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Ron Swords

Men's Basketball

Eagles Back on the Road to Face ISU and Weber State

Starting the league season 2-1, Eastern will have its hands full against a pair of future professional guards in ISU’s Ethan Telfair and Weber State’s Jeremy Senglin

 

­­­­­­­Eastern Washington
University "Eagles"
Men's Basketball (10-6/2-1 Big Sky)

Jan. 12 – at Idaho State, 6:05 p.m., Pocatello, Idaho
Jan. 14 – at Weber State, 6:05 p.m., Ogden, Utah

all times Pacific
Radio: 700-AM ESPN in Spokane, with Larry Weir calling the play-by-play. Broadcasts begin a half-hour prior to tipoff
Internet Radio: http://www.700espn.com or http://www.tunein.com
Radio iPhone App: Search for "700 ESPN" and download app. An app is also available for tunein radio.
TV: None
­­­Webcast: All EWU home games and all Big Sky Conference games available via http://goeags.com/sports/2016/1/5/watchbigsky.aspx?id=73 or http://watchbigsky.com
Live Stats: Idaho StateWeber State
http://ewustats.com for all EWU home games.
Weekly Coaches Show: The next show is Tuesday, Jan. 10 at 6 p.m. at the Swinging Doors in North Spokane (Jan. 10 and then Mondays Jan. 16 through at least Feb. 27) . . .  700-AM ESPN, http://www.700espn.com & via iphone app. (search for "Spokane Radio" and download app).
Their guarding has been impressive so far in the league season for the Eastern Washington University men's basketball team, but guarding guards is the challenge this week.
 
Starting the Big Sky Conference season with a 2-1 record and owning a 10-6 record overall, the Eagles hit the road this week, starting Thursday (Jan. 12) at Idaho State and then Saturday (Jan. 14) at league favorite Weber State in a pair of games which begin at 6:05 p.m. Pacific time. Fans can listen to both games on 700-AM ESPN and via the web at www.700espn.com, with pre-game coverage starting a half-hour prior to tipoff. All Big Sky games will also be broadcast via www.watchbigsky.com.
 
After its first three league games, Eastern is leading the Big Sky in scoring defense, allowing an average of just 63.7 points per game. That includes the top three defensive performances this season versus NCAA Division I foes for the Eagles, in addition to the league's best defensive shooting percentage overall (.367) and second-best from the 3-point stripe (.300). On offense, Eastern is the top 3-point shooting team in league games only (.474) and has the second-best shooting percentage overall (.497).
 
But Idaho State senior guard Ethan Telfair will test the Eagles with averages of 16.6 points (eighth in the Big Sky), 4.9 assists (third) and a league-leading 2.7 steals per game. Weber State's Jeremy Senglin in third in the league in scoring with a 20.4 average and has an average of 4.3 3-pointers per game to rank first in NCAA Division I.
 
"Both teams have great guards that will play professional basketball," said Eastern head coach Jim Hayford on his team's match-ups this week. "We will have our hands full."
 
Idaho State enters Thursday's game with an 0-2 Big Sky record and is 2-12 overall, but in Big Sky preseason polls the Bengals were picked to finish fifth by the media (along with EWU) and were two positions ahead of Eastern in fifth by the coaches. A year ago, Telfair scored 31 points on 9-of-13 shooting from the field and 13-of-15 from the free throw line in ISU's 75-71 win over EWU in Cheney. He also had seven rebounds, seven assists and a pair of steals.
 
Weber State, which hosts Idaho on Thursday, is 2-0 in the league and 7-6 overall after last Saturday's game at Idaho State was postponed because a leaking roof at Holt Arena in Pocatello, Idaho. The Wildcats were picked to repeat as league champions in both polls. Senglin, also a senior guard, has averaged 14.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.7 assists in three career games versus EWU, making 13-of-30 shots overall, 7-of-16 3-point attempts and 9-of-12 free throws.
 
Eastern, meanwhile, suffered its first league loss and first loss of the season at home when Montana scored the final seven points of the game to beat EWU 65-59 on Jan. 7 in Cheney. Two nights earlier, the Eagles had an impressive 82-64 victory over Montana State.
 
So far, EWU is 2-1 against its first five foes of the 2017 league season – all picked higher than the Eagles in the preseason coaches poll. A year ago, EWU was 1-6 versus those same five teams. Eastern will reach the one-third point of the conference season on Jan. 19 when it hosts Northern Arizona.
 
"As a staff we looked at the first five games of the conference season as a great challenge," explained Hayford. "All five schools were picked to finish ahead of us, and those teams went 6-1 against us last year. So this trip is the next stage of the first third of the season and we embrace the challenge."
 
 
 

Team Notes

 
Defense Impressive in Last Three Games
 
The Eagles have now had their top three defensive performances of the season against NCAA Division I opposition in their last three games, holding Idaho to 62 points and Montana State to 64 in a pair of wins. Eastern held Idaho to 31 percent shooting from the field for EWU's top defensive performance of the season, and that game included a stretch of nine-straight misses for UI and two others of six-straight. In the next game versus MSU, the Bobcats had 11-straight misses at one point and had stretches of 11:23 and 3:58 without a field goal.
 
Eastern allowed only 65 points against Montana and held the Grizzlies scoreless for the first 5:13 of the game on 0-of-5 shooting with three turnovers. But Montana's defense proved to be the difference in the six-point Grizzly win. The Eagles were held to 59 points and 40.4 percent shooting, one game after EWU had its best shooting performance of the season against Montana State at 60.4 percent. Eastern's top three scorers for the season – Bogdan Bliznyuk, Jacob Wiley and Felix Von Hofe – combined to make just 13-of-40 shots for 32.5 percent, after entering the game shooting a collective 49.3 percent clip for the season.
 
 
Eastern Still Boasts Big Sky's Best RPI at No. 132
 
Despite falling down the stretch to Montana in its last outing, the Eagles remain the top team in the Big Sky Conference with an RPI of 132 (EWU was a season high 57th on 12/13 in the official NCAA RPI ratings). The next-best Big Sky teams are Montana (#174), Weber State (#183) and Portland State (#191). Idaho State is 323rd out of the 351 NCAA Division I schools in the rankings. With an 8-5 mark entering Big Sky play, Eastern joined Portland State at 7-4 as the only other league team above the .500 mark prior to the start of the league season. Plus, the Eagles received 10 votes in the Collegeinsider.com Mid-Major top 25 on Dec. 12 when the Eagles were 7-2.
 
