Eastern Washington
University "Eagles"
Men's Basketball (8-10/3-2 Big Sky)
Jan. 18 – at Northern Arizona – Flagstaff, Ariz. – 5:30 p.m.
Jan. 20 – at Southern Utah –Cedar City, Utah – 11:30 a.m.
all times Pacific
|
Radio: |
700-AM ESPN & 105.3-FM in the Spokane/Cheney area. Larry Weir calls the play-by-play. Broadcasts begin a half-hour prior to tipoff |
Internet Radio: |
http://www.tunein.com (search for Eastern Washington University) |
Radio Mobile Phone App: |
Via tunein radio |
TV: |
The NAU game will be televised in Arizona by NAU TV. |
Webcast: |
All EWU home games and all Big Sky Conference games are available via Pluto TV and http://watchbigsky.com |
Live Stats: |
http://ewustats.com for all EWU home games, plus NAU & SUU. |
Weekly Coaches Show: |
Shows hosted by Larry Weir and featuring head coach Shantay Legans take place Mondays at 6 p.m. at Barrelhouse Pub & Pizza in Cheney. They are aired live on 700-AM ESPN. |
For those with title aspirations, the road breakthrough is a key. The Eagles could have used one more a year ago.
The Eastern Washington University men's basketball team heads back on the road for a pair of games, taking on Northern Arizona on Thursday (Jan. 18) at 5:30 p.m. Pacific time, followed by a game at Southern Utah on Saturday (Feb. 20) at 11:30 a.m. Pacific time.
The Northern Arizona game will be televised in Arizona by NAU TV. All of EWU's remaining regular season games will be available via
http://watchbigsky.com via Pluto TV. In addition, all Eastern games are carried live on 700-AM ESPN and 105.3-FM in the Spokane/Cheney area, with Larry Weir calling the play-by-play. Broadcasts begin a half-hour prior to tipoff and may also be heard via http://www.tunein.com (search for Eastern Washington University). A mobile phone app is also available via tunein radio.
The Eagles have had good success recently in both Flagstaff and Cedar City, including splits on this same road trip in 2015 and 2017, and a sweep in 2016. The Eagles have won the last four meetings in Cedar City dating back to a 69-55 loss there in the first-ever league match-up between the two schools in 2013.
Eastern has won three of the last six in Flagstaff, but ended the regular season a year ago with a 76-61 loss just two days after beating the Thunderbirds 91-75. That loss to the Lumberjacks cost EWU a share of their fourth regular season Big Sky title in school history.
Both the Lumberjacks and Thunderbirds were 0-4 in the league heading into their match-up last Saturday (Jan. 13) in Cedar City, Utah. The Thunderbirds had five players score in double figures to prevail 81-75 while leading for nearly 36 minutes. Northern Arizona is now 3-15 overall this season (1-4 at home), while SUU, which hosts Idaho prior to playing the Eagles, is 7-9 (6-2 at home).
"You always want to get to your next game," said Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans, whose team is 3-9 away from home this year. "Especially after a loss, you want to get back out there and face the challenge."
In falling at home to Idaho 58-51 in EWU's lone game last week, Eastern missed out in an early-season opportunity to move into second place in the Big Sky standings. After the dust cleared last weekend, Montana leads the way (6-0) with Montana State two games behind (4-2). Eastern, Idaho, Weber State and Idaho State are all 3-2, with Northern Colorado (3-3) lurking just behind. The Grizzlies have four road conference wins already and Idaho has two, while EWU, MSU, Weber State, Idaho State and Portland State all have one all-important road breakthrough.
The Eagles are now 8-10 on the season and 3-2 in the Big Sky, and have won five of their previous seven games. Suffering its first loss at home to drop to 5-1 on the year, the Eagles are still 51-10 (84 percent) at Reese Court in the past five seasons since 2013-14. However, EWU saw its 12-game home court winning streak snapped, having not lost at home since falling to Montana on Jan. 7, 2017.
The Eagles jumped out to early leads of 10-1 and 20-6 against the Vandals, but fell behind by 11 in the second half en route to its second-lowest point total of the season. Despite equaling a season-best by allowing only 58 points, EWU's shooting performance of 36.4 percent was its lowest in more than a month.
"It comes down to our offense," explained Legans. "We slowed down and didn't play with the same efficiency, speed and pace that we've been accustomed to playing as of late. We have to have a good week of practice and get on the road for our next two games."
Continuing to inch closer to the EWU career scoring record, Eastern senior
Bogdan Bliznyuk now has 1,756 career points. He's second in school history, and just 47 behind the record of 1,803 set by Venky Jois (2013-16). Bliznyuk currently ranks 16th in the 55-year history of the Big Sky, ranking 31 points behind North Dakota's Quinton Hooker with 1,787 in four seasons from 2014-17. Jois is No. 14 on the Big Sky list.
The Eagles are coming off a third-straight appearance in a national postseason tournament, and were 22-12 overall a year ago. Eastern finished 13-5 in the Big Sky to finish second behind regular season champion North Dakota, and then the Eagles advanced to the semifinals of the league tournament.
Game Notes
Among Big Sky Leaders, EWU Tops in Free Throw Shooting
The Eagles have been a solid free throw shooting team this season and are currently leading the league and ranked 32nd in NCAA Division I (76.2 percent, as well as tops in league games only at 88.2 percent). Senior
Bogdan Bliznyuk is third in the league at 86.8 percent. In individual field goal shooting, junior
Jesse Hunt is 14th in the league at 50.5 percent, as well as eighth in rebounding at 6.6 per game. Bliznyuk is right behind him in ninth in rebounding (6.3), and is also eighth in scoring (18.2) and fifth in assists (3.6). Junior
Cody Benzel is fourth in 3-point shooting at 46.7 percent (28-of-60) and true freshman
Jack Perry is 14th at 40.4 percent (23-of-57). Junior
Ty Gibson has averaged 2.2 3-pointers per game (39-of-104 total) to rank 11th in the league, and is currently third on the team in scoring at 7.7 per game. One of the team's co-captains, Gibson has scored in double figures in six of the last 11 games.
