Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Feb. 22, 2001, edition 1 / Page 16
Part of Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
n TOURNEY FEVER STRIKES! Wire Photo KIRKLAND: Former CIAA MVP and Rucker League legend to tip off men's CIAA tourney. ? SIAC, CIAA IN LAST WEEK OF REGULAR SEASON PLAY; CIAA ADDS 6,000 SEATS UNDER THE BANNER WHAT'S GOING ON IN AND AROUND BLACK COLLEGE SPORTS WILLIAMS AN ALL-STAR: Hampton center Tarvis Williams, a virtual shoo-in to be named the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference player of the year, will be one of 64 seniors from across the nation participating in the 49th annual Portsmouth (Va.) Invitational Tournament, April 4-7 at Churchland High School. Williams averages 22.6 points per game, the top mark in the MEAC and fifth best amongst NCAA Div. I players. He also leads the MEAC with 4.4 blocks All Pro Photo , , , WILLIAMS: Taking P? game" the sec?nd ^ average ,n his game to the next ^'v '? "le '' Williams has been level has garnered among block leaders nationally in NBA interest. each of his four seasons at Hampton but has blossomed this year to become a more dominant player on both ends of the floor. The P-I-T always draws a horde of professional scouts from the NBA, other U. S. pro leagues and overseas teams. TO THE RAFTERS: Morehouse College retired the jersey of all-time basketball great Harold Ellis in ceremonies Wednesday (Feb. 21) during the Morehouse/LeMoyne-Owen game. Ellis, who entered the pro gram in 1988 as the school's first full four-year basketball scholarship recipient, left in 1992 as an honor graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Eduction and as the school's all-time lead ing scorer and steals leader. He won the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference player of the year award an unprecedented three times and also won the John McLendon Award as the nation's top black college player. As a professional player, Ellis has played for the L. A. Clippers and Denver Nuggets of the NBA and the Rockford Lightning and Quad City Thunder of the CBA. He was also a member of the USA World Championship team in Puerto Rico. TOP PLAYER: The winner of the Paul "Tank" Younger Trophy, going to the black college football player of the year, will be unveiled Sunday in ceremonies in Los Angeles. Hampton RB Montrell Coley, Florida A&M WR Jacquay Nunnally. Grambling OT Larry Metevia. luskegee LB Kelvin Powell. Florida A&M DE Jauron Dailey and Grambling DB Calvin Spears are winners of Spirit Awards by position and are finalists for the Younger Trophy. luskegee head coach Rick Comegy will be honored as coach of the year. THE STAT CORNER WHO ARE THE BEST PERFORMERS IN BLACK COLLEGE SPORTS HOW THEY DID IT Key games in black college basketball this past week. SWAC (women) Alcorn State beats, passes Alabama State Alcorn State forward Cherea Wood threw in 26 points and hauled down nine rebounds as the Lady Braves (13-2 SWAC, 16-9) displaced Alabama State (11-3 SWAC. 17-6) atop the SWAC standings with a 83-68 win Monday night at the David L. Whitney Complex. Wood hit on all twelve of her free throws to lead a 33 of 36 free throw shooting performance for Alcorn State which all but buried any chances for the Lady Hornets. Wood also had three assists, three blocked shots and one steal. Guard Kamrica Turk connected on eleven of twelve