 
Eastern 12th in the Nation in Free Throw Percentage
 
Eastern's clutch free throw shooting is a major reason EWU is 6-1 in games decided by six points or less and 7-2 in games decided by 10 or less. Eastern has made 77.1 percent thus far to lead the league and rank 12th in NCAA Division I (Notre Dame leads at 84.0 percent). Bogdan Bliznyuk is 36th at 88.2 percent (60-of-68) and Jacob Wiley is 87th at 84.3 percent (59-of-70). They are ranked second and fifth, respectively, in the Big Sky. Felix Von Hofe is not ranked, but has made 28-of-34 thus far (82.4 percent). A season-low 50 percent performance against Xavier on Dec. 20 (9-of-18) dropped EWU from second to seventh in the nation, and a 15-of-24 performance at Colorado dropped the Eagles to 14th.
 
 
Eagles Set School Record Already for Overtime Periods
 
The Eagles are finding a way to win close games, and have already set a school record with six extra periods this season. Eastern defeated Seattle 80-76 in double overtime on Nov. 22 and then beat Denver in its next game in overtime by an 85-80 score. Two games later, the Eagles played at Seattle in another double-overtime thriller, winning 93-88. In its most recent OT game, Eastern beat Morehead State 88-86 on Dec. 13. The previous record for overtime periods in a single year was five in the 1998-99 season, including four extra periods in a 101-100 loss to Weber State on Jan. 16, 1993. The Eagles had no overtime games last season, two in 2014-15, one in 2013-14 and four in 2012-13
 
 
Eagles Entered League Play With 8-5 Record After Successful Pre-Conference Schedule
 
Eastern entered league play with a winning record of 8-5 – only the fifth time that has happened in 30 years in the Big Sky. The impressive start for EWU equals the NCAA Tournament team of 2014-15 (9-4) and the 1985-86 team (9-4) as the only teams to start 8-5 or better in 34 years in NCAA Division I. This year's Eagles were just the sixth team in 34 years to start 5-2 or better, including three under Hayford.
 
 
Eagles Picked as High as No. 5 in Preseason Polls
 
The Big Sky Conference men's basketball race is going to be a dogfight, and 2016-17 preseason predictions bear that out. Coming off its best back-to-back seasons in its NCAA Division I history, Eastern has been picked fifth by the media and seventh by the coaches in the league's preseason basketball polls released Oct. 14.
 
While the Eagles appear loaded and ready for another Big Sky title run, the rest of the league is as well. Weber State was picked to win the title in both polls, while the media picked Montana at No. 2, Idaho third and North Dakota to finish fourth just ahead of the Eagles and Idaho State at No. 5. After Weber State, the coaches picked the order of finish as Idaho, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho State, Montana State and then EWU.
 
"This is my sixth year as the head coach of Eastern and I anticipate this to be the most balanced and competitive conference season we have seen yet," said Eastern head coach Jim Hayford.
 
The Eagles began Big Sky play on Dec. 30 with a 69-62 win at Idaho, followed by the team's league home opener and 82-64 win against Montana State on Jan. 5. Eastern also hosts Montana (Jan. 7), Northern Arizona (Jan. 19), Southern Utah (Jan. 21), Sacramento State (Feb. 2), Portland State (Feb. 4), Idaho (Feb. 17), Weber State (Feb. 23) and Idaho State (Feb. 25) before the regular season comes to a close on March 4 at Northern Arizona.
 
The 2017 Big Sky men's basketball championship will take place March 7 through 11 at the Reno Events Center in Reno, Nev. Tickets for the 2017 Big Sky Basketball Championships are now on sale. Visit http://RoadtoReno.com for more information.
 
 
Eagles Coming Off First Postseason Victory as a Member of NCAA Division I
 
The Eagles finished the 2015-16 season with an 18-16 record and advanced to the second round of the College Basketball Invitational, including the school's first NCAA Division I postseason win with a 79-72 victory over Pepperdine. Eastern finished fourth in the Big Sky Conference with a 10-8 league mark, then beat Northern Arizona 74-52 in the first round of the league tournament. Eastern was the Big Sky's 2014-15 regular season and tournament champion, and advanced to the NCAA Tournament.
 
The 44 combined victories the last two years are the most in since EWU became a member of NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season. They are the most overall in 39 years since EWU won a combined 45 in the 1976-77 and 1977-78 seasons as a member of the NAIA.
 
Eastern finished the season ranked fifth in NCAA Division I with an average of 10.5 3-pointers made per game. Eastern also ranked 15th in NCAA Division I in scoring offense (81.4 points per game), 16th in overall field goal accuracy (48.3 percent) and 25th in accuracy from the 3-point stripe (38.5 percent).
 
 
Schedule Features Four Teams from 2016 NCAA Tourney
 
The Eagles will again travel the nation by playing teams from 13 different leagues. Eastern's schedule includes four teams which appeared in the NCAA Tournament a year ago, and four others who joined EWU last year in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI). One opponent played in the CollegeInsider.com Tournament (CIT). But the best part of the season is 16 home games at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash.
 
Eastern picked up an 80-69 exhibition victory on Oct. 30 against Saint Martin's, which is coached by former Eastern assistant Alex Pribble. The Eagles officially opened the regular season in Cheney with a 70-47 victory against Linfield, a NCAA Division III school in the Northwest Conference.
 
Eastern then took part in the Legends Classic, falling to Northwestern 86-72 on the road on Nov. 14 and 85-52 at Texas on Nov. 17. Still looking for its first-ever NCAA Tournament berth, Northwestern finished with an overall record of 20-12 and 8-10 in the Big 10, losing to Michigan in the first round of the Big 10 Tournament. Texas (20-13 overall and 11-7 in the Big 12) lost to Baylor in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament and went on as a No. 6 seed in the NCAA Tournament where it lost to Northern Iowa in the first round. The Longhorns were ranked 21st and 23rd in the two national polls prior to playing the Eagles.
 
