NSIC Thursday Night Hoops Scores (2/19)

COLLEGE

WBB

NSIC

UMary                 79 F/OT – Bergen Kinnebrew 35pts & 12rbs. Allison Undlin 20pts. [32-36 FT’s].

Northern State 69 – Izzy Moore 21pts & 5rbs. Carli Kuyper 13pts. Taylor Tool 11pts. [11-15 FT’s].

 

Minot State 83 – Tiyahna Trotier 26pts. Taryn Hamling 22pts. Jessica Mogen 8pts & 10rbs.

Jamestown  72 – Allie Berns 22pts & 12rbs. Haidyn Crockett 18pts. Jessika Lofstrom 15pts & 8rbs.

 

Winona State    62 – Megan Johnson 15pts. Megan Schuman 13pts.

MSU-Mankato 110 – Natalie Bremer 28pts. Rhyan Holmgren 17pts. Mackenzie Schweim 15pts.

 

Bemidji State       43 – Gabrielle Fineday 7pts. Ashlynne Guenther 7pts.

MSU-Moorhead  79 – Ashton Safranski 13pts. & 9steals. Caylin Kelly 12pts. Abby Berge 11pts & 7rbs.

 

Augustana 71 – Isabella Sanneh 24pts & 11rbs. Ava Pautz 12pts. Miranda Lomax 10pts.

SMSU          74 – Audrey Swanson 24pts & 11rbs. Kylan Gerads 20pts.

 

MBB

NSIC

UMary                 63 – Cayden Redfield 14pts & 10rbs. Noah Thomas 10pts.

Northern State 71 – Josh Book 18pts. & 7ast. James Glenn 13pts. Simon Akena 13pts.

 

Minot State 85 – Kiku Parker 15pts. Darik Dissette 14pts. Isaiah Alexander 11pts. Trey Brandt 11pts.

Jamestown  84 – Anthony Walters 32pts. Thomas Diew 21pts. Ford Okehi 12pts.

 

Winona State   66 – Aidan Bardic 19pts. Ryan Heise 15pts. Tyler Mason 14pts.

MSU-Mankato 77 – Malcolm Jones 18pts & 8rbs. Traijan Sain 17pts. Arhman Lewis 14pts.

 

Bemidji State      65 – John Pecarich 17pts. Henry Shannon III 12pts & 10rbs. Logan Sipple 12pts.

MSU-Moorhead 85 – Isa El-Amin 15pts. & 6ast. Adam Jenkins 12pts. Rodrick Payne 9pts.

 

Augustana  67 – Tameron Ferguson 18pts. Bennett Fried 11pts. Caden Hinker 10pts.

SMSU           86 – Mekhi Shaw 22pts. Aeron Stevens 16pts. Micah Schlaak 14pts. & 7rbs.

The post NSIC Thursday Night Hoops Scores (2/19) appeared first on Hub City Radio.

Published
Categorized as Sports

By Digital Team

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *