Women's Basketball MEAC Media Relations

MEAC Women's Basketball Tournament: Day Two

Warner, Perry Combine to Lead Hampton To Easy Win Over UMES

Winston-Salem, NC-Melanie Warner poured in a game-high 22 points and corralled 10 rebounds and Quanneisha Perry also added a double-double of 18 points and 13 rebounds to lead Hampton to an easy 65-41 win over the Maryland Eastern Shore in the quarterfinal round of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference basketball tournament at the Joel Coliseum.

The Lady Pirates (18-11), the number two seed, advance to Friday's semifinal round against the winner of the Bethune-Cookman/Morgan State quarterfinal game on Friday at 2:30 pm.

Hampton, which played in the tournament final last year and lost to North Carolina A&T, entered tournament as one of the hottest teams, having won three in a row and 11 of its last 12.  The Lady Pirates came out of the block and established the tempo early, bolting out to a 23-6 lead and never looking back.

 "It was very important that we got off to a fast start," said Hampton first year head coach David Six.  "It allowed us to set the tempo.  We were able to get out and do the things we wanted to do.  I thought we did a great job on defense, we executed our offense and we did a much better job of not giving them second chance opportunities."  Hampton dominated the boards, 47-28 and 19-5 on the offensive glass.

Warner, a sophomore and Perry, a junior who was a First-Team All-Conference selection and Defensive Player of the Year, provided both the firepower and the rebounding as they combined for 19 of their team's 30 points and 13 rebounds while limiting the Lady Hawks (12-16) to three field goals in the first 20 minutes.

 "Hampton came out and played like a Number two seed is supposed to," declared UMES head coach Fred Batchelor.  "They were a lot more aggressive and they beat us in every way.  We were out-played, out-executed and out coached."

The Lady Pirates continued their dominance in the second half as Perry and Warner proved to be too much to handle.  The point guard tandem of sophomores Bernadette Fortune and Jerika Jenkins were equally effective, although in a much quieter fashion, as they controlled the tempo, scoring 15 points between them and dealing out nine assists while committing only one turnover.      

The Lady Hawks were led all season by their tandem of All-MEAC selection, senior April McBride and junior Casey Morton, but Hampton bottled up the duo and held them to 9 points between them, 17 points under their season average.

 "Our focus was on playing great defense," said Coach Six.  "I thought we had a concentrated effort on keeping two of the better players in the conference in check."

UMES was led by sophomore forward Adobi Agbasi, who came off the bench to score a team-high 14 points and grab six rebounds.  

WILEY HITS GAME WINNER IN UPSET WIN OVER NORTH CAROLINA A&T

Winston-Salem, NC-March 10-
Whitney Wiley nailed a three point shot with 1.0 seconds remaining to lift South Carolina State to a 61-60 upset win over North Carolina A&T in the quarterfinal round of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tournament at the Joel Coliseum.  The Lady Bulldogs (13-18), the number eight seed, advance to the semifinal round against the winner of the quarterfinal round match-up between Howard and Florida A&M on Friday at Noon.

The game had the usual ebbs and flows of tournament play, particularly in the second half.  North Carolina A&T (21-10), the Number 1 seed and defending tournament champion, extended a 29-21 halftime deficit to 35-23 during the first three minutes of the second half and appeared to take control.  But the Lady Bulldogs refused to fold and responded with a 22-3 run over the next eight minutes to take their biggest lead at 45-38.

The proud Lady Aggies responded with a 9-2 run of their own and tie the game at 47-all at the 4:36 mark.  From there, it became a tug-of-war affair with 8 lead changes and three ties.

Paris Alston, who scored 12 of her game-high 16 points in the second half and Wiley, who added 8 of her 11 after intermission, kept it close for the Lady Bulldogs.  NC A&T countered with scoring from Amber Calvin, All-MEAC selection Ta'Wuana Cook, Tyronnica Alford and Jaleesa Sams, who teamed for 27 of the Lady Aggies' 31 points in the final 20 minutes.

NC A&T took a 59-56 lead on a Lamona Smalley basket with 50 seconds remaining.  Alston scored on the Lady Bulldogs' next possession to get within 59-58.  Alford made the second of two free throws to give North Carolina A&T a 60-58 lead with 13 seconds remaining.

SC State had two opportunities in what seemed like an eternity for NC A&T, but each time, they regained possession after missed shots. The Lady Bulldogs were forced to call back-to-back timeouts when they had problems getting the ball inbounds.  Then Wiley, a junior guard, took a dribble to the right of the three-point line and launched an off-balance hook shot that went in and set off a wild, but premature celebration.

 "I drew up a set play but that was not what we ended up running,"admitted SC State head coach Doug Robertson.  "The thing about it is that that was not the first time that she has been in that situation this season."

Wiley, who finished with 11 points, says that she felt no pressure.

 "That is actually the fifth time that I have been in that situation this season," said Wiley.  "I was successful on some and some I was not.  I am just happy that I made it in a game that meant so much."

The Lady Aggies, who swept SC State this season, had a final shot attempt by Cook go wide as the buzzer went off.

 "It is a very tough loss, but it happens in this game," said NC A&T head Patricia Cage-Bibbs.  "South Carolina State did a great job.  They played hard.  We work on that situation all the time in practice but it is just one of those things that happens in tournament play."

Another key to the win may have been the Lady Bulldogs ability to close the statistical gap.  NC A&T dominated the boards in the first half with a 27-11 bulge and an 18-4 advantage in the paint area.  SC State reversed that trend it in the second half, winning the battle in rebounding, 23-8 while holding a 21-3 difference in second half points.

 "I was a little hard on the players in the first half, but my coaches told me to relax a little," said Robertson.  "I think that it helped because they did a much better job."