The No. 14 Concordia women’s basketball team had no troubles with non-conference foe York College on Thursday night. The Bulldogs stomped the Panthers, 111-65 in the tilt played in Walz Arena. Junior Devin Edwards posted a career-high 14 points. Three other Bulldogs scored in the double digits.
The No. 14 Concordia women’s basketball team breezed by the Dordt Defenders on Wednesday evening. The 86-54 victory came thanks to a stiff Bulldog defense, forcing 31 Defender turnovers. CUNE also helped themselves with a 41.9 shooting percentage.
After putting on an offensive display in the third quarter, the well ran dry in the final stanza for the ninth-ranked Concordia University women’s basketball team.
The ninth-ranked Concordia women’s basketball team will host three teams over a four day span this week. The Bulldogs are looking to bounce back after a defeat at Dakota Wesleyan and will take on Dordt College, York College and Mount Marty College in the coming week.
Shooting from the 3-point range was one of the No. 9 Concordia women’s basketball team’s strengths in a 92-37 triumph over the Nebraska Wesleyan Prairie Wolves.
Coming off its first GPAC victory, the No. 4 Concordia women’s basketball team will split a pair of games this week at home and on the road.
After two-straight losses to open up conference play, the fourth-ranked Concordia University women’s basketball team solved the fourth quarter. Riding the hot hands of senior Becky Mueller and junior Shelby Quinn, the Bulldogs eked out a 71-66 win over rival Doane inside the Haddix Center on Tuesday night.
The No. 4 Concordia women’s basketball team will travel to Doane College on Tuesday, Nov. 24 for a 6 p.m. tipoff. The contest will be the last game of the month of November for the Bulldogs.
Everything then unraveled in the fourth quarter as the visiting Mustangs claimed a 77-66 win inside Walz Arena on Saturday. Top-ranked Morningside (7-0, 2-0 GPAC) remains undefeated.
In a conference-opening battle of perennially powerful GPAC programs, the fourth-ranked Concordia University women’s basketball team went on the road for the first time this season and saw an 11-point second-half lead melt away.
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.