WHITEWATER WEATHER

UW-W Women’s Basketball Nips Amherst 55-51 in Semifinal; Update: Faces Hope (MI) on Saturday

March 17, 2022

By Lynn Binnie
Whitewater Banner volunteer staff
whitewaterbanner@gmail.com

“Whitewater doesn’t need luck” read a fan’s St. Patrick’s Day sign, but the outcome of Thursday afternoon’s semifinal for the women’s basketball DIII championship was a back and forth contest nearly to the final buzzer. At halftime it was UW-W in the lead by 27-25, but the third quarter had Amherst (MA) ahead by 44-41, but the Warhawks pulled off a 55-51 win. UPDATE: In the other Final Four game that followed, Hope College (MI) defeated Trine (IN) by 57-52. It’s a UW-W vs. Hope game on Saturday at 1 p.m. for the national championship. Saturday’s title game will air live on CBS Sports Network and on WKCH radio, 106.5 FM. [Spectrum cable customers with the silver or gold package may find CBS Sports at 306.]

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By Chris Lindeke, Assistant Athletic Director, Strategic Communications and Branding, UW-W

Thursday, March 17, 2022

UW-Whitewater Women’s Basketball Advances to National Title Game

Game Statistics

NCAA Division III Women’s Basketball Web Page

NCAA Championship Microsite

Game Photos (Credit: Dan Hunter, d3photography.com for UW-Whitewater Athletics):

The No. 12 ranked University of Wisconsin-Whitewater women’s basketball team erased a deficit through three quarters and took the lead for good midway through the fourth quarter Thursday afternoon in a 55-51 victory against No. 8 Amherst (Mass.) in the semifinals of the NCAA Division III Championship at UPMC Fieldhouse in Pittsburgh, Pa.

With the win, the Warhawks (28-4 overall) advance to the national championship game, which is set for this Saturday at 1 p.m. Central Time against the winner of Thursday night’s Hope/Trine game. Saturday’s title game will air live on CBS Sports Network and on WKCH radio, 106.5 FM. [Spectrum cable customers with the silver or gold package may find CBS Sports at 306.] [As reported above, UW-W will face Hope College.]

In the fourth quarter, a pair of free throws by Aleah Grundahl with 5:42 on the clock broke a 46-46 tie and gave UW-W a two-point lead. She converted a layup on the next possession to force a timeout by the Mammoths (25-4).

UW-Whitewater’s advantage was cut to one at the 2:24 mark before Yssa Sto. Domingo knocked down a 3-pointer from the left wing to make it 53-49 with 2:03 left.

Amherst drew to within 53-51 with just under one minute to play. The two teams traded empty possessions before a foul was committed against Kacie Carollo, who stepped up to the free throw line and knocked down both shots to make it a four-point game with three seconds to play.

The Mammoths missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer, sending the Warhawks and their energetic crowd into a frenzy.

Grundahl led all scorers with 18 points, including 8-of-10 from the free-throw line, and added seven rebounds. Carollo tallied 11 points, nine rebounds and four assists, and Maggie Trautsch tallied 10 points off the bench.

UW-Whitewater held Amherst to 31.3 percent shooting from the floor, including 3-of-17 in the fourth quarter, and knocked down 14-of-16 at the free-throw line on the other end.

Neither team led by more than one possession until the 3:23 mark of the first quarter, when the Mammoths took a 13-9 advantage. The Warhawks scored six of the next eight points as Trautsch tied the game with a driving layup with 2:06 remaining. Amherst held a two-point lead heading to the second.

UW-W started the second quarter on an 8-1 run, capped by Rebekah Schumacher’s 3-pointer with 7:35 on the clock, to take a 23-18 lead. The two teams exchanged buckets before Trautsch gave UW-Whitewater a 27-25 advantage heading into halftime.

Amherst tied the game on a 3-pointer just over two minutes into the third quarter and, after a layup by Johanna Taylor, took a 34-33 lead at the midway point of the period.

The Mammoths’ lead increased to three before the Warhawks rallied with a 6-0 run capped by Carollo’s steal-and-layup with 2:53 left in the quarter. UW-W trailed by three by the end of the period.

Trautsch’s 3-pointer just over three minutes into the fourth tied the game and set up Grundahl’s go-ahead free throws.

UW-W Women’s Basketball Faces Amherst in Final Four on Thurs. @ 4 p.m.; Live Stream Available

March 16, 2022
Women's basketball national anthem line at Elite Eight game for March 16
Photo by Michael McLoone

By Lynn Binnie
Whitewater Banner volunteer staff
whitewaterbanner@gmail.com

UW-Whitewater Women’s Basketball faces Amherst College (MA) in the national semifinal DIII game on Thursday at 4 p.m. The game notes shown below, and many additional statistics, are available here. Two Whitewater High School grads, freshman guard Kacie Carollo and fifth year senior guard Rebekah Schumacher, were major contributors to the team’s success in the playoffs.

Live streaming video will be provided here. The winning team will advance to the championship game on Saturday at 1:00 p.m. versus the winner of Thursday evening’s contest between Trine University (IN) and Hope College (MI).

