WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. – Senior
Dyson Harward (Danville, Pa./Danville Area) became just the second player in the Lycoming College men's basketball program's history to earn four all-conference honors in a career and the fifth to earn three straight first-team all-conference accolades as the All-MAC Freedom teams were announced on Tuesday morning Feb. 28. In addition, both senior
Mo Terry (Severn, Md./Severn School) and junior
Steven Hamilton (Phoenixville, Pa./Phoenixville Area) each earned a slot on the conference's second team.
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Harward joins Rich Henninger '74 as the only players in program history to earn four all-conference accolades in a career and
Ron Travis '67, Henninger,
Andy Rutherford '98 and
Jonathan Pribble '06 as the only three-time first-team all-conference honorees in program history. Harward was the MAC Commonwealth Rookie of the Year and a second-team all-conference pick in 2020 before earning First Team All-MAC Freedom honors the past three years.
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Harward finished in the top 10 in the conference in five statistical categories this season, sitting eighth in scoring, averaging 13.7 points per game, third in rebounds (9.7), tied for the lead in three-pointers made (2.2 per game), third in blocked shots (1.7 per game), fourth in free throw percentage (.817) and fourth in three-point field goal percentage (.392).
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He finished his career 23rd in school history with 1,172 career points, sixth with 839 rebounds and he broke the school record with 166 blocked shots despite playing just 89 career games. He was the first player with more than 800 career rebounds since Bill Conroy '78 pulled down 933.
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Terry earned his first all-conference accolades after finishing in the top 20 in the MAC Freedom in seven statistical categories, sitting 16th in the conference in scoring (11.5), 20
th in field goal percentage (.406) and free throw percentage (.651), third in steals (1.7), 14
th in 3-point field goals made (1.5), 13
th in assists (2.7) and eighth with a .374 three-point field goal percentage.
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Terry finished his four-year career with the Warriors with 980 career points despite playing only seven games his sophomore season due to COVID-19. He also notched 408 career rebounds, 185 assists, knocked down 113 3-pointers and notched 107 steals.
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Hamilton repeated on the All-MAC Freedom Second Team after he also finished amongst the top 20 in the league in five statistical categories, including leading the MAC Freedom in three-pointers made (2.2), and ranking ninth in assists (3.1), third in 3-point field goal percentage (.392), 12
th in blocked shots (0.7) and 14th in scoring (11.8).
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The Warriors finished 16-10 overall and 11-5 in the MAC Freedom under first-year head coach
Mark Linebaugh.
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