- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/sun-belt/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Thu, 15 Mar 2018 16:43:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Little Rock to face Florida State in first round of NCAA tournament /news-archive/2018/03/15/lady-trojans-ncaa-2018/ Thu, 15 Mar 2018 16:43:22 +0000 /news/?p=69771 ... Little Rock to face Florida State in first round of NCAA tournament]]> Tickets for Little Rock’s game against Florida State are on sale now via the Florida State Ticket Office. Single-session tickets are available for $20, and all-session tickets are available for $30. To purchase, call 888-FSU-NOLE or . If you are not able to make it to Tallahassee, there will be a watch party in the Legends Room at the Jack Stephens Center on Saturday morning. Doors will open at 9:30 a.m. For more information, contact Ryan Miller at 501-569-3411 or romiller@ualr.edu. If Little Rock advances to the second round of the tournament, the Trojans will play the winner of the game with No. 6 University of South Florida and No. 11 Buffalo on Monday. This will be Little Rock’s fifth trip to the NCAA Tournament. Little Rock has posted two NCAA Tournament victories over the years with the last coming as the No. 11 seed against No. 6 seed Texas A&M in 2015 when it knocked off the Aggies 69-60. Little Rock then fell 57-54 to No. 3 seed Arizona State in the second round. Prior to that, Little Rock’s first NCAA Tournament victory came in 2010 when the team was an at-large bid to the tournament. As a No. 11 seed that season, the Trojans defeated No. 6 seed Georgia Tech in the first round before losing to No. 3 seed Oklahoma in the second round on the Sooners’ home court. Little Rock earned its automatic bid to this year’s NCAA Tournament when it claimed the Sun Belt Tournament Championship on March 10. The Trojans survived a strong second-half surge by Texas State to win its fourth league tournament with a final score of 54-53. and earned All-Tournament Team honors for their performance throughout the tournament.    ]]> Trojan women win Sun Belt Tournament Championship /news-archive/2018/03/12/sun-belt-championship-2018/ Mon, 12 Mar 2018 17:10:23 +0000 /news/?p=69768 ... Trojan women win Sun Belt Tournament Championship]]> The victory sends Little Rock to the NCAA Tournament for the fifth time in program history and for the first time since 2015. This is the third time that Little Rock has won the regular-season championship and tournament championship in the same season. Monique Townson was the star for the Trojans (23-9) with a team-high 17 points and eight rebounds in 40 minutes. She finished 7-for-13 from the field and 3-for-4 from three. Tori Lasker had nine points to go along with five rebounds and four assists while knocking down three three-pointers. Sisters Raeyana and Ronjanae DeGray each tallied eight points. Ronjanae had eight rebounds while Raeyana tallied five. Little Rock was 21-for-54 (38.9 percent) from the field, 6-for-17 (35.3 percent) from three and a perfect 6-for-6 from the charity stripe. Townson and Ronjanae DeGray earned All-Tournament Team honors for their performance throughout the tournament. The Bobcats (23-9) had three players in double figures as Tournament MVP Taeler Deer led the game with 20 points and eight assists. Toshua Leavitt tallied 11 points with three steals, and Brooke Holle had 10 points with seven rebounds. Texas State shot 35.2 percent (19-for-54) from the field, 29.4 percent (5-for-17) from three and 90.9 percent (10-for-11) from the foul line. As it entered the fourth quarter with an 11-point lead, Little Rock’s offensive struggles from the third quarter carried over while Texas State’s offense continued to flourish. After Ronjanae DeGray made a jumper to put Little Rock up by 13 at the beginning quarter, it was all Texas State from there as the Bobcats went on a 13-0 run from 7:42 to 4:10. Yanina Inkina stopped the bleeding with a jumper, but Leavitt hit a three right after to give Texas State the 53-52 lead. The Trojans’ defense finally stepped up in the final three minutes of action as it didn’t allow a single Bobcat point. The lead returned to Little Rock at the 2:30 mark as Townson put up the go-ahead layup. With Little Rock up 54-53, both