Shooting Percentage Slips Versus Vandals, But Eagle Defense a League Leader
Eastern has made at least 50 percent of its shots in four of the last seven games, winning in each of those four contests. But the most noticeable statistic is 3-point shooting defense, in which the Eagles rank third in the Big Sky Conference overall and first in conference games only.
Eastern has made gradual shooting improvement this season, after starting the year making only 39 percent through nine games. The Eagles have improved that to 44.1 percent for the season, and are 8-0 when they out-shoot their opponents and 0-10 when they don't.
Eastern has had its top eight shooting performances of the year in the last nine games, and the team's three-point shooting has also improved from 30.2 percent after nine games to a current mark of 35.4. In league play, the Eagles have sank 47.8 percent of their shots from the field overall and 38.2 percent from the 3-point arc.
In addition, EWU has held conference opponents to 43.9 percent shooting overall and 27.7 percent from the 3-point line. For the season, opponents are shooting at a 44.0 clip overall and 33.8 from the arc. As a result, Eastern is ninth in the Big Sky Conference in field goal percentage and fifth in the league defensively, but in league games only those marks improve to third and fifth, respectively. From the 3-point line, Eastern is seventh overall offensively and third defensively, and in league play those marks are third and first, respectively. Eastern has allowed 70.2 points in league play, ranking second behind Idaho (66.0).
Although EWU struggled offensively with 36.4 percent shooting overall and 32.1 percent from the arc, the Eagles held Idaho to 58 points on Jan. 12 to equal the fewest EWU has allowed to an opponent this season. Idaho sank just 40.8 percent of its shots, including only 2-of-9 3-pointers in the second half (22.2 percent).
The Eagles had their second-best shooting performance of the season (best against a NCAA Division I opponent) at 55.2 percent against Sacramento State on Jan. 6. Eastern had a 49.0 percent performance against Portland State and before that sank 54.0 percent at North Dakota. Eastern made a season-best 56.7 percent against Providence on Dec. 20, sinking 62 percent in the second half as they eclipsed the 51.5 percent they had three days earlier versus CSUN. Eastern's 11-of-22 performance from the arc against the Matadors equaled its season-best of 50 percent, while its 51.6 percent shooting afternoon eclipsed the .484 shooting percentage EWU had at Wyoming in its previous outing (including 15-of-30 3-point attempts). That was better than Eastern's previous game when the Eagles made what was then a season-best 45.6 percent against South Dakota on Dec. 10.
Punctuated by Performances Against Sac State, Balanced Minutes and Balanced Scoring is Key for Eagles
Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans has gone to his bench often, continuing in league play what the Eagles started in the preseason while utilizing eight different starting lineups along the way. With eight
different players scoring in double figures in two home games in early January, the Sac State game on Jan. 6 was the punctuation mark on EWU's balance this season.
For the season, Eastern is averaging 26.2 points per game from its bench (471 total), compared to an average of 19.4 by its opponents (349 total). Ten Eagles are averaging between 13.9 and 33.7 minutes per game, and one other is averaging 9.3. For the season,
Bogdan Bliznyuk is averaging a team-leading 18.2 points per game, but 10 others are averaging between 4.7 and 9.1.
Versus Sac State, 80 of Eastern's 82 points were scored by players
not named Bliznyuk, Gibson and Hunt. Bliznyuk and third-leading scorer
Ty Gibson combined for only two points in the first half and were scoreless in the second half. In addition, second-leading scorer
Jesse Hunt didn't play because of a foot injury suffered the day before in practice. However, five other Eagles did score in double figures, with all five of them entering with season scoring averages of between 4.5 and 5.4 points per game. Those five had entered the game with just a collective total of nine double-figure scoring performances in EWU's first 16 games of the season. Eastern had career-high performances from starter
Cody Benzel (25 on 7-of-10 shooting from the 3-point stripe) and substitute
Benas Gricinunas (16), as well as 14 points from true freshman
Jack Perry, 12 by sophomore
Mason Peatling and 10 by senior
Sir Washington.
Eastern had 26 bench points in its league opener at Northern Colorado, then 19 at North Dakota and 22 versus Portland State. The Eagles played those games without injured starter
Luka Vulikic (planter fasciitis), and the first two without starter
Mason Peatling (hand). Peatling missed a total of four games, and Vulikic has missed EWU's last 10.
All 11 players who were available against Providence on Dec. 20 scored to contribute toward EWU's season-best output of 94 points, and each had at least one rebound. Against Cal State Northridge on Dec. 17, five players scored in double figures as the Eagles at the time had their best shooting percentages (.516 overall and .500 from the 3-point stripe), as well as a season-high 22 assists. Five different Eagles had at least three assists, and three Eagles had at least six rebounds. Defensively, Eastern had a season best by allowing just 58 points, surpassing the previous low of 61 on two other occasions – both wins.
The Eagles had a season-low 18 bench points at South Dakota on Dec. 10, but had a season-high 40 versus Eastern Kentucky on Nov. 22. Eastern routed Eastern Kentucky by 21, jumping out to a 19-point lead in the first half and leading 39-16 at intermission. Eastern led by as many as 28 in the second half and no less than 19 in the final minutes in the 83-62 win. That helped give EWU a 39-point turnaround in two games, having lost to Georgia State by 18 points two days earlier on Nov. 20 in its MGM Resorts Main Event opener.
