Anteaters driven to bounce back
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
First came history, then hubris. But it was humility that haunted the
UC Irvine men’s basketball program this past off-season, after an
11-17 campaign in which the Anteaters failed to qualify for the
eight-team Big West Conference tournament.
Nothing like dropping 11 of your last 13, including a seven-game
conference losing streak, to kill the buzz created by an
unprecedented three straight 20-win seasons in which UCI won two Big
West regular-season titles.
“We just didn’t get it done in so many areas,” UCI Coach Pat
Douglass said of the harrowing 2003-04 season. “The coach didn’t have
a good year coaching and a couple of players we counted on didn’t
have the type of year we would have liked. We had more deficiencies
than we realized. The makeup of our roster just didn’t fit.”
Graduation, defections and one dismissal pared nine players from
the program, leaving seven new faces on this year’s 11-man roster.
Change has also been embraced by Douglass, who, in his eighth
season, has vowed to sweat every detail in order to restore his
program to the level it had attained prior to last year’s struggles.
“I think I’m more enthused, more directed and I’ve had more
preparation for the season than I’ve probably had in a long time,”
Douglass said.
Douglass’ commitment to a more hands-on approach has already
surfaced in the team’s two exhibition victories. Before both games,
the former NCAA Division II Coach of the Decade (he guided Cal State
Bakersfield to three NCAA Division II national titles) supervised
pregame warmups from the baseline.
Also bent on redemption are returning starters Jeff Gloger, Ross
Schraeder and Greg Ethington, all of whom Douglass praised for their
leadership thus far.
“I think those guys were [ticked] off we didn’t make the league
tournament last year,” Douglass said. “They came to Irvine to be in
the league tournament, to try to compete for a [conference] title,
and to get into the NCAAs. They didn’t come to Irvine just to be
basketball players, which is a little different mind-set than we used
to have. I think this team wants to be good, more so than any team
I’ve had in a long time.”
Toward that end, Douglass will count on Ethington, a 6-foot-8,
250-pound senior who will turn 24 in January, Schraeder, a 6-5
sharp-shooting junior wing, and Gloger, a 6-4 junior who shifts from
point guard to the wing, to consistently produce.
“I think Greg is ready to break out this year,” Douglass said of
Ethington, who started eight games and averaged 6.5 points and 3.2
rebounds as a junior. He is the lone senior on this year’s roster.
Schraeder averaged 7.9 points, but 19.5 the last four games, and
led the team with 49 three-pointers. He started 13 games and the son
of a former high school coach has been the most vocal leader thus
far, Douglass said.
“At the end of last year, when we lost [Mike] Efevberha [suspended
and subsequently dismissed after being convicted of petty theft] Ross
knew he had to produce. As long as he is aggressive, he’s a scorer.
But when he’s not being aggressive, he’s just a shooter.”
Gloger, who started 26 games as a sophomore, should be an even
greater stat-stuffer, after being relieved of some of his
ball-handling chores by the arrival of new point guard Aaron
Fitzgerald. Gloger averaged 9.1 points, 6.3 rebounds, 4.2 assists and
2.1 steals last season. His 135 career steals rank No. 2 in school
annals, only 27 behind Jerry Green, who built his total in twice as
many games.
“With Jeff on the wing, now, and with the other perimeter players
we’ve added to our roster, we’re looking to fast break a little more
this year,” Douglass said.
Fitzgerald, a 6-2 junior transfer from Jacksonville Community
College in Texas, after stops at Portland State and Washington State,
has averaged five points and seven assists in two exhibition games.
“He sees the game very well and he’s very good in the spread
court,” Douglass said of Fitzgerald. “He can penetrate, shoot the
three and he plays with a lot of energy. I think he’s going to be one
of the top newcomers in our conference.”
The fifth starter for Friday’s regular-season opener against
visiting Cal State Dominguez Hills may be 6-8 freshman Darren Fells,
who has already impressed Douglass with his size and athleticism. He
was not only an All-CIF Southern Section performer in basketball last
year, but was an All-CIF tight end in football.
“He has really quick hands and feet and will be one of the top
freshmen in our conference,” Douglass said.
Fells started the second exhibition game, a 67-41 win over Cal
State Los Angeles, and has averaged 12 points, 6.5 rebounds and just
more than 20 minutes in two exhibitions.
Other newcomers include 6-2 junior guard Shamar Armstrong, a
transfer from Diablo Valley Community College, and frontline
contributors Adam Metelski, a 6-10 junior, and Andrew Bruckner, a 6-9
sophomore.
Armstrong, who averaged 12.8 points and hit 56 three-pointers at
Diablo Valley last season, has averaged 9.5 points in the exhibition
season.
Metelski, a native of Poland who played at Grayson County
Community College in Texas last season, as well as Bruckner, who
played one season at College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, provide
size and strength up front.
“Like other European players, [Metelski] sees the game well and
can pass the ball,” Douglass said. “He’s strong inside, but sometimes
he prefers to spot up and shoot the ball.”
Bruckner, a muscular 260-pounder with limited offensive skills,
will be counted upon to defend and rebound, Douglass said.
Bruckner and Metelski are being asked to help offset the loss of
7-0 Adam Parada, now with the ABA’s Utah Snowbears, and 6-11
Stanislav Zuzak, both of whom have graduated.
Another “new” face is 6-6 redshirt freshman Patrick Sanders, an
Orange High product whom Douglass considers a bit of a wild card.
“I think Patrick probably has the most potential of any player in
our program and that’s a pretty big statement,” Douglass said. “But
then he could also be the 11th man on an 11-man team. Passing,
shooting and jumping, he’s very skilled an very athletic. He’s still
young and I’m hoping his mind matures as much as his body.”
Nic Campbell, a 6-6 sophomore who averaged two points in 22 games
last season, and 6-4 freshman Davis Baker, an All-CIF performer at
Capistrano Valley High last season, will add depth on the perimeter.
Douglass supports the consensus that recognizes defending Big West
tournament champion Utah State and regular-season champion University
of the Pacific as conference title favorites.
“With seven new faces, it’s tough to say,” Douglass said of his
team’s Big West hopes. “We are building for part of the year, but,
hopefully by league play, we’ve built something.”
The Anteaters were picked to finish seventh in the conference in
preseason polls by the media and coaches.
UCI opens conference play Dec. 28 at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo,
after a preseason that includes games at USC (Monday) and UCLA (Nov.
27).
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.