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Bronx, N.Y. – The Fordham women's basketball team (3-2) has won two straight and return home looking to keep the momentum going when ACC foe Pittsburgh visits the Rose Hill Gym on Sunday afternoon. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m. Fans can follow along with the action via the links above.
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Upcoming Promotions
Toy Drive: The women's basketball teams will be collecting toys tomorrow and during next Saturday's game against Iona (Dec. 9) for the Maria Ferari Children's Hospital. Fans that bring toys will get a ticket voucher for the women's game against George Washington on December 31.
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Last Time Out at Manhattan
It was a tale of two halves in the 49th Battle of the Bronx, as the two schools struggled to put the ball in the basket in the opening 20 minutes; the Rams held a slim 18-15 lead at the break, but the two steams combined for more than double that output, 69 points, in the second half. The win broke a 24-24 deadlock in the all-time series, which the Jaspers had long led for the last few decades. Fordham withstood a strong Manhattan surge in the fourth quarter, with the hosts outscoring the visitors, 23-16, for its third win of the season and first on the road. The first half saw a nearly identical shooting percentage (25.8% for Fordham, 25.9% for Manhattan), with no free throw attempts by either team and just three combined makes on 10 three-point tries each. Both teams coughed up the ball 10 times. However, the Fordham offense turned a quarter in the third frame, scoring 20 points on 6-of-11 shooting from the field and 4-of-5 from downtown, including three straight makes from freshmen
Bre Cavanaugh and
Kendell Heremaia. By the end of the period, the Rams held a 38-25 lead.
G'mrice Davis scored seven straight points for Fordham to begin the fourth quarter but the offense fell stagnant for several minutes while the Jaspers continued to attack, eventually whittling their deficit down to three with 1:37 left in regulation. Junior
Mary Goulding came up big, however, by grabbing her own miss on a jumpshot, giving her team a new shot clock. Cavanaugh would sink a jumper towards the end of that clock and Fordham would hold on for a six-point victory.
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Davis earned the Doc Johnson Most Outstanding Player award for a second straight season, tallying her fifth straight double-double, with 19 points and 15 rebounds, while playing all 40 minutes. Cavanaugh set several new career highs with 16 points and seven rebounds, plus five makes on 15 attempts.
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Series History vs. Pittsburgh
The two schools have met just twice, nearly one year apart, in 2003 and 2004, with Pittsburgh winning both times. The two schools met in Pittsburgh in 2003, where the Panthers won, 62-48, on New Year's Eve, and on December 30 of the following year, they were victorious again, 58-51, in the Bronx.
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Davis Scores 1,000th Point
G'mrice Davis entered her senior campaign with 970 career points scored and knowing it wouldn't be long to become the 20th Ram to ever accomplish the feat of scoring 1,000 career points in maroon and white. After scoring 28 combined points in her first two games, she was able to reach 1,000 quickly at Albany, midway through the first quarter on a textbook midrange jumper from near the left elbow off a pass from
Lauren Holden. Davis would go quiet thereafter but explode in the second half, scoring 15 of her 17 points, including the go-ahead basket with 20 seconds left in regulation. The Philadelphia native has since scored 33 points over her last two contests and now sits on 1,048 career points, having just passed Carol Elser ('86) and Stacey Paukovitz ('93) to reach 18th all-time.
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Fourth-Ranked Defense
Fordham comes into the week allowing the fourth-fewest points per game in the country, allowing just 48.2 points to opponents. The Rams sit atop the Atlantic 10, as they did a year ago, and are behind just Green Bay, Stony Brook, and North Texas, as the only four programs to allow 50 or fewer points per contest. Last year, the Rams held opponents to 56.2 points per contest, ranked 19th by season's end.
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Davis as Division I's Top Rebounder
G'mrice Davis, the nation's returning leading rebounder, hasn't missed a beat, leading all of Division I with 14.6 rebounds per game and 12.2 defensive boards per contest. The senior forward's five straight double-doubles to begin the season rank seventh overall, as well, and her 73 total rebounds rank 29th.
