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McKaela Schmelzer, team

Women's Basketball

Non-Conference Slate Closes Thursday At Chicago State

Panthers look to bounce back on the road

MILWAUKEE – After dropping their first game in over a month, the Milwaukee women's basketball team will look to bounce back Thursday with a road game at Chicago State. Tip time is scheduled for 7pm from the Jacoby Dickens Center on the CSU campus, after a scheduling conflict moved the game from the Jones Convocation Center. Fans can listen to Matt Menzl call all the action on the Black & Gold Network, or stream the game on the WAC Digital Network, with links available at MKEPanthers.com.
 
LOOKING AT THE COUGARS
Chicago State enters Thursday's game looking for their first win of the year. In her 15th season at the helm, head coach Angela Jackson returns four players from last year's squad, while adding six newcomers - including Marquette transfer Ines Mata Boix, who has started all 13 games so far this season.
 
True freshman Tyeshia Bowers leads the Cougars in scoring at 12.7 points/game, while Mata Boix averages 9.2 points and 8.3 rebounds per contest.
 
SERIES HISTORY
Milwaukee will look for its 22nd win over Chicago State in the 26th matchup between the two schools all time, with that advantage sitting at 17-2 at the Division I level. The Panthers only loss at CSU came back on Feb. 13, 1986 - before any of the current players on either team were born. Last year, Milwaukee beat a shorthanded Cougar squad, 71-49, from the Klotsche Center.
 
UP NEXT
UWM will have a few days off for the Christmas break before kicking off conference play on the road Thursday, Nov. 28 at Northern Kentucky.
 
LAST GAME
Milwaukee suffered a rare home loss Sunday, 83-68, to Marquette at the Klotsche Center.
 
The Panthers (8-3) saw their eight-game win streak come to a close and fell for just the third time all season despite shooting a season-high 53 percent from the floor.
 
Marquette – which was receiving votes in this week's top-25 – improves to 6-4 on the year.
 
"This was a very physical game, but we knew that it would be coming in," Milwaukee head coach Kyle Rechlicz said. "We prepared our team for this, but we just had way too many mental lapses to be successful. We shot 53 percent for the game, just didn't get nearly enough shots on goal."
 
Jenny Lindner led the way for Milwaukee in the loss with a team-high 13 points to go with six rebounds.
 
Jamie Reit, Bailey Farley and Steph Kostowicz all also reached double digits in scoring with 10 points apiece.
 
Allazia Blockton had the hot hand for Marquette with a game-high 29 points on 12-17 shooting.
 
CRACKING THE POLLS
The Panthers once again find themselves ranked in the CollegeInsider.com Mid-Major Poll, as voted on by Division I Women's Basketball coaches this week. Milwaukee - which received its first ever ranking in the same poll one year ago - broke into last week's poll at No. 25 after rattling off seven consecutive wins.
 
GOING STREAKING
Sunday's loss to Marquette brought Milwaukee's eight-game win streak to a close. The impressive run finishes tied as the fourth longest in Division I history of the program, with only a pair of nine-game runs and the school-record 12-game streak longer than this year's early season start. It also marks the fourth time in the last two-plus seasons the Panthers have put together at least five consecutive wins, with this year's run setting the new mark for the longest under head coach Kyle Rechlicz.
 
MORE B1G WINS
With wins over both Northwestern (Dec. 3) and Wisconsin (Dec. 14) this season, the Panthers now own two wins over Big Ten foes in the same season for the first time in program history. While it marks just the eighth and ninth wins all-time against the current Big Ten schools, the success should come as no surprise. Milwaukee thumped the Badgers, 80-63, at home a year ago and dropped a 65-63 heartbreaker to NU a few weeks later. That came one year after nearly upsetting Minnesota in the WNIT to close out the 2015-16 season.
 
WINNING IN A VARIETY OF WAYS
Milwaukee's recent eight game win streak has been impressive for a variety of reasons; one of those being they have proven they can win in a variety of ways. The team flipped a 13-point deficit at Western Illinois into a 10-point road win Nov. 26. That was sandwiched by a pair of lopsided home wins over Loyola (Nov. 21) and North Dakota State (Dec. 1). UWM also dug deep and used stout defense in wins at Northwestern (Dec. 3), Wisconsin (Dec. 14) and at home against Illinois State (Dec. 7).
 
