Senior guard Charel Allen was named the Notre Dame Monogram Club Most Valuable Player for the second consecutive year at the 2007-08 Irish women's basketball awards banquet, which was held Tuesday night at the Joyce Center.

No. 23/25 Irish Back On Road Tuesday At Central Michigan

Nov. 19, 2007

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2007-08 ND Women’s Basketball: Game 4
#23/25 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (2-1 / 0-0 BIG EAST) vs. Central Michigan Chippewas (2-1 / 0-0 MAC West)

DATE: November 20, 2007
TIME: 7:00 p.m. ET
AT: Mount Pleasant, Mich. – Rose Arena (5,200)
SERIES: Series tied 1-1
1ST MTG: 12/21/83 (CMU 72-69)
LAST MTG: 11/10/06 (ND 88-66)
RADIO: ESPN Radio 1490 AM/UND.com (Sean Stires, p-b-p)
TV: None
LIVE STATS: UND.com
TICKETS: (888) 347-3872

Storylines

  • Notre Dame has won 14 consecutive games against Mid-American Conference opponents, dating back to the 1994-95 season.
  • The Irish will be making their first-ever visit to Central Michigan Tuesday night.

No. 23/25 Irish Back On The Road Tuesday At Central Michigan
With a solid run in the Preseason WNIT now in the rearview mirror, Notre Dame focuses on the remainder of its non-conference schedule, which tips off Tuesday at 7 p.m. (ET) when the Irish take on Central Michigan at Rose Arena in Mount Pleasant, Mich.

Notre Dame suffered its first loss of the 2007-08 season last Friday night, coming out on the short end of a 75-59 decision at No. 3 Maryland in the semifinals of the Preseason WNIT. The Iriush stuck right with the Terrapins in the first half, leading by as many as five points and trailing by only six at halftime. However, Maryland used a 12-4 run early in the second half to finally pull clear of Notre Dame for good.

Senior guard Charel Allen became the third different player to lead the Irish in scoring this season, tossing in 16 points for the second consecutive game. Freshman forward Devereaux Peters added 12 points and six rebounds, while junior guard Lindsay Schrader notched 10 points and a team-high eight rebounds for Notre Dame, which set a school record in the loss with just three turnovers (and two of those occurred on offensive fouls).

Rankings

  • Notre Dame was ranked 23rd in last week’s Associated Press poll and 25th in the Nov. 13 ESPN/USA Today poll.
  • Central Michigan is not ranked.

A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish
Even after a 20-12 record and a trip to the second round of the NCAA Tournament in 2006-07, Notre Dame still continues to fly below the national radar. Head coach Muffet McGraw wouldn’t want it any other way.

Last year, the Irish learned quickly that respect is something that isn’t handed to you, but rather earned on the court. It’s also a quality that takes time to develop and doesn’t come from trophy cases or record books. So although Notre Dame was tabbed fifth in the preseason BIG EAST Conference balloting, it’s not a great concern to McGraw and her charges. Instead, they focus on the things they can control and prefer to let the outside world judge them when the season is over.

This year could prove to be unlike any in recent memory for Notre Dame. For one, the Irish will roll out some impressive depth, going virtually two-deep at every floor position. In addition, Notre Dame’s new offensive system (a Princeton-based set with four guards and a post) continues to evolve, building upon last year’s 70.1 point-per-game average that was its highest since the 2000-01 NCAA national championship season.

Senior guard Charel Allen is the top returning scorer and rebounder for the Irish, leading the team in both categories last year (17.0 ppg., 6.2 rpg.). She also was a first-team all-BIG EAST and WBCA honorable mention All-America selection, and was a finalist for the 2007 USA U21 World Championship Team that struck gold this past summer in Moscow.

Allen’s backcourt partner and classmate is point guard Tulyah Gaines. Now in her second full season at the helm of the Notre Dame offense, the speedy Gaines averaged 9.6 points per game along with team highs of 3.9 assists and 2.0 steals per contest. She also is a two-year team captain who commands instant respect from teammates, coaches and opponents.

