University of Northern Iowa Athletics

Panthers Drop McLeod Opener to Iowa State, 80-74 in Overtime
11/20/2006 7:00:00 AM | Women's Basketball
Nov. 20, 2006
CEDAR FALLS, Iowa -
The University of Northern Iowa women's basketball team could not hold on to a 13-point second-half lead as Iowa State rallied to come away with an 80-74 overtime win in the McLeod Center opener on Monday.
UNI senior Tara King led all scorers with a career-high 38 points. The
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Senior Jessie Biggs and Megan Keefe also scored in double figures for the Panthers, adding 17 and 16 points, respectively. King, Biggs and Keefe combined to score 71 of UNI's 74 points, with freshman Lindsey Swanson being the only other Panther to score in the game.
The Cyclones (2-0) had five players score in double figures, led by Toccara Ross's 19 points. Lyndsey Medders notched a double-double with 13 points and 11 assists. Rachel Pierson scored 18 points for ISU, and Heather Ezell finished with 15, sparked by a 3-for-8 performance from three-point range. Nicky Wieben finished with 12 points for
The Panthers (0-3) led through most of the first half, and built a seven point lead when Keefe hit a three at
The teams traded baskets and one-point leads until a three from Biggs put UNI up 35-33 with
King was 6-of-8 from the floor and scored 15 points through the first 13 minutes of the second half. Her jump shot with
Biggs brought it back to a two-possession game with a jump shot with
The Cyclones rebounded UNI's missed jump shot with 20 seconds remaining, giving ISU a chance at the final shot. Medders went up for the shot with 5 seconds remaining, but Biggs came up with a block. Pierson grabbed the offensive board, but her shot did not fall, sending the game into overtime.
Keefe scored on UNI's first possession of the extra period, but Ezell answered on the Cyclone end to tie the game at 70. King gave the lead back to UNI with a jump shot with
"This was simply a tremendous college basketball game," DiCecco said. "After our first two games, we knew we had some work to do. I think that if we play this hard every night, we're going to have success."
The Panthers shot 41.5 percent (27-of-65) from the floor, and finished 9-of-28 (32.1 percent) from three-point range. UNI was 11-of-14 (78.6 percent) from the free-throw line.
"I think we did as well as we could with the size difference," DiCecco said. "We tried to keep the ball around the perimeter, because we knew if they got the ball down low we were in trouble. Their rebounding advantage really hurt us."
A crowd of 2,874 was in attendance for the first women's game to be held in the
"I wish we could have come away with this win to really make this opening special," DiCecco said. "But, this atmosphere and this arena are even better than we imagined. This will still be a night that these players remember."
The Panthers return to the road for their next two contests when they travel to