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D3hoops.comNotables

News and notes from around D-III

Feb. 1-7, 2001

Notables
Nov 21: IWU gets past top- ranked Bears
Nov 20: Wash U rallies past DePauw
Nov 18: Mac ends long losing streak
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Mullet posts D-III's highest point total in 10 years
LEXINGTON, Va. Nearly 10 years to the day since the original record was set, Eastern Mennonite's Emily Mullet scored Division III's second-highest single-game total when she dropped 58 on Washington & Lee (7-12) on Feb. 7 in an 80-69 loss.

Mullet was 20-for-37 from the field, 10-for-24 from three-point range and 8-for-9 from the line in breaking her own school record for points for the third time this season. She came within three points of the all-time Division III single-game record of 61 by Oberlin's Ann Gilbert against Allegheny on Feb. 6, 1991.

Mullet now averages 25.9 points per contest. The rest of the Royals (3-17) shot 4-for-34 from the floor.

Widener, F&M upsets throw Mid-Atl. into disarray
The process of divining the best team in the Middle Atlantic region just became a whole lot murkier. No. 10 Widener became the Blue Jays' 12th home-court victim this season, as E-town won 81-71 Wednesday night, while No. 22 Franklin & Marshall lost at Gettysburg 81-80.

Despite the loss, Widener retains sole possession of first place in the MAC Commonwealth at 9-2 (17-4 overall). Elizabethtown (17-4 overall) remains the lone holder of second place with its 8-3 conference record.

Ross Unruh was on fire for the Blue Jays, totaling 28 points and five rebounds while going 3-5 from behind the three-point line, including a pair of threes made from about four feet behind the arc. Bob Porambo pitched in 15 points for Elizabethtown, and Brian Loftus scored 13 points, pulled down five rebounds and dished out six assists for the Blue Jays. Rocky Parise also had six assists for E-town.

Chaz Williamson led Widener with 16 points and nine assists. Frank DeLuca added 15 points and led the Pioneers with 11 rebounds.

Franklin & Marshall's Alex Kraft, who drained a 35-foot buzzer-beater in overtime to down Gettysburg last February in Lancaster, missed a 15-footer with two seconds left and Mike Monroe hauled in the defensive rebound to preserve Gettysburg's 81-80 victory in Centennial men's action.

Needing 12 points to reach the 1,000-point mark for his career, senior Greg Schreiber scored 22 points, the last two of which came on a layup that put the Bullets ahead for good with 18 seconds to play. Curtis McNeil added a career-high 31 points for Gettysburg (13-8, 8-2), which moved into a tie for first place with F&M in the CC West Division.

Larry Fain led four Diplomats (16-5, 8-2) in double figures with 22 points while Kraft added 19 points and nine rebounds in the loss, F&M's second straight at Bream Gymnasium.

Down 57-44 with 15:22 left in the second half, Franklin & Marshall chipped away over the next 10 minutes, pulling to within 74-71 at the 5:17 mark on a 3-point play by Kraft.

Natale made one of two free throws to push the lead back to 75-71, but the Diplomats used a 7-2 burst over the next 3:29 to take a 78-77 lead when Kraft knocked down a 3-pointer with 1:19 left.

Widener was ranked first in the NCAA regional poll, while Elizabethtown was third. Franklin & Marshall was fourth. Fifth-ranked King's and sixth-ranked Albright also lost, to sub-.500 Drew and Moravian, respectively.

Augustana upsets Carthage
ROCK ISLAND, Ill. — Augustana finished the game on a 13-2 run Feb. 6 and upset No. 1 Carthage 62-58. The Redmen (16-3, 6-2) led 30-28 at the half before pulling out to 54-47 with 4:22 to go.

Then Mike Nee went to work, scored 11 consecutive points in the final 2:55, including three three-point field goals. Nee hit two free throws to trim the advantage to 56-51 and then he buried back-to-back three-pointers to put the Vikings (16-5, 8-2) up 57-56.

A free throw by Carthage's Jim Oboikowitch at 1:17 tied the game at 57-57. The Redmen's Rob Garnes, who was outstanding all night with 24 points and 12 rebounds, missed a free throw with 43 seconds left and with 0:28 showing on the clock Nee drilled his third three-pointer to give Augustana a 60-57 lead.

