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Hoops du Jour | News, Sports, Jobs – Altoona Mirror

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Men: Towson at Pitt

Tipoff: 6 p.m., Petersen Events Center, Pittsburgh

Records: Towson (2-1, 0-0 Colonial Athletic Association); Pitt (1-2, 0-0 ACC)

TV: ACC Network

Notable: Pitt is coming off its first win of the season over UNC-Wilmington, another CAA team … Towson beat Albany and Hampton, and lost to Monmouth while scoring at least 71 points in each game … Towson 10-year coach Pat Skerry was an assistant at Pitt under Jamie Dixon during the 2010-11 season when the Panthers went 28-6 … Cameron Holden, 6-foot-5 senior, leads the Tigers (14.3 ppg., 10.7 rpg.)

Mirror prediction: Pitt, 66-64

Mirror prediction record: 2-1

— Buck Frank

Cannistraci sparks Lady Lion victory

WILLIAMSPORT — The Penn State Altoona women’s basketball team picked up their first win of the season Thursday night, disposing of Penn College, 63-46, in collegiate action.

The Lady Lions, up 13-10 after one quarter, used a 10-11 showing in the fourth quarter to pull away for the win. Alexis Cannistraci had a monster night for Penn State, nailing 11-of-19 from the field and finishing with 30 points. Teammate Ellie Matthews added 10 points.

Penn College (0-4) got 11 points from Cassi Kuhns.

PENN STATE ALTOONA (1-3): Cannistraci 11-19 8-9 30, Matthews 4-14 2-2 10, Hartman 3-11 0-0 8, Kitko 2-3 0-0 5, Marines 1-7 1-2 3, Bisignani 1-3 1-2 3, Phillips 1-2 0-0 2, Huston 1-5 0-0 2. Totals: 24-64 12-15 63.

PENN COLLEGE (0-4): Kuhns 5-15 1-1 11, Teats 2-13 4-4 8, Dyer 3-11 2-2 8, Miller 3-7 0-0 7, Stetts 2-10 2-4 6, Shadle 1-2 0-0 2, Pardee 1-4 0-0 2, Troup 1-3 0-2 2 Hitesman 0-0 0-0 0, Pyatt 0-0 0-0 0, Anthony 0-1 0-0 0. Totals: 18-66 9-13 46

SCORE BY QUARTERS

Penn State Altoona 13 16 14 20 — 63

Penn College 10 14 11 11 — 46

3-point goals: PSU 3-24 (Hartman 2-10, Kitko 1-1, Marines 0-1, Bisignani 0-1, Huston 0-2, Matthews 0-6, Cannistraci 0-3); Penn 1-10 (Miller 1-4, Teats 0-6). Rebounds: PSU 40 (Matthews 12); Penn 44 (Dyer 18). Assists: PSU 18 (Hartman 5); Penn 5 (2 tied with 2). Attendance: 143.

Hall-of-Famer Calhoun retires again

Jim Calhoun, who led UConn to three national titles, has retired again, this time from Division III Saint Joseph.

The 79-year-old Hall of Fame coach, who has struggled with stomach cancer and other ailments, said his health was not a factor in his decision to leave the former women-only school in West Hartford, Connecticut, after spending more than four years helping it establish a men’s basketball program.

“It’s just the right time,” Calhoun said in a statement. “I’m healthy, my wife is healthy, and the USJ men’s basketball program is healthy. We built this program starting from scratch about five years ago, and now the team is in a good place.”

Calhoun ends his career with a record of 920-397. That includes 248 wins in 14 years at Northeastern and 625 in 26 years at UConn, where his teams won NCAA titles in 1999, 2004 and 2011.

He sent more than two dozen UConn players to the NBA, including Ray Allen, Rudy Gay, Richard Hamilton and Kemba Walker.

Calhoun stepped down from Connecticut in 2012 after dealing with health problems including skin and prostate cancer, NCAA sanctions for recruiting violations and the failure of his team to meet academic standards, which eventually forced the program to miss the 2013 postseason.

In 2017, he was asked by Saint Joseph athletic director Bill Cardarelli, a former Calhoun assistant at UConn, to help build a men’s basketball program. The university had just announced plans to admit male students for the first time.

He has led the program to a 47-17 record, including a conference title and an appearance in the NCAA Division III Tournament in 2020.

He also spearheaded the school’s $15 million renovation of its athletic facilities.

Calhoun’s friend and longtime assistant Glen Miller will take over as coach of the Blue Jays, who are 3-0 this season.

“Coach Calhoun has stayed longer and done more for USJ than I could ever have hoped when we first talked to him about launching our men’s basketball team and with it, the transition to coeducation almost five years ago,” university President Dr. Rhona Free said.

From Mirror, wire reports

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