Thompson, Rasch help Vols sweep Shawnee

 
 BY JOHN D. HOMAN
Logan Media Services
ULLIN – Call it a three-game sweep for the John A. Logan College baseball squad as the Vols took a pair of games from Shawnee College Saturday, 2-0 and 14-2, a day after notching a 5-0 win in Carterville.
jalc baseball logo
Sophomore Derek Thompson was simply amazing in the opener, tossing a complete-game shutout, allowing only two hits in his seven innings of work. Thompson (5-1), struck out 11 and walked three.
Logan plated both of its runs in the fifth inning. Sophomore third sacker Keelin Rasch of Harrisburg led the charge with two hits in four at bats, including an RBI single. J.C. Davis contributed a double. Others notching one hit apiece were: Tanner Scott, Joba Ferrell, John Tolliver, and Dontrell Rush. DeJohn Suber did not get a hit, but scored a run.
In the finale, the Vols erupted for 17 hits as led by sophomore Anthony Bayus’s collection of four. He also had an RBI and two runs scored. Davis was 3-for-4 with three runs scored. Derek Repking bashed three hits, as well, including a pair of runs batted in. Rasch made the most of his two hits with a two-run homer and single and drove in five of his team’s runs. Scott followed with two hits and two RBIs. Rush had two hits and two runs scored. Ferrell tacked on one hit with an RBI.
The Vols scored four runs in the first; five in the second; two in the third and three in the sixth.
Winning pitcher was Chris Hunt. The sophomore righthander went the first four innings, surrendering two runs, one earned. He gave up five hits, struck out five and walked one. Anthony Spangler tossed the final two frames, striking out three.
The Vols (15-13) are scheduled to play at Jefferson College in Hillsboro, Mo. Tuesday and will host Southeastern Illinois Thursday at 3.

Amazing come-from-behind win sends RLC Warriors to NJCAA Final Four

DANVILLE, Ill. (March 20, 2013) – Momentum.

]While watching the Rend Lake College Warriors get behind South Suburban College in the national basketball championship quarterfinals Wednesday night, there was a feeling they could still swing it. Too good a team to go quietly against the Bulldogs program-turned rival over the span of a year, there was still a fixed hope things would change. But it was double-digits by the half. Then 20 points. Things seemed to be getting away from the Warriors in a hurry.

Jeril Taylor hit two free throws with ;05 seconds left to give the RLC Warriors a berth in the NJCAA Final Four.

Jeril Taylor hit two free throws with ;05 seconds left to give the RLC Warriors a berth in the NJCAA Final Four.

But then it happened. A couple of stops here. A turnover there. Still enough time. The momentum had turned and Rend Lake had dug itself out. It found itself with the ball and a chance to hit a last-second long shot to win. Sophomore guard Dawson Verhines (Woodlawn) caught the inbound pass, launched a half-court laser over two defenders, and it rimmed out. It was perhaps the greatest comeback in RLC sports history already, and the Warriors hadn’t won anything.

Overtime.

RLC went on the attack, taking advantage of South Suburban players who had picked up four fouls in regulation. It worked. Two Bulldogs fouled out by way of Warriors slashing into the lane off the dribble. South Suburban’s coach went to a player on the bench who had four fouls. Within two or three possessions he had fouled out. RLC’s plan was working, but it was still down. Players kept fighting on defense, going hard for loose balls and working for good shots. A couple of costly turnovers and a foul by the Bulldogs put the hammer in Rend Lake’s hand with Jeril Taylor holding the last nail. The spindly, 6-4 freshman from Louisville, Ky., had hit key shots throughout the game – three from long range and a team-high 19 points. It was fitting he was the one called to close.

Taylor stepped to the line with five seconds left. The rest of his team had pulled out to the other end of the floor to put up one last defensive stand. Without hesitation, he made the first. It looked more like he was shooting in the first five seconds of the game than the last five seconds of overtime. His second shot found nothing but net in the same fashion. South Suburban pushed the ball down the floor, passed to a man in the corner and got off one last shot. However, RLC big man Bronson Verhines (Woodlawn) blocked the ball farther out of bounds than it had travelled from the shooter’s hand.

The block ended the game and sends a roused Rend Lake team into the national semifinals. The #4 seeded Warriors (28-3) play at 6 p.m., Friday, against #8 Owens Community College of Ohio (26-8). Listen live at Q106.3FM and watch a live stream at www.ihigh.com/njcaatv.