UW-W Wrestling’s Jaritt Shinhoster Claims National Championship

March 13, 2022
Jaritt Shinhoster

By Chris Lindeke, Assistant Athletic Director, Strategic Communications and Branding, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Jaritt Shinhoster of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater wrestling team earned the program’s seventh individual national title Saturday by winning the 184-pound bracket at the 2022 NCAA Division III Championships at Alliant Energy Powerhouse in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Shinhoster, who is the fifth wrestler to win an individual national championship at UW-Whitewater, knocked off top-seeded Shane Liegel of Loras (Iowa) with a 13-5 major decision to punch his ticket to the final at 184 pounds.

In the night session, Shinhoster earned three first-period takedowns, including one just six seconds into the bout, and held a 6-3 advantage after one period against third-seeded Paul Detwiler of Coast Guard. He picked up another takedown in the second around a pair of escapes and led 8-5 after two, and earned an escape, a takedown and riding time to finish off the 12-6 decision.

Shinhoster, the Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and NCAA Upper Midwest Regional champion, finishes his season with a 32-2 record to go with 12 pins, five technical falls and 10 major decisions, including three in the national tournament.

Shinhoster’s run gave the Warhawks a tie for 17th place in the team standings with a total of 22 points.

See below for complete UW-W results from the weekend.

149

Jake Burford

First Round: lost to No. 2 Kristian Rumph (Wartburg) by decision, 7-4

Consolation: lost to Alex Barr (Wabash) by decision, 4-1

184

Jaritt Shinhoster

First Round: d. Charles Baczek (Wabash) by major decision, 10-0

Quarterfinal: d. No. 4 Chibueze Chukwuezi (Ithaca) by major decision, 10-0

Semifinal: d. No. 1 Shane Liegel (Loras) by major decision, 13-5

Final: d. No. 3 Paul Detwiler (U.S. Coast Guard Academy) by decision, 12-6

No. 12 Warhawks Edge UW-Oshkosh, Earn Trip to Final Four in Pittsburgh

March 12, 2022
Women's basketball Final Four postgame posed photo March 12
The Warhawks are headed to the Final Four for the fourth time since 2008. (Photo by Michael McLoone)

By Chris Lindeke, Assistant Athletic Director, Strategic Communications and Branding, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Box Score

The No. 12 ranked University of Wisconsin-Whitewater women’s basketball team executed on both ends of the floor in the fourth quarter Saturday night to clinch the program’s fourth trip to the Final Four since 2008 with a 68-62 victory against UW-Oshkosh in front of an energetic crowd at Kachel Gymnasium.

The Warhawks (27-4 overall) will take on Amherst (Mass.) in the national semifinals this Thursday at UPMC Cooper Fieldhouse in Pittsburgh, Pa. Tipoff time has yet to be announced.

Trailing by three points with 2:51 on the clock, UW-W closed the game on a 9-1 run, including seven straight points from freshman guard Kacie Carollo to close out the game.

Johanna Taylor started the run with a putback off a miss, and Carollo gave UW-Whitewater the lead for good with a 3-pointer at the 1:59 mark.

The two teams exchanged empty possessions before Carollo took a pass from Taylor, pump faked and finished the layup to make it 66-62 with 17 seconds to play. UW-W got another stop before Carollo knocked down a pair of free throws to send the team to its first appearance in the national semifinals since 2014.

Rebekah Schumacher knocked down six 3-pointers on her way to a career-high 22 points to go with six rebounds, two steals and two blocks. Aleah Grundahl totaled 14 points and four rebounds, while Carollo collected 13 points, eight rebounds and three assists. Taylor contributed with nine points, nine rebounds, six assists and three blocks, and Yssa Sto. Domingo recorded eight points, four rebounds and three assists.

Both teams got off to a slow start offensively, but the Titans (22-7) held a 7-2 advantage with 2:28 left in the first quarter. The Warhawks ended the period on a 6-0 run, including buckets from Grundahl and Sto. Domingo, for an 8-7 lead.

UW-Oshkosh heated up in the second, turning a 12-12 tie two minutes into the quarter into a 20-14 advantage with 3:40 on the clock. UWO’s lead grew to as may as eight in the quarter, but Schumacher’s layup in the final second brought UW-W to within six by halftime.

UW-Whitewater chipped away at the Titans’ lead early in the third, but UWO built its advantage back up to eight in the final minute of the quarter. The Warhawks took the momentum back on a 3-pointer by Sto. Domingo and a layup by Grundahl on their final two possessions of the period to draw within 50-47.

A 3-pointer by Schumacher tied the game at 52-52 with 7:42 remaining in the contest, and Grundahl’s free throws 40 seconds later gave UW-Whitewater the lead. The two teams traded baskets before the Titans tied the game on a 3-pointer just past the midway point of the fourth quarter.

UW-Oshkosh hit another 3-pointer two minutes later before the Warhawks staged their rally over the final 2 1/2 minutes.

[Attendance was 1225, only five more than on Friday night.]

More information on the university’s plans to celebrate the team’s run to the Final Four will be announced in the coming days.

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