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Simon Fraser University Athletics

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basketball
Aaron Selig
56
Saint Martin's Unive SMU 11-16
64
Winner Simon Fraser Univers SFU 15-12
Saint Martin's Unive SMU
11-16
56
Final
64
Simon Fraser Univers SFU
15-12
Winner
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 F
Saint Martin's Unive SMU 32 24 56
Simon Fraser Univers SFU 27 37 64

Game Recap: Basketball - W | | By GNAC Staff

Clan Rallies From 8 Down to Beat Saints 64-56

The Clan (15-12) will take on the nation's No. 1 ranked team Alaska Anchorage in their semifinal on Friday.

BILLINGS, Mont. - Fourth-seed Simon Fraser rallied from an eight-point second half deficit to defeat Saint Martin's 64-56 Wednesday and advance to Friday's 1:15 p.m. PST semifinal game in the GNAC Women's Basketball Championships at Alterowitz Gymnasium.
 
The Clan (15-12) will take on the nation's No. 1 ranked team Alaska Anchorage in their semifinal.  The Seawolves bring a 27-1 record and a 15-game winning streak into the contest.  Their only loss this year has been to Northwest Nazarene on New Year's Day in Anchorage.
 
Saint Martin's led by five at halftime (32-27) and opened up a 40-32 lead with 17:02 left on a basket by Megan Wiedeman.  SFU, however, then ran off 10 straight points to go ahead 42-40 and then finally took the lead for good at 50-48 on a layup by Rachel Fradgley with 8:33 remaining.
 
Fradgley (14 points, 11 rebounds) and Meg Wilson (11 points, 15 rebounds) finished the contest with double-doubles and Katie Lowen and Erin Chambers netted 20 and 16 points, respectively,  to pace SFU.
 
Krista Stabler led the Saints (11-16) with 19 points, while Liz Mills and Elin Johansson had 10 each.  Wiedeman scored eight points and had a team-high 13 rebounds.
 
Following Fradgley's go-ahead basket, Saint Martin's kept it close, pulling to within one point (55-54) on two free throws by Liz Mills with 2:42 left, but Fradgley countered at the other end 12 seconds later making two foul shots with 2:30 left.
 
Wiedeman then had a three-pointer to tie the game, but she missed and Lowen countered with a trey with 1:43 left to double the SFU lead to six points.  Mills' jumper cut the SFU lead back to four, but the Clan then scored the game's final four points in the final minute on a basket by Fradgley and two free throws by Chambers.
 
Neither team shot the ball particularly well as the Saints made just 19 of 62 (30.6%) and were one of 12 from beyond the arc.  SFU made 22 of 62 (35.5%) and connected on six of 22 three-pointers.
 
The Clan also outrebounded the Saints 42-34 and had seven blocks, including three by Fradgley, who made six of her 10 shots.
 
Friday's two semifinal winners - the first semifinal will match second-seed Seattle Pacific and third-seed Western Washington - will advance to Saturday's 5:15 p.m. championship game.  That winner earns an automatic berth in next week's NCAA West Regional.
 
 
Western Washington Ousts Central Washington
 
Stingy defense and a game-high 17 points by forward Taylor Peacocke  carried Western Washington to a 51-40 victory over Central Washington Wednesday in the opening game of the GNAC Women's Basketball Championships at Alterowitz Gymnasium.
 
The triumph lifts the Vikings, the No.3 seed in the tourney, to 20-8 overall.  They'll play No.2 seed and nationally  20th ranked Seattle Pacific (21-5) in Friday's first semifinal at noon.
 
Central, the No.6 seed, ended its season at 12-15.
 
The Vikings, who entered the contest ranked in the Top 10 in Division II in every shooting percentage category, including second in field goal percentage (47.7 percent), shot a season-low 28.6 percent (18-of-63) in scoring a season-low 51 points.
 
But WWU also had one of its finest defensive performances of the campaign, allowing a season-low 40 points, holding Central to 31.7 percent shooting (13-of-41) from the floor, and forcing 14 turnovers while committing just six.
 
Just one CWU player - GNAC Freshman of the Year Jasmin Edwards - was in double figures.  Edwards netted 14 points, connecting of 4-of-11 shots, including two of five three-pointers.  She also had a game-high three assists equaling WWU guard Jenni White's total in that category.
 
The first half featured three ties and five lead changes, but the Vikings scored the final six points of the period to take a 24-20 lead at halftime, including a key three-pointer by White with five seconds left after Edwards missed the front end of a 1-and-1 with 24 seconds left preventing the Wildcats from possibly taking a one-point lead into the locker room.
 
WWU then took control early in the second half, holding Central to just one field goal in the first nine minutes and grabbing a 37-24 lead on a Sydney Donaldson layup with 11:32 remaining.
 
The margin remained in double digits the rest of the way.
 
White, last year's tourney MVP, had 16 points for WWU, which has won the last two GNAC tournaments. Peacocke and White combined to go 13-of-23 from the field as Peacocke made 6-of-11 and White converted on 7-of-12.
 
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