The Eagles returned home and won the title in the Legends Classic Sub-Regional round in Cheney. Eastern beat Bryant (8-23/5-13 Northeast Conference) 81-77 on the first day, then edged Seattle 80-76 in double-overtime the next night. Bryant beat Louisiana Monroe in the consolation game, with Eastern's Jacob Wiley earning tournament MVP honors. Seattle was in the CBI a year ago and Louisiana Monroe played in the CIT.
 
Next, Eastern swept two games in the EWU Classic in which they beat Denver (16-15/7-9 Summit League) 85-80 on Nov. 26 and then defeated San Francisco (15-15/8-10 West Coast Conference) in a 96-90 shootout on Nov. 27. San Francisco lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament last season to Pepperdine, which fell to Eastern 79-72 in the first round of the CBI. The Eagles beat the Dons for the second-straight year in San Francisco in 2015-16, winning 81-77.
 
On Dec. 4, Eastern had yet another double-overtime victory (93-88) over Seattle (13-15/7-7 Western Athletic Conference), which lost in the second round of the last year's WAC Tournament. Seattle made it to the second round of the CBI before falling to Vermont. Eastern and the Redhawks split two games last season, with EWU winning 76-70 at home and losing on the road six days later 58-52.
 
The Eagles returned home for a pair of games against Great Falls (13-16/5-13 Frontier Conference) on Dec. 8 and Morehead State (23-14/11-5 Ohio Valley Conference) on Dec. 13. Eastern beat the Argos 103-76 and downed Morehead State 88-86 in overtime. Morehead State had a successful postseason in 2015-16, making it to the finals of the CBI before losing to Nevada in three games. Nevada ended EWU's season last year with an 85-70 victory in Reno in the quarterfinals of the CBI.
 
Eastern hit the road for its three final non-conference games before starting league play. The Eagles lost 70-48 at Northern Kentucky (9-21/5-13 Horizon League) on Dec. 18, then fell at 17th-ranked Xavier (28-6/14-4 Big East) by an 85-56 score on Dec. 20. The trip closed with a 76-68 loss at Colorado (22-12/10-8 Pac-12) on Dec. 22. The latter two teams participated in the 2016 NCAA Tournament -- Xavier as a No. 2 seed and Colorado at No. 8. Xavier defeated Weber State in the first round and then lost to Wisconsin in the second round. Colorado fell to UConn in the first round.
 
Eastern's home triumphs ended with a perfect 7-0 record, but the true road challenges of the season commenced with a trio of games, with EWU taking first-half leads in each before falling. Following the last of those losses on Dec. 22, the combined record of those three teams was 29-8 -- Xavier 10-2, Colorado 10-3 and Northern Kentucky 9-3. Through games of Dec. 26, the Musketeers had the fourth-highest RPI in the nation at No. 4, with Colorado at No. 69 and Northern Kentucky at 138th.
 
Eastern's loss at Northern Kentucky was an afternoon game in the Eastern time zone that actually started at 10 a.m. Pacific time. Northern Kentucky out-shot Eastern 45 percent to 33 percent in the game, and the Norse outscored Eastern 49-24 after the Eagles had taken a three-point lead late in the first half. Eastern then held 22-11 lead in the first half in its first-ever game against 17th-ranked Xavier, but the Musketeers roared back to beat the Eagles. Eastern used an 11-0 run in the first half to forge its 11-point lead, including a trio of 3-pointers, and led for 11:05 in the first half, compared to just 4:50 for XU. Eastern followed that with a 19-2 opening run versus Colorado, and led for 26 minutes versus the Buffaloes. A 17-3 run gave Colorado the lead for good, but Eastern had a furious 10-2 run in the last four minutes to nearly pull off the upset of the Pac-12 Conference opponent.
 
 
Coaches Shows Continue Jan. 10 and Then Mondays Thereafter
 
The weekly Eastern Washington University Men's Basketball Coaches Show featuring head coach Jim Hayford and host Larry Weir began with a season preview on Nov. 8, returned on Jan. 3 and will take place on Tuesday, Jan. 10 at 6 p.m. Pacific time at the Swinging Doors Restaurant in North Spokane (W. 1018 Francis). Additional interviews with players and other guests will also be featured. Fans may attend the one-hour shows live, or listen on 700-AM ESPN and via the web at www.700espn.com. Programming on 700-AM ESPN is also available via mobile phone aps (search for "Spokane Radio" and download app) and www.tunein.com (an app is also available for tunein radio).  Following Jan. 10, shows will be move to Mondays from Jan. 16 through at least Feb. 27. The show on March 6 depends on team travel arrangements for the Big Sky Conference Tournament in Reno, Nevada. Shows on March 13 and March 20 are also possible and will be determined by EWU's postseason fate and availability of Hayford.
 
 
Rodney Stuckey in 10th Season in NBA; Former Eagle Drew Brandon Signs with Romania Pro Team
 
Former Eastern men's basketball player Drew Brandon recently signed with the CS Phoenix Galati in Romania after playing previously in Germany, and is one of 14 former Eagles currently playing professionally. The most famous is Rodney Stuckey, who is in his 10th season in the NBA (now with the Indiana Pacers after seven years with the Detroit Pistons) after earning honorable mention All-America honors for Eastern in the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons.
 
Brandon was a member of EWU's 2015 NCAA Tournament team, and CS Phoenix is a member of the Romania Liga Nationala League. In 30 games as a rookie for Bayer in Germany last season, Brandon averaged 10.4 points, 5.8 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 2.4 steals per game. He was named to the Eurobasket.com All-German 2.Bundesliga Pro A squad as an honorable mention selection, and was on its All-Defensive Team.
 
Former Eagles Venky Jois and Tyler Harvey are also currently playing overseas. In his first four games with Tartu Ulikool/Rock in Estonia in the 2016-17 season, Jois was averaging 7.0 points, 12.0 rebounds, 1.0 assists and 0.8 blocked shots per game, including 17 points and 13 rebounds in an 88-57 victory over Audentese in Estonia.
 
In his first five games with Auxilium Torino in Italy in the 2016-17 season, Harvey was averaging 6.2 points, 1.2 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 1.2 steals per game, and made 8-of-29 3-point shots. He averaged 11.9 points in 37 games as a rookie for the Erie Bay Hawks in the NBA's Developmental League, making 80-of-231 three-pointers for 34.6 percent.
 