free throws for 13 points and added six rebounds, five assists and one blocked shot. Alcorn State was also dominating on the boards as they outrebounded the Lady Hornets, 43-24. Alabama State was led by forward Shameka Jackson who had 17 points and five rebounds.Next up for Alcorn State is a trip to Baton Rouge. Louisiana where they will face the Southern Lady Jaguars () 1-3 SWAC. 15-7) in a battle for first place. CIA A (men) Shaw wins battle of division leaders Shaw (7-2 CIAA E. 8-5 CIAA. 15-8). leader of the conference's Eastern .]< Division, went into Johnson C. Smith's Braybroy Gymnasium and handed the Western Division leading <6-1 CIAA E. 12-2 CIAA, 20-4) Golden Bulls their first CIAA loss in the building in two years, 85-78 before an overflow boisterous crowd of above 2^(K) fans. The Bears showed off the talent first-year coach Joel Hopkins has assembled. Guards Jermaine Smith (16 points) and Vance Williams (15 points) teamed with scintillating wingman Ronald Murray (23 points) to give the Bears a potent outside game, as they canned 11 three-pointers. Six-ten center Steve Bynes < 17 points. 13 rebounds) and 6-9 forward Kenyon Murray (eight points, nine rebounds) did the dirty work down low. leading to a 44-33 rebounding advan tage for the Bears, a ten-rebound margin off the defensive glass. The quintet scored all but six of the Bears points and had answers for everything the Bulls threw at them. Antoine Sims led Smith with 20 points, while center I^mans Shingler. who battled Shaw's tall frontline all night, had 19 points and II boards. MEAC (men) Coppin State knocks off MEAC top 'DaWgs, S. C. State Joe Brown scored 37 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lift Coppin State (8-7 MEAC, 10-13) to a 68-60 upset win over cold-shooting South Carolina State Saturday in Orangeburg. Rasheeni Sims had 11 points and Larry 1\icker 10 ! for the Eagles who snapped a two-game losing streak. S C. State, which dropped its second league game of the season - both at home - and had a five-game win j streak snapped, was paced by Vincent Whitt with 19 points and Greg Gray with 14. Dexter Hall added II points and a game-high 15 rebounds in the loss, which dropped the Bulldogs to 15-10 overall and 12-2 in the league. Coppin. which avenged an earlier 65-61 home loss to the Bulldogs, connected on 49 percent of its | shots from the field, including 58 percent in the second half, in which they out scored S.C. State 40-26. The Bulldogs shot only 32 percent in the game and hit a frigid 24 percent of their shots from the floor in the final 20 minutes. S C. State led 34-28 at the half and was ahead 38-32 with just under 17 minutes to play, when ' Coppin used a 11 -1 run to deadlock the contest at 39-all on Tucker's short jumper w ith 14:55 on the clock.. There were four lead changes and four deadlocks, the last at 52-all with 5:40 remaining, before the Eagles took control of the contest. OAZEEZ Communications. Inc. VOL. VII, NO 28 SCORES FEB 1* Alabama St 67 Alcorn St 50 Dataware St 73. Norfolk St 69 Howard 63 B-Cookman 49 Kentucky St 83. Clark Atlanta 60 Lane 85. Paine 79 Loyola 65. Talladega 51 UM?S 72. Florida A4M 57 Mwa Valley St 86. T Southern 74 N C A4T 68 Copper State 65 Praine View 77, Ark -Pine Bluff 69 S C State 76 Morgan State 69 Southern 74. Alabama A4M 69 FEB 17 Alabama Si 62 Southern 56, OT Alcom Si 77 Alabama A4M 74 Bow* Si 