In light of the tragedy on April
16, the Virginia Tech athletic department has made the following
decisions regarding its athletics teams:
The remainder of Tech's spring
football session, including Saturday's spring game, has been canceled.
Tech was scheduled to practice Wednesday and Friday before holding the
spring game on Saturday.
In addition to Tuesday's
softball game between Virginia Tech and East Tennessee State,
Wednesday's non-conference baseball game at English Field between Tech
and William & Mary has also been canceled.
The athletic department has also
decided that the three home ACC events — baseball, softball and lacrosse
— will go on as scheduled. The baseball team will host Miami on Friday,
Saturday and Sunday. The lacrosse team hosts Maryland on Saturday at
noon, and the softball squad hosts Maryland on Saturday and Sunday.
The five athletic teams
scheduled to compete at various conference championships — golf, men's
and women's outdoor track and field, and men's and women's tennis — will
still compete as scheduled.
All Monogram Club events
scheduled around the spring game, as well as the baseball alumni
tailgate, have been canceled.
Golden
Eagles complete spring workouts
Southern Miss completed its
spring football drills on Monday with a two-hour workout at M.M. Roberts
Stadium. The practice was the final one of 15 allowed by the NCAA during
the offseason period.
East Carolina plays its
Conference USA opener against Southern Miss at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Sept.
15, in Greenville.
The Golden Eagles had planned on
finishing their spring campaign, Saturday, April 14, but heavy rains and
winds during the morning hours forced cancellation of the annual spring
game.
Golden Eagle coach Jeff Bower
thought that his program accomplished most of its goals over the last
month in preparation for the 2007 season and was pleased with the effort
of the team during this time.
"I thought we did well," Bower
said. "We found out a lot about our personnel and where we have to get
better. We found out a lot about our young kids and made some steps with
them."
Bower also announced the most
improved players of the spring campaign. Ralph Turner of Cottonwood, AL,
won the offensive award, while Michael McGee from Magee, MS, won the
defensive award.
Former offensive lineman Travis
Cooley from Waynesboro, MS, won the Heart of the Eagle Award, presented
to a Southern Miss player from the previous year that has excelled not
only on the playing field, but also in the classroom and in the
community.
East Carolina softball at UTEP on pay-per-view
East Carolina's softball game at
UTEP on Saturday at 3 p.m. will be shown as a pay-per-view event on CSTV.
The registration site is cstvppv.com. Cost is $9.95.
April
17, 2007
ECU's Salisbury
wins hammer throw at UNC-CH
The East Carolina track and
field teams competed in the Carolina Fast Times this past weekend at UNC-Chapel
Hill.
On the women's side, the Pirates
took home 17 top ten finishes, including Chelsea Salisbury's victory in
the hammer throw (58.62 meters).
On the men's side, the Pirates
brought home three top ten finishes. John Loehr came in 3rd in the 3000
meter steeplechase (9:45.03); Richard Armstrong (1:54.03) came in 10th
in the 800 meter run; and Akintunde Abisogun (6.72)was 10th in the long
jump event.
ECU softball
splits with Tigers, heads for UNCW
Due to inclement weather in
Greenville, Sunday's Conference USA softball series finale between East
Carolina and Memphis was cancelled.
The two teams split a
doubleheader on Saturday. The Tigers took game one 8-3 while the Pirates
bounced back to capture the nightcap, 5-0. In game two, Toni Paisley
threw a complete game shutout while also matching her career-high in
strikeouts with 11.
ECU returns to action today with
a rescheduled doubleheader at UNC-Wilmington.
UCF, Rice standouts take weekly C-USA honors
Central Florida sophomore
righthander Kyle Sweat has been named the Conference USA pitcher of the
week, while Rice sophomore second baseman/designated hitter Jess Buenger
earned hitter of the week honors for the period ending April 15.
Against No. 17 Florida, Sweat
had the best performance by a Golden Knight pitcher this season. The
sophomore shut down the Gators, giving up just two hits and walking only
two, keeping them scoreless over eight innings of work.
Buenger had one of the best
weeks of any Owl all year, leading Rice with a composite .556 batting
average as the team went 3-1. He went 10-for-18 with a home run, four
doubles, seven runs scored and four RBI's.