In addition, former Eagle Laron Griffin recently signed with KB Trepca Mitrovice (SuperLeague) in Kosovo. Most recently, Griffin played for San Miguel in Liga MB in Salvador where in 18 games he averaged 16.3 points, 14.4 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.3 steals and 2.3 blocks per game.

Eastern has 14 former players who have played in the pro ranks within the last year. The complete list of current and former professionals is located at: http://goeags.com/sports/2016/6/27/eagles-in-the-pros.aspx
 
 
 
 

Player Notes

 
Bliznyuk Earns Mid-Season "Player of the Year So Far" Honors, and Wiley is Also Honored
 
Eastern's Bogdan Bliznyuk and Jacob Wiley were honored Dec. 30 by HoopsHD.Com as mid-season All-Big Sky Conference selections. Bliznyuk was named that organization's "Player of the Year So Far," and he was joined on the all-league team by senior graduate transfer Jacob Wiley.
 
"There are three parts of the season – non-conference, conference and post-season," said Eastern head coach Jim Hayford. "Our team only has four upperclassmen this year and we need their leadership and consistent play. Jacob and Bogdan played well in November and December. Recognition for them is earned and deserved.  Now we move forward together with their leadership."
 
 
Two-Time Big Sky Player of the Week Bogdan Bliznyuk Ranks 58th Nationally in Scoring
 
Already a two-time Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Week, after 16 games Bogdan Bliznyuk is ranked in the top 13 in four different statistical categories in the league, ranking sixth in points (19.1 per game), 13th in rebounds (5.8), fourth in assists (4.4) and second in free throw percentage (.882). He ranks 58th nationally in scoring and is 36th in free throw percentage.
 
He had his ninth 20-point performance this season and 16th of his career when he finished with 21 in a 65-59 loss to Montana on Jan. 7. He closed the nonconference schedule with a 25-pointer performance at Colorado on Dec. 22 that included 21 in the first half, scoring 18-straight Eastern points at one point. He had a career-high 34-point effort in EWU's 88-86 win over Morehead State on Dec. 13, making 13-of-19 field goals and 7-of-10 free throws. Bliznyuk had a double-double with 31 points and 12 rebounds in EWU's 93-88 double-overtime non-conference victory over Seattle on Dec. 4 to earn his second of two Big Sky Conference Player of the Week honors. Formerly from Lutsk, Ukraine, and a 2014 graduate of Todd Beamer High School near Seattle, he had 12 rebounds to finish with the 11th double-double in his career, including the school's first and only triple-double last season. The previous week, after helping EWU win three home games, Bliznyuk was also the Big Sky Conference Player of the Week.
 
He came a rebound away from the second triple-double in school history (he had the first as a sophomore last year) with 22 points, a career-high 11 assists and nine rebounds in an 85-80 win over Denver. The next night, he equaled what was then his career-high with 32 points, and added seven rebounds and seven assists in a 96-90 shootout win against San Francisco. He made 9-of-16 shots from the field, both of his 3-pointers and 12-of-13 free throws in the win over the Dons, which equaled the career high of 32 he had on Nov. 21 in a win over Bryant. In that game, Bliznyuk made 11-of-15 shots overall, both of his 3-point attempts and all eight of his free throws, to go along with seven rebounds and four assists.
 
Bliznyuk's 22 points, career-high 11 assists and nine rebounds against Denver on Nov. 26 was the fourth time since Jan. 11, 2014, that an Eagle had come one stat from a triple-double. The other three were by Drew Brandon. Bliznyuk had 11 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists against Northern Arizona on Jan. 16, 2016, for the first triple-double in school history. The closest former Eagle Rodney Stuckey – now playing in the NBA for Indiana – came was 14 points, seven rebounds and 10 assists on Nov. 19, 2005, versus Pacific Lutheran.
 
Bliznyuk compiled some big numbers during Eastern's seven-game winning streak from Nov. 21 to Dec. 13, including four performances of at least 31 points. He averaged 25.1 points, 7.0 rebounds, 5.0 assists and 1.0 steals per game in that stretch, making 53.0 percent of his field goals, 37.5 percent of his 3-point shots (9-of-24) and 89.6 percent of his free throws (43-of-48). Until falling 70-48 to Northern Kentucky on Dec. 18, Eastern hadn't lost since falling at Texas 85-52 on Nov. 17.
 
 
Averaging a Double-Double in League Play, Wiley Takes Over Big Sky Lead in Rebounding
 
Senior graduate transfer Jacob Wiley has already compiled some impressive numbers 15 games into what will be a one-year career at EWU, and is averaging a double-double during league play. He's made 57.9 percent of his field goals and 77.8 percent of his free throws in league play thus far, with team-leading averages of 19.3 points, 11.0 rebounds and 2.7 blocked shots per game, as well as averages of 2.7 assists and 1.0 steals.
 
He's scored in double figures in 14 of 16 games this season, and has had four double figure rebounding performances, including a season-high 14 against Montana on Jan. 7. One game earlier he had a near triple-double with a career-high 25 points in an 82-64 win over Montana State by making 10-of-15 shots from the field and 5-of-7 free throws. He also had 10 rebounds, a career-high seven assists and three blocked shots. His scoring performance versus Montana State eclipsed his previous career high of 23 points one game earlier at Idaho when he sank 9-of-13 shots from the field and added nine rebounds and five blocked shots in the 69-62 win. He had 16 points, six rebounds, five blocks and four assists versus 17th-ranked Xavier on Dec. 20, then had 10 points, eight rebounds and two more blocks against Colorado two nights later. Prior to that he had back-to-back double-double performances, with 12 points and 12 rebounds against Morehead State on Dec. 13 and 14 points and 12 more boards against Northern Kentucky on Dec. 18.
 
For the season, he's averaging 14.7 points (13th in the Big Sky), 8.3 rebounds (first), 3.1 blocked shots (first) and 2.1 assists per game, while making 58.7 percent from the field (fifth) and 84.3 percent from the free throw line (fifth). He leads the Big Sky in blocked shots per game by almost double the next player (1.6), and is ranked sixth in NCAA Division I. As a team, Eastern is 27th nationally in blocks with an average of 5.4 per game. Wiley is also 28th nationally in field goal percentage and 87th in free throw percentage.
 
