October 2008

Men's Basketball Part of Horizon League, ESPN National Game-of-the-Week Package
Tuesday, October 21 2008
Courtesy of:
Indianapolis, Ind. --- For the second consecutive season the Youngstown State men's basketball team will appear on national television when it hosts Cleveland State on Jan. 23 as part of the Horizon League’s first national basketball game-of-the-week package on ESPN networks, Commissioner Jonathan B. LeCrone announced Monday (Oct. 20).

Seven Horizon League match-ups featuring all 10 men’s teams and two women’s on Fridays in January and February on ESPNU are part of 17 games involving League teams scheduled to be shown on ESPN networks during the coming season.

“We are excited to expand our ESPN partnership with our first national basketball game-of-the-week,” said LeCrone. “More fans will now be able to follow our teams on a regular basis during the regular season. This is another important step in the growth of the League.”

The Friday night game-of-the-week schedule will tip-off Jan. 9 with an intrastate battle when Milwaukee plays host to Green Bay at 9 p.m. ET.

“Showcasing the Horizon League in a consistent Friday primetime window is a great addition to ESPN’s college basketball schedule,” said Rosalyn Durant, vice president and general manager, ESPNU. “This agreement also allows us to enhance the number of live events we offer on ESPNU with quality intra-conference competition.”
The following Fridays in January will feature Wright State at Detroit on Jan. 16 (9 p.m.), preseason League favorite Cleveland State at Youngstown State on Jan. 23 (9 p.m.) and Valparaiso at defending champion Butler on Jan. 30 (7 p.m.).

February’s Horizon League game-of-the-week schedule on ESPNU starts with a women’s match-up when Wright State plays at Butler on Feb. 6 (9 p.m.). Men’s action resumes with Butler playing host to UIC on Feb. 13 (7 p.m.), followed by UIC at cross-town rival Loyola on Feb. 27 (9 p.m.). There will be no scheduled League game on Feb. 20 due to all 10 teams participating in the annual ESPNU BracketBusters that weekend.

ESPN2 will televise two regular-season men’s games, including Butler at UIC on Saturday, Jan. 17 (2 p.m.). Again this season, the final Saturday of the regular season (Feb. 28, 12 p.m.) will feature a men’s wildcard game that will be selected in early February. Games scheduled that day are Green Bay at Wright State, Milwaukee at Detroit, Cleveland State at Butler and Youngstown State at Valparaiso. Both ESPN2 games also will be streamed live on ESPN360.com.

Two non-conference Horizon League games also will be broadcast on ESPNU this season. Valparaiso will host North Carolina on Dec. 20 (2 p.m.) at the United Center in Chicago, and Butler will play at Xavier on Dec. 23 (7 p.m.). A third game will be streamed live on ESPN360.com when Detroit opens the season at Purdue on Nov. 14 (9 p.m.).

ESPNU will air the Horizon League Men’s Basketball Championship semi-finals on March 7 at 7 and 9 p.m. and the Women’s Basketball Championship on March 15 at 1 p.m. The Men’s Basketball Championship remains in its usual spot on Tuesday (March 10) at 9 p.m. on ESPN as part of “Championship Week.” That game also will be available on ESPN360.com.

Following is a list of Horizon League men’s and women’s basketball games currently scheduled for ESPN networks during the 2008-09 season. (All games are men’s unless otherwise noted.)
Day Date Game Time (ET) Network
Fri. Nov. 14 Detroit at Purdue 9 p.m. ESPN360.com
Thur. Dec. 4 Butler at Cleveland State 8 p.m. ESPNU
Sat. Dec. 20 Valparaiso vs. UNC 2 p.m. ESPNU
Tue. Dec. 23 Butler at Xavier 7 p.m. ESPNU
Fri. Jan. 9 Green Bay at Milwaukee 9 p.m. ESPNU
Fri. Jan. 16 Wright State at Detroit 9 p.m. ESPNU
Sat. Jan. 17 Butler at UIC 2 p.m. ESPN2/ESPN360.com
Fri. Jan. 23 Cleveland State at Youngstown State 9 p.m. ESPNU
Fri. Jan. 30 Valparaiso at Butler 7 p.m. ESPNU
Fri. Feb. 6 Wright State at Butler (Women) 9 p.m. ESPNU
Fri. Feb. 13 UIC at Butler 7 p.m. ESPNU
Fri. Feb. 27 UIC at Loyola 9 p.m. ESPNU
Sat. Feb. 28 Wildcard Game Noon ESPN2/ESPN360.com
Sat. March 7 Men's semifinal #1 7 p.m. ESPNU
Sat. March 7 Men's semifinal #2 9 p.m. ESPNU
Tue. March 10 Men's championship 9 p.m. ESPN/ESPN360.com
Sun. March 15 Women's championship 1 p.m. ESPNU
 
 
Men's Basketball Greets Media at Annual Media Day
Saturday, October 18 2008
Courtesy of:
2008-09 Schedule Notes

• The Penguins play 29 regular-season games for the third consecutive year and just the fourth time in school history.

• The Guins face eight 20-win teams and seven squads that made the postseason in 2007-08.

• YSU opens Horizon League play at home against Valparaiso on Dec. 4 and closes league play at Valparaiso on Feb. 28.

• Head Coach Jerry Slocum will coach his 1,000th career game when the Penguins host Valparaiso on Dec. 4.

• The Penguins play a total of 15 home games this season, six of which are doubleheaders.

• The Guins take on Maryland for the first time in school history. The matchup against the Terrapins is also the Guins’ first game against an ACC foe since facing Georgia Tech on Dec. 29, 1992.

• Youngstown State faces Allegheny for the first time since Dec. 18, 1935.

• The 15 home contests are the most games played at the Beeghly Center since the 2004-05 season.

