I COME BOUNCING BACK TO YOU
Minnesota taps off the season hosting Central Connecticut State University from New Britain CT. The Blue Devils have a long if undistinguished basketball history beginning with the 1971-72 season. For the next 25 years, including the transition to NCAA Division 1 in 1986-87, they were coached by DR Brenda Reilly. Although coaching changes have come more frequently in recent years, current head coach
Way Veney is only the sixth head coach to lead the program.
Like Dawn Plitzuweit, Way Veney (a former Temple assistant) is in her second season at the helm. Veney inherited a team that has experienced only two post season appearances-the 2009 and 2019 WNITs. Last season the Blue Devils (9-21, 7-9 NEC) finished 5th in the nine team Northeast Conference behind Sacred Heart, Le Moyne, FDU and Merrimack.
This season CCSU is projected to finish 2nd to FDU in the NEC. (Sacred Heart and Merrimack have moved on from the NEC replaced by Chicago State and Mercyhurst).
The Gophers and Blue Devils have never met; but, for fun, we can look at some comparative scores.
Last season CCSU lost to Illinois 50-89, Penn State 73-101 and Fairfield 52-78. And last season, Minnesota crushed NEC schools LIU 92-57 and Chicago State 100-42.
This week the NEC released its preseason all-conference team which included Blue Devil graduate guard 5’5”
Belle Lanpher. More on Lanpher and her teammates here:
CCSU Blue Devils Women's Basketball Season Preview: 2024-25 — NEC Blitz
I must note that New Britain, AKA “Hardware City” was the birthplace of Stanley Tool. Which made me wonder why CCSU went with a generic nickname-Blue Devils. I mean, they could’ve been the Hammers or Rip Saws.
Nevertheless, a basketball playing timekeeper employed by Stanley gifted future round ballers with the invention of the dribble. During the 1895-96 season, according to the New Britain Industrial Museum,
Bernadotte Loomis unveiled the dribble during a game at the New Britain YMCA. Fortunately,
James Naismith was in attendance. Naismith overrode the objections of the opposing team and blessed this form of passing to oneself. It has been the bane of coaches ever since.