Women’s basketball changes opponent, heads west once again

Women’s basketball changes opponent, heads west once again

The Lipscomb women’s basketball team will no longer play their scheduled contest Wednesday at Cincinnati, according to a statement from Lipscomb Athletics Tuesday morning. Instead, the Bisons will travel to Arizona to play the Pac-12’s Arizona State Sun Devils. That game will take place 3 pm Central time Thursday in the Phoenix suburb of Tempe. For the third time this season, Lipscomb will travel to the western half of the country for an away game. The Bisons’ first two games came in Utah against BYU and Utah, respectively, and the Purple and Gold also played against the Colorado State Rams in November in Fort Collins, Colorado. The Bisons lost all three of those contests. Lipscomb’s second Pac-12 matchup this year will take place at Weatherup Center, Arizona State’s practice facility, due to the short notice. Because of the space limitations at the facility, fans and most media members are not permitted to attend. This will be the Sun Devils’ second-straight game at Weatherup Center after lighting issues at their primary facility, Desert Financial Arena, forced a venue switch in their win over UC Irvine. The Bisons are 5-7 on the year after a 4th-quarter comeback win last time out. Arizona State enters the game with a 7-5 record, having won 5 of their last 6 contests. The Sun Devils have a 5-1 record in home contests, while Lipscomb is just 1-5 away from home. The Bisons and Sun Devils will square off for the first time in series history. Their only common opponent this season is BYU, who beat both teams at home in Provo, Utah. Senior guard Jade...
Lady Bisons prevail over Eastern Illinois

Lady Bisons prevail over Eastern Illinois

CHARLESTON, Illinois – The Lipscomb women’s basketball team beat the Eastern Illinois Panthers 54-47 Monday afternoon at Lantz Arena in Charleston, Illinois. With the win, the Lady Bisons broke a number of bad streaks this season, getting their first win against OVC opposition (1-3), their first win outside of Allen Arena (1-4) and their first win against a Division I opponent (1-7). “It was so fun,” senior center Dorie Harrison said. “It was about being consistent. Things don’t always go our way, but we’re learning to respond to adversity better and keep doing the right thing no matter what,” the Nashville native said. It was a tight game from the get-go, as the teams traded buckets in the first quarter. The Bisons scored four straight points to gain the biggest lead of the quarter at 16-11, and the quarter ended with Lipscomb holding a 16-13 advantage behind six points from Harrison. Despite picking up two fouls in the first quarter, Harrison led the team in points and rebounds with 16 and 12, respectively. She earned a double-double for the second time this year and matched her season-high points total. “We just stuck to the gameplan, just matching steps, making sure I stayed down,” Harrison said. “We watched film, we prepared like any game. I think we did a better job of executing the gameplan, all five of us.” Her performance inside did not go unnoticed. “ [Harrison] did a great job of not only scoring, but getting us second and third chances with the effort that she gave,” assistant coach Chris Sumski said. That defensive-minded, too-close-to-call narrative of the...
Men’s basketball breaks losing streak, beats Bulldogs

Men’s basketball breaks losing streak, beats Bulldogs

The Lipscomb men’s basketball team defeated the Tennessee Wesleyan Bulldogs 98-64 Sunday afternoon at Allen Arena. An unconvincing first half saw the Bisons trail for the majority of the first frame against TWU, a member of NAIA’s Appalachian Athletic Conference. The Bulldogs led Lipscomb by as many as 5, but Lipscomb took the lead for good with 8:40 in the first half. TWU shot 44% from the 3-point line in the first half, scoring 21 points beyond the arc to keep them in the game at halftime with just a 53-43 deficit. “[I was] pretty proud of our guys in that second half,” assistant coach Kevin Carroll said. “We did not have our best effort defensively, obviously, in the first half, and I really did not feel that our intensity and focus was there. “In the second half, we corrected that, as we should have. The communication on the floor was tremendously better, and it really showed and led to a lot of our points on the offensive end,” Carroll said. Second-year freshman Jacob Ognacevic scored 35 points for a career-high outing for the Bisons. The Sheboygan, Wisconsin-born power forward went 12-15 from the field and made 9 of 16 free throws, adding 6 rebounds. “Obviously, Jacob is a great player,” Carroll said. “Most importantly, I thought our guys really looked for him and gave him good opportunities to catch and convert around the rim.” He probably could have had well over 40 if he had his normal day from the [free throw] line,” Carroll said. Graduate transfer forward Parker Hazen pulled down a game-leading 9 rebounds and added...
Women’s basketball endures endless frustrations in Murray

Women’s basketball endures endless frustrations in Murray

MURRAY, Kentucky – The Lipscomb women’s basketball team lost a 74-50 decision to the Murray State Racers Saturday evening at CFSB Center in Murray, Kentucky. An outing full of disappointment left the Bisons without a win over Division I opposition on the season and continued a difficult run of games after losing 50-49 to Tennessee State Wednesday. A Racers squad that entered the game at 7-2 on the year certainly had Lipscomb’s respect going in, but the pervasive feeling in the locker room was that the team still could have done much better on the night than their performance showed. “I definitely credit them a lot,” assistant coach Chris Sumski said. “They’re a really good team, but I think we’re a much better team than what we showed tonight.” Sumski acted as the head coach for the second straight game in the absence of his wife, head coach Lauren Sumski. “Honestly, we’re just trying to hold it down as best we can until she gets back,” Sumski said after a noticeable pause to collect himself. “But the culture that she’s built, we should be able to keep things rolling even when she’s not here.” Despite leading the team with 11 points, it was a visibly frustrating night for sophomore guard Blythe Pearson. The Overland Park, Kansas-born shooting guard hit 3-4 from deep and pulled down a team-leading 8 rebounds as well, but all 11 points from the Bisons’ leading scorer came in the second half, when it was largely too late to affect the result. “It started at the beginning of the game,” Pearson said. “We didn’t come out...
Men’s basketball taken down by Tigers in fourth straight loss

Men’s basketball taken down by Tigers in fourth straight loss

The Lipscomb men’s basketball team continued a poor run of form in a 65-73 loss to the Tennessee State Tigers Sunday afternoon at Allen Arena. Down by 11 at the break and as many as 19 during the second half, the Bisons were unable to complete a last-gasp comeback effort to take down TSU. “We’ve just got to be better in the first half,” point guard Will Pruitt said. “We had 10 turnovers coming out of the first half, and I for myself have just got to be better, and we’ve got to be better as a team.” “We were fighting back in the second half, which is tough,” Pruitt said. Pruitt, a redshirt freshman from Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, led the Bisons in scoring with 14 points. Pruitt, who fouled out in the final minute of the game and committed four turnovers, added three steals for the Bisons and was a perfect 6-6 at the free throw line. Senior forward Parker Hazen added 12 points and 6 rebounds for the Bisons. The former Iowa Western Community College and Valparaiso player went 2-5 from the 3-point line. A pair of offensive weapons struggled uncharacteristically for Lipscomb on a night where almost nothing went right. Second-year freshman forward Jacob Ognacevic, the team’s leading scorer, put up just 7 points, while sharpshooting guard Greg Jones shot just 2-8 from distance and ended with 10 points. As a whole, Lipscomb shot just 10-26 from the floor in the first half, while TSU shot an even 50%, going 16-32. The Tigers also shot 45% from beyond the arc, making 5-11 at the 3-point line....