By John Painter

(Hamilton, NY – Jan. 15, 2015) Colgate’s first dose of adversity for its 2013 women’s basketball team struck right down the center. As in, the all-important center position.

Team captain Lulu Brase was ruled out this past the weekend for the rest of the season – and her career – with a stress fracture in her knee. It’s the final straw in a series of knee ailments that plagued the senior post player throughout her Raiders career.

“It’s not how I wanted to end my career, especially going into league play,” Brase said of the timing.

But Colgate head coach Nicci Hays Fort said there was more at stake than just basketball.

“We’re looking out for her future health,” Hays Fort said. “She’s way too young to be thinking about a knee replacement. It was just too scary of a situation to put her into by trying to continue.”

Hays Fort informed the team right before the trip to Washington for Saturday’s Patriot League opener against American. The Raiders lost, 54-45.

“It was a really hard day when we told the team, and it’s going to be fresh and hard for Lulu for a while,” Hays Fort said. “But she’s also become a very good leader. Just because you’re an upperclassman doesn’t mean you’re a leader, but Lulu fits the description.

“And Lulu had developed herself into a really good player for us. She was playing some of her best basketball.”

Friends and Family

Brase on Jan. 3 was one rebound shy of her first career double-double in the 72-36 win over NJIT. She finished with a collegiate-best 15 points and nine boards. Two games before that, Brase tallied nine points and a career-high 10 rebounds at Iona.

The daughter of German parents who moved to this country before she and her brothers were born, Brase said she was lucky to have had her final collegiate performance Jan. 6 in Charlotte near her Lake Wylie, S.C., home. She posted four points and eight rebounds against a tough 49ers squad that beat the Raiders, 57-33.

“I was thinking about it and I was blessed to be able to go home and play in front of my friends and family,” she said. “I can say I ended my career playing in front of the people who are closest to me.”

Brase finishes with 116 points and 132 rebounds in just 45 collegiate games. She missed all of her sophomore season two years ago because of injury, but returned to make a difference for the 2012-13 Raiders. Brase started 14 straight games to begin this season – her first starts since 2009-10.

“She wanted to be a factor on the team and she was,” Hays Fort said. “She earned the starting role and she loves the game. If she didn’t, it would have been easy for her to walk away last year or the year before.

“She was a very good high school player who came here and then had a series of injuries.”

Brase’s career averages of 2.6 points and 2.9 rebounds were both nearly doubled by this year’s numbers of 4.9 and 4.7, respectively. And she was shooting 46 percent from the field this season – four points above her career mark.

“I definitely would have kept going if I could, but medically it just wouldn’t be smart,” Brase said. “I want to be able to walk in my future and run around with my kids. But, yeah, I’ve been through a lot.”

Teaching and Coaching Future

An English major, Brase graduates in May and already is looking for teaching and coaching jobs. She hopes to stay in the Northeast so she can watch her younger brothers, Hans at Princeton and Janpeter at St. Lawrence, continue their basketball careers.

“It should be an interesting future,” she said.

Meanwhile, Hays Fort is reconfiguring the pieces from what is now a noticeable hole down the center of Colgate’s offensive and defensive plans.

“She was a solid presence inside and we’re going to miss her perseverance and optimism on the court,” the Raiders coach said. “She’s given us everything she could. She is a captain for us and will continue to be a leader.

“Obviously, she’s going to be at practice every day and be down there with the posts. She just can’t get in there and bang around.”

Hays Fort said she had hoped this year to bring freshman forward Josie Stockill along slowly while learning the collegiate ropes. Now, those plans might have changed.

“Josie’s going to have to learn from Lulu and get better,” Hays Fort said. “Lulu has a really calm demeanor about her and that will be good for Josie. Lulu’s always working for the betterment of the team; she’s someone who always takes care of her business.

“She’s a good upperclassman for our freshmen to look up to.”

Brase agrees. It’s not her first choice, but there’s still work to do this season with 13 league games remaining and a real chance for improvement over last year’s 8-22 showing.

The Raiders are 6-9 heading into Wednesday’s 7 p.m. game at Bucknell. They host Lehigh on Saturday at 4 p.m.

“We don’t have any upperclassmen in the post, so I’ll be there helping them out with what I see and just be the biggest cheerleader I can,” Brase said. “Hopefully, they can do things I would have done on the court.”

 

 

By martha

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