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National Ranks
It's never too early to cast an eye towards the Division I national statistics. Davis is once again doing her thing on the glass, but the Rams rank highly in several other team and individual categories, as well. Coming into last Friday night's contest against Northern Colorado, junior guard
Lauren Holden led the nation in minutes per game, at an unsustainable clip of 41.3 minutes per game, longer than the actual 40 minutes of regulation. After playing just 33 minutes against the Bears due to foul trouble, she played all 40 minutes at Manhattan on Wednesday, and now sits second in the nation at 39.4 minutes per contest. Redshirt freshman
Bre Cavanaugh has made a big impact in the Fordham starting lineup and has been asked to log heavy minutes, averaging 38.0 per contest, which ranks 12th overall. Cavanaugh's been deadly from the free throw line thus far, as well, converting on 90.9% of her attempts, which ranks 22nd in DI.
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As a team, the Gaitley-led Rams continue to be a top-tier defensive squad, currently ranked fourth overall with just 48.2 points allowed per game. Part of that is the team's success guarding the perimeter, with opponents' hitting just 23.7% of their three-point attempts, ranked 21st in thecountry and second in the A-10.
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Fordham's 76.3% team conversion rate at the free throw line has the team ranked 43rd in the country and second in the conference, while the squad has really committed to minimizing fouls in the early going, with just 14.6 per game, ranked 21st overall and tops the league standings. The Davis-inspired attack on the glass has the Rams with a rebounding margin of +8.6, ranked 47th overall.
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Defense, Defense, Defense
A staple of the Gaitley-led Rams is defense, and no stat better represents that than Fordham's 52-5 record when holding opponents under 50 points during her tenure. Last January, Saint Joseph's defeated the Rams, 47-44, at Hagan Arena in Philadelphia, ending a streak of 38 consecutive contests with such victories. The last time before that loss, coincidentally, was also against the Hawks, in the 2013 A-10 Championship game at the Barclays Center, 47-46. Fordham was 10-1 last year when holding opponents under 50 points and are 3-0 this season.
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Since Gaitley took over before the 2011-12 season, the Rams have ranked within the top-50 in all six seasons, and within the top-20 at the conclusion of half of them, in scoring defense. The highest a Gaitley-coached defense has finished was 12th during the conference championship-winning 2013-14 campaign, holding opponents at 56.3 points per game, while the 2012-13 squad held opponents to just 52.4 points per game, ranked 16th nationally. Last year, Fordham held opponents to 56.2 points per game and was ranked 19th in the country at season's end. This season, the Rams are 3-0 in such games, holding UMBC, Northern Colorado, and Manhattan all to under 48 points, and rank fourth with 48.2 points allowed per contest.
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Opponents Scoring <>
The Rams, all-time, since the move from the AIAW to the NCAA in 1983, have held opponents under 40 points 18 times, all coming in 1990 and beyond. Under
Stephanie Gaitley, that number is seven, with Northern Colorado's output of 33 points being the latest. The Bears came into that contest averaging 69 points per contest over five game. Their 33 points were the third-lowest by a Fordham opponent all-time.
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Got a Minute?
Junior tri-captain
Lauren Holden sits second in all of Division I in minutes played, currently at 39.4 per game. A starter since midway through her freshman season, Holden the 2,000-minute mark against Northern Colorado and is fast approaching the all-time top-20.
Bre Cavanaugh's 38.0 minutes per contest ranks 12th overall, while
G'mrice Davis' 36.2 minutes rank 52nd.