FARLEY CATCHING FIRE
Bailey Farley has been a big part of Milwaukee's offense of late. The senior guard - who was a game-time decision at Northwestern - went off for a career-high 24 points on near-perfect shooting against the Wildcats. Farley finished 8-11 from the floor and a perfect 5-5 from the free throw line. She was also vital down the stretch, netting 11 of her 24 points in the fourth quarter to help put the game out of reach.
 
That hot shooting carried over for Farley, who finished with a game-high 19 points after tying her career high with five made three-pointers, providing the spark her team needed in the win over Illinois State. 
 
After being the clear focus defensively for Fort Wayne, Farley again got hot late in the win at Wisconsin to finish with a game-high 16 points.
 
Farley now has finished in double figures in scoring in four of the last five games - a new career best.
 
DE-FENSE
Milwaukee has put together some lock-down showings on the defensive side of the ball recently, including the Dec. 1 performance against North Dakota State. The Panthers limited the Bison to just 38 total points - the ninth time over the past two-plus seasons UWM has held an opponent to 50 points or less in a game. In fact, that marks the fewest points allowed by Milwaukee since head coach Kyle Rechlicz took over the program in 2012 and the third-fewest points allowed in the program's Division-I history. The Panthers also held Bison to just 29-percent shooting for the game - the second time this season UWM has held its opponent below 30 percent for four quarters.
 
UWM has also held teams to single digits in the scoring column for an entire quarter eight times now this season (not including overtime), including in both the second and fourth quarters against both NDSU and Illinois State.
 
The Panthers head into Thursday's game against Chicago State with their defense boasting some impressive national rankings, checking in at 80th in scoring defense (59.8 points/game against), 109th in field-goal percentage defense (37.2%) and 113th in three-point field goal defense (29.4%).
 
SHE SHOOTS, SHE SCORES
Steph Kostowicz has come out of the gates on fire to start her senior season. The 6-2 forward opened the season with 26 points on 9-14 shooting from the floor and a perfect 8-8 showing from the free throw line. Then, in the Nov. 21 home opener, Kostowicz racked up another 19 points while going 8-10 from the floor. She then duplicated that feat Dec. 10 at Fort Wayne, again finishing 8-10 from the floor with 19 points. Kostowicz enters this Thursday's game with a sparkling .600 percentage from the field - 23rd best in the entire NCAA.
 
WORKING THE GLASS
Milwaukee has prided itself in its ability to control the boards over the past few years. Last season, the Panthers won the rebounding battle in 26 of their 34 games. That dominance has carried over into this season, with Milwaukee claiming the rebounding edge in all 11 games to start the season. In fact, six of those 11 games have finished with a double-digit advantage by UWM, with the season high so far coming in the Dec. 1 drubbing of NDSU as Milwaukee finished that game with a 53-28 edge on the boards.
 
THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME
The Panthers have certainly enjoyed playing in front of their home fans recently. Milwaukee went an impressive 12-3 at home last season and is already 3-1 at the Klotsche Center this season with a pair of emphatic wins. UWM is now 24-9 in the last two-plus seasons when playing in front of their home fans.
 
In fact, the Panthers just closed out a 10-game home winning streak after the loss to Marquette. That finishes as the fourth-longest home win streak in the team's Division I history.
 
WINNING BIG
The Panthers have made a habit lately of posting some rather lopsided wins. Milwaukee put together nine 20-plus-point wins a season ago and has already done so twice this season. It started in the home opener with a 22-point smothering of Loyola (63-41) Nov. 21 before steamrolling North Dakota State by a whopping 36 points (74-38) Dec. 1.
 
Milwaukee's big win over NDSU marked the fifth-largest margin of victory for UWM since they moved to Division I heading into the 1990-91 season. Milwaukee only has two bigger wins in the last 15 years - the 38-point handling of LIU-Brooklyn last year and the school-record 54-point victory over Youngstown State back on Feb. 2, 2002.
 