Greg Ktistou was fouled on a drive to the basket with 18 seconds to play and hit one of two free throws to cut the lead to 60-58. Nee was then fouled on the inbounds but missed the front end of a one-and-one and Carthage had a chance to tie the game. Garnes, however, missed a shot with :05 left and Adam Talbot rebounded and was fouled with :02 left. He hit both free throws.

Augustana shot just 35% for the game (21-for-60), while Carthage shot 39% (22-for-56). Nee led the Vikings with 17 points. Garnes scored a game-high 24 points for the Redmen along with 12 rebounds, while Jason Wiertel had 17 points and nine boards.

No. 25 Linfield knocks off No. 15 Lewis & Clark
PORTLAND, Ore. In a battle of the giants of the Northwest Conference, No. 25 Linfield (16-4, 10-2 NWC) came away with a 107-97 road victory Tuesday, breaking No. 15 Lewis & Clark's (16-5, 11-2) nine-game winning streak.

O.J. Gulley shot 13-for-18 from the floor to lead the Wildcats with 30 points. Grant Ebright posted 17 points, eight rebounds and six assists as well. As a team, Linfield shot 58.1% from the floor.

John Mietus led the Pios with 26 points and 13 rebounds. Kristofer Speier added 25 points and 13 rebounds. Scott Davis notched 15 points and five assists for L&C.

L&C jumped out to an early nine-point lead, but Linfield stormed back to take a 63-55 halftime lead.

The win pulls the Wildcats even in the loss column in the conference race, one-half game behind Lewis & Clark, and avenges the Pioneers' overtime victory in McMinnville in January.

George Fox's Katie Lacey
Katie Lacey is George Fox's leading scorer, averaging 15.6 points in only 25.6 minutes per game.

George Fox new No. 1
For the first time in the relatively short history of the D3hoops.com Top 25 poll, Washington U. is not the No. 1 women's team in the country. That honor belongs to George Fox University, of Newberg, Ore. The Bruins (19-1) garnered 15 of the 25 first-place votes on a split ballot and hold the top spot by 10 points over No. 2 NYU, 11 points over No. 3 Washington U.

George Fox reached the Sweet 16 last season and leads the Northwest Conference by three games with four to play. Their one loss was a 64-58 setback at Northwestern (Iowa) on Dec. 30. Northwestern is currently 20-4 and ranked No. 5 in the latest NAIA Div. II poll.

"This team has worked so hard for so long that they definitely deserve to be recognized," said George Fox coach Scott Rueck. "I am very proud of them. As great as the ranking and recognition is, we know that a ranking is not our goal. I have been amazed at how this group has let nothing stand in its way this year, and I know that their focus and determination will continue."

A farewell to Columbus Multimedia
Dear Readers:

I don't know if you've noticed, but Columbus Multimedia announced Monday night that it is closing.

This hits close to home, because Barry Robinson and I have been trying to accomplish the same things for the last several years, bring attention to the student-athletes here at the Division III level. I designed his first Web site, way back in 1995, before I had even thought of doing D3hoops.com or D3football.com

I'm sure almost every one of us knows a player who was on his weekly honor roll, or an all-region player, or even an All-American. But when he says that he does not have the time to devote to his venture, I nod in understanding and hope that I am not taken down that road as well.

Those who wish to contact Barry Robinson should do so at bvrobinson@iwaynet.net

— Pat Coleman, Editor and Publisher

Roanoke rallies to upset No. 7 Hampden-Sydney
SALEM Roanoke rallied from a 13-point second-half deficit to upset Hampden-Sydney 71-67 on Monday night in Old Dominion Athletic Conference action.

With 9:31 to go, the No. 7 Tigers (18-3, 12-3 ODAC) led 55-43, but the Maroons went on a 20-7 run over the next five minutes to take their first lead of the game, 63-62. That lead came via a layup by Roanoke freshman Jason Graffam with 4:24 to play. The Maroon run was spurred by sophomore guard Robby Pridgen, who drained three three-pointers over that span. Pridgen finished the game with four threes and 14 points.