sides missed three shots each in the final two minutes. With two seconds remaining in the game, Deer missed the go-ahead layup by mere inches. With 0.2 seconds left and Little Rock inbounding, the Trojans threw the ball into play off the Texas State defender’s leg to run off the clock and win the championship. Texas State came out of the locker room ready to play in the third quarter as it outscored Little Rock 17-10 after shooting 58.3 percent (7-for-12). The Trojans shot just 21.4 percent (3-for-14) in the period. The Bobcats’ biggest run of the quarter occurred with 5:53 left in the period as Texas State went on a 9-0 run. The Trojans ended the first half with an 18-point lead over the Bobcats after shooting 53.6 percent (15-for-28) in the first 20 minutes. Townson ended the half with a game-high 12 points as she went 5-for-5 from the field and 2-for-2 from beyond the arc. Little Rock held Texas State to 20 percent (6-for-30) in the half and kept the Bobcats’ three-point shooting at bay as they shot just 1-for-10. Up 33-20, Little Rock ended the half on a 5-0 thanks to two free throws by Keys and a layup and a free throw by Raeyana DeGray. Little Rock got off to a scorching start as it led Texas State 20-7 after 10 minutes of play. Townson was sensational as she started the game 4-for-4 with one three-pointer and two rebounds. Little Rock shot 60 percent (9-for-15) for the period while holding Texas State to 17.6 percent (3-for-17). The Trojans were dominant on the boards as they outrebounded the Bobcats 13-7. Little Rock had two runs of seven points each in the period and finished the quarter on a 14-2 run. Keanna Keys finished with six points, three rebounds, two assists, two steals and one block. Inkina ended up with six points, and Terrion Moore tallied four assists and four rebounds. Little Rock had a 41-27 advantage in rebounds and a 13-12 advantage in assists. The Trojans led for just over 37 minutes while the Bobcats led for just under two minutes. Little Rock will now prepare for the NCAA Selection Show on Monday at 6 p.m. in the Legends Room of the Jack Stephens Center. Festivities are set to begin at 5:30 p.m.]]> Trojans Advance to Sun Belt Semifinals with 66-34 Win over Appalachian State /news-archive/2018/03/08/sun-belt-semifinals/ Thu, 08 Mar 2018 21:14:10 +0000 /news/?p=69721 ... Trojans Advance to Sun Belt Semifinals with 66-34 Win over Appalachian State]]> 11th consecutive season, top-seeded Little Rock won its quarterfinals game at the Sun Belt Conference Championship as it defeated No. 9 Appalachian State 66-34 on Thursday afternoon at Lakefront Arena.听 The Trojans (21-9) were led by senior Monique Townson who put up a game-high 14 points with four steals, four assists, and a team-leading seven rebounds. Yanina Inkina had 12 with two rebounds, and Tori Lasker tallied 11 points with four assists, three rebounds, and two steals. Ronjanae DeGray was the fourth Trojan in double figures as she ended the game with 10 points, four rebounds, and four steals. Little Rock shot 45.1 percent (23-for-51) from the field, 54.5 percent (6-for-11) from three and 70 percent (14-for-20) from the charity stripe. The Mountaineers (8-23) tallied just 34 points for the game 鈥 its fewest of the season. They also tied Little Rock’s opponent low for points scored this season. App State had no players in double figures as LaPresha Stanley led the Mountaineers with nine points. App State shot just 26.7 percent (12-for-45) from the field, 13.3 percent (2-for-15) from three and 50 percent (8-for-16) from the foul line. Little Rock took its largest lead of the game in the fourth quarter at 37 points with 8:18 left in the game. Inkina drained her sixth field goal of the game to put the Trojans up 61-24. With 3:44 left and the lead well in hand, Little Rock went to its bench and wrapped up the victory. The Trojans had their best offensive quarter of the season in the third period as they outscored the Mountaineers 30-13. Townson and Lasker each tallied nine points for the quarter. Lasker was 3-for-3 from beyond the arc in the first three minutes of the second half while Townson was 3-for-3 from the field with one three-pointer and two free throws. Little Rock put together runs of eight and 11 points during the