The Team of the Week was in its eighth season in 2004-05, recognizing the top performance at each of the five positions from the previous week.
Dates: Nov. 19-21, 2004
| Men | Pos. | Women |
|---|---|---|
| Adam Gibbons Sr., MIT |
G | Megan Silva Jr., Randolph-Macon |
| Brian Schaefer Sr., Adrian |
G | Sarah Caskey Sr., Albion |
| Chase Fawcett Sr., Emory |
G | Danielle Gallagher Fr., Hood |
| Jonathan Pribble Jr., Lycoming |
F | Susie Gutowski Jr., Chicago |
| Drew Cohen So., Colby |
C | Felice Porrata Sr., Lawrence |
Women's
Megan Silva
Silva paced the Yellow Jackets, averaging 28 points, 6.5 assists, and 5 steals in R-MC’s wins against North Carolina Wesleyan and Shenandoah. The junior finished the weekend 19-of-30 from the field, including 15-of-19 from the charity stripe.
Sarah Caskey
Caskey led the Britons to a pair of wins in the Nan Nichols Tournament at Wooster, achieving tournament most valuable player honors. She scored 23 points in an 82-66 victory over Washington and Jefferson, and followed with 21 points in a 73-53 rout of Wooster.
Danielle Gallagher
In her first two collegiate games, Gallagher recorded a pair of double-doubles, averaging 18.5 points and 12.5 rebounds. In the consolation final against Lycoming, she scored a team-high 22 points and hauled in 14 boards.
Susie Gutowski
Gutowski averaged 24 points, 9.5 rebounds, and four steals as Chicago finished second at the season-opening Midway Classic. She had 32 points, 10 rebounds, and three steals in a 74-63 win over Northland in the tournament opener, before totaling 16 points, nine boards, and four steals in a 70-59 loss to Trinity (Texas) in the championship game.
Felice Porrata
Porrata scored 20 points and grabbed five rebounds in Lawrence's 59-56 upset at No. 4 UW-Stevens Point. The senior scored final five points of the game to seal the win, averaging 19 points for the weekend, which also included a win over Dominican.
Men's
Adam Gibbons
Gibbons scored 25 points to lead the MIT Engineers to a 66-62 win over Roger Williams in the opening game of the UMass-Dartmouth Tip-Off Tournament. Tech's senior tri-captain also added a game-high six steals and five rebounds. In the championship game on Saturday against Endicott, Gibbons tallied 20 points on 7-of-13 shooting, including hitting all five of his attempts from three-point range, leading MIT to a 74-69 victory. As a result of his outstanding two-day performance, Gibbons was named the tournament MVP.
Brian Schaefer
In two victories, Schaefer scored 49 points, making 16-of-32 shots, including 7-for-14 in 3-pointers. He was 10-for-13 on free throws, including the winning charities in the closing seconds of a 74-72 victory against Bethany. Schaefer added four assists and averaged 38 minutes played in each contest.
Chase Fawcett
Scoring his 1,000th career point, Fawcett led the charge as Emory upset 22nd-ranked Maryville (Tenn.). Fawcett averaged 20 points, eight rebounds, and two assists in two games for the Eagles.
Jonathan Pribble
Pribble led Lycoming to the title of its own tip-off tournament with come-from-behind victories over Alfred and Geneseo State. The junior forward scored 31 points vs. Alfred, including 22 in the second half as the Warriors overcame a 15-point deficit with 17 minutes to play to eventually win the game in overtime. Pribble added 19 points against Geneseo - 15 in the second half - to bring Lycoming back from a 14-point halftime deficit for an 11-point victory.
Drew Cohen
The sophomore dominated the competition in the first week of the season, 18.5 points, 12 rebounds, and five blocks in two games for the White Mules. Cohen paced Colby in its two wins of the 2004 Emmanuel Tip-Off Tournament.