Newly named WCC all-time scorer Rydalch leads Cougars past Lions
Interview with Lexi Eaton Rydalch on becoming WCC's all-time leading scorer
LOS ANGELES — Scoring a season-high 31 points, Lexi Eaton Rydalch became the West Coast Conference all-time leading scorer as the Cougars picked up their ninth conference win of the season beating LMU, 82-75, Thursday.
"We had a great team effort tonight,” BYU head coach Jeff Judkins said. “We made some crucial stops when we needed to. This is a very good win for us because it is tough to win on the road.”
Rydalch recorded her third double-double of the season, scoring a season- and game-high 31 points and pulling down a new season-high 12 rebounds. Passing Alex Cowling for the WCC scoring record, Rydalch now has 2,235 in her career as a Cougar.
“Lexi played a great game. I think she probably played one of her best games tonight,” said Judkins. “Kalani and Makenzi also played very well and were vital to the team’s win.”
Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher scored 19 points, going 7 for 7 from the free throw line, dished out four assists and tallied a game-high five steals in the win. Teammate Kalani Purcell finished the contest with 14 points and 14 rebounds to log her 11th double-double of the year. Purcell also dished out a game-high eight assists and had four steals.
The Cougars (17-4, 9-1) outrebound the Lions (7-14, 3-7) 46 to 33, bringing down 18 offensive rebounds to LMU’s seven. LMU had 17 assists to BYU’s 20 and the Cougars recorded 14 steals in the contest, while the Lions had seven.
BYU started the fourth period on a 6-0 run fueled by fast break layups off of steals by Pulsipher and Purcell to go up 13, 70-57, their largest lead of the game.
LMU cut the lead to six, 75-69, with 3:11 to go in the game on two made free throws. At the 2:18 mark, Purcell found Rydalch for her eighth assist of the game to take the nine point lead, 78-69. On the next possession, LMU's Makenzie Cast cut that lead again to six, 78-72, as she converted her fourth 3-pointer of the game.
Purcell kept the Cougar lead alive, 79-73, by converting one of two free throws with 65 seconds to go. LMU chipped away at the lead down 80-75, but two Rydalch free throws sealed the 82-75 win.
Teams started out the first period trading baskets, with the score 9-7 at the 7:44 mark. Rydalch scored the first five of BYU’s seven points. The Cougars then proceeded to go on a 6-0 run behind a 3-pointer from Rydalch, her second of the game.
The Lions then went on a run of their own to pull ahead 16-13, but Pulsipher hit a three on the next possession to tie the game at 16-all. With 2:55 to go in the first period, Pulsipher hit another 3-point field goal to tie the game at 19. LMU took the 24-22 lead into the second period.
Rydalch and Pulsipher went 4 for 7 from behind the arc in the first period, contributing nine and 11 points, respectively. The Lions and Cougars combined for seven 3-point field goals through the first 10 minutes of action.
Purcell opened the second period of play with a made layup and the foul to give the Cougars the one point, 25-24, advantage. Maeda converted another Cougar 3-pointer off of a crosscourt pass from Cassie Broadhead at the eight-minute mark to again tie the game at 28.
Two made free throws from Pulsipher and a long baseline jumper from Kristine Fuller Nielson put the Cougars up four, 32-28. LMU then cut the lead to one, 37-36, with 2:12 to go, on a made free throw by Cheyanne Wallace. BYU took the 40-37 lead into half time with 11 of those points coming from the charity stripe.
Rydalch and Pulsipher led all scorers with 13 points going into halftime. Purcell finished the half with five points, six rebounds and a game-high five assists. Teams were tied eight times in the first 20 minutes of play and the lead changed seven times.
LMU opened the half with a 3-point field goal by Cast to tie the game at 40-all. BYU then went on a 10-4 run, backed by a 3-pointer by Rydalch. With that 3-point field goal at the 7:35 mark in the third period, Rydalch passed Alex Cowling for the top spot on the WCC all-time scoring list.
