University of Northern Iowa Athletics

Second-Half Run Pushed Panthers Past Weber State, 62-52.
11/16/2007 7:00:00 AM | Women's Basketball
Nov. 16, 2007
CEDAR FALLS, Iowa -
After playing to a tie through the first half, the
The Panthers (2-1) started out slow, hitting just one of their first eight shots. Senior Megan Keefe put the Panthers on the board first, but WSU (1-1) followed with a 9-0 run that put the Wildcats in front 9-2 with
Traci Ollendieck kept it going with a three from the top of the key that made it 9-7 in favor of WSU with
Tonya Schnibbe hit a three and Ahkia Hunter drover for a layup to give the lead back to WSU, 14-11 with
Lizzie Boeck came off the bench to score seven straight points for the Panthers, four coming off offensive rebounds and putbacks and the last three coming from behind the arc. Boeck's run put the Panthers back in front, 18-14 at the five-minute mark.
Kristin Iehl connected on a pair of free throws to stretch UNI's lead to six, 20-14, but a jumper from Tashina Taylor ended the Panthers' 9-0 run and brought the score to 20-16.
Caitlin Anderson trimmed the Panther lead to one, 20-19. Boeck made one of two free-throw attempts to make it a two-point game, but Sara Tuomi connected on a pair to tie the game at 21-21 with 1:11 on the clock. Schnibbe put the Wildcats in the lead with a pair of free throws with 45 seconds left, but a layup from Keefe with 14 seconds left sent the teams into the break tied at 23.
The teams traded early baskets and remained knotted at 25-25 with
"It wasn't pretty, but we found a way to win," UNI head coach Tanya Warren said. "We came out hard in the second half and found a way to get it done. Good teams find a way to win, and we did that tonight."
After shooting 26.7 percent (8-of-30) from the floor in the first half, UNI shot 46.2 percent (12-of-26) in the second 20 minutes to shoot 35.7 percent (20-of-56) in the game. The Panthers were 5-of-18 (27.8 percent) from three-point range and connected on 17-of-22 (77.3 percent) free throws.
UNI held the rebounding advantage, 44-33. The Panthers turned 14 offensive rebounds into 16 second-chance points.
The Panthers will return to action on Sunday when they host in-state foe