#7 LADY HORNETS READY FOR LAST TWO HOME GAMES

Emporia State to host Neb.-Kearney on Military Appreciation Night

2013-14 ESU WBB Rheanna Egli vs. Pitt State
Stephen Coleman

Women's Basketball | 2/19/2014 1:02:00 PM


Emporia State Game Notes Neb.-Kearney Game Notes
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Game #26
#7 Emporia State Lady Hornets (23-2, 14-2 MIAA)
vs. Neb.-Kearney Lopers (8-14, 4-11 MIAA)
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2014 • 5:30 p.m. • Emporia, Kan. •  White Auditorium (5,000)
Series Record: ESU leads 25-10 Last Meeting: ESU 84, at UNK 75 (Feb. 1, 2014)
Radio: KFFX 104.9FM (5:10 p.m.) Internet Audio: kvoe.com
Television: None Internet Video: americaonesports.com ($8)
 Up Next: vs. Washburn  • Feb. 22, 2014 • 5:30 p.m. • Emporia, Kan. •  White Auditorium (5,000)

FINISHING UP   
The #7 Lady Hornets return to Emporia for their final two regular season games in White Auditorium beginning with Neb.-Kearney.
 
LAST TIMEOUT
Laura Patrick and Merissa Quick both had double-doubles for the #7 Lady Hornets as they punched their ticket to Kansas City with a 66-45 win at Central Oklahoma on Saturday in Edmond, Okla. The Lady Hornets used a 14-0 run in the first half to turn a 9-9 tie into a 23-9 advantage with 5:13 left in the opening period. Kionna Kellogg ended the half with nine points while Merissa Quick had eight rebounds and six blocked shots as the Lady Hornets took a 29-15 lead to the locker room. Emporia State got back to back three-pointers from Laura Patrick and another three from Rheanna Egli to start the second half to cap a 13-0 run that spanned halftime and put the Lady Hornets up 38-15 with 18:16 left.  The lead would hit 25 in the second half before Emporia State settled for the 66-45 win. Patrick ended with 12 points and 13 rebounds while Quick finished with ten points, 11 rebounds, four assists and six blocked shots.  Egli was the third Lady Hornet in double figures with 11 points.

THE COACHES
Jory Collins is 89-29 in his fourth year as the head coach of the Lady Hornets. He has 14 career wins against Top 25 teams with nine wins in the last ten match-ups. This is his 13th season on the Lady Hornet coaching staff and Emporia State has advanced to the NCAA tournament in 11 of those seasons. He is 2-0 against Neb.-Kearney.
Kevin Chaney is 36-65 in his fourth year at UNK. He is 0-2 against Emporia State.

ABOUT THE LADY HORNETS
Seventh ranked Emporia State is 23-2, 12-2 in the MIAA with ten wins over teams that have received votes in this year's WBCA Poll. They have clinched a bye to Kansas city for the MIAA Tournament and are tied with Central Missouri for first place in the MIAA while owning the tiebreaker over the Jennies. Nine players have scored in double figures in a game.
   
ABOUT THE LOPERS
Neb.-Kearney is 8-14 overall and 4-11 in the MIAA. The Lopers are 3-10 away from the Health & Sports Center with their lone conference road win coming at Washburn. Amarah Williams averages 12.8 points and 6.8 rebounds while Shelby Zimmerman checks in at 12.5 points and 7.9 rebounds per game.

THE SERIES    
The Lady Hornets lead the overall series 25-10. This is the first game between the two in White Auditorium since the 1998-99 season.

LAST TIME VS. NEB.-KEARNEY
Laura Patrick had 28 points to lead the #3 Lady Hornets to an 84-75 victory at Neb.-Kearney The Lady Hornets took a 43-30 point into the break and never trailed in the second half, but Neb.-Kearney did close the gap to a single point at 69-68 with 3:51 left in the game.  Patrick was three of seven from behind the three-point arc.  All nine Lady Hornets that played scored. Kionna Kellogg and Merissa Quick each had seven rebounds and Quick blocked four shots.

UP NEXT
The Lady Hornets play their final regular season game in White Auditorium on Saturday when they host Washburn. Tip-off for the Senior Night Turnpike Tussle is at 5:30 p.m.