Earlier this season, Wiley was the MVP of the Legends Classic sub-regional round in Cheney, Wash, finishing with 20 points, nine rebounds, five blocked shots, five assists and a pair of steals in an 80-76 double-overtime victory over Seattle in the championship game. The previous night in an 81-77 win over Bryant, he scored 18 points and had a team-high nine rebounds, sinking 10-of-12 free throws and four of seven shots from the floor.
 
Wiley's numbers compare favorably with those of the forward he's replacing in the starting lineup – all-time leading scorer Venky Jois. Now playing professionally, Jois averaged 14.8 points, 8.3 rebounds, 2.0 blocks and 2.3 assists in his 122-game career, and made 58.3 percent from the field. However, Wiley has a significant advantage at the free throw line where Jois made only 55.0 percent in his career.
 
Wiley capped a spectacular junior season for Lewis-Clark State in 2015-16 by earning first team NAIA All-America honors after averaging 14.9 points, 7.5 rebounds and 1.4 blocked shots per game. He led L-C State to a 29-5 record and was the fourth-most accurate shooter (.604) in the NAIA, as well as ranking 20th in blocks per game and 43rd in rebounds per game. An Academic All-Frontier Conference selection while at L-C State, Wiley originally played 20 games at Montana in the 2012-13 season. He is 2012 graduate of nearby Newport (Wash.) High School.
 
As a true freshman for Montana in the 2012-13 season, Wiley played in 20 games and averaged 3.0 minutes, 0.9 points and 0.6 rebounds per game. In two regular season victories over EWU, he played one minute in each. Wiley scored two points in an 81-66 win in Missoula and had a rebound in a 65-46 triumph in Cheney. His career highlight came during Montana's 2013 NCAA Tournament round game against Syracuse when he scored five points and recorded one block in the 81-34 loss. After quitting the basketball team prior to his sophomore season, he joined the Montana track and field squad and competed in the 400 meters.
 
 
Felix Von Hofe Up to 15th in Big Sky History for 3-Pointers Made, Just 41 from School Record
 
With a team-leading 53 3-pointers this season, senior Felix Von Hofe ranks 14th in NCAA Division I with an average of 3.31 3-pointers per game, helping EWU rank 71st as a team in makes per game (8.8) and 90th in percentage (37.3).
 
Last week Von Hofe moved up two spots for career 3-pointers in the Big Sky, now ranking 15th with 219. He ranks second in school history, having recently moved past his former teammate Parker Kelly with 210 from 2012-15. Von Hofe is now 41 from the record set by his former teammate Tyler Harvey from 2013-15 with 260. He is also second in school history with 537 attempts, and his percentage of .408 is 10th (teammate Bogdan Bliznyuk is 14th at .392).
 
Von Hofe now has had 12 performances of at least 20 points in his Eastern career, including four this year and seven as a junior in 2015-16 when he had the fourth-most 3-pointers in school history with 105. He has scored in double figures nine times this season and 35 times in his career (20 as a junior), and has led EWU in scoring on 11 occasions (eight in 2015-16). He had five 3-pointers and 19 total points in an 82-64 win over Montana State on Jan. 5.  One game earlier, Von Hofe had a 22-point performance in a 69-67 victory over Idaho on Dec. 30 that included six 3-pointers.
 
During EWU's seven-game winning streak earlier this season, he averaged 16.1 points and made 25-of-63 3-pointers and 20-of-24 free throws. He had a pair of 20-point performances in that stretch – 23 with six 3-pointers against Denver and 21 with five more treys versus San Francisco – then had 19 in EWU's double-overtime win at Seattle.
 
 
Hunt Has Hot Weekend in Split Versus MSU and UM
 
Sophomore Jesse Hunt came off the bench to contribute 21 points in just 34 minutes of action in EWU's split against Montana State and Montana. In the two games, he made 7-of-8 shots (3-of-4 from the 3-point line) and added nine rebounds. He had a career-high 13 points in 18 minutes against Montana State, having entered that game averaging just 2.2 points per game and scoring seven points in his last five games. He also had seven rebounds against the Bobcats, coming one from his career high. Hunt then scored eight versus Montana, hitting all three of his shots from the field with a pair of 3-pointers. He is now averaging 3.3 points and 2.1 rebounds this season after a freshman season that saw him average 1.9 points and 1.8 rebounds in 30 games (nine as a starter).
 
 
Ty Gibson Has Career Day Versus Argos
 
Sophomore Ty Gibson scored 13 points in a less than four minute span in the first half and finished with a career-high 19 points in EWU's 103-76 victory over Great Falls on Dec. 8. In helping Eastern open leads of 27-2 and 39-4, he played only 15 minutes and still nearly doubled his previous high of 10 last year versus Southern Utah and on Nov. 27 this season versus San Francisco. He scored 13 points in a 3:43 stretch in the first half with four three-pointers and a free throw. Gibson made 6-of-7 shots from the field – all 3-point attempts – and made all three of his free throws. For the season, he is averaging 4.5 points on 55.0 percent shooting from the field, including 20-of-36 3-pointers (55.6 percent to rank second in the Big Sky). He is a 2015 graduate of Issaquah (Wash.) High School.
 
 
Eagles Starting Pair of True Freshmen
 
A pair of Eagle true freshmen have been in the starting lineup the last two games, including point guard Luka Vulikic from Belgrade, Serbia, and forward Mason Peatling from Melbourne, Australia. Vulikic has started 12 of 16 games, and is averaging 2.9 points, 2.9 rebounds and 0.9 assists per game. He had just two turnovers in 58 combined minutes versus Xavier and Colorado, and he equaled his season high with 12 points versus the Buffaloes. Peatling made his starting debut versus 17th-ranked Xavier on Dec. 20 and has started every game since. He is averaging 3.5 points and 3.4 rebounds, with a high of 10 points versus Northwestern on Nov. 14 and highs of nine rebounds and three blocked shots versus Idaho on Dec. 30. He also had seven points versus the Vandals and has made 55.3 percent of his shots from the field for the season (21-of-38) with a four 3-pointers.
 
