Upper Midwest Athletic Conference: Season 2014-15

UMAC Ranking
 1. Northwestern, MN 14-0 
 2. Minn.-Morris 9-5 
 3. N.Central Univ. 8-6 
 4. St.Scholastica 8-6 
 5. Bethany Lutheran 5-9 
 6. Martin Luther 5-9 
 7. Northland 4-10 
 8. Crown 3-11 


University of Northwestern, MN wins the UMAC 2014-2015 title (Photo: UMAC)

UMAC Women 2014-2015
Official Web Site

University of Northwestern, MN 2014-15
Tim Grosz Tim Grosz Grosz
Michael Carney
Carney
Kyle Ooms
Ooms
Cody Sprenger
Sprenger
Will Gisler
Gisler
Porter Morrell
Morrell
# Name CM (INCH) Pos Bo NAT
10  Carney Michael 183 (6'0'') PG 93 USA
31  Ooms Kyle 198 (6'6'') F 94 USA
4  Sprenger Cody 183 (6'0'') PG 94 USA
5  Gisler Will 198 (6'6'') F 94 USA
21  Morrell Porter 183 (6'0'') PG 95 USA
11  Janson Caleb 193 (6'4'') F 94 USA
13  Van Maanen Blake 193 (6'4'') F 94 USA
15  Petkau Daniel 198 (6'6'') F USA
33  Watnemo Matt 198 (6'6'') F 92 USA
2  Filzen Kyle 178 (5'10'') PG USA
14  Youngberg Aaron 193 (6'4'') F USA
23  Shephard Thomas 193 (6'4'') F/G USA
3  Stubbs Austin 188 (6'2'') G USA
32  Rahier Isaiah 180 (5'11'') PG USA
40  Lindgren Matt 188 (6'2'') G USA
Head Coach: Tim Grosz
Coach Assistant: Micah Schultz


UNW hoists UMAC Tournament championship banner for fifth straight year - Mar 1, 2015

Luther Vandross's famous rendition of the song "One Shining Moment" can once again ring in the halls of the Ericksen Center after the University of Northwestern's convincing 68-39 victory over the University of Minnesota Morris in the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference (UMAC) Tournament championship game on Saturday night. The victory, a program-record 16th consecutive for the Eagles, earned UNW its fifth straight trip to the NCAA Division III Tournament with Saturday's title earning the UMAC's automatic qualifier into the big dance, which begins next weekend.
Fortunate to be alive after a 70-74 overtime victory against St. Scholastica on Wednesday, Northwestern came out of the box hot on Saturday, scoring nine of the first 11 nine points of the night and never looking back. Minnesota Morris came back to within a point at 9-8, but the Cougars' spurt caused UNW to respond even greater. Thomas Shephard (6'4''-F/G) and Michael Carney (6'0''-PG-93) hit back-to-back three-pointers with Shephard adding an and-one three-point play that put the Eagles ahead by double digits as the game's 10th minute passed. The margin stayed within eight to 12 points before Shephard and Carney again teamed up for consecutive downtowners, followed by a layup in the paint by Porter Morrell (6'0''-PG-95) that sent Northwestern into the locker room with a 38-22 halftime lead.
The buffer only went up as the second half began, but it wasn't just explosive offense that put such a large gap between the Eagles and Minnesota Morris; UNW put up a solid defensive front throughout the entire night, be it at the perimeter or on the glass, where the Purple and Gold owned a 16-rebound advantage throughout the 40-minute contest. Caleb Janson (6'4''-F-94), who was later named the tournament's most valuable player, improved Northwestern's lead to 20 before three minutes had ticked off the clock in Round 2 with the margin continuing to grow. Carney's sixth three-pointer of the game put UNW's lead at 62-31 with 8:26 to go before the difference maxed out at 33 two minute later. By the time the horn sounded, Northwestern not only owned a 31-point win on the scoreboard, but also a dominating statistical victory: the Eagles committed just four turnovers on the night, dished out 15 assists, and held the Cougars to a mere two offensive rebounds.
While Northwestern's 42.6 percent shooting rate wasn't a season high by any means, it certainly felt as though the majority of the Eagles' attempts were going in. Carney finished the game with 18 points, all on three pointers, with Shephard going 5-6 overall and 3-4 from outside the arc for a 14-point performance in 18 minutes of action. Janson, who had a double-double on Wednesday, finished with 13 points and six rebounds.
Neil Helgeson (6'2''-G) was the lone Cougar to reach double digits, as his 12-point effort led Minnesota Morris, whose season ends at 12-15.

Courtesy of UMAC Athletics

UMAC Tournament Final: Northwestern - Minnesota Morris 68-39
UMAC Tournament Semifinals:
Northwestern - St. Scholastica 74-70, OT
Minnesota Morris - North Central 79-64



All-UMAC Awards 2015 - Mar 5, 2015

All-UMAC 1st Team 2015
Todd Brassow
Brassow
Luke Chafin
Chafin
Neil Helgeson
Helgeson
Michael Carney
Carney
Will Gisler
Gisler

All-Tournament MVP: Caleb Janson (6'4''-F-94) of Northwestern, MN
Player of the Year: Michael Carney (6'0''-PG-93) of Northwestern, MN
Freshman of the Year: Austin Vanderheyden (6'5''-F) of Crown
Coach of the Year: Tim Grosz of Northwestern, MN

1st Team
G: Todd Brassow (6'2''-G) of Martin Luther
G: Luke Chafin (6'4''-G) of N.Central Univ.
G: Neil Helgeson (6'2''-G) of Minn.-Morris
PG: Michael Carney (6'0''-PG-93) of Northwestern, MN
F: Will Gisler (6'6''-F-94) of Northwestern, MN

2nd Team
G: Andrew Laughlin (6'6''-G) of St.Scholastica
G: James Brown (6'2''-G) of Crown
C: Jordan Harrell (6'5''-C) of N.Central Univ.
PG: RJ Dean (6'0''-PG) of Minn.-Morris
PG: Porter Morrell (6'0''-PG-95) of Northwestern, MN

Honorable Mention
Neil Eichten (6'1''-G) of Bethany Lutheran
Nick Sanborn (6'4''-F) of Bethany Lutheran
Jake Naslund (6'5''-G) of St.Scholastica
Austin Vanderheyden (6'5''-F) of Crown
Luke Rothe (6'1''-G) of Martin Luther
Travis Voigt (5'8''-PG) of N.Central Univ.
Dan Campion (5'10''-PG) of Northland

All-Defensive Team
F: Brady Rose (6'3''-F) of Bethany Lutheran
G: Andrew Laughlin (6'6''-G) of St.Scholastica
G: Luke Rothe (6'1''-G) of Martin Luther
G: CD Douglas (6'2''-G) of Minn.-Morris
F: Caleb Janson (6'4''-F-94) of Northwestern, MN