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Topics - ysuindy

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76
I saw a few weeks ago that Justin Thomas had opted out of his minor league deal.  He is on his way to Japan to join the Nippon Ham Fighters

https://twitter.com/JustinThomas02

77
I missed them getting their release in April. 

http://www.mlive.com/sports/flint/index.ssf/2013/07/detroit_mercy_grew_toxic_for_f.html#incart_river_default

GRAND BLANC, MI – Wayne State University's women's basketball team this year is getting a powerhouse junior scorer and a solid sophomore after two teammates from Grand Blanc jumped from University of Detroit-Mercy's Division I program to Wayne State's Division II team

Shareta Brown and teammate Destiny La Vita-Stephens, both Grand Blanc grads, were released in April from their Division I basketball scholarships with the Titans at their request.

The girls are teammates and consider themselves sisters. La Vita-Stephens' parents were given legal custody of Brown as a minor in 2009. Both women said they are changing schools to pursue their own happiness.

Both signed July 8 to play hoops at Wayne State University. Darrin McAllister, La Vita-Stephens' father, is an assistant coach for the women's basketball team.

As a star player at Detroit-Mercy, Brown said she was treated well, but left Detroit-Mercy because of conflict with Coach Autumn Rademacher. Brown said she didn't like the way the coach talked to other players.

As a sophomore, Brown set new scoring records, led the Titans to a Women's Basketball Invitational Championship and became the second Titan to ever average 20 points in a season. She was on track to be the lady Titans' all-time leading scorer.

"I didn't like how (Rademacher) treated people, plus I don't think that I was getting better myself. I was limited to do just one thing and if I didn't do what she wanted me to do, then she would get mad," Brown said.

La Vita-Stephens, who averaged 3.2 points in 14.7 minutes as a freshman, said she decided halfway through the last season that she would leave the team.

"I didn't know Reta felt the way she felt. I thought she was going to stick it out, but I never felt comfortable at that school," La Vita-Stephens said.

Rademacher responded to an email from MLive-The Flint Journal with thanks for reaching out to hear both sides of the story, but said she was informed that she is "unable to comment on student-athletes that are no longer enrolled here."

UDM's media relations department "wishes them the best in their future." No other statements or comments were released on the school's behalf.


View full size
Former Detroit Mercy basketball star Shareta Brown (No. 24) has transferred to Wayne State University.
UDM Sports Info

After announcing she would leave Detroit-Mercy in May, Brown said she was contacted by 20-25 coaches in Division I programs from conferences like the SEC, Big Ten, Big EAST, Conference USA and the MAC.

Brown wanted to stay near her family in Michigan, though, and when UDM granted her scholarship release on April 25, the university blocked her from attending any Horizon League institutions -- Western Michigan, Eastern Michigan, South Florida, Toledo, Michigan and Michigan State.

La Vita-Stephens was given the same restrictions, but promptly decided on Wayne State, where her father is part of the coaching staff.

"That wasn't the only reason why we came over there," said La Vita-Stephens, who will pursue a nursing degree at WSU. "I just knew that my dad would have my back and it would help if I was over there with my other half (her father)."

McAllister and WSU declined to comment on the players' decision to come to the school.

Brown initially looked to attend Oakland University, but ultimately decided to follow La Vita-Stephens and attend the smaller program at Wayne State, where they both can play right away next season.

NCAA rules would force them to sit out a season if they transferred to A Division I school, but are allowed to play at the smaller-division Wayne State.

"At first, I was thinking that I should go to a higher school, but I really don't have to prove myself no more," said Brown, who broke the Horizon League single-year scoring record with 714 points last season. "I've played against Penn State, Michigan and Michigan State and I did good. There's plenty of people that have played D2 that have did their thing and what they wanted to do, so that's not going to hold me back, it's just going to make me better."


View full size
Destiny La Vita-Stephens
UDM Athletics

Brown and La Vita-Stephens are shooting for a national title at Wayne State this season.

La Vita-Stephens' parents – McAllister and Michelle La Vita – were granted legal custody of Brown before the start of her junior year, which allowed her to move to Grand Blanc. La Vita-Stephens and Brown starred at Grand Blanc from 2009-11 and teamed up on McAllister's Michigan Fire and All Michigan Amateur Athletic Union basketball teams.

