Friday, December 12, 2025
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Badgers’ women’s basketball team falls to Golden Hawks after poor second half

|
|

The Badgers’ women’s basketball team could not withstand the Laurier Golden Hawks comeback as Brock fell 61-60 on the road, to head into the winter break with a 5-4 record. 

Madalyn Weinert led the Badgers in scoring with 23 points, as Oluwatitio Akinnusi registered a game-high 14 rebounds, seven of which were on the offensive glass. 

The first quarter began positively for the Badgers as they knocked down three three-pointers in the frame, two by Olivia Fiorucci and one by Angeline Campbell, accounting for nine of Brock’s 17 points in the quarter. 

Defensively, the Badgers limited the Golden Hawks to 25 per cent shooting, including only one made three-pointer, as the Badgers had the six-point lead through one. 

In the second, Weinert, the OUA’s second-leading point scoring coming into the contest, showed her all-star calibre skillset. The junior guard scored 10 of Brock’s 21 points in the frame as she drained both of her three-point attempts and only missed one field goal going four-for-five in the quarter. 

Akinnusi also showed her size and strength picking up six rebounds in the quarter, three of which were on the offensive end as rebounding was a huge strength for the Badgers. They outrebounded Laurier 25-12 in the half and 48-29 in the game, which led to Brock outscoring the Golden Hawks by 13 in second-chance points.  

The combination of rebounding and high shooting percentage gave Brock the 38-31 halftime lead when things quickly went downhill. 

The Golden Hawks came out of the break on fire, shooting nearly 40 per cent as Laurier shooters combined for four three-pointers in the quarter. Brittyn Graves buried a three to beat the buzzer and give the Golden Hawks the one-point advantage as the Badgers could not contain the lethal Laurier sharpshooters. 

Along with the inability to defend, the Badgers could not shoot the ball nor complete routine passes, committing seven turnovers in the frame compared to Laurier’s one. 

Those same miscues carried into the fourth as the quarter started off similarly to how the third ended. 

The Badgers shot an abysmal 22 per cent from the field – their lowest in any quarter in the game – as the Golden Hawk defenders clogged the paint, which resulted in Brock missing routine shots that they’d typically convert. 

Akinnusi was limited to only five points in the entire game since she was double teamed in the low block. She was a focal point for the Laurier defense, especially after her 37-point performance last weekend against McMaster. 

However, the Badgers got lucky in the fourth as the Golden Hawks’ shooters cooled down, only scoring one field goal in the entire ten minutes.  

The Achilles’ heel for the Badgers was that Laurier was able to get to the free throw line at will going seven-for-nine, which attributed to a 10-0 run midway through the quarter.  

That run by the Golden Hawks gave them their largest lead of the game, eight points, before Brock’s key players re-took control of the game, attempting to stage their own comeback. 

Noor Bazzi and Weinert hit back-to-back jumpers before Weinert added a layup to cut the deficit to just one, with a minute and a half remaining. 

The Golden Hawks went down the floor but failed to score, giving the Badgers the chance to re-take the lead and salvage the victory. 

However, the Badgers missed three opportunities to take the lead in the final minute, as the comeback fell short, resulting in a heartbreaking 61-60 loss to go into the winter break devastated. 

Next up for the Badgers is a home matchup against the TMU Bold on Jan. 5th before heading to Toronto to take on the Varsity Blues the next day. For more information on the Badgers’ women’s basketball team, head to gobadgers.ca. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

A Night with the Boys in Blue: Toronto Maple Leafs versus the Saint Louis Blues 

The platform for the Union Station Lakeshore West train is packed, with bodies bumping into bodies as hundreds of people wearing blue and white pile out of the train. There is no denying that fans of the Toronto Maple Leafs are loyal, because even in the midst of a five-game losing streak, people are still out in droves to see their team play.

Badgers overwhelm Algoma with second-quarter run  

Brock women’s basketball finished the month of November with a decisive home win, pulling away from the Algoma Thunderbirds with a 89-53 victory at Bob Davis Gymnasium on Nov. 29. The result moved Brock to six-four on the season, while Algoma remained winless at 0-10. 

The hidden bias in sports broadcasting  

Broadcasts of women’s sports continue to differ from men’s coverage in ways that are visible, documented and traceable to specific on-air decisions. Across basketball, soccer and tennis, clear examples show how women are described and analyzed differently, while also given different production treatment, even in the highest profile competitions.

Badgers fall hard in loss to the Mustangs  

After five consecutive wins, the Brock Badgers men's basketball team fell to the third-ranked Western Mustangs on Nov. 15 in blowout fashion.  

Chromosomal rules reshape women’s athletics  

After being discontinued in the late 1990s, World Athletics became the first Olympic-governed sport to reinstate mandatory sex verification procedures. Under the current framework, athletes competing in women’s events must undergo sex screening at least once in their careers. The organization has framed the policy as a measure intended to protect “the integrity of competition,” reviving a longstanding and contentious debate at the intersection of sport, biology and human rights. 

Badgers surge towards OUA title contention  

The Brock women’s volleyball team has solidified itself as one of the most consistent teams in OUA, earning their third consecutive appearance in the U SPORTS Top 10 rankings. Now sitting at number seven nationally with a 5-1 record, the Badgers continue to build a profile that suggests they can make a deep postseason run and potentially position themselves to win the OUA final if their current trajectory holds.

Mavericks fire Nico Harrison  

On Nov. 11, the Dallas Mavericks announced that they were relieving Nico Harrison of his duties as general manager and president of basketball operations. His departure comes after a 3-8 start to the 2025-26 NBA season and follows significant strategic decisions that drew scrutiny both internally and externally.

Detroit basketball is officially back 

After an agonizing 15-year period of only two playoff appearances, poor drafting and bad team management, the Detroit Pistons now sit comfortably atop the Eastern Conference with a 15-3 record (as of Nov. 27). It took a long time to get here, but for Pistons fans, it’s most definitely been worth the wait.