The Tigers were able to regain the lead just once over the final 4:24 when Marcus Gregory canned a jumper with 1:02 showing on the clock. Roanoke's Brad Dunleavy responded with a jumper with 42 seconds remaining in the game. The Tigers had a chance to tie, but missed a layup with just 12 ticks left. Off the ensuing rebound, Dunleavy was fouled. He went to the line for two, made the first, to give RC a 69-67 lead, but missed the second. However, RC's Colby Leftwich snared the offensive rebound, was fouled and sealed the game with two free throws with just six seconds left. The Maroons improve to 16-5, 11-4.

The Tigers took the lead 25 seconds into the game and never trailed in the first half, taking a 36-27 lead to the locker room. The Tigers shot 44% in the first half, but limited Roanoke to just 29.7% (11-for-37) in the first half. The Maroons trimmed the lead to three with 16:41 left in the game, but HSC went on a 10-0 run to take its largest lead at 50-37.

Leftwich finished the game with 19 points and 15 rebounds. Eight of his rebounds came off the offensive glass, including his game-clincher with six seconds left. Powered by the three three-pointers in the second half, Pridgen finished with 14, as did senior forward Jason Strickland. Roanoke torched the nets in the second, shooting 57.7% percent (15-for-26) from the field.

Brandon Randall was the lone Tiger to break double-figures, completing the game with 10 points. Gregory, Matt McKeag and Aaron Gibbs each tallied nine. The Tigers, who entered the game ranked last in the ODAC from the line shot 11-for-12 in the first half but just 4-for-10 in the closing frame.

Carleton rallies to knock off St. Ben's, share first
NORTHFIELD, Minn. Renée Willette scored 16 points, including the go-ahead basket with 44 seconds left, as Carleton rallied from 10 points down with 3:10 left to defeat No. 13 St. Benedict 69-64 on Monday night. The win puts the Knights into a first-place tie with the Blazers and St. Thomas in the MIAC standings.

Carleton (16-3, 14-2 MIAC) led 35-31 at the half, but watched the Blazers (16-3, 14-2) open the second half with a 15-4 run. The Blazers maintained a five-point lead for much of the half, and extended it to 10 on consecutive three-pointers by Michelle Barlau and Ashley Brown with just over three minutes remaining.

Carleton rallied, scoring four straight points on free throws and pulling within four at 63-59 on a jumper in the lane by Bridget Seegers. After the Blazers missed the front end of a one-and-one, Karissa Kramer's layup made it 63-61 in favor of the visitors. After another missed free throw by St. Benedict, sophomore Angie Grabowski scored on a runner in the lane, tying the game at 63-63. Out of a timeout, St. Benedict tried to swing the ball to Barlau in the corner, but first-year player Linnea Engel jumped the screen, stealing the ball. She raced to the other end, feeding Willette in the lane to give Carleton its first lead since early in the second half, 65-63.

Willette connected on two more free throws the next time Carleton touched the ball, as Carleton went 8-for-10 from the line in the final 2:30, despite going 2-for-12 the rest of the second half.

Mia Peterson led the Blazers with 16 points, while Barlau tallied 14 points and nine rebounds. Danni Hannon added 11 points and four rebounds. Seegers tallied a double-double with 15 points and 10 rebounds, while Grabowski added 14 points, five rebounds and five assists. Kramer scored seven poitns and snatched a career-high 15 rebounds.

Carleton has now matched its school record with seven consecutive wins, set earlier this season. They've won 14 of the last 15, and ended the Blazers' six-game win streak. With the wins, the Knights also set new school records for overall and conference wins in a season. This marks the first time in the program's history the Knights have been in first place in February.

Wilkes men lose for second time in a week
BETHLEHEM, Pa. Senior guard David Jordan scored 28 points to surpass 1,000 points for his career and the Moravian men's basketball team scored 64 points in the second half to defeat No. 2 Wilkes 104-96 on Alumni day at Moravian.

The Greyhounds (7-13 overall, 3-0 this week) led by 12 points midway through the first half before Wilkes (17-2) responded to take a 41-40 halftime lead. The Colonels extended their lead to 53-45 before the Greyhounds began to rally in the game.

Moravian tied the score at 57-57 on a three-pointer by Jordan with 12:12 to play. The two teams traded the lead until the four-minute mark when the Greyhounds took the lead for good, 79-77 on a layup by sophomore forward Ken Greb. Wilkes had tied the game just eight seconds earlier when senior guard Dave Jannuzzi scored a layup. Jannuzzi had 33 points in the contest and became Wilkes' all-time leading scorer in the contest with 1,964 points.

