On Monday (March 17) night in Allendale, Mich., the No. 5-ranked Ashland University women's basketball team lost 62-50 to No. 2 Grand Valley State in the NCAA Division II Midwest Regional tournament championship game.
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The Eagles' 2024-25 season ends at 32-4, and the Lakers will move on to the Elite Eight in Pittsburgh, Pa., at 35-2.
"Ton of credit to Grand Valley," said Ashland head coach
Kari Pickens. "They're a really good team. I'm disappointed, because I thought we could get them. I thought that our team was really good, too. We just didn't shoot the ball well enough."
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Coming into the regional final, Ashland was second in D-II in scoring defense (49.9 ppg. allowed), and Grand Valley State seventh (52.9 ppg. allowed). So it wasn't a surprise that the score was low slightly halfway through the first quarter – with the Eagles leading 6-4.
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Six points off six Eagle turnovers helped the Lakers to an 11-9 lead through the first quarter, but AU did keep GVSU to 5-for-14 (35.7 percent) from the floor.
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Three free throws from sophomore guard
Gia Casalinova put the Eagles up 12-11 early in the second period, then Grand Valley followed with eight consecutive points to force an Ashland timeout.
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The Lakers led by as many as 11 points (27-16) in the second, but by halftime, a late spurt punctuated by a jumper from senior guard
Morgan Yoder cut the Eagle deficit to 29-23.
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Halfway through the third stanza, Grand Valley led 38-29, but freshman point guard
Ashley Mullet's 3-point field goal cut the Laker lead to six points. GVSU, however, took a game-high 12-point lead at 44-32 later in the third, and heading into the fourth, had a 46-37 advantage.
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The Lakers were kept off the scoreboard for the first 4½ minutes of the final quarter, but that only got the Eagles to within five points at 46-41. Five straight Grand Valley State points, however, put it back on top by 10.
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…AND THE REST OF THE STORY
- In her last collegiate game, senior forward Zoe Miller finished with a double-double – 15 points and 10 rebounds. Miller was named to the all-tournament team.
- The Lakers were kept to 40.0 percent from the field and 2-of-10 from 3-point range.
- This was Ashland's eighth all-time D-II Sweet 16 appearance.
- The Eagles will go into the 2025-26 season with 998 all-time wins, needing two more to become the 13th D-II women's basketball program with 1,000.
- Over the last 14 seasons (2011-12 to 2024-25), Ashland is 422-45 (.904) with three NCAA Division II national titles, two national runner-up finishes, three undefeated seasons, a D-II-record 73-game winning streak, nine 30-win seasons, 13 NCAA postseason qualifications, 10 conference regular-season championships, 11 conference tournament titles, and a mark of 227-14 (.942) at the Sherrill Hudson Court at Kates Gymnasium.