Upcoming Games (times Pacific)
Thursday, March 3 - Reese Court (5,000) - Cheney, Wash. - 6:05 p.m. - Eastern Washington (10-6 Big Sky/16-12) vs. Idaho State (10-6/15-13)
Saturday, March 5 - Reese Court (5,000) - Cheney, Wash. - 2:05 p.m. - Eastern Washington vs. Weber State (14-2/22-7 - at Idaho 3/3)
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Coverage
Radio: Eastern games may be heard on
700-AM ESPN in Spokane. Larry Weir returns for his 23rd season calling the play-by-play, starting 30 minutes prior to tipoff.
Internet Radio: www.700espn.com or
www.tunein.com.
Radio iPhone App: Search for "Spokane Radio" and download app. An app is also available for tunein radio.
Live Stats: ewustats.com for EWU home games.
EWU Coaches Show: The shows, featuring head coach
Jim Hayford & host Larry Weir, continue Mondays until at least Feb. 29 live at 6 p.m. Pacific time from the Swinging Doors Restaurant in North Spokane (W. 1018 Francis). Fans may attend the one-hour shows live, or listen on 700-AM ESPN and via the web at
www.700espn.com.
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The Eagles slept fine last week, knowing the home court advantage awaits.
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The Eastern Washington University men's basketball team closes out the 2015-16 regular season this week when EWU hosts Idaho State and Weber State at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. The game versus the Bengals takes place Thursday (March 3) at 6:05 p.m. Pacific time, with both teams currently in a four-way tie for third in the Big Sky Conference standings at 10-6.
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Weber State comes to town Saturday (March 5) afternoon for a 2:05 p.m. game as seniors
Venky Jois, Austin McBroom and
Kyle Reid will be honored. Jois enters the week needing only eight points to tie and nine to break the school's career scoring record of 1,741.
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Fans can listen to both games on 700-AM ESPN and via the web at
www.700espn.com. All EWU home games and conference road games are broadcast on
www.watchbigsky.com.
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Although Eastern has lost its last two games – both on the road – Eastern head coach
Jim Hayford says his team is in a good place heading back to Reese Court. The Eagles are 10-0 at home this season, and have out-scored opponents by an average score of 96-72.
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 "We're in a great spot and we haven't lost at home all season," said Hayford after his team lost 66-62 last Saturday (Feb. 27) to fall into the tie for third with Idaho, North Dakota and Idaho State. "We woke up in a playoff position and we are going to bed in a playoff position. We worked hard all year. This game didn't hurt us as much as it would have hurt Idaho. But they did what they had to do, and if we defend our home court, we will be where we want to be headed to Reno."
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There are still six key games remaining this week among the top six teams in the league standings that will determine seeding for the Big Sky Conference Tournament, which takes place March 8-12 in Reno, Nevada, and includes all 12 league teams. The top four seeds receive first-round byes, otherwise, the other eight teams will play on the first day of the tournament and need to win four games in five days to win the league title and the NCAA berth that goes with it.
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These are the only meetings this season for Eastern against both ISU and WSU. The Eagles are now 16-12 overall, while Idaho State is 15-13. The Wildcats are 14-2 in the league and 22-7 overall, and are coming off a 60-54 home win over Montana to take over first in the standings. Weber State, which plays at Idaho Thursday before coming to Cheney, has played the last two games without double-double machine Joel Bolomboy (knee).
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Last year when they went on this same road trip, the Bengals and Wildcats were both swept by the Eagles and Vandals. Not including head-to-head meetings, EWU and UI are a collective 23-5 in the league at home in the last two seasons since the Vandals re-joined the Big Sky. Eastern is 12-2 and Idaho is 11-3, and no team has gone 2-0 when traveling to Cheney/Moscow.
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Eastern is the defending Big Sky Conference Tournament champion, and has 42 victories the last two seasons. Those are already the most in back-to-back seasons in the school's 33 seasons as a member of NCAA Division I.
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"Our team has worked hard to defend our home court, and are undefeated at home," added Hayford. "If we want to keep our playoff position and stay unbeaten at home, everything will be just fine. We'll put all our energy into that direction. Several of our players told me they will shoot better than they did against Idaho, and I said, 'I know you will."
