'KEENE, N.H. 02/27/06 - The basketball seasons for Keene State
College men's and women's teams will continue. Each earned
berths in their respective ECAC New England Division III
tournaments on Monday.
Both teams will play opening round games on Wednesday night at 7
p.m. Selected as the top seed, the Owl men (20-7) will host
eighth seed Colby-Sawyer College (17-10) at Spaulding Gym.
The sixth-seeded KSC women (16-11) will travel to Boston to face
third seed Emmanuel College (21-7).
"I thought there was a good chance we'd be the top seed," said
KSC men's coach Rob Colbert. "If we take care of business, we
have a chance to play the entire tournament at home."
Both the Owls and the Chargers lost in the finals of respective
conference tournaments. KSC fell to UMass-Boston (81-67) in the
Little East Conference while CSC came up short against Endicott
College (65-56) in the Commonwealth Coast Conference title game.
The pairing is the exact opposite from last year, when
top-seeded Colby-Sawyer defeated the eighth-seeded Owls 89-61 in
New London. The two teams also met earlier this season at the
Jacob's Bridge tournament in Concord with KSC prevailing 81-80 on a
buzzer-beating three-point basket by David Sontag.
Disappointed at missing out on an NCAA tournament bid, Colbert
said his team is looking forward to playing in the ECACs. "We
had a team meeting and players are excited that their season is
extended," Colbert said. "They want to end their season on a
positive note."
For freshman Tyler Kathan, the tournament can provide valuable
experience down the road. "I think it will help to experience
tournament play and get some more games under my belt," he said.
Keene State is no stranger to the ECAC tournament. The Owls will
be making their seventh trip to the regional tournament in the past
nine years. KSC has reached the finals on two occasions: losing to
Colby-Sawyer (102-95) in 1998 and falling to Babson College (81-71)
in 2003. CSC is making its third straight trip and seventh
overall appearance in the tournament.
The victor of Wednesday's game will face the winner between
fourth seed Rhode Island College and fifth seed Coast Guard Academy
on Friday. The championship game will be played on Saturday
at the highest remaining seed.
The Keene State women, who lost in the semifinals of the LEC
tournament to eventual champ Southern Maine (65-40), are returning
to the ECAC tournament for the first time since 2003. The Owls last
played Emmanuel during the 1982-83 season.
"I'm excited for the players, and it's well deserved," said KSC
women's coach Keith Boucher. "We play a very difficult
schedule and I'd like to think they took that into account. We
played the number one team in the country three times this season,
so we're battle tested."
The Owls will be facing an Emmanuel College team that has an
impressive history. The Saints, upset by Norwich University
(44-35) in the finals of the Great Northeast Conference, have made
11 trips to the NCAA tournament, reaching the final four in
2001. Winners of five previous GNAC titles, Emmanuel set the
record for the longest regular-season conference win streak (72
games) from 2000-06.
Emmanuel, who used to scrimmage Keene during its Division II
days, presents several problems for the Owls. "They're very
athletic, play full court, and try to disrupt you," so we'll have
to play with a lot of poise," Boucher added.
A victory by the Owls will send them into the semifinal round on
Friday against the winner of the game between second seed Western
New England and seventh seed Nichols College. The championship game
is scheduled for Saturday.
Keene, who won the ECAC Championship as a Division II member in
1988 and 1989, and also reached the championship game in 1993, will
be making its third appearance in the Division III
tournament. Returning to the tournament in 2002, the Owls
defeated Colby-Sawyer before losing to Plymouth State in the
semifinals. The following year they dropped a first round game to
Colby-Sawyer.
Emmanuel, under 29-year coach Andy Yosinoff, is making its
seventh appearance in the ECAC Tournament, having advanced to the
finals in 1989 and 1990.