Eastern Washington
University "Eagles"
Men's Basketball (16-8/9-4 Big Sky)
Saturday, Feb. 15 – at Portland State – 7:05 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 20 – Sacramento State – 6:05 p.m.
all times Pacific |
Radio: |
EWU games are on 700-AM ESPN & 105.3-FM in the Spokane/Cheney area with Larry Weir calling the play-by-play. Broadcasts begin a half-hour prior to tipoff. |
Internet Radio: |
https://tunein.com/radio/Eastern-Washington-Basketball-s308823/?_branch_match_id=723936718277085088 |
Radio Mobile Phone App: |
Via tunein radio |
TV: |
The Portland State game is televised by Eleven Sports. |
Webcast: |
Fans can also watch the broadcast via Pluto TV channel 534 for EWU home games (532 for Portland State) or via https://bigskyconf.com/sports/2015/11/19/WatchBigSky.aspx |
Live Stats: |
EWU Home Games: http://ewustats.com |
Weekly Coaches Show: |
The next show hosted by Larry Weir and featuring head coach Shantay Legans is scheduled for Monday, Feb. 17 at 6 p.m. and is aired live on 700-AM ESPN & 105.3-FM. That show is expected to take place live at 24 Taps Burgers & Brews in Spokane (825 W. Riverside). CLICK HERE for a complete schedule. |
The road has been kind to the Eagles in the 2019-20 season, but Viking Pavilion has been anything but that in the last three years.
Coming off a disappointing 74-71 loss at home to Idaho, the Eastern Washington University men's basketball team goes back on the road for a Big Sky Conference game Saturday (Feb. 15) at dangerous Portland State at 7:05 p.m. Pacific time in Portland, Ore.
The game will be televised by Eleven Sports. Eastern games are aired live on radio on 700-AM ESPN, 105.3-FM, via the web at tunein.com and via mobile phone app, with pre-game coverage starting a half-hour prior to tipoff. Larry Weir serves as the play-by-play broadcaster. Fans can also watch the broadcast via Pluto TV or via
https://bigskyconf.com/sports/2015/11/19/WatchBigSