Monday, March 07, 2005

Monday's MAAC Tournament Recap - 3/7/05

Here is a recap I wrote for The Sports Network.

MAAC TOURNAMENT - FINAL
Monday, March 7, 2005


#1 Niagara 81, #2 Rider 59

Photos from press row

BUFFALO - I had been trying to get decent pictures with my Motorola v265 camera phone from courtside, but wasn't having much success. I took these two pics and was reasonably satisfied with the results.



I took this one while Fairfield was warming up for its semifinal game against Rider...I figured somebody should get a pic of the Stags' LAST pre-game shootaround. ; )



As you can see, my seat is pretty good...just a bit off center court and just over the right shoulders of the TV broadcasters.

Rider downs Stags, 76-74, looks to go "dancing"

BUFFALO - For the first time since 1996, the Rider men's basketball team will be playing in a nationally televised conference championship game when the the second-seeded Broncs take on top seed Niagara in tonight's MAAC Tournament final at HSBC Arena.

Rider reached the final with a thrilling 76-74 win over No. 3 Fairfield in Sunday's semifinal game. Niagara moved on with a hard-fought 69-66 win over a pesky Iona team.

It will be the first MAAC title game for Rider since joining the league prior to the 1997-98 season and it will be the Broncs' first league final since a one-point loss at Monmouth in the 1996 Northeast Conference championship game. Rider made four straight NEC title games from 1993-1996, winning in '93 and '94 – marking the Broncs' most recent trips to the NCAA Tournament.

The game will be televised on ESPN2 at 9 p.m. (ET) Monday night.

Freshman and MAAC All-Rookie Team selection Jason Thompson collected 15 points, nine rebounds and a pair of blocks for the Broncs (19-10), who were led in scoring by Robert Taylor's 16 points. Three other Broncs reached double figures in the scoring column as Jerry Johnson finished with 15, Edwin Muniz with 14 and Steve Castleberry with 10.

For the GoBroncs.com story, click on the headline above.



The scoreboard says it all. (photo by Pete Borg for Rider University)