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Matchmaking is scheduled to stop on Mar. 8 at 23:00 (UTC+0), and the game will be shut down for updates on Mar. 9 at 00:00 (UTC+0). The server is expected to reopen on Mar. 9 at 17:00 (UTC+0). Please pay attention to official announcements for the latest shutdown and reopening times. Once the update is complete, a new client version will be released. Players can update the previous version of the game directly, or download the latest version from the official website.
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The latest beta has concluded. A day after that, They have announced their Global launch worldwide coming in July available on both App Store and Google Play. Make sure you pre-register the game for pre-download notification.
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Feb. 12, 2006Contact: Alan AshbyComplete Release in PDF FormatDownload Free Acrobat ReaderGame #24vs. Youngstown St. (6-17, 2-10 HL)Date: Monday, Feb. 13, 2006Site: Cleveland, OhioArena: Goodman Arena (8,500) (Bert L. & Iris S. Wolstein Center)Tip-off: 7:00 p.m. ESTSeries: Youngstown St. leads 28-15Live Stats/Audio: www.csuvikings.comWatch: www.horizonleague.orgPlay-By-Play: David WilsonThe Opening Tip: Cleveland State (3-20, 1-11 HL) closes out a hectic stretch of three games in five days when the Vikings host in-state rival Youngstown State (6-17, 2-10 HL) on Monday night. The contest is one of only two remaining regular season affairs left in the Wolstein Center.A Look At The Series: Youngstown State leads the all-time series by a 28-15 margin, although the Vikings have won six of the nine meetings since their in-state rivals joined the Horizon League. Cleveland State is 10-8 in Cleveland, including a 64-58 victory last season in the Wolstein Center. The 43 meetings with YSU trails only Wright State (45) and UIC (44) in school history.A Glance At The Vikings: Cleveland State heads into Monday's game having dropped its last 11 Horizon League contests. The Vikings are shooting .392 from the field and have knocked down 31.3 percent of their three-point attempts en route to averaging 57.3 points. Omega Harrington (10.7 ppg) leads the team in scoring, while Dominique Butler (9.7) and Erin Martin (8.3) follow closely behind. Martin also paces the squad in rebounds (5.0) and assists (3.78) and Butler leads in steals (2.61).Noting The Penguins: Youngstown State enters Monday's contest with a 6-17 overall mark and 2-10 record in the league. The Penguins have dropped 5-of-6 since upending CSU on Jan. 19, including a 68-49 loss to UIC on Saturday. YSU is shooting .379 from the field en route to posting a 58.0 scoring average, while its opponents are averaging 67.2 points on a .437 field goal percentage. Kristy Gaudiose leads the team in scoring (11.5) and is second in rebounding (3.5). Ashlee Russo is averaging 10.6 points, while Jessica Schloemp paces the Penguins with 6.7 boards. Head coach Tisha Hill is 22-57 in three seasons in Youngstown.Martin Closes In On Milestone: With 11 points on Thursday against UIC, Erin Martin moved to within 12 points of becoming the 19th player in school history to reach 1,000 career points. She already ranks among the top 10 in Cleveland State annals in steals (8th-191), three-point field goals (8th-106), free throws made (9th-244) and games started (9th-82).Charity In The League: Cleveland State's concentration at the free throw line appears to have gone up since the start of Horizon League play. Through 12 games, the Vikings are third in the league with a .717 percentage, knocking down 119 of their 166 freebies. In a bit of a statistical oddity, CSU has gained its lofty standing without a single player ranked in the league's top 15 in free throw percentage (due to lack of free throws made). In its 11 non-conference games, CSU hit just 66.4 percent of its attempts from the charity stripe (101-152).Stolen Property: The Vikings have notched double-digit thefts in 16 of 23 games this year, including a season-high 17 swipes against Robert Morris on Dec. 28. CSU, which had just five double-figure steal games all of last season, ranks third in the league and 33rd in the nation (as of Feb. 6) averaging 10.52 steals. Dominique Butler, Brittany Korth and Erin Martin lead the way with 60, 40 and 40 thefts, respectively. It only took the Vikings 19 games to eclipse their steal total from all of last year (207 in 29 games).Triple Threat: Cleveland State heads into Monday's game having made a three-point field goal in 381 consecutive contests -- the longest active run in the nation and the second-longest streak ever. Louisville (394 games) ranks first all-time in NCAA annals, although the Cardinals had their streak come to an end during the 2004-05 campaign. The last time the Vikings failed to drain at least one three-pointer in a game was in a 78-55 loss at Cincinnati on Dec. 17, 1992. CSU has made 2,257 triples during the run, an average of 5.9 per game. The 1995-96 team led the nation in three-pointers made per game with 8.5.Internet Provides Limitless Horizons: Under a new plan put in place during the off-season, all Horizon League women's conference games will be available via video streaming on the League's official web site at www.horizonleague.org. All games will be shown live on the web through a new partnership with College Sports TV Online, which also is the web provider for five league schools as well as the conference office.The service, which a available for free, can be accessed on www.CSUVikings.com or via the League's web site. Each broadcast will feature the radio play-by-play of the host school and video taken from at least three