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Milwaukee Looks To Carry Momentum Into Contest With UIC

Panthers welcome Flames for final home game of January

Fresh off a season high 90-point performance Wednesday, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee women's basketball team looks to continue its hot shooting when it welcomes UIC to the Klotsche Center Saturday afternoon. It's also "Girl Scout Day", with scouts in attendance receiving a special Panther patch for attending and an opportunity to participate in a free postgame skills clinic for youth seventh grade and younger. Tip off time is set for 2 p.m.

LOOKING AT UIC
The Flames are coming off a successful 2013-14 campaign where they went 26-9 and claimed the Women's Basketball Invitational title. This season, the team checks in at 12-5 overall and 2-2 in league play. UIC is led by player of the year candidate Ruvanna Campbell, who is first in the Horizon League in rebounding (14.4 rpg) and blocks (1.9 bpg) and third in scoring (17.4 ppg). Head coach Regina Miller just won her 300th career game against Oakland Jan. 17 and is in her 20th year as an NCAA Division I head coach.

SERIES HISTORY
The Panthers lead all-time, 26-20, but the Flames have dominated of late. UIC has won six of the past seven, including a season sweep a year ago. Milwaukee fell 79-54 on the road and 84-70 at home a year ago.

LAST GAME
Senior Ashley Green poured in 31 points and junior Jordyn Swan netted a career-high 19 to lead UWM to a 90-79 victory over Valparaiso University Wednesday evening at the Klotsche Center. The Panthers (6-11, 2-3 Horizon League) used a 21-3 scoring run stretching between halves to take the lead against the Crusaders (4-14, 0-5 Horizon League) and were in control down the stretch, answering each run in finishing with a season-high 90 points on the day to earn the victory.

Green just missed a double-double with nine rebounds and added a season-high five steals, scoring 30-plus points for the fifth time in her career. Swan eclipsed her former career best of 16, getting to 19 on 3-of-4 shooting from the floor while adding an 11-of-13 effort from the free throw line. She grabbed seven big rebounds and did it all in just 15 minutes of game action.
 
Freshman Jenny Lindner was in double-figures with 14 and junior Jaleesa Armstrong was as well with 11. Milwaukee also shot a season-high 53 percent (27-of-59) from the floor and out-rebounded Valparaiso, 41-30.

IT WAS CLICKING
The offense was playing well against Valparaiso Jan. 21, setting a season high with 90 points scored and with its 53 percent shooting from the floor. The 90 points eclipsed the 84 that Milwaukee scored at Detroit Jan. 7 and marked the first time at 90-or-more in 20 games, a 90-78 victory over Cleveland State on Feb. 23 of last season.

NOT A SWAN SONG
Junior Jordyn Swan played a key role in the win over Valpo Jan. 21, setting a new career high with 19 points. That bettered the 16 she scored earlier this season and she did it in just 15 minutes of playing time. In addition to the 19 points, she set a career-best with 11 made free throws - including a 4-4 effort in the final 30 seconds to ice it - and also grabbed seven rebounds.
 
ABOUT THAT SCORING AVERAGE
Now that we are past the halfway point of the season, it's time to take a look at where senior Ashley Green can finish with her 19.6 point-per-game scoring average. At her current rate, only two other players in program history have ever averaged more per game over the course of any season. Traci Edwards (first place at 20.6 ppg in 2007-08 and second at 20.5 ppg in 2006-07) and Jen Greger (19.7 ppg in 1996-97) are the only two players above her on the list.

30-PLUS RARE IN THE RECORD BOOK
Green netted 31 points against Valpo Jan. 21, the third time this season she has finished with 30-or-more in a game (36 vs. NDSU; 30 vs. ND). The last player to accomplish the feat at least three times in one season was Traci Edwards back in 2008-09 (games of 32, 30, 30). Edwards also holds the record with four such games in one campaign, accomplished in 2007-08 (45, 35, 30, 30).

THE BIG 1-0-0
Green is also approaching another career milestone, having made 98 all-time starts heading into play Saturday against the Flames. She will soon become just the seventh player in program history to make 100 starts. She will have a chance to approach the top three the rest of the way (No. 4 is currently 108 starts).

