not only is he a former JMU basketball star, he is a coach that exudes class. I really don't think there's a better person for the job out there.

Dawn Evans also scored her 1,000th point on Sunday, making her the fastest player to reach that mark in CAA history. She is currently tied for the #3 highest scorer in the country with Drexel's Gabriela Marginean at 23.8 ppg, only 0.1 behind #2.

Path to the CAA Championship

After Saturday's disappointing loss to Delaware, we are set in the #7 seed going into this weekend's men's basketball CAA tournament in Richmond. Here are the matchups we're looking at (should we keep winning):

Friday, March 6th, 6pm
#7 JMU vs. #10 W&M
TV: CAA web streaming

Saturday, March 7th, 6pm
Quarterfinal
#2 Mason vs. #7 JMU
TV: The Comcast Network/CSS/CAA-TV

Sunday, March 8th, 5:30pm
Semifinal
#7 JMU vs. #3 Northeastern/#6 Drexel/#11 Towson
TV: The Comcast Network/CSS/CAA-TV

Monday, March 9th, 7pm
Championship Game
#7 JMU vs. most likely VCU (though Delaware, Hofstra or ODU could pull the upset)
TV: ESPN2

Not too bad of a schedule. If we get Devon back and start playing like a team again it might just be a schedule that could get JMU to the championship game for the first time in a very long time.

JMU: Nation's #44 Undergrad Business School

James Madison University was recently rated #44 in the 'Top Undergraduate Business Programs' list in Business Week. They rose 10 spots from their 2008 ranking of 54th. Other Virginia/DC schools on the list were UVA (#1), Richmond (#12), Georgetown (#24), American (#28) and W&M (#30). Northeastern (#27) and W&M were the only other CAA schools on the list. JMU was also ranked #16 on the student survey and was given an A+ on job placement.

JMU's rank on this list is also very impressive given that it consistently ranks as a top value college in the country. The only other top 50 schools that cost less than JMU are Brigham-Young (#5), UNC (#13) and the University of Washington (#25), which are all 2-year programs and have full-time enrollments of 1,783, 1,645 and 632 compared to JMU's 3,121. The only programs that rank higher and have higher enrollments than JMU are Penn State (#38), Indiana (#20), Texas A&M (#37), Texas (#10), Bentley (#33), Ohio State (#42), and USC (#21).

Complete List

Update: JMU was also ranked the #3 public school for Return on Investment behind UNC and Binghamton.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Women's Lacrosse Takes Yale After Strong Start

The Lady Dukes dominated the first half of play against Yale in this early Saturday afternoon game, going on to win 10-7. Sidenote: the Lady Dukes decided to just wear their regular shorts with no leggings underneath, unlike Yale (which is over 300 miles north of Harrisonburg), who had only a couple players not wearing some sort of long pants. It was in the 20's and there were strong winds. I had a couple layers on and I was still cold. Not sure if they were moving faster to stay warm or if the Bulldogs were intimidated, but it certainly worked out for the Dukes in the first half. They scored twice in the first 2:27 and would score four more times before Yale would get on the board. JMU was in control of the ball for most of the first half and was able to attack for a majority of the time. Redshirt junior Kim Griffin was the first to score, followed by freshman Monica Zable. Sophomore Mary Kate Lomady then scored two consecutive shots, followed by freshman Casey Ancarrow (who won CAA ROW honors after her performance against VT) making two straight putting the Dukes up 6-0. With 3:21 left in the first half, Yale was finally able to get their first goal. JMU senior Jaime Dardine answered back though with only 3.5 seconds left in the half taking the lead back up to six. The amount of time attacking and strong defense can be seen just looking at the stats with the Dukes leading shots on goal 12 to 4.

The second half started off with Griffin scoring again a little over 5 minutes in, but the rest of the game wouldn't go as well for the Dukes. In the final 18:24 of the game, the Bulldogs would outscore the Dukes 6-2. Yale was very accurate in the second half, making 6 of their 11 shots on the goal, while JMU was only able to score on 2 of their 8 shots in the second half. Freshman Ashley Kimener and Griffin would score the final two goals for the Dukes.

After beating Virginia Tech 14-9, this win takes JMU's record to 2-0 and dropped Yale to 0-2. The Dukes are now ranked #14 by LaxPower just behind UNC. JMU will travel to Longwood on Wednesday to take on the Lancers.

Stats | JMUSports.com | Photos