Eastern Connecticut tackles Williams College in NCAA Tournament

WILLIMANTIC, Conn. – Eastern Connecticut
looks to maintain late-season momentum when it opens play in its
third straight NCAA Division III tournament Thursday at 6 p.m.
against heavily-favored Williams College in the opening round of
the New England Regional Tournament at Rockwell Cage on the MIT
campus.
Seeded seventh in the eight-team field, Eastern (11-26) meets No. 2
Williams College (27-7) in the third of four matches on the first
day of play. Two semifinal-round matches are scheduled for Friday
beginning at 4:30 p.m. and the championship tilt is set for
Saturday at 7 p.m. The regional winner moves on to the Round of
32.
In other matches Thursday, No. 4 Wellesley College (27-6) opens the
tournament at 1 p.m. against No. 5 Endicott College (26-10); No. 3
Amherst College (27-4) meets No. 6 Rivier College (25-11) at 3:30.;
and No. 1 MIT (34-2) hosts No. 8 Maine Maritime Academy (19-5) in
the final match at 8:30. Six of the eight teams in the regional
qualified automatically, with Amherst and MIT being awarded
at-large berths in the 61-team field. Amherst lost the New England
Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) playoff final to
Williams, and MIT lost for only the second time all year when it
had a 30-match winning streak severed by Wellesley in the New
England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference
championship match.
Last week, Eastern salvaged what has been a disastrous season by
winning the Little East Conference championship with three wins in
five days – culminating in a three-game sweep of
second-seeded Western Connecticut State University Saturday. By
winning the title and gaining the automatic bid given the champion,
Eastern extended its New England Division III record with its 16th
NCAA tournament berth.
Until the final week of the season, the Warriors had won as many as
two matches in a row only once. With a 6-13 record in late
September, Eastern lost its first ten matches in the month of
October before winning five of its last eight. The No. 5 seed in
the eight-team LEC playoffs, Eastern defeated three higher seeds on
the road, surviving in five games in the two matches leading up to
the championship win over Western Connecticut. The team brings a
season-high four-match winning streak into tomorrow’s
opener.
“We had a lot of struggles this year and a lot of ups and
downs,” observed fifth-year head coach Jolie
Ward after the team won its third straight LEC title
(seventh overall) Saturday. “But the players pulled together.
With such a young team, we had a lot of adversity early in the
season. I knew that they had the potential to do amazing things as
a team, but it had to come from them, they needed to see it,”
added the coach, who was credited with her 100th win at Eastern
when the club broke its ten-game losing streak Oct. 19 against
Montclair State. “We needed to go through the struggles
first, and make adjustments and make changes. And the players
ultimately proved it to themselves.”
Eastern has been eliminated with first-round NCAA loss each of the
last two years. It was swept by Cortland State in 2005 and dropped
a five-game decision to Endicott last year. The Warriors have the
least wins, most losses and worst winning percentage in this
year’s NCAA field. During the regular season, they were 0-3
against teams in the New England Regional, and 0-6 against teams
from the NESCAC.
Eastern and Williams are dominated by freshmen and sophomores and
each team features only one senior in setters Priscilla
Dougherty (Island Park, N.Y.) of Eastern and reserve
player Liz Hirschorn of Williams.
The MVP of the Little East tournament, Dougherty is the only player
in Eastern history with as many as 1,000 career assists and 1,000
digs. She ranks second all-time with 2,787 career assists.
Dougherty, the team captain, leads this year’s team in
assists and serve percentage and is second in service aces and
third in digs. Sophomore libero Lauren Odell (Dover Plains,
N.Y.) is first on the team in digs, service aces and pass
attempts, and second-team all-conference junior Sandra
Jaques (Milford) is first in kills and second in digs,
pass attempts, and pass percentage. Offensively, sophomores
Lindsey Odell (Dover Plains, N.Y.) and
Ashley Tuggle (South Windsor) follow Jaques in
kills. Junior Alex Silvestros (North Branford) is
the team leader in blocks.
Into its eighth NCAA tournament, Williams brings seven straight
wins. The Ephs are making their 13th post-season appearance overall
(ECAC and NCAA combined), having reached the NCAA quarterfinals in
each of their last three appearances (2002 through 2004). They have
advanced into the Round of 16 or deeper in each of their last five
NCAA showings.
Five-foot-seven inch outside hitter Melissa Pun earned first-team
all-region honors as a freshman in 2006 and is among
Williams’ leaders this year in kills, aces and digs. Six-foot
freshman Nicole Ballon-Landa and 5-foot-11 inch sophomore Whitney
Hitchcock – both middle blockers – are among the
Williams’ leaders in both kills and blocks. Freshman Emily
Avis has compiled over 1,000 assists.
Williams entered the final week of the regular season ranked third
in the NCAA New England Region, then defeated second-ranked Amherst
in five matches to capture its fifth NESCAC title in seven
years
Eastern had Williams have faced 10 common opponents this
season. The Warriors are 1-9 against those teams, Williams
10-2.
The meeting against Williams will be the first between the programs
since the Ephs’ sweep of the Warriors at the Williams Quad in
1999. The only other match in the series came in 1993, with Eastern
winning in four games at the Stony Brook Invitational in 1993.









Volleyball