Jordan would get his 1,000th career point on a three-pointer, one of seven in the game, with 2:37 to play, giving Moravian an 85-80 lead. Moravian was 15 of 26 behind the three-point line in the contest with sophomore guard Kevin Hall adding four treys with two of over 25 feet.

Hall added 24 points in the victory while Greb had 16 points. Freshman guard Lucas Malishchak added 14 points, going 8-for-8 from the foul line in the final two minutes. The Colonels received 16 points and 11 rebounds from forward Kevin Walsh while guard/forward Tom Stambaugh added ten points.

Wilkes shot 59% from the floor for the game (41-for-69). Moravian shot better than 50% for the third game this week. The Greyhounds were 28-for-55 from the floor (51%) and 33-for-42 from the foul line (79%). Moravian shot 18-for-20 from the foul line in the final 3:38 of the game as Wilkes was pressing and fouling after falling behind on Greb's layup.

The 104 points was the first time the Greyhounds had scored 100 since netting 105 points in a win against Western Maryland on Jan. 6, 1996. Moravian leads the series between the two schools 29-21 and is 16-5 in Johnston Hall.

Magyar's Miracle in Manhattan
Magyar on defense
Dari Magyar defends Washington U's Lendy Stuber.
Buzzer-beating three upsets No. 1 Wash U.
NEW YORK — NYU junior guard Dari Magyar redeemed herself for a missed layup by draining a buzzer-beating three pointer to defeat No. 1 Washington University 65-64. Hear the exciting finish, as called by Ray Martel and Gordon Mann on D3hoopsNet. Or you can listen to the entire archived broadcast, from Onairsports.com.

"We had about four seconds so I just had to push it up and get a shot off," said Magyar, whose layup on the previous possession went off the glass with seven seconds left.

The entire NYU team mobbed Magyar at center court. "I was just so excited," Magyar told D3hoopsNet. "Nobody on this team has ever beaten (Wash U.) — this is the biggest thing."

The No. 4 Violets (17-1, 8-1 UAA) led by as many as 22 points in the first half and 40-23 at halftime before Washington U. rallied to take a 63-62 lead with 32 seconds left on a three-pointer from Meg Sullivan.

NYU came down with a chance to win, but after the Violets took a timeout with 17 seconds left, they could not inbound the ball within the five seconds and turned it over. However, Washington U. (17-2, 8-1) missed three of four free throws down the stretch, and Stuber's 1-for-2 with 5.2 seconds left gave the Bears a 64-62 lead, setting up Magyar's heroics.

Magyar was a bright spot in a night where NYU was 4-for-17 from downtown. She finished with only 8 points, but was 2-for-2 from three-point range. Rashida Allen led NYU with 16 points on 8-for-12 shooting from the floor, while the Bears' Lindsey Merrill led all scorers with 19 points. The Bears outrebounded NYU 43-27 but turned the ball over 26 times. See short video of postgame celebration from NYU.

 

Vassar ends St. Lawrence's 17-game streak
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. Vassar built a 19-point first half lead and then hung on for a 65-63 shocker over the No. 6 St. Lawrence women Feb. 2 at the new Athletic & Fitness Center.
Vassar snapped the Saints' 17-game winning streak while St. Lawrence lost its first Upstate Collegiate Athletic Association game.

Thanks to runs of 8-0 and 9-2, the Brewers (12-5, 3-5) built a 15-point lead midway through the first half.

Down nine at the half, the Saints used a 10-0 scoring streak to pull within one at the 9:47 mark when Aliza Bogdanich canned two of her 12 points. Nicole Leary, who finished with a team-high 19 points, put the visitors ahead for the first time in the second half when she nailed a jumper with 2:13 on the clock.

Cara Barbierri later fouled Lisa Ercolano, who sank both free throws to put Vassar back up by one with 85 ticks on the clock. A Lauren Nishamura lay up pushed the lead to four with 40 seconds left.

Following Jen Janeway's basket, Katie Griffith stole the ball in the Brewers' back court but Lauren Kelly's foul prevented the easy layup by Leary, who only made good on one of her two chances at the line.