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Link to Fact BookÂ
The complete version of the 2015-16 EWU men's basketball fact book may be found at:
http://goeags.com/sports/2016/1/7/MBB_Other%20Links-Archive.aspxÂ
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More Eagle Basketball LinksÂ
Eastern Basketball --
http://goeags.com/index.aspx?path=mbballLink to Ticket Information -- http://goeags.com/sports/2015/12/19/genticketinfo.aspxSpokesman-Review EWU Basketball Page --
http://www.spokesman.com/ewuhoopsStory on Eagle Head Coach
Jim Hayford --
http://www.inlander.com/spokane/the-man-in-the-red-blazer/Content?oid=2603878Story on Mid-Season Top 5 Australians (Jois & Von Hofe included):
http://pickandroll.com.au/ncaa-men-simmons-headlines-mid-season-top-5-aussies/Eagle Radio Podcasts:
https://soundcloud.com/ewuathletics-1/tracksBig Sky Conference Basketball:
http://www.bigskyconf.com/index.aspx?tab=basketball&path=mbballNCAA Basketball --
http://www.ncaa.com/sports/m-baskbl/ncaa-m-baskbl-body.htmlESPN College Scoreboard --
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/scoreboardTyler Harvey NBA D-League Page --
http://dleague.nba.com/player/tyler-harvey/Tyler Harvey Video of 3-Point Barrage in D-League:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMTL11v5kkQRodney Stuckey NBA Page --
http://www.nba.com/playerfile/rodney_stuckey/index.htmlMore Information and Links are Available at:
HTTP://WWW.GOEAGS.COMÂ
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Opponent/Series NotesÂ
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* In a six-team race for the top six seeds, there are six important games which will take place this week. The first tie-breaker criteria is head-to-head, followed by record versus teams in ascending order of finish in the league standings. Here are the six games that will determine the top two seeds between Montana and Weber State, and seeds No. 3 through No. 6 for EWU, Idaho, Idaho State and North Dakota:
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Thursday, March 3 – Idaho State (10-6) at Eastern (10-6); Weber State (13-3) at Idaho (10-6); North Dakota (10-6) at Montana (13-3).
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Saturday, March 5 – Weber State at Eastern; Idaho State at Idaho; North Dakota at Montana State.
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* An Eastern sweep this week would guarantee a first-round bye for the Eagles. Eastern could finish anywhere from third to fifth with a win over Idaho State and a loss to Weber, and the opposite result would have the Eagles finish anywhere from fourth to sixth. Eastern will finish either as No. 5 or No. 6 if it loses both. If the home team wins all six games listed above, Montana will be the No. 1 seed, Weber State No. 2, Idaho No. 3, Eastern No. 4, North Dakota No. 5 and Idaho State No. 6.
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* Eastern is 42-28 all-time against ISU, and is 11-19 on the road and 27-7 at home (1-1 at neutral sites) since becoming a member of NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season. The Eagles have won 11 of the last 12 meetings, with an eight-game winning streak snapped in the 2013-14 season when the Bengals prevailed 72-83 in Pocatello. Eastern won 65-57 at home in the 2014-15 season, extending EWU's home winning streak versus ISU to 13 games dating back to a 65-63 loss on March 1, 2003. Eastern also won later in the year in Pocatello by an 85-81 score.
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* Eastern is 22-45 all-time against Weber State, including a 15-16 home record. However, Eastern is just 5-29 all-time at Weber State, but won there last season 79-71 to end the regular season. Earlier in the year, Eastern opened league play with an 84-78 win over the Wildcats to snap a seven-game losing streak against WSU. Eastern had also lost the last five meetings at Reese Court, having not defeated the Wildcats at home since a 77-69 victory on Jan. 11, 2009.
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* This year's Big Sky Conference Tournament will include all 12 teams at a neutral site, the Reno Events Center in Reno, Nevada. The first round takes place on March 8 (seeds #5-12), followed by quarterfinals (March 10), semifinals (March 11) and the championship game (March 12). Game times for the first round will be 12:05 p.m. (#8 vs. #9), 2:35 p.m. (#5 vs. #12), 5:35 p.m. (#7 vs. #10) and 8:05 p.m. (#6 vs. #11). The same game times will be used in the quarterfinals -- 12:05 p.m. (#1 vs. #8/#9 winner), 2:35 p.m. (#4 vs. #5/#12 winner), 5:35 p.m. (#2 vs. #7/#10 winner) and 8:05 p.m. (#3 vs. #6/#11 winner). The semifinals will include games at 5:35 p.m. (first two quarterfinal winners) and 8:05 p.m. (second two quarterfinal winners). The championship game is slated for 5:45 p.m.Â
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* Of EWU's first 14 games of the season, just three were at home – Nov. 15, Nov. 17 and Dec. 6. A Dec. 17 game against Morehead State would have been one of only two home games for the Eagles in a 12-game stretch from Nov. 23 to Jan. 2, but it was canceled because of weather-related travel difficulties for the Kentucky-based team. Thus, by the time the Eagles played Idaho, they had not played at home in more than a month and played 10 of 11 on the road (including its last six). Thus far, EWU is 4-0 at home and 3-8 on the road.
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* The Eagles had a 6-6 record in non-conference play, with three of those losses coming to upper echelon squads in NCAA Division I (Mississippi State, Davidson and Pittsburgh). With two of EWU's wins against lower-division teams, that gave Eastern seven opponents – mid-majors if you will –to prepare for the rigors of league play. The Eagles finished those seven games with a 4-3 record, including road wins at San Francisco and Denver. Fresh off its best season in the school's NCAA Division I history, Eastern played teams from nine different conferences in the 2015-16 non-conference portion of EWU's season.
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* Senior
Venky Jois, only the third player in the 53-year history of the Big Sky Conference to have more than 1,600 points and 900 rebounds in his career, is just eight points away from the EWU career scoring record. Now with 1,733 points as an Eagle, the school record of 1,741 was set 39 years ago by Ron Cox (1974-77). The point total for Jois is currently 13th in Big Sky history, 77 from moving into the No. 12 position (1,810).