Michelle La Vita says her girls' decision to leave Detroit-Mercy initially caused a division within the family: McAllister felt the players were hitting the "freshman wall" during a rough stretch, while Michelle La Vita felt differently, she said.

"I kept trying to be positive," Michelle La Vita said. "I'm not complaining, because Destiny averaged over 13 minutes per game as a freshman and Shareta played whenever she wasn't in foul trouble and wanted to play ... but enough was enough ... and it was really time to go."


78
YSU Penguin Athletics / Michgain State based previews of YSU @ Sparty
« on: July 10, 2013, 03:30:49 PM »
If you are going to give examples of FCS over FBS in a story about YSU, wouldn't you, you know, mention YSU vs Pitt?  Of course that would involve acknowledging that football exists outside the cocoon of the B1G.


http://db.lsj.com/blogswp/couchonfire/an-early-spin-through-msus-football-season-youngstown-state-on-sept-14-offers-final-tuneup-before-season-gets-real/

This is the third in a 12-day series looking at Michigan State’s opponents this football season and their chances against the Spartans.

Week 3: Youngstown State
Time and Date: 2 p.m., Sept. 14
Venue: Spartan Stadium, East Lansing
TV: Big Ten Network

Penguins at a glance
Coach: Eric Wolford (Fourth season, 16-17)
Last season: 7-4 overall, 4-4 Missouri Valley (6th)
Returning starters: 14

Preseason magazine predictions
Athlon: None
Lindy’s: 4th, Missouri Valley; ranked No. 19 in FCS
Sporting News: 6th, Missouri Valley

Why they’ll beat the Spartans
FCS programs (still known more as Division I-AA) can be dangerous. The obvious example is Appalachian State beating Michigan in 2007. But it happens somewhat regularly and the close calls are annual events — the Wolverines’ escape of UMass in 2010, Wisconsin’s near-trip against Northern Iowa last season, etc.

It doesn’t take an elite FCS foe to pull the upset, but, as with mid-majors, it has to be one with elite playmakers and enough bulk in the trenches not to be blown over (It also helps if a few high-major transfers find their way to campus.). Youngstown State might just be that, led by school-record-touting senior quarterback Kurt Hess and lauded as a playoff contender. And, if there is an obvious letdown game on MSU’s schedule, this is it — the newness of the season having worn off by the third straight home game to start the season, a week before a trip to Notre Dame.

Why they won’t
These aren’t Jim Tressel’s Penguins. And while Hess returns, Youngstown State lost a three-time 1,200-yard rusher and a combined 107 starts along its offensive line.

Final analysis
MSU ought to be finding its way on offense by this point, some sort of rhythm emerging between its QB of choice and wideouts, the running back situation shaking itself out behind a veteran offensive line. The Spartans might roll into South Bend without being tested.

79
FAMU gets $900k @ tO$U
YSU gets $650k @ Sparty
Tennessee Tech gets $500k @ Wiscy
SIU gets $350k @ Illinois

http://espn.go.com/blog/bigten/post/_/id/79404/b1g-teams-to-pay-fcs-foes-nearly-5-million

Based on SIU's payout looks like we will have less $ to play with from our game at Illinois.

And I'm still pissed tO$U is sending an extra $250k out of state. 

80
http://www.pittsburghbasketballclub.com/images/2013%20pro%20am%20roster%206-20-13.pdf

Looks like KP, Amiker, Podolsky and Chojnacki playing this year.

Anyone head down to watch yet?

82
Can't like while on my phone but Plain Dealer reporting YSU signee Hannah Boesinger has been released from her Letter of Intent and has signed with Ohio U and Boldon.  She is a 5-11 forward from Hudson.


83
YSU Penguin Athletics / Horizon League softball tournament
« on: May 08, 2013, 04:12:58 PM »
#6 YSU opens with a 9-1 win over #3 Valpo in 5 innings.

Crozier with 9 strikeouts.  YSU scores 7 in the second.

The ladies next face #1 Loyola tomorrow afternoon.  YSU was 1-2 vs. Loyola this season.


84
https://twitter.com/PaulKampe

It would appear the Golden Grizzlies will be making regular visits to Youngstown.

It had to happen - now the question is will there be more or is the Horizon League done for now.

