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An Unofficial College of Charleston Cougars Sports Blog! (Note: This blog is primarily for CofC basketball, but I will try to post on other sports when possible) GO COUGS!
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile


From the Post & Courier:
ELON, N.C. — The College of Charleston won the Southern Conference women's tennis tournament title with a 4-1 victory over top-seeded Furman in the final Sunday at the Jimmy Powell Tennis Center.
(photo courtesy of cofcsports.com)
"Our girls laid it all on the line and left everything out on the court," said Cougars coach Angelo Anastopoulo, whose second-seeded team improved to 24-4. "They have battled through injuries all season and still managed to rise up to the occasion every time this season. (Sunday) they played the hardest I've ever seen them play.
"Anytime you can beat a team like Furman (17-8), it is special. They are an oustanding team. They have dominated the league year in and year out. We knew going into the tournament that we needed to play better at doubles. During the regular season we were 0-3 at the doubles point against the teams we played in the tournament. We went 3-0 this weekend, and that gave the girls a tremendous boost going into the singles."
The Cougars won their first conference championship since 2003 and secured the SoCon's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.
The 24 wins represent the most by a Charleston team since earning NCAA Division I status in 1991-92. The NCAA Tournament Selection Show will air on ESPNU at 5:20 p.m. Tuesday.
In doubles play, the teams split matches in the Nos. 1 and 3 spots. At No. 2, Kinsey Casey and Keely Mulligan earned a 9-8 victory to capture a team point for the Cougars.
After Furman won the first match in singles play, Charleston swept matches in the number four, six and two positions to get to the four points needed to clinch the SoCon championship.
Casey (No. 6), Anna Lee Evans (No. 4) and Holly Dowse (No. 2) supplied the singles wins the Cougars needed.
Singles: Laura Gioia (F) d. Laura Borza 6-0, 6-1; Holly Dowse (C) d. Monica Arguello 3-6, 6-3, 6-2; Jessica Preeg (F) vs. Caroline Newman 3-6, 6-3, unfinished; Anna Lee Evans (C) d. Susan Bitetti 6-1, 6-4; Lauren Tomory (F) vs. Keely Mulligan 6-7 (2-7), 6-2, unf.; Kinsey Casey (C) def. Jennifer Betts 7-5, 6-2.
Doubles: Arguello-Gioia (F) d. Evans-Borza 8-1; Casey-Mulligan (C) d. Tomory-Betts 9-8 (8-6); Dowse-Newman (C) d. Preeg-Bitetti 8-5.
--Furman (22-7) won its second straight SoCon men's tennis tournament championship, posting a 4-0 victory over host Elon (21-6). The Paladins earned the conference's automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament.
Like every team that competes, the ultimate goal for the College of Charleston men's basketball team was an opportunity to compete in the 65-team NCAA Tournament. But with nearly 350 schools in Division I, the Cougars are happy that there are a few other dances besides the big one.
Charleston, which lost to Chattanooga in the SoCon Tournament championship game, got word late Sunday that the Cougars' 26-8 record wasn't enough to land them a spot in the National Invitation Tournament. But it was more than enough for a spot in the College Basketball Invitational, a second-year event featuring a 16-team field. The Cougars will travel to play Troy (19-14) of the Sun Belt Conference at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Cougars coach Bobby Cremins is a big advocate of having more teams invited to the NCAA, which in turn would offer more opportunities in the National Invitation Tournament. But right now he's happy for the CBI and the opportunity if affords his team.
"I think these tournaments are great. Until we put more teams in the Big Dance, I'm a big advocate of these tournaments," said Cremins, noting that The Citadel (20-12) also will get a postseason opportunity in the inaugural College-Insider.Com Tournament.
Senior guard Marcus Hammond said the Cougars are excited to still be playing. Hammond said he kept up with the selection process on the computer and by text messages and was happy when the word finally came around 11:30 p.m. "It extends our careers and gives us another opportunity to play and show our value to the program," Hammond said. "I think the CBI is a tournament that will grow. It's not where the NCAA or NIT is, but the tournament will grow. We want to go out and win the tournament and go out as champions.