April
16, 2007
Weather curtails
Southern Miss spring game
Heavy rains and high winds
through the Hattiesburg area on Saturday morning forced Southern Miss to
cancel its annual spring football game. The scrimmage was set for a 1
p.m., start at M.M. Roberts Stadium.
The game will not be made up.
Instead, the Golden Eagles will use their final allowable practice
session of the spring today at the Joe P. Park practice facility.
Two Conference USA players taken in USBL draft
Houston senior guard Oliver
Lafayette and Tulsa senior forward Charles Ramsdell were both selected
in the United States Basketball League (USBL) draft.
Lafayette, a 6-foot-2 guard and
a two-time All-Conference USA second team selection, was the 15th
overall pick and drafted in the second round by the Kansas Cagerz.
The 6-foot-10 Ramsdell was
selected in the fourth round by the Oklahoma Storm. He was the seventh
pick in the fourth round and the 37th pick overall in the draft. This
past season, Ramsdell averaged 6.5 points and 4.2 rebounds while helping
the Golden Hurricane post a 20-11 overall record.
Wake
football gets rings, presents awards
The Wake Forest football team
received its 2006 ACC championship and 2007 Orange Bowl rings at its
postseason banquet on Saturday evening at Groves Stadium.
Sophomore punter/placekicker Sam
Swank was voted the team's most valuable player in a vote by his
teammates. Junior Kenneth Moore won the most outstanding back award,
senior Steve Vallos earned the Bill George award as best
lineman/linebacker, and senior Josh Gattis was selected most outstanding
special teams player.
April
15, 2007
Kass displays big
arm in Purple-Gold game
The heir-apparent to James
Pinkney as East Carolina's starting quarterback flashed passing talents
reminiscent of Pinkney in the team's spring game Saturday in Greenville.
Sophomore Rob Kass passed for
231 yards and a pair of touchdowns, including a game-winning 77-yarder
to classmate Jamar Bryant early in the fourth quarter, to highlight the
annual Purple-Gold intra-squad battle Saturday afternoon at
Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.
Kass, who completed 10 of 21
passes while splitting time with both teams, also opened the scoring by
connecting with senior wide receiver Phillip Henry on a 55-yard toss on
the game's fifth play from scrimmage to spark "East Carolina" to a 20-13
win over the "Pirates."
After the Pirates rallied from a
13-6 deficit to tie the contest on freshman Kevin Gidrey's one-yard
scoring plunge with 24 seconds to play in the third quarter, Kass capped
a brief three-play, 88-yard drive by hitting Bryant on a deep route
during ECU's first possession of the final quarter.
The three quarterbacks on ECU's
current depth chart played on a rotating basis for each squad throughout
the contest. Junior Patrick Pinkney completed eight of 24 passes for 67
yards with an interception while sophomore Brett Clay was 10 of 21 for
96 yards.
As East Carolina's
signal-caller, Kass found a receiver on six of 11 throws for 174 yards,
which included the two long TD strikes.
ECU
women's tennis matches record win total
The East Carolina women's tennis
team extended its winning streak to a season-high four matches in
impressive fashion with a 7-0 non-conference victory over N.C. Central
at the ECU Tennis Complex on Friday.
The win enabled ECU (19-8) to
tie a team single-season record for victories, matching its total set
last spring. Since taking over the ECU women's tennis program in 1999,
head coach Tom Morris has now equaled or surpassed the standard on four
occasions (16 in 2003, 17 in 2005 and 19 in 2006 and 2007).
Accusing LSU assistant submits resignation
Before returning to her alma
mater, LSU women’s basketball assistant coach Carla Berry distinguished
herself in mobile phone sales. Six years later, after excelling in the
art of recruiting some of the nation’s best players, she’s returning to
the business sector, according to a Baton Rouge Advocate report.
Berry, who first brought
allegations of improper conduct with former players by former LSU head
coach Pokey Chatman to the attention of LSU administrators, resigned
Friday.
“I have enjoyed my years at LSU
as a player and a coach, and I have memories I will cherish for a
lifetime,” Berry said in a prepared university statement. “I am excited
about the future of LSU women’s basketball, and I know the Lady Tigers
will do great things with our new head coach, Van Chancellor. I will
always be a great fan of LSU Lady Tiger basketball.”
The 37-year-old Berry, who has
not spoken publicly since Chatman stepped down March 7, did not return a
message seeking additional comment.