HITTING THE BIG TIME
The game against Wright State Jan. 14 at UWM Milwaukee Panther Arena was the 11th all-time for the women's basketball team at the downtown facility. It marked the first time since the 2002-03 season that the team played their twice in one campaign. The team is now 6-5 all-time in those contests, also defeating Eastern Illinois 72-63 back on Dec. 10. The last game prior to this season? A 60-51 win over Loyola on February 18, 2010.

FIRST TIME FOR EVERYTHING
Junior Sydney Howard has continued to shine in her expanded role this season and has now added the title of "rebounder" to her resume. A game after setting a career high with six rebounds at Detroit Jan. 7, she reset the mark the next game at Oakland with seven boards, good enough to lead the team in a game for the first time in her career as well. She added nine points, coming close to her first career double-double in the process.

DISHING AND DRIVING
The points/assists double-double that junior Jaleesa Armstrong recorded Jan. 7 at Detroit is rare in the history of the Milwaukee basketball program. Since becoming an NCAA Division I program in 1990-91, the Panthers have played just over 1,100 games all time. Her 23/10 effort marked just the 12th time a player has recorded a double-double consisting of points and assists in that span (roughly 1.1 percent of the time). She also tied a 15-year old school record in the process, in the category of the most three-pointers made in a game without a miss. She made a perfect 5-of-5, equaling the mark set by Daryl Schaffeld back in February of 1999.

SYD THE KYD
Sydney Howard is in the middle of a breakthrough junior campaign and her performance in the month of December was noteworthy. In six games (four starts), Howard averaged 7.0 points and 2.5 rebounds per game and reset her career-high for points in a game twice, including 14 against IPFW Dec. 28. She shot 51.9 percent from the field (14-27), 55.6 percent on 3's (5-9), playing 25.7 minutes and had 11 assists compared to four turnovers. Coming into the season, she was averaging 1.8 points, 1.1 rebounds and 10.5 minutes per contest.

THE LAST TIME?
A couple of numbers jump off the box score from the win over the Cougars Dec. 21. The Panthers collected 40 total rebounds, including an impressive 20 on the offensive end. The last 20-plus offensive rebound effort came in the season finale in 2012-13 when they grabbed 22. The team also committed just nine fouls. The last time UWM was under 10 personal fouls was also a count of 9 versus Valparaiso in February of 2012. Finally, the last time Milwaukee allowed less than 50 points to an opponent was 28 games ago when Omaha netted 48 in January of 2014.

JENNY, FROM THE BLOCK
Freshman Jenny Lindner netted a career high for the second game in a row against Eastern Illinois Dec. 10, finishing with a team-best 19 points. Her high-water scoring mark has gone from 12 to 15 to 19 overall and she has finished 10 games in double-figures - the most for a UWM freshman since Ashley Green accomplished the feat 17 times back in 2011-12.

'TIS THE SEASON OF GIVING
For the second year in a row, a Panther sits near the top of the Horizon League leaders in assists. Newcomer Jaleesa Armstrong is currently fourth at 4.5 assists per game, with the current first-place tally at 4.9. A year ago, Angela Rodriguez led the league, finishing with a school record 168 on the year.

IT'S AN OLD HABIT
The Panthers have turned it up from three-point range recently, but have always been a threat from long distance. In fact, the team has a long history of making three's headed into 2014-15. Milwaukee has made at least one three-pointer in every game dating back to an 0-for-4 showing from long-distance against Marquette back on November 26, 2002. That makes 376 games in a row heading into the game against the Flames. It's a ways to go for the NCAA record, however, which is held by Canisius at 510 in a row (1994-2011). The Horizon League record was halted three years ago when Loyola came up empty at 446. Cleveland State held the record previously - which was also the NCAA mark at the time - at 408 (1992-2007). For comparison, the NBA's longest streak is the Dallas Mavericks at 1,108 in a row.