86, Saint Paul s 65 Cantral Si 84. Ohio Dominican 63 Chaynay 82 Manshaid 72 Clark Atlanta 100. Fort Valley SI 85 Concord 89 Wast Va State 83 OT Coppm St 68. SC Stale 60 Gardner-Webb 74. Savannah St 55 Grambkng St 83. Jackaon St 82 Hampton 73 Dataware St 58 Howard 72. Florida AAM 68 UMES 59. Bethune-Cookman 51 Miles 62. Albany St 51 Miss Vallay St 99 Prairie View 85 Morehouse 73, Kentucky St 62 Morgan St 68. NC AAT 61 St Aug s 88. Livingstone 74 Shaw 85, Johnson C Smith 78 Tenn Tech 81. Tenn St 72 T Southern 69 UAPB 67. OT Virginia St 81. Elizabeth City St 68 Virginia Union 82. NC Central 66 WSSU 75, FayatlavWe St 72 P| A A Central Intercollegiate v,~ ~ Athletic Association thru ant (XV ALL E. DIVISION W L W L Shaw 7 2 14 8 Virginia Union 5 3 14 9 Virginia State 3 3 14 9 Bowie State 4 5 17 8 Elizabeth City 3 5 11 13 St Paul's 1 7 5 18 w. DIVISION J. C Smith 7 1 20 4 W-Salem State 7 2 21 3 St. Augustine's 5 5 13 11 Fayetteville State 3 5 14 9 Livingstone 2 6 6 17 N.C. Central 2 6 6 17 CIAA PLAYER OF THE WEEK RONALD MURRAY. 6-4, Jr., F. Shaw (Philadelphia, PA) - In two Bear victories. Murray averaged 26.0 ppg., 6.0 rebounds and 4.0 steals. He had 29 points in a win over Va. Union and came back with 23 in a win over J C Smith CIAA ROOKIE OF THE WEEK VANCE WILLIAMS. 6-2, Fr., G. Shaw (Raleigh,NC) Williams had 26 pts . including eight three pointers in win over VUU and 15 on five threes vs. JCSU. MCAP Mio Eastern iiik.nv Athletic Conference thru 2/1# CONF ALL W L W L S. e state 13 2 16 10 Hampton 12 3 19 5 Norfolk State 9 6 9 15 Delaware State 9 7 10 14 Maryland-ES 8 7 10 14 Coppin State 8 8 10 14 N.C.AAT 7 7 10 13 Howard 7 8 9 15 Bethune-Cookman 4 12 7 17 Flonda A&M 4 12 6 19 Morgan State 3 12 4 19 MEAC PLAYERS OF THE WEEK VINCENT WHITT, 6-6, Sr., G. SC State (Greensboro, NC) - Whrtt posted 22 points (8 of 12 FGs), seven rebounds and three steals in win over Bethune-Cookman MEAC ROOKIE OF THE WEEK DERRICK SMITH. 5-10, Fr.. G, Norfolk State (Bowman, SC) - Had 14 points in a loss to UMES and 19 points in a win over Coppin State hitting on five of nine three pointers in the two games Q| A Southern Intercollegiate w i rr\ w Athletic Coneehence THRU L CONF ALL 1* W L W L Morehouse 13 3 18 6 Lane 11 6 13 9 Miles 10 7 15 9 Kentucky Slate 11 7 13 12 Paine s 9 9 14 10 LeMoyne-Owen 8 8 11 13 Clark Atlanta j 6 8 11 14 Tuskegee 6 9 9 14 Fort Valley State 7 9 11 13 Albany State 1 16 3 20 SIAC PLAYERS OF THE WEEK NA fl C WA P Southwestern ^ Athletic Conference thru ?1? CONF ALL W L W I Alabama State 12 2 16 7 Miss Valley 11 4 14 6 Alcorn State 10 5 10 14 Alabama A&M 9 5 13 11 Grambling 7 7 7 14 Southern 7 8 9 13 Jackson State 5 9 5 20 Texas Southern 5 9 6 17 Prairie View 4 10 5 18 Ark. Pine Bluff 2 13 2 22 SWAC PLAYER OF THE WEEK DEWAYNE JEFFESON, 6-3, Sr., G, Mississippi Valley State (West Point, MS) ? Jefferson poured in 40 points in the Delta Devils 96-84 win over Prairie View on Saturday and came back to get 37and 12 rebounds in Monday's win over Texas Southern. He made seven of 20 three-pointers on Saturday and canned eight in 17 attempts on Monday OTHERS : TMHU2/1* W I Cheyney 12 12 Central State 10 10 UDC 9 13 W Va State 7 17 Tennessee State 9 17 Benedict 7 13 IND. PLAYER OF THE WEEK JAMIE ROBERTS. Sr.. G, Tennessee State - Roberts matched his career high sconng 32 points, canning eight of 12 shots from three-point range as the Tigers lost