6-foot-6 Point-Forward Bogdan Bliznyuk Now 47 Points from School Record
Big Sky Conference Player of the Year candidate
Bogdan Bliznyuk moved into the No. 2 position on EWU's career scoring list versus Sacramento State on Jan. 6 and is now just 47 points from ending what could be a short-lived record. And he's already broken a record held by a former 10-year NBA veteran.
In 121 career games (fourth in school history), Bliznyuk has a current total of 1,756 points – 15 points better than long-time record-holder Ron Cox (1,741 from 1974-77) and 47 from Bliznyuk's former teammate, Venky Jois (school-record 1,803 points from 2013-16). Against San Francisco on Dec. 7, Bliznyuk passed Irv Leifer (1,550 from 1942-47), who held the record for 30 years after playing for EWU from 1942-47. He then passed the 1,564 points of his former teammate Tyler Harvey (2013-15). Previously, Bliznyuk passed 10-year NBA veteran Rodney Stuckey (1,438 points from 2006-07) in EWU's first game of the season, and then Dave Hayden (1,461 points from 1970-73) against Washington.
With 393 free throws made in his career, Bliznyuk has also broken the record of 386 held by Stuckey, who played a total of 10 years with the Detroit Pistons and Indiana Pacers in the NBA. Bliznyuk broke the record when he was 13-of-13 from the line against Portland State on Jan. 4. Bliznyuk is just eight field goal attempts from the record of 1,286 held for the past 45 years by Hayden.
In addition, if Bliznyuk plays seven more games he will equal the record of 128 set by his former teammate
Felix Von Hofe from 2014-17. Bliznyuk is ranked in the top 10 in school history in several other categories, and against Providence on Dec. 20 moved passed Eagle legend and former Big Sky MVP Alvin Snow (2015-17) into seventh in assists (Snow had 318 and Bliznyuk has a current total of 338 to rank sixth all-time at EWU). In the next game Bliznyuk plays, he will equal the 122 games that Jois played to rank third in school history.
Parker Kelly, another former teammate, is second with 126.
This season, Bliznyuk has made 48.0 percent of his field goals and 86.8 percent of his free throws (third in the Big Sky) to average 18.2 points (eighth) through 18 games. He is also averaging 6.3 rebounds (ninth) and 3.6 assists (fifth) to rank as the only player in the league to be in the top 10 in scoring, rebounding and assists. He now has nine performances in his 121-game career of at least 30 points, 34 with at least 20 and 83 scoring in double figures, including the school record of 45 set as a junior. Plus, he had the lone triple-double in school history as a sophomore.
On Jan. 1, Bliznyuk was one of five players in the league named by HoopsHD.com to its mid-season All-Big Sky team. He was selected on Dec. 19 as the Big Sky Conference Player of the Week after a 30-point effort in one game and a near triple-double in another. In two games – including an overtime loss at Wyoming and a 28-point NCAA Division I home win, the Big Sky Player of the Year candidate averaged 23.0 points, 7.5 rebounds, 5.0 assists and 1.5 steals per game. He made 50 percent of his shots overall (15-of-30) and from the 3-point arc (4-of-8), and also made 12-of-15 free throws for 80 percent. On Nov. 8, Bliznyuk was selected to the Lou Henson Award preseason Watch List by Colllegeinsider.com. The award is presented annually to the nation's top Division I mid-major player, and the initial watch list featured 51 players from across the country.
Bliznyuk concluded his junior season with 701 points, becoming just the fourth player in school history to hit that mark (Jake Wiley, a senior on the 2017-18 squad, ranks fifth in school history with 694). A senior, Bliznyuk was a second team All-Big Sky Conference selection a year ago, and was the league's Freshman of the Year in 2014-15. He also earned second team All-District 6 honors from the National Association of Basketball Coaches. He is formerly from Lutsk, Ukraine, and graduated from Todd Beamer High School in Federal Way, Wash., in 2014.
The Eagles finished the season with five Big Sky Conference records and 14 EWU marks, most broken as the result of EWU's 130-124 triple-overtime victory over Portland State on Feb. 4. Wiley and Bliznyuk set the most intriguing record when
both scored a school-record 45 points in that game versus the Vikings.
Bliznyuk has played in seven Big Sky Tournament games (5-2 record), with Bliznyuk averaging 15.9 points, 5.3 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game. He scored 32 points with eight rebounds in the 2017 semifinals, and had 18 points, nine rebounds and six assists in the quarterfinals.
Led by Bliznyuk, the Eagles in 2017-18 feature a team with size throughout their lineup. They were bolstered by the addition of 7-footer
Benas Griciunas, a senior graduate transfer from UNC Charlotte. A 6-foot-6 point-forward, Bliznyuk was named to the preseason All-Big Sky team, and is one of 10 returning players to the Eagle roster. The Eagles return eight letterwinners from last year, including a trio of returning starters -- Bliznyuk,
Mason Peatling and
Luka Vulikic. The others are
Cody Benzel, Grant Gibb, Ty Gibson, Jesse Hunt and
Sir Washington, with
Jacob Davison and
Joshua Thomas returning as a 2016-17 redshirts.
Senior Sir Washington Averaging 8.0 Points in Conference Play
Eastern's other four-year letterwinner,
Sir Washington, has picked up his scoring pace in the Big Sky Conference season. After averaging only 4.3 points and 1.8 rebounds in the 12 preseason games he played, the senior has averaged 8.0 points and 3.6 rebounds in conference play. He sank only 30.4 percent of his shots overall (17-of-56) in the preseason, but has made 45.5 percent (15-of-33) of his field goals in conference play thus far.
