Colorado University Athletics
Senior Sunday As CU Hosts Cowgirls In Home Finale

THE GAME: The University of Colorado (8-19, 2-12 Big 12) will play its final game home game of the season as the Buffaloes host Oklahoma State University (6-19, 0-14 Big 12) on Sunday, Feb. 26, at 2 p.m. at the Coors Events/Conference Center.
BROADCAST: SundayGÇÖs game will be broadcast live on KKZN 760AM. Tim Smile will handle play by play duties and is joined by USA BasketballGÇÖs Carol Callan with the color commentary. Internet audio streaming of the game will be available through Yahoo! Sports. SundayGÇÖs game will also be televised by the CU Journalism School on local cable and will be available through the internet for Stampede Online subscribers at CUBuffs.com.
LAST GAME ACTIVITIES: Sunday's home finale is Youth Day. The first 500 kids 13 and under will get a FREE CU T-shirt and all fans can participate in an autograph session with players after the game. Be sure to also stop by the CU Merchandise stand, located on the North End of the Events Center, where CU apparel will be discounted up to 50 percent off.
OPENING TIP: Colorado head coach Kathy McConnell-Miller will go after career win No. 100 against the team which she registered career win No. 1 against just over six years ago. McConnell-MillerGÇÖs first win as a collegiate head coach came against Oklahoma State, 72-69, on Nov. 28, 1999 while at the University of Tulsa.
THE BUFFALOES: Colorado currently resides in 11th place in the Big 12 at 2-12, and with just two games left in the regular season will most likely be the No. 11 seed for the 2006 Big 12 Championshp which begins on Tuesday, March 7, at Reunion Arena in Dallas. A win over Oklahoma State would guarantee CU at least the No. 11 seed. OSU needs two wins and two CU losses to overtake the Buffs for the 11th spot. The Buffaloes could still claim the No. 10 seed with wins in their last two games and two losses by Kansas. CU owns the tiebreaker over Kansas by virtue of the BuffsGÇÖ season sweep of the Jayhawks.
Seeking to match their win total from the 2004-05 season, the Buffaloes look to end a five-game slide in Big 12 games when they face the Cowgirls on Sunday. Colorado, just 6-9 at home this year, faces an Oklahoma State squad that has lost 29 straight road games, including an 0-9 mark this year. OSU is also looking to stop a 20-game skid in regular season Big 12 contests.
Sophomore Jackie McFarland leads Colorado in scoring (17.6 ppg) and rebounding (9.3 rpg), just under a season-long double-double. McFarland has 13 games of 10-plus rebounds, the sixth-best, single-season performance in team history. Junior Jasmina Ilic is second in scoring (14.5 ppg) and leads CU with 45 3-point field goals. Ilic has seven games of 20-plus points including a Big 12 season-best 36 against Nebraska on Jan. 4. Junior Anna Nedovic has started all 27 games for the Buffaloes averaging 5.6 points and 4.4 rebounds per game. Nedovic scored her second double-double of the season with 15 points and a career-high 13 rebounds against Northern Colorado.
CUGÇÖs back-court trio of senior Whitney Law and sophomores Lauren Lubin and Yari Escalera have put up some impressive numbers. Law shot a "perfect game" against UNC, 4-of-4 from the field and 4-of-4 from the line, and has ranked among the Big 12GÇÖs top 15 in assists and assist/turnover ratio all season. Escalera, the fourth-best foul shooter in the Big 12 at 81.9 percent, has scored in double digits in five of the last nine games and has 21 3-pointers in the last 10. Lubin, who started 11-straight games before being sidelined with a mild concussion, has hit nearly 50 percent of her 3-point attempts this season (12-of-25) and is fourth on the team in assists. Escalera (.819), McFarland (.806) and Ilic (.783) each rank among the top 10 free-throw shooters in the Big 12 for the leagueGÇÖs best free-throw shooting team (.739). Lubin is right there as well at .821, but is under the minimum number of attempts to qualify for the Big 12 rankings.
NOT JUST FRESHMAN ANYMORE: ColoradoGÇÖs freshman duo of forward Caley Dow and guard Hannah Skildum have played key roles off the bench this season. In CUGÇÖs road win over Kansas, the duo combined for 22 points on 9-of-12 from the field and 16 rebounds. Dow, who has a pair of double-doubles this season, is CUGÇÖs second-leading rebounder at 5.3 per game and has increased that number to 8.3 per game over the last five contests. Skildum, averaging four points and 3.3 rebounds, has three games of double-digit points this season, all of them on the road against Big 12 teams.
LAST TIME OUT: Sophomore Jackie McFarland and freshman Caley Dow each had 12 points, but it was not enough to overcome a strong, No. 10 ranked Baylor Bears team as they lost 86-40 Wednesday night.
Baylor All-American Sophia Young led the Bears with 20 points, four steals and two rebounds, giving her the all-time Big 12 career rebound record of 1,224 rebounds, in her final game at BaylorGÇÖs Ferrell Center. Tricia Abbott added 12 points off the bench while starters Jordan Davie and Chameka Scott both chipped in 11.
Baylor (20-5, 10-4 Big 12) was hot from the floor all night; they shot 50 percent in the first half and 61.3 percent in the second. This marked the sixth straight season that the Baylor has reached the 20 win mark.
Colorado (8-19, 2-12 Big 12) fell behind early and never could stage a serious comeback. Turnovers really hurt the BuffsGÇÖ as Baylor scored 37 points off 22 CU turnovers. While CUGÇÖs shooting did heat up in the second half, the 41-16 halftime deficit was just too large to overcome.
Junior Jasmina Ilic managed to add five points in 15 minutes, as she returned from an injury that kept her out of last SaturdayGÇÖs game against Missouri. Dow reached double digits in scoring for the sixth time this season. She led the Buffs with seven rebounds, marking her third straight game with seven or more boards.
ABOUT THE COWGIRLS: Oklahoma State is 6-19 overall and in last place in the Big 12 at 0-14. The Cowgirls have not won in 2006 as they are on a 14-game losing streak with the last win coming against Prairie View A&M, 103-48, on Dec. 29. 2005. OSU is averaging just 50.8 points per game during the Big 12 season and has been held under 40 points twice. Junior Whitney Pegram leads the Cowgirls in scoring at 14.7 points per game, ranks second in the Big 12 in blocks (2.7 bpg) and his hitting a team-best 51.9 percent from the field. Take away PegramGÇÖs 51.9 percent and the rest of the Cowgirls shoot just 35.1 percent from the floor. Freshman forward Shaunte Smith is OSUGÇÖs only other player averaging double-digits in scoring at 11.1 points per contest. Junior forward Destanie Sykes leads the Cowgirls in rebounding at 6.8 per game while Smith is a close second at 6.7. Oklahoma State ranks last in the Big 12 in scoring (59.4 ppg), scoring margin (-4.2 ppg), free-throw percentage (.574), field-goal percentage (.387), 3-point field-goal percentage (.310), rebounding defense (39.6 rpg) and rebounding margin (-1.3 rpg).
SERIES RECORDS: This will be the 46th meeting between Colorado and Oklahoma State with the Buffaloes holding a 25-20 series advantage. Colorado has won five of the last seven meetings and two-straight over the Cowgirls in Boulder. OSU took an overtime decision from CU last winter in Stillwater and will be looking for its first win in Boulder since a 75-72 triumph on Jan. 29, 2000. CU is 11-8 all-time against the Cowgirls in Boulder.
CUGÇÖS LAST 10 GAMES AGAINST OSU IN BOULDER
Date Result Date Result
2/21/04 W, 72-57 1/6/95 W, 71-52
1/12/02 W, 79-57 2/25/94 W, 69-59
1/29/00 L, 72-75 1/31/93 W, 78-61
2/14/98 L, 67-72 1/22/92 L, 70-82
2/25/96 L, 49-69 2/23/91 W, 65-63
Kathy McConnell-Miller is 3-2 as a head coach against Oklahoma State and will face the Cowgirls for the first time as head coach at CU.
FAMILIAR FACES: Kathy McConnell-Miller and Oklahoma StateGÇÖs Kurt Budke will face each other for the first time in the Big 12, but it will not be the first time the two have squared off has head coaches. McConnell-Miller faced Budke six times while she was at Tulsa and he was the head coach at Western Athletic Conference rival Louisiana Tech from 2002-05. Budke was 5-1 against McConnell-Miller in his three seasons in Ruston.