period. The Trojans were 10-for-15 (66.7 percent) from the field in the quarter while the Mountaineers were 5-for-15 (33.3 percent). The Trojans ended the first half by allowing its fewest first-half points this season as they held the Mountaineers to 11. Little Rock went to the break with a 15-point lead over App State. The Trojans shot 38.5 percent (5-for-13) in the second quarter while holding the Mountaineers to 15.4 percent (5-for-13). After beginning the period on a 7-4 run, Little Rock went on a 7-0 run to take its largest lead of the half at 26-9. Little Rock had a 12-5 lead at the end of the first quarter after shooting 30.8 percent (4-for-13). Inkina led the quarter with six points as she went 3-for-5 from the field. The Trojans tallied four steals for the quarter while forcing seven Mountaineer turnovers. Little Rock held App State to 22.2 percent (2-for-9) from the field. Keanna Keys finished the game with nine points and six rebounds while Terrion Moore tallied a career-high eight assists with three rebounds and two points. Raeyana DeGray had five points and two assists, and Kira Shepard put up three points. The Trojans finished the game with a season-high 12 steals while forcing 20 Mountaineer turnovers. Little Rock will have two days to prep for its semifinals matchup on Saturday at 5 p.m. The Trojans will face either No. 4 Troy or No. 5 South Alabama on ESPN3.]]> Coach Foley, 3 Trojans earn Sun Belt Conference honors /news-archive/2018/03/05/coach-foley-3-trojans-earn-sun-belt-conference-honors/ Mon, 05 Mar 2018 15:55:11 +0000 /news/?p=69672 ... Coach Foley, 3 Trojans earn Sun Belt Conference honors]]> Ronjanae DeGray was named to the All-Sun Belt First Team, while and Keanna Keys and Monique Townson were named to the All-Sun Belt Third Team.听 Foley’s Coach of the Year award is his fifth as the Trojans’ head coach. He previously won the award in 2011, 2012, 2015 and 2017. The 2017-18 season was a big one for Foley as he became the Sun Belt’s all-time winningest听coach, earned his 750th career win, earned his 300th win as the Trojans’ head coach, and coached in his 1,000th career game. Foley’s Trojans won the Sun Belt Conference Regular Season Championship with a 17-1 conference record for the second consecutive year. On Saturday, Foley tallied his fourth consecutive 20-win season at Little Rock and 11th as the Trojans’ head coach. Foley now has 27 20-win seasons in his 31 seasons as a collegiate head coach. DeGray’s All-Sun Belt First Team honor is the first of her career. During the regular season, the junior led Little Rock with 13.9 points per game while tallying a 51.8 field-goal percentage and 5.6 rebounds per game. In Sun Belt play,听DeGray averaged 16 points with a 53.2 field-goal percentage and 6.2 rebounds per game. DeGray led Little Rock in scoring on 10 different occasions throughout the season and tallied double figures in all but five games. DeGray听scored at least 10 points in all but one Sun Belt Conference game. Keys’ All-Sun Belt Third Team honor is the first of her career as the graduate student averaged 8.9 points per game with a 53.0 field-goal percentage and 5.1 rebounds per game. In conference action, Keys averaged 9.7 points with a 57.0 field-goal percentage and 5.0 rebounds per game. Keys’ field-goal percentage for the season and in conference play were second-best in the league. Keys shot 42.9 percent or better in all but one Sun Belt contest. Like Keys, this is Townson’s first All-Sun Belt Third Team honor. The senior led Little Rock with 4 assists per game and 1.8 steals per game while tallying 7.7 points per game and 4.7 rebounds per game. In Sun Belt play, Townson听had 8.4 points per game, 5.4 rebounds per game, 4 assists per game and 1.4 steals per game. For her career, she has the best free-throw percentage of any player to wear a Little Rock uniform at 80.7 percent. Little Rock will get back to action on Thursday in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Conference Championship and will face either No. 8 Arkansas State or No. 9 Appalachian State as the No. 1 overall seed. Opening tip is 11:30 a.m. at Lakefront Arena on ESPN3. All-Sun Belt听First Team Ronjanae DeGray, Little Rock (Junior, Forward, Odessa, Texas) Jas Adams, Coastal Carolina (Senior, Guard, Winston-Salem, N.C.) Chyna Ellis, South Alabama (Senior, Center, Cordova, Tenn.) Rebekah VanDijk, UTA (Senior, Center, Nazareth, Texas) Taeler Deer, Texas State (Senior, Guard, Houston, Texas) All-Sun Belt听Second Team Akasha Westbrook, Arkansas State (Junior, Guard, Malvern, Ark.) DJ Williams, Coastal Carolina (Sophomore, Guard, Moreno Valley, Calif.) Toshua Leavitt, Texas State (Junior, Guard, Nixa, Mo.) Kayla Robinson, Troy (Sophomore, Guard, Clyo, Ga.) Amber Rivers, Troy (Sophomore, Forward, Birmingham, Ala.) All-Sun Belt Third Team Bayley Plummer, Appalachian State (Sophomore, Center, Thomasville, N.C.) Monique Townson, Little Rock (Senior, Guard, Kansas City, Mo.) Keanna Keys, Little Rock (Graduate, Forward, Sumrall, Miss.) Simone Fields, Louisiana (Senior, Forward, San Antonio, Texas ) Crystal Allen, UTA (Senior, Guard, Fort Worth, Texas) Sun Belt Player of the Year Taeler Deer, Texas State (Senior, Guard, Houston, Texas) Sun Belt Defensive of the Year Chyna Ellis, South Alabama (Senior, Center, Cordova, Tenn.) Sun Belt Freshman of the Year Savannah Jones, South Alabama (Freshman, Guard, Ocean Springs, Miss.) Sun Belt Newcomer of the Year Sky’Lynn Holmes, Troy (Junior, Forward, Mount Pleasant, Texas) Sun Belt Coach of the Year Joe Foley, Little Rock]]> Little Rock No. 25 in latest mid-major top 25 poll /news-archive/2018/02/28/little-rock-no-25-latest-mid-major-top-25-poll/ Wed, 28 Feb 2018 14:32:36 +0000 /news/?p=69595 ... Little Rock No. 25 in latest mid-major top 25 poll]]> Little Rock was last ranked in the Mid-Major Top 25 Poll on Feb. 6 when it came in at No. 24. The Trojans have been ranked or received votes in 13 of the 17 released polls this season. On Feb. 24, Little Rock won the outright Sun Belt Conference Regular Season Championship for the second consecutive season after defeating Appalachian State 61-35. The Trojans are 18-9 overall and 15-1 in Sun Belt Conference action. They’ll be the No. 1 seed at the Sun Belt Conference Tournament beginning on March 6 at Lakefront Arena in New Orleans. Little Rock will play its next-to-last regular season game on Feb. 28听as it visits ULM in Monroe, Louisiana. Tip is scheduled for 5 p.m. at Fant-Ewing Coliseum.]]> Little Rock women’s basketball team wins Sun Belt Conference Regular Season Championship /news-archive/2018/02/26/womens-basketball-team-wins-sun-belt-conference-regular-season-championship/ Mon, 26 Feb 2018 14:46:23 +0000 /news/?p=69581 ... Little Rock women’s basketball team wins Sun Belt Conference Regular Season Championship]]> The victory marked Little Rock’s fifth regular-season title and was the third in the past four years. Little Rock now has a combined 14 regular season, division and tournament titles 鈥 all in head coach ‘s tenure (2003-present). The Trojans (18-9, 15-1 Sun Belt) were led by senior听 in her final home game as she had a team-high 10 points, seven rebounds and four assists. Graduate also played her final home game at the Jack and finished with seven points, three rebounds, and two steals. Freshman tallied 10 points to go along with three rebounds and three assists. Little Rock ended the game shooting 27-for-46 from the field (42.2 percent), 4-for-10 from three and 3-for-7 (42.9 percent) from the foul line. The Mountaineers (7-21, 5-12 Sun Belt) had just one player in double figures as LaPresha Stanley finished the game with 10 points and six assists. Bayley Plummer had a game-high 11 rebounds in addition to seven points. App State was 13-for-46 (28.3%) from the field, 0-for-13 from three and 9-for-17 (52.9 percent) from the foul line. The Trojans went into the fourth quarter with an insurmountable 30-point lead. Up 54-29, Townson and Keys stepped off the Jack Stephens Center floor for the final time with 5:33 left to play. led the Trojans with five points and three rebounds in the final 10 minutes of action. All 12 of Little Rock’s fourth-quarter points came off the bench. Little Rock held App State to just 15.4 percent (2-for-13) in the third quarter as it outscored the Mountaineers 13-6. Townson was the period’s leading scorer with four points and two assists. Up 38-17, Little Rock scored nine consecutive points to take its largest lead of the game at 47-17. Eight of Little Rock’s 13 points came off App State turnovers. The