Bea Milligan, who turned the ball over to give the Saints one last chance, found redemption when she was fouled trying to rebound the last gasp shot. The 5-8 junior captain connected on one free throw but that was enough to ensure the victory.

Ercalono finished with a game-high 20 points while Carleen Aubee added 19 for Vassar. Megaon Dietrichsen tallied 10 points for St. Lawrence.

Simpson men upset No. 19 Buena Vista
INDIANOLA, Iowa —
Simpson upset No. 19 Buena Vista 86-76 on Feb. 2 in Iowa Conference men's action. The Storm limited the Beavers to just 33.8% (22-for-65) shooting from the field and outrebounded BV 45-39.

Simpson (6-14, 5-11) led 37-32 at halftime and seemed to be in control until the Beavers rallied, cutting the Storm lead to 50-47 on a three-pointer from Adam Jones. The Storm called timeout and out of the break, Jesse Von Behren dropped in a three pointer to make 53-47. Simpson went on a 9-0 run as Von Behren hit another three on the next Storm possession. Shane Bogaard and Jason Snyder added field goals before Beaver coach Bryan Van Haaften called timeout.

Simpson used the free-throw line to their advantage when Buena Vista (16-4, 13-3) began to foul. The Storm scored their final nine points of the game from the charity stripe and shot 85.7% from the line (24-for-28) for the game. Jesse Harris led all scorers with 23 points, while freshman point guard Dirk Walker tied his career high with 15. Senior center Brandon Clubb tied his career high with 14 rebounds. BV was led by Jones' 17 points while Brett Smith added 15.

Linfield men drop Pacific Lutheran in overtime
TACOMA, Wash. In arguably one of the wildest men's basketball games ever played in the history of 31-year old Olson Auditorium, visiting Linfield held off Pacific Lutheran 119-115 in overtime in a Northwest Conference game played Friday night.

The result set a pair of Pacific Lutheran single-game records. The combined scoring total of 234 breaks the old record of 227 established in a 1992 game that saw Whitman beat Pacific Lutheran 117-110. The other record was for highest losing score by a Pacific Lutheran team, breaking the record of 110 points set in that same 1992 game.

Linfield scored the first six points of the game and eventually took a 17-7 lead on O.J. Gulley's jumper at the 15:38 mark. At that point, someone hit the turbo jets on the PLU offense as six different players scored during a run of 25 unanswered points in a little more than 3½ minutes. They hit five three-point field goals during the run, which started with Treven Vander Ploeg's three-ball and ended on Erik Dordal's trey with 11:48 remaining in the half. At that point, PLU led 32-17.

Pacific Lutheran kept up the assault, eventually building a 51-30 advantage on Vander Ploeg's layup with 5:27 left in the half. Linfield responded with a 17-4 run, including six points from Ian Hartman, to close out the first half trailing 55-47.

The Lutes led until there was 30 seconds left to play in regulation when Gulley hit a jumper to put Linfield on top 101-100. Gulley then stole the ball and passed it ahead to Rob Emerson, who hit a pair of foul shots to give the Wildcats a 103-100 lead. With 1.7 seconds left in the game, Emerson was whistled for a foul on Dordal's desperation shot from just inside the half-court line. Dordal went to the line and hit all three charity tosses to send the game into overtime.

Linfield then went to the three-point shot in overtime, getting treys from Hartman, Gulley and Travis Jones, to take a 116-113 lead with 1:53 left. After a Dordal layup at the 1:42 mark, the Wildcats hit three of six free throws, getting the offensive rebounds twice on misses, while the Lutes turned the ball over two times and failed to get a shot off.

Gulley scored a career-high 31 points for the Wildcats, who also got 18 from Hartman, 17 from Emerson and 16 from Jones. Linfield played the entire second half and overtime without former conference MVP Grant Ebright, who had to get stitches for a head wound suffered in the first half.

Neil Mendez had a career-best 33 points for Pacific Lutheran, and the sophomore post also added 14 rebounds. PLU had five other players score in double figures, including Vander Ploeg with 19.

St. Ben's completes sweep of St. Thomas
ST. PAUL — Sophomore guard Michelle Barlau (23 points) and freshman guard Ashley Brown (21) combined to make six three-pointers as No. 13 St. Benedict (15-2 overall, 12-1 MIAC) broke to a 20-point lead and held on to beat host No. 3 St. Thomas (14-2, 11-2) 70-67 in MIAC women’s basketball Feb. 1 in Schoenecker Arena.

