Archive for the ‘SDSU at UW men’s hoops’ category

UW-SDSU notes and quotes

January 10th, 2010

Some quotes from Wyoming’s 85-83 win over San Diego State that didn’t make the paper:

“It was a conversation between a coach and a player. We talked about expectations, his goals, our goals as a team. Expectations weren’t being met at different levels. Afam has a good heart and is a good kid. I think it showed a lot for him to swallow that and be ready to play.” — UW coach Heath Schroyer on the decision to bench sophomore forward and leading scorer Afam Muojeke.

“We’ll see.” — Schroyer when asked if he will continue to bring Muojeke off the bench after he scored a game and season-high 30 points.

“If we execute the game plan we can beat anybody, but we have to play lke this for 40 minutes.” — UW sophomore point guard JayDee Luster.

“We played as well as we could and handled te ball well under stress in the first half, but played about as bad as you can play in multiple stretches in the second half.” — SDSU coach Steve Fisher.

“Our thing right now to the fans and everyone is to hang in there with this group. There’s good days and there’s bad days. You’re never as good as you think you are and you’re never as bad as you think you are. These guys are goriwng up and that’s what we’ve hung our hat on all year.” — Schroyer.

It was quite the contrast in halves as UW trailed 45-31 at halftime, but outscored SDSU 54-38 in the second half.

UW-SDSU post-game thoughts

January 9th, 2010

I figured Wyoming would play better against San Diego State than it did in its 83-73 loss to Colorado State on Wednesday.

But I still thought that wouldn’t be enough to beat the Aztecs.

Imagine that, I was wrong. UW won 85-83.

Sophomore forward Afam Muojeke scores 30 points off the bench. Yes, he was benched for what coach Heath Schroyer described as “not being a good teammate” before and after the CSU game.

Sophomore point guard JayDee Luster hits the game-winning 3-point shot with six seconds to play. Kind of fitting he’s a San Diego native, isn’t it? Luster finished with 14 points, and this was the second straight game he set a career-high in points. If he continues to be a scoring threat for UW, that should open up other areas of the offense.

Arthur Bouedo had a big trey, and UW’s pressure defense finally did its job as it forced 15 SDSU turnovers in the second half. Meanwhile, UW had just two.

SDSU is 6-24 all-time at UW. The Aztecs were without leading scorer, junior forward Billy White, because of an ankle injury. The Aztecs played only eight guys big-time minutes. But I will say, true freshman Kawhi Leonard is the real deal. He finished with 25 points and 12 rebounds. Another freshman, guard Chase Tapley, had 17 points. Those guys are really good!

UW trailed by as many as 17 in the game yet won.

But as I stated in my column for Sunday’s paper, it was the effort that stood out to me. If the Cowboys show this kind of effort the rest of the way then this team will be competitive and entertaining. We’ve seen how bad it can be when it doesn’t play with great effort. It was nice to see the other side of this.

UW-San Diego State five things to watch

January 8th, 2010

1. Does UW show up?: After what happened in Wednesday’s loss to Colorado State, one has to wonder about this. It’s hard to believe a team could be that unmotivated and uninspired to play. Maybe not all the players performed that way, but many did. For UW to simply be competitive in conference play it has to have great effort from start to finish.

2. Generating some offense: The Cowboys average 75.9 points per game, but they are going up against the best defensive team in the MWC in San Diego State (55.7 ppg). The Aztecs are big and athletic, and points could be hard to come by. Efficiency on the offensive end will be critical for the Cowboys.

3. Crash the boards: UW was outrebounded 40-33 against CSU and it faces the best rebounding team in the MWC in San Diego State. The Cowboys must hold their own on the boards, and they can’t allow the Aztecs to get a lot of second-chance opportunities.

4. Big three need big games: Sophomore forward Afam Muojeke, sophomore guard A.J. Davis and junior forward Djibril Thiam are UW’s three leading scorers, but combined for just 18 points and seven rebounds against CSU. They’ve got to be more productive than that. Especially Muojeke, both offensively and defensively.

5. Post presence: UW matches up poorly with San Diego State’s size and skill inside. Sophomore center Adam Waddell was great against CSU (18 points, five rebounds) but the guy he guarded, Andy Ogide, had 22 points and six boards. Waddell needs to continue to play well and play better defensively (so does the entire team). 7-2 center Boubacar Sylla needs to play MUCH better and Thiam and freshman Amath M’Baye must hold their own so the Aztecs don’t run rough shod over the Cowboys down low.

The weather looks to be much better Saturday so live blogging is back on for the game. Join me at about 3:30 p.m.