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* Besides his scoring prowess, Jois' school-record total of 233 blocked shots are 14 from the league record of 247 (Brian Qvale, Montana, 2008-11). Jois also has 974 rebounds in his career to rank third in school history and sixth all-time in the Big Sky (37 from fifth). The only other players in league history to have more than 1,600 points and 900 rebounds are Larry Krystkowiak (Montana, 1983-86, 2,017 points, 1,105 rebounds, 3,122 total) and Steve Hayes (Idaho State, 1974-77, 1,933 points, 1,147 rebounds, 3,080 total). For total points/rebounds, Jois is fourth all-time with a current total of 2,707, only 191 from No. 3 (Bruce Collins, Weber State, 1977-80, 2,019 points, 879 rebounds, 2,898 total).
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* With 53 dunks this season to tie his own school record of 53 set as a junior, Jois is currently on pace to finish 20th in Big Sky history and fifth in school history in career field goal percentage (58.3 percent). His accuracy as a senior of 69.7 percent is on pace to set a school record (Ron Cox, 66.0 percent in 1977) and rank as the third-best in league history. Jois also ranks on EWU's leaders lists for games played (117, fifth), scoring average (14.80, 10th), rebounding average (8.3, eighth), field goals attempted (1,182, second), field goals made (689, second), free throws made (351, second) and owns school records for dunks (151) and free throws attempted (631).
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* Jois moved from fourth to second in career scoring against Montana on Jan. 23, with a first-half dunk moving him past the 1,550 points of Irv Leifer (1942-47) and in the second half he moved past the 1,564 scored by former teammate
Tyler Harvey. Jois also ranks ahead of the 1,438 of Rodney Stuckey (now with the Indiana Pacers in the NBA). Jois became the fourth player in school history to hit the 1,500-point mark in his Eagle career with 24 against Southern Utah on Jan. 14.
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Game NotesÂ
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* Coaches Shows featuring head coach
Jim Hayford and host
Larry Weir continue Mondays at 6 p.m. Pacific time at the Swinging Doors Restaurant in North Spokane (W. 1018 Francis). Fans may attend the one-hour shows live, or listen on 700-AM ESPN and via the web at
www.700espn.com. Shows will continue through at least Feb. 29, with the show on March 7 depending on team travel arrangements for the Big Sky Conference Tournament in Reno, Nevada. Shows on March 14 and March 21 are also possible and will be determined by EWU's postseason fate and availability of Hayford.
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* The Eagles and head coach
Jim Hayford have already won the most games in back-to-back seasons in the school's 33 seasons as a member of NCAA Division I. Eastern has won 42 thus far (26 last year, 16 this season), to overtake the previous mark of 35. Hayford is the winningest coach in Eastern's Division I history with 82 wins in his five years at the helm (the previous mark was 69). He is averaging 16.4 victories per season thus far – just behind the all-time record of 17.3 among Eastern coaches with at least four seasons at the helm. He would need to get to 87 wins (21 this season) to surpass that high-water mark in EWU's 108 seasons of basketball.
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* Eastern has been dominant at Reese Court, where Eastern has won all 10 games this season. The Eagles have out-scored opponents by an average score of 96-72 while out-shooting opponents 55 percent to 43 percent. The Eagles have also doubled the 3-point output of their opponents – 123-55 – while sinking 43 percent of their treys to just 35 percent for opponents. In its six league home games, Eastern has led for 223:38 out of 240 minutes (93 percent).
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* Eastern's scoring average for the season is at 83.0 points to rank 11th in NCAA Division I and lead the Big Sky Conference through games of Feb. 27. Eastern had scored 290 points in its first three games for an average of 96.7 points per game to rank fifth nationally. Last year's team set a school record with 2,820 points scored and averaged 80.6 per game to rank third in NCAA Division I. Eastern's school records for average are 90.0 overall (1972) and 84.2 as a member of D1 (2007).
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* Eastern is now 13-0 this season when it has a better field goal percentage than its opponent, and 3-12 when it has been out-shot. The Eagles are also 8-1 when allowing 71 points or fewer, and 7-1 when their opponent makes 44.9 percent or less from the field. Against Sacramento State on Feb. 18, the Eagles won for the ninth-straight time when they made at least 50 percent of their shots, finishing 31-of-58 for 53 percent with 11 3-pointers, but that streak ended the next game versus Portland State when EWU was out-shot 65 percent to 50 percent. The Eagles, ranked sixth in NCAA Division I with an accuracy rate of 49.8 percent, are now 12-3 when making at least 50 percent, and have had hit that mark in five-straight games before making only 43 percent versus Idaho on Feb. 27.