to OVC leader Tennessee Tech, 01-72. Roberts, who scored 31 points in TSU's first meeting with Tech, has topped the 20-point mark in 10 of his last 13 games. He is averag ing 21 4 ppg in OVC play and is shooting 59.7% from the field and 55.3% from 3-point range Sellout of lower arena, ticket demand causes CIAA board to open upper section More CIAA tourney tickets available LUT WILLIAMS BCSP Editor Citing a persistent, increas ing demand for tickets, the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association's (CIAA) board of directors decided last Thursday to open the upper level of Raleigh's (N. C.) Entertainment and Sports Arena for next week's (Feb. 26 - March 3) 56th annual basketball tour nament. According to CIAA Commissioner Leon Kerry, the move will make available an additional 6,000 seats in the ESA and bring the total number of seats for the tournament to near 20,000. Tickets to the other sections of the ESA - which include lower, club and suite level seats - have been sold out for weeks according to Kerry who said he recommended the move to the board. "Starting as far back as December we have had (ticket) requests in our office that we couldn't fill," Kerry said Monday from his Hampton. Va.. office. "Also, the schools have been asking for more tickets. We don't want the fans to be denied." Kerry cited a number of factors that he believes led to the increased demand. "I think it's a combination of the new venue, increased marketing efforts on our part and the enjoyment and success SUN., FEB. 25,2001 Location Time Tournament Committee Meeting Marriott Crabtree 8 am Women's Team Practices/Pictures - Cardinal Gibbons H.S. 8 am -'4 pm Women's Tip-Off Banquet (Food Lion) Hilton 6:30 pm MON., FEB. 26, 2001 Women's Tournament Arena 1,3,7,9 pm TUES., FEB. 27, 2001 Women's Tournament Arena 1,3,7,9 pm Men's Team Practices/Pictures Cardinal Gibbons H.S. 8 am - 4 pm Men's Tip-Off Banquet (Capital Broadcast) Hilton 6:30 pm WED., FEB. 28, 2001 Men's Tournament Arena 1, 3,7, 9 pm Career Exposition Convention Center 8:30 am THURS., MARCH 1.2001 High School Day Convention Center 8 am Official's Hall of Fame (Mech & Farmer's Bank) Marriott Crabtree 9 am Men's Tournament Arena 1,3,7,9 pm (TV) j FRI, MARCH 2, 2001 >' ?, Tom Joyner Morning Show Memonal Auditorium 6 -10 am Hall of Fame (Reebok) Marriott Crabtree 9:30 am Women's Semi-Finals Arena 11 am & 1pm Fashion Show Memorial Auditorium 2 pm Coca Cola Presidents/Chancellors Dinner Wake County Shriners Club 4 pm Bank of America Presidential Reception Arena 6 -8 pm Men's Semi Finals Arena 7 pm & 9 pm (TV) Step-Show N. C. Central Univ. 9 pm Coaches Social Marriott Crabtree ? 11pm SUPER SAT., MARCH 3. 2001 DOORS OPEN Arena 7 am 3 point shoot-out ' Arena 8-9 am Cheerleading Exhibition Arena 9 - 9:40 am (4) Women's Legends Game Arena 9:45 -11:55 am Cheerleading Exhibition Arena halftime leg. (4) Cheerleading Exhibition Arena 12 n-12:40 pm (4) 3 on 3 Contest Arena 12:45 -1:05 pm CIAA/SAAC & Bank of America Leadership Forum Arena 1 pm - 2pm Men's Legend Game Arena 1:10 -2:40 pm Women's Finals Arena 5 pm (TV) Men's Finals Arena 8 pm (TV) Post Tournament Party Marriott Crabtree we and the fans had last year." One of the matters compli said Kerry. "We try to make our eating the decision was the pres tournamenl different. With the ence of the CIAA's popular great ballgames and all the