SOUTHERN DROUGHT: Colorado will be attempting to snap a 13-game losing streak against Big 12 Southern Division opponents, dating back to the 2003-04 season. CUGÇÖs last win over a Big 12 South team came in a 72-57 decision over Oklahoma State on Feb. 21, 2004.
RARE LATE BREAK FROM CONFERENCE ACTION: CUGÇÖs Feb. 13 win over Northern Colorado marked the first time the Buffs have taken a break in the middle of league play for a non conference game since participating in the 1997 Big 12/ACC Challenge. CU hosted North Carolina State on Feb. 1, 1997, coming away with a 67-62 win. It was also the latest in the season the Buffaloes have ventured out of conference for a regular season game since CU defeated Colorado College, 83-58, on Feb. 15, 1983, at the Coors Events Center.
McFARLAND NAMED ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT: Sophomore forward Jackie McFarland has been named to the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District VII University Division WomenGÇÖs Basketball first team, as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America.
McFarland, an accounting major who sports a 3.97 grade point average, is the lone sophomore joining four seniors on the five-member first team. She is now eligible for the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America team which will be announced on Feb. 28.
A native of Derby, Kan., McFarland is a two-time member of the DeanGÇÖs List and earned the CU Athletic DepartmentGÇÖs Academic Excellence Award in the fall of 2004 with a perfect 4.0 GPA. She is also a team representative for the Student Athlete-Advisory Committee.
The District VII University Division is comprised of NCAA Division I schools from the states of Colorado, Iowa, Kansas Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming. McFarland is the first CU womenGÇÖs basketball player to be named to the academic all-district team since Randie Wirt was a second-team member in 2004.
RECORD NIGHT FROM ?3GÇÖ: Colorado entered its game at Kansas shooting just 30 percent from 3-point range for the season, but on a night when everything seemed to go right, the Buffaloes set a single-game team percentage record (minimum eight attempts) from downtown by hitting 6-of-8 (.750) against the Jayhawks. The previous best was a 69.2 percent performance (9-of-13) against Oklahoma on Mar. 8, 2001.
ILIC HITS 30 TWICE: Jasmina IlicGÇÖs 36 point performance against Nebraska is the best individual total in the Big 12 Conference this year and third on CUGÇÖs all-time single game list just behind co-record holders Susan Horner who had 38 against Weber State on Mar. 10, 1979, and Tracy Tripp who also had 38 at Oklahoma State on Feb. 4, 1987. Ilic is the first player in team history to score 33 or more points twice in the same season as she had 34 points in CUGÇÖs season-opening win over Cal State-Fullerton.
McFARLAND SCORING AND REBOUNDING NEARING TOP 10: Jackie McFarland leads Colorado in scoring at 17.6 points per game. Her current average would place her among the to 10 in school history and she is also on pace to become the the eigth CU player to score 500 points in one season. Her 476 points to date ranks 13th on CUGÇÖs single-season list and she needs just 11 points to break into the single-season Top 10. She is the first player in CU womenGÇÖs basketball history to average at least 20 points and 10 rebounds over the first seven games of a season.
CU SINGLE SEASON SCORING AVERAGE LEADERS:
Name Season Average
1. Jamillah Lang (32 games) 1993-94 19.2
2. Lisa Van Goor (36 games) 1981-82 18.8
3. Tera Bjorklund (32 games) 2002-03 18.5
4. Lisa Van Goor (33 games) 1980-81 18.5
5. Tera Bjorklund (30 games) 2003-04 18.1
6. Jackie McFarland (27 games) 2005-06 17.6
7. Diane Hiemstra (28 games) 1983-84 17.6
8. Lisa Van Goor (29 games) 1982-83 17.0
9. Jeannie Raikes (26 games) 1976-77 16.9
10. Diane Hiemstra (29 games) 1982-83 16.7
McFarlandGÇÖs current average of 9.2 rebounds per game would be the ninth best single-season mark in team history if the season ended today and her current pace would leave her with 275 rebounds, the 11th best mark in team history (based on a guaranteed three more games).
