The most successful program on Liberty Mountain deserves its own forum. We give Coach Green and the Lady Flames their props while breaking down their run to the Big Dance once again.

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By Fumblerooskies
Registration Days Posts
#57656
This time from the Roanoke Times...
Triplets make Flames a family
Megan, Moriah and Molly Frazee have drawn the rest of their family to Liberty.

Vicki L. Friedman


LYNCHBURG -- Mere minutes separated the Frazee triplets at birth 19½ years ago.

Since then, little has kept them apart.

On second thought ...

"You went to that overnight basketball camp that time, remember?" ponytailed Moriah asks her equally ponytailed sister Megan.

Or did Molly say that?

Moriah and Molly are identical; Megan is a fraternal sibling, though all three so closely resemble one another that they can stump even an astute observer.

It's hardly unusual for triplets to cling together constantly. What's extraordinary is that these three not only attend Liberty University together but also play basketball for the school. That gives them the distinction of being the only triplets in Division I. The three sophomores have been in the starting lineup together eight times this season.

If that seems like a lot of togetherness, consider that their parents, Jim and Tammy Frazee, are quiet but fervent spectators at each Flames home game. The two, former Christian missionaries, left teachings jobs in Xenia, Ohio, to move to Lynchburg to work and to watch the triplets play.

Even the triplets' older brother, Zeb, is at Liberty. He transferred there from Kentucky Christian, making the family unit complete.

Tammy Frazee, now teaching fourth grade in Lynchburg, tracks fouls during games, occasionally interjecting a "C'mon, Megan/Molly/Moriah" cheer. Jim Frazee, muttering sporadic advice, snaps photos with a digital camera. Zeb, a junior, slumps in his seat, enjoying Tetris on his cellphone with a constant eye toward the court.

The family insists the mass relocation is no big deal. "We wanted to be able to watch some games," Tammy Frazee said.

The triplets stress their college choice came down to two factors: family and religion.

"We wanted to stay together and we wanted to play for a Christian university," Megan said.

As pleased as the triplets are with their college selection, they insist they could just as easily have ended up at their second choice, Cedarville University, a Baptist college near Xenia with an NAIA Division II team. But they wanted to stretch out of their comfort zone.

All three triplets -- Megan and Moriah are 6-foot-3, a half-inch taller than Molly -- were recruited, but Megan attracted the most interest. She was the Associated Press Region Player of the Year and a Street & Smith All-American honorable mention selection in high school.

In less than a full season on the court -- she tore a knee ligament 14 games into last season -- Megan is proving her talents.

She is averaging 16.7 points and 7.5 rebounds for the Flames (12-8, 4-1 Big South). She's a mismatch for most opponents, and Virginia found out in December why she was the Big South's Preseason Player of the Year. She tore up the Cavaliers with 37 points in a game in Charlottesville and is already mentioned as a top prospect in two years in the WNBA draft.

Asked if she could remember any player causing so much havoc, UVa senior guard Siedah Williams said:"The only time I can remember it was against Duke with [All-American] Alana Beard. ... We tried to do a variety of things like switching and denying her the ball. Nothing seemed to work."

Moriah and Molly aren't exactly benchwarmers. Moriah, who has started every game this season, leads the team in blocks (14) and averages 8 points. Molly averages 7.5 points.

That's why Liberty coach Carey Green considered it a "no-brainer" when he signed the triplets, whom he saw for the first time when they were 15-year-olds playing in an AAU tournament in Virginia Beach.

The Frazees assimilate well with the rest of the Flames, said teammate Rachel Hammond, who played against them as a rising high school senior. Back then, she recalled the triplets as "all huge and looking alike," but today she said they're easy to tell apart.

"They move different and have different gestures," said Hammond, who rooms with Megan. "Plus Molly holds herself very upright. She has this perfect posture. Moriah and Megan are a bit more relaxed."

As youngsters, Megan was the most athletic.

"Molly and Moriah wanted Barbie; she wanted a Ken doll," Tammy said. "For her second Christmas, Megan wanted a basketball. The other two wanted a doll buggy."

Megan cherished that ball and quickly began dribbling it on the tile floor in the kitchen. Before long, Molly and Moriah had ditched the dolls and were following their dad to the gym, shooting baskets at the side as he coached. Jim Frazee, who played at Indiana's Hanover College, became his daughters' primary instructor.

"We put up a five-gallon bucket against a backboard made of plywood at the end of our metal garage for Zeb," he said. "The girls used it, too."

They got exposure through an AAU team, also coached by Jim, rather than through the small Christian league in which they spent most of their high school years. Teammates since fifth grade, the Frazees were homeschooled from eighth to 11th grade, which only added to their bond. Rather than have their parents teach them lessons, the learning came by way of videos sent through the mail.

"We'd start at 8 o'clock in the morning and usually be done by noon," said Molly. "We'd be done with homework around 1 and then usually play basketball."

