Saturday, January 25, 2014, 3:00 p.m.
Gentile Arena, Chicago
Loyola plays Northern Iowa for the first time since 2007, and stands at 1-5 in previous meetings. The only Loyola victory in the series that goes back to 1994 came on December 16, 2006, when the Ramblers won 76-67 at the Gentile Center. I was sitting in the back row of the student section for that game, and a familiar looking guy and his wife sat down next to me. It was then-UNI Athletic Director and NCAA referee Rick Hartzell, and we talked for a while about the players, the teams and other issues (he kept commenting on how much he really liked Blake Schilb, and especially Leon Young).
It’s not a coincidence that the sole Loyola victory in six tries came at the Gentile Center—the Panthers are traditionally an excellent home team. When they’re having a mediocre season, they usually struggle mightily on the road. This year is a particularly extreme example—they’re currently 7-0 at home, 2-2 at neutral sites, and 1-7 on opponents’ courts. The dichotomy of their play at home and away is rather stark. They’ve defeated higher-quality, above .500 teams like VCU, Iona, and Missouri State at home, but lost to below-.500 teams like Southern Illinois and George Mason on the road. To illustrate the difference in their home and road performance, the Panthers beat Bradley at home by 34 points on January 1, and lost their game at Bradley on Wednesday by four. Their one road win on the year, however, was a spectacular 27-point blowout at Evansville to start the conference season.
The Panthers are led in scoring and rebounding by MVC preseason first teamer, Seth Tuttle, a 6’8” junior forward. His 7.9 rebounds per game leads the MVC and ranks in the top 100 in the nation, and his 14.2 ppg ranks 8th in the league. Tuttle does a little bit of everything for the Panthers, leading the team in blocks and free throw attempts, ranking second in steals, third in assists, and setting a whole lot of screens with his 232 pounds. Another junior forward, 6’9” Nate Buss, mostly comes off the bench but averages 11.0 points and 4.8 boards in 20+ minutes per game, and often steps out to shoot threes at a 44% clip.
In the backcourt is 6’1” sophomore guard Wes Washpun, who averages 8.9 points, 3.9 rebounds, and 3.8 assists per game. Deon Mitchell, a 6’1 junior guard is second on the team in points at 12.1, and also dishes out 3.5 assists per contest. UNI has two prolific three point shooters in 6’4” guard Matt Bohannon and 6’6” forward Chip Rank, who have taken a combined 207 three point attempts on the season, although they each connect on less than 33% of them. As a team, UNI leads the league in made threes and takes the second most three point attempts per game (23.3). Five different players (Bohannon, Rank, Buss, Mitchell, and 6’5” freshman guard Jeremy Morgan) have already attempted 50 or more threes on the season.
Ball screens. Lots of threes, Cuts to the basket. Making the freebies when they get to the line (UNI leads the league in free throw percentage). Big bodies establishing position on defense. Solid coaching from veteran Ben Jacobsen (8th season in the top job, 13 continuous years at UNI) who knows, recruits for, and drills his system. That’s the UNI game in a nutshell.
Opening Vegas Line: UNI by 6
Loyola Game Notes:
http://www.loyolaramblers.com/sports/m- ... 14aaa.html UNI Game Notes:
http://www.unipanthers.com/ViewArticle. ... =209384209 TV: Comcast SportsNet Chicago
Streaming Video (ESPN3):
http://espn.go.com/watchespn/index/_/id ... la-ChicagoLoyola Audio:
http://client.stretchinternet.com/client/luc.portal#