85
YSU Penguin Athletics / Scalzo: FCS Mess
« on: April 14, 2013, 12:44:58 AM »
I had to think for a few seconds to answer his question


http://www.vindy.com/news/2013/apr/14/fcs-mess/?newswatch

Future of college football’s lower tier is anything but certain as teams bolt

By Joe Scalzo

scalzo@vindy.com

Hypothetical sit- uation. Imagine a rich (and eccentric) billionaire sidles up to you in a sports bar one night, lays down a stack of $100 bills and asks, “Are you a Youngstown State football fan?”

“Sure,” you say.

“That’s very good news,” he says, “because I’m going to change your life. There is $100,000 in that stack and it’s all yours if you can answer one question: Who lost to North Dakota State in this year’s FCS championship game?”

Could you answer it?

---

This has been a bad offseason for the Football Championship Subdivision, a clunkily-named collection of 127 teams struggling to remain relevant in a shifting college landscape.

The bad news started in mid-February, when Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez said members of the Big Ten would no longer schedule FCS teams, a troubling (but so far unsubstantiated) development that could cost teams like YSU at least $500,000 a year, hurt recruiting and diminish the FCS’s national profile.

“That is extremely troubling,” said Patty Viverito, commissioner of the Missouri Valley Football Conference, of which YSU is a member. “If what Barry says comes to fruition, and it leads other leagues to come to the same conclusion, then I’m beyond a little concerned. I’m really nervous.

“That is a very significant source of revenue and pride for our subdivision.”

The bad headlines continued last month when Appalachian State and Georgia Southern announced they would join the Sun Belt, becoming the latest FCS schools to move up to the Football Bowl Subdivision. The move robs FCS football of its most decorated program (Georgia Southern has won six national titles, two more than second-place YSU) and its most famous (thanks to Appalachian State’s 2007 upset of Michigan).

The decision follows the recent departures of high-profile FCS teams such as UMass and Western Kentucky and could lead schools such as Liberty, James Madison, Villanova and Jacksonville State to make the jump, even though for every success story like Boise State, there are far more cautionary tales (like, well, UMass and Western Kentucky).

“I think Appalachian State moving up sends a message,” said Northern Iowa athletic director Troy Dannen, whose school also has explored making the jump. “If the best among you are dissatisfied, is anyone asking why? Is it a matter of what they’re reaching for, or is it a matter of what they’re running away from?

“I tend to think it’s what they’re running away from.”

A day after the Appalachian State/Georgia Southern announcement, Craig Haley, who covers the FCS for The Sports Network, wrote an article headlined “End of the FCS as we know it is looming.”

His most damning line: “It seems the FCS level can only take so many more hits while it grasps for national relevance in college football.”

At this rate, FCS may soon stand for Frankly, Can’t Survive.

But is it that bad? And what can the FCS to do to change things?

---

YSU athletic director Ron Strollo was a senior tight end on Jim Tressel’s first national championship team, in 1991, before graduating with an accounting degree. He understands football and he understands money and he understands how each affects the other.

Strollo was YSU’s business manager in the late-1990s when the Penguins tried (and failed) to join the Mid-American Conference at the same time when FCS rivals such as Marshall and Buffalo moved up to the MAC.

“The separation [in budgets] back then might have been $1 million to $3 million,” Strollo said, comparing YSU’s budget to the MAC schools. “Now it’s probably closer to $10 million to $12 million.

“I think there’s a lot of schools out there throwing money at this thing and sometimes you lose brand-name teams but I think our division has shown we can replace those teams and move on.”

Viverito agrees, believing when a team like Marshall or Boise State leaves, a team like North Dakota State (which has won the last two national titles) steps in.

Still, she’s not naive. Conference realignment has left everyone nervous, since every shift (Nebraska to the Big Ten) causes more shifts (West Virginia and TCU to the Big 12), which causes more shifts (the Big East imploding, then resurrecting as a basketball conference), which all trickles down as raided conferences believe they need to grow or die.

“It is unnerving,” said Viverito, whose conference has added NDSU, South Dakota State and South Dakota in recent years after losing Western Kentucky to the Sun Belt. “There are a lot of things out of your control.”

Earlier this week, CBSSports.com reported that the so-called “Group of Five,” a collection of non-BCS conferences (MAC, Conference USA, Mountain West, Sun Belt, American Athletic Conference) have talked about capping per-conference revenues at $12 million per year in the playoff era. It could slow, if not end, realignment.