The Warriors’ 98-75 win over Cecil College on Tuesday was the first men’s basketball national tournament win in RLC school history. Tonight’s incredible 85-83 overtime victory is the second.

For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu/warriors.

BOX SCORE

Date: 3/20/2013 Arena: Mary Miller

Time: 8:00 pm City, State: Danville, IL

VISITOR: South Suburban (83 OT)

TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS

NO PLAYER P FG FGA FG FGA FT FTA OFF DEF TOT PF TP A TO BK S MIN

21 Thorton, Kadeem * 4 8 0 0 0 0 2 5 7 3 8 2 1 0 1 38-

23 Harris, Michael * 9 24 6 13 0 1 2 2 4 2 24 1 5 0 1 44+

24 Walker, Bryce * 9 20 4 11 3 3 2 5 7 0 25 8 2 0 0 44-

30 Lee, Michael * 4 8 1 3 2 2 1 3 4 5 11 2 5 0 2 32+

32 Beard, Stefan * 2 5 0 1 1 5 2 0 2 4 5 1 1 1 0 18-

10 Strickland, Anthony 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 5 1 1 1 0 0 11-

34 Hopkins, Marius 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1-

41 Davis, Henry 3 5 0 0 1 4 2 5 7 1 7 1 0 0 0 14-

55 Shofidiya, Rasheed 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 2 0 1 1 0 24+

TEAM REBOUNDS 0 0 0 0

Team Totals 32 74 11 28 8 17 11 21 32 23 83 16 17 2 4 225

 

Total FG% – 1st: 15/35 0.429 2nd and OTs: 17/39 0.436 Game: 0.432 Deadball

3-PT FG% – 1st: 6/15 0.400 2nd and OTs: 5/13 0.385 Game: 0.393 Rebounds

Total FT% – 1st: 1/2 0.500 2nd and OTs: 7/15 0.467 Game: 0.471 (5,7)

 

HOME: Rend Lake College (85 OT)

TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS

NO PLAYER P FG FGA FG FGA FT FTA OFF DEF TOT PF TP A TO BK S MIN

10 Ayala, Corey * 2 10 1 2 2 2 4 3 7 1 7 4 4 0 0 31+

21 Allen, Noel * 4 5 0 0 2 4 5 5 10 1 10 1 3 2 1 28-

24 Verhines, Dawson * 3 13 0 7 2 2 1 1 2 2 8 5 3 1 2 38+

30 Macklin, Cortez * 6 14 0 5 4 4 0 4 4 2 16 0 1 0 1 33+

42 Verhines, Bronson * 6 8 0 0 1 4 5 8 13 3 13 3 2 3 1 38+

5 Whaley, Trice 3 5 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 1 6 0 0 0 1 9+

00 Williams, Montez 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 7-

20 Bryant, Stephon 2 6 1 2 0 0 1 1 2 0 5 0 1 0 1 5+

22 Taylor, Jeril 6 17 3 10 4 5 0 7 7 4 19 1 1 0 0 30-

32 Buford, Montez 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4-

34 Singletary, Alonzo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1+

TEAM REBOUNDS 0 0 0 0

Team Totals 32 79 5 26 16 23 19 31 50 15 85 14 16 6 7 225

 

Total FG% – 1st: 10/31 0.323 2nd and OTs: 22/48 0.458 Game: 0.405 Deadball

3-PT FG% – 1st: 1/10 0.100 2nd and OTs: 4/16 0.250 Game: 0.192 Rebounds

Total FT% – 1st: 3/7 0.429 2nd and OTs: 13/16 0.813 Game: 0.696 (7,4)

 

Technical Fouls: SS (0)

: RLC (0)

 

 

ENHANCED SCORING FstBrk OffTov Paint 2ndCh Bench

South Suburban 0 16 26 11 10

Rend Lake College 0 19 50 21 31

 

SCORE BY PERIODS 1st 2nd OT1 TOTAL

South Suburban 37 38 8 83

Rend Lake College 24 51 10 85

 

SHOT CHART

 