HOME COOKIN'
The Lady Hornets have won 14 straight and 226 of the last 246 games at home. They have only lost 11 games to unranked NCAA teams in White Auditorium since 1997. The Lady Hornets are 378-89 (.809) overall since 1979 at home and hold the MIAA record for consecutive home wins with 62 set from 1997-2001. Emporia State is 10-4 against top ten teams in White Auditorium.

BRING IT ON    
The Lady Hornets are 61-41 against Top 25 teams since 1997-98.  Emporia State is 25-9 at home against Top 25 teams since 1997. The Lady Hornets have 22 wins against Top 10 teams, including four against #1 teams in the last six seasons. Emporia State is 21-14 in neutral site games with top 25 foes since 1997.  

QUICKEN
Merissa Quick (Jr./Cheney, Kan.) is ranked eighth in the nation in blocked shots. She is second in the MIAA in blocked shots, third in field goal percentage, 10th in rebounding, and 22nd in scoring. She had ten points, 11 rebounds, six blocks and four assists at Central Oklahoma. She became the 27th Lady Hornet to score 1,000 points when she went for 23 against Northeastern State. She scored 15 points against Ft. Hays State in White Auditorium. She scored 16 points on eight of 11 shooting, pulled down eight rebounds and blocked six shots at Washburn. She had four blocks at Neb.-Kearney. She scored a team high 13 points on six of ten shooting with eight rebounds at Ft. Hays State. She scored 15 points on six of seven shooting with nine rebounds against Pittsburg State. She had 14 points, seven rebounds and five blocks against Central Missouri. She had 12 points on six of seven shooting with 11 rebounds and four blocked shots at Lindenwood. She scored a season high 26 points in 22 minutes against Baker with eight rebounds. She opened the season with 14 points and 14 rebounds against Indianapolis. She had a double-double with 14 points and 14 rebounds at Kansas. She was an honorable mention All-MIAA selection and was named Most Outstanding Player at the MIAA Tournament. She scored 18 points with eight rebounds against Augustana in the Regional Championship game. She had 17 points and nine rebounds against Washburn in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. She scored 22 points in the MIAA Championship game against Central Missouri. She scored 11 points and had a career best 20 rebounds against Washburn in Emporia. She scored a career high 31 points on 13 of 20 shooting against Pittsburg State and added eight rebounds. She scored 19 points on nine of 12 shooting with three blocks at Central Missouri. She scored 21 points on seven of nine shooting with eight rebounds against Newman. She had nine rebounds against Kansas in 2011. She had 222 rebounds as a freshman, the most by a Lady Hornet freshmen since Emporia State joined the MIAA. She is sixth in all-time freshman scoring at ESU with 341 points and ranks fourth since Emporia State joined the MIAA. She is fourth in career blocked shots at Emporia State with 184 in 88 games and needs three to tie Sheri Moore for third. She has 1,010 points needs seven points to tie Casey Cookson for 26th and 18 to tie Kristi Nelso-Lackey for 25th on the all-time scoring list at Emporia State.
 
THE BIG SHOW
Laura Patrick (Sr./Hutchinson, Kan.) is ranked 32nd in the nation and leads the MIAA in made three-pointers. She is third in the MIAA in three-point percentage, eighth in blocks, and 11th in scoring. She had 12 points and 13 rebounds at Central Oklahoma with four made three-pointers. She had a team high nine rebounds against Northeastern State. She hit four three pointers and ended with 13 points at Washburn. She had a season high 28 points at Neb.-Kearney. She had 12 points, six rebounds, three blocks, two assists and a steal against Pittsburg State. She scored 16 points and had six rebounds against Central Missouri. She was six of nine from behind the three-point arc for 22 points at Lindenwood with a career high five blocked shots. She finished with 21 points, going five of eight from the three point line against Missouri Southern with five rebounds, three assists, three steals, and two blocks. She scored 21 points and went eight of 13 from the field against Southwest Baptist. She was the MIAA Player of the Week after scoring a game high 21 points against West Texas. She scored 21 points with eight rebounds, six assists and four blocks against Southwestern. She had 20 points and a career high 14 rebounds at Newman. She was a third-team All-MIAA selection and was named to the MIAA and Central Regional All-Tournament Team. She had 18 points with nine rebounds against Minnesota State. She scored 20 points against Washburn in the first round NCAA game. She scored 14 points and was four of five from behind the three-point line against Washburn in the MIAA semifinals. She scored 20 points with eight rebounds, seven assists and two steals against Washburn in White. She scored 22 points on six of eight shooting from the field against Missouri Southern. She had her first double-double with 13 points and ten rebounds at Southwest Baptist. She scored a career high 29 points with seven made threes against Abilene Christian. She earned second-team NJCAA All-American honors for Hutchinson CC and was named Jayhawk Conference West MVP.  She began her collegiate career at Sterling College and was named first-team All-KCAC and was the KCAC Freshman of the Year. She is fourth on the Lady Hornets single season list with 83 made three pointers last season. She has 148 made three pointers to rank eighth in career makes at Emporia State and leads all two year players. She has scored 823 points at Emporia State and 1,162 in her career at four year schools.