camera angles. For a complete schedule of all games, log on to www.horizonleague.org.Hormig Responds To Starting Nod: Erica Hormig had a breakout game on Thursday against UIC, going 8-for-10 from the field (tied for the eighth-best mark in school history) en route to a career-high 16 points. In starting the last six games, the Windom, Minn. native is averaging 6.5 points and 2.5 rebounds while shooting 52.9 percent from the floor (18-34). In 16 appearances of the bench, she went just 14-for-36 from the field (.389), while averaging 2.2 points and 1.6 boards.The Butler Did It: Freshman guard Dominique Butler came into Cleveland State as one of the most highly-recruited players in the program's history. Rated the 20th-best shooting guard in the nation as a high school senior by All-Star Girls Report, she stands 22nd in the league in scoring (9.7), eighth in field goal percentage (.487), second in steals (2.61) and 11th in blocks (0.61). The Milwaukee native made her collegiate debut by leading the Vikings with a career-high 14 points in 30 minutes off the bench at Wisconsin on Nov. 20. Since then, Butler has gone on to lead the team in scoring seven more times, shooting above 50.0 percent on 13 occasions. She tallied a career-high 20 points (all in the second half) against Butler (Feb. 4) and posted all 11 of her points (5-5 FGs) in the final 6:42 on Dec. 31 to help stave off a late Detroit rally.Page-Turner: The old saying goes: Don't judge a book by its cover. Omega Harrington is proof enough of that. In Cleveland State's two exhibition games, she went 1-for-10 from the floor and 0-for-4 from three-point range en route to scoring just five points. The Indianapolis native has completely turned things around so far in the regular season, leading the Vikings and ranking 17th in the league in scoring at 10.7 ppg. She has paced the team in scoring 10 times and posted double-figure totals on 13 occasions this year, including a career-high 29-point effort at UW-Green Bay on Jan. 26 and 17 points in the Dec. 31 victory over Detroit.Harrington Has Been On The Mark Too: A 32 percent shooter last year from both the field and behind the arc, Omega Harrington has raised her shooting accuracy so far this season, ranking eighth in three-point percentage (.405) while connecting on 37.4 percent of her shots overall. She has knocked down at least one three-pointer in all but one game this season (ranking third in the league at 2.22), after draining a triple in 15-of-21 contests last year.Streaking The Wrong Way: Having dropped 11 contests in a row (all in league play), the Vikings are tied with the 1985-86 team for the second-longest losing streak in school history. Only the 1988-89 (15 games) squad posted a longer winless skein.Line-up Shuffles: In her first season on the Cleveland State sidelines, Kate Peterson had the luxury of using just three different starting line-ups, including the same five for 22 of 28 games. However, the 2003-04 squad boasted three seniors that combined to start 83 out of 84 chances. Since then, Peterson has used 14 different line-ups, including six this season.As Multidimensional As Ever: While Erin Martin may be struggling with her shot -- she's averaging 8.3 points on 31.7 percent shooting -- that hasn't taken away from the rest of her game. A preseason second team All-Horizon League selection, Martin ranks fourth in the league in assists (3.78), 14th in rebounds (5.0), 10th in steals (1.74) and 14th in assist-to-turnover ratio (1.00). The Canfield, Ohio native had 17 points, a career-high tying eight assists and five steals at Youngstown State on Jan. 19 and nearly posted her first career triple-double on Dec. 11 against Western Michigan, recording 12 points, nine rebounds and eight assists. She has three of the team's four double-doubles on the season, bringing her career total to six.Head Coach Kate Peterson: The sixth head coach in 33 seasons of Viking women's basketball, Kate Peterson is 19-61 (.238) in her third year directing the Cleveland State program. In 2003-04, she guided the Vikings to a 12-16 record, including a school-record nine league wins. Prior to her arrival in Cleveland, Peterson spent six years as an assistant at Wisconsin, serving as the recruiting coordinator starting in 1998. She also worked at Eastern Illinois (1993-97) and Indiana (1991-93). A 1991 graduate of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, she earned Kodak All-America honors her senior season after setting the NCAA Division III record for three-point field goals per game at 3.85.Titan Run Does In Vikings: Detroit used a 42-11 run spanning halftime on its way to cruising to a 78-46 victory over Cleveland State on Saturday in Calihan Hall. The Titans knocked down 11 three-pointers and turned 28 Viking turnovers into 21 points. The teams battled to a 17-17 tie after the opening 12 minutes as the defenses dominated early. However, the Titans closed out the half on a 14-5 run as CSU went without a point for nearly six minutes. Dominique Butler scored a game-high 15 points and added eight rebounds to lead CSU, while Katie Solner paced Detroit with 14 points.Petrecca Enters Hall: On Jan. 28, Mary Petrecca became the ninth women's basketball player to be enshrined in the CSU Athletics Hall of Fame. Joining her in this year's class were Matt Ghaffari (wrestling, 1983-84), Tim Holden (baseball, 1970, 1972-73) and Joe Kaderabek (baseball, 1963-66). Petrecca, a four-year starter on the women's basketball team from 1983-86, currently ranks fourth all-time in rebounding (869), seventh in scoring (1,229) and eighth in blocked shots (60). She averaged in double figures in each of her first three seasons