South Suburban

FG

FGA

PCT

3P

3PA

PCT

FT

FTA

PCT

ORB

DRB

TRB

PF

A

TO

BK

ST

PTS


1st

15

35

42.9

6

15

40.0

1

2

50.0

3

11

14

10

7

6

1

2

37

2nd

14

27

51.9

3

8

37.5

7

13

53.8

4

7

11

8

7

11

0

2

38

OT1

3

12

25.0

2

5

40.0

0

2

0.0

4

3

7

5

2

0

1

0

8


32

74

43.2

11

28

39.3

8

17

47.1

11

21

32

23

16

17

2

4

83

Rend Lake

FG

FGA

PCT

3P

3PA

PCT

FT

FTA

PCT

ORB

DRB

TRB

PF

A

TO

BK

ST

PTS


1st

10

31

32.3

1

10

10.0

3

7

42.9

4

15

19

4

4

9

4

3

24

2nd

21

43

48.8

4

14

28.6

5

6

83.3

13

11

24

10

9

7

1

4

51

OT1

1

5

20.0

0

2

0.0

8

10

80.0

2

5

7

1

1

0

1

0

10


32

79

40.5

5

26

19.2

16

23

69.6

19

31

50

15

14

16

6

7

85

 

SCORE BY PERIODS

1st

2nd

OT1

TOTAL

South Suburban

37

38

8

83

Rend Lake College

24

51

10

85

RLC advances at NJCAA DII Tournament

By Nathan Wheeler

Rend Lake College’s 12-point lead at halftime over Cecil College was a promising start in today’s opening round of the 2013 NJCAA DII Men’s Basketball Championship Tournament in Danville.

It got better.

After recovering from a meltdown in the opening minutes of the second half, the Warriors took control and won 98-75 over a Seahawks squad that logged an atypical 33.7 percent from the field. Cecil led the nation in three-point shooting during the regular season.

BronsonVerhinesMugBut it was Rend Lake that hit from beyond the arc in the second half – 44 percent. Big shots from long range came courtesy of players like Dawson Verhines (Woodlawn) who finished with 12 points; Cortez Macklin (Louisville, Ky.) who had 13 points, six rebounds and two assists; and Stephon Bryant (Louisville, Ky.) who had seven points and five rebounds. RLC got good inside penetration and rebounding from Bronson Verhines (Woodlawn) and Noel Allen (Guttenburg, N.J.). The combination of shooting and rebounding lifted The Lake to the next round.

RLC will play South Suburban (Ill.) at 8 p.m. Wednesday, March 20. Rend Lake beat the Bulldogs 76-68 when the two teams met back in November. The games are available live on local radio by tuning in to WQRL 106.3FM or online at wqrlradio.com and on a video stream at www.ihigh.com/njcaatv.

Bronson Verhines finished with a double-double – 18 points and 15 rebounds. Two of the biggest factors in the game were rebounding and bench points. Rend Lake out-rebounded Cecil 61-35 and had 41 points from the bench, compared to the Seahawks’ 10. Cecil players appeared to be running on empty toward the end of the fast-paced game.

Montez Buford (Louisville, Ky.) had an outstanding first half for the Warriors and was a big part of the lead going into halftime. Buford finished with 15 points.

Others contributing to RLC’s cause were point guard Trice Whaley (Jeffersonville, Ind.) with six points and two steals; Corey Ayala (Metropolis) with four points and two assists, Allen with 10 points and seven rebounds, Dennis Froemling (Campbell Hill) with two points, Alonzo Singletary (Chicago) with two points and six rebounds, and Jeril Taylor (Louisville, Ky.) with nine points, nine rebounds and five assists.

For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu/warriors.

 

 

SIU travels to Eastern Illinois Tuesday for non-conference battle

 

Southern Illinois (9-10, 0-0 MVC) vs. Eastern Illinois (3-14, 0-5 OVC)
Date Tuesday, March 19
Time 3 p.m.
Location Charleston, Ill. – Coaches Field
Probables LHP Brad Drust (1-1, 10.57) vs. RHP Jake Johansmeier (0-1, 4.00)
Radio WFRX 1300-AM and online at Saluki All-Access
Game Notes Southern Illinois Get Acrobat Reader
Live Stats Provided by Eastern Illinois
Social Media @SIU_Baseball

CHARLESTON, Ill. – The Southern Illinois baseball team will look to snap a three-game losing streak with a 3 p.m. game Tuesday at Eastern Illinois. It will be the Salukis’ final game before the conference season starts this weekend.