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Fourth Quarter Rallies
In Fordham's two losses this season, the Rams have faced double-digit deficits but made furious charges in the final period of action to get close or take the lead. At Boston College, the Eagles led by 12 with 3:23 left in regulation. Fordham responded, however, and rattled off an impressive 10-1 run down to the final 20 seconds where the Eagles were able to hit both of their free throws and solidify the victory. At Albany, the Rams entered the fourth quarter trailing by 11. Fordham had shown flashes in the third quarter, outscoring Albany, 12-11, but still unable to make up the necessary ground. The Great Danes began the fourth with a short 4-2 run to lead by 13, but after that last basket, it was all Fordham. The Rams rampaged to a one-point lead with 20 seconds to play, capping a 15-1 run, with
G'mrice Davis scoring 11 of those points. Unfortunately for Fordham, the Great Danes would tie things up and go on to win in overtime.
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Slow Starts, Strong Finishes
Through five games this season, the Rams are being outscored by their opponents, 109-102, in first halves. Thanks to a 19-5 outburst against Northern Colorado and 20-10 at Manhattan, the Rams are now outscoring opponents 77-53 in third periods, plus 76-766 in fourth quarters, despite both the Bears and Jaspers outscoring the Rams in the last two fourth quarters. Combined, Fordham has outscored opponents, 153-119 over the final 20 minutes of this season's contests.
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Davis Racks Up Preseason Honors
G'mrice Davis' breakout junior season saw her earn First Team All-Conference and All-Defensive honors, and the league's coaches predicted her to do so again as a senior. Read more about it by
clicking here. Davis was also selected as one of 20 players in Division I for the inaugural Katrina McClain Award Watch List, to be given out to the nation's top power forward, starting with this season.
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Fordham Picked to Finish Fifth in Preseason Poll
Likewise, the league's coaches also predicted an identical fifth-place finish for Fordham in the preseason poll. You can click the link above for more information.
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Five Fordham Debuts
Five freshmen made their debuts on Friday against UMBC, the most since 2011. Three of those freshmen started the contest, the most in the last 15 years. Joey Klug's 13 points were the most by a freshman in her debut since Hannah Missry scored 14 in 2013. Klug became the first freshman to record both a block and a steal in her debut over the last 15 years, as well, and the first to record at least one block since
Samantha Clark had two in her 2012 debut. Cavanaugh's 39 minutes were the most by a freshman making her debut since Megan Mahoney played all 40 minutes in 2007.
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Gaitley Makes History
Stephanie Gaitley reached 100 wins with the Fordham program against Little Rock on November 19, 2016, and later won her 116th contest at home against Massachusetts, 74-43, in February, passing Kathy Mosolino ('74-'80) for the most wins in program history. Gaitley tied and passed the milestone with two typical Gaitley-inspired performances, with three-pointers and excellent defense, holding both opponents below 50 points. Entering the 2017-18 season, Gaitley had 120 wins across six seasons in the Bronx, an average of over 20 per campaign. Her 123 total wins are the second-most of any of Gaitley's stops in her 32-year career as a head coach, ahead of her 116 wins at Richmond (1985-91) but a ways away from her 10-year stint at Saint Joseph's (1991-2001), in which she racked up 196 wins. Gaitley has a career 587-348 record and has the second-most overall wins among active A-10 coaches, behind Saint Louis' Lisa Stone, and has the second-most wins by any Atlantic 10 coach, with 168 between Fordham and Saint Joseph's, but is 72 behind Joe McKeown's record of 240 that he accumulated during his 17 years with George Washington from 1989 to 2008.
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This Is Our House
Fordham finished its 2016-17 campaign with a 16-3 at home, as opposed to a 5-7 record on the road and 1-2 at neutral sites. They were also 7-1 during home conference contests for the second year in a row. Since Gaitley took over before the 2011-12 season, the Rams hold a 73-24 (75.3%) record at home. They are 2-0 thus far this season in the Bronx. On the flip side, including this year's 1-2 start, Gaitley's Rams are 50-54 (48.1%) on the road or on neutral ground.
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November Rams
Under Coach Gaitley, Fordham is 26-15 during the month of November, and 4-3 in season openers. This season they were 3-2.
