Westfield State and Bridgewater State Advance to the MASCAC Women's Basketball Title Game
Top seed Westfield State and second seed Bridgewater State have advanced to the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference (MASCAC) Women's Basketball Title Game after winning their respective semifinal games Thursday.
Top seed Westfield State and second seed Bridgewater State have advanced to the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference (MASCAC) Women's Basketball Title Game after winning their respective semifinal games Thursday.
#1 Westfield State 79, #4 Framingham State 65
WESTFIELD, Mass. – Senior Jen
Ashton (Beverly/Beverly, Mass.) scored a game high
23 points, grabbed nine rebounds and handed out seven assists to
lead Westfield State as the Owls outpaced Framingham State, 79-65,
in the semifinals of the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic
conference women's basketball tournament at the Woodward Center on
Thursday evening.
Westfield advances to Saturday's MASCAC Championship game
Westfield will host Bridgewater State on Saturday at 12 pm. The
league tournament winner will receive an automatic bid to the NCAA
Division III tournament.
The Owls won their school-record
16th straight game in improving to
22-4 on the season.
The two teams battled through a tight and fast paced first
half, with Westfield leading 37-36 at the intermission. Ashton
scored 18 first-half points for the Owls on 6-11 shooting from the
floor, including 3-4 from long distance.
Westfield quickly extended its lead in the second half, with
Ashton scoring a layup out of the break, a pair of free throws
from Forbasaw
Nkamebo (Amherst/ Amherst, Mass.), and a
three-pointer by Alyssa
Darling (Palmer/Palmer, Mass.) sandwiched around a
bucket from Framingham's Alycia Rackliffe (Agawam/Feeding Hills,
Mass.) gave the Owls a 44-38 lead just 2:33 into the second
half.
After a free throw from the Rams' Sarah Palace
(Auburn/Auburn, Mass.), Nkamebo hit two more free throws and added
a layup to extend the lead to nine points, 48-39 with 15:52 left to
play.
Framingam responded by sawing the lead back down to three,
52-49 on a Nicole Bostic (Oliver Ames/Easton, Mass.) layup with
12:56 left, but Westfield then embarked on a 10-2 run to push the
lead up to 11, 62-51 on another Nkamebo layup.
Framingham would get no closer than nine points the rest of
the way, and Westfield led by as many as 18.
The Owls got 20 points and 12 rebounds from Nkamebo,
and Jill
Valley added 15.
Framingham falls to 16-9 on the season. The Rams
were led by 17 from Sarah Palace, and got 13 from Bostic.
Rackliffe and Margo McCarthy each added 12 points for
Framingham
#2 Bridgewater State 59, #3 Worcester State 45
BRIDGEWATER, Mass. – Second-seeded Bridgewater State University posted a 59-45 victory over #3 Worcester State University in the semifinal round of the 2015 Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference (MASCAC) Women's Basketball Tournament on Thursday evening at the Tinsley Center.
With the win, the Bears (15-10) advance to the MASCAC Tournament Championship Game for the fifth straight year and sixth time in the last eight years. BSU will travel to top-seeded Westfield State University on Saturday to take on the Owls at noon.
Worcester State wraps up the season with an overall mark of 17-10.
BSU senior forward Megan Boutilette (Charlton, Mass.) led all scorers with 15 points. Boutilette also filled the stat sheet with six rebounds, five assists, four blocked shots and five steals.
Senior guard Rachel Kusz (Worcester, Mass.) added 12 points for the Bears on 4 of 8 shooting from three-point range, while junior guard Vanesa Conceicao (New Bedford, Mass.) chipped in with 11 points, four steals and a game-high seven assists.
Senior guard Julie Frankian (Millbury, Mass.) paced the visiting Lancers with 12 points, while senior guard Kelli McPherson (Mansfield, Mass.) added nine points on 3-for-4 shooting from behind the arc. Junior forward Bianca Langford (Worcester, Mass.) pulled down a game-high 22 rebounds including eight off the offensive glass.
Both teams struggled with their shooting in a low-scoring first half as they combined to make just 14 field goals. The Bears connected on 9 of 28 (32%) field goal attempts, while the Lancer went 5-for-18 (28%) from the floor. Worcester State also turned the ball over 17 times due to an intense BSU defensive pressure. Fifteen of the Lancers' 17 turnovers were a result of Bridgewater State steals.
The Bears led by as many as seven points on two occasions in the stanza including a 17-10 advantage with 2:20 remaining. However, Langford hit a short jumper for the Lancers followed by a wide-open three-pointer by McPherson to cut the deficit to two (17-15) as the clocked ticked under a minute. Following a BSU turnover, the visitors had a chance to take the lead, but a three-pointer was off the mark. Kusz then drained a trifecta with just five seconds on the clock to give the Bears a 20-15 lead at the intermission.
Boutilette and Kusz notched six points apiece in the first half, while Langford led Worcester State with five.
Bridgewater State used a 7-1 run at the start of the second half to open up a double-digit advantage, 27-16. The Bears got up by as many as 15 points (45-30), before the Lancers battled back to cut the deficit to single digits. A 10-3 run highlighted by a pair of three-pointers by Frankian and McPherson pulled the visitors to within 48-40 with under six minutes left to play.
Out of a timeout, Kusz nailed a clutch three-pointer to push the Bears' lead up to 11, 51-40, with 5:36 remaining. The margin would not fall below double-digits the rest of the way.
BSU shot 52% from the floor in the second half and converted 8 of 10 (80%) free throw attempts. The Bears finished with 19 steals in the contest and limited the Lancers to 29.6% (16-54) shooting.
Kusz tied the Bears' single-season record for three-pointers with her 58th of the season. Corey Cuddihy originally set the mark back in 2008-2009, and it was equaled by Jenna Williamson last season.
With her 15 points, Boutilette moved past BSU Hall of Famer Cathy Baker (1,152 pts.) into sixth place on the Bears' all-time scoring list as she now has 1,160 in her career. Boutilette also tied Williamson's program record for games played with 109.
Courtesy of Westfield and Bridgewater State Sports Information