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* From Jan. 28 to Feb. 18 the Eagles had a seven-game winning streak, its best since the 2003-04 season when the Eagles won 11 in a row – all during conference play. Eastern's longest winning streak during last year's 26-9 campaign was six games. Both the 2004 and 2015 squads advanced to the NCAA Tournament. In those seven games, EWU led for 259:10 out of 280 total minutes – 93 percent -- and only trailed for 7:18 (tied for the other 13:32). Eastern's win over North Dakota was its closest of the seven games, with UND leading for 5:02 and the game tied for 2:27 in the first half. The Eagles led for 38:47 in its most recent game versus Sacramento State, 37:13 against Northern Colorado, 32:31 against UND, 33:16 at Southern Utah, 39:45 at Northern Arizona, 38:25 versus Sacramento State and 39:13 against Portland State. Versus PSU, EWU opened a double-digit lead it never relinquished at 16-4 just 3:40 into the game, and led by 20 or more for the last 26:21 of the game and 27:13 total.
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* Eastern has now led for 362:40 out of 400 minutes – 91 percent -- in its last 10 victories. In a three-game homestand in January which started the trend, EWU led 113:30 out of a total of 120 possible minutes, sank 57 percent of their shots (99-of-174) and had an average winning margin of 21.0 points per game. Eastern averaged 92 points per game while allowing an average of 71. But proving just how difficult it is to win on the road, Eastern led Montana on Jan. 23 for just 3:29 and two nights earlier led MSU for just 5:23. In a 107-91 loss at Portland State on Feb. 20 that snapped EWU's seven-game winning streak, EWU led for just 48 seconds, with the game tied for 1:22 and PSU leading for 37:50.
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* Featuring a school-record performance with 20 3-pointers against Portland State on Jan. 28, Eastern's average of 10.4 3-pointers per game is sixth in NCAA Division I (previously fourth after eight games) and leads the Big Sky. The team's percentage is 21st at 39.0 percent (previously 175th/33.9 percent after six games).
Austin McBroom (3.63 per game) and
Felix Von Hofe (3.07 per game) are ranked first and fourth in the Big Sky and are third and 24th, respectively, in the nation. Against PSU on Jan. 28, the Eagles made 20-of-31 to break the previous school record of 18 3-pointers set against New Hope on Dec. 4, 2010 and equal the Big Sky record (since broken by Montana State with 25 on Feb. 11 versus Northern Arizona). Eastern's 20 treys were by eight different players – six by
Austin McBroom, five by
Felix Von Hofe, four by
Julian Harrell and one each by
Bogdan Bliznyuk, Sir Washington, Bear Henderson, Will Ferris and
Cody Benzel. Two days later, Eastern made just 1-of-20 in a 74-67 home victory over Sacramento State. A year ago, Eastern was fifth nationally with an average of 9.8 made treys per game, and its 40.0 percent accuracy was eighth-best in the nation. With 292 3-pointers made this season, the Eagles are chasing the school record of 344 set in 2015, as well as the percentage record (.400) set the same season.
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* This only the second time in Eastern's 33 seasons as a member of NCAA Division I that the Eagles have scored at least 100 points in four games. Eastern also achieved that feat in 2006-07 season when Rodney Stuckey averaged 24.6 points per game when the Eagles averaged 84.2 per game to establish EWU's high-water mark as a member of DI. The overall record for 100-point performances is eight set in the 1970-71 season, and the 1971-72 squad had seven when Eastern averaged a school-record 90.0 points per game.
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* Eastern has now led at halftime in 21 of 28 games this season, and has a 16-5 record in those 21 games. Until a 96-86 loss to Davidson on Dec. 9 and an 84-51 setback to Pitt two days later, EWU had led at halftime in its first eight games of the year. The Eagles trailed by eight and 19 points, respectively in those two games. Eastern has out-scored opponents 1123-942 in the first half (average score of 40-33) and has been outscored 1235-1202 in the second half (44-42).
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* Entering the 2015-16 season, head coach
Jim Hayford was selected by College Sports Madness as its preseason Big Sky Conference Coach of the Year. Additionally, Sam Vecenie of CBS Sports rated him as one of the top 21 offensive coaches in all of NCAA Division I.
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* Head coach
Jim Hayford – the 2014-15 Big Sky Conference Coach of the Year -- took over an Eastern team four years ago that had been to the Big Sky Conference Tournament just once in five seasons, but in the 2014-15 season he took the Eagles to new heights. The Eagles entered the 2015-16 season with 66 victories overall, 39 league wins and four Big Sky Tournament game triumphs under Hayford, and the 26 victories last season are the fourth-most in the more than 50-year history of the league. In fact, a local newspaper dubbed Hayford the "Wizard in Cheney" in a feature article in November 2015. On July 8, 2015, Hayford signed a new five-year agreement which extends his contract at EWU through the 2019-20 season. The new five-year agreement replaced the contract he signed a year prior.
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* For the second year in a row, EWU was honored with the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Team Academic Excellence Award. Eastern's 3.27 team grade point average was the best in the Big Sky Conference in the 2014-15 season, and .20 better than the team's 3.07 average of a year ago.