TUESDAY’S STARTER Brad Drust will make his second start of the season. The lefty made his first start of the season on Wednesday, March 13 at Middle Tennessee State. He allowed two runs off four hits in four inning of work. A redshirt junior, Drust has also made four relief appearances in 2013 and picked up his first win of the year on Feb. 22 at Jacksonville State.

EASTERN ILLINOIS SERIES NOTES Southern Illinois leads the all-time series, 56-28-1. The series dates back to Abe Martin’s first year as head coach in 1947. The Salukis have won eight of the last 11 meetings, but the Panthers beat SIU 5-1 in Carbondale in 2012. The two schools have met annually for a single game since 2005. During that recent stretch, SIU is 6-2 against the Panthers. Southern Illinois has won its last three road games against Eastern Illinois and has not lost in Charleston since dropping both games of a double header with EIU on April 7, 1993.

The Salukis have not lost in Charleston since 1993.

The Salukis have not lost in Charleston since 1993.

SCOUTING THE PANTHERS After starting the season 3-5, Eastern Illinois has lost nine straight games. The Panthers opened the home portion of their season this past weekend with a pair of losses to Austin Peay. The third game of the series was cancelled due to weather. EIU ranks 10th out of the 11-team Ohio Valley Conference with a .243 team batting average. Second baseman Nathan Sopena leads the team with a .316 batting average and five stolen bases. Jake Johansmeier will make his second start of the season. He has also made six relief appearances this season.

CLOSE LOSES Four of SIU’s last five loses have been by two runs or less, and the last two have been in extra innings. SIU has not lost by more than three runs all season. The Salukis are 2-4 in one-run games and 2-4 in two-run games. Southern Illinois is 5-2 in games decided by three runs or more.

LOOKING AHEAD SIU will open the conference schedule on Friday, March 22 with a three-game series at Indiana State. The Salukis will then return home for five consecutive nonconference games at Abe Martin Field. SIU will host Belmont on Tuesday, March 26 before welcoming Eastern Kentucky to town for a three-game series beginning on Thursday, March 28. The homestand will conclude on Tuesday, April 2 against Murray State.

Lady Warriors softball wins fourth straight, back to .500

PENSACOLA, Fla. (March 15, 2013) – Rend Lake College softball wrapped up its spring break trip to Florida today with a shutout sweep of Carl Sandburg College, 3-0 and 5-0. The Lady Warriors finished 5-3 in the Sunshine State’s University of West Florida Spring Fling in Pensacola.

It improved to 5-5 with the sweep today – its fourth straight win. RLC lost two to Lincoln

It improved to 5-5 with the sweep today – its fourth straight win. RLC lost two to Lincoln University (Mo.), 2-1 and 7-2, on Tuesday; split with Black Hawk College, 1-0 and 8-2, on Wednesday; and swept Southeastern Illinois College, 6-3 and 7-3, yesterday. The 1-0 win over Black Hawk was in walk-off fashion and was the highlight of the trip, according to Head Coach Dave Ellingsworth. Taylor Cheek (Pinckneyville, Ill.) hit a two-out single to score Molly Whaley (Benton, Ill.) who had walked earlier in the inning.

Fellow Benton native Amanda Holloway threw the first shutout against Carl Sandburg today. Holloway threw all seven innings – striking out three, walking three, and giving up five hits. She finished 3-1 at the Spring Fling.

In the second game, it was Erica Wilson (O’Fallon, Ill.) getting the shutout win. She also went all seven innings. Wilson struck out one, walked three and gave up three hits.

Hitting was spread around the lineup in both games today, according to Ellingsworth. Besides freshman Fallon Clayton (Anna, Ill.) at the lead-off spot, Ellingsworth has been experimenting with his lineup. Three players have hit cleanup so far – Breanne Pelker (Nashville, Ill.), Whaley and Taylor Thomas (Arcola, Ill.).

“That’s one thing good about this whole trip. Everybody contributed,” said Ellingsworth.

Thomas strained a quad against Black Hawk. Ellingsworth is hoping she will be out for only about a week.

“She was walking on it pretty good today, but walking on it and playing on it are two different things,” he said.

In three of its last four wins, Rend Lake has scored all or most of its runs in one inning.

“We would have runners on base but we just couldn’t drive them in. I don’t really like that, but we are scoring a lot of runs, so you kind of have to like it. I told them, you have to have that killer instinct where you just jump on them.”