Vendor Pavillion in the conces events and parties surrounding sion area on the top level. The our games, everyone had a good conference and it's Raleigh time." ? Tournament Steering Commit BCSP Notes WED., FEB. 28, 2001 Women's Quarterfinals 10 am Men's Quarterfinals 12 n Women's Quarterfinals 2 pm Men's Quarterfinals 4 pm Women's Quarterfinals 6 pm Men's Quarterfinals 8 pm THURS., MARCH 1, 2001 Shoot for cash Women's Quarterfinals 12 noon Men's Quarterfinals 2 pm Men's Quarterfinals 4 pm Men's Quarterfinals 6 pm FRI., MARCH 2, 2001 Talent Search Women's Semifinals 12 noon Men's Semifinals 2 pm Women's Semifinals 4 pm Men's Semifinals 6 pm SAT., MARCH 3. 2001 Women's Championship 3 pm Men's Championship 6 pm Old School Jam w/ Alexander O'Neal and Brick After title game ? Play at the 68th SIAC Basketball Tournament will be held Wednesday. Feb. 28 thru Saturday. March 3 at Birmingham's Fair Park Arena. Morehouse will likely enter as the men's favorite while Fort Valley will be favored to take the women's title. The conference will be holding its first tournament under first-year Commissioner Robert Vowels and he has added a few contests to the tourney mix. Spectators will be vying for a million dollar shot on Thursday night. There will be a talent search during Friday's semifinals and an Old School Jam following Saturday's final games. ? Winston-Salem State graduate and current Atlantic Coast Conference Assistant Commissioner Delores "Dee" Todd and Norfolk State basketball legend Richard "Pee Wee" Kirkland will be the keynote speakers at the women's and men's tipoff banquets at the CIAA tournament next week. Todd, the first female assistant commissioner in the ACC and a former award-winning track coach at Georgia Tech. will highlight the women's banquet Sunday. Feb. 25 at the Raleigh North Hilton Hotel. Kirkland, a New York Rucker League legend who led the high scoring 1967-68 Norfolk State basketball team to the CIAA championship, will speak on Tuesday, Feb. 27 for the men's banquet at the Hilton. Kirkland, who was drafted by the NBA's Chicago Bulls, also gained fame for his off-court activities whith landed him in jail where he eventually turned his life around. He currently operates a New York city program which teaches young people important values. He has been the subject of television news and advertisements and feature articles oknnl hie lifo ? on,l .h? tee worked with the Wake (N. C.) County Fire Marshall's office to work out the details. The new tickets will go on sale at the ESA Box Office on Wednesday (Feb. 21). Kerry said the plan is to make an additional 5,000 ticket books available for adults at $95 and 1.000 more student books available at $37.50. That configuration could change based on demand. None of the additional tickets will be sold through the confer ence office or the schools. The ESA Box Office telephone num ber is 919-861-2300. Single session (walk-up) tickets are scheduled to be on sale every day through Thursday at the ESA box office. There will be no day-of-game ticket sales on Friday and Saturday. This will be the first time in history the C1AA, by far the largest and most successful of black college end-of-season bas ketball tournaments, has attempted to sell out an arena the size of the ESA. Last year's sold-out tourna ment was the first of a three-year deal in Raleigh but the upper arena was not open