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* Active within the last year in the pro ranks are 14 former Eagles, including
Tyler Harvey and
Drew Brandon from last year's Eagle team. Harvey is now with the Erie Bay Hawks of the NBA's Developmental League after getting drafted in the second round (51st overall) by the Orlando Magic in the 2015 NBA Draft. Harvey averaged 10.6 points, 2.0 assists and 1.4 rebounds for the Magic's "Blue" summer squad. Brandon is in his first year with the Bayer Giants in the Germany ProA League. Eastern's professional players are headlined by NBA veteran Rodney Stuckey, who is in his second season with Indiana after seven seasons with the Detroit Pistons. In 2014-15 – his eighth season as a pro and first with the Indiana Pacers – Stuckey averaged 12.6 points, 3.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 0.8 steals per game in 71 games (36 starts). He made a career-best 39.0 percent of his 3-point attempts, sinking 55-of-141. Stuckey signed a new 3-year, $21 million contract with the Pacers on July 21, 2015.
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Player NotesÂ
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* Eagle players are a collective 14-3 when they have double-doubles, including
Venky Jois (7-3),
Bogdan Bliznyuk (6-0) and
Austin McBroom (1-0). Jois, with 36 in his career, has led EWU to a 22-14 record in those games (7-3 this season, 6-2 in 2014-15, 4-5 in 2013-14 and 5-4 in 2012-13). Eastern is 7-1 in the eight career double-doubles Bliznyuk has recorded, including a current streak of seven in a row.
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* With 98 3-pointers this season, senior graduate transfer
Austin McBroom is two away from the seventh performance in Big Sky Conference history with at least 100. Three of those previous six performances are by Eagles (Shannon Taylor 103 in 1999,
Tyler Harvey 109 in 2014 and Harvey a Big Sky-record 128 in 2015). McBroom is averaging 21.5 points per game to rank first in the Big Sky and 14th in NCAA Division I. His scoring average currently ranks as the fifth-best in school history and his 580 total points are already seventh. In addition, his average of 3.65 3-pointers per game leads the league (teammate
Felix Von Hofe is fourth) and is third nationally. His 98 total 3-pointers already ranks fourth all-time in single season school history and eighth in league history. McBroom is also 14th in the nation in minutes per game with a league-leading 37.3 average, and he is 44th nationally and fourth in the Big Sky in 3-point percentage (.421). He is seventh in the league and 109th nationally in free throw percentage, making 128-of-155 for 82.6 percent (he was 10th nationally after making 19 of his first 20). He has upped his assists average to 3.7 per game, ranking ninth in the league. He was the Oscar Robertson National Player of the Week after piling up the most points in back-to-back games in Big Sky Conference play in school history, finishing with a combined 72 points in EWU's home sweep against North Dakota (35 points on 2/11/16) and Northern Colorado (37 points on 2/13/16). Including his 11 assists which led to 26 additional Eagle points, he had a hand in 98 of EWU's 192 points on the weekend (51 percent). The Eagles lost a pair of All-Big Sky guards from last year's NCAA Tournament team, but McBroom has provided an instant solution for the Eagles. He scored 76 points on Eastern's East Coast road trip, including 33 at Davidson on Dec. 11, 14 two nights later at Pitt and 29 on Dec. 14 at Western Carolina. His performance against Davidson included a 12-of-19 shooting night, and eclipsed his previous top game as an Eagle of 20 points (versus Pacific) and as a collegian of 26 points (for Saint Louis against Bradley on 11/29/14). He sank 10-of-17 shots from the field at Western Carolina, including 7-of-12 3-point attempts. His 19 points, five 3-pointers and five assists helped EWU win at San Francisco 81-77 on Dec. 1. He had a double-double with 19 points and 10 assists versus George Fox on Nov. 15. McBroom came to EWU with 97 games and 45 starts worth of NCAA Division I experience -- he played in 66 games at Saint Louis (15 as a starter) and 31 (30 as a starter) at Central Michigan in 2011-12.
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* Preseason Big Sky Conference MVP
Venky Jois has made 38 of his last 46 shots (83 percent) in the last five games and is ranked a season-high second in NCAA Division I in field goal percentage. His current mark of 69.7 percent is on pace to break the school record of 66.0 percent set by Ron Cox in the 1976-77 season and rank third all-time in the Big Sky. He is also 69th nationally and fourth in the league in rebounding (8.8 per game), 62nd/3rd in blocked shots (1.81) and 142nd/ninth in scoring (16.9). Jois has had 10 double-doubles this season, with nine in his last 17 games, including his 36th career double-double against Sacramento State (2/18/16) with 18 points and 13 boards. He had his first double-double of the season with 21 points, 14 rebounds, four assists and two blocked shots at Davidson on Dec. 9. Jois played in the 100th game of his career and became the 16th player in school history to hit the century mark on Dec. 14 when EWU played at Western Carolina. He equaled his career high with seven assists on Nov. 29 against South Dakota, which double and triple teamed him when he got the ball in the post and limited him to just three shots. He also went to the free throw line five times against the Coyotes to surpass the school's career record for charity shots. Now with 629 free throws attempted in his career, he broke the previous school record of 499 set by Dave Hayden from 1970-73. His 349 free throws made are second in school history, with Rodney Stuckey (2006-07) owning the record of 386. Jois also owns school records with 233 blocked shots (second in Big Sky history) and 151 dunks. He averaged 16.7 points, 7.7 rebounds and 2.2 blocked shots per game as a junior, and so far as a senior has averages of 16.9 points, 8.8 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.8 blocks. In Eastern's home sweep versus Portland State (1/28/16) and Sacramento State (1/30/16), he averaged 23.5 points and 10.5 rebounds while making 63 percent of his shots from the field (19-of-30) and 75 percent from the free throw line (9-of-12). He also had three assists, three blocks and a steal to garner Big Sky Conference Player of the Week honors. In a six-game stretch from Jan. 14-30, he averaged 20.5 points and 9.5 points on 53-of-79 shooting (67.1 percent) from the field, helping EWU to four victories. He had a huge weekend in Eastern's home sweep on Jan. 14 and 16, scoring 45 points on 21-of-28 (75 percent) shooting from the field, with a total of 11 dunks. Jois also had 20 rebounds, three assists, three blocked shots and a pair of steals. Eastern beat Southern Utah 106-80 and Northern Arizona 96-73 in a pair of romps that EWU led for a total of 73:22 and trailed for just 4:09 out of 80 minutes. He made 11-of-16 shots with six dunks to score 24 against SUU, and also had 12 rebounds to finish with a double-double. He made 10-of-12 shots from the field with five dunks, and added eight rebounds, two blocks and two steals in a 21-point effort versus NAU.