But they all agree, basketball does not define their life in the way it does many college athletes.

"That's just not who we are," Molly said. Hardly a sentence is spoken from any of them with a reference to Jesus sprinkled in. Megan is the most overt about her faith, even choosing her No. 40 jersey because of its Biblical significance.

"It's symbolic for a couple of reasons," Megan said. "The great flood lasted 40 days. Jesus was in the wilderness for 40 days. It's a small thing but neat that I can do something on the court to relate back to the Bible."

Megan said they came to accept Jesus as their savior at age 5, and Moriah added, "Even our birth was a miracle."

The triplets weighed in just after midnight at about 3 pounds apiece on March 29, 1987. Molly and Moriah were in the same birth sac with no dividing wall, their umbilical cords knotted. If Tammy hadn't gone into labor five weeks early, they likely would have died.

Ask any one of them a personal question and the answer frequently begins with "We."

"We like Contemporary Christian," answered Megan, when asked about her musical taste.

"We like to swim," responded Moriah, when she's asked about her hobbies.

They respond almost simultaneously when asked what most people ask upon meeting them.

"How does it feel to be triplets?"

And their answer? Just fine, thank you.

Sometimes they've been competitive for grades -- Molly and Moriah are nursing majors; Megan is into physical education -- but on the court, they've never felt threatened by each other.

"We're enjoying this," Megan said. "We're pretty much around each other all the time."

Not even a boyfriend has gotten in the way. No triplet has had one, if you don't count the triplet boys they babysat as high school teens.

"They're 5 now," Molly laughed.
http://www.roanoke.com/sports/college/wb/102743
By Chris Lang
Registration Days Posts
#57673
They're both owned by the same chain -- Landmark -- thus the story sharing.
By Jasmen8182
Registration Days Posts
#57801
There was an article in our Sun. paper also (Jan. twenty-eight).I'll try to post it- there were simiarities with the other articles (like the mention that they were home-schooled). I thought the info. abt. their birth was interesting- our paper didn't incl. some of the more personal stuff.
Last edited by Jasmen8182 on February 3rd, 2007, 12:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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By bigsmooth
Registration Days Posts
#57815
does it matter who got the article first?? in any regard, a very good read!
By Jasmen8182
Registration Days Posts
#57833
I think you completely misunderstand where I'm coming from. I was excited to see the article my husband saved to show me b/c my alma mater is mentioned up here in CT. Besides, as I stated, the articles are written differently.
By Jasmen8182
Registration Days Posts
#57843
Thought it would be a good chance for me to learn how to add what I've scanned-maybe some other time; becoming more computer savy is an investment in time (and resources...).[/quote]
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By bigsmooth
Registration Days Posts
#58251
jasmen i was talking about atrain not you :D
By ATrain
Registration Days Posts
#58261
I don't actually care who had it first...I was just pointing something out for the sake of pointing something out (aka increasing my post count). Now, if you go to the CAAZone and look in their women's basketball thread, Al will tell you that the article was on the front page of the Virginia-Pilot Sports Section while his beloved Lady Monarchs ended up on page 3.
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By Sly Fox
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#165489
From Baptist Press sports ....
Frazee crazy: Triplets lead Lady Flames back to NCAA tourney

Wednesday, Mar 19, 2008
By Joshua Cooley


Image

LYNCHBURG, Va. (BP)--They don't possess telepathy. They don't finish each other's sentences. And when one of them gets hurt, the other two don't mystically share the pain.

No, there is nothing particularly unusual about triplets Megan, Molly and Moriah Frazee -- that is, except their shared basketball skills. The Frazees, juniors at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., are thought to be the only triplets who all play hoops at the NCAA Division I level.
Click Here for Full Story
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By jcmanson
Registration Days Posts
#165492
Would be nice to have all 3 of them in an NCAA tournament game, ehh hopefully next year.
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By bozlady
Registration Days Posts
#165671
Megan is listed in this week's SI as the top "brainiac" in Women's Hoops and there's a small blurb about the triplets on the same page. . . . .gotta love these girls!!!
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By Sly Fox
Registration Days Posts
#165955
The Tidewater fishwrap did their own "original" story in advance of their squad losing to them tomorrow night ... :D
Liberty triplets: Three of a kind, but each their own
Liberty's Frazee triplets -- Megan, Molly and Moriah -- chose to stay together. But they want you to know they're three individuals.

Dave Johnson | 247-4649
10:04 PM EDT, March 21, 2008


They had been virtually inseparable for 18 years, from sharing the same bedroom to playing on the same teams. And now, as it was time to pick a college, they could stay together. Or they could go out on their own and finally be recognized as individuals.

They thought about it. They thought about it a lot.

In the end, the Frazee triplets -- Megan, Molly and Moriah -- chose to stay together. And, together, they led Liberty University to its 11th trip to the NCAA tournament in 12 years and a first-round challenge Sunday night against Old Dominion.
Click Here for Full Story
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