The Irish will benefit from the return of junior guard Lindsay Schrader, who missed the entire 2006-07 season with a torn ACL in her right knee. Schrader, who retains three years of athletic eligibility, was Notre Dame’s second-leading scorer (10.5 ppg.) and top rebounder (5.4 rpg.) as a rookie in 2005-06 and will look to regain that form this season.

Last year saw Notre Dame break new ground by becoming the first school ever to put three players on the BIG EAST All-Freshman Team. Guards Ashley Barlow (10.3 ppg., 5.4 rpg.) and Melissa Lechlitner (6.3 ppg., 2.7 apg.) will provide a superb complement to the veteran Allen-Gaines tandem, while center Erica Williamson (6.1 ppg., 5.3 rpg., 1.3 bpg.) showed flashes of potential throughout her rookie season and is poised for increased development this year.

Headlining a three-player freshman class (ranked 11th nationally by Blue Star Basketball) is Devereaux Peters, a smooth 6-2 forward who was a consensus All-American as a senior last year at national powerhouse Fenwick High School in Oak Park, Ill. Fellow post Becca Bruszewski (Valparaiso, Ind.) finished third in last season’s Indiana Miss Basketball voting and was a perennial all-state pick. And, guard Brittany Mallory (Baltimore, Md.) offers a perimeter shooting threat, as well as a cerebral player who will mesh well in the Irish offensive system.

A Quick Look At Central Michigan
With a new coach and several returning veterans, things are looking up for Central Michigan this season.

The Chippewas bring back eight letterwinners, including three starters from last year’s club that posted an 11-19 record, but finished sixth in the Mid-American Conference West Division with a 3-13 record. CMU looked sharp early on, going 9-5 through the season’s first two months, but the Chippewas struggled down the stretch, losing 14 of their final 16 games, including eight defeats by 10 points or less.

While this season is only three games old, Central Michigan seems to have learned some lessons from last year’s rough finish. CMU is 2-1 this season, with both wins coming at home by five points or less — a 76-71 season-opening victory over Illinois-Chicago and a 69-68 comeback win over Chicago State this past Saturday. Those triumphs were sandwiched around an 83-45 loss at Temple on Nov. 12.

In the CSU contest, the Chippewas trailed by as many as 16 points with eight minutes to play. However, the CMU bench and a relentless full-court press sparked a huge rally, as the hosts went on a 25-7 run, taking a 68-67 lead on a layup by sophomore guard/forward Britni Houghton with 16 seconds left. After a Chicago State miss, junior guard Angel Chan hit one of two foul shots and the Chippewas dodged a huge bullet at the horn when CSU’s Jasmin Dixon was fouled but missed the second of two free throws would have forced overtime.

Chan is Central Michigan’s leading scorer thus far at 12.0 points per game, while also setting the pace with 2.0 assists per game and six three-pointers. Despite coming off the bench, junior guard Latisha Luckett has recorded two double-doubles in three games this season, including a career-high 21-point, 11-rebound day vs. Chicago State. Luckett is averaging 11.3 points and a team-high 7.0 rebounds per game with a team-best .464 field goal percentage.

As a team, CMU has forced more than 18 turnovers per game, but opponents are averaging 74.0 points per game with a .459 field goal percentage. The Chippewas are scoring 63.0 points per game with a .352 field goal percentage and are on the short end of a (-7.0) rebound margin to date.

While in her first season at Central Michigan, head coach Sue Guevara has a wealth of experience at her fingertips, including a seven-year run as the head coach at Michigan (1996-2003). She has a career record of 125-83 (.601) that includes a 1-1 mark against Notre Dame.

The Notre Dame-Central Michigan Series
Although separated by less than 200 miles, Notre Dame and Central Michigan will be playing for just the third time ever, with the two schools splitting their previous two contests. The Chippewas won the inaugural series matchup, 72-69 on Dec. 21, 1983 at the Joyce Center. Nearly 22 years later, the teams returned to that arena on Nov. 10, 2006, when the Irish gaining an 88-66 win over CMU.

