COMMERCE – Texas A&M University-Commerce women's basketball team plays its final non-conference game on Wednesday night in Austin against the Texas Longhorns, who made a NCAA Tournament Elite Eight tournament last season.
WHO: A&M-Commerce at Texas
WHERE: Austin | Moody Center
WHEN: Wednesday, December 28 | 7 p.m.
RECORDS: The Lions are 2-9 on the season and the Longhorns are 8-4 on the season.
RANKINGS: The Longhorns are receiving votes in both national polls and have been ranked as high as No. 3 this season.
LIVE AUDIO: Lion Sports Network – KETR 88.9 FM, Commerce |
http://www.ketr.org
LIVE VIDEO: Longhorn Network |
https://www.espn.com/watch/player/_/eventCalendarId/401481459?gameId=401481459&sourceLang=en&om-navmethod=espn%3Aglobalsearch%3Aresults
LIVE STATS: https://statb.us/v/tame/433613
GAME NOTES: TAMUC | UT
SCOUTING THE LONGHORNS
• The Longhorns, coming off a Elite Eight appearance in 2021-22, are 8-4 on the season, but have won their last five and seven of their last eight.
• Texas is currently receiving votes in both national polls, but has been ranked as high as No. 3 in both the Associated Press and the WBCA Coaches polls.
• The Longhorns are 10th in the country in turnovers forced per game, 11th in blocks per game, and 21st in free throw attempts. Shaylee Gonzales is 12th in the country in free throw percentage.
QUICK GLANCE AT THE LIONS
• A&M-Commerce has lost its last three going into the Christmas break, but two of three losses came to teams ranked inside the top 50 in the NCAA NET rankings.
• Before the Christmas break, the Lions went down to South Padre Island and fell to Boise State and Bowling Green at the UTRGV South Padre Island Classic.
• The Lions lead the Southland in rebounding and in scoring, they are second in blocks, and third ins steals as well.
•
Dyani Robinson leads the SLC in scoring,
DesiRay Kernal is fourth in rebounding.
BRAND NEW WATERS
• The Lions are in the first season in NCAA Division I and the Southland Conference.
• This is the first time the Lions are changing conferences for the first time in program history.
AMONG THE BEST IN THE SLC
• The Lions lead the Southland in rebounding (41.9) and in scoring (67.0), they are tied for second in blocks (3.6), and third in steals (9.4).
•
Dyani Robinson leads the conference scoring, while
DesiRay Kernal and
Laila Lawrence are fourth in rebounding and field goal percentage, respectively.
ROBINSON EARNS SECOND SLC PLAYER OF THE WEEK AWARD
•
Dyani Robinson picked up her second Southland Player of the Week award on December 12 after scoring over 20 points in the games against Mississippi State and Idaho.
• She also earned the SLC Player of the Week award after the first week of the season.
• Last season, she was a first team All-American, TABC Small College Player of the Year, D2CCA South Central Region Most Outstanding Player of the Year, and Lone Star Conference Player of the Year.
KERNAL CRASHING THE BOARDS
•
DesiRay Kernal is averaging 7.5 rebounds per game, which is fourth in the Southland Conference.
• She has three double-doubles on the season, all coming against Division I opponents.
LAWRENCE SHOOTING WELL
•
Laila Lawrence is scoring 10.7 points per game on a clip of 49.5 field goal percentage, which is fourth in the conference.
• She is 14th in scoring and 11th in rebounding.
A RARE FEAT IN STARKVILLE
• Despite the lopsided loss against Mississippi State, the Lions had an impressive effort on the road.
• Coming into the game, the Bulldogs were allowing 50.3 points per game, which was seventh in the country. The Lions scored 53 points.
• Only one player had scored 20 or more points against the Bulldogs all season prior to December 11.
Dyani Robinson scored 20 to add to the list.
ENDED ON A HIGH NOTE
• The Lions ended their Division II era with four straight NCAA Tournament appearances and won a NCAA Tournament game in each of the last two seasons.
• A&M-Commerce has five postseason appearances in program history, with four coming in the last four seasons.
• The Lions were ranked as high as No. 1 in the D2SIDA rankings and No. 2 in the WBCA rankings last season.
HE'S DONE THIS ONCE OR TWICE
• Coach
Jason Burton is in his second stint in the Southland Conference.
• Burton was an assistant coach at Texas State from 2011-13 on the men's side.