The Tommies, who shot just 39% from the field, had a 28-game home court win streak halted and a 10-game season win streak end. They fell into third place in the MIAC race, one game behind St. Ben's and one-half behind Concordia-Moorhead (12-2) with eight conference games to play.

The Blazers completed a regular-season sweep of the Tommies for the first time since 1992-93. It was UST’s first conference home loss since St. Ben’s won here in January 1998 and their first overall home loss since falling to Mount Union in the NCAA region finals in March 1998.

Andrea Bennett added 13 points and eight rebounds for the Blazers, who survived 23 turnovers and a long shooting drought in the closing minutes. Junior center Jennifer Ulstad had 21 points and junior guard Missy Pederson added 18 points for St. Thomas, which never pulled closer than three points.

The Blazers shot 65% from the field in the first half (18-for-28) and took a 45-32 halftime lead. They built their biggest lead at 57-37 with 15:50 to go as Brown sank a three-pointer.

But the Blazers, who shot 8-for-32 in the second half, scored only 10 points over the next 14:50 as the lead evaporated. A 27-10 run pulled the Toms within 67-64 with 55 seconds to go. But Barlau and Bennett each sank two free throws down the stretch to hold off the final Tommie threat.

Colby-Sawyer hands No. 22 Amherst road defeat
NEW LONDON, N.H. — Sophomore forward Ethan Betts scored two of his game-high 28 points with 1:05 remaining to give host Colby-Sawyer a 70-68 lead they would never relinquish on the way to a 76-70 win against No. 22 Amherst on Feb. 1. It was the Jeffs' first road loss of the season after nine straight victories away from the friendly confines of LeFrak Gymnasium.

Amherst and Colby-Sawyer battled to a 39-39 tie at the break after a first half that featured 10 lead changes and 68.2% (15-for-22) shooting by the Chargers. Betts burst out of the gate on fire, scoring eight of Colby-Sawyer's first 11 points and shooting 7-for-8 for the half, including a driving lay-in at 16:57 to give the Chargers (13-6) an early 11-7 lead.

After Betts opened the second half with a pair of free throws, Amherst (13-3) either tied or led for the next 15 minutes despite shooting a paltry 2-for-16 from three-point range and 32.4% (11-for-34) overall from the floor after the break. Betts finally put the Chargers on top from the charity stripe, 64-63, with 4:15 remaining before Calen Paquette extended the lead with a lay-up off an inbound pass on Colby-Sawyer's next possession.

Not to be outdone, Steve Zieja brought the Jeffs back within one with a tip-in off
a missed layup by senior guard Brian Daoust and freshman guard Adam Harper tied the score 66-66 with 2:15 remaining, hitting the first of two bonus free throws.

However, on the ensuing Colby-Sawyer possession, Jim Statires was fouled on the perimeter by Ryan Faulkner and calmly sank a pair of free throws to put the Chargers up 68-66. The Jeffs had one more comeback in them as Zieja responded with a backdoor layin to knot the score for the last time, 68-68, with 1:33 remaining.

From there it was all Betts, who gave Colby-Sawyer the lead for good with a running one-hander. Following a missed free throw and a jumper and two offensive rebounds by Amherst, Paquette blocked a three-point attempt, which would have given the Jeffs the lead. Grant Kelly drew the foul as he grabbed the rebound and hit both free throws to extend the margin to four.

The Chargers hit all six of their free-throws in the final minute to ice the upset victory. Colby-Sawyer hit each of its last 13 free throws.

Aside from Betts and Paquette — who finished with 21 points in addition to Betts' 28 — no Colby-Sawyer player tallied more than six points on the evening. Fitzsimons led three Jeffs in double figures with 16 points to go along with 14 rebounds and five blocks.

Notables 2003-pres.

2003 Notables
February 15-28
February 1-14
January 16-31
January 1-15

2002 Notables
December 16-31
December 1-15
November
October-early Nov.
September-October
June-August
May
March-April
February 22-28
February 15-21
February 8-14
February 1-7
January 22-31
January 15-21

January 8-14
January 1-7

2001 Notables
December 16-31
December 1-15
October-November
July-September
June
May
April
March

Notables 1998-2001

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