CU SINGLE SEASON REBOUNDING AVERAGE LEADERS:
Name Season Average
1. Linda Gehrke (32 games) 1977-78 12.3
2. Lisa Van Goor (33 games) 1980-81 11.0
3. Lisa Van Goor (29 games) 1982-83 10.3
4. Cathy Lanky (32 games) 1977-78 10.3
5. Lisa Van Goor (36 games) 1981-82 10.1
6. LeaAnn Banks (30 games) 1985-86 9.8
7. LeaAnn Banks (28 games) 1984-85 9.6
8. Susan Horner (32 games) 1977-78 9.4
9. Jackie McFarland (27 games) 2005-06 9.2
10. Erin Scholz (32 games) 1993-94 8.7
McFARLAND NEARS 500-250-50 CLUB: Jackie McFarland needs 24 points and two rebounds to become just the second player in team history to record 500 points, 250 rebounds and 50 assists in one season. She would join Erin Scholz who had 544 points, 279 rebounds and 80 assists in 1995-96. She would also be only the third different player in CU history to record 500 points and 250 rebounds on one season joining Scholz and Lisa Van Goor who did it twice with 678 points and 365 rebounds in 1981-82 and 610 points and 363 rebounds in 1980-81.
LUBIN BACK-TO-BACK DOUBLES: With her performances against Utah State and Colorado State sophomore guard Lauren Lubin became just the fifth true guard in team history to record two or more points-rebounds double-doubles in a career and only the second to do it back-to-back games. Former Big Eight Conference MVP Bridget Turner did it in back-to-back games during the 1988-89 season and leads all CU guards with nine total points-rebounds double-doubles. Lubin joins three other guards with two points-rebounds double-doubles and included in that list is teammate Whitney Law who had a pair last season. Lubin had 13 points and 13 rebounds against Utah State and had 15 points and 10 rebounds at CSU.
McFARLAND DOUBLES: Sophomore forward Jackie McFarland has 13 double-doubles this season, the fourth-best single-season mark in team history. She is just the second individual to achieve the feat as CU Hall of Famer Lisa Van Goor recorded the other three instances. McFarland, who currently ranks third in the Big 12 in double-doubles, has 18 for her career, which ties Sabrina Scott (1999-03) for fifth on CUGÇÖs all-time list.
Speaking of doubles, McFarland has 18 career double-digit rebounding games, seventh on CUGÇÖs all time list.
CLIMBING THE ?3GÇÖ LADDER: Jasmina Ilic had one 3-point field goal at Baylor to move into sole possession of eighth place on CUGÇÖs career 3-point charts with 85.
Sophomore Yari Escalera is tied for 12th with Emily Waner (2003-04) at 51, junior Anna Nedovic is 15th with 47, while senior Whitney Law is 19th with 36.
BLOCK PARTY: Jackie McFarland is 11th on CUGÇÖs all time list for blocked shots with 58. She has 34 this season -- 10 more than her freshman season total -- including a school-record tying eight in one game against South Dakota State on Dec. 28. Her 34 blocks are 18th on CUGÇÖs single-season list and fourth-best single-season performance by a sophomore on the team charts.
GETTING TO THE LINE: Jackie McFarland has 137 free-throws made this season, ranking fifth on CUGÇÖs single-season list. She needs 18 more free throws to break the school single-season record of 154 set by Bridget Turner in 1988-89. McFarland, shooting 80.6 percent from the line this season, has hit 42-of-47 (.894) over the last eight games.
FREE THROWS MADE SINGLE SEASON:
Player (Season) FTM
1. Bridget Turner (1988-89) 154
2. Bridget Turner (1987-88) 153
3. Mandy Nightingale (2000-01) 150
4. Erin Scholz (1995-96) 148
5. Jackie McFarland (2005-06) 137
6. Tera Bjorklund (2002-03) 134
7. Debbie Descano (1979-80) 128
8. Shelley Sheetz (1992-93) 123
9. Tera Bjorklund (2003-04) 120
10. Mandy Nightingale (2001-02) 119
Colorado is the top free-throw shooting team in the Big 12 at 73.9 percent, and ranked 22nd in the nation (through games of Feb. 20). CU has five players with 30 or more free throws made hitting 70 percent or better. Lauren Lubin leads the way at 82.1 percent followed by Yari Escalera (.819), McFarland (.807), Jasmina Ilic (.783) and Whitney Law (.722).
ColoradoGÇÖs 452 team free-throws made are more than four Big 12 teams have attempted for the season. The nearest team to CU in terms of free throws made is Baylor with 387. Colorado has attempted 612 free throws, 42 more than second place Oklahoma (570).