EGG HER ON
Rheanna Egli (Sr./Ankeny, Iowa) is ranked 48th in the nation in assist/turnover ratio. She is sixth in assists and ninth in assist to turnover ratio in the MIAA. She scored 11 points with three three-pointers at Central Oklahoma. She had 15 points on six of nine shooting with three steals against Northeastern State. She had seven assists off the bench at Neb.-Kearney. She had ten points, six assists and just one turnover against Central Oklahoma. She scored a team high 16 points with eight assists against Pittsburg State. She had a season high 17 points with 13 coming in the first half at Lindenwood. She scored 11 points against Baker. She scored 14 points, all in the second half, at Lincoln. She scored a season high 15 points against Midwestern State. She was six of nine from the field for 13 points with eight assists against Tabor. She scored 11 points against Concordia-St. Paul. She scored a game high 15 points and was four of four from behind the three point line against Central Methodist. She scored in double figures in six straight games and averaged 13.5 points and 3.0 assists per game in tournament games last March. She scored 17 points in the regional final against Augustana last year. She scored 13 points, all in the second half, against Minnesota State. She had 16 points against Washburn in the NCAA Tournament. She scored 10 points with seven assists against Central Missouri in the MIAA Championship Game. She scored 11 points against Washburn in the semifinals. She had 14 points, three assists and three blocks against Truman. She tied her career high with nine assists with no turnovers and 11 points against Central Oklahoma. She had nine assists with two turnovers against Abilene Christian. She scored 14 points at West Texas and had a career high five steals. She had 17 points with a career record 11 of 14 effort at the free throw line at Central Missouri. She scored a career high 20 points including a four of five effort from the three-point arc against Kansas Wesleyan. She scored her season high ten points against Washburn in the MIAA Championship game as a sophomore. Her 245 points in 2010-11 rank 12th all-time among freshmen at Emporia State. She has 117 made three-pointers in her career and needs six to move into the top ten on the Lady Hornet career list.

ACME PRODUCTS
Desiree Wylie (Sr./Killeen, Texas) is ranked eighth in the MIAA in rebounding. She had 13 points and eight rebounds against Northeastern State. She had ten points and eight boards at Ft. Hays State. She pulled 11 rebounds against Central Oklahoma. She had her fourth double-double of the season with 11 points and 13 rebounds in her first start of the year against Pittsburg State. She was six of nine from the field for 12 points and pulled down ten rebounds against Central Missouri. She had 13 rebounds at Lincoln. She pulled 12 rebounds and scored six points against Baker. She had six points and nine rebounds against Missouri Southern. She had 11 points and 11 rebounds against Southwest Baptist. She scored ten points at Northwest Missouri. She scored 14 points and tied her career high 14 rebounds against Southwestern. She had 13 points and nine rebounds against Midwestern State.  She had 11 rebounds against Indianapolis. Last year she had ten points with six rebounds at Pittsburg State. She scored a career high 16 points with nine rebounds against Lindenwood. She scored 11 points on four of six shooting and pulled down eight rebounds against Lincoln. She scored 12 points on five of eight shooting at Neb.-Kearney last season. She scored 15 points, including a pair of three-pointers, against Central Oklahoma and added nine rebounds. She scored ten points with eight rebounds in 13 minutes against Ft. Hays State. She had a career high 14 rebounds against Central Methodist. She had 12 rebounds against Abilene Christian. She had a team high seven rebounds at West Texas A&M. She scored 14 points with nine rebounds against Kansas Wesleyan. She had nine rebounds at Colorado State-Pueblo. She recorded a double-double in her first game with the Lady Hornets, getting 12 points and 11 rebounds against Newman. She was the third leading scorer and sixth leading rebounder in NJCAA Division I as a sophomore for Ranger College.  She averaged 20.7 points and 13.2 rebounds per game. She was a two-time all-conference performer and named first-team All-Region V as a sophomore.  