RLC’s next opportunity is Tuesday, at home, against Kaskaskia College. The first pitch is scheduled for 2 p.m. For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu.

RLC’s Macklin, Verhines selected to All-Region team

INA, Ill. (March 13, 2013) – Rend Lake College student-athletes Cortez Macklin and Bronson Verhines have been selected to the NJCAA DII All-Region XXIV Team for basketball.

Macklin, a freshman guard from Louisville, Ky., averaged a team-high 13.7 points per game and shot 67.5 percent from the free-throw line and 44.4 percent from the field. Macklin also led the team in three-pointers made per game, and averaged 3.5 rebounds, 1.7 assists and 1.2 steals per game.

Cortez Macklin

Cortez Macklin

Bronson Verhines

Bronson Verhines

Verhines, a sophomore forward from Woodlawn, Ill., led the Warriors in rebounds and blocks per game with 8.1 and 1.9, respectively. Verhines averaged 9.5 points per game, and shot 52.8 percent from the field and 60.3 percent from the free-throw line. His brother, Dawson Verhines, also plays for the Warriors

Joining them on the All-Region team are Region XXIV Player of the Year Chris Whitehead of Danville Area Community College, Derek Shouse of DACC, Brad Hamilton of John Wood Community College, Dominique Walls of Parkland College, Aaron Simpson of Lincoln College, Ronnie White of DACC, Sam Feehan of Illinois Central College, A’Darius Porter of John Wood, Marcus Graham of Lincoln Land Community College, and James Lane of John Wood.

After winning the Region XXIV championship on Sunday, the Warriors are getting ready to play at the national championship tournament, March 19, in Danville, Ill. RLC plays at 8:30 p.m., against Cecil College of Maryland.
For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu/warriors.

 

Clodfelder, Mings to speak at Saluki Football Spring Clinic

Benton Rangers head football coach Jeremy Clodfelder and Johnston City Indians head football coach Dan Mings will be featured speakers at the annual Saluki Football Spring Clinic that will be held on April 13.

Below is the link for the information for the daylong event:

Coaches Clinic – 2013 Flyer

High-energy style has paid dividends throughout Jeff Early’s career

By Tom Weber
Saluki Media Services

Have you ever wondered why Saluki senior Jeff Early plays with such a non-stop motor — always hustling and scrapping — as if he has a chip on his shoulder? Turns out he does have an axe or two to grind.

The Virginia native, who spent most of his childhood growing up in Puerto Rico, will never forget the day he was cut from his eighth-grade basketball team. The coach flat-out told him he didn’t have the size or talent to play junior-high hoops.

A devastated Early practiced and trained on his own almost every day, determined to prove the coach wrong. Soon, he realized his coach was correct. He was short and his skills were lacking. That’s when Early decided to try a different approach that would set him apart.

“No matter how well you can shoot or how bad you are at dribbling, if you play as hard as you can and leave everything on the court, anything can happen,” he explained. “I still carry that feeling around of when I got cut and being the only one of my friends not on the basketball team.”

jeff early 228

Early’s frenetic, high-energy style was born out of necessity and made its debut at Rockbridge High School, where he blossomed into an All-State basketball player. He was also a football star and would’ve accepted a gridiron scholarship, except for academic deficiencies. Rather than play JUCO football across the country in Kansas, he elected to play basketball for nearby Allegany College and earned All-American status his freshman year. To increase his profile, he transferred to JUCO powerhouse Monroe College, where he subsequently broke both feet in the span of 18 months.

Although he was named an All-American at Monroe in 2011, most Division I coaches shied away from Early because of his injury history and lingering questions about his unorthodox shot. Saluki assistant coach Anthony Stewart loved Early’s dogged style and convinced Southern Illinois head coach Chris Lowery to take a chance on both Early and Monroe teammate T.J. Lindsay.

“Everything happens for a reason, and if I didn’t have academic problems, I would have pursued my football career out of high school, and if I didn’t break both feet, I wouldn’t be at SIU,” Early said. “God sent me on a different path.”

The 6-foot-1 Early was a part-time starter at guard last year for SIU and averaged 8.6 points and 3.8 rebounds — not bad numbers, but modest in comparison to the breakout season he’s experienced for Southern this year. Early is averaging 12.6 points and leads the nation among players 6-foot-1 or shorter with 7.4 rebounds per contest. He’s coming off a monster game against Miami University in which he scored a career-high 31 points and recorded his eighth double-double of the season.