With 4:42 to go in the third period, Wallace converted the 3-point play to cut BYU’s lead to one, 53-52. Purcell made her way into double figures at the 4:03 mark as she made a jumper at the elbow, giving her 11 points in the contest. BYU proceeded to go on a 7-0 lead to garner its largest lead of the game, 62-52.
LMU cut the lead to five, 62-57, but Pulsipher extended that lead back to seven as she converted two free throws to end the third period.
It was a close game until the end. The Cougars came out firing in the fourth period to grab their largest lead of 13, but the Lions crawled back making the game interesting until the final buzzer.
BYU will continue its Southern California road trip as they travel to Malibu to take on Pepperdine, Saturday. Teams will tip-off at 2 p.m. MT. The game can be followed on BYU Radio - Sirius XM 143 and links to live stats and radio can be found on the BYU women's basketball schedule page.
Postgame Notes
Team
With the 82-75 win, BYU extends its win streak to nine games. For the time this year, the Cougars had a game with 80-plus points in the road victory over the Lions.
Through two quarters of action, the Cougars had the advantage in rebounds, pulling down 22. The Lions had 16. BYU had a total of 46 rebounds in the game. LMU grabbed 33 in the contest.
BYU led the way in the steals category with eight in the first half. LMU had two. The Cougars finished the game with 14 to the Lions seven.
The Lions had the advantage in blocks with four. The Cougars didn’t record any in the first two periods of play. At the end of the game the Lions maintained their advantage in blocks with nine while BYU recorded four.
For the game, the Cougars had 23 points from the Lions miscues, while LMU picked up 17 points from BYU turnovers.
Three players recorded double figures in points for the 11th time this year. Rydalch (31), Pulsipher (19) and Purcell (14).
Player
Lexi Eaton Rydalch totaled 13 points in the first half of action, tying for game highs. She also had five rebounds and one assist. With 7:27 left in the third period, her third trey of the game, she became the WCC all-time leading scorer. Rydalch ended the contest with her third double-double of the year from season highs in points (31) points and rebounds (12). She also dished out three assists and for the third time this year made five 3-pointers.
Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher tied for game highs in points after the first two periods with 13 points. He also had one assist and two steals. For the game, she finished with her 14th game scoring in double figures with 19 points, four assists and a game-high five steals. Pulsipher was also perfect from the free throw line, going 7 for 7.
For the 11th time this season Kalani Purcell recorded a double-double with 14 points and 14 rebounds. She nearly had a triple-double with a game-high eight assists and also had four steals. In the first half, she had tied for game highs in rebounds with six, had dished out a game-best five assists, three steals and five points.
Amanda Wayment contributed eight points, seven rebounds, one assist, one block and one steal in the victory.
Headed to southern California for two WCC games
PROVO, Utah —Tied for first place in the latest West Coast Conference standings after the first half of league play, BYU women’s basketball (16-4, 8-1) hits the road for the next four conference games.
The four-game stretch begins at LMU (7-13, 3-6) on Thursday, Jan. 28, at 7 p.m. PT. Then on Saturday, Jan. 30, the Cougar women are in Malibu to take on Pepperdine (5-15, 1-8) at 1 p.m. PT. That game can be heard live on BYU Radio. The game vs. the Lions is on TheW.tv.
BYU at a Glance
All-American senior guard Lexi Eaton Rydalch is one of three BYU players that is putting up double figures in points with a team-best 23.4 points. She ranks second on the team in rebounds, pulling down 5.5 boards a game. Junior Makenzi Morrison Pulsipher contributes 11.7 points to the Cougars’ offensive threat. All-American Kalani Purcell, a JC transfer from Hutchinson Community College and Hamilton, New Zealand, rounds out the scoring with her 11.4 points and with a team best 12.7 rebounds is averaging a double-double. Purcell tops the league in rebounds and in assists and on Monday picked up her third straight WCC Player of the Week honor. With the 21 points she scored against Pepperdine, Rydalch reached third place all-time in scoring at BYU. She can pass LMU’s Alex Cowling for the top spot in the WCC record book with 16 points. Currently, Rydalch leads the conference in scoring.