START LOOKING AT ME SWAN
Finally 100 percent healthy, junior Jordyn Swan has been emerging as a go-to player this season. She has started 15 of 17 games and is averaging career-highs with 8.5 points and 4.0 rebounds per game. In fact, coming into this season, she had accumulated 58 career points and 20 career rebounds - this season alone she now has 144 points and 62 boards.

ROYAL WORK IN KC
Not to be overlooked against UMKC Dec. 2, but the Panthers did one of their best-ever jobs of taking care of the ball. The team ended up with just eight turnovers against the Kangaroos, just one off the school record-low of seven in a game (It's the sixth game in program history with eight).

NOT A GREENHORN
Ashley Green is making this scoring thing look easy as a senior. Over the course of her first three years in a Panther uniform, Green crossed the 20-plus plateau on eight occasions, including a pair of 30-plus point outings.

This season alone, she has finished with 20-or-more points eight times, including three outings over 30. She has paced the team in scoring nine of 17 times and has led or tied for the team lead in rebounding in 13 of 17 outings as well.

ON FIRE
Ashley Green's scoring output in the early portion of the season was impressive. In fact, the 89 she netted in the first three games of the campaign marked the third-highest three-game output in school history. Only Traci Edwards had more: 94 (42/30/22) in 2006-07 and 92 (45/20/27) in 2007-08.

I'LL TAKE GREEN FOR 20, ALEX
Ashley Green scored at least 20-or-more points four times in a row to open the 2014-15 campaign - with the streak coming to an end against Mizzou - just one off of Traci Edwards' school-record streak of five (which she did four times).

THROWING THEM INTO THE MIX
Steph Kostowicz became the third freshman (joining Kelsey Cunningham and Jenny Lindner) to earn her first start this season, cracking the lineup against Marquette Nov. 26. She responded with 12 points and four rebounds, making 8-of-12 attempts from the free throw line.

IT AIN'T EASY BEING GREEN
Ashley Green became just the second player in program history to score 30-or-more points in back-to-back games (66 total points Nov. 16 and Nov. 18), joining Traci Edwards (72 in consecutive games in January of 2007) on the short list. Edwards' two-game tally included outings of 42 and 30 points.

A DEFENSIVE BAKERS DOZEN
The 13 points Milwaukee held Bowling Green to in the first half of the Nov. 22 contest was nearly unprecedented. The tiny tally was just one point off the school record of 12 accomplished in the first half against Wagner way back in December of 1997.

HIGH-SCORING HALF
The 50-point first half against North Dakota Nov. 18 marked the first time UWM hit the half-century plateau as a team since netting 53 in the second half of an 82-69 victory over Chicago State Nov. 16, 2010.

BEST EVER
Ashley Green's 36 points against NDSU Nov. 16 were the most-ever for a Milwaukee player in a season opener, topping the 30 that Traci Edwards netted in the initial game of the 2007-08 campaign. It was also a marked improvement in season openers for Green personally. She finished with three points as a junior against Wisconsin, five against Chicago State as sophomore and did not score in her freshman debut off the bench.

SETTING THE BAR HIGH
Ashley Green has been a starter since early in her freshman campaign and has already accumulated a lengthy resume when it comes to personal statistical highlights. She one-upped all of that in just one performance in the season opener, setting new career-highs in both points scored and rebounds. Her 36 points topped her former best of 33 that she scored against Bradley December 4, 2012. Meanwhile, the 15 rebounds eclipsed her former career-best of 14, accomplished twice prior. In addition, she also tied her collegiate-best with the 13 made field goals.

FILLING IT UP
That 36-point effort from Ashley Green tied for the fourth-highest single-game scoring effort in program history.
1. 45 points, Traci Edwards, 2/21/08
2. 42, Edwards, 1/20/07
3. 38, Andrea Filipek, 1/23/99
4. 36, now accomplished four times

JUST ANOTHER GAME
After averaging 17.1 points per game as a senior in high school, freshman Jenny Lindner picked it right up on the collegiate level with 12 points and seven rebounds in her UWM debut against NDSU Nov. 16. The 12-point effort marks the most for a Milwaukee freshman in a season opener since Angela Rodriguez finished with 16 points in the 2010 opener against Oklahoma.

