Saturday, January 9, 2016, 3:00 p.m.
Gentile Arena, Chicago, Ill.
The Bears have arguably played the third toughest schedule in the MVC. Their four D1 wins on the season have come against mostly good programs: Oklahoma State (in Stillwater), IUPUI, Oral Roberts, and Northern Iowa. The Bears have lost to Butler, Minnesota, Valpo, Tulsa, Mississippi State, Oral Roberts (on the road), and Utah State. The only really bad loss they’ve had was at home to S.E. Missouri State (the “other” State’s only win on the season). Despite point guard Dorian Williams’ second game out with a hamstring, the Bears upset Northern Iowa Wednesday night in Springfield, 59-58. Two other returning players missing because of injury are junior center Tyler McCullough and junior guard Austin Ruder.
Paul Lusk’s patched-together team currently has three guards and two forwards as starters. They each play heavy minutes and don’t get much scoring help or minutes from their short bench. Though not impressively tall, this year’s MSU team has an improved frontcourt with wide 6’6” senior forward Camyn Boone and long 6’7” freshman forward Obediah Church. Boone has upped his scoring and rebounding, leading the team with 12.2 points and 6.6 rebounds per game. Boone scored 27 against Oral Roberts and had a double-double of 24 and 10 in MSU’s win over IUPUI. Church, a true freshman from the Springfield in Illinois, has been a revelation for the Bears—he averages 6.7 points, 5.8 rebounds, and nearly 1.7 blocks per game. Church shoots 62.7% from the field, leads the team in offensive rebounds, is judicious with fouls, a good interior passer, and takes care of the ball well.
The MSU backcourt is led by 5’10” junior newcomer Dequon Miller, who puts up a lot of shots to get his 11.8 points per game. Miller leads the team in field goal attempts, three point attempts, free throw attempts, and turnovers. Six-five sophomore guard Chris Kendrix shoots for a lot more accuracy than Miller, and averages 10.8 points and 4.3 rebounds. Dorian Williams, a 6’3” senior point guard, is the usual starter and averages 7.4 points, 4.7 rebounds, and 4.4 assists per game; if he’s still out because of the hamstring 6’2” freshman Jarred Dixon will take his spot.
Coming off the bench are 6’4” freshman guard Ryan Kreklow, 6’6” senior forward Loomis Gerring, and 6’8” juco newcomer Jordan Martin. Kreklow averages 6.2 ppg in 19.3 minutes; he can shoot the three, has good hands, and plays good defense.
Without the services of Austin Ruder, the Bears are one of the worst three point shooting teams in college basketball—342nd among 351 teams in three point percentage (.281), and 327th in threes made. They also allow the opposition a high percentage on shots from distance, 39.3%. Yet in their last game, they beat UNI (despite the Panthers’ 45.3% three point shooting) with great interior defense, controlling the pace, and keeping UNI off the free throw line (only nine fouls committed in the game, resulting in only four UNI free throw attempts).
Teams with a good inside/out scoring combination, teams who attack the basket and get to the free throw line, and teams that play at a pace of 70 or more points per game usually end up on the winning side against the Bears.
Loyola game notes:
http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/loy ... 108aaa.pdfMissouri State game notes:
http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/loy ... a_mosu.pdfTV/Streaming video: ESPN3 (
http://espn.go.com/watchespn/index/_/id ... basketball)
Vegas odds: Loyola by 5.5