One
Buckeye dad says NBA decision not made
Mike Conley, Sr., has told The
Columbus (OH) Dispatch that he is "100 percent confident" that Greg Oden,
Mike Conley, Jr., and Daequan Cook have not decided whether to leave
Ohio State for the NBA.
He indicated that all three
freshmen could at least enter the draft to give themselves more time to
assess their status.
College underclassmen have until
April 29 to enter the draft and until June 18 to withdraw. The draft is
June 28. The Indianapolis Star reported Friday that Oden's father, Greg,
Sr., said his son would enter the draft, in which he is the presumptive
No.1 pick. The story did not say, however, whether Greg, Sr., who lives
in Buffalo, was told that by his son or how else he came by the
information.
April
14, 2007
Quarterbacks will
rotate in ECU's spring game
East
Carolina completes its spring football practice today with the playing
of the annual Purple-Gold Game at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium beginning at
3:00 p.m.
Similar to
last season, the two teams will be divided up as "East Carolina" and
"Pirates." However, unlike coach Skip Holtz' first two spring clashes,
which pitted the program's first offensive unit against the top
defensive unit, today's rosters were compiled in true draft fashion with
alternating picks by ECU's coaching staff.
With the
exception of the top three quarterbacks on the depth chart, all players
have been selected to a particular team. Junior Patrick Pinkney and
sophomores Rob Kass and Brett Clay are expected to rotate at quarterback
between the two squads in order to get the maximum amount of
repetitions.
RELATED ITEM: VIEW EAST CAROLINA'S SPRING DEPTH CHART
Hoyas duo testing NBA draft
status
Georgetown
basketball coach John Thompson III announced Friday that juniors Jeff
Green and Roy Hibbert have decided to submit their names for the NBA
draft.
"Both young
men have worked extremely hard to position themselves for this
opportunity," Thompson said. "They have begun a process of information
gathering which is necessary for them to make educated decisions."
Neither will retain (agents) until after the early withdrawal deadline
(if necessary)."
Pirate netters
sweep Mount Olive, N.C. Central
The East
Carolina men's tennis squad posted its first doubleheader sweep since
the opening weekend of the season with a 6-1 win over Mount Olive and a
7-0 shutout of North Carolina Central on Friday afternoon at the ECU
Tennis Complex.
April
13, 2007
Change, addition
made to ECU baseball slate
The
schedule for this weekend's Conference USA baseball series between East
Carolina and Marshall has been altered due to the threat of inclement
weather.
The two
teams will play a doubleheader today beginning at 3 p.m. and then play a
single game Saturday night at 7 p.m. at Appalachian Power Park in
Charleston, WV.
The Pirates
are currently in sixth place in Conference USA with a 4-5 league record,
while Marshall is 0-6 and in ninth place.
It was also
announced Thursday that the Pirates have added Elon University to the
2007 schedule to complete their 56-game season. The game, which will be
played on Tuesday, May 15, at 7 p.m. at Clark-LeClair Stadium, was added
to compensate for the cancellation of the scheduled March 16 game
between ECU and Michigan due to inclement weather.
NCAA football
timing returns to 2005 procedures
NCAA
football rules will go back to 2005 standards regarding a couple of
changes instituted last season to shorten the time of games.
First, the
clock will start on the snap after a change in possession, as opposed to
the 2006 rule which started the clock when the referee signaled the ball
ready for play. The committee also returned its rules on free kicks to
2005 standards, starting the clock on kickoffs only when the ball is
legally touched in the field of play.
Two major
changes intended to control overall game times include moving the
kickoff to the 30-yard line, which should result in more returns, and
limiting the play clock to 15 seconds in televised games following
commercial timeouts.
The new
rules will also limit charged team timeouts, during televised games
only, to 30 seconds plus the 25-second play clock. Conference or
institutional contractual media agreements shall supersede this policy.
This will not affect non-televised games.
Boyle spurns
chance to return as Duke coach
In a
surprising move, California coach Joanne Boyle didn't take Duke up on
its offer to have her replace women's basketball coach Gail Goestenkors,
according to a Durham Herald report.
The former
Blue Devils player and longtime Goestenkors assistant interviewed in
Durham on Monday, meeting with athletics director Joe Alleva and men's
basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski, among others.
She decided
Wednesday that her heart was in Berkeley.