Perhaps the key to his dramatic improvement has been a position switch to what first-year head coach Barry Hinson calls the hybrid forward. Early admits being skeptical at first about the proposed change.

“Coach pulled Josh (Swan) and I to the side one day and said he had a plan for us to be successful this year,” Early recalled. “I’d never heard of the word hybrid, and he told me it was the four. I started thinking, how am I going to play the four?”

The move has paid off for the Salukis and Early, who can use his explosive, energetic style to his advantage against taller, slower four-men. Defensively, he’s worked hard not to be a liability.

“I have my disadvantages on height and weight,” he acknowledged. “With how aggressive I play and with the mentality I play, I think I overcome most of the disadvantages.”

The 24-year-old Early, who is the oldest player in the Missouri Valley Conference, said he’s improved as a team leader this season, as well.

“Coach told me not to be afraid to tell my teammates what’s right and what’s wrong,” he said. “We’re so cool together off the court that sometimes you don’t want to make them mad and mess the friendship up. Somebody might take a bad shot or make a turnover, and before, I wouldn’t say anything or say it under my breath. I started to get to know how each player responds. There’s certain players you can yell at to get them going, and there’s certain players you have to talk to them calmly so they don’t get off their game.”

The Salukis have won four of their last six games, and in the wins over Missouri State and Miami University, it was Early who shook his teammates out of their doldrums for come-from-behind victories.

“I think it’s the drive I have and the love for the game,” he said. “If the team doesn’t have the energy it needs, they need that captain and leader on the court to bring it out of them.”

Early plans to graduate in May and will play in the 14-team Puerto Rican pro league next summer.

“After I graduate, I want people to remember me as a hard-nosed warrior who left it all out on the court,” he said. “I play every possession like it’s my last.”

Saluki Men’s Basketball tops Northern Iowa, 63-57, on Senior Night

By Tom Weber
SIUSalukis.com

CARBONDALE, Ill. – Southern Illinois extended its home winning streak to five games — the longest since 2009 — by clamping down defensively on Northern Iowa in a 63-57 victory on Senior Night at SIU Arena on Wednesday.

The Salukis (13-16, 5-12) are getting hot just as the conference tournament approaches, having won five of their last seven games. They matched last year’s Missouri Valley Conference win total and sent their three seniors — Kendal Brown-Surles, Jeff Early and T.J. Lindsay — out on a high note.

Desmar Jackson scored 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lead SIU.

Desmar Jackson scored 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lead SIU.

“I’m really happy for our three seniors,” said SIU head coach Barry Hinson. “I’ve always made a big deal about Senior Night. This was my 12th Senior Night as a head coach and I’ve never had a team get beat on Senior Night.”

SIU played its best defensive game of the conference season, holding the visitors to 38 percent shooting and forcing 16 turnovers. Southern’s D recorded 11 steals that led to 15 fast-break points, as the team jumped to a 39-24 halftime advantage. Desmar Jackson had 14 of his game-high 18 points in the first half, including a pair of highlight reel dunks.

“We weren’t strong enough with the ball in traffic and it led to points without our defense being set,” said UNI head coach Ben Jacobson.

The Panthers (17-13, 10-7) struggled to run their offense without leading scorer, Anthony James, who was sidelined with a thigh bruise that he suffered in Saturday’s BracketBusters game. They were just 8-for-32 from 3-point range.

“You’re so far along into a routine of what you’re doing at both ends of the floor, and you take away somebody who is that experienced and that valuable to you at both ends of the floor (as James),” Jacobson said.

UNI played pretty strong defense of its own in the second half, holding the Salukis scoreless for more than eight minutes and trimming a 15-point deficit to five with 4:43 remaining. The Salukis finally broke through when Jackson made a pair of free throws with 2:50 remaining to push SIU’s lead to 50-43.

The Panthers made one final push, cutting the deficit to 58-54 on a 3-pointer by Marc Sonnen with 31 seconds remaining, but Jackson iced the game with two free throws with 22 seconds to go.

“We told the team at halftime, you know they’re going to make a run,” Hinson said. “We know it because we’re good at imploding.”