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 * Sophomore forward
Bogdan Bliznyuk is one of only two players in the league (NAUs Kris Yanku is the other) to rank in the top 25 in scoring (21st, 12.3 per game) and the top 15 in rebounding (7th, 6.8) and assists (12th, 2.9). He also ranks in the top 10 in steals (8th, 1.36) and free throw percentage (9th, 78.7 percent). In league only statistics, Bliznyuk is ranked in the top 20 in scoring (18th, 12.7) and in the top 11 in five other categories – rebounding (6th, 7.9), assists (11th, 3.4), blocked shots (8th, 1.1), free throw percentage (5th, .833) and assist-to-turnover ratio (9th, +1.5). Playing a key "blur" position for the Eagles, Bliznyuk has had five double-doubles in his last 11 games, and a total of six this season and eight in his career. Included is the first triple-double in school history with 11 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists in a 96-73 victory over Northern Arizona (1/16/16). He made 4-of-12 shots from the field and both of his free throws, and also had three blocked shots. Not even Rodney Stuckey, now of the Indiana Pacers, or former All-Big Sky point guard
Drew Brandon, were able to register the rare feat. He followed that with his fourth double-double of his career and third this season with 22 points and 13 rebounds at Montana State (1/21/16), and against Portland State (1/28/16) he had another monster game with 11 points, seven rebounds, six assists, five steals and four blocked shots in 34 minutes. In Eastern's road sweep over Northern Arizona (84-73) and Southern Utah (81-67), he averaged 24.0 points, 8.5 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.5 steals to earn College Sports Madness Big Sky Player of the Week honors. He sank 53.8 percent of his shots overall (14-of-26), making an equal percentage and amount of shots from the 3-point stripe as well as inside (7-of-13 each). He was 7-of-13 from the field in both games as well, registering a double-double with 22 points, a career-high six 3-pointers and 10 rebounds against NAU in EWU's first Big Sky road win of the season. He then had a career-high 26 points with seven rebounds, three assists and a pair of steals against SUU. He made 11-of-12 free throws against the Thunderbirds, including 6-of-6 in the last 3:37 and a key steal and rebound in the final 1:43 to preserve the win.
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* Sophomore
Bogdan Bliznyuk plays a position head coach
Jim Hayford calls a "blur" because it shares attributes of a shooting guard, small forward and power forward. He has been used frequently at bringing the ball up the court with a deft ability to get to the rim. He has made 35-of-98 3-pointers thus far for 36 percent, and is 85-of-167 inside the stripe (51 percent) with an overall percentage of 45 percent. He has also made 70-of-89 free throws (78.7 percent). He was the Big Sky Conference Freshman of the Year after coming off the bench to average 8.7 points and 4.0 rebounds for the Eagles. It's an honor now won six times in the past 14 seasons by Eastern players, including current Eagle
Venky Jois in the 2012-13 season. Bliznyuk, who also earned Big Sky All-Academic honors, averaged 12.0 poiÂÂnts in league play to rank 24th in the Big Sky -- tops among all freshmen. He was also fifth in field goal shooting (58.0 percent) and 12th in rebounding (5.6). Bliznyuk is formerly from Lutsk, Ukraine, but graduated from Todd Beamer High School in Federal Way, Wash., in 2014. He was less than 2 years old when his father, a truck driver, died in an accident. Their mother moved them to Federal Way five years later to be closer to family. Born with a gap in his upper jaw, he has had multiple surgeries after moving to the United States, included transferring bone from his hip. He officially became a United States citizen on Jan. 12, 2016.