Scoring at least 10 in two of EWU's last four games, he finished with his second double figure scoring performance of the season and 17th of his career with 10 points versus Sacramento State on Jan. 6. He ranks 16th in school history with 106 career games played (25 as a starter) while averaging 5.3 points, 2.6 rebounds and 1.1 assists.
Peatling Back to Pre-Injury Form
Making his first start since Dec. 12 after missing four games because of a hand injury, sophomore
Mason Peatling embraced his return to the starting lineup on Jan. 6 against Sacramento State. It took barely over seven minutes for him to hit the double-figure mark, as he finished with 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting from the field in 13 minutes of action. That gave him a total of four double figure performances this season and eight in his career (now 48 games), but it was his first in nearly a month. Prior to being sidelined with his injury, he scored a career-high 19 at South Dakota on Dec. 10 and had 11 points and six rebounds one game earlier at San Francisco.
For the season, Peatling has averaged 6.1 points in 14 games (10 as a starter), and has averaged 3.6 rebounds and nearly a blocked shot per game (11 total). In his 48-game career (27 as a starter), he's averaged 4.6 points and 3.2 rebounds with a total of 28 assists, 25 blocks and 22 steals.
Junior Jesse Hunt Has Made Most of Five Starts
Sidelined against Sacramento State on Jan. 6 with a foot injury suffered the day prior in practice, junior
Jesse Hunt has started EWU's the last five games he has played. In those five outings (including four Eagle victories), he's averaged 14.6 points, 7.8 rebounds and 1.0 blocks per game, while making 25-of-43 shots overall (58.1 percent), 7-of-11 from the 3-point stripe (63.6 percent) and 16-of-20 from the free throw line (80.0 percent). He registered his career high in the first four games.
Hunt scored a career-high 14 points and had eight rebounds in his first start of the season against CSUN on Dec. 17, then had his second double-double of the season with 16 points and a career-high 11 rebounds against Providence three days later. He equaled his career high with 16 points at Northern Colorado on Dec. 29 when he also had a career-high four blocked shots and eight rebounds in a career-high 29 minutes of action. He played 29 minutes at North Dakota and finished with 16 points and eight boards, then had 11 points and four rebounds in just 16 minutes because of foul trouble against Portland State.
For the season, Hunt is averaging 21.3 minutes, 9.1 points, 6.6 rebounds (eighth in the Big Sky) and has eight blocked shots, while making 50.5 percent of his shots from the field (14th in the league) and 83.3 percent from the free throw line. In his 79-game career (17 as a starter), Hunt has averaged 12.3 minutes, 3.7 points, 2.9 rebounds and has 28 blocks.
Graduate Transfer Griciunas Equals Collegiate Best With 16 Versus Hornets
Eastern's eight newcomers this season include Lithuanian seven-footer
Benas Griciunas, a graduate transfer who came to EWU with 59 games of NCAA Division I experience. He had his first double-figure scoring performance as an Eagle with 16 points on 7-of-10 shooting from the field in EWU's 83-62 win over Eastern Kentucky on Nov. 22, and matched it with 16 against Sacramento State on Jan. 6 when he was a perfect 7-of-7 from the field with five rebounds and three blocked shots.
His best scoring performance while at UNC Charlotte was 14 points and his best as a freshman at Auburn was eight. He had 12 rebounds once while playing for the 49ers. He unofficially opened his Eastern career by scoring 18 points on 6-of-13 shooting from the field in EWU's exhibition victory over Portland on Oct. 29. He had a trio of 3-pointers and also had nine rebounds. He followed that with four points, five rebounds and two blocked shots in his Eagle official Eagle debut on Nov. 10 against Walla Walla.
A total of 13 Eagles played in EWU's opener versus Walla Walla, and Griciunas was one of four newcomers to see action. The others were redshirt freshman
Jacob Davison and true freshmen
Richard Polanco and
Jack Perry. Brendan Howard, Kim Aiken Jr., and
Tanner Groves are redshirting the season, as well as BYU transfer
Steven Beo and walk-on
Tyler Kidd.
Trio of Other Newcomers Contributing Significantly, Including Two as Starters
True freshman
Jack Perry has started EWU's last 10 games, and had a 14-point, six-assist effort in EWU's 82-67 win over Sacramento State on Jan. 6. He had his first two first double-figure scoring performances of the season with 13 at South Dakota on Nov. 10 and 17 two nights later at Wyoming when he also had a season-high seven assists. On the season he's averaging 6.0 points and 2.7 assists per game while making 45.8 percent from the field and 23-of-57 3-pointers (40.4 percent to rank 14th in the Big Sky). His clutch 3-pointer with 15 seconds left helped clinch EWU's 81-74 win over Portland State on Jan. 4.
Redshirt freshman
Jacob Davison made the first start of his career at Seattle on Dec. 3 and started seven-straight games. He is now coming off the bench and has averaged 5.8 points on the season. He had a 13-point performance against Utah on Nov. 24 for his third double-figure scoring performance in a four-game span. He came off the bench to score 20 against Georgia State on Nov 20, and had 11 one game earlier versus UNLV. He has made 29-of-35 free throws (82.9 percent).
And true freshman forward
Richard Polanco has provided an offensive boost, averaging 9.3 minutes and 4.7 points. He's scored in double figures three times this season and has made nearly half of his shots from the field (32-of-65) and 68.4 percent of his free throws (13-of-19).