PRESEASON PUBLICITY
Senior Ashley Green was named to the Preseason All-Horizon League Second Team in the league's annual preseason poll of head coaches, media members and sports information directors.

NEW-LOOK PANTHERS
Milwaukee will have an interesting look to the roster this season after graduating three senior starters from a year ago. The roster features five players who were on the team in 2013-14 and seven newcomers. Among the new faces are a pair of transfers (one will be sitting out per NCAA regulations), a senior playing her first season of collegiate hoops and four true freshmen all looking to make a good first impression.

TIME TO STEP UP
The situation allows the Panthers an opportunity for new players to step up or returning players to expand their roles from last season. The team returns just 30.7 percent of its scoring (608 of 2,081 total points) and 36.9 percent of rebounding (370 of 1,004 total individual rebounds). When you break it down further, senior Ashley Green accounts for 70 percent of that returning point total and 55 percent of the boards.

FOR OPENERS
The Panthers now hold an 8-17 record in season-openers at the NCAA Division I level (dating back to 1990-91) after topping North Dakota State. A year ago, Milwaukee fell to the Wisconsin Badgers by a score of 85-60 at the Klotsche Center in the season opener. Head coach Kyle Rechlicz is now 2-1 in openers, as UWM ran away with an 82-58 win over Chicago State in Rechlicz's debut contest two years ago.

FOR OPENERS: PART II
Taking the win-loss record a step further, the Panthers are now 13-12 in home openers over the same time period after falling to Bowling Green Nov. 22.

MORE THAN A GREEN THUMB
One look at the career statistics of senior Ashley Green show an impressive trajectory. In each season at UWM, she has increased both her scoring average and her rebounding average and will look to continue the trend over her final campaign. As a freshman in 2011-12, Green averaged 10.4 points and 5.4 rebounds. She upped that to 11.6 ppg and 6.2 rpg and then followed that up with a junior season where she contributed 14.2 ppg and 6.7 rpg.

HOW THEY ROLL
The Panthers were at it again last season and it would have been more noticeable had they not been even better at it two years ago. The team once again finished close to the top of the record book for three-pointers made and attempted. Prior to Kyle Rechlicz's arrival, the most three's made was 212 and attempted was 586. The marks set in 2012-13 (255 of 726) smashed the old standards. Last year, the team finished at 241 makes and 733 attempts, both numbers ending in the top two all-time.

MAKING BUCKETS
The 90 points Milwaukee scored against Cleveland State Feb. 23 last season marked a season-high, topping the 86 it scored against Western Illinois Nov. 17. UWM went 4-1 last season when it scored over 80 points. That was a one-game jump over the prior year, when the Panthers scored at least 80 points four times. This is a marked change for the offense. Looking back, the last time a UWM team scored more than 80 points at least four times in the same season was 2006-07 (four times that campaign). The last time Milwaukee netted at least 80 more than four times was back in 2000-01, when it did so seven times.

TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS
The Panthers set a record for fewest turnovers per game in 2012-13 at 16.2 - an impressive total considering the record that they broke was the former standard of 17.3 set during the 2001-02 campaign (an improvement of over one per game). The new record did not last long, however, as UWM turned the ball over just 14.9 times per contest a year ago to shatter the record once again.

SELECT COMPANY
Senior Angela Rodriguez went over 1,500 career points at the end of last season to become just the fifth player to reach that level in a UWM career. She started the season in 17th place on the all-time list moved all the way up to No. 5 (1,564).

1,000/500
Ashley Green not only scores, but rebounds. Sitting at 499 career rebounds headed into the game at UIC Feb. 17 last season, she grabbed an early board to become the 23rd player in program history to collect 500 rebounds in a career. She is now just the fifth player to have recorded over 1,000 points and 500 rebounds in a career in UWM's NCAA Division I era. The rest of the list includes Traci Edwards (2,340 pts/1,193 reb), Maria Viall (1,867/971), Lindsay Laur (1,404/791) and Sami Tucker (1,172/774).