“If their money is capped, it discourages from them from cannibalizing each other or gobbling up the FCS,” she said. “So maybe there’s an end game in sight.”

---

One of the selling points of FCS football is its playoff system, a tournament that has expanded from 16 teams to 24 since 2010. It gives teams like YSU a chance to win a true national championship, something that would never happen in the FBS, even as it transitions to a four-team playoff.

“I just don’t see how anyone can look at our experience and look at their bad bowl system and see any contest there,” Viverito said. “People at Youngstown State know that. They’ve lived that. If the alternative were something comparable at the bottom half of the FBS, maybe [moving up] would make more sense, but they sell their souls to go to a bad bowl game on occasion.

“Why would you do that to go to the GoDaddy.com Bowl?”

Well, exposure, for one thing. This year’s FCS title game aired at 1 p.m. on ESPN2, while the GoDaddy.com Bowl (which pitted Kent State and Arkansas State) aired at 9 p.m. on ESPN.


Lower-level FBS teams also can command bigger paydays from BCS conference teams, rates that will only go up if the Big Ten opts to drop FCS teams.

The MAC also benefits from its willingness to play on any night of the week, getting its games on ESPN and in newspapers while the FCS struggles for attention, even in the playoffs.

“Even in our community, when we’re out of the playoffs, the newspaper runs scores but no stories on FCS games,” Dannen said. “We all want ESPN to do more but, frankly, the media covers what drives readership and viewership. And I don’t think they’re slighting us on purpose.”

Viverito said the FCS has talked with ESPN about “more and better ways to partner with us,” and there’s a chance FCS teams could open a week early to get more exposure.

Dannen would like to see the NCAA make a bigger commitment to FCS football, particularly financially. Right now, the NCAA keeps 85 percent of the revenue for a home playoff game, which means a team like Northern Iowa (which brings in about $150,000 for a home game) nets a fraction of what it would make for a regular Saturday game.

“And if you travel [for the game], you’re probably not making any money either,” he said. “I’m not saying you need an NCAA basketball tournament-type financial reward, but I’d like to see the NCAA do something to truly invest in FCS football.”

Dannen doesn’t necessarily want UNI to jump to the FBS — “Our fans would love for us to move up but in no way, shape or form does the financial argument make sense,” he said — but said the school’s boost from playing in the 2005 FBS final (which it lost to Appalachian State) can’t compare with its 2010 run to the Sweet Sixteen.

“The return was remarkably different,” he said. “And the reason is that is the national stage. We are not on the national football stage, even though it’s a big deal to our community.”

---

North Dakota State athletic director Gene Taylor oversees the Alabama of FCS football, which is all the more remarkable considering the Bison were playing Division II football less than a decade ago.

While he’s worried about the long-term effect of losing teams like Georgia Southern and Appalachian State — “If you keep losing membership, sometimes those victories become hollow victories” — he said the Bison are committed to staying at this level, even though NDSU’s location (the closest FBS program to Fargo is Minnesota, which is nearly four hours away) would give it a Boise State-like advantage over schools in more competitive markets.

“I still think it’s a fairly stable level of football,” Taylor said. “It’s a very competitive level of football and I think our playoff format is very strong.

“We can sell the idea that you can win a true championship here. If you go to the FBS level, you’ll never be part of a championship.”

That’s what drew YSU coach Eric Wolford, who spent his entire career coaching at the FBS level, including two years in the Big Ten and one in the SEC. He understands the lure of FBS football to recruits — it’s no coincidence his coaching staff is stocked with former FBS assistants — but he came to YSU because it gives him a chance to win a national championship.

“How many places in the country can you say that?” said Wolford, who coached in the Sun Belt with North Texas. “Unless you’re going to move up to one of the big power conferences, what are you playing for, other than maybe TV exposure?

“I think at times there’s probably some interest [in moving up] but the biggest question is whether you can do it economically. That’s a whole different ballgame. We enjoy playing where we’re at. We’ve got a good conference that’s well-respected and we embrace that.”

---

With the FBS level moving toward a separation of haves (SEC, Big Ten, ACC, etc.) and have-nots (the “Group of Five”) some believe the upper tier conferences will eventually break off, leaving the NCAA behind.

“I’ve heard those rumors, but I don’t necessarily believe that,” Strollo said. “I don’t think there will be a formal separation, but clearly, there’s more and more of a separation.”

