HUNTSVILLE — Monday afternoon at Johnson Coliseum, the Bearkats began preparing for their first-round NCAA tournament matchup with 19th-ranked Baylor.
Sam Houston State (25-7) literally has a steep hill to climb if it wants to upset the third-seeded Bears (25-7) on Thursday in New Orleans. Baylor has a 7-foot center (Josh Lomers) and a pair of 6-10 forwards (Ekpe Udoh and Anthony Jones) who have played in all 32 games this season.
With no one on the active roster listed taller than 6-8, the 14th-seeded Bearkats are working on finding a way to counter the Bears’ size advantage.
“Our game plan is going to be to stretch them out,” senior forward Preston Brown said. “They may be bigger than us, but we have some guys that can dribble the ball and get around them a little bit. We are just trying to stretch them out. We have good 3-point shooters and three or four of us can knock down those shots.”
The good news for the Bearkats is that Baylor’s size isn’t anything they haven’t seen this season. Sam Houston had two nonconference games against Kentucky and Louisiana-Lafayette, teams which had plenty of players who have to bend down just to make it through the door.
Against the Wildcats on Nov. 19, the Bearkats struggled inside, getting outscored 48-18 in the paint. All-SLC forward Gilberto Clavell finished with 14 points, but was just 3 of 12 from the floor. Kentucky forwards Demarcus Cousins and Patrick Patterson combined to score 47 points.
But Sam Houston was able to hang with one of the top teams in the country because of its outside shooting. Senior Corey Allmond drilled a Rupp Arena-record 11 3-pointers as the Kats hit 18 treys in a 102-92 loss to the Wildcats.
“It’s going to be a lot like playing Kentucky with (Baylor’s) length,” SHSU head coach Bob Marlin said. “Hopefully we will be able to shoot the ball like we did at Kentucky and make some shots. We are going to need to do that and get defensive rebounds. We have to keep those long guys off the offensive glass.”
Udoh is Baylor’s most dangerous post player. He is averaging 13.9 points and 9.8 rebounds per game. The junior transfer from Michigan has also blocked 124 shots.
Lomers and Jones both average more than six points a game and combine to grab eight boards.
The Bearkats will need not only Clavell and Brown to play well, but forwards Antuan Bootle, Arthur Zulu and Marco Cooper must continue to contribute solid minutes off the bench.
“We aren’t going to be surprised by their height and their length because we have been up against it this season,” Brown added.
“It is just a matter of what we are going to do against it. We know that we need to knock down shots, because when we played Kentucky it was hard to get easy shots inside because of their height.”
The Bears have more than just a strong inside presence. They also have two talented guards, both of whom are from Louisiana.
LaceDarius Dunn (6-4 junior) is averaging a team-high 19.4 points and Tweety Carter (5-11 senior) has been just as good, chipping in 15.7.
The Bearkats counter with Allmond (15.9 points) and senior point guard Ashton Mitchell (12.7). Sophomore Drae Murray and junior Lance Pevehouse have been valuable this season as well.
Junior Josten Crow rotates between playing guard and forward and is averaging 8.1 points per game, but his defense has been huge.
As one of the top defenders in the SLC, Crow completely shut down Stephen F. Austin’s leading scorer, Eddie Williams, in SHSU’s 64-48 victory in the championship game of the Southland tournament Saturday.
“We know they have a great team and a lot of athletic players,” Crow said. “They are good. We know they beat Texas the last three times they played them.
“We are just going to have to slow them down as much as we can with the guys we got. We have to get it done.”
SHSU Sports
Playing among trees
Bearkats hope outside shooting counters Baylor’s height advantage
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Time to crank it up
Sam Houston State head coach Willie Fritz knew coming into the season that he was going to have his hands full turning around the Bearkats’ football program.
The rest of the coaches in the Southland Conference apparently agree.
Coming off a 5-6 season, a fifth-place finish in league play and the loss of 15 starters, Sam Houston State has been tabbed to finish seventh in the SLC preseason coaches’ poll, which was announced Wednesday during the Southland Conference Football Media Day at the L’Auberge du Lac Resort. -
Pitching dominates Triple-A All-Star Game
Like the Major League All-Star Game on Tuesday night in Anaheim, Calif., pitchers dominated the Triple-A All-Star Game on Wednesday in Allentown, Pa.
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Almost there
After years of toiling in the minor leagues, Dustin Martin can see the light at the end of the tunnel.
Rising through the ranks of the minor league system all the way from Rookie League, the former Sam Houston outfielder is playing some of his best baseball these days and will play in Wednesday’s Triple-A All-Star Game in Allentown Pa., which will be televised at 6 p.m. on the MLB Network. -
Gallant shining again in Cape Cod League
Maybe, just maybe, on the mound closing games is where Dallas Gallant needs to be if he’s going to make a name for himself.
For the second summer in a row, the Sam Houston State pitcher has performed marvelously when he finishes games for the Hyannis Harbor Hawks, a member of the distinguished Cape Cod Baseball League. -
Bearkats enjoy banner year in classroom
With the release of grade point averages for the more than 400 Bearkats participating in varsity sports, plus the announcement by the Southland Conference office of the annual Commissioner’s Academic Honor Roll, the 2009-10 season goes in the books as another banner academic year for Sam Houston State University.
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Belcher, Vilardi golf tournaments help rival football programs
Golfers in the Huntsville area can help the football programs at both Sam Houston State and Stephen F. Austin, two longtime rivals that soon will be adding new excitement to their annual “Battle of the Piney Woods” when they kick off this fall at Reliant Stadium in Houston.
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Kelly ready for NCAA golf regional
When Sam Houston’s Scott Kelly tees off Thursday in the NCAA South Central Regional men’s golf tournament, his goal will be simple. He wants to become the first Bearkat golfer to earn a spot in the national tournament.
“As an at-large entry, it’s difficult to advance but it’s not out of the question,” Kelly said. “I’m going into the tournament with high expectations and will give it my best shot.” -
Dreaming big
His mind has been working overtime. Huntsville senior Quenntin Tucker has spent the past two weeks preparing for the Class 4A Region III track meet.
Tucker practices the discus by day, then dreams about it at night. Physically and mentally, he’s ready for the big meet.
“I had a dream about this,” Tucker said last week during a short break from practice. “In the dream I finished second in our region, then I finished second at state.
“I woke up that morning smiling.” -
Same old story
The Bearkats must’ve felt as if they had a little bit of déjà vu.
For the second straight Saturday, the Bearkats used a monster inning to climb out of a huge hole only to see it slip away.
This time, it was Stephen F. Austin, which rallied for five runs in the final two innings and held off Sam Houston for a 14-13 win. -
UCA has Bearkat softball team on ropes
The Bearkats saw the light dim on their Southland Conference tournament aspirations Saturday afternoon.
Desperately in need of a series win to gain ground in the chase for the sixth and final seed, the Sam Houston State softball team dropped both games of a doubleheader to Central Arkansas. - More SHSU Sports Headlines
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