Franklin Pierce: 'Leedham Named WBCA Division II Player of the Month'
Information Provided By Franklin Pierce Sports
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RINDGE, N.H. (April 1, 2009) – Franklin Pierce University
junior All-American and Great Britain international Johannah
Leedham (Ellesmere Port, England/Cheshire Academy (Conn.)) has been
named the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA)
Division II National Player of the Month for March it was announced
by the Association today.
Leedham, the 2008 State Farm/WBCA Division II Player of the Year,
earns WBCA Player of the Month honors for the first time after
collecting honorable mention honors in January and February. She
led Franklin Pierce to both the Northeast-10 Conference tournament
and NCAA Division II East Regional championships in that time as
well as a spot in the NCAA Division II Championship game for the
first time in program history. Leedham averaged 25.1 points, 5.9
rebounds, 3.9 assists, 3.2 steals and a block per game during the
month which was comprised of nine postseason contests. She shot
55.1-percent (75-for-136) from the field, including 39% (23-59)
from three-point range, and converted 86.9% (53-61) of her
free-throw attempts for the month.
Leedham, who led Franklin Pierce in scoring in eight of the Ravens
nine games last month, earned Northeast-10 Player of the Week
honors three-straight weeks to round up the season, collecting MVP
honors for the NE-10 Tournament as well as Most Outstanding Player
accolades for the NCAA East Regional for the second-straight year.
She was also named to the All-Tournament team at the Division II
Elite Eight for the second-straight season. Leedham averaged 24.8
points, 6.2 rebounds, 4.0 assists, 3.5 steals and 1.2 blocks per
game during the Ravens six NCAA Tournament games, shooting
56.2-percent (50-for-89) from the field, including 37.5% (12-32)
from beyond the arc, and converting 88.1% (37-42) of her free-throw
attempts. Leedham set an NCAA Division II Tournament record with
her 149 points in the event.
Leedham opened the month by leading Franklin Pierce to its first
ever Northeast-10 Tournament title as she earned tournament MVP
honors by averaging 25.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 2.7
steals over the Ravens three tournament wins, shooting 53.2-percent
(25-for-47) from the field, including 40.7% (11-27) from
three-point range, while converting 16-of-19 (84.2%) free-throw
attempts. She posted 31 points, eight rebounds, four assists, two
steals and a blocked shot in the Ravens 93-81 win over third-seeded
Bentley University in the NE-10 championship game.
Leedham then led Franklin Pierce to its second-straight regional
title, averaging 21.7 points, 6.7 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 4.0 steals
and 2.0 blocked shots, while shooting 57.6-percent (19-for-33) from
the field, including 40% (6-15) from beyond the arc, and converting
21-of-23 (91.3%) of her free-throw attempts over the Ravens three
victories in Philadelphia, Pa. She posted 24 points, six assists,
five rebounds, four assists (no turnovers) and a blocked shot in
the Ravens 78-54 triumph over third-seeded Stonehill College in the
regional final. Leedham was named Most Outstanding Player and
earned All-Tournament honors at the regional for the
second-straight year in leading the Ravens to another Elite
Eight.
At the Elite Eight in San Antonio, Texas, Leedham again earned
All-Tournament team honors there as well, leading Franklin Pierce
to its first ever national championship game appearance. She
averaged 28 points, 5.7 rebounds, 4.7 assists and three steals over
the Ravens three games in San Antonio, shooting 55.4-percent
(31-for-56) from the field, including 35.3% (6-17) from three-point
range, and converting 16-of-19 (84.2%) free-throw attempts. Leedham
posted 30 points, five assists, three steals and three rebounds in
Franklin Pierce’s 88-73 quarterfinal round win over
6th-ranked California (Pa.) University, before collecting 28
points, six assists, four rebounds and two steals in the Ravens
58-39 semifinal victory over 24th-ranked Delta State University.
Leedham rounded out the season with her fifth double-double of the
season (23rd career) as she posted 26 points, ten rebounds, four
steals, three assists and a blocked shot in Friday’s 103-94
setback to 4th-ranked Minnesota State University-Mankato in the
national final.
Leedham, the Daktronics East Region and NE-10 Player of the Year
for the second-straight season, led the NE-10 in scoring for the
third-straight year, breaking her own single-season program scoring
average record with 23.5 points per game (5th nationally), to go
with 6.1 rebounds (19th NE-10), 3.2 assists (14th), 3.1 steals
(1st) and 1.3 blocked shots (7th) per contest. She shot
50.2-percent from the field (6th), including 37.3-percent from
three-point range (8th), while converting 86.3% of her free-throw
attempts (6th) for the season.
Leedham broke her own single-season scoring record with her 799
points scored this season, matching the Northeast-10 record and
marking the 16th-best single-season total in Division II history.
She also set program records with 79 three-point field goals and
182 made free-throws, again breaking her own single-season mark in
the latter category. Leedham is the only player in program history
to post three seasons with 100-plus steals, finishing with 105 for
the season, having shattered the program’s career mark with
316 over her three seasons.
Leedham, who owns no less than 28 program records at Franklin
Pierce, enters her senior season with 2,135 career points, just 54
shy of the Northeast-10 record of 2,189 set by American
International College’s Juana Garcia (1992-96), 375 shy of
the program record of 2,564 set by University Hall of Famer Shelia
Lindsay (1984-88) and 751 short of the Division II record of 2,885
set by LaShonda Chiles of Anderson (S.C.) University and Lander
University (2004-08).
Franklin Pierce (29-6, 18-4 NE-10) is ranked No. 2 in the final USA
Today/ESPN/WBCA Division II poll, marking the highest national
ranking in program history. The Ravens captured both the NE-10
regular season and tournament titles for the first time in program
history this season, while also winning the East region for the
second-straight season.



