That could lead the bottom half of the FBS to merge with the upper half of the FCS, something that would require several schools to swallow their pride in hopes of building a substantial second tier.

“I suspect somewhere down the line, there’s going to be a line drawn between the BCS conferences and the bottom half of the FBS and the top half of the FCS,” Viverito said. “It probably makes some sense competitively but I don’t know if it could get done politically.

“We’ve not proven to have much aptitude in doing what makes sense in college sports, so maybe I’m answering my own question.”

---

In 1836, just before the Battle of San Jacinto, a Texas general said something that could apply to the future of the FCS: “We view ourselves on the eve of battle. We are nerved for the contest, and must conquer or perish. It is vain to look for present aid: none is at hand.”

That general’s name was Sam Houston. His army won, Texas earned its independence and in 1879, it named a college after him: Sam Houston State.

More than 130 years later, that school played back-to-back FCS championship games against North Dakota State, losing both times.

Whether you knew that is a $100,000 question.

As for the future of FCS football? Well, that’s a million-dollar one.

86
The Evansville Courier Press is reporting Loyola will be joining the Missouri Valley to replace Creighton.

http://www.courierpressblogs.com/sports/ue/?p=4295

Of course, a few weeks ago the Green Bay paper was saying UIC to the Valley was a done deal.

Evansville paper has no mention of UIC.

On a very simplistic level, prefer losing Loyola than UIC as Loyola does not play baseball - leaves the Horizon needing to add only one baseball school.

That said, I don't think the shuffling is done, particularly if the Big East / Catholic 7 + Butler raids the A-10 for Dayton and St. Louis in a year.  The A-10 may well look for at some Horizon schools

87
Rob Demovsky also reporting a loyola and Valpo could go to Valley and Denver and UMKC are possible for Horizon.  I am out of country and cannot link story.  Perhaps someone can find the story and post a link.

88
YSU Penguin Athletics / Georgia Southern and App State to the Sun Belt
« on: March 25, 2013, 12:50:04 PM »
Twitter reports have GSU and App joining the Sun Belt Conference, with press conferences coming Wednesday. 

https://twitter.com/AppTrailWSJ

https://twitter.com/rvarner

89
In keeping with my usual method of trying to maintain stories with information on finances, here is a story from the Indianapolis Business Journal that deals with Butler and the risk involved in the Catholic 7 / Big East they have moved to.  It goes to show just how big the difference is between the big boys and the Horizon League, etc.




http://www.ibj.com/keyword/111/Butler%20University/RPARAMS/taxonomyId/769

From afar, Butler University’s decision to leapfrog from bigger conference to bigger conference looks like a no-brainer.

Abandoning the Horizon League last year for the Atlantic 10, and now after one year jumping to the newly formed Big East, certainly has major upside.

Officials for Butler, Creighton and Xavier announced today they will join Georgetown, St. John’s, Villanova, Seton Hall, Providence, Marquette and DePaul to form a new league for next season.

The excitement on Butler’s campus should be tempered with caution.

President James Danko told me for a story in this week’s IBJ, “The move to the A10 was not a money-maker.”

Like the move to the A10, the risks in this most recent jump are considerable and the costs—at least initially—will most certainly outweigh any financial gains.

Whether this makes sense in the long term depends on how the schools of this new conference share athletic revenue, how big a broadcast deal the league can broker, and how much Butler will have to spend to keep up with relative hoops powerhouses such as Georgetown and Marquette.

Chief among the advantages of joining the new league is exposure in key markets, especially those on the East Coast. The exposure helps Butler attract a more diverse—and potentially richer—student body.

A student body from wealthier parts of the country eventually turns into a wealthier alumni base, and that can have a big impact on fundraising. But that lift could take years to realize.

The plan to pump up the men’s basketball team and use it as a key marketing tool was hatched in 1989 by then-President Geoffrey Bannister. That plan has been carried on by Bobby Fong and Danko.

And who can argue with the results? Butler’s student body has more than doubled, to 4,200, since 1990 and admissions have jumped about 50 percent since 2010, after the first of the school’s two Final Four runs.

Fundraising for the athletic department has jumped, too, from $635,000 in 2008 to $1.45 million last year and a projected $1.5 million this year. That doesn’t include $13.3 million in donations collected since June 2010 for Hinkle Fieldhouse renovations.