Honored Academically Within Past Year, Eagles Post 3.43 GPA in Fall Quarter
Despite a road-heavy second half of the quarter for the Eagles, EWU basketball players posted a collective 3.43 grade point average in the fall. "This is very impressive, especially considering the amount of days we were on the road this quarter," praised Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans. "Our guys work hard, and our coaches and administration do a great job of making sure they have all the support they need."
In the offseason, the Eastern men's basketball team was honored with the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Team Academic Excellence Award announced last summer. It was the fourth consecutive year EWU has won that award. In addition, a trio of players – including returning senior forward
Bogdan Bliznyuk – were honored on the NABC Honors Court.
The team award was won by 209 colleges and universities for having a team cumulative grade point average of 3.0 and above for the 2016-17 season. Teams in NCAA Division I, II, II and NAIA Division I and II were eligible. Eastern and Gonzaga were the only NCAA Division I schools in the state of Washington to be honored, and were joined by Central Washington from NCAA Division II and Northwest College from the NAIA. Eastern, Idaho State and Montana were the only Big Sky Conference schools to be recognized.
Players on EWU's 2016-17 team included Academic All-America nominees
Ty Gibson and
Jesse Hunt, as well as their fellow Big Sky Conference All-Academic selections
Jacob Wiley (Big Sky MVP),
Bogdan Bliznyuk (second team All-Big Sky),
Mason Peatling,
Mario Soto and
Luka Vulikic. Other members of the squad included
Julian Harrell, Felix Von Hofe, Sir Washington, Cody Benzel,
Michael Wearne, Grant Gibb and
Geremy McKay, with
Jacob Davison and
Joshua Thomas redshirting
.
Besides Bliznyuk, former Eagles
Julian Harrell and
Mario Soto were selected on the Honors Court. Recipients of the award must be a varsity player, and academically a junior or senior while earning a cumulative grade point average of 3.2 or higher.
Bliznyuk is from Lutsk, Ukraine, and graduated in 2014 from Todd Beamer High School in Federal Way, Wash. He is a marketing major at Eastern, and currently has a 3.31 grade point average at EWU. A three-time member of the Big Sky All-Academic team, Bliznyuk is one of five returning players who earned that honor in the 2016-17 season. The others are Gibson, who has a near-perfect 3.99 GPA, Hunt (3.62 GPA), Peatling (3.94 GPA) and Vulikic (3.41 GPA).
Home Games Cherished in Second-Toughest Preseason in 31 Years
With just three home games in the preseason, the first season at the helm has been road-heavy and a challenging one for
Shantay Legans and his first team, with 10 of 13 preseason games away from home. In fact, the only time in 31 seasons as a member of the Big Sky Eastern has had a more road-heavy preseason schedule was in the 1988-89 season when EWU played 11 of 14 games away from home. That team was 1-10 away from home and 3-11 overall heading into conference play (EWU finished 8-22 overall and 5-11 in the league).
Seven of EWU preseason losses were on the home court of its opponents, which finished their pre-conference schedules 69-27 (72 percent) on the season and 50-6 (89 percent) at home. The Eagles recorded a huge win at Stanford (67-61 on Nov. 14) and barely lost at Wyoming (93-88 in overtime on Dec. 17). After 36-straight days without a home game, Eastern returned to Reese Court where the Eagles had won 84 percent of their games (46-9) in the previous four years since the 2013-14 season.
This season is also just the second time in school history EWU has played three Pac-12 Conference opponents in the same year, with 2011-12 the other season and included losses to Oregon, Washington State and UCLA. In the 2017-18 season, Eastern will play eight opponents who played in national postseason tournaments last season, including five in the non-conference portion of EWU's schedule.
Three Pac-12 Conference opponents and a stretch of 36-straight days without a game at home were the task EWU took on. Three other teams in NCAA Division I also have such a streak:
39 – Penn (Nov. 18 vs. PSU-Brandywine; Dec. 27 vs. Delaware State)
39 – Harvard (Nov. 12 vs. UMass; Dec. 21 vs. Boston University)
37 – New Mexico State (Dec. 12 vs. vs. Eastern New Mexico, Jan. 18 vs. Seattle U.)
36 – Eastern Washington (Nov. 10 vs. Walla Walla; Dec. 17 vs. CSU-Northridge)
In all, Eastern has played teams from 10 different conferences this season, with all but two of its games versus NCAA Division I opposition. Seven opponents won at least 20 games a year ago – Georgia State, Utah, San Francisco, South Dakota, Wyoming, North Dakota and Weber State. Utah and South Dakota advanced to the National Invitation Tournament (NIT), Georgia State advanced to the College Insider Tournament (CIT) and San Francisco and Wyoming joined EWU in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI). The other three postseason opponents came from the Big Sky Conference – North Dakota in the NCAA Tournament and Idaho and Weber State in the CIT.
Eastern's long road stretch was rare, but not unprecedented in 110 years of basketball at Eastern. The 10 games (2-8 record) without a home game is the second-longest stretch, ranking only behind the 1988-89 team which played 11-straight away from home (1-10) while going from Dec. 3 to Jan. 12 without a home game. That team went 39 days without playing at home and the 1981-82 squad had a stretch of 37 days (5-4 in nine games away from home). This year's team went 36 days – Nov. 10 to Dec. 17 – without playing at home at Reese Court, where the Eagles are 46-9 (84 percent) in the last four-plus years (since the 2013-14 season). Since joining NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season, Eastern has had eight month-long stretches without a home game, and prior to that had seven known such streaks.
The Eagles began their road trip against the University of Washington in Seattle on Nov. 12 – two days after playing at home on Nov. 10 versus Walla Walla. The first leg of EWU's road stretch included 4,432 airline miles, while the other trips in the road stretch included 3,449 air miles. That's a total of 7,881 air miles, not including ground travel and a bus trip to and from Seattle for the game versus the Redhawks.