• The Guins travel to North Carolina for first-ever contests against High Point and Charlotte.

• The busiest month is January when the Guins play 10 times.

• The 18 conference games will tie a school record. This is the second straight season YSU will play 18 conference games. As members of the Mid-Continent Conference, YSU played 18 games three times (1993-94, 1994-95 and 1995-96).

• YSU is again among the pool of teams involved in ESPN’s BracketBuster concept. The Penguins will play at home this season and host Buffalo in a return game from the 2008 Bracket Buster.


 
 
Legendary Basketball Coach Dom Rosselli Passes Away at 93
Tuesday, October 7 2008
Courtesy of:
The Youngstown State Department of Intercollegiate Athletics is deeply saddened to announce the passing of former men's basketball and baseball head coach Dom Rosselli, who died at the age of 93 Tuesday morning, Oct. 7, 2008.

The school's winningest basketball and baseball coach, Rosselli guided Youngstown State's basketball and baseball teams for 38 and 31 years, respectively. Rosselli accumulated more than 1,000 career victories for the Red and White. He also served as an assistant football coach for 21 seasons.

“Dom Rosselli was one of the true champions of YSU, not only on the basketball court, the baseball diamond and the football field, but across the university and the Mahoning Valley," YSU President Dr. David Sweet said. "Though he was small in stature, he was a giant in YSU athletics and a role model for us all – students, faculty and staff. His enthusiasm for the university was relentless. His contributions to the university were innumerable. And his memory will live forever. My most heartfelt sympathies go to his family. He will be missed.”

"Coach Rosselli's sense of humor and unmatched love for YSU will be greatly missed," Executive Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Ron Strollo said. "The thoughts of the entire YSU athletics department are with the Rosselli family.

"An amazing number of former student-athletes had stayed in contact with him through the years, which is a testament of the true character of Coach Rosselli."
Born March 19, 1915, in Youngstown, Ohio, Rosselli was a fixture on the basketball bench from 1940 to 1982. He nurtured a program from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) to NCAA Division II and then to Division I. He was also instrumental in Youngstown State's rise as an independent to conference play, first in the original Mid-Continent Conference on the Division II level and the Ohio Valley Conference in Division I.

In his 38 years, Rosselli compiled a career record of 589-388 for a .604 winning percentage. He led his teams to eight 20-win seasons, including a 24-3 mark with an .889 winning percentage in 1963-64. Both are still school records for most wins and highest winning percentage in a season.

During the 1956-57 season, Rosselli guided the Penguins to a 23-4 mark and an appearance in the NAIA Quarterfinals as the Penguins lost to Southeastern Oklahoma, 69-65. The following season Youngstown State finished 23-7 and advanced to the third round of the NAIA National Tournament before losing to Western Illinois, 70-67. For the third time in as many seasons, Rosselli and the Penguins made an appearance in the NAIA National Tournament after a 19-9 mark in 1958-59. YSU defeated Baldwin Wallace, 97-77, in the championship game of the NAIA Ohio District and Northern (S.D.) State, 85-76, in the first round of the NAIA National Tournament. In the second round, the Penguins lost to Tennessee A&I State, 89-80.

He coached the Penguins for two seasons before World War II duty as a Captain in the U.S. Air Force took him off the court and overseas.

Upon his return from the war, Rosselli was very involved in YSU athletics. Rosselli resumed full-time duty on the basketball court as soon as he returned.

He was an assistant coach on the football team before the war, and when he came home in 1946, he remained at his assistant’s position until 1963. He created the Penguin baseball program and was the coach from 1948-50 until it was discontinued. In 1958, he resurrected the Penguin baseball team and for the next 28 years was a fixture in the dugout.

In the spring of 1948, Rosselli became the first baseball coach in Youngstown State history and accumulated a 31-year career record of 489-316-1 for a .607 winning percentage. In 1958 and Rosselli led the Penguins to an 11-6 record and the NAIA District 22 championship. YSU repeated as district champions in 1959 with a 10-6 mark. In 1964 and 1966, YSU appeared in the NCAA Division II Tournament.

From 1969 to 1977, Rosselli led the Penguins to nine consecutive 20-win seasons, including a 26-8 record and an appearance in the NCAA Division II Regionals in 1977. During that nine-year span, the Penguins amassed a record of 199-101 for a winning percentage of .663. In 1979, Rosselli recorded his 10th 20-win season with a 21-5 mark and collected his 11th and final 20-win campaign in 1982 with a 23-14 record.

Rosselli guided former major league pitcher and YSU Hall of Famer Dave Dravecky to a four-year career record of 21-7, including a 7-1 mark in 1977, and a career earned run average of 1.85.

His winning coaching ledger is a distant second to the person known as "Coach", someone who ate and slept Youngstown State athletics and always had time for anyone who requested to meet with him.


A graduate of Rayen High School, Rosselli attended Geneva College and started in three sports. Rosselli led Geneva to a football victory over Youngstown College in 1938, YSU's first season of football. Upon graduation in 1939, Rosselli earned a master's degree from the University of Pittsburgh and began his well-documented coaching career at Youngstown State. He began as an assistant football coach to the legendary late Dwight “Dike” Beede and assistant basketball coach to Ray Sweeney before taking over the reigns of the cage program in 1940-41.

His many coaching honors include the NCAA’s District IV Coach of the Year, Ohio’s College Coach of the Year, both in 1957 and 1964, and the Italian Coach of the Year.

Rosselli was named to the Curbstone Coaches Hall of Fame in 1978 and was named to the charter class of the Youngstown State University Athletics Hall of Fame in 1985. He was also named the Penguin of the Year in 1999.

He is survived by his wife, Connie, four children and several grandchildren.