On Saturday February 26th, the Transylvania Pioneers women’s basketball team secured their fourth straight Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference title, defeating the Anderson University Ravens 81-51 in the championship game at the Beck Center. With this win, the pioneers kept their undefeated season alive, improving to a 13-0 conference record and a 24-0 overall record heading into the NCAA tournament.
The Pioneers came into the tournament ranked Number 2 in the country, Number 1 in the HCAC, and had almost certainly clinched at least an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. They defeated the Manchester University Spartans in the first round 90-44, then defeated the Rose Hulman Institute of Technology Fighting Engineers in the semifinals 72-50. In the championship game against Anderson, the Pioneers started out on a 16-0 run and held the Ravens to only 7-24 shooting in the first half, giving them a 50-17 lead at the half, which the Pioneers were able to successfully hold on route to a 81-51 victory. Kennedi Stacy led the team in scoring with 21 points on 8-11 shooting in the first half alone and 24 points overall. Stacy was also named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament, with both her and her teammate Madison Kellione also being named to the All-Tournament team.
With this win, the Pioneers clinched their fourth consecutive conference title and an automatic qualification to the NCAA tournament. They also improved to a perfect 24-0 record for the season, with impressive wins at Number 7 Tufts University and vs. Number 3 John Carroll University. They are ranked Number 2 in the country by the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association poll, only below the also-undefeated Christopher Newport University Captains.
The Pioneers will take on Washington & Jefferson College in the first round of the NCAA tournament on Friday, March 4th at 6:30 P.M. in the Beck Center. Tickets are free for the first 100 students and 50 faculty members.



There is a Fault in the System

apartments, the Bourbon st. in totality, and Hazelrigg Hall are still under construction? President Lewis explained to me that the decision was warranted because Hazelrigg Hall and the Bourbon st. area are both at a bit of a standstill. They can not proceed without more funding and proper planning. Now, why couldn’t the funds that are being used on the stairs go towards these projects? I’m not sure. However, the Old Morrison steps project has begun and students have once again been faced with one of Transy’s all too familiar trademark construction fence banners, this one, no longer urging us to “pursue bold paths”, but instead features the cheeky slogan “improving our campus one step at a time.” All while the silhouettes of the leftover tape from our protest signs are still vaguely visible behind the thin red banner.
Another point in our collective concern that I was eager to bring up was the sheer lack of attention and so called “sensitivity” that was given to the demonstration held by the student government association (SGA) to have our frustration and opinions of the construction heard. To put this disregard into perspective,
and disregard for so long. President Lewis answered all of my questions thoroughly and thoughtfully and I greatly appreciate that. He also mentioned quite often that his door is always open to a student needing to feel heard. Dialogue and conversation is the best way to move forward on debates according to President Lewis and I have to agree. Thanks to SGA President Lindsey Steffen and all those who helped draft her and President Lewis’ conversation last November, the construction on the steps will not end up affecting our graduation to the point of relocation.
the Major-League Hitting Coach for the New York Yankees. (Like the MLB team with the most World Series wins, the New York Yankees). Since 2018 Lawson has served as the Minor-League Hitting Coordinator for the Yankees’ entire minor-league system in Florida but has recently accepted the position over the major-league team in New York. At Transy, Lawson majored in exercise science and received his Master’s in education with an emphasis on strength and conditioning from Lindenwood University. Since then he’s coached in many university baseball programs including Lindenwood University, Morehead State, Southeast Missouri State, and the University of Missouri. Before and after coaching at the University of Missouri, Lawson was a minor-league coach under the Houston Astros, before officially moving to the Yankees in 2018.