Wednesday, December 3, 2014 7:00 p.m.
Gentile Arena, Chicago
Since Loyola played Tulane a year ago, losing 65-59 in N’awlins after giving up a 19-point lead early in the second half, the Green Wave finished 17-17 (good enough for the CBI Tournament) and joined the American Athletic Conference. As the newest member of the conference cobbled together from the football schools of the old Big East and some better basketball schools of C-USA, Tulane was picked to finish last. The Wave was obliterated in their home opener against Wake Forest, but is 5-0 since—all at home—including Sunday’s 73-68 win over Tennessee Tech.
The Green Wave returns four starters and its top six scorers from last season, including guards Louis Dabney (a 6’3”, 210 pound junior) and Jonathan Stark (a quick 6’0” sophomore point) who combined for 50 of Tulane’s 65 points last year against the Ramblers. The rest of the starters are filled out by 6’4” senior guard Jay Hook, 6’6” senior forward Tre Drey, and 6’11” sophomore center Ryan Smith.
Fifth year head coach Ed Conroy runs a guard-intensive team that relies on sharing scoring, defense and rebounding, and the presence of Smith and fellow centers 6’9” Dylan Ostkowski and 6’10” Aaron Liberman mostly serve as a deterrent to keep other teams honest. The trio of big centers had not provided much offense prior to their last game against Tennessee Tech, when Smith was much more active (10 points and 4 rebounds in 15 minutes). Sophomore forward Peyton Henson (7 rebounds off the bench against Loyola last year, 8 points and 5 rebounds against Tennessee Tech Sunday) and Ostkowski also have potential for a big game. Drey leads the Green Wave in rebounding at 4.7 per game, but the trio of starting guards average 9.8 boards per game among them.
In Tulane’s game against Tennessee Tech on Sunday, Stark was impressive at the point (14 points, 7 assists, 3 steals). Dabney, the team’s leading scorer, did not start—maybe he was being sent a message (took a lot of contested shots rather than passing). Tulane trailed by one with 3:46 left, but pulled away for the win behind some big late plays by 6’7” sophomore forward Cameron Reynolds (a steal, a crucial rebound, and four points).
Tulane’s young big men make their baskets when they take them, but aren’t very good defensively. Tennessee Tech made a whole lot of their scoring from 8-foot jumpers to the left and right of the lane, which seems to be a prescription for a big scoring game from Milton Doyle. The Green Wave’s big guys are also prone to bite on dribble penetration, leaving the basket open for passes to cutters—something Christian Thomas has been doing for a lot of his scoring this year. Stark will be a handful to defend, but the other guards tend to force shots even under decent coverage.
Loyola should be favored in this game, but has to watch letting down their energy as they appeared to do at times in the second half at Kent State.
Loyola game notes:
http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/loy ... 202aaa.pdfTulane game notes:
http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/tul ... 202aaa.pdfStreaming video:
http://www.loyolaramblers.com/collegesp ... dia=472476Vegas line: Loyola by 7.5