Trojans ended the first half with a 36-13 lead over the Mountaineers after outscoring App State 14-7 in the second quarter. Little Rock was 7-for-16 (43.8 percent) for the period while App State was 3-for-10. Up 30-13 with 3:41 left in the quarter, the Trojans ended the half on a six-point run thanks to jumpers from Lasker, and Townson. Little Rock was scorching in the first quarter as it shot 10-for-17 (58.8 percent) while ending the period with a 22-6 lead. The Trojans held the Mountaineers to just 21.4 percent (3-for-14) and forced six App State turnovers. Little Rock began the game on a 9-0 run before App State finally responded. After the Mountaineers’ bucket, the Trojans finished the quarter on a 13-4 run. Lasker led the quarter with eight points after going 3-for-5 from the field with two threes. ended the game with eight points and six rebounds while Inkina finished the game with eight points, two rebounds and two assists. came away with six points, three rebounds, two assists and two steals. ended up with five points and six boards, and tallied four points, three rebounds and two steals. had three points off a three-point shot. In their time with the Trojans, Keys and Townson have helped the Trojans to a 46-1 record in home conference games, a 78-14 record in Sun Belt games, and an overall record of 109-48 since 2013. With its final home game at the Jack in the books, Little Rock will now travel to ULM for its next-to-last regular-season contest on Thursday at 5 p.m.]]> DeGray earns Sun Belt Player of the Week honors /news-archive/2018/01/18/degray-sun-belt-player-week-honors/ Thu, 18 Jan 2018 15:11:59 +0000 /news/?p=69013 ... DeGray earns Sun Belt Player of the Week honors]]> was named the Sun Belt Conference Player of the Week on Jan. 15.听 In the Trojans’ two wins over UT Arlington and Texas State, DeGray averaged 18.5 points, a 65.2 field-goal percentage (15-for-23), and 4.5 rebounds in 31.5 minutes per game off the bench. DeGray began the week with a team-leading 14 points in addition to five rebounds in 32 minutes against the Mavericks. She followed that up with her best performance of the weekend against the Bobcats as she tied a season high with 23 points, went 10-for-11 from the field and tallied four boards in 31 minutes. This season, DeGray leads the Sun Belt and ranks 35th nationally with a 55.9 field-goal percentage. In conference play, the junior is third in the league with 19.0 points per game and leads the field with a 65.8 field-goal percentage. This is DeGray’s first Sun Belt Conference Player of the Week award, and she’s the first Trojan to pick up the honor this season. Little Rock has first place all to itself in the Sun Belt Conference at 6-0 with a 1.5-game lead over second-place South Alabama and Louisiana.听Little Rock will host rival Arkansas State on Saturday at 3 p.m.]]> Women’s basketball team picked second in Sun Belt Preseason Poll /news-archive/2017/11/02/basketball-preseason-poll/ Thu, 02 Nov 2017 18:04:36 +0000 /news/?p=68461 ... Women’s basketball team picked second in Sun Belt Preseason Poll]]> The Trojans earned 125 points and picked up two first-place votes while UT Arlington was picked as the league favorite with 136 points and seven first-place votes. Troy and Louisiana were third and fourth with 119 and 116 points, respectively. Troy earned two first-place votes while Louisiana earned one. A 27-point gap opened up between fourth and fifth as Texas State came in with 89 points. Arkansas State and South Alabama were picked sixth and seventh with 71 and 70 points, respectively. Georgia State, Appalachian State, Georgia Southern, Coastal Carolina and ULM rounded the field with 65, 50, 48, 33 and 14 points, respectively. Little Rock went 25-9 overall with a 17-1 Sun Belt record last season. The Trojans knocked off Southern Miss in the first round of the WNIT before they came up a basket shy in their second-round match at Alabama. Little Rock finished the year ranked 20th in the College Insider’s Mid-Major Poll. Little Rock returns nine players from last season and welcomes five newcomers to the 2017-18 roster. The Trojans will begin the new season at home against Memphis on Nov. 12. 