With one game remaining on the league schedule, SIU is locked into the No. 10 seed at next week’s MVC Tournament in St. Louis — the first time Southern has been No. 10 since the league expanded the conference tournament to 10 teams in 1997.

After starting the conference season 1-11, the Salukis have played free and easy the month of February, not worried about wins and losses, and suddenly the wins are taking care of themselves. Hinson said the turning point was the team’s 37-point loss to Illinois State on Feb. 2.

“After the Illinois State game, we sat down as a group and said we’re not going to stop,” he explained. “We’re going to try to get better every day. Attitude and effort — as long as you do that — don’t worry about the scoreboard.”

The Salukis have gotten stellar play from their three seniors. In his post-game press conference, Hinson noted that it was Lindsay’s 14-point first half in the upset win over Wichita State that got the train rolling. Since then, Early has played spectacularly — he had 14 points, eight rebounds and three steals tonight — and Brown-Surles has been a steady floor general.

“I’ve always written my three seniors a note and put it on their chair for the last home game,” Hinson said. “Basically, I told them I’m proud of them and how they’ve grown as young men this year.”

The Salukis play one more regular-season game at Drake on Saturday, and then will play either Bradley, Drake, Illinois State or Missouri State next Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at the Scottrade Center.

Sophomore students honored at RLC Homecoming

SOPHOMORE NIGHT - Sophomore basketball players, FROM LEFT, Jennifer Moeller (Nashville) and Tazonda Gibbs (Detroit) were recognized as part of the RLC Homecoming celebration on Feb. 20.

SOPHOMORE NIGHT – Sophomore basketball players, FROM LEFT, Jennifer Moeller (Nashville) and Tazonda Gibbs (Detroit) were recognized as part of the RLC Homecoming celebration on Feb. 20.

SOPHOMORE NIGHT - Sophomore basketball players were recognized as part of Homecoming celebrations on Feb. 20. FROM LEFT are; Noel Allen (Guttenburg, N.J.), Corey Ayala (Metropolis), Dennis Froemling (Campbell Hill), Coach Randy House, Jesse Smith (Campbell Hill), Bronson Verhines (Woodlawn) and Dawson Verhines (Woodlawn). (Photo by Nathan Wheeler/RLC Sports Information)

SOPHOMORE NIGHT – Sophomore basketball players were recognized as part of Homecoming celebrations on Feb. 20. FROM LEFT are; Noel Allen (Guttenburg, N.J.), Corey Ayala (Metropolis), Dennis Froemling (Campbell Hill), Coach Randy House, Jesse Smith (Campbell Hill), Bronson Verhines (Woodlawn) and Dawson Verhines (Woodlawn). (Photo by Nathan Wheeler/RLC Sports Information)

SOPHOMORE NIGHT - Rend Lake College sophomore dancers were recognized as part of Homecoming celebrations on Feb. 20. FROM LEFT are; Dana Rone (Whittington), Alexa Heumann (Benton) and Barbie Finstad (Anna).

SOPHOMORE NIGHT – Rend Lake College sophomore dancers were recognized as part of Homecoming celebrations on Feb. 20. FROM LEFT are; Dana Rone (Whittington), Alexa Heumann (Benton) and Barbie Finstad (Anna).

SOPHOMORE NIGHT - Rend Lake College sophomore cheerleaders were recognized as part of Homecoming celebrations on Feb. 20. FROM LEFT are; Olivia Sledge (Mt. Vernon), Kasey Turner (Woodlawn), Sierra Moore (Sesser), Bobbi Massie (Waltonville), Justine Lamke (Scheller), Harlie Eubanks (Waltonville), Kali Echols (Mt. Vernon), Taylor Cochrane (Sesser), Alli Bozarth (Harrisburg) and Brooke Barwick (Herrin).

SOPHOMORE NIGHT – Rend Lake College sophomore cheerleaders were recognized as part of Homecoming celebrations on Feb. 20. FROM LEFT are; Olivia Sledge (Mt. Vernon), Kasey Turner (Woodlawn), Sierra Moore (Sesser), Bobbi Massie (Waltonville), Justine Lamke (Scheller), Harlie Eubanks (Waltonville), Kali Echols (Mt. Vernon), Taylor Cochrane (Sesser), Alli Bozarth (Harrisburg) and Brooke Barwick (Herrin).

 

 

 

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News