Men’s basketball: Anteaters NIT bound
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
Though it could not dodge what Coach Pat Douglass termed “a
mid-major monkey on our backs,” the UC Irvine men’s basketball team will
be back on the court after receiving a bid Sunday to the National
Invitation Tournament.
The Anteaters (21-10), whose bid for the program’s first NCAA
Tournament berth vanished in a 66-61 Big West semifinal upset by UC Santa
Barbara Friday night, will meet BYU (17-11) Thursday at the Marriott
Center in Provo, Utah. Tipoff is 6 p.m. (PST).
“We are excited to have the chance for postseason play,” Douglass said
Sunday, after learning he would face a Cougar squad guided by former UCI
player Steve Cleveland (1974-76), with whom Douglass is already
acquainted.
“Steve Cleveland is a friend of mine from when he was the coach at
Fresno City College and I was at Cal State Bakersfield,” Douglass said.
The Anteaters are no strangers to the NIT, where they were defeated in
last year’s first round at eventual champion Tulsa, 75-71.
That loss, which followed another semifinal setback in the Big West
Tournament, ended a 25-5 campaign that stands as the winningest in school
history.
This year, the Anteaters earned a share of their second straight Big
West regular-season crown, en route to the program’s first back-to-back
20-win seasons.
Douglass wondered aloud after a 72-65 first-round tournament win over
Long Beach State Thursday, whether being forced to win three games in a
week to earn the mid-major conference’s lone ticket to the Big Dance,
didn’t wrongly minimize four months of work that included so much
success.
UCI, which went 1-1 in NIT appearances in 1982 and ‘86, the latter
including a first-round win at UCLA, will now try to maximize its second
chance against a BYU squad coming off a disappointing Mountain West
Conference tournament showing.
The Cougers, who won the Mountain West Tournament title last year,
were felled, 62-51, by surprising tournament champion San Diego State in
Thursday’s first round at the Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas.
It was BYU’s first first-round exit since 1998 and extended their
losing streak to three games. Cleveland’s Cougers, however, are 15-0 at
home this season, including wins over Big West foes Idaho, Cal State
Northridge, as well as NCAA-bound Creighton, San Diego State, Wyoming and
Utah.
The Cougers, who defeated then No. 13-ranked Stanford, 81-76, in a
Dec. 22 game in Las Vegas, are led by 6-foot-6 junior guard Travis
Hansen, a second-team All-Mountain West selection averaging 15.4 points
and 6.4 rebounds.
Matt Montague, a 6-0 point guard, finished the regular season ranked
sixth nationally in assists, averaging 7.3 per contest.
Sophomore Mark Bigelow (14.8 ppg), 6-9 senior forward Eric Nielsen
(10.4 ppg) and 6-9 center Jared Jensen (9.3 ppg), who shared Mountain
West Freshman of the Year honors, are also starters.
The Anteaters are led by senior guard Jerry Green, a two-time Big West
Conference Player of the Year, who is the program’s all-time leading
scorer with 1,981 points.
Green has hit 12 game-winning shots during his brilliant four-year
career, including a buzzer-beating 12-footer on his last trip to Utah to
key a 67-66 conference win at Utah State to end the Aggies 19-game home
winning streak Jan. 10 in Logan.
Green made the All-Big West Tournament team after scoring 40 points
and collecting 12 assists in two games.
Other Anteater standouts include 6-5 junior forward Jordan Harris, who
is averaging 12.4 points and 6.9 rebounds, and 7-foot sophomore center
Adam Parada.
Parada, averaging 12.4 points and a team-leading 7.0 rebounds, had an
outstanding Big West Tournament. After amassing 17 points and 12 rebounds
against Long Beach State, he produced 18 points and seven rebounds
against UCSB at the Anaheim Convention Center.
The Anteaters enter the postseason after an inconsistent finish. They
were 4-4 in their last eight games.
“Obviously we wanted to win our league tournament, but that didn’t
happen, so we are just happy to continue playing.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.