1,000 Broadcast Milestone Reached Dec. 3 by Broadcaster Larry Weir
Long-time Eastern Washington University radio announcer Larry Weir called his 1,000th Eagle men's basketball or football game on Dec. 3 in EWU's game at Seattle. He was the 2015 and 2016 State of Washington Sportscaster of the Year, and was honored at Eastern's home game versus Providence on Dec. 20.
Weir recently concluded his 27th season as the football voice of the Eagles and is in his 25th calling men's basketball for EWU, whose games are broadcast on 700-AM ESPN. Through the Dec. 3 game, Weir had missed just 27 out of 706 men's basketball games, calling a total of 679 to go along with 321 out of a possible 322 football games. Through Jan. 12, his total is at 1,010.
Weir first began calling games in the 1991-92 season, and the only football game he missed in that span was a 2005 playoff game at Northern Iowa when he was broadcasting Eastern's basketball games in Alaska. Weir is in his 25th season calling men's basketball action for the Eagles (from 1991-2009 and again from 2012-present). Weir's tenure has included calling games coached by seven men's basketball coaches and five in football. The 2017-18 season marks his first year working with EWU coaches
Aaron Best in football and
Shantay Legans in basketball.
Now in Cheney, Basketball Coaches Show Are Mondays
Featuring a new location, the next Eastern Washington University basketball coaches show take place Mondays throughout the season at 6 p.m. Pacific time and will be broadcast live on 700-AM ESPN.
The public is invited to attend the live shows, which are now taking place at Barrelhouse Pub and Pizza in Cheney, Wash., just a few blocks from the EWU campus. They begin at 6 p.m., and feature head men's basketball coach
Shantay Legans, host
Larry Weir and other special guests, including women's head coach
Wendy Schuller.
Barrelhouse is located at 122 College Ave. in downtown Cheney, and is owned by Mike Lyons. The restaurant features specialty pizzas, calzones and other appetizers, as well as a large variety of draft beer and a full bar. It also has a large assortment of televisions tuned to each day's top sporting events.
Comments from Head Coach Shantay Legans . . .
On Idaho Loss: "Our guys came out and played with great emotion and great fire, and I thought they did that throughout the game. But as you don't score and the game stops going the way you want it to go, your effort level doesn't dip but your confidence does a little bit. We didn't play with that same confidence and same swagger as we did at the start and how we have been playing. We have to do a better job next time sustaining that energy we played with early. You can't say we didn't come out and play defense, because I thought we did a good job there."
On EWU Defense: "We went over a lot of stuff and they run a ton of stuff on offense, so I give our guys credit for doing a good job defensively. We held them to 40 percent and to 22 percent in the second half from three – that's really good, especially against a team shooting 41 percent from three. That was a good job by us there."
On Vandals: "They came in and had a good game plan – Coach Verlin did a good job with his team. They put us on our heels a little bit in the second half, and that kind of threw our timing off a little bit. We rushed some of our shots – we usually make those threes. We have to go back to the drawing board. Our guys played hard and to hold them to 58 points was a positive for us. But 51 points isn't very good – it was a very bad game for us tonight."
On Vandal Defense: "I give them all the credit. They came in with a great game plan and they stuck to it. They made us switch it up during the middle of the game. Their zone and their 1-2-2 press gave us a little bit of a problem. We have to be a little bit more aggressive and I have to do a better job getting guys prepared for that."
On Having Players Like Bliznyuk: "It's good, and it's always great to have players like Bogdan. He can do everything for us. I've said it all the time that when we have guys like this on the team it's easy to coach – they are smart, they play hard, they are getting better every day and they come in with great attitudes. It makes life easy."
On Strength of League: "There are lot of good coaches, and recruiting is starting to pick up and they are getting good players from all over the world. It's a tough league because every team has three or four really tough players and are well-coached. There are a lot of skilled players and the depth of the league is wild."
On Contributions of Senior Sir Washington: "Since we've been in league play Sir has stepped up and played huge. He's playing like a senior. He's had some ups and downs, but since we've started league play he's played his butt off. He's defending and he's getting big rebounds, and he's taken some pressure off Jack (Perry) at the point. He's playing undersized but he's tough. When you have a senior who is a great leader, we count on him."
On Captains: "Bogdan and Ty are our captains and they keep our team level-headed – not too high and not too low. They keep us steady, and it makes it easy to coach with them on our team."
On Jack Perry: "We're lucky to have him. He does a lot of things right and his father is a good coach back in Australia. Jack comes battle-tested and it's great having him. He is confident every time he's on the court and he understands exactly what is going on. It's like having another coach out there, and he's doing everything the right way. We have a lot of different options we can go with."
On Bliznyuk's Abilities: "Bogdan has been the personification of what we want our EWU program to look like. He is the perfect student-athlete and deserves all the accolades he receives. He shows that hard work and determination pays off. We talked about it before the season started that he was going to be double-teamed and he has to make sure he's making the pass. He's making the pass and that's exactly what we're looking for. He's doing a great job of leading our players, getting them in the huddle and talking to make sure we are doing everything the right way. He's a great captain."
On Academic Honors: "This is just a testament that we are more than just a talented basketball team. It also shows that academics are the highest priority for our student-athletes at Eastern Washington. I am proud of our players for finishing the year strong in the classroom, and setting an example for the incoming student-athletes."