WHAT A WIN
Milwaukee's 77-67 win over Western Illinois Nov. 26 was significant for a number of reasons:
 
-The Panthers trailed by 13 points with just over five minutes left in the third quarter and finished with a 10-point win; a 23-point swing over the final 15:20.
 
-The home loss was the first for WIU in nearly 10 months (12/31/17) after going 13-1 at Western Hall last year.
 
-The Leathernecks entered that game ranked in the mid-major top-25. That marks the second win for Milwaukee over a mid-major-ranked team in a short span, taking down highly ranked Green Bay late last year, 72-60.
 
COMEBACK KIDS
Milwaukee's 13-point comeback over Western Illinois Nov. 26 isn't a program record, but it certainly is a memorable one. It marks the largest come-from-behind win since the Panthers turned a 44-28 deficit (16 points) in a 60-57 win over Toledo back in 2011.
 
Fans shouldn't be too surprised by Milwaukee's comeback win over WIU though. UWM set a program record with seven come-from-behind (trailing at halftime) wins last season, besting the previous mark of six set back in the 2006-07 season.
 
A CAREER PERFORMANCE
Jenny Lindner turned in one of her best performances to date in Milwaukee's road win at Western Illinois Nov. 26. The senior poured in a career-high 34 points - 21 of which came in the second half - to go with 10 rebounds to lead all players in both categories. That marks the third time in her career Lindner has finished with 30+ and it surpasses her previous high of 32 set late in her sophomore season in a win at Oakland.
 
In fact, her 34 points were the most by a Panther since Courtney Lindfors netted 35 in a road win over Chicago State Nov. 16, 2010.
 
EARLY HONORS
Just four weeks into the 2017-18 season, Milwaukee has already turned in some of the top performances in the entire Horizon League. Steph Kostowicz was named Horizon League Player of the Week after just the first week of the season, going off for 26 points, 12 rebounds, two blocks, two assists and one steal at perennial power Drake in the Preseason WNIT. Then, Jenny Lindner was named player of the week by the conference after pouring in a career-high 34 points to go with 10 rebounds in the road win at Western Illinois Nov. 26.
 
RIGHT OUT OF THE GATES
McKaela Schmelzer and Sydney Staver both inked their names into the Panther record book before their first collegiate game even ended. That's because the duo both were in the starting lineup in their first collegiate game, becoming the first freshmen to achieve that feat since Kelsey Cunningham did so in her debut in 2014. In fact, it marks just the second time in program history two freshmen started the season opener, joining Angela Rodriguez and Courtney Lindfors back in 2010.
 
DOUBLE VISION
After turning in two double-doubles as a freshman, Steph Kostowicz has been a machine at putting together 10+ performances in points and rebounds. With her 17-point, 13-rebound performance on Dec. 7 against Illinois State, Kostowicz now has 26 double-doubles in her collegiate career. That already ranks her fourth in program history and is just one shy of Lindsay Laur for third place all-time.
 
Teammate Jenny Lindner is also steadily climbing that chart in this season's early going. The senior turned in a 19-point, 11-rebound performance in the win over CSUN Nov. 18 before exploding for 34 points and 10 rebounds in the comeback win over Western Illinois eight days later. Those marked Lindner's 13th and 14th career double-doubles, ranking eighth in program history and just three shy of sixth place.
 
CLIMBING THE CHARTS
It's no secret Jenny Lindner and Steph Kostowicz have already left their mark on this program heading into their senior year. The duo both eclipsed both the 1000-point and 500-rebound milestones as juniors and have continued to climb up the statistical charts. Entering Sunday's game, Lindner ranks eighth in scoring (1,377 points), eighth in rebounding (642), eighth in double-doubles (14) and fifth in games started (103). Meanwhile, Kostowicz sits at 10th in career scoring (1,304 points), sixth in rebounding (762), third in blocks (135) and fourth in double-doubles (26).
 
PRESEASON RANKS
The Horizon League released its preseason rankings as voted on by coaches, media members and SIDs, with the Panthers picked to once again battle for the top this season. Milwaukee was tabbed fourth overall this year with 129 points, behind only Green Bay (246), Wright State (204) and Oakland (139). Steph Kostowicz was once again recognized when the votes were announced, earning preseason first-team all-league honors for the second-straight year.
 