Tuesday’s game will be the first for Notre Dame at Central Michigan’s Rose Arena.

The Last Time Notre Dame And Central Michigan Met
For the 12th consecutive season and the 17th time in the 20-year Muffet McGraw era, Notre Dame tipped off its season with a victory, defeating Central Michigan, 88-66 on Nov. 10, 2006 at the Joyce Center. The Irish never trailed in the contest and led by double digits for all but the first 3:59 in their first meeting with the Chippewas in more than 22 years.

Four Notre Dame players scored in double figures on the afternoon, led by center Melissa D’Amico, who tossed in 16 points despite playing only 15 minutes due to foul trouble. Guard Charel Allen tallied 15 points, including 11 in the first half, while co-captain Breona Gray chipped in with 13 points.

The Irish (1-0) shot the ball well on Opening Night, connecting at a 48.3 percent clip (29-of-60) from the field and a sharp 83.9 percent (26-of-31) at the free throw line. Notre Dame also enjoyed a +10 edge on the glass, with center Erica Williamson collecting a game-high eight rebounds, not to mention a game-best five blocked shots.

Central Michigan’s Candace Wilson led all scorers in the game with 17 points, with 12 of those coming in the second half on 4-of-4 three-pointers. Sharonda Hurd added 15 points and a team-best seven rebounds for the Chippewas (0-1), who bounced back from a .280 first-half field goal percentage with a .517 mark after the break.

The season-opening crowd of 6,702 fans were still settling into their seats as Notre Dame stormed from the gate, nailing eight of their first 11 shots from the floor and taking a 17-3 lead on two free throws by Allen with 14:55 left in the first half. The Irish kept their offensive flow going, as guard Ashley Barlow, Gray and Allen drilled three-pointers in succession to push the hosts’ lead as high as 31-9 with only 9:54 gone in the season.

CMU made a late run in the first half, scoring six of the final eight points to trim the margin to 39-22 by the intermission. The Chippewas kept battling back in the opening moments of the second half, getting as close as 13 points on a couple of occasions, the last when Britni Houghton sank two foul shots with 14:50 remaining. However, Notre Dame doused any hopes for a record-setting comeback, using a 12-1 run just past the midway point of the second half to vault its lead back over 20 points and CMU would get no closer the rest of the way.

Other Notre Dame-Central Michigan Series Tidbits

  • Central Michigan is the first of three opponents on this year’s Notre Dame schedule that the Irish will play on the road for the first in their respective series. The others are IUPUI (Dec. 21) and Richmond (Jan. 2).
  • Notre Dame is 48-19 (.716) all-time against teams from the state of Michigan, including an 18-13 (.581) record away from home. The Irish also are 28-7 (.800) against the Wolverine State in the Muffet McGraw era (1987-present). Notre Dame has won its last five games against Michigan schools, since an 82-73 overtime loss to Michigan State on Dec. 2, 2004 at the Joyce Center. The Irish also have won their last two road games at Michigan institutions, most recently taking down the state’s flagship school by a 61-58 score in Ann Arbor on Dec. 1, 2006.
  • In last season’s matchup, Central Michigan’s Candace Wilson set a Joyce Center record for opponent three-point percentage by going 4-for-4 from beyond the arc. Irish center Melissa D’Amico also logged her second career “point-a-minute” game with a team-high 16 points in 15 minutes (due to foul trouble).
  • Notre Dame freshman forward Devereaux Peters and Central Michigan freshman guard Camille Ramsey saw each other quite a bit during their high school days in Chicago. Most recently, Peters led Fenwick High School to the 2007 Illinois Class AA state title, defeating Ramsey’s Bolingbrook High School squad, 35-27 in the championship game. Peters had a double-double in the state final (13 points, 10 rebounds), while Ramsey played four minutes, but did not score.
  • First-year CMU head coach Sue Guevara faced Notre Dame twice during her seven-year tenure at Michigan (1996-2003). Her Wolverines lost to the Irish, 88-54 in the second round of the 2001 NCAA Tournament at the Joyce Center. The following season, Guevara led UM to a 78-63 victory over Notre Dame in the Women’s College Basketball Showcase on Dec. 2, 2001 at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Mich.
  • The state of Michigan has been home to 14 Notre Dame women’s basketball players during the past 31 years. That’s second only to Indiana (18) for the most players from one state in program history. The Irish will add two more Michigan natives to their roster next season, as Ionia’s Kellie Watson and Oak Park’s Erica Solomon become the first residents of the Wolverine State to play women’s basketball at Notre Dame since 2000, when Ann Arbor’s Julie Henderson completed her Irish career.
  • Recent CMU Athletic Hall of Fame inductee Betsy Yonkman may be a familiar name to some Irish observers. She served as an assistant coach for six seasons (1995-2001) at Notre Dame’s BIG EAST Conference rival Rutgers, and just returned to the Scarlet Knights’ staff this past summer as an assistant to the head coach.