I BELIEVE I CAN FLY
Kelly Moten (Fr.-RS/Gary, Ind.) is 15th in the MIAA in assists. She had seven rebounds at Central Oklahoma. She had seven points, five rebounds and two steals against Northeastern State. She scored ten points in ten minutes against Ft. Hays State in White Auditorium. She scored nine points at Neb.-Kearney. She scored seven points with three steals at Ft. Hays State. She had a career high four steals against Central Oklahoma. She scored 11 points with four assists against Pittsburg State. She tied her career high with 14 points and had six rebounds, three assists and two steals against Central Missouri. She had 13 points with five rebounds and seven assists against Missouri Western. She had eight points, eight rebounds, five assists, two blocks and two steals against Southwest Baptist. She had career highs of 14 points and nine rebounds against West Texas and added five assists. She scored 13 points with three made treys at Northwest Missouri. She dished a career high seven assists with seven rebounds against Tabor.  She was held scoreless for the only time in her young career at Newman, but dished four assists. She had 12 points against Concordia-St. Paul and pulled seven rebounds against CSU-East Bay. She had seven points and five rebounds off the bench at Kansas.  She was an honorable mention Indiana Basketball Coaches Association All-State selection for Roosevelt HS. She averaged close to 20 points per game on her way to first-team All-Region honors for the Panthers.

DO IT AGAIN
Haley Parker (Sr./Lawrence, Kan.) is ranked second in the MIAA in assist to turnover ratio and 11th in assists. She had three steals at Central Oklahoma. She had six assists and no turnovers against Northeastern State. She scored 11 points and shot four of six from the field against Ft. Hays State in White Auditorium. She started and scored seven points at Neb.-Kearney. She scored six points off the bench at Ft. Hays State. She started and scored ten points against Central Oklahoma. She was four of four from the field and tied her career high with six assists against Central Missouri. She was five of six from the line and dished six assists at Lindenwood. She scored ten points on four of five shooting at Lincoln. She dished a career high six assists against Southwest Baptist. She made five of six free throws at Northwest Missouri. She had six points, four rebounds and four assists against Southwestern. She scored a career high 15 points including a four of four effort from behind the three-point line against Tabor.  She had 11 points, three assists, and two steals against Central Methodist. She scored a season high 11 points at Washburn last year, including a seven of seven effort from the free throw line. She hit two free throws with 1.2 seconds to ice the win at West Texas A&M. She went six for six from the free throw line and scored eight points against Kansas as a sophomore. She scored 14 points on six of ten shooting at Missouri Southern as a freshman.
 
SHE'S GRRRREEEAATT!
Kionna Kellogg  (Sr./Ames, Iowa) is 20th in the MIAA in rebounding. She had her second straight double-double with 12 points and ten rebounds against Ft. Hays State in White Auditorium. She had 13 points and a career high 13 rebounds at Washburn. She scored nine points and was four of five from the field with seven rebounds at Neb.-Kearney. She had 15 points and ten boards against Missouri Western. She had 15 points and ten rebounds at Lindenwood. She had 12 points and seven rebounds against Missouri Southern. She scored 11 points with five rebounds in 17 minutes against Southwest Baptist. She scored 16 points against West Texas. She scored eight points with seven rebounds at Northwest Missouri. She had 11 points, eight rebounds and four assists against Southwestern. She scored 11 points on five of seven shooting against Midwestern State.  She had 16 points and ten rebounds against Tabor for her first double-double as a Lady Hornet.  She scored 16 points with a pair of three-pointers at Newman. She had 12 points against Indianapolis. She scored six points with five rebounds at Kansas. She scored 11 points and was five of six from inside the three-point line against Central Methodist. She comes to Emporia State after three seasons at the University of Minnesota. In three years with the Gophers, she played in 96 games with 64 starts and averaged 5.1 points and 4.9 rebounds per game. She started all 32 games last season and averaged 6.5 points and 5.4 rebounds for the 18-14 Gophers.
 