"We don't have a lot of time to find out about Troy. It's a quick turnaround. We'll give it all we've got. We'll do a lot of studying and then we'll be ready Wednesday."
Fellow senior Jermaine Johnson said he knows the Trojans are members of the Sun Belt Conference, whose champion is Western Kentucky, and that says a lot.
"I'm ready to play," Johnson said. "We've already been off the court too long. This is the most exciting thing ever. I've never been to a postseason tournament. The fact we actually have a chance to do this is a great feeling."
Cremins said prior to the two new tournaments, the only SoCon teams that would be in postseason play would be tournament winner Chattanooga and regular season champion Davidson.
"So this is fun for us," he said. "But we need to take this tournament seriously. We need to go in thinking we want to prove ourselves. I'm going to tell them how fortunate they are to still be practicing. We could be closing shop right now. We have an opportunity to play in a postseason tournament. Let's go out and give it everything we have."
Cremins said the opportunity is a step in the right director for the College of Charleston program.
"You have to remember, we have four sophomores, we have Tony White, who is a junior, and we have these freshmen. The more they play, it might mean something next year," Cremins said.
"I'm happy for the seniors. That was a tough loss for them in Chattanooga. Jermaine, Marcus, Dustin Scott. They really wanted to win that game. Now, they keep playing. Our first choice, obviously, was to beat Chattanooga and go to the Big Dance and get involved with March Madness."
Reach Tommy Braswell at braswell@postandcourier.com
Copyright © 1995 - 2009 Evening Post Publishing Co..

Photo Credits: BRETT FLASHNICK/AP
Despite disappointment, USC determined to match quality of first-round NIT pairing
By Travis Haney
The Post and Courier
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
COLUMBIA — Even with an All-American coming for a nationally televised game, you still have to wonder if South Carolina will be up for a postseason tournament it didn't necessarily want to be part of.
It was holding out for the school's first NCAA bid since 2004. Not for the program's fifth NIT appearance since 2001.
The Gamecocks host Stephen Curry and Davidson at 7 p.m. tonight in the opening round of the NIT (TV: ESPN2).
South Carolina guard Devan Downey and the Gamecocks aim to make the most of their NIT bid when they host All-American Stephen Curry and the Davidson Wildcats in a first-round game today at 7 p.m.
"You'll know in the first five minutes of the game whether we're ready to play or not," USC senior Zam Fredrick said. "I think we'll be ready. ... I know we'll be ready."
Bobby Cremins is a qualified handicapper for the game.
His Charleston team played both teams in the regular season — and beat both of them. Then the Cougars knocked Davidson from the Southern Conference Tournament, ending its NCAA hopes.
From the outside looking in, Cremins says he gives the Gamecocks a slight nod. But says if Curry and Davidson (26-7) are clicking, it wouldn't surprise him to see the Wildcats steal a road win.
An ankle injury now behind him and the team, Curry is averaging 28.6 points a game.
"If we were not playing, I would be headed to Columbia to watch that one," said Cremins, the South Carolina grad whose Charleston team will play at Troy on Wednesday in the College Basketball Invitational. "It should be a heck of a game. It's a heck of an NIT game. The NIT is very fortunate to have these guys playing."
USC's Devan Downey, despite being a half-foot shorter, will guard Curry some during the evening. But USC coach Darrin Horn said the game is transcendent of the one-on-one matchup, specifically.
"I think it's more about two great guards playing in the same game rather than them going at it," Horn said. "Hopefully that's as appealing as the matchup itself."
Cremins said he expects to see the Gamecocks come out "flat" because of their exclusion from the NCAAs. But, to him, it's all about how USC responds throughout 40 minutes.
Cremins said he once coached a team that had to turn down an NIT bid because it was too bummed to continue playing.
"Of course we're disappointed about not getting a bid," Fredrick said. "As a man, as a person, you have to move on."
As it turns out, despite a 21-9 record and 10 SEC wins, the Gamecocks weren't even all that close to the bubble. The selection committee held the SEC in the same esteem as a mid-major.