to spectators. That meant the tournament sold about 14.000 tickets last year. Kerry said at the time that con sideration would be given to opening the top section this year if warranted. Prior to coming to Raleigh, the tournament spent six years in Winston-Salem's (N. C.) Joel Coliseum where they had diffi culty selling out the 14,000-seat venue during the final two years of their contract. If they are able to sell out the remaining seats it would put the C1AA on a par with NCAA Div. I conferences like the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Big East, Southeastern Conference (SEC) and Big Ten who perennially sell out 19 20.000-seat arenas for their tournaments. Kerry also said a host of new promotions and giveaways are schduled this year. Among them, three hundred pairs of Reebok athletic shoes will be given away to seat holders while Bank of America is giving away a free trip to Europe. "There is just so much going on in and around this tour CIAA photo KERRY: "We don't want our fans to be denied," says CIAA Commissioner. nament." Kerry said. "We think this move will give us the kind of free-flowing ambience that we had in Richmond (Va.) where the fans could mingle on all levels of the arena. We've missed that. We think this will bring that back." GAMES THIS WEEK THU., FEB. 22 CIAA Virginia Slate at Fayetteville State 7:30 PM St. Augustine's at Dist ot Columbia" 70Q-P.M N.C Central at Saint Paul's 7:30 PM' SIAC Lane at Tuskegee 7:00 PM INDEPENDENTS Claflin at Benedict 8:00 PM Sav. State at B'ham Southern 8:00 PM St. Aug's at UDC 7:00 PM FRI., FEB 23 LeMoyne-Owen at Paine 8:00 PM SAT., FEB. 24 CIAA Fayetteville State at Livingstone 7:30 PM N.C. Central at J. C. Smith 7:30 PM Saint Paul's at Virginia State 4:00 PM Eliz. City at Virginia Union 7:30 PM Winston-Salem State at Lander 4:00 PM MEAC Delaware State at B-Cookman 4:00 PM UMES at Coppin State 7:30 PM S C. State at Hampton 4:00 PM Howard at Morgan State 4:00 PM N.C. A&T at Norfolk State 4:00 PM SIAC Tuskegee at Clark Atlanta 8:00 PM SWAC Alcorn State at Southern 7:30 PM Grambling State at UAPB 7:30 PM Jackson St at Miss. Valley St. 7:30 PM Prairie View at Alabama State 8:00 PM Texas Southern at Alabama A&M 7:30 PM INDEPENDENTS Austin Peay at Tennessee St 7:30 PM Benedict at Allen 12:00 PM Central State at Masters (CA) 7:30 PM Kutztown at Cheyney 8:00 0M UDC at Columbia Union 9:00 PM Xavier at Dillard 7:30 PM ? MON., FEB. 26. ? CIAA 2001 Tourney in Raleigh thru March 3 MEAC Sav State at B-Cookman 7:30 PM Howard at Coppin State 7:30 PM Delaware State at Florida A&M 8:00 PM N.C A&T at Hampton 7:30 PM UMES at Morgan State 7:30 PM S.C State at Norfolk State 7:30-PM SWAC Grambling at Miss. Valley State 7 30 PM Jackson State at UAPB 7:30 PM Prairie View at Alabama A&M 7:30 PM Texas Southern at Alabama State 8:00 PM WED., FEB. 28 ? SIAC Tourney in Birmingham thru March 3 SCORES FEB. 1# Alcorn St 83. Alabama St 68 Clark Atlanta 65. Kentucky State 55 Coppm State 74. N C A&T 64 Delaware St 79 Norfolk St 66 Howard 101, B-Cook man 76 Lane 62. Paine 51 UMES 69. Florida A&M 67 Prairie View 77. Ark.