NOTHING GOOD COMES EASILY
Amber Vandiver (Jr./Westminster, Colo.) is ranked 11th in the MIAA in rebounding and leads the league in offensive rebounds. She scored a career high 20 points with seven rebounds against Ft. Hays State in White Auditorium. She scored ten points and had six rebounds, five offensive at Ft. Hays State. She had ten rebounds and seven points at Northeastern State. She scored 16 points against Central Missouri. She scored 11 points and had 12 rebounds against Missouri Western. She was three of three from the field for six points with eight rebounds at Lindenwood. She had nine rebounds at Lincoln. She scored 15 points on six of nine shooting with six rebounds in 18 minutes against Baker. She pulled down 11 rebounds against Missouri Southern. She scored nine points with eight rebounds against Southwest Baptist. She had ten points and nine rebounds against Southwestern. She had nine points and 11 rebounds against Midwestern State.  She had 11 boards at Newman. She had a double-double with 18 points and 10 rebounds against Concordia-St. Paul. She scored 12 points with nine rebounds against Central Methodist. She transferred to Emporia State at semester from Boise State. She averaged 6.8 points and 6.2 rebounds as a sophomore in 11 games for the Broncos before transferring. She was an All-State selection in both Idaho and Wyoming for Boise Capital HS as a senior and Laramie HS as a junior.

HOLLOWAY WITH THE FALL AWAY
Megan Holloway  (Fr./Salina, Kan.) started and scored eight points at Neb.-Kearney. She had three rebounds against Central Oklahoma. She had seven points in nine minutes against Missouri Southern. She scored five points on two of two shooting from the field with two assists against West Texas. She had three rebounds at Northwest Missouri. She scored 11 points in her Lady Hornet regular season debut against Indianapolis. She was a first-team All-Class 5A selection as a senior after earning second-team honors as a junior. She was a two-time first-team All-Ark Valley-Chisholm Trail league pick. She averaged 14.4 points, 6.4 rebounds and 3.8 assists for the Cougars as a senior.

SAWING WOOD
Sarah Wood (So./Superior, Neb.) had four points and a rebound at Central Oklahoma. She saw her first action of the season at Ft. Hays State after sitting out all of the fall with an injury. She had ten rebounds against Washburn in the MIAA Tournament Championship Game last year. She scored a season high 12 points with eight rebounds at Central Oklahoma. She had 11 points on three of three shooting from the field against Lincoln. She pulled down a career high 11 rebounds at CSU-Pueblo. She had eight points and six rebounds against Tarleton in the first round of the NCAA Tournament as a freshman.

A STOUT ADDITION
Morgan Stout (So./Madison, Kan.) pulled a rebound against Central Oklahoma. She made her first three-point attempt and had two rebounds against Baker. She  joined the team at the semester break. She began her collegiate career at Missouri Western and played in eight games during the 2010-11 season for the Griffons. She had career highs of five points against Pittsburg State and five rebounds against Lincoln for the Griffons.  She was a first-team All-Lyon County League selection for Madison HS as a senior.

SUSTAINED EXCELLENCE
Emporia State won their first national championship in 2010, 12 years after making their first appearance in the national title game. The Lady Hornets were ranked 5th in this year's preseason USA Today Sports/WBCA Coaches Poll, the 17th straight year the Lady Hornets have received votes in the preseason poll and the highest preseason ranking since opening #3 in the 2006-07 poll.  The Lady Hornets have opened the season in the top 15 nationally in 12 of the last 17 years. The Lady Hornets have now assured themselves of 18 straight winning seasons, the longest active streak in the MIAA. They have clinched a spot in the MIAA Tournament for the 18th straight year, the second longest active streak in the MIAA. The Lady Hornets have won seven MIAA regular season championships in the last 16 years. They have made the NCAA Tournament 15 times in the last 17 years and their 30-14 record in the tourney is ranked fourth all-time among active Division II schools in total wins. Emporia State has made five Elite Eight trips, tied with Delta State, Northern Kentucky and North Dakota for the most since 1997.

LET'S HANG SOME MORE
Aneta Kausaite, Jurgita Kausaite, Tara Holloway-Churchill, Emily Bloss-Carpenter, Michelle Stueve-Corpening, Cassondra Boston and Alli Volkens have had their jerseys retired in White Auditorium for earning All-American honors at Emporia State, graduating and playing at least two years for the Lady Hornets.