That kind of fundraising would have seemed preposterous a decade ago.

But the costs of jumping to a new conference loom large, and Butler supporters have to wonder where the money will come from.

First, there’s a $2 million exit fee owed to the A10. But that’s small potatoes compared to the ongoing expenses of running with this new crowd.

Last week, Danko told me the school’s athletic department operates at a deficit. That means money must be pulled from elsewhere to feed sports.

Of course, Butler is not alone. The vast majority of NCAA Division I schools operate their athletic department at a loss.

But that doesn’t make it an easy issue for Danko. Given the school’s small size and Indianapolis’ penchant for fiscal conservatism, the expense of such a move is a pressing one for Butler’s president. That’s why he said he has been involved in conference realignment talks “every step of the way.”

Butler has seen the salary of its basketball coach triple in the last five years. Brad Stevens’ $1 million salary is nearly 10 times what Barry Collier earned when he started coaching the team in 1989.

Stevens was by far the highest-paid coach in the Horizon League. Now, he makes only a fraction of what other coaches in this high-octane league earn, and that will test his allegiance. He makes about one-third as much as Marquette’s Buzz Williams. Williams signed an extension last year that will pay him $2.82 million annually through 2018.

Schools like St. John’s, Georgetown and Villanova also pay their coaches big bucks. If the Stevens-led Bulldogs can compete with those schools, the market will dictate his pay be commensurate.

Just look at the Big Ten. The schools at the top of the conference have the highest-paid coaches. That’s not coincidental. And that’s not just because the best teams hire the best coaches. Of course, that’s partly the case. But with each passing year, big-time college basketball is becoming more of a pay-for-performance system where winning coaches demand higher salaries.

Increased travel expenses also concern Danko. In the Horizon League, Butler could charter a bus to many away games. And if Butler weren’t so concerned about its athletes being in the classroom, I suppose they could still use buses.

But Danko explained that the school decided this year to have the team travel primarily by air so the players would miss less classroom time.

Butler will spend $800,000 more for travel this year than it did last year in the Horizon League, Danko said. Since it’s doubtful airline fees are going down, that’s an expense that could pile up quickly.

Butler is in the midst of a $16 million renovation campaign for Hinkle Fieldhouse. But if the university is going to keep up with facilities of its new brethren, the Bulldogs will have to put more money into Hinkle and other training facilities. A charming campus and storied venue get you only so far these days.

And since Butler has a considerably smaller student body—and alumni base—from which to draw financially than the likes of DePaul, Marquette, St. John’s, Georgetown and Villanova, keeping up won’t be easy. That could put a heavier burden on the entire school to support the juiced-up athletic department.

When I asked Danko about jumping to a bigger, better conference last week, he replied, “We have to take advantage of the opportunities that help us become the school we want to be. We have high aspirations.”

With high aspirations come big risks. Really big risks.

90
Congratulations to YSU for stepping up with the cash to host this game.

http://www.ysusports.com/sports/mbkb/2012-13/releases/20130311kb9ftw

Boston, Mass. -- The Youngstown State men's basketball team has accepted an invitation to play in the 2013 CollegeInsider.com Tournament (CIT), marking the school's first postseason tournament appearance since joining the NCAA Division I ranks in 1981-82.

The Penguins (17-15), who posted consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 1985, will host their historic game on Tuesday, March 19, at 7:05 p.m. at the Beeghly Center. The Penguins' opponent has not been determined.

Tickets for the postseason game are $10 for reserved and $7 for general admission. Youngstown State student tickets are free with a current and valid student ID.

Penguin Club members and season-ticket holders have until Friday, March 15, at 5 p.m. to purchase their tickets.

Head Coach Jerry Slocum, who has a 38-year career record of 672-475, said he was honored to have the ability to continue playing this season.

"I'm very excited for this opportunity to play in the CIT," Slocum said. "We are very proud of our program and our players to receive this opportunity to play in the postseason."

Youngstown State has not played in a postseason tournament since the 1976-77 NCAA Division II Tournament.

The CIT, which is in its fifth year, consists of 32 teams and 31 games played in the month of March. First-round games are March 19-20; second-round games will be played March 21-23; the quarterfinals will be held March 24-26; the semifinals are March 28-30; and the championship game is on April 2.

The CIT Championship Game will be broadcast live on CBS Sports Network on Tuesday, April 2.




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