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Career Numbers Watch
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G'mrice Davis is two points away from 1,050
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G'mrice Davis is seven rebounds away from 850
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G'mrice Davis is nine assists away from 100
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G'mrice Davis is eight steals away from 100
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G'mrice Davis is two appearances away from 100
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G'mrice Davis is six starts away from 75
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Asnate Fomina is two assists away from 150
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Asnate Fomina is 10 steals away from 50
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Asnate Fomina is 13 appearances away from 100
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Lauren Holden is 27 field goals away from 200
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Lauren Holden is eight three's away from 100
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Lauren Holden is six appearances from 75
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The "Yutes"
The Rams graduated three seniors last May and saw two other players depart. The turnover means there are five returning players and an incoming group of nine freshman, only one of whom will sit out the 2017-18 season. Fordham is one of the youngest teams in the country, with 64.3% of its roster made up of freshman. An unofficial survey yielded that the Rams rank 22
nd in terms of percentage of underclassmen on the roster, and, with no sophomores and nine freshmen, rank joint-first with percentage of freshman. You can view the 2017-18 roster
here.
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The Stephanie Gaitley Show
Back for a seventh season is head coach
Stephanie Gaitley and so is her weekly show with WFUV. You can watch and/or listen to every episode by
clicking here.
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Class of 2018
Gaitley and the program announced a four-person recruiting class on Thursday morning: guards Chloe Chaffin and Cat Polisano, and forwards Kaitlyn Downey and Megan Jonassen. Read more about the newest Rams
here.
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2016-17 Review
Last year's Rams finished the season with a 22-12 overall record and 11-5 in conference play, good for a fifth-place final standing. Their efforts were rewarded with a WNIT bid, the program's third in the past five years under head coach
Stephanie Gaitley, and Fordham, like its other two trips to the postseason tournament, made it past the first round, this time by rallying to defeat Georgetown on the road, before falling at Penn State a couple days later. Senior forward
G'mrice Davis led the way, becoming just the second Ram to ever average a double-double over the course of the season, and was chosen as an Atlantic 10 First Team All-Conference and All-Defensive honoree. Davis was the second player to ever earn First Team honors (Erin Rooney in both 2013 and 2014), and third to garner All-Defensive recognition (Arielle Collins in 2013 and
Samantha Clark in 2016). Davis finished the campaign second in total rebounding (436), rebounding per game (12.8), defensive boards per game (10.0), and third in double-doubles (24), but is the returning leader in those categories after graduations. Davis was recently
predicted to repeat both of her accomplishments for her senior campaign, and was chosen as one of 20 players in Division I to the inaugural
Katrina McClain Award watch list, to be given annually to the nation's top power forward.
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The class of 2017, Danielle Burns, Hannah Missry, and Danielle Padovano, made up some of the most durable players in Fordham history, all three rankings in the top-seven in career games played and, in Missry's case, second all-time in career starts. The trio made up 32.1% of the Fordham offense a season ago. Missry, who broke the school's all-time three-pointers made record as a junior, continued to add to her tally, finishing her career with 310, which ranks third all-time in Atlantic 10 history.
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Coach Gaitley earned win number 116 at Fordham in a big win over Massachusetts at home last February, breaking a tie with Kathy Mosolino (1974-80) for the most wins in program history. Gaitley finished the year with 120 victories over her six seasons in the Bronx, an average of 20 per season. The 120 wins are the second-most of any of Gaitley's stops in her 32-year career as a head coach, ahead of her 116 win at Richmond (1985-91) but a ways away from her 10-year stint at Saint Joseph's (1991-2001), in which she racked up 196 wins. Gaitley has a career 584-346 record and has the second-most overall wins among active A-10 coaches, behind Saint Louis' Lisa Stone, and has the second-most wins as an Atlantic 10 coach, with 175, but is 65 behind Joe McKeown's record of 240 that he accumulated during his 17 years with George Washington from 1989 to 2008.
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Up Next
The Rams return to State College on Wednesday night for a rematch of last March's second-round WNIT loss at Penn State. Tipoff is set for 7 p.m.
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