ALL-TIME ALL-MIAA TOURNAMENT TEAM
Lady Hornets Emily Bloss, Tara Holloway and Jurgita Kausaite were named to the ten person All-Time All-MIAA Tournament Team by a panel of past and current sports information directors and media members prior to the 2007 Tournament. Bloss averaged 17 points in her twelve tournament games, including a tournament record 76 points as a senior. Holloway scored 151 points in her career. Kausaite scored 120 points in six tournament games. Emporia State's is 26-12 all-time in MIAA Tournament play and the Lady Hornets are the last team to win four straight MIAA titles.

MIAA TOURNEY EXCELLENCE
Emporia State appeared in their third straight MIAA Tournament Championship Game  last season and became the first team to have two different streaks of at least three straight championship game appearances.  The Lady Hornets won four straight championships from 1998-2001 and have been in the last three title games.  

SPEAKING OF THE MIAA TOURNAMENT
For the first 10 years in Kansas City the MIAA Championships had been an eight-team tournament for both the men and women. Beginning last season 12 teams qualified for the tournament. The top four seeds automatically advanced to Kansas City, and seeds 5-12 played an opening round of games on campus sites on March 5. Emporia State is the only school to have both their men's and women's teams qualify for the MIAA tournament since it moved to Kansas City in 2003.

RANKINGS
Emporia State is ranked #7 in this week's USA Today Sports/WBCA Coaches Poll. The Lady Hornets ended last season ranked #18 in the Coaches Poll. The Lady Hornets have been in the Coaches Top 25 220 weeks since first appearing in the 1997-98 preseason poll and have been in the top ten for 155 weeks. Emporia State ended the 2009-10 season ranked #1 after winning the national championship.  The Lady Hornets were first ranked #1 in the Jan. 11, 2005 poll. Emporia State was last ranked #1 in the regular season in the Nov. 28, 2006 poll after opening at #3 in the 2006-07 Preseason Poll.  In other polls, the Lady Hornets are ranked #2 in both the Massey Ratings and the Bennett Basketball Rankings.

LADY HORNETS NCAA HISTORY
The Lady Hornets have made the NCAA Tournament for 15 times in the last 17 years and their 30-14 record in the tourney is ranked fourth all-time among active Division II schools in total tourney wins. Emporia State won the 2010 National Championship, were national runners-up in 1998, advanced to the Final Four in 1999 and were also in the Elite Eight in 2000 and 2006.   
 
ROAD WARRIORS
Emporia State is 208-81 (.720) away from home, 70-24 (.745) in neutral site games and 44-11 (.800) against non-MIAA teams at neutral sites since 1997-98 with four of the losses in the Elite Eight. The Lady Hornets have gone on the road to defeat the #1 ranked team in the nation twice in regional tournaments and have eliminated the host team in five regional tournaments. The Lady Hornets are 110-42 (.724) on the road in MIAA league play since 1997-98.

NOT SUCH A HOME COURT ADVANTAGE
Emporia State's win over Washburn last season means the host team for the NCAA Regional the Lady Hornets compete in has won the tournament only once in the last nine years. The first eight years of the streak were in the South Central Region. In that same time, the host team has advanced to the regional final only twice with Emporia State defeating Washburn in 2006 in Lee Arena and West Texas A&M defeating Central Oklahoma in 2009 in Canyon, Texas.

HERE THEY COME
Emporia State has played in front of at least 1,000 fans in White Auditorium in every home game since January 2, 1999 - a span of 221 games. Last season, the Lady Hornets averaged 1,942 per game to rank fourth nationally. The Lady Hornets national championship game drew a standing room only crowd of 3,405 to the St. Joseph Civic Arena in 2010. The Lady Hornets averaged a school record 2,684 fans over 13 home dates in 2005-06 to finish third in the nation and led the nation with an average attendance of 2,348 fans for their 15 home dates in 2004-05. Emporia State has been in the top six of the nation in attendance in each of the last 16 years.

ON THE AIR
The Lady Hornets have been seen on national television four times in the last 14 years and are 3-1 in those games following their 65-53 national championship win over Ft. Lewis on ESPN2 in 2010. ESU's 97-94 overtime victory over then #1 Gannon was shown on ESPNU. The Lady Hornets 74-67 victory over Washburn in 2007 was televised nation wide on CSTV. It was the first time a basketball game was televised nationally from White Auditorium and the first time an MIAA regular season basketball game, men or women, had been telecast nationwide. The Lady Hornets national championship game against North Dakota in 1998 was seen on ESPN. The Turnpike Tussle game against Washburn in White Auditorium on Jan. 15, 2011 was available across Mid-America on the MIAA Broadcasting Network as were the Lady Hornets appearances in the last three MIAA Tournament Championship Games have all been televised by the MIAA Network.
 