The Cougars are scoring 68.5 points and grabbing 39.2 rebounds while shooting 41.4 percent from the field, 68.0 percent from the free throw line and 35.1 percent from 3-point range. BYU is holding opponents to 60.8 points per game.
• Head coach: Jeff Judkins (Utah, ‘78) 15th season
• Team’s leading scorer: #21 L. Eaton Rydalch, 23.4 ppg
• Team’s leading rebounder: #32 K. Purcell, 12.7 rpg
• Team’s assists leader: #32 K. Purcell, 4.5 apg
• Team’s steals leader: #32 K. Purcell, 2.0 spg
• Team’s blocks leader: #32, K. Purcell, .75 bpg
LMU at a Glance
Loyola Marymount has a 7-13, 3-6 record. The Lions have captured wins over Portland, Pepperdine and Pacific in league play. When playing at home, LMU is 2-3 in WCC action.
The Lions return eight letterwinners including three starters that finished last year with a 7-24, 4-14 record and finished eighth in the WCC regular season race. Head coach Charity Elliott is in her fourth season at the helm of LMU’s women’s basketball program.
LMU currently has two players that are scoring in double figures with both Cheyanne Wallace and Sophie Taylor contributing 11.7 points each. Taylor is the team’s leading rebounder, grabbing 8.6 boards a game.
The Lions are scoring 66.8 points and grabbing 41.2 rebounds a game. They shoot 37.0 percent from the field, 30.1 percent from 3-point range and 70.2 percent from the free throw line.
• Head coach: Charity Elliott, Fourth Year
• Team’s leading scorer: #20 S. Taylor & #04 C. Wallace, 11.7 ppg
• Team’s leading rebounder: #20 S. Taylor, 8.6 rpg
• Team’s assists leader: #11 A. Velasco, 3.6 apg
• Team’s steals leader: #20 S. Taylor, 2.0 spg
• Team’s blocks leader: #04 C. Wallace, 2.2 bpg
Series History
BYU leads the overall series over LMU 11-1.
The two met last week in Provo where the Cougars came away with the 75-61 home win. When playing in Los Angeles, BYU has a 3-1 mark. They last lost at Gersten Pavilion on Feb. 28, 2013, a 13-point 68-55 victory for the Lions.
PEPPERDINE at a Glance
Entering the second half of WCC action, Pepperdine is in ninth place with a 5-15, 1-8 record. They will host San Diego Thursday night before BYU’s game on Saturday afternoon at Firestone Fieldhouse.
The Waves return eight letterwinners and have seven newcomers on this year’s team. Two new assistant coaches also joined this year’s squad.
Erica Ogwumike tops the leaderboard in both scoring and rebounding with 16.9 points and 7.2 boards, respectively. The Waves shoot 38.3 percent from the field, 34.0 percent from 3-point range and 72.3 percent at the free throw line while scoring 63.3 points per contest.
• Head coach: Ryan Weisenberg, Third Year
• Team’s leading scorer: #13 E. Ogwumike, 16.9 ppg
• Team’s leading rebounder: #13 E. Ogwumike, 7.2 rpg
• Team’s assists leader: #11 P Fecske, 3.5 apg
• Team’s steals leader: #13 E. Ogwumike, 1.9 spg
• Team’s blocks leader: #44 K. Brockway, .50 bpg
Series History
BYU leads the series with Pepperdine, 11-2.
In last week’s first meeting between the two league foes, BYU got the 69-64 win in Provo, on Jan. 23. When playing in Malibu, the Cougars have a 3-2 mark. The last time they lost in Firestone Fieldhouse was on Feb. 2, 2012 when Pepperdine picked up the 12-point, 61-49 home win.
Coming Up
The Cougars will remain on the road for two more critical league games. BYU is at Pacific on Thursday, Feb. 2, and at Saint Mary’s on Saturday, Feb. 4. Both games are scheduled to air on TheW.tv.