 
Julian Harrell Will Miss Rest of Season With Shoulder Injury
 
The collegiate career for Julian Harrell has ended with surgery to repair a disabling shoulder injury, head coach Jim Hayford announced Nov. 21. With a 3.89 grade point average, Harrell saw action in two of Eastern's three games this season, but played just 36 total minutes. In his 23-game career as an Eagle he averaged 7.7 points, 2.7 rebounds and 1.1 assists, making 47.1 percent of his shots from the field. He transferred to Eastern from City College of San Francisco after originally playing at Penn in the 2012-13 (redshirt) and 2013-14 seasons.
 
"This is terrible news, and very disappointing for Julian, his family and his teammates," said Hayford of the 2012 graduate of Loyola High School in Los Angeles. "Julian has giving everything he can to our program for two years, and will graduate winter quarter as an honors student. Though not replaceable, our team will work very hard to step up and honor Julian with our work this season."
 
Harrell will graduate from Eastern with an interdisciplinary studies/liberal arts degree. He was a Big Sky Conference All-Academic selection last season, and entered this year as a preseason fourth team All-Big Sky selection by College Sports Madness.
 
 "The hardest thing for me to do is to accept that I won't be able to play this season," said Harrell. "This team has something special brewing, and I wanted to be out there playing with my brothers. There isn't a doubt in my mind that they will be successful this year. Though I'm expected to make a full recovery, it truly hurts that I can't be on the court during the special season that this team will have. Thank you to the EWU community for the love and support since I first arrived on campus -- it means a lot. Go Eags!"
 
 
Trio of Eagles Earn Preseason Honors
 
Junior forward Bogdan Bliznyuk was selected as a first team selection on the College Sports Madness preseason All-Big Sky Conference team. Seniors Felix Von Hofe and Julian Harrell were both picked as fourth team selections. All three were starters last season on a team that featured a pair of All-Big Sky Conference and All-District 6 selections in Venky Jois and Austin McBroom
 
"We lost two great starters from last year's team to graduation. It's nice to see the other three guys who started recognized for what they have done," said Eastern head coach Jim Hayford. "I am excited about what they will do as leaders of this year's team."
 
Last year, Bliznyuk averaged 12.4 points, 6.8 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game, and registered the first triple-double in school history. Von Hofe averaged 13.0 points and 3.1 made 3-pointers per game, and Harrell chipped in 8.3 points and 2.8 rebounds after missing 13 games with a hand injury.
 
 
Quartet Sign Letters of Intent With Eagle Basketball
 
A quartet of high school players, including 6-foot-9 forward Tanner Groves from Shadle Park High School in Spokane, Wash., have signed letters of intent to play basketball and attend Eastern Washington University, EWU head coach Jim Hayford announced Nov. 9.
 
The others signed include 6-6 forward Brendan Howard, who was Montana's Gatorade Player of the Year as a junior at Great Falls High School. The third signee was Australian Jack Perry, a 6-2 guard who joins a group of five Aussies currently on EWU's roster. The fourth was 6-7 guard/forward Kim Aiken, an All-CIF selection from East Valley High School in Redlands, Calif.
 
More on the signing class, including comments from head coach Jim Hayford, is available at: http://goeags.com/news/2016/11/9/mens-basketball-quartet-sign-letters-of-intent-with-eagle-basketball.aspx?path=mbball
 
 
 
 

Series Notes

 
* Eastern is 43-29 all-time against ISU, including a 40-28 record since becoming a member of NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season (13-19 on the road, 26-8 at home, 1-1 at neutral sites). The Eagles have won 11 of the last 13 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, but then lost its home-court winning streak in the lone meeting in 2015-16 with a 75-71 loss at Reese Court.
 
* In last year's meeting with ISU, senior Venky Jois broke Eastern's 39-year-old career scoring record, but the Eagles fell short at home against Idaho State and lost to the Bengals 75-71 March 3 at Reese Court. Jois finished with a team-high 21 points and 11 rebounds to register the 37th double-double of his career, and passed the previous school record of 1,741 set by Ron Cox from 1974-77. Eastern had its worst shooting night of the year at home, and also had 12 turnovers that turned into 16 points for the Bengals. The Eagles made 43.5 percent from the field, 28.6 percent from the 3-point arc and a season-low 47 percent from the free throw line. Idaho State out-shot Eastern 46 percent to 43 percent, and also made 22-of-32 free throws (69 percent) compared to just 9-of-19 for the Eagles. Idaho State was paced by Ethan Telfair, who finished with 31 points, seven rebounds and seven assists. He made 9-of-13 shots from the field and 13-of-15 free throws. Jois made 10-of-13 shots from the field and also had a pair of blocked shots and two steals, but made only 1-of-10 free throws. In his 125th game as a collegian, senior graduate transfer Austin McBroom finished with 13 points and a pair of assists. He made only 4-of-13 field goals, including 3-of-8 3-pointers. Sophomore Bogdan Bliznyuk was perfect from the line (4-of-4), but was 4-of-10 from the field to finish with 12 points, nine rebounds and six assists. Junior Felix Von Hofe chipped in nine with a trio of 3-pointers (3-of-11). Freshman Jesse Hunt came off the bench to score seven points and get two steals and a pair of rebounds in seven minutes of action. Fellow freshman Cody Benzel scored four points and had two rebounds and two steals as well. After cutting the lead to 71-66 with 1:27 to play, Eastern got a pair of stops, but ended up turning ball over both times. The second turnover, an offensive foul whistled on Bliznyuk with 37 seconds left, led to pair of free throws by Telfair, who added two more free throws with 16 seconds remaining. Eastern needed a 12-0 run in the first half to erase an uncharacteristic start. The Eagles made just one of their first seven shots and 5-of-20 to fall behind early by as many as nine points. Eastern then followed with a 12-0 run to take the lead, capped by a 3-pointer by Hunt, who scored seven points in the run. Jois also scored with 4:00 left on a feed from Benzel to give him sole possession of the career scoring record. Eastern trailed at halftime 35-32.
 