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* Eastern is 10-4 since junior
Julian Harrell entered the starting lineup for the first time on Jan. 9 against Idaho after missing 13 games with an injury. A transfer from City College of San Francisco who previously played at Penn, Harrell averaged 13.3 points in his first three starts this season (all victories). He sank 15-of-20 shots in those three games, including 6-of-9 3-point shots. In 15 games played this season, he is averaging 8.7 points and 2.9 rebounds per game, while making 51.7 percent of his shots and 17-of-46 3-pointers (37.0 percent). His season high is 16 points versus Portland State on Jan. 28 when he finished with 16 points on 5-of-7 shooting, including 4-of-6 3-pointers. He made the first start of his career against Idaho (1/9/16), helping EWU to a 28-12 lead by scoring all 10 of his first-half points in that stretch on a trio of 3-pointers and a free throw. He finished with 14 points and three rebounds in a total of 25 minutes, then had 15 points in 19 minutes on 6-of-7 shooting against Southern Utah (1/14/16). He had two points, five rebounds and an assist in 10 minutes of action in his Eagle debut versus North Dakota (1/4/16) after missing the first 13 games with a hand injury. He also takes on the added role of usually guarding the opposing team's best player.
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* Junior sharpshooter
Felix Von Hofe ranks 24th in NCAA Division I in 3-pointers per game with an average of 3.07 per game (he was third with a 3.86 average following EWU's game on Jan. 9) and is 34th in accuracy at 42.6 percent (he was 22nd with a 46.2 percent accuracy rate after Jan. 9). He is averaging 13.0 points on the season, but in a five-game stretch from Dec. 14 to Jan. 9, he averaged 24.0 points with outings of 28, 27 (twice) and 19 (twice). In that stretch, he made 52.6 percent of his shots overall (40-of-76) and 50.0 percent of his 3-point shots (27-of-54), and also made 13-of-16 free throws (81.3 percent) and averaged 4.4 rebounds. He was selected on Dec. 21 as the Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Week after back-to-back career-best performances. The 6-foot-5 sharpshooter eclipsed his career high with 28 in a huge 74-58 road win at Denver on Dec. 20 on 9-of-18 shooting from the field and 8-of-14 from the 3-point stripe. Von Hofe finished two treys away from the school record of 10 and also had six rebounds -- two from his career high. One game earlier, he scored 27 at Western Carolina, which bested his previous high of 25 points set against Seattle on Nov. 18. He made 10-of-16 shots overall and 5-of-9 from the 3-point stripe against Western Carolina, for two-game totals of 19-of-34 (55.9 percent) and 13-of-23 (56.5 percent).
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* Eastern's sixth-man, sophomore guard
Sir Washington made 7-of-10 shots from the field to finish with 15 points and equal his career high against Sacramento State (2/18/15). It was his most in his career against a Division I opponent, and matched his overall career high of 15 against Great Falls (12/6/15). He has scored in double figures seven times this season, including a 10-point effort on perfect 3-of-3 shooting against Portland State (1/28/16). Three games earlier he came two points from his career high by hitting all five of his shots and three free throws to finish with 13 points in a 96-73 win over Northern Arizona (1/16/16). He also had six points, six rebounds and two steals in 28 minutes at Montana (1/23/16) and eight points, five rebounds and a career-high three assists in 15 minutes versus North Dakota (2/11/15). The Eagle sixth man opened the season with 11 points in the team's opener at Mississippi State, and topped that with career highs of 15 points and nine rebounds against Great Falls on Dec. 6. He also scored 11 in two other games, including Northern Colorado (12/31/16) in the team's league opener. He was injured and didn't play versus Idaho (1/9/16). He has started four games, and is averaging 6.1 points on 53 percent shooting from the field (61 percent in conference play), and is also averaging 17.8 minutes and 2.9 rebounds with 23 assists and 18 steals.
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* Six Eagles have already made their college basketball debuts this season, and five of them have played in at least 23 Eastern games. Those five were inserted into the starting lineup by head coach
Jim Hayford against Great Falls on Dec. 6.
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* Starting true freshman
Jesse Hunt, a 6-foot-7 forward, made the first start of his career against Pacific (11/28/15), and is averaging 9.0 minutes, 1.9 rebounds and 1.3 points per game as a nine-game starter. He missed EWU's game at Western Carolina with a sprained ankle. Redshirt freshman
Will Ferris, who came off the bench to play 23 minutes against Seattle on Nov. 23 and score a career-high nine points, is averaging 1.6 points, 0.7 assists and 6.5 minutes on the season.
Ty Gibson has seen significant action as a true freshman, averaging 7.6 minutes and 1.9 points per game and starting twice. He made all three of his 3-point attempts and a free throw to finish with a season-high 10 points against Southern Utah (1/14/16). Redshirt freshman
Bear Henderson has averaged 5.3 minutes and 1.6 points thus far, and started his first career game against George Fox on Nov. 15. Freshman redshirt
Cody Benzel has averaged 3.5 points in an average of 5.3 minutes, including 23 points on a 7-of-14 3-point shooting performance against Great Falls on Dec. 6. He also had a 12-point performance against South Dakota on Nov. 29 when he made four 3-pointers in just eight minutes of action. All five of those players made their collegiate debuts in EWU's opener at Mississippi State on Nov. 13, and Ferris, Benzel and Gibson made the first starts of their careers against Great Falls. True freshman
Michael Wearne made his collegiate debut versus George Fox, however, will now redshirt because of a hip injury requiring surgery.