ColoradoGÇÖs season mark of 73.9 percent would rank the eighth-best in team history if the season ended today.
FT SUCCESS UNDER PRESSURE: ColoradoGÇÖs success at the free-throw line in 2005-06 increases as games draw closer to the final buzzer. The Buffaloes have shot 70.9 percent from the line in the first half (168-of-237) and that number grows by percentage, and quantity, in the second 20 minutes. CU has shot 76.2 percent (278-of-365) in the final 20 minutes of games this year.
CUGÇÖs percentages climb even higher in the final minutes of games. The Buffs are hitting 76.3 percent in the final five minutes (119-of-156) and 77.6 percent (59-of-76) in the final two minutes. Jackie McFarland leads the way at 88.9 percent in the final five minutes (32-of-36) and 91.7 percent in the final two (11-of-12).
MILESTONES GALORE IN SEASON OPENER: Several milestones were reached in ColoradoGÇÖs season-opening 100-71 win over Cal State-Fullerton.
Junior Jasmina Ilic and sophomore Jackie McFarland each had 34 points, both career highs, marking the first time in team history two players hit the 30-point mark in the same game. McFarland recorded her sixth career double-double, grabbing a personal-high 15 rebounds. Ilic also had a personal-best 12 field goals and tied a career mark with 10 rebounds.
Whitney Law dished out a school record 15 assists, breaking the previous record of 14, which was done twice, last by La Shena Graham vs. Missouri in 1998. She also had nine assists in the first half, breaking a 26-year old school record. Sandy Bean recorded eight assists in a half against Northern Colorado on Feb. 1, 1979.
Colorado recorded its first 100 point game since a 114-52 win over St. Francis (Pa.) on Nov. 28, 1994. CUGÇÖs 58 first-half points tied for the sixth-most in team history, a feat also achieved against TCU on Dec. 7, 1993 and vs. St. Francis (Pa.) on Nov. 28, 1994.
CLASSIC IN REVIEW: Colorado placed third in the 19th Annual Coors Classic Tournament Nov. 25-26 at the Coors Events Conference Center. The Buffaloes fell to Northern Iowa, 74-65, in overtime marking the first time in Coors Classic history that CU lost a first round match up. Colorado rebounded to take the consolation game from Utah State, 73-56. Northern Iowa would go on to take the tournament title by defeating Illinois 71-47.
Jackie McFarland was named to the All-Tournament team as she averaged 18 points, 8.5 rebounds, four steals and two blocks. Northern Iowa senior center Cassie Hager, who had 21 points, 10 rebounds and six blocks against CU, was the tournament MVP.
RICHARDS WILL REDSHIRT: Sophomore center Kara Richards, who has not played in a regular season game this season due to a broken foot, will miss the remainder of the year and use this as her redshirt season CU head coach Kathy McConnell-Miller announced on Jan. 10.
Richards suffered a Jones fracture ? a fracture to the fifth meta-tarsal ? in her left foot on Nov. 15, just three dayGÇÖs before CUGÇÖs season opening win over Cal State University-Fullerton. She underwent surgery on Nov. 16 and the initial diagnosis had her missing anywhere from four to eight weeks. Richards was in a cast until Dec. 28, and returned to light practice the next week, but was not making the progress needed to return to the line up in the near future as soreness from her injury continues.
Richards will be a sophomore in eligibility for the 2006-07 campaign. She did appear in CUGÇÖs two exhibition games in November averaging 12 points and 6.5 rebounds.
A native of Graham, Texas, Richards started in 26 of 28 games for the Buffaloes as a true freshman last winter, averaging nine points, 5.3 rebounds and one block per game. She earned a spot on the Waco Tribune-HeraldGÇÖs All-Big 12 Conference Freshman team in 2004-05 and was named the BuffsGÇÖ Rookie of the Year.
WALLACE ACTIVATED: Junior forward Courtney Wallace has waited more than a year to put on the Buffaloes uniform and now laces them up with the rest of the squad. Wallace, a walk-on transfer from CU-Colorado Springs, was officially added to the active roster on Nov. 17. Wallace practiced with the Buffs for most of last season as she sat out her NCAA mandated redshirted year after transferring from the Springs campus. She has been practicing and conditioning with the Buffaloes since the start of the school year. Wallace played two years for the Mountain Lions and was a two-year letterwinner for Air Academy High School in Colorado Springs, graduating in 2004.