It took three teams, which would've been two if not for Mississippi State winning the SEC tourney. It made regular season champ LSU an 8 seed, Tennessee a 9 seed and Mississippi State a 13 seed.
That clearly left no room for teams such as South Carolina and Auburn — the first SEC teams to win 10-plus conference games and fail to make the NCAA field.
But a matchup with Curry quickly grabs your attention, Fredrick said.
The junior, and son of former NBA standout Dell Curry, willed the Wildcats to the Elite Eight last season.
There, they lost to eventual national champ Kansas — by two. And they had a shot to win at the buzzer, but Curry was double-teamed and Jason Richards couldn't connect.
Richards is gone, but 6-8 post Andrew Lovelace will provide a physical test for USC forward Mike Holmes.
And then there's Curry.
"I think he's like a lot of really good players we've seen this year," Horn said of Curry. "I don't think you're going to stop a guy that shoots 20-plus times a game or put up 30 all year long. I think the key against someone like him is hopefully you make him work for everything."
Horn said the Gamecocks would treat Curry and Davidson very similarly to how they did Jodie Meeks and Kentucky.
Meeks had three games of 40-plus points and averaged about 25 a game. Both times the Gamecocks held Meeks below his average. And USC won both meetings.
Similarly, Charleston held Curry to 12 of 41 shooting — and 6 of 24 3-point tries — in those two Cougars wins.
To give you an idea of the norm, Curry hit 10 or more field goals in 16 games. That includes a close loss at Oklahoma and a victory against North Carolina State. He had 44 points in each of those games.
"Good players find a way to do what they do, regardless of what the opponent is doing," Horn said. "You just don't want it to be easy. You don't want 25 on a normal night to turn into one of those 40 plus-point nights."
Reach Travis Haney at thaney@postandcourier.com and check out the South Carolina blog atpostandcourier.com/gamecocksblog/.
Copyright © 1995 - 2009 Evening Post Publishing Co..

First Team
Stephen McDowell, UTC (MVP)
Tony White Jr., College of Charleston
Stephen Curry, Davidson
Kevin Goffney, UTC
Bryan Friday, Samford
Second Team
Nicchaeus Doaks, UTC
Dustin Scott, College of Charleston
Donald Sims, Appalachian State
Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston
Jeremy Simmons, College of Charleston

From my neighbor Tommy Braswell @ the Post & Courier
Posted 03:58 p.m., January 30, 2009
The College of Charleston is having a hard time getting over last week's 72-63 loss at The Citadel, which ended the Cougars' 13-game winning streak against its cross-town rival.
That was evidenced by recent comments from Charleston forward Jermaine Johnson, who said he'd rather not score a point, get a rebound or play a single minute if it meant the Cougars had to lose to The Citadel or that he would have to listen to Bulldogs' forward Demetrius Nelson's mouth.
A Cougar fan recently expressed sentiment that he wished Johnson hadn't said such things. (For the record: that was not yours truly) Imagine that. After several years of smug, condescension when it comes to the Bulldogs' basketball program, there are actually Cougars' fans out there who don't want to risk offending The Citadel.
It's the best thing that has happened to basketball in Charleston for some time.
A dormant rivalry is once again relevant.
Admittedly, it's still Davidson and everyone else as far as the Southern Conference is concerned.
But for the city of Charleston, it means hot times are ahead when the teams meet Feb. 14 at the Cougars' Carolina First Arena.
As of Friday afternoon, fewer than 400 tickets remain. (Photo credits: Jed Trabert)

In their last game until the New Year, the Cougars welcome rival Davidson and their wonder-boy Stephen Curry to the Carolina First Center. Davidson (nationally ranked 22nd in the country, but still 2nd to the Cougars in the South Division of the SoCon) is coming off an embarrassment in Indy, where the Wildcats lost whole-handily to Purdue by almost 20 points in perhaps the “whitest” game played on the court since all 10 players wore Chuck-Taylors. Or maybe that wasn’t a loss at all for Davidson fans, Curry only put up 13 points instead of his average of 31, so if we jettison our math and instead apply our Steph-matics, Davidson (could have) beat Purdue.