2017-18 Conference Women’s Basketball Coaches’ Preseason Poll first-place votes in parentheses 1. UTA (7) – 136 pts 2. Little Rock (2) – 125 pts 3. Troy (2) – 119 pts 4. Louisiana (1) – 116 pts 5. Texas State – 89 pts 6. Arkansas State – 71 pts 7. South Alabama – 70 pts 8. Georgia State – 65 pts 9. Appalachian State – 50 pts 10. Georgia Southern – 48 pts 11. Coastal Carolina – 33 pts 12. ULM – 14 pts In the upper right photo, guard Monique Townson plays ball in the Jack Stephens Center. Photo by Nelson Chenault.听]]> 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock student-athletes earn Sun Belt academic honors /news-archive/2017/08/18/student-athletes-sun-belt-academic-honors/ Fri, 18 Aug 2017 19:27:46 +0000 /news/?p=67658 ... 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock student-athletes earn Sun Belt academic honors]]> were on honored as the Sun Belt Conference released its Commissioner’s List and Honor Roll Aug. 15.听 More than 100 Trojans were honored with placement on one of the league’s two lists. The Commissioner’s List recognizes student-athletes with grade point averages (GPA) above 3.5, and the Honor Roll recognizes student-athletes with GPAs between 3.0 and 3.49. The 106 total student-athletes on those lists is up from last year’s total of 99. Fifty-six student-athletes made the Commissioner’s List in 2017 鈥 the second-highest total since 2014. The Trojan baseball team had the highest number of student-athletes on both lists with 28 members in total. Fourteen members of the team were named to the Commissioner’s List, and 14 others were named to the Honor Roll. Soccer had the highest number of student-athletes named to the Commissioner’s List with 17. Seven others were named to the Honor Roll for a total of 24 student-athletes recognized by the league. Little Rock track and field and cross country combined for 22 student-athletes on the Sun Belt lists. Four men and four women were named to the Commissioner’s List, and five men and nine women were named to the Honor Roll. Women’s basketball had eight student-athletes honored by the league with one on the Commissioner’s List and seven on the Honor Roll. Eight members of the Trojan volleyball team were placed on the Sun Belt lists, as four earned spots on the Commissioner’s List and four earned spots on the Honor Roll. Men’s golf saw seven of its student-athletes honored as six earned placement on the Commissioner’s List and one made it to the Honor Roll. Women’s golf also had seven student-athletes honored by the league as six made the Commissioner’s List and one made the Honor Roll. Men’s basketball had two players earn a spot on the league’s Honor Roll. 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock’s honored student-athletes include: Commissioner’s List
  • Zach Baker, Baseball
  • Jacob Boggess, Baseball
  • Kale Emshoff, Baseball
  • Ryan LeMoine, Baseball
  • Cory Malcom, Baseball
  • Matt McDowell, Baseball
  • Keegan Meyn, Baseball
  • Cody Daylor, Baseball
  • Corbin Osburn, Baseball
  • Hunter Owens, Baseball
  • Riley Pittman, Baseball
  • Christian Reyes, Baseball
  • Dylan Slayton, Baseball
  • Dalton Thomas, Baseball
  • Ronjanae DeGray, Women’s Basketball
  • Grady Bourguignon, Men’s Golf
  • Zach Coats, Men’s Golf
  • Danial Durisic, Men’s Golf
  • Brady Edwards, Men’s Golf
  • Nico Parra, Men’s Golf
  • George Scanlon, Men’s Golf
  • Shania Berger, Women’s Golf
  • Emelie Blennow, Women’s Golf
  • Sabrina Bonanno, Women’s Golf
  • Lucy Owen, Women’s Golf
  • Thea Wakeford-Wesmann, Women’s Golf
  • Peyton Weaver, Women’s Golf
  • Arola Aparicio Gili, Soccer
  • Madison Bingham, Soccer
  • Sara Cavanagh, Soccer
  • Jaylin Finney, Soccer
  • Sammi Gregory, Soccer
  • Doro Greulich, Soccer
  • Harrison Hayworth, Soccer
  • Nora Hellmers, Soccer
  • Hali Long, Soccer
  • Jaclyn Purvine, Soccer
  • Shara Robbins, Soccer
  • Samantha Rolka, Soccer
  • Lisa Ryan, Soccer
  • Sairra Tucker, Soccer
  • Kayla Turner, Soccer
  • Josie Verslues, Soccer
  • Quin Wilkes, Soccer
  • Davion Campbell, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Tyler Davis, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Nghia Dinh, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Kendrick Dunn, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Jasmine Blunt, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Sara Claycomb, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Akeia Joyner, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Hunter Paul, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Marina Avram, Volleyball