* Eastern is 22-46 all-time against Weber State, including a 15-17 home record after last season's 79-77 loss. Eastern is just 5-28 all-time at Weber State, but won there 79-71 in the 2014-15 season to end the regular season. Earlier in the year, Eastern opened league play with an 84-78 home 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.
* In last year's meeting with the Wildcats, Weber State wrapped up the outright Big Sky Conference title with a 79-77 victory over EWU to end the regular season for both teams on March 5 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. Weber State's Joel Bolomboy made a 3-pointer with 19 seconds left to break a 76-all tie in a game that featured six ties and six lead changes. Knowing his team would have to play again in three days regardless of the outcome against WSU, head coach Jim Hayford played his bench liberally and used a full-court press to force EWU's most turnovers against a NCAA Division I opponent this season. Eastern scored 22 points -- three from a season high -- off those 19 Wildcat miscues. Eastern seniors Venky Jois, Austin McBroom and Kyle Reid were honored in pre-game ceremonies, just one game after Jois became the school's career scoring leader in a 75-71 loss versus Idaho State two days earlier. McBroom had a game-high 30 points and three steals for the Eagles, while Jois finished with 12 points, four rebounds, three assists and a blocked shot before fouling out with 4:32 to play. Reid had a career-high two blocked shots. Junior Felix Von Hofe also scored 12, making a trio of 3-pointers and 4-of-7 field goals overall. Eastern began the game with a new starting lineup – featuring the team's three seniors – and the Wildcats jumped out to an early 15-8 lead. But the Eagles used a platoon system and a full-court press to force the Wildcats into eight first-half turnovers, and EWU turned those into 11 points. After making just five of its first 13 shots, EWU made 11 of its last 18 to take a 39-34 halftime lead. A 10-0 run helped give the Eagles their biggest lead of the half at 30-21 at the 5:43 mark. With the second half featuring six ties and three lead changes, Eastern led by as many as 11 after intermission, but its shooting touch left them down the stretch. Eastern made only two of its last eight shots, while Weber State made eight of its last 10. The Eagles led 75-73 with 1:18 to play, but Joel Bolomboy's dunk and free throw with 57 seconds left and his 3-pointer with 19 seconds to play were the daggers. Eastern was fouled with three seconds left, but after Austin McBroom missed the second shot, Jeremy Senglin snared the rebound for WSU to end the game. Eastern was whistled for a season-high 32 fouls, leading to opponent highs of 32 free throws made and 43 attempts by the Wildcats. Previous highs were 28 fouls, 24 free throws and 32 attempts. Weber State, meanwhile, was whistled for 22 fouls and EWU sank 13-of-23 free throws. The Wildcats out-shot Eastern 61-46 percent in the second half, after Eastern had a 56-33 percent edge in the first half. For the game, Weber State made 54 percent from the field and EWU was at 47 percent, including 10-of-20 3-point attempts.
 
 
 

Recent Game Recaps

 
Grizzlies Sink Late Foul Shots for 65-59 Win in Early Big Sky Showdown
 
Montana was given the opportunity to win the game at the free throw line as Eastern suffered its first home loss of the season in a 65-59 loss Jan. 7 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. After a key defensive play went against the Eagles with 52 seconds to play, the Grizzlies made their last six free throws and EWU missed its last four field goal attempts in a game that featured seven ties and 17 lead changes. Bogdan Bliznyuk scored 21 points and had six rebounds and six assists to lead the Eagles, with former Grizzly Jacob Wiley finishing with 10 points and a season-high 14 rebounds. Sophomore Jesse Hunt came off the bench to contribute eight points, hitting all three of his shots from the field. Junior Sir Washington chipped in seven points on 3-of-4 shooting. In a game that was statistically even in most respects, the only difference was at the line where Montana made 16-of-24 and EWU sank 7-of-8. In the second half alone, the Grizzlies were sent to the line 20 times (making 15) while EWU had just six charity shots (made all six). After a stretch of eight lead changes and three ties early in the second half, Eastern hit a series of huge baskets during a 5-of-5 shooting stretch that gave EWU a 51-45 lead with 8:07 left. Hunt had a pair of 3-pointers, Washington hit a trey, Wiley had an emphatic dunk and Bliznyuk made a driving layin during EWU's hottest shooting stretch of the game. Eastern led 53-48 with 5:18 to play, but back-to-back 3-pointers turned the tide for the Griz. Eastern took two more leads before Montana made seven of eight free throws in the final 52 seconds. With 52 seconds remaining, the Eagles felt they had forced Walter Wright into a traveling call, but instead, Sir Washington was called for a foul and Wright made both free throws to give the Griz a 60-59 lead. A missed 3-pointer by Bliznyuk with 33 seconds to play was followed by two more UM free throws, then Felix Von Hofe missed a 3-pointer with 13 seconds remaining, followed by two more Griz free throws.
 
 
Eastern Uses Two Impressive Runs to Beat Montana State 82-64
 
Senior graduate transfer Jacob Wiley scored a career-high 25 points with a near triple-double, and two big scoring runs fueled by defense helped EWU improve to 2-0 in the Big Sky Conference with an 82-64 victory over Montana State Jan. 5 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. Senior Felix Von Hofe added 19 points with five three-pointers and Jesse Hunt came off the bench to score a career-high 13 points in the 10th win of the season for the Eagles. Eastern made a season-best 60.4 percent from the field, but it was its defense that made the difference as MSU made only 38 percent in the game – the third-best performance this season for the Eagles. Montana State missed 11-straight shots at one point and went 11:23 without a field goal as EWU used a 21-3 run to turn an 8-4 deficit into a 25-11 lead in the first half. Eastern held the Bobcats to 27 percent shooting and just 22 points in the first half for the second-best defensive half of the season for EWU. In the second half after Tyler Hall led MSU's rally, a 9-0 Eagle run and a four-minute stretch without a field goal for the Bobcats helped Eastern turn a one-point lead into a double-digit advantage. Eastern led by no less than eight the rest of the way, despite a game-high 33 points by Hall, who at one point scored 17-straight MSU points. Wiley eclipsed his previous career high by two by making 10-of-15 shots from the field and 5-of-7 free throws. He also had 10 rebounds, a career-high seven assists and three blocked shots. Von Hofe made 5-of-7 of his shots from the 3-point stripe and both of his two-point shots. Hunt entered the MSU game averaging just 2.2 points per game and scoring seven points in his last five games, but he shattered his previous career high of eight points. He also had seven rebounds, one from his career high. Sophomore Cody Benzel added nine points on 3-of-4 shooting from the 3-point stripe. Junior Bogdan Bliznyuk played only 25 minutes because of foul trouble, and finished with eight points, three assists and a pair of steals.
 