Series Notes
* Although Eastern has won nine of the last 12, Eastern lost the last meeting a year ago and trails in the all-time series versus NAU 31-37 (9-23 in Flagstaff, 20-12 in Cheney, 2-2 neutral). The only meeting before Eastern became a member of NCAA Division I was an 84-80 NAU victory on Dec. 20, 1969, in Fresno, Calif. In the 2016-17 season Eastern won in Cheney 84-62 before falling in Flagstaff 76-61. In the 2015-16 season, Eastern won three games versus NAU, including a 74-52 victory in the first round of the Big Sky Conference Tournament. Eastern has won the last six meetings in Cheney dating back to a 73-69 loss on Jan. 15, 2010.
* A year ago in Flagstaff, a 20-point deficit in the first half was too much to overcome as Eastern ended the Big Sky regular season with a 76-61 road loss at NAU on March 4 at the Walkup Skydome. Had the Eagles won, they would have won a share of their fourth regular season Big Sky title in school history.
Bogdan Bliznyuk scored 28 and
Felix Von Hofe had 15 to lead EWU, but senior
Jacob Wiley was held to six shots and five total points. Northern Arizona out-shot EWU 43 percent to 35 percent and out-rebounded the Eagles 46-29. After a furious rally from 25 down to nearly beat Idaho two days earlier, Northern Arizona came out on fire against the Eagles and surged to an early 34-14 lead. The Lumberjacks had runs of 9-0 and 8-0 en route to making 48 percent of their shots from the field in the first half, including 5-of-8 three-pointers. Meanwhile, Eastern's inside and drive games were shut down by NAU, and EWU attempted only four two-point shots in the first half. The Eagles missed them all and hit 6-of-21 3-point shots. Eastern trailed 37-20 at halftime. The Eagles cut the lead to 10 at 51-41 with 9:52 on back-to-back 3-point field goals by Von Hofe and
Cody Benzel, but Eastern missed its next shot with a chance to cut the lead to seven. That started a stretch of five-straight misses for EWU, as the Eagles went 3:37 without scoring and NAU held a 15-point lead with 6 1/2 minutes to play. Bliznyuk also had, seven rebounds and five assists, making 9-of-24 field goals and 8-of-9 free throws.
* In the previous meeting in Cheney on Jan. 19, 2017, It was raining points again for
Jacob Wiley, as he poured in 30 points to lead Eastern past NAU 84-62. Wiley made 14-of-16 shots from the field and both of his free throws, and also had eight rebounds, four blocked shots and a steal. Thanks to Wiley's dominating performance, Eastern out-shot the Lumberjacks 54 percent to 40 percent for the game, and had a season-high 58 points in the paint. The Lumberjacks had only 16 points in the paint, a season low for an EWU opponent this season. Eastern led for less time in the first half than NAU (7:42 to 8:25), so a 37-31 halftime lead was far from comfortable for the Eagles. But EWU came out on fire in the second half and used a 13-2 run to open a 50-35 lead with 16:17 remaining. Eastern led by as many as 25 before finishing with the 22-point win, its largest versus a NCAA Division I opponent at the time.
Mason Peatling finished with 10 points, five rebounds, two assists and two steals while making 5-of-8 shots from the field.
Jesse Hunt added six points, three rebounds and a pair of blocked shots.
Luka Vulikic made all four of his shots and chipped in nine points.
Cody Benzel contributed six points in the first half.
* The Eagles are 9-4 all-time against Southern Utah (5-1 in Cheney, 4-3 in Cedar City) with an eight-game winning streak. Eastern has won the last four meetings in Cedar City since a 69-55 loss on Jan. 26, 2013. The Eagles have triumphed in the last five home meetings since losing the first game in Cheney in the series by a 70-68 score on Dec. 21, 1993. The Thunderbirds joined the Big Sky in the 2012-13 season and EWU is 8-1 versus them since then.
* Last year in Cedar City, Eastern used runs of 11-0 and 7-0 in the second half to pull away from Southern Utah for a 91-75 victory March 2, but the even better news that night came from Grand Forks, N.D., where league-leading North Dakota was upset by Sacramento State 57-53. As a result, the Eagles and Fighting Hawks sat atop the Big Sky standings at 13-4 apiece with one game to play in the regular season (EWU lost and UND won their finales).
Felix Von Hofe scored 20 points with six 3-pointers to become the 21st player in school history go over the 1,000-point mark in his career. His scoring performance was his best since getting 22 in a league-opening win at Idaho. He,
Jacob Wiley and
Bogdan Bliznyuk combined for 70 of EWU's 91 points. Wiley had a double-double with 18 points and 13 rebounds and Bliznyuk had 32 points, eight rebounds and six assists. Wiley and Bliznyuk combined for all of EWU's points in a 7-0 run to give EWU a comfortable 73-61 lead with 3:56 to play, about six minutes after EWU used an 11-0 run to take the lead for good. Trailing 54-50 in the second half, EWU outscored the Thunderbirds 41-21 the rest of the way. Eastern made all 23 of its free throws in the second half and made 12 3-pointers, helping the Eagles to a 57 percent shooting night. Bliznyuk made his last 15 free throws after missing the lone EWU free throw attempt in the first half.
* The last time the teams played in Cheney,
Bogdan Bliznyuk and
Jacob Wiley scored 21 points each as Eastern beat Southern Utah 83-68 Jan. 21, 2017, at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. Eight Eagles scored and four had 3-pointers as the Eagles were dominating in the first 20 minutes of the game and opened a 47-22 lead at halftime. Eastern led by as many as 30 points in the second half before settling for the 15-point victory. Eastern had a 52 percent shooting night and held Southern Utah to 36 percent while blocking 10 Thunderbird shots. In the first half alone, Eastern's defense held the Thunderbirds to 24 percent shooting and a 6:35 stretch without a field goal. At the time, the 22 points SUU scored equaled the second-fewest EWU has allowed in a half this season. Bliznyuk and Wiley stuffed the stat sheet, with Bliznyuk finishing with 21 points, nine rebounds and equaling a career high with five steals. Wiley also had nine rebounds to go along with five assists, four blocks and a steal.
