logo
Teneisia Brown scores 34 points, Fairleigh Dickinson women go wire-to-wire in Northeast Conference

Teneisia Brown scores 34 points, Fairleigh Dickinson women go wire-to-wire in Northeast Conference

HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) — Teneisia Brown scored a career-high 34 points and Fairleigh Dickinson defeated Stonehill 66-49 on Sunday to win the Northeast Conference Tournament.
Fairleigh Dickinson completed the sixth wire-to-wire run in women's NEC history. The Knights went 16-0 in the NEC regular season and added three wins to claim the tournament championship. They are going to the women's NCAA Tournament for the first time.
Sunday's game was unusual in that both teams already knew what postseason tournament they would play in. The Skyhawks, still in their Division I transition period, were eligible for the conference championship but not the NCAA Tournament. When FDU and Stonehill won their semifinals it meant that Fairleigh Dickinson would get the NEC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. At the same time, the WNIT announced that Stonehill would be invited to that tournament.
Fairleigh Dickinson, and more specifically Brown, dominated the first half, building a 35-21 lead. She had 20 points on 7-of-11 shooting and 6 for 6 on free throws.
The Skyhawks got within 42-37 late in the third quarter but Brown was fouled twice in the final six seconds and her four free throws gave the Knights a 46-37 lead. She outscored the Skyhawks 8-2 in a key stretch of the fourth quarter, giving FDU a 62-47 advantage with two minutes remaining.
Brown, a 14.4 points per game scorer, had 23 and 28 points in FDU's previous games in the tournament.
Ava Renninger had 10 points for the Knights (29-3). Brown finished 11 for 19 from the field and 12 for 12 at the line.
Kylie Swider had 10 points and 10 rebounds for the Skyhawks (17-15). Sharn Hayward and Brooke Paquette scored 12 points each. ___

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Is the fantasy football hype around Chase Brown warranted? Let's investigate
Is the fantasy football hype around Chase Brown warranted? Let's investigate

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Is the fantasy football hype around Chase Brown warranted? Let's investigate

(This article was written with the assistance of Castmagic, an AI tool, and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy. Please reach out to us if you notice any mistakes.) If you were underweight on Chase Brown in 2024 fantasy football, you weren't alone, and you probably felt it by midseason. But with 2025 drafts heating up, a surprising consensus has emerged across the fantasy community: Brown is not only a locked-in RB1, but his profile in the Bengals offense looks rock-solid for another top-tier season. Advertisement Let's dig into Matt Harmon and Scott Pianowski's conversation from the Yahoo Fantasy Forecast for a nuanced breakdown of Brown's outlook. Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen. Brown finished last season as the RB12 overall, emerging as one of the rare true hits for zero-RB drafters. When Zack Moss missed time, Brown 'was the only game in town,' as Harmon put it, regularly dominating not just the early-down work but also the hurry-up and high-scoring packages — a holy grail scenario for fantasy running backs. Pianowski put it bluntly: 'Chase Brown was a screaming right answer … He never came off the field. He was good in all packages … [and] a running back who never comes off the field in that situation is fantasy gold.' Advertisement Perhaps the most important note for Brown's fantasy managers is how little has changed in Cincinnati. Burrow, Chase, Higgins — everyone's back, and the system remains in place. The only real additions in the RB room? Taj Brooks (a Day 3 rookie) and some veteran insurance in Samaje Perine. Neither is expected to cut deeply into Brown's role; the Bengals' lack of a splashy running back addition speaks volumes about their trust in Brown. Even the oft-circulated Zack Moss 'threat' doesn't move the needle. Pianowski is firm: 'Zach Moss? Last year, what, 3.3 yards a carry? Give me a break … He really should be like an RB3 on a decent team and he might ultimately be that on this team.' What are the positives and negatives for Brown in 2025? Brown fits the traits fantasy managers crave: Advertisement Three-down role: He handled 90%+ snaps in multiple games last year — a pace that, even if dialed back, still lands him in RB1 territory. Concentrated offense: As Harmon notes, the Bengals have 'a very highly concentrated nature of this offense.' You don't have to squint to see the targets for Brown (alongside Chase and Higgins) being safely locked in. Game-script-proof: Even in negative scripts — likely with Cincinnati's defense still projected to struggle — Brown will continue to see playing time and pass-catching work. The Yahoo Fantasy Forecast episode highlights that the industry consensus is to rank Brown right around RB12-13, and that's roughly where his best ball ADP is landing — yet Pianowski went as far as to call him flat-out mispriced: 'People who are getting Brown in the third round right now, enjoy it while it lasts. He'll be a locked-in second-round pick, I think, when the major part of draft season kicks in.' There's a broader fantasy team-building angle here, too. If you love building out dominant receiver rooms and going 'Hero RB,' Brown is a prime candidate. Pianowski says it best: 'Is Chase Brown good enough for a Hero RB build? And my answer is, absolutely. If I left the draft where the only signature back I had was Brown and I had that wide receiver … I was winning the flex. I was winning the wide receiver room. That's a roster I'd go to war with.' Of course, every player has risks. With Brown, it comes down to: Advertisement Pedigree concerns: As a former Day 3 pick, some 'what if?' always lingers until a player receives massive team investment. Volume adjustment: The coaching staff has hinted they don't want every game 90%+ snap shares, but even a dip to 70-75% would be plenty. Bengals defense improvement: If the defense outperforms expectations, there could be fewer shootouts — but the unit is projected to remain bottom-10. Summing up the takeaways from Harmon and Pianowski, Chase Brown is one of the best RB picks you can make at the 2/3 turn. Opportunity, team trust and fantasy-friendly game environment — all the ingredients are there. Don't overthink it, don't get sidetracked by backup chatter, and be comfortable making him the hoss of your RB room. When the Bengals' carnival kicks into high gear, you'll be glad Brown is riding shotgun.

LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson explains why he changed the lineup vs. Little Rock
LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson explains why he changed the lineup vs. Little Rock

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson explains why he changed the lineup vs. Little Rock

LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson explains why he changed the lineup vs. Little Rock With the 2025 season hanging in the balance heading into Monday's elimination game against Little Rock, LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson made a change to his lineup for the first time during this NCAA Tournament. Amid struggles at the plate, slugger Jared Jones moved from second to sixth while Ethan Frey, the team's leading hitter, stepped into the two-hole. Coupled with continued strong at-bats from the top of the lineup, the Tigers put the pieces together in the nick of time, coming from behind to beat the Trojans 10-6 and win the Baton Rouge Regional. "You take a risk when you have a lot to gain," Johnson said. "We had a chance to play a Super Regional at home, two wins to go to Omaha, seven more to win a national championship, maybe eight. It was time to take a risk." Derek Curiel remained in the leadoff spot and worked two walks while Frey followed with four hits, four RBI and two walks. Johnson praised both for their efforts in crunch time along with Steven Milam, who Johnson said put together the best at-bats of his career. "He's [Curiel's] the engine of this offense and how he plays inspires the team," Johnson said. "And then, its Ethan Frey, one of the best hitters in the country right now," Johnson said. Johnson said he wanted to get Frey as many at-bats as possible. "I wanted them to feel the pressure immediately with [Frey] stepping in the batter's box," Johnson said. With Milam, Johnson felt good about the quality of his at-bats throughout the regional. "His at-bats this weekend were him as his best player. He will play baseball for a very long time if he takes the caliber of at-bats that he has," Johnson said. When discussing moving Jones to the six hole, Johnson said he wanted Jones to have the advantage of hitting lower in the order. At six, Jones has the chance to sneak up on pitchers. "On the best teams that I've had, that six-hole guy, after you're having to work through the top five and all those guys doing their job, sometimes they can get forgotten about a little bit. Or the pitcher lets up just a little bit. And I wanted to kind of give Jared that advantage," Johnson said. The change paid off with LSU scoring 10 runs. Now, LSU turns its attention to the Baton Rouge Super Regional vs. West Virginia, beginning on Saturday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store