Purdue (err, Purr-Don’t)
How did Purdue blow-out the Wildkittens? Old-fashioned defense, Purdue’s Chris Kramer was in Curry’s boyish face the entire game and the Boilermakers never took their foot off the gas. Even after Purdue led 21-0 in the first half, they continued to ride Curry and never let him find his rhythm. When Curry hit his first 3-pointer (after missing 8 consecutive shots) did the Boilermakers get worried-“Oh man, here they come, Curry is hot now”? Nope, they responded with a trey of their own and just kept face blasting Curry.
Keys to the win: 1) Keep a hand in Steph Curry’s cute little face. I know with his boyish smile, you just want to cut up with him and tell a couple of jokes, but put a hand in his face so he can’t see the basket and disrupt the rhythm as soon as he crosses mid-court. 2) Limit Lovedale and (benchwarmer) Archambault’s touches: these guys aren’t all that great of players, barely almost 50% shooters from the field, but they are the next best thing Davidson has in their arsenal. 3) Holy crap, McKillop’s kid plays for Davidson-shocked, completely shocked. 4) Makes some noise kids!
Remember this Cougars: You have a clean slate facing Davidson in our new arena! Let the record of Davidson in the Carolina First Center be a welcoming 0-1 when they leave the arena tonight! If McKlump and his boys want a win whilst in Charleston, they need to get it across town when they play the Citadel this week. The SoCon belongs to Charleston, Davidson is just 2nd best with a little more press (perhaps distractions) than they deserve.
| Thu, Nov 20 | Charleston Southern | at NC Coliseum | 7:30 | | |
| Mon, Nov 24 | South Carolina State | at Orangeburg, S.C. | 7:30 | | |
| Fri, Nov 28 | South Carolina (CSS) | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Thu, Dec 04 | Elon * | at Elon, N.C. | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Dec 06 | UNC Greensboro (SportSouth) * | at Greensboro, N.C. | 3:00 | | |
| Wed, Dec 17 | Coastal Carolina | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Fri, Dec 19 | UNC Wimington | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Mon, Dec 22 | Winthrop | at Rock Hill, S.C. | 7:00 | | |
| Mon, Dec 29 | Davidson (ESPNU) * | Carolina First Arena | 9:00 | | |
| Wed, Jan 07 | North Carolina (FSN South) | at Chapel Hill, N.C. | 9:00 | | |
| Sat, Jan 10 | Georgia Southern (CSS) * | Carolina First Arena | 4:00 | | |
| Mon, Jan 12 | Samford (CSS) * | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Thu, Jan 15 | Wofford * | at Spartanburg, S.C. | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Jan 17 | Furman (CSS) * | at Greenville, S.C. | 8:00 | | |
| Wed, Jan 21 | Appalachian State * | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Jan 24 | The Citadel (SportSouth) * | at Charleston, S.C. | 3:00 | | |
| Thu, Jan 29 | UNC Greensboro * | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Jan 31 | Elon * | Carolina First Arena | 4:00 | | |
| Thu, Feb 05 | Western Carolina * | at Cullowhee, N.C. | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Feb 07 | Davidson (ESPN2) * | at Davidson, N.C. | 6:00 | | |
| Wed, Feb 11 | Western Carolina * | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Feb 14 | The Citadel * | Carolina First Arena | 4:00 | | |
| Mon, Feb 16 | Appalachian State (CSS) * | at Boone, N.C. | 7:30 | | |
| Thu, Feb 19 | Georgia Southern * | at Statesboro, Ga. | 7:30 | | |
| Mon, Feb 23 | Chattanooga (CSS) * | at Chattanooga, Tenn. | 7:00 | | |
| Thu, Feb 26 | Wofford (CSS) * | Carolina First Arena | 7:00 | | |
| Sat, Feb 28 | Furman (SportSouth) * | Carolina First Arena | 4:00 |




2008 Men's and Women's SoCon Tournament Pairings
Men
Friday, March 7
Wofford vs. Western Carolina, 3 p.m. (Seeding TBD)
No. 7 Elon vs. No. 10 Furman, 5:15 p.m.