BURTON GETS WIN NO. 150
• Coach
Jason Burton, who is the Lions' all-time wins leaders, secured his 150th career win on 2/12/22 at UT Tyler.
ALL-CONFERENCE RECOGNITION
•
Dyani Robinson was named the LSC Player of the Year, she is among four all-LSC honors last season
•
Laila Lawrence earned Sixth Woman of the Year award, while also being named to the All Freshman team and All-LSC Third Team
•
DesiRay Kernal was named to the second team and former Lions
Chania Wright was named to the third team.
CONFERENCE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
•
Dyani Robinson was the third LSC Player of the Year in program history, joining Britney Jordan and Kanani Marshall.
Chased 20 wins
• A win on 2/12/22 against UT Tyler gave the Lions 20 wins for the fifth time in program history.
• The previous 20 win seasons came in 2006-07, 2016-17, 2018-19, 2019-20.
ROBINSON REACHES 1K MARK
•
Dyani Robinson reached the 1,000 career points mark on Saturday, she needed 11 points against the Falcons.
STARTING OUT STRONG
• A&M-Commerce's 11-0 start to last season was the second time in three seasons that the Lions started 11-0 or better.
REACHING THE CENTURY MARK
• A&M-Commerce scored 100 points against Midwestern State on 1/23/22, the third time they reached the 100-point mark.
• The Lions had never scored 100 points in a game three times in a single season before this year.
• Earlier this season, the Lions scored 100 points or more against Arkansas-Monticello and SAGU.
• Entering the season, they had only scored 100 points or more eight times.
40 UNDER 40
• Coach
Jason Burton was named to Dave Campbell's Texas Basketball's 40 Under 40 list last season. The all-time wins leader in his ninth year the helm of the Lion Women's basketball program.
A&M-COMMERCE OFFICIALLY JOINS NCAA DIVISION I AND THE SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE
• After 90 successful years as charter members of the Lone Star Conference, the Lions begin a historic transition to NCAA Division I and the Southland Conference. This is the first time the Lions are changing conferences since 1931.
• The Lions are eligible to win the Soutland Conference, though they are not eligible for the NCAA Tournament during the four-year transition period.
• Winners of the NAIA National Championship in 1954-55.
• Founded in 1889, A&M-Commerce serves rural and urban Northeast Texas with distinction, consistently delivering on a promise that founder Professor William Leonidas Mayo made more than a century ago: "No industrious, ambitious youth shall be denied an education if I can prevent it." To this day, the institution remains committed to its core mission: "Educate. Discover. Achieve."
• Formerly known as East Texas State University, the 2,100-acre Commerce campus provides many opportunities for students to learn and grow. The university offers more than 135 degree programs at the bachelor's, masters and doctoral levels. A vibrant student life experience includes 14 competitive NCAA athletic teams, a thriving Greek system and more than 120 student organizations. Programs are delivered on site at the Commerce campus as well as in Dallas, Frisco, McKinney, Mesquite and Corsicana. A robust online academic menu of classes is also a point of distinction, and U.S. News & World Report has ranked several programs at Texas A&M University-Commerce among the best in the nation for 2021.
• A member of The Texas A&M University System since 1996, the institution provides quality education to an inclusive community of diverse learners as one of the most affordable universities in East Texas. Students work with world-class professors who dedicate themselves to excellence in teaching and research. The university maintains strong relationships with local industries to create relevant academic programs and valuable internship and networking opportunities that prepare career ready graduates.
• Serving nearly 12,000 students, Texas A&M-Commerce is a leader in competency-based education, and is the nation's first institution to offer an accredited competency-based bachelor's degree in criminal justice and organizational leadership. The agriculture program is also a national stand-out, featuring one of the only programs where students grow their own experimental crops on the university's 1,500-acre farm. In addition, A&M-Commerce upholds a 130-year legacy as an exceptional teachers' college, graduating more than 400 certified educators in 2019. In 2020, the university opened the 113,470-square-foot Nursing and Health Sciences Building, featuring a state-of-the-art simulation hospital.
SOUTHLAND MEMBERS IN 2022-23
Institution |
Offers Women's Basketball? |
A&M-COMMERCE |
YES |
Houston Christian |
Yes |
Incarnate Word |
Yes |
Lamar |
Yes |
McNeese State |
Yes |
New Orleans |
Yes |
Nicholls State |
Yes |
Northwestern State |
Yes |
Southeastern Louisiana |
Yes |
Texas A&M-Corpus Christi |
Yes |
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