and grabbed at least 190 rebounds in every season. She was honored as the team's Most Outstanding Player as a senior in 1985-86. When she graduated in 1987, she ranked second in school history in points, rebounds and blocks.Thomas Hits Boards Hard: Despite playing just under 20 minutes a game, Nicole Thomas has still managed to rank among the Horizon League's defensive leaders. Playing with a healthy back this year, she ranks 15th in rebounding (4.9), 11th in offensive rebounds (1.77), 14th in defensive boards (3.14) and 14th in blocked shots (0.36). She is also shooting .494 (41-83) from the floor (but does not have enough field goals to qualify for the league leaders). Included in her solid performance was a career-high tying 13 rebounds on Dec. 22 against Ohio and her second career double-double versus Detroit (12P, 10R) on Jan. 31.Wilson Has Her Way: Junior college transfer Chenara Wilson was recruited to give the Vikings more of an offensive presence in the paint. On Jan. 14 against UW-Milwaukee, she erupted for a career-high 18 points in 24 minutes of play, knocking down nine of her 14 field goal attempts. In CSU's 12 league games, she is averaging 5.9 points while shooting 48.1 percent from the field (26-54).Miller Has Breakout Game: Natalie Miller had the best day of her young career on Jan. 7 at Loyola. The Dover, Ohio native went 7-for-9 from the field, setting career-bests for points (15) and rebounds (5) in a career-high 25 minutes of action. In Cleveland State's 12 league games, she is averaging 6.8 points and 2.3 rebounds while shooting 59.6 percent from the floor (31-52).Three-Point Barrage: Omega Harrington matched the school record with seven three-pointers en route to a career-high 29 points on Jan. 26 at UW-Green Bay. Erin Martin and Mahogany Green (twice) are the other two players to accomplish the feat. Her 7-for-10 performance from behind the arc was also good for the sixth-best percentage in school history (.700). Harrington's stand-out performance is indicative of how CSU's last three meetings with the Phoenix have gone as the teams have combined to knock down 68 triples over that span.NCAA Regional Comes To Cleveland: Cleveland State continues its tradition of hosting first class NCAA events when the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship comes to Cleveland for the first time. Along with the Mid-American Conference, CSU will welcome four of the nation's top teams to Quicken Loans Arena on March 26 & 28, 2006 for the Cleveland Regional. All-session tickets are available and range in price from $20 for the three games, up to $60 for the best seats in the house. If available, single session tickets may go on sale the week of the competition. Call 216-420-2200 for an order form or for additional information or log on to www.theqarena.com to download a ticket brochure.In Celebration of Dr. King: In recognition of the honorable Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the Horizon League held its second annual Martin Luther King Celebration in conjunction with six league basketball games played from Jan. 14-16. Each host institution chose a local elementary school to implement a contest among upper-elementary students involving essay, music or art to celebrate Martin Luther King Day. Fifteen winners from Marion Sterling Elementary in Cleveland were recognized prior to the Jan. 14 tip-off with UW-Milwaukee. The winners were accompanied by student-athletes from each team during pregame introductions and received complementary tickets to the game, a commemorative T-shirt from the Horizon League and Margaret Davidson's book entitled I Have a Dream: The Story of Martin Luther King.Home Cooking: Cleveland State's schedule features a record 14 home games. Prior to this year, the Vikings had played 13 regular season home games on eight occasions, the most recent time coming in 2003-04.Charity Starts At Home: Cleveland State head women's basketball coach Kate Peterson came up with a unique way to help break the Viking women's attendance record. When CSU hosted No. 8 Connecticut in front of a record 2,948 fans on Nov. 27, Peterson donated $1 for every person in attendance (until the previous record of 2,173 was broken) to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.Peterson presented a check to JDRF for $2,174 during the the men's game against John Carroll on Dec. 22 to recognize freshman guard Natalie Miller, who suffers from the disease. JDRF is the leading charitable funder and advocate of type 1 diabetes research worldwide. The mission of JDRF is to find a cure for diabetes and its complications through the support of research. Type 1 diabetes is a disease which strikes in childhood, adolescence, or adulthood, but lasts a lifetime. JDRF provided more than $98 million to diabetes research in the 2005 fiscal year, and is responsible for more than $900 million in direct funding since it was founded.Straight Shooters: The Vikings' .563 field goal percentage (27-48) in the Nov. 23 win over Hillsdale was good for the third-best mark in school history. The school-record of .627 (32-51) was set at on Jan. 21, 1980, while the second-best mark of .569 (29-51) came against Chicago State on Nov. 22, 1997. Cleveland State was accurate in every facet against the Chargers, knocking down 58.3 percent (7-12) of its three-pointers (tied for fifth-best in school history) and 80.0 percent of its free throws (16-20).Four Ink With Vikings: The continued building of Cleveland State's women's basketball program received a big boost with the signing of four players during the November early signing period.Kailey Klein (Cherry, Ill.), twin sisters Angel and Jessica Roque (Miss