 

 
Head Coach Jim Hayford Comments

 
On Montana Loss: "It was a really good basketball game. They made big plays in the last minute and we didn't. It's a tough one, a really tough one. They had a great start in the second half, but we got re-grouped and took the lead back. We made our run, but they answered it, and with a minute to go it was a one-point game. We thought we played some really good defense and forced a travel, but it wasn't and was a foul on us. They made two free throws and we executed and got the look we wanted from our best player, but it didn't go down. We had to foul and they made pressure free throws. Felix then got a great look at a 3-pointer and it didn't good down, and they made pressure free throws again."
 
On MSU Victory: "I'm obviously pleased to open our home conference schedule with a win. They heated up at the beginning of the second half, but our guys showed great composure and were resilient. They didn't give up the lead and we got re-grouped. We had a nice little two-minute run to take the lead back and made sure nothing crazy happened."
 
On Inside Game Versus Bobcats: "Jacob Wiley was really good inside, but we also had huge minutes off the bench from Jesse. When we were talking about how good we were going to be in the frontcourt this season, Jesse was a big part of the equation. He struggled through the non-conference schedule but he kept coming to work every day.  I thought he was a big difference maker for us in both halves when Bogdan was in foul trouble. To find ways to win games you need different players to step up and Jesse did a great job coming off the bench. I'm really proud of him and I'm really proud of our team."
 
On Non-Conference Schedule: "Looking at the big picture, the non-conference season is to get you ready for conference play. We get to go play in these big games and it's economically important for our athletic department. I'm pleased with our team for coming out of that at 8-5 and with more wins than anybody else in the conference.  We've learned a lot about them. We lost Julian, which was a big hit, and then had to adjust another brand-new senior to the program adjusted during non-conference play. We moved Bogdan into the role as team captain, and we are starting two freshmen and have a young bench. You can look at the non-conference schedule as a whole and be really pleased with the work our team did. We don't like losing three on a road trip, but our Big Sky Championship team two years ago lost three on road trip in December. Last year's team lost three on a trip in December. It's a beast, but it makes you better if you respond in the right way, and I think our team has."
 
On Stretch of Six of Seven Games at Home in November/December: "The schedule was an opportunity. When you look at the previous five years, we were pretty much out on the road having to develop our team during this time. This year we were at home and won four close games. Maybe on the road it's different, and we lose a close game and we have to encourage our team. We have to tell them they are almost there and it's about the development of the team. Win or lose, you stay in the mindset that you have to keep growing and keep getting better. But let's be honest, for 18 to 22 year olds it's easier when you are winning to keep hearing that. The opportunity to develop a team here is a huge advantage that normally we don't have. What you do with opportunities is the question we all have in life. Our guys made great use of the opportunity."
 
On Defense/Offense: "We aren't going to be the team that just scores points in droves and all of the sudden there is a 15-0 run. We are going to have to put stops together and keep chipping away. We are going to be a tough team that has to work and probably won't put points on the board as fast as we have."
 
On Big Sky Race: "We think this is going to be the toughest Big Sky Conference race yet. I think 20 of the top 30 leading scorers in the conference are returning. We have three of the top returning starters in the conference, and that's the veteran experience of our group. We are going to lean on them, but it's going to be a very, very tough conference schedule."
 
On Big Sky Tournament in Reno: "Ultimately, you are playing for a three or four game winning streak. If you can do that in Reno, you can get the crown jewel. Playing it in Reno is a great experience because every team knows they are coming, you can plan ahead and families can see you play. I thought the environment is great. I'm glad the conference made this move to a neutral site, and I think it is only going to get better and better. It's nice to have experience there, but ultimately you have to build depth for your team to be at its best for those games."
 
 
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Players Mentioned

Venky Jois

#55 Venky Jois

F
6' 8"
Senior
Austin McBroom

#5 Austin McBroom

G
6' 0"
Senior
Kyle Reid

#23 Kyle Reid

F
6' 8"
Senior
Cody Benzel

#20 Cody Benzel

G
6' 4"
Redshirt Sophomore
1L
Bogdan Bliznyuk

#32 Bogdan Bliznyuk

G/F
6' 6"
Junior
2L
Ty Gibson

#2 Ty Gibson

G
6' 3"
Sophomore
1L
Julian Harrell

#0 Julian Harrell

G/F
6' 5"
Redshirt Senior
1L/TR/JC
Jesse Hunt

#34 Jesse Hunt

F
6' 7"
Sophomore
1L
Felix Von Hofe

#44 Felix Von Hofe

F
6' 5"
Senior
3L
Sir Washington

#4 Sir Washington

G
6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
2L
Luka Vulikic

#13 Luka Vulikic

G
6' 5"
Freshman
HS
Mason Peatling

#14 Mason Peatling

F
6' 8"
Freshman
HS

Players Mentioned

Venky Jois

#55 Venky Jois

6' 8"
Senior
F
Austin McBroom

#5 Austin McBroom

6' 0"
Senior
G
Kyle Reid

#23 Kyle Reid

6' 8"
Senior
F
Cody Benzel

#20 Cody Benzel

6' 4"
Redshirt Sophomore
1L
G
Bogdan Bliznyuk

#32 Bogdan Bliznyuk

6' 6"
Junior
2L
G/F
Ty Gibson

#2 Ty Gibson

6' 3"
Sophomore
1L
G
Julian Harrell

#0 Julian Harrell

6' 5"
Redshirt Senior
1L/TR/JC
G/F
Jesse Hunt

#34 Jesse Hunt

6' 7"
Sophomore
1L
F
Felix Von Hofe

#44 Felix Von Hofe

6' 5"
Senior
3L
F
Sir Washington

#4 Sir Washington

6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
2L
G
Luka Vulikic

#13 Luka Vulikic

6' 5"
Freshman
HS
G
Mason Peatling

#14 Mason Peatling

6' 8"
Freshman
HS
F