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Nov. 13, 2007
Niagara's Second-Half Surge Trips
Penguins, 87-76
Niagara University,
N.Y. –
Youngstown State scored 41 points
off 30 Niagara turnovers but the
Purple Eagles' second-half outburst
of 48 points and a 54.3 second-half
field-goal percentage lead to an
87-76 defeat of the Penguins on
Tuesday evening at the Gallagher
Center.
Youngstown State
falls to 0-2 while Niagara improves
to 2-0.
Senior Heather
Karner scored a game-high 20 points
with seven rebounds while senior
Lauren Branson posted 11 points with
six assists and five steals.
Junior Kelsey
Gurganus also reached double figures
with 11 points.
The Penguins led
42-39 at the intermission but the
Purple Eagles began the second half
with an 11-4 run to take a
four-point advantage, 50-46, at the
15:54 mark.
Jumpers by Karner
and Gurganus knotted the game at
50-50 with 14:28 left.
Junior Ashley
Pendleton tied the game for the
fifth time in the second half,
52-52, at the 13:30 mark. Over the
next six minutes, Niagara held the
Penguins to just three field goals
and outscored YSU, 18-7, to take an
11-point lead, 70-59 with 6:33
remaining. The Penguins would not
get closer than seven points the
rest of the game.
In the first
half, the Penguins led 11-8 after a
3-pointer by Karner at the 14:21
mark before the Purple Eagles used
an 11-2 run over the next three
minutes to take a 19-13 advantage.
The Penguins made
a run of their own outscoring
Niagara, 12-6, to tie the game at
25-25 with 6:48 remaining after two
free throws by Karner.
Branson converted
one of two charity tosses to give
the Penguins a 26-25 advantage and
then two steals and layups on
consecutive Niagara possessions by
the Cincinnati, Ohio, native put the
Guins ahead, 30-25 with 5:36 left in
the first half.
The Penguins
pushed their lead to as many as
eight, 33-25, after a put-back by
Ashley Pendleton.
The Purple Eagles
came within four, 35-31, and cut the
Penguins lead to three, 42-39, at
the half.
After 10 days
off, the Penguins head to The Big
Apple for the LIU Turkey Classic,
Nov. 23-24. YSU takes on Long
Island, Friday, Nov. 23, at 2 p.m. |