
A Winning Culture

Itýs been a bizarre past two seasons for . After being sidelined the entire 2020ý2021 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Setters returned this year to circumstances remarkably different from that of the 2019ý2020 season.
Yet, the team has continued to find a wayýexceeding expectations considerably, en route to a 17-5 record, hovering at the very top of the NE-10 Conference, even making an appearance in the national rankings.
Even more impressively, theyýve done it with a squad that looks remarkably different than two years ago. Pace Head Coach Carrie Seymour, now in her 30th year as head coach, has been particularly pleased with this yearýs core group of veteransýLauren Schetter '21, '24, Lauren Hackett '22, Naya Rivera '21, and Kelsey Quain '22, the only four returning players, who Seymour believes have set the bar for success.
ýOur big question mark was: How were we going to look this year with just four players that have played at Pace? I think Lauren (Schetter), Lauren Hackett, Naya Rivera, and Kelsey Quain have done a really good job setting the tone for how hard youýve gotta play in games, how difficult the conference is, just helping the new kids by example,ý says Seymour.
ýFrom having the whole year off, we were really eager to come back as upperclassmen to meet these new kids and finally get them on court and work with them,ý added Schetter. ýIt was hard in the beginningýpre-season was different, last year was different, we had sophomores and freshman coming in, we really had to communicate how hard it is to actually win games.ý

As Seymour and Schetter both note, the team has figured out how to turn the unusual circumstance of last year and this season into fuel for success. They started the year by making a major statementýwinning 11 out of their first 12 gamesýand have managed to continue the momentum as they move toward the later stretches of the season.
ýEverybody really just wanted to get back onto the court,ý says Seymour. ýLast year we were limited, and we had some bad luck with quarantines when we were allowed to start doing workouts again, so we had very minimal amount of time in the gym with more than one or two people at a time. I think everyone is playing just a little bit harder.ý
Like all sports during the pandemic, safety precautions have meant that the majority games have taken place , and some with no spectators at all. Seymour and Schetter note that while the atmosphere has been more squeaky sneakers than screaming fans, being able to wear the Setter Blue and Gold in a competitive atmosphere has been more than enough.
ýWeýre just excited to even be playing against another team,ý explains Schetter. ýWe had been playing against teammates and two or three other players for a whole year.ý
ýItýs nice when the crowds are back, the cheerleaders are back, the dance team, thereýs a little more buzz in the gymýitýs kind of weird when you have the public address announcer talking to no one,ý says Seymour. ýItýs nicer to have people in the building, hopefully we can keep building on attendance.ý
ýEverybody really just wanted to get back onto the court,ý says Seymour.
Yet, there has arguably still been a buzz in the gym this seasonýparticularly on January 22, when Pace defeated Saint Michaelýs College 69-65, thanks in large part to Schetterýs career-high 31-point performance. The win was Paceýs 12th of the season, but more notably, it was Coach Seymourýs 500th career win, becoming only the 21st coach in Division II history to reach 500 wins with the same school.
Seymour, as a great coach often does, credited the accomplishment to those around her.
ýItýs not about Carrie Seymour getting 500 wins, itýs about ý Womenýs Basketball getting 500 wins since Iýve been here,ý says Seymour.
But Schetter, who graduated in the fall with a degree in human resource management and is currently pursuing an MS in Human Resources at Pace, understands that she has been working with a truly special coachýone who has influenced her well beyond the confines of the court.
ýShe has a huge role in everything we do every single dayýkeeping us motivated on the court, keeping us determined to come in every single day. Sheýs taught me so much not only on the court, but things Iýll take on for the rest of my life, and Iým sure that all the players who have played for her before can say the same thing,ý added Schetter.

As the team heads into the home stretch, the coming weeks can prove to be truly exciting. The Setters are in position to potentially win the NE-10 Conference and make a deep playoff run. Yet, like any well-disciplined team, they know that they can't look too far ahead.
ýThe big thing for us is one game at a time,ý said Seymour. ýWe could have end goals of what weýd like to accomplish this season, but we have to stay very, very narrowly focused on our next game. If you can do that, wins will fall into place.ýý
Donýt miss the action for the remainder of the season! , and if you canýt make it to , stream the upcoming games on the .
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