Notre Dame vs. The Mid-American Conference
Notre Dame is 31-14 (.689) all-time against the current Mid-American Conference alignment, with a 12-10 (.545) record away from home (road/neutral sites combined). The Irish also sport a 16-5 (.762) record against MAC schools in the Muffet McGraw era, with a 5-4 (.556) ledger away from South Bend.

Notre Dame also has won its last 14 games against current MAC schools since an 87-64 loss at Northern Illinois on March 10, 1995 in the semifinals of the Midwestern Collegiate Conference Tournament. Back on Nov. 9, the Irish opened the season with a 98-50 win over Miami (Ohio) in the first round of the Preseason WNIT at the Joyce Center.

Central Michigan is the second of three MAC opponents for Notre Dame this season, with a visit to Bowling Green (Dec. 5) on the slate next month. Tuesday’s game at CMU will mark the first game for the Irish on a MAC campus in exactly two years — Notre Dame pulled out a 71-68 win at Western Michigan on Nov. 20, 2005.

A November To Remember
Notre Dame’s success during the past 13 years has been aided by its ability to get off to a good start. To wit — the Irish are 47-11 (.810) in November games since they joined the BIG EAST Conference in time for the 1995-96 season. In addition, Notre Dame has won 29 of its last 37 games during the year’s penultimate month, but is coming off a 75-59 loss at third-ranked Maryland last Friday night.

Spreading The Wealth
One of the hallmarks of Notre Dame’s squad this season is its balance and depth. That’s been particularly evident through the first three weeks of the season (counting the exhibition games), with five different players from four different floor positions and three different classes leading the team in scoring.

Sophomore center Erica Williamson set the pace in the exhibition opener vs. Southern Indiana, before senior point guard Tulyah Gaines shouldered the scoring load in the second exhibition vs. Hillsdale. Junior 3-guard Lindsay Schrader claimed top scoring honors in the season opener against Miami (Ohio), while sophomore shooting guard Ashley Barlow was the leading scorer in the win over Western Kentucky. Most recently, senior shooting guard Charel Allen took her turn at the front of the Irish scoring train with 16 points at No. 3 Maryland last Friday night.

This trend also extends to the rebounding column, where four different Notre Dame players have led the club in rebounding thus far — senior center Melissa D’Amico (USI), Peters (Hillsdale/WKU), Williamson (Miami) and Schrader (Maryland).

Protecting The Pill
Notre Dame took ball protection to a new level in its loss at No. 3 Maryland last Friday night. The Irish set a school record with only three turnovers against the Terrapins, with two of those giveaways coming on offensive fouls. The previous school record for fewest turnovers was six, set on Feb. 12, 2006 at DePaul.

With only three turnovers, it probably comes as no surprise that Maryland did not register a steal against Notre Dame. However, what is surprising is that it was the first time in the 31-year history of the Irish program that an opponent did not record a steal against Notre Dame. Several opponents had only one steal vs. the Irish, with the most recent being Boston College on March 19, 2006 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament (played at West Lafayette, Ind.).