  • Taylor Lindberg, Volleyball
  • Veronica Marin, Volleyball
  • Sydnee Martin, Volleyball
Honor Roll
  • Justin Cooper, Baseball
  • Bryce Dimitroff, Baseball
  • Justin Garcia, Baseball
  • Ty Gunter, Baseball
  • Cameron Knight, Baseball
  • Cody McGill, Baseball
  • Danny Mitchell Jr., Baseball
  • McKinley Moore, Baseball
  • Preston Oberling, Baseball
  • Zach Ours, Baseball
  • Ben Patranella, Baseball
  • Jacob Rateliff, Baseball
  • Cole Townsend, Baseball
  • Reed Willenborg, Baseball
  • Brandon Brady, Men’s Basketball
  • Shandon Goldman, Men’s Basketball
  • Sydney Chastain, Women’s Basketball
  • , Women’s Basketball
  • Anna Hurlburt, Women’s Basketball
  • Keanna Keys, Women’s Basketball
  • Emily Lytle, Women’s Basketball
  • Kaitlyn Pratt, Women’s Basketball
  • Kiara Scott, Women’s Basketball
  • George Trujillo, Men’s Golf
  • Pernille Orlien, Women’s Golf
  • Bailey Fithian, Soccer
  • Fali Garuba, Soccer
  • Camilla Olsson, Soccer
  • Claire Palmer, Soccer
  • Shannon Shields, Soccer
  • Sara Small, Soccer
  • Logan Strange, Soccer
  • Imad Amenzou, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Zodani Francois, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Terence Goodwin, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Emilio Medina, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Jaquez Wilson, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Brittney Anderson, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Anika Charles, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Nicole Edison, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Tyra Gilliam, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Adela Hernandez, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Tyler Kelly, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Widline Lageroy, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Christina Nickerson, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Rebeca Solis, Track and Field/Cross Country
  • Hope Larmour, Volleyball
  • Miona Milovanovic, Volleyball
  • Tiara Wilkins, Volleyball
  • Aubrey Wilson, Volleyball
]]>
Trojans fans celebrate Sun Belt Championships with VR experience /news-archive/2017/03/08/trojans-sun-belt-championships-vr-experience/ Wed, 08 Mar 2017 23:42:40 +0000 /news/?p=66535 ... Trojans fans celebrate Sun Belt Championships with VR experience]]> This week, members will promote the Trojans men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 basketball teams as they compete in the Sun Belt Tournaments at Lakefront Arena in New Orleans. 鈥淲e are using our experience with virtual reality and augmented reality to get up close and personal with some of our favorite Trojan players,鈥 said Dr. Carolina Cruz-Neira, director of the Emerging Analytics Center. 鈥淏eing a Trojan fan has personal meaning to loyal supporters,鈥 Cruz-Neira said. 鈥淢any fans would love the opportunity to take pictures with the players. So we have a virtual means to give the fans what they want; a photo with a virtual reconstructed image of one of the women鈥檚 and one of the men鈥檚 team players.鈥 With the fan experience app, fans can take pictures with virtual representations of senior guards. and, who was recently announced as the Sun Belt Player of the Year. The app also includes an engaging basketball perimeter shooting experience. When users succeed in making the virtual basket, they are rewarded with a computer animation of Josh Hagins鈥 game winning shot against Purdue during the 2016 NCAA Tournament. The 鈥糖心Vlog传媒LR TrojansAR鈥 app is free and can be downloaded from the and. The Trojans women earned the conference’s regular-season championship and the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament. After winning the first game 69-53 against Appalachian State, the team will play in the听tournament semifinals at 5 p.m. Saturday on ESPN3. In the upper right photo, the Emerging Analytics Center created virtual representations of senior guards Marcus Johnson Jr. and Sharde’ Collins for the fan experience app.听]]>