McCONNELL-MILLER 100 IN DEBUT: Kathy McConnell-Miller led Colorado to the century mark in her first game as head coach, by far the best total of any current Big 12 Conference coach in their debut at their school. Bill Fennelly of Iowa State was the closest as he led the Cyclones to an 82-55 win over Idaho State in his debut in 1995. Ironically, McConnell-Miller is not the first Colorado womenGÇÖs coach to debut with a 100-point performance. Sox Walseth led the Buffs to a 107-73 win over Colorado WomenGÇÖs College in his first game as womenGÇÖs head coach on Nov. 18, 1980. Here is the list of current Big 12 coaches and their first games:
Coach, School Opponent Date W/L Result
Kathy McConnell-Miller, Colorado Cal State Fullerton 11/18/05 W 100-71
Bill Fennelly, Iowa State Idaho State 11/24/95 W 82-55
Marsha Sharp, Texas Tech Abilene Christian 11/19/82 W 78-64
Kim Mulkey-Robertson, Baylor Miami (Ohio) 11/18/00 W 75-62
Cindy Stein, Missouri Bradley 11/19/98 W 73-57
Jody Conradt, Texas McLennan CC 11/22/76 W 72-58
Kurt Budke, Oklahoma State Texas State 11/19/05 L 69-77
Deb Patterson, Kansas State Memphis 11/22/96 W 68-60
Connie Yori, Nebraska Grambling State 11/22/02 W 63-40
Sherri Coale, Oklahoma Oral Roberts 11/22/96 W 62-50
Gary Blair, Texas A&M La Salle 11/22/03 L 62-67
Bonnie Henrickson Texas-Arlington 11/21/04 L 49-53
BUFFS IN OPENERS: With its win over Cal State-Fullerton, Colorado moved to 27-5 (.844) all-time in season openers and a whopping 31-1 (.969) all-time in home openers. CU has won six straight season debuts and 19 of its last 20 with the lone loss in that span coming at Denver on Nov. 19, 1999.
BUFFS IN PRESEASON: With its win over Northern Colorado, CU wrapped up the non conference schedule with a 6-7 record, meaning the Buffaloes string of five straight seasons of .500 or better during non conference action has ended. It is only the third time CU has finished below .500 during the nonconference schedule in the Big 8/Big 12 era going 5-6 in 1999-2000 and 4-9 in 1984-85.
BUFFS PICKED 12TH: Colorado was picked to finish 12th in the annual Big 12 Conference Coaches Preseason Poll. CU received 14 points meaning no less than eight Big 12 coaches picked the Buffaloes to finish in the 12th spot (coaches do not vote for their own teams). It is the first time the Buffaloes have been picked lower than eighth since the coaches poll began in 1997. Defending NCAA champion Baylor was picked to win its second consecutive Big 12 title, landing six first place votes and 113 total points to edge out second place Texas with two first place nods and 110 points. Texas Tech was a close third with the four remaining first place votes and 108 points. Oklahoma was fourth (91), followed by Nebraska (70), Kansas (66), Texas A&M (59), Kansas State (56), Iowa State (45), Missouri (37), Oklahoma State (23) and CU.
TOUGH SCHEDULE: ColoradoGÇÖs schedule has featured 14 games against 2005 NCAA or WNIT tournament teams. Oklahoma is the only ranked team CU has faced this year. The Sooners, who were ranked No. 16 in the coaches poll and No. 18 in the AP poll when the teams met in January, have climbed to No. 9 in both polls. Defending national champion Baylor checks in at No. 10 in both polls. Texas A&M, who was unranked when the teams met in January, is currently No. 25 in the AP poll and just outside the top 25 in the coaches poll. Missouri and Wyoming are receiving votes in both polls.
HOME AT THE CECC: Colorado is traditionally tough at home with a 295-87 all-time record at the Coors Events/Conference Center (.772). The Buffaloes have won 10 or more games in a season at the CECC in 18 of the previous 27 years including five undefeated seasons (1980-83, 1992-94). Currently at 6-9, CU will finish its home season with a below .500 mark for just the third time in the 28-year history of the CECC.
For the complete release, statistics and player notes click on the link below.