No. 6 College of Charleston vs. No. 11 The Citadel, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 8
No. 1 Davidson vs. Wofford/WCU winner, 2 p.m.
No. 4 App State vs. No. 5 UNC Greensboro, 4:15 p.m.
No. 2 Chattanooga vs. Elon/Furman winner, 7 p.m.
No. 3 Ga. Southern vs. Charleston/Citadel winner, 9:15 p.m.
Sunday, March 9
Semifinals, 6 and 8:30 p.m.
Monday, March 10
Championship game, 9 p.m.
Women Thursday, March 6 Friday, March 7 Saturday, March 8 Sunday, March 9 Monday, March 10
No. 7 Furman vs. No. 10 Wofford, 3 p.m.
No. 8 App. State vs. No. 9 UNCG (30 minutes later)
Furman/Wofford winner vs. No. 2 Western Carolina, 10 a.m.
App State/UNCG winner vs. No. 1 Chattanooga
No. 4 Georgia Southern vs. No. 5 College of Charleston, 9 a.m.
No. 3 Davidson vs. Elon, (30 min later)
Semifinals, noon, 2:30 p.m.
Championship Game , 5 p.m.

Someday you can tell your grandchildren you saw the College of Charleston play basketball in the "old" Kresse Arena.
Hopefully they will look at you with some sense of awe and appreciation.
If you live long enough you'll see venues like this old gymnasium on George Street relegated to the pages of history. Some of us remember the old "Blue Heaven" at North Carolina where the Tar Heels played, Reynolds Coliseum where the Wolfpack prowled and the Old Field House at South Carolina where Frank McGuire sparked his magical run with the Gamecocks.
The same can now be said of John Kresse Arena at the College of Charleston,
home court for the Cougars from the winter of 1982 until Saturday night when they played their last game here against Furman, winning 77-59.
It's only right that they closed this place with a victory because that's the way the Cougar faithful will remember it. All told, over all those years, the College logged a total of 342 wins with only 44 losses.
The credit for this legacy goes to John Kresse, a living legend in this town, for his remarkable run of 560-143, much of it accomplished in a building that Sports Illustrated magazine once described by saying it "looked like a high school gymnasium and smelled like a Chinese restaurant."
New York accent
Not only will this old gym be razed soon to make way for the "new" Kresse Arena on an adjacent property, but the oriental take-out joint next door is disappearing as well.
Cougar alumni who knew the College way back when can only marvel at how far the school and its fledgling basketball program have come in their lifetimes.
It seems like only a couple of decades ago that a young, energetic John Kresse came to this Southern city with his New York accent and bag of basketball tricks. Within a few years he took the Cougars all the way to an NAIA national title in the same year they opened play here in the F. Mitchell Johnson Physical Education Center.
Since then the program transitioned into Division I status and earned the reputation as a giant slayer during several appearances in the NCAA Tournament.
Some say Cougar basketball peaked in the late 1990s and suffered a setback when Kresse, the undisputed king of this homecourt, unexpectedly announced his retirement in 2001.
Since then the program has struggled to regain its dominant position in the Southern Conference and find a place on the national stage.
Few doubt, however, that former Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins can find a way to bring the College back as it prepares to move into its new 5,000-seat arena next season.
Jittery genius
Regardless of what the future holds, there will never be a feeling at this school like there was on those cold winter nights when this little hothouse was rocking.
With Kresse, the jittery genius on the sidelines, this was the toughest ticket in town.
With students breathing down the referee's necks and a loyal, basketball-savvy home crowd, the Cougars turned this rather pedestrian place into a place of pain for opponents.
While it's doubtful this year's team (14-16, 9-11 in the SoCon) will capture America's imagination the way Kresse's teams did a decade ago, the future of Cougar basketball remains bright.
As today's players built a 20-point lead over the Paladins in the second half, they were celebrated by longtime fans and former players who came to give this special building a proper sendoff.
After the victory, the court was ringed by more than 120 former players dating back to the 1940s. In a special ceremony, they passed a basketball through the ages, ending with a handoff from Cremins to Kresse, who made the last layup to close the building for the ages.
Nice touch.
Nice shot.
(Photo courtesy of CofC Sports.com)