EDITOR’S NOTE: This story was originally published at the Ashland University sports information website.

ALLENDALE, Mich. — In almost any other Division II regional final, the Ashland University women’s basketball team would be wearing a crown.

Alas, the fifth-ranked Eagles landed in perhaps the toughest regional in the country. On Monday night, second-ranked Grand Valley State showed why they are considered one of the best teams in the nation, if not the best.

The host Lakers, the top-seed in the Midwest Regional, knocked off the second-seeded Eagles 62-50 to advance to the Elite Eight in Pittsburgh.

The 2024-25 Ashland University women’s basketball team finished the season 32-4 with a 26-game winning streak.

The Eagles’ 2024-25 season ends at 32-4, and the Lakers will move on to the Elite Eight in Pittsburgh, Pa., at 35-2. This loss also halted Ashland’s 26-game winning streak.

“Ton of credit to Grand Valley,” said Ashland head coach Kari Pickens. “They’re a really good team. I’m disappointed, because I thought we could get them. I thought that our team was really good, too.

“We just didn’t shoot the ball well enough.”

Coming into the regional final, Ashland (32-4) was second in Division II in scoring defense (49.9 ppg. allowed), and Grand Valley State seventh (52.9 ppg. allowed). So it wasn’t a surprise that the score was low halfway through the first quarter – with the Eagles leading 6-4.

Six points off six Eagle turnovers helped the Lakers to an 11-9 lead through the first period, but AU did keep GVSU to 5-for-14 (35.7 percent) from the floor.

Three free throws from sophomore guard Gia Casalinova put the Eagles up 12-11 early in the second stanza, then Grand Valley followed with eight consecutive points to force an Ashland timeout.

The Lakers led by as many as 11 points (27-16) in the frame, but by halftime, a late spurt punctuated by a jumper from senior guard Morgan Yoder cut the Eagle deficit to 29-23.

Halfway through the third quarter, Grand Valley led 38-29, but freshman point guard Ashley Mullet‘s 3-point field goal cut the Laker lead to six points. GVSU, however, took a game-high 12-point lead at 44-32 later in the frame, and had a 46-37 advantage heading to the final 10 minutes.

The Lakers were kept off the scoreboard for the first 4½ minutes of the final quarter, but that only got the Eagles to within five points at 46-41. Five straight Grand Valley State points, however, put it back on top by 10.

Final notes

  • In her last collegiate game, senior forward Zoe Miller finished with a double-double – 15 points and 10 rebounds. She was the only Eagle in double figures.
  • The Lakers were kept to 40.0 percent from the field and 2-of-10 from 3-point range.
  • This was Ashland’s eighth all-time Division II Sweet 16 appearance.
  • The Eagles will go into the 2025-26 season with 998 all-time wins, needing two more to become the 13th Division II women’s basketball program with 1,000.
  • Over the last 14 seasons (2011-12 to 2024-25), Ashland is 422-45 (.904) with three NCAA Division II national titles, two national runner-up finishes, three undefeated seasons, a D-II-record 73-game winning streak, nine 30-win seasons, 13 NCAA postseason qualifications, 10 conference regular-season championships, 11 conference tournament titles, and a mark of 227-14 (.942) at the Sherrill Hudson Court at Kates Gymnasium.
  • This game was a marked improvement for the Eagles, who lost 67-42 at Grand Valley State earlier in the first meeting between these teams on Nov. 21.

I've lived in Richland County since 1990, married here, our children were born here. This is home. I have two books published on a passion topic, Ohio high school football. Others: Buckeyes, Cavs, Bengals,...