BIG-TIME HONOR
Angela Rodriguez was named Second-Team All-Horizon League last season, becoming the first Panther to earn postseason all-league honors since 2010-11. She also earned a spot on the Mexico National Team in October, one of 12 chosen to play on the squad.

SETTING THEM UP
Senior Angela Rodriguez broke the Milwaukee single-season record for assists against Wright State March 1 of last season. She went into the contest against the Raiders with 151, and her third of the day near the end of the first half in Dayton gave her 154 to break the mark of 153, set by Pam Bartnik during the 1993-94 campaign. She finished the season with 168.

MAKING A NAME FOR HERSELF
Head coach Kyle Rechlicz was named the seventh coach in program history in May of 2012. She also got off to one of the best starts - becoming the first UWM coach to win three of her first five contests of her initial campaign. In her first season, Rechlicz was also one of the youngest coaches at the NCAA Division I level - just seven coaches had earlier birth years when the 2012-13 campaign began.

BE A HOOPS COUCH POTATO
Fans will have the opportunity to watch the Panthers all season long. The team will play five games on local broadcast television, once again returning to Time Warner Cable SportsChannel. Another 18 games will be carried live online on the Horizon League Network. For the Panthers' TWC SportsChannel contests, Bob Brainerd and former UWM great Maria Viall will once again be calling the action. Early season games will also be available on the SEC+ Network (Missouri) and the WAC Digital Network (UMKC).

HEAD TO THE BIG 920
Every Milwaukee regular-season game will once again be available on the radio and online via "The Big 920" on your AM dial. Scott Warras is back for his ninth season donning the headset. Fans can also catch Warras' call with the majority of the team's ESPN3 webcasts. A handful of games will be aired on WISN 1130 AM due to broadcast conflicts.

WELCOME
Head coach Kyle Rechlicz rounded out her staff in the offseason by hiring Ashlee McGee as an assistant coach and Scott Warras as the Director of Basketball Operations. Kelly Poster also begins her first season as the team's athletic trainer.

McGee comes to Milwaukee after most recently serving as the women's basketball assistant coach at Tennessee State University since the summer of 2012. Warras, the voice of the Panthers on radio broadcasts for the past eight seasons, joins the Milwaukee staff on a full-time basis and will work directly with Rechlicz on coordinating team travel, budget, practices and other program functions.

UP NEXT
The Panthers close the month of January with a two-game road swing through the state of Ohio. Up first is a matchup with Cleveland State Jan. 29, tipping at 6 p.m. CST.
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Players Mentioned

Jaleesa Armstrong

#1 Jaleesa Armstrong

G
5' 3"
Junior
Ashley Green

#4 Ashley Green

G/F
5' 11"
Senior
Kelsey Cunningham

#12 Kelsey Cunningham

G
5' 9"
Freshman
Sydney Howard

#15 Sydney Howard

G
5' 7"
Junior
Jenny Lindner

#20 Jenny Lindner

G
6' 0"
Freshman
Steph Kostowicz

#32 Steph Kostowicz

F
6' 2"
Freshman
Jordyn Swan

#41 Jordyn Swan

G/F
6' 0"
Junior
Angela Rodriguez

#23 Angela Rodriguez

G
5' 8"
Senior

Players Mentioned

Jaleesa Armstrong

#1 Jaleesa Armstrong

5' 3"
Junior
G
Ashley Green

#4 Ashley Green

5' 11"
Senior
G/F
Kelsey Cunningham

#12 Kelsey Cunningham

5' 9"
Freshman
G
Sydney Howard

#15 Sydney Howard

5' 7"
Junior
G
Jenny Lindner

#20 Jenny Lindner

6' 0"
Freshman
G
Steph Kostowicz

#32 Steph Kostowicz

6' 2"
Freshman
F
Jordyn Swan

#41 Jordyn Swan

6' 0"
Junior
G/F
Angela Rodriguez

#23 Angela Rodriguez

5' 8"
Senior
G