Walz Arena will be the venue for the GPAC women's basketball championship game for the fourth year in a row. Concordia will meet rival Hastings on Tuesday in a battle of powerhouses.
The Concordia pressure forced Dordt into 35 turnovers and fueled a 94-79 GPAC semifinal win on Saturday (Feb. 29). The Bulldogs will now host the GPAC final for the fourth-straight year.
After pummeling Midland in the GPAC quarterfinals, No. 2 Concordia will meet Dordt in the semifinals on Saturday. The Bulldogs have won 10 GPAC tournament games in a row.
Sophomore Mackenzie Koepke put on a shooting display as part of a dominant beginning to the postseason for second-ranked Concordia. The Bulldogs pummeled Midland, 95-46.
Senior Philly Lammers notched 18 points in both of last week's road wins as the Bulldogs wrapped up the outright GPAC regular-season title. As a result, Lammers earned GPAC Player of the Week honors.
After wrapping up a fourth-straight GPAC regular-season title, the Bulldogs now take aim at a fourth-straight conference postseason championship. Second-ranked Concordia will host Midland on Wednesday.
It took four quarters to put it away, but the second-ranked Bulldogs took care of business at Jamestown and polished off a GPAC regular-season title. Concordia has won four championships in a row.
Accomplished seniors Grace Barry and Philly Lammers both garnered recognition as members of the 2020 Academic All-District® Women’s Basketball Teams, as selected by CoSIDA.
All-American Philly Lammers will be remembered for her incredible success on the court, her humility and her role in the most successful four-year run in Concordia women's basketball history.
On the same night, Grace Barry reached 1,000 career points and Philly Lammers notched 1,000 career rebounds. The star duo helped lead the second-ranked Bulldogs to a 75-68 win at Midland on Wednesday (Feb. 19).
After losing several key pieces from the 2014-15 team that made a run to the national title game, the Bulldogs have reloaded with a balanced approach in 2015-16.
It was only a matter of time before Sarah Harrison Krueger found her way into the Concordia Athletics Hall of Fame.
Since 1992, 14 Concordia women’s basketball teams have appeared at the national tournament with four advancing all the way to the national semifinals. But in 2015, the Bulldogs reached new heights by motoring to the national title game for the first time in program history.
It’s a Tuesday evening in the middle of July and two brothers have reunited over a familiar round, orange and leather-coated object that has been prevalent in their lives since birth. Jarrod Olson, now 41, drives and whirls a pass back out top to Drew Olson, 35, who rises and fires a three. They narrowly miss out on the Olson-to-Olson scoring connection.