Felix Von Hofe hit 4-of-8 3-point attempts to finish with 12 points.
Luka Vulikic had six points and five rebounds, and equaled his career high with three assists.
Mason Peatling chipped in seven points, seven rebounds, three assists and two blocked shots.
Cody Benzel and
Ty Gibson both hit a pair of 3-pointers and scored six points.
Recent Game Recaps
Fast Start and Defense Doesn't Hold Up For Eagles
Despite a 20-6 start and a defensive effort that equaled its season best, Eastern fell 58-51 to the Idaho on Jan. 12 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash., to end EWU's 12-game home court winning streak. The Eagles held Idaho to 58 points, equaling the fewest EWU has allowed to an opponent this season. Idaho sank just 40.8 percent of its shots, including only 2-of-9 3-pointers in the second half (22.2 percent). However, after sinking eight of its first 13 shots from the field to jump out to the early 14-point lead, Eastern finished at just 36.4 percent from the field for its lowest percentage since Dec. 7. Eastern's 51 points were its fewest since scoring 50 in a loss to Georgia State in November, and Eastern hadn't scored fewer than 65 in the 12 games since – and no fewer than 77 in the last seven. Most notably, Idaho held
Bogdan Bliznyuk scoreless for 32:12 of the game after he scored nine of EWU's first 20 points. He also contributed six rebounds, four assists and a pair of steals.
Mason Peatling chipped in eight points, six rebounds, two steals and two blocked shots, and
Jack Perry also scored eight with two assists and three rebounds. Juniors
Ty Gibson and
Cody Benzel each scored six points, but combined to go just 4-of-14 from the field overall, including 4-of-13 from the 3-point stripe. Gibson also had five rebounds and four assists. The Eagles got off to a hot start, opening leads of 10-1 and 20-6, but they couldn't sustain it. The Eagles made eight of their first 13 shots, but then just 12-of-42 after that for 29 percent. Eastern led 34-33 with 15:27 left in the game on a 3-pointer by Gibson, but the Vandals followed with a 10-2 run over the next three minutes to take a 43-36 advantage. A 7-0 Vandal run and a five-minute scoreless stretch for the Eagles helped Idaho open an 11-point bulge at the 2:21 mark, and EWU could get no closer than seven the rest of the way.
Benzel Scores Career-High 25 as Eastern Beats Sacramento State 82-67
Cody Benzel led five Eagles in double figures with career highs of 25 points and seven 3-pointers as the Eagles remained unbeaten at home with an 82-67 victory against Sacramento State on Jan. 6 at Reese Court. Besides Benzel,
Benas Griciunas had a career-high 16 points,
Jack Perry had 14,
Mason Peatling contributed 12 and
Sir Washington chipped in 10. Those five players had entered with scoring averages of between 4.5 and 5.3 per game, and had just a collective nine double-figure scoring performances in EWU's first 16 games. Eastern's top three scorers – including injured forward
Jesse Hunt – combined for just two points in the game, as Big Sky Player of the Year candidate
Bogdan Bliznyuk was double and triple teamed by the Hornets. He finished with just two points, but he contributed nine assists, seven rebounds and three steals. The senior was able to move into second in school history in career scoring with 1,742 points, one better than Ron Cox with 1,741 from 1974-77 and 61 away from the all-time record. For the third-straight game, Eastern had a double-digit advantage in field goal percentage. Eastern sank 55 percent – including a blistering 62 percent in the second half when the Eagles made 8-of-14 3-pointers – while Sac State finished at 44 percent. Benzel got hot in the second half and netted 15 points, including a trio of 3-pointers in runs of 8-0 and 6-0 to give EWU a 21-point lead. The Eagles had used runs of 10-0 and 9-0 in the first half to help open a 12-point lead at halftime. The Hornets led just three times in the first half for a total of 57 seconds.
Toughness Prevails as Eagles Edge Vikings 81-74
It was another record-breaking night for senior
Bogdan Bliznyuk, but it was toughness that saved the day at Reese Court as Eastern edged Portland State 81-74 on Jan. 4. Eastern used a 16-0 run to build a double-digit cushion midway through the second half versus a team with 10 victories during the preseason. But 40 minutes of full-court pressure by the Vikings caught up with the Eagles, who needed a 3-pointer by true freshman
Jack Perry with 15 ticks of the clock left to seal it for the Eagles. Eastern won the game with a dominating 49 percent to 37 percent advantage in field goal percentage, and out-shot the Vikings 8-3 from the 3-point line. Until Eastern took a 13-point lead with 9:20 to play following a 16-0 run, the game featured 10 ties and 14 lead changes – both season highs for the Eagles. Bliznyuk broke the school record for career free throws, ending the night with 391 to surpass the 386 of 10-year NBA veteran Rodney Stuckey from 2006-07. Bliznyuk was 13-of-13 at the line and finished with a double-double of 28 points and 12 rebounds.
Jesse Hunt scored in double figures for the fifth-straight game, finishing with 11 on 3-of-5 shooting from the field and 3-of-4 from the free throw line. He had four rebounds but played only 16 minutes before fouling out.
Sir Washington came off the bench to contribute seven points and three rebounds in 29 minutes, and
Ty Gibson hit three of EWU's eight 3-pointers in the game to finish with 10 points.
Richard Polanco scored nine points in just 11 minutes off the bench, and Perry contributed seven points, four rebounds and four assists in 33 minutes as a starter.