-Pine Bluff 47 S. C State 69. Morgan State 60 Southern 81. Alabama A&M 65 Talladega 76. Loyola 67 T Southern 81 Miss Valley St 57 Virginia 75, Hampton 72 FEB. 17 Albany St 61. Miles 47 Alcorn State 74, Alabama A&M 51 B-CC 64. Md-Eastem Shore 56 Central St 72. Ohio Dominican 57 Cheyney 56. Mansfield 45 Delaware St 70. Hampton 57 Elizabeth City St 68. Virginia St 60 Fort Valley St 76. Clark Atlanta 61 Gradner-Webb 65. Savannah St 45 Grambling St 96. Jackson St 81 Howard 103, Florida A&M 69 J.C. Smith 115, Shaw 82 Morgan St 98. NC A&T 65 NC Central 71. Va Union 35 Prame View 82. Miss Valley St 41 SC State 79. Coppin St 77 Saint Augustine's 67. Livingstone 64 Saint Paul's 82. Bowie St 71 Shawnee St 77. WMberforce 57 Southern 87. Alabama St 58 Tennessee Tech 93. Tennessee St 90 Texas Southern 50. UAPB 48 Tuskegee 76. Lane 72 West Va State 88 Concord 66 W-Salem St 80. Fayetteviiie St 61 Xavter 79 TaWadega 62 P| A A Central Intercollegiate ^1 ~ ~ Athletic Association THRO 2/10 DIV ALL E. DIV. W L W L St Paul's 6 2 15 7 Virginia State 5 3 13 10 Elizabeth City 5 3 11 11 Shaw 4 5 6 19 Bowie State 3 6 9 16 Virginia Union 2 6 3 20 w. DIV. N.C. Central 7 1 20 3 FayVI. State 5 3 16 7 W-Salem State 5 4 17 7 J.C.Smith 4 4 16 8 Livingstone 4 5 17 7 ! St. Augustine's 1 9 7 17 CIAA PLAYER OF THE WEEK AMBA KONGOLO, 6-3, Jr, C, NC Central (Kinshasha, Congo) - Scored 39 points, had 17 rebounds, four assists, six blocks and four steals. Against Virginia Union, she scored 24 . had 9 rebounds and 4 blocks CIAA ROOKIE OF THE WEEK JOI SURRATT, 5-4. Fr, G. JC Smith (Charlotte, NC) - In three games, she averaged 12.6 ppg, 4.6 rpg. and 2.0 assists Had 21 pts 4 rebs vs. LC M p A f* Mid Eastern ,WI i"ri v Athletic Conference THRO 2/13 CONF ALL W L W L Howard 12 2 15 7 S. C.State 11 3 15 7 FlondaA&M 10 5 14 9 Delaware State 9 6 11 13 Hampton 8 6 10 13 Morgan State 8 7 8 15 Norfolk State 6 9 10 13 Coppin State 6 9 8 15 Bethune-Cookman 5 10 8 15 Maryland-ES 3 10 5 17 N.C.A&T 1 13 3 20 MEAC PLAYER OF THE WEEK CHAVONNE STEWART. 5-8. Sr.. F, Delaware State (Kennett Square. PA) In two wins. Stewart scored 61 points and pulled down 12 rebounds She.had 35 pts. six rebounds and seven steals vs NC AAT and had 26 pts., six rebounds and two steals against UMES ROOKIE OF THE WEEK TENE MILLER. 5-8. Fr.. G. Florida AAM (Detroit. Ml) Had 20 pts and five rebs. against Coppin State and 15 pts . five rebounds and three assists vs. NC AAT S AC Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference thru 2/1 ? 1 CONF ALL W L W L | Fort Valley State 12 1 19 4 Tuskegee 10 3 16 7 Albany State 10 5 11 13 Clark Atlanta 7 5 12 9 Kentucky State 5 9 7 14 LeMoyne-Owen 5 9 7 15 Paine 5 10 8 15 Lane 5 10 7 16 Miles 3 11 4 19 SIAC PLAYER OF THE WEEK NA ^ W A C Southwestern i?nv Athletic Conference thru 2/19 CONF ALL W L W L Alcorn State 13 2 16 9 Alabama Slate 11 3 17 6 Southern 11 3 15 7 Grambling 9 5 11 10 Prairie View 8 5 11 11 Texas Southern 7 7 12 11 Alabama A&M 5 9 6 16 Jackson State 5 9 7 14 Ark. Pine Bluff 2 13 2 21 Miss Valley 0 15 1 21 SWAC PLAYER OF THE WEEK CHEREA WOOD. F. Alcorn State ? Wood had her first career triple double getting 19 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists in Saturday's win over Alabama A&M and then added 26 points and nine rebounds in MorkJay's win over Alabama State. With the win Monday, the Lady Braves took over first place in the SWAC women's OTHERS THRU 2/19 W L Central State 22 6 Benedict 7 12 Tennessee State 6 18 W Va. State 5 -17 UDC 2 16 Cheyney 3 19 IND. PLAYER OF THE WEEK NA
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 22, 2001, edition 1
16
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75