Former Wolverines faring well at the next level

Several players that contributed to the Foothill Conference championship by the San Bernardino Valley College women’s basketball team are excelling at their four-year colleges.

Junior forward Shy Walter has moved into the starting lineup at Cal State Los Angeles. She started the week averaging 6.6 points and 3.9 rebounds but tallied 26 points, 11 rebounds, three assists, two steals and a block in losses to Western Oregon and Northwest Nazarene.

Guard La’Quita Jordan is the leading scorer at Alaska-Fairbanks. She is averaging 13.9 points, 4.1 rebounds and 3.1 assists and has hit 11 of 27 tries from 3-point range. She has a high game of 23 and has been the team’s leading scorer in three of its last four games.

Forward Ronisha Edwards is a teammate of Jordan’s. She is averaging 9 points and 7.9 rebounds and has a high rebounding effort of 12.

 

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Cal State men trounce Pac West foe

Junior center Brandon Brown scored 19 points and collected 12 rebounds and three blocks to lead Cal State San Bernardino to a 96-54 win over San Francisco Academy of the Art Sunday in the CCAA-Pac West Challenge at Valley High School in Las Vegas.

The New Orleans native was solid in his debut weekend. In Saturday’s loss to Grand Canyon he tallied 21 points, 13 boards and four blocks.

“He definitely gives us a presence down low that we didn’t have before,” coach Jeff Oliver said. “He was the bright spot for us. No doubt.”

The Coyotes (3-5) shot 54 percent (34-of-62) from the field, including a 14-for-29 from 3-point range.

Reggie Brown added 18 points, making six of his nine long distance shots. Tim Denson added 18 points while Devin Montgomery and Lawrence Tyson chipped in with 13 points each.

Tyson also collected seven rebounds and four assists while DuBois Williams contributed six rebounds and 10 of the Coyotes 26 assists.

It was a season-high in the scoring column and also marked the fewest points allowed.

 The Coyotes finished with a 42-33 edge on the boards and cut their turnovers down to 15. They also hit 14 of 20 free throws, an improvement of 14-for-28 the previous night.

“It was a little better. We shared the ball better and looked for each other and it’s the first time we outrebounded anyone,” Oliver said. “But we still didn’t execute all that well at times. But it’s some progress.

The Urban Knights (0-11) shot just 32 percent (21-for-61) from the field. Sophomore point guard Weleh Dennis led them with 18 points.

The Coyotes are off until Jan 2 when they resume CCAA play with a 7:30 p.m. game against Cal State Stanislaus at Coussoulis Arena.

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Las Vegas a popular spot for college teams

Las Vegas seems to be the place for Division II basketball as the city hosted several events this week with Cal State San Bernardino and Cal Poly Pomona playing at different venues.

The Broncos needed more than 24 hours to make what should be a four-hour trip because of the eight inches of snow that blanketed the area. It took nearly seven hours for the team to make it from the school to Laughlin where it could go no further and had to spend the night.

The next day it took almost four to make what is typically a 90-minute at most trip from there to Las Vegas.

The team vans were stopped for hours at a time. The players took time to get out and stretch their legs. They had snowball fights and built a snowman.

Games the first day had to be called off. Not only could the Broncos not get into Vegas until late that night, but Cal State Stanislaus had its flight from Sacramento to Vegas canceled.

Cal Poly eventually got to Vegas but Stanislaus pulled a low-class move and bailed on the tournament. The Warriors could have gotten out the next day and still played their second of two games in the event on Friday. But they opted not to try and reschedule their flight.

That left Central Washington without a game. That school was one of the host teams and spent $13,000 between its stay and the cost of hosting the event. And yet it never played.

It has a right to be upset.

Word gets out about such moves so it wouldn’t be surprising if the Warriors weren’t invited back.

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