BY THE NUMBERS
The Lady Hornets have topped the 100-point barrier 66 times and have eclipsed the 110 point mark 27 times in their history. Since 1997-98, the Lady Hornets are 241-2 (.992) when scoring at least 80 points. The first loss was to North Dakota, 87-81 in the 1999 Final Four and the second came at West Texas A&M, 86-83 in the 2009 NCAA South Central Regional Semifinals. Emporia State was 167-22 (.884) in the previous 23 seasons when scoring at least 80 points. Conversely Emporia State is 132-2 (.985) all-time when holding opponents to 50 points or less.

LOCK DOWN
Emporia State led the nation in scoring defense during the 2000-01 season, allowing just 50.6 points per game to rank 20th all-time in single season defense in NCAA Division II.  The Lady Hornets have not allowed a team to score 100 points against them since a 106-75 loss to West Texas A&M on Nov. 29, 1991 a streak of 692 games.
 
TOUGH ENOUGH
The MIAA is 71-32 in non-league action this season and was 87-33 against outside competition last season. The MIAA has produced two of the last eight National Champions and four different schools have been to the Elite Eight since 2008. The MIAA has had a team in the Elite Eight in 20 of the last 29 seasons.  According to this week's Massey Ratings, the MIAA has three of the top seven home court advantages in the nation.  Emporia State is rated sixth overall and is one of only two teams with at least 20 wins in the top 20.

WINNING
With last year's MIAA Tournament Championship, every four year player at Emporia State since the incoming freshman class of 1994-95 has won at least a share of an MIAA regular season championship, a regional championship, or MIAA Tournament Championship. The Lady Hornets ended 2009-10 ranked #1 in the ESPN/USA Today/WBCA Coaches Poll after winning the national championship. The Lady Hornets have spent 155 polls in the top ten since 1997-98. After advancing to the Elite Eight for the fourth time in eight years in 2006, Emporia State opened the 2006-07 season with a #3 preseason ranking in the USA Today/WBCA Coaches Poll. It was the highest preseason ranking ever for the Lady Hornets by the WBCA. The Lady Hornets have been ranked in the WBCA Top 25 in each of the last 17 seasons.

ABOUT LAST SEASON
Emporia State went 23-9 last year and were 13-5 in the MIAA before winning the MIAA Tournament.  The Lady Hornets won seven straight games including six against nationally ranked teams before falling in the regional final 75-74 to Augustana. It was the Lady Hornets tenth trip to the Sweet 16.
 
CHAMPIONSHIP EXPERIENCE
The Lady Hornets national championship in 2010 came in the school's second trip to the title game. Last year was Emporia State's 15th trip to the NCAA Tournament in the last 17 years and they have reached the Sweet 16 ten times. They have won five NCAA South Central Regional Championships to advance to the Elite Eight and have been to three Final Fours. The Lady Hornets have opened NCAA Tournament play with a win in 13 of their 15 tourneys. They have won seven MIAA regular season championships, five MIAA tournament championships and five NCAA South Central Regional championships since 1997. The Lady Hornets have played in ten NCAA Regional Championship Games and ten MIAA Tournament Championship Games in the last 15 years. Emporia State is an MIAA best 16-2 in the quarterfinals of the MIAA Championship Tournament and has been to ten title games in the last 16 years.

LADY HORNET SUCCESS ON THE COURT...
The Lady Hornets have the best record in MIAA play in the 21st century. ESU is 214-62 (.775) in MIAA play since the 2000 season and 366-98 (.789) overall in that time. The Lady Hornets are even better in the MIAA if you add two more years to the equation. Since the 1997-98 season, Emporia State is 245-63 (.795) in MIAA play and 429-102 (.808) overall. The Lady Hornets have been ranked in the top ten of the ESPN/USA Today/WBCA Coaches Poll 153 times, the most of any current NCAA Division II school.  Emporia State has been to 15 NCAA Tournaments, made the Regional Championship or "Sweet 16" ten times, has made five trips to the Elite Eight, three to the Final Four, two national title game appearances and won the 2010 NCAA Division II National Championship. The Lady Hornets have won seven MIAA Championships and are the only team to win four straight undisputed (untied regular season and tournament) MIAA Championships pulling the trick from 1998-2001. They have been in three straight MIAA Tournament Championships games, been to ten of the last 16 MIAA Tournament Title Games and won five tourney titles.