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* Making his NCAA Division I debut against Mississippi State on Nov. 13 was junior college transfer
Rico Nuno, who had a career-high seven rebounds at Denver on Dec. 20 and is averaging 1.7 rebounds, 0.6 points and 6.4 minutes in 17 games played. He has not played since Jan. 23 because of a foot injury. Senior graduate transfer
Austin McBroom made his Eagle debut against the Bulldogs, and junior transfer
Julian Harrell played for the first time on Jan. 2 after missing the first 13 games with a hand injury. Three Eagles – transfer
Geremy McKay, transfer
Mario Soto and freshman
Grant Gibb – will redshirt.
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* Two major cogs in Eastern's roll to the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament last season –
Venky Jois and
Bogdan Bliznyuk -- were selected to the preseason All-Big Sky Conference team as selected by a panel of sportswriters, broadcasters and sports information directors in the league. Jois, a senior 6-foot-8 forward, is EWU's lone returning starter this season and was selected as the league's preseason MVP. A year ago, Eastern's
Tyler Harvey won the award and went on to lead NCAA Division I in scoring and was eventually drafted in the second round of the NBA Draft by Orlando. Besides Jois, Bliznyuk was also selected to the seven-player team and was the only underclassmen chosen. The others honored included Montana's Martin Breunig, Montana State's Marcus Colbert, Northern Arizona's Kris Yanku and Weber State's Joel Bolomboy and Jeremy Senglin.
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Quoting Coach Hayford
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On Four-Point Idaho Loss: "It was a great basketball game, but Idaho was a little better than us. Their strength is their rebounding and they beat us on the boards. I thought we had great execution, we just missed our last five shots. Give them credit – they played good defense. We did some good things to keep it interesting all the way down to the final two seconds. We would love to play them again in the championship in Reno."
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On Offense Versus Vandals: "They played some really good defense. We had balanced scoring and we wanted to go to a shorter rotation because we didn't play Thursday. We need to shoot a little better – credit them, but maybe at home they go in. Their defense was good, but we didn't do it."
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On Shooting Prowess: "We recruit to shoot – I'm not surprised by our great shooting nights. If you come to practice and watch these players, they can really shoot it. We put a premium on it and it's one of the standards of our offense. When we are shooting well it sets up our drive game and our post play."
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On Venky Jois Building Program: "
Tyler Harvey got a lot of attention last year, but there are some unsung heroes too in the renaissance of Eastern basketball. Venky is going to leave here as the all-time leading scorer and the all-time leader in blocked shots. He's a pre-med major and was selected to the all-academic team for our region. The reason is our program is better is that we were able to build on his back. He's that good of a player and a person. He loves Eastern – he sweats it. He said, 'I will turn this around with you Coach Hayford,' and he's done it. That's why we'll see his number retired in this gym some day."
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On Austin McBroom Filling Gap When Tyler Harvey Departed a Year Early: "We had a gap in our program, and I don't think there was a graduate transfer in the country better than the player we were able to get. We lost a player to the NBA, but our team is playing great basketball on the offensive side, this is in large part due to because we added a player like Austin. I'm really glad he wanted to get his master's in communications here because he's made us a great offensive team."
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On Bogdan Bliznyuk: "Bogdan is playing great basketball -- as well as anyone on our team. I am really proud of him. Â His conference statistics reflect his great ability and character."
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Recent Game Recap
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* After a league season filled with wire-to-wire finishes, this one came down to the wire. Idaho's defense, rebounding advantage and a timely run were the difference and helped the Vandals beat Eastern 66-62 Feb. 27 in Moscow, Idaho. Idaho used a 10-2 run to overcome a four-point Eagle lead, then hit four free throws in the final 1:27 to score its final points of the game. In finishing the afternoon at 43 percent, it was the first time EWU hasn't made at least half its shots since Feb. 4. The Eagles had five-straight performances of 50 percent or better and entered the game fifth in NCAA Division I at 50.1 percent. Eastern had won four-straight games versus the Vandals, including a 74-60 win in Eastern on Jan. 9 in Cheney in which EWU sank 53 percent to Idaho's 31 percent. The Vandals made 48 percent in the rematch, while holding EWU to 9-of-29 shooting from the 3-point stripe (31 percent). The game featured six ties and lead changes, making it the third-closest game EWU has played – win or lose – in the league season. Eastern's
Venky Jois scored a team-high 16 points, giving him 1,733 in his career to move just eight from the school record of 1,741. Senior graduate transfer
Austin McBroom scored 11 points on 4-of-15 shooting from the field overall, including 3-of-11 from the 3-point stripe. He also had three assists. Sophomore
Bogdan Bliznyuk finished with 12 points, eight rebounds and a pair of assists. Junior
Felix Von Hofe chipped in 10 with a trio of 3-pointers, and junior
Julian Harrell also had 10 points to go along with four rebounds.
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