PILING UP THE WINS
Over the past two seasons, Milwaukee has been racking up the total in the win column. The Panthers eclipsed the 20-win mark for just the third time in program history last season, finishing with a program-record-tying 22 wins on their way to the WBI Semifinals. Additionally, that marked the first time UWM has had back-to-back seasons with at least 16 wins since doing so in three-straight years from 99-2000 through 01-02.
 
400 AND COUNTING!
The Panthers have been on fire from behind the arc of late, headlined by hitting 14 threes against Valparaiso Jan. 7 of last season. That's nothing new for Milwaukee, though, as they have been lighting it up from three-point range for a while now. In fact, the Panthers have made at least one three-point in every game dating back to an 0-for-4 showing against Marquette back on Nov. 26, 2002. That makes 466 games in a row heading into the game against the Cougars.
 
In fact, when Alexis Lindstrom hit her first three pointer against Green Bay on Feb. 17 of last season, the Panthers broke the league record for consecutive games with a made three. That topped the previous mark of 446 set by Loyola, halted six years ago when they went 0-11 against Butler. It's still a ways to go for the NCAA record, however, which is held by Canisius at 510 in a row (1994-2011). For comparison, the NBA's longest streak is the Dallas Mavericks at 1,108 in a row.
 
MAKING A NAME FOR HERSELF
Head coach Kyle Rechlicz was named the seventh coach in program history in May of 2012. After three years of hard work, the Panthers broke through in her fourth season at the helm with an incredible campaign last year. Milwaukee racked up 19 wins, finished second in the Horizon League and earned a trip to the WNIT. All that work did not go unnoticed, as Rechlicz was named Horizon League Coach of the Year at the end of that season, making her just the second coach in program history to earn that honor. She followed that up with an impressive 22 wins in 2016-17, tying the school record in that category and helping guide the team to its second consecutive postseason berth.
 
CATCH ALL THE ACTION
Fans will have the opportunity to watch the Panthers all season long. All 13 of Milwaukee's home games will be carried live online at ESPN3, with 10 road contests also streaming live through ESPN, as well as the entirety of the Horizon League Tournament. An additional six games this season will be streamed through various opponent platforms. Milwaukee women's basketball will also make its TV debut on FOX Sports Wisconsin this season when they host Marquette inside the Klotsche Center on Dec. 17, with Bob Brainerd and former UWM great Maria Viall once again calling the action. 
 
Panther fans will also be able to listen to this year's games everywhere they go, as Matt Menzl calls all the action on the Black & Gold Network. Menzl will be courtside for all 30 regular season contests, as well as the exhibition game against Cornell and all postseason action. The Black & Gold Network is streaming live online and can be accessed at MKEPanthers.com.
 

 
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Players Mentioned

Kelsey Cunningham

#12 Kelsey Cunningham

G
5' 9"
Senior
Bailey Farley

#4 Bailey Farley

G
5' 10"
Redshirt Senior
Steph Kostowicz

#32 Steph Kostowicz

F
6' 2"
Senior
Jenny Lindner

#20 Jenny Lindner

G
6' 0"
Senior
Jamie Reit

#10 Jamie Reit

G
5' 9"
Sophomore
McKaela Schmelzer

#3 McKaela Schmelzer

G
5' 7"
Redshirt Freshman
Sydney Staver

#1 Sydney Staver

G
5' 11"
Freshman

Players Mentioned

Kelsey Cunningham

#12 Kelsey Cunningham

5' 9"
Senior
G
Bailey Farley

#4 Bailey Farley

5' 10"
Redshirt Senior
G
Steph Kostowicz

#32 Steph Kostowicz

6' 2"
Senior
F
Jenny Lindner

#20 Jenny Lindner

6' 0"
Senior
G
Jamie Reit

#10 Jamie Reit

5' 9"
Sophomore
G
McKaela Schmelzer

#3 McKaela Schmelzer

5' 7"
Redshirt Freshman
G
Sydney Staver

#1 Sydney Staver

5' 11"
Freshman
G