...AND IN THE CLASSROOM
Lady Hornets have been honored as Academic All-Americans three times since joining the NCAA. Michelle Stueve was named to the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America second-team in 2007-08 and was a three-time Academic All-District VII performer. Emily Bloss was a three-time Academic All-American and was named the Academic All-American of the Year in 2001.

END GAME
The Lady Hornets are 237-4 (.983) when leading at the 5:00 mark since the start of the 2004-05 season and are 404-10 (.976) since 1997 with a lead at the 5:00 mark.  

ABOUT THE CENTRAL REGION
The MIAA moved to the Central Region last year with the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference and the Great American Conference. The Regional tournament was stacked with tradition with four former national champions in the field and five of the eight teams have played for a national title at some point.  Emporia State is one of three MIAA teams to win National Championship, capturing the most recent title in 2010 and playing for the national title in 1998. Washburn won the 2005 National Championship while Central Missouri captured the 1984 National Championship and were runners-up in 1985. The NSIC's Minnesota State-Mankato won the 2009 National Championship.  Arkansas Tech, currently in the GAC, played for the national championship in 1999 as a member of the Gulf South Conference. They lost to North Dakota, who had eliminated Emporia State in the Final Four.

STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE
A total of 14 of the Lady Hornets games this season have been against teams that received votes in the WBCA Top 25 at some point this year.  Two of them played in their regional championship game last year. Eight of their nine non-conference opponents are currently above .500 with a combined record of 162-64 (.717) which improves to a .736 winning percentage when you remove their losses to Emporia State. All of their opponents are a combined 319-200 (.615) on the season. Emporia State's opponents combined record last season was 384-270 (.587) with 24 of their 32 opponents with a winning record. The Lady Hornets nine losses on the season were all to teams that went a combined 170-58 (.746), received votes at some point in the WBCA USA Today Sports Coaches poll last year and were ranked in the top ten of their respective regions in the final three weeks.

 STREAKS AND SUCH
•The Lady Hornets have hit a three pointer in 255 straight games dating back to a zero for 14 effort at Washburn on Feb. 15, 2006.
•The Lady Hornets have held their last 692 opponents to under 100 points dating back to a 106-75 loss to West Texas A&M in Hays, Kan. on Nov. 29, 1991.
•The Lady Hornets have won 20 straight non-conference games in White Auditorium dating back to a 58-51 loss to Harris-Stowe on December 8, 2007.
•The Lady Hornets ended the longest winning streak in NCAA Division II history (51 games) with their 61-59 overtime victory over Washburn on March 13, 2006 in the South Central Regional final and the longest single season winning streak (37 games) with their 97-94 overtime victory over Gannon on March 24, 2010 in the national semifinals.
•The Lady Hornets have defeated the host team in the last three regional tournaments they have played in (at Washburn 65-58 in 2013; at Washburn 71-65 in 2012; at West Texas A&M 76-69 in 2010).
•The Lady Hornets won six straight games against nationally ranked teams prior to falling in the regional championship game last year, the longest streak since winning seven straight over the 1999-2000 through 2000-01 seasons and the longest single season streak since winning seven straight on the way to the 1998 national championship game.
•Previous to the Northeastern State game in Tahlequah, the last time the Lady Hornets failed to place a player in double figures was in a 64-42 loss to Washburn on Jan. 25, 1995 - a streak of 588 games.

TIP-INS
• The Lady Hornets have won 20 games in 12 straight seasons, 17 times in the last 18 years and 22 times in the program's 38 year history.
• The Lady Hornets have won 25 games nine times in school history.
• The Lady Hornets have won 30 games three times in school history.
• The Lady Hornets are 791-363 (.685) overall in 38 years of action.
• The Lady Hornets are the only team to appear in the NCAA top twenty season records for scoring offense (17th - 90.0 in 1998; 8th - 91.3 in 1999; 18th - 89.9 in 2000) and scoring defense (18th - 50.6 in 2001).
• The Lady Hornets have had nine of the last 15 MIAA MVPs, five of the last 11 Freshmen of the Year and won the MIAA Defensive Player of the Year award in 2011-12.

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