No Easy Road
Notre Dame has always played a difficult schedule, using it as a means of preparation for future tests in both the BIG EAST Conference and the postseason. However, this year’s slate could be one of the more rugged ones in recent memory.

With the addition of third-ranked Maryland to the docket in last week’s Preseason WNIT semifinals, the Irish now will face four of the top six teams (including the top three) in the Nov. 12 Associated Press poll. Still to come this season are No. 1 Tennessee (Jan. 5 at the Joyce Center), No. 2 Connecticut (Jan. 27 at the Joyce Center) and No. 6 Rutgers (Feb. 19 in Piscataway, N.J.). The top three teams in the poll have combined to win three of the past four national championships, with Tennessee currently holding the hardware.

Allen Named To Preseason WNIT All-Tournament Team
Senior guard Charel Allen earned a spot on the Preseason WNIT All-Tournament Team after averaging 13.3 points and 5.7 rebounds in Notre Dame’s three tournament games. Allen is the fourth Irish player in history to be named to the squad, joining Katryna Gaither (1996), Megan Duffy (2004) and ’04 Most Valuable Player Jacqueline Batteast.

Guess Who’s Back … Back Again?
Junior guard Lindsay Schrader looked very sharp in her return to action on Nov. 9 vs. Miami (Ohio). In her first meaningful game in nearly 20 months, Schrader scored exactly one point for every month she was out, finishing with 20 points on 10-of-12 shooting, converting her first six shots before the game was eight minutes old. The Bartlett, Ill., native wound up playing just 17 minutes against the RedHawks, resulting in the first “point-a-minute” game of her career.

Irish Fans Crave A Big Mac Attack
Notre Dame has introduced a new promotion this season, offering fans a coupon for a free Big Mac from South Bend-area McDonald’s restaurants if the Irish score at least 88 points in a game. The coupons are issued at the Joyce Center gates as fans leave the arena following the game.

Promotional Corner
Here’s a rundown of some upcoming promotions and giveaways at future Notre Dame women’s basketball games this season. Tickets may be purchased in advance at the Irish athletics ticket office (second floor of the Joyce Center through Gate 1; 574-631-7356), on game day at the Gate 10 ticket windows of the Joyce Center, or via the Internet at Notre Dame’s official athletics web site (UND.com). Please note — additional promotions and giveaways may be added at a later date, so consult the Notre Dame promotions web site (www.notredamepromotions.com) for the latest information:

  • Nov. 24 vs. Boston College — Mascot Day (photos with mascots on concourse beginning 75 minutes before tipoff) … South Bend Tribune Family Day (4 tickets/sodas/hot dogs for only $25) … season ticket holder t-shirt/media guide pickup (Gym 2 on upper concourse) … Irish women’s basketball calendar to first 1,000 fans, courtesy of Waterford Estates Lodge … post-game autograph session courtside with selected Notre Dame players.
  • Nov. 27 vs. Canisius — Elvis Night (Elvis will be taking photos with fans on concourse beginning 75 minutes before tipoff; don’t miss a special halftiime performance from the “King of Rock and Roll”) … Golden Domer Night ($3 tickets for all senior citizens) … Irish women’s basketball drinking glasses to first 1,000 fans, courtesy of Coca-Cola and Legends of Notre Dame restaurant … post-game autograph session courtside with selected Notre Dame players.

Next Game: Boston College
Notre Dame tips off a three-game homestand Saturday with a noon (ET) game against former BIG EAST Conference rival Boston College at the Joyce Center. It will be the opener of a day-night basketball twinbill at the Joyce Center, with the Irish men’s basketball team slated to take on Youngstown State at 7:30 p.m. (ET).

Boston College is 1-1 this season, most recently dropping a 69-66 decision at Massachusetts on Nov. 14. Freshman center Carolyn Swords led the Eagles with 14 points and nine rebounds, while sophomore guard Ayla Brown added her first career double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds. BC will visit Delaware Tuesday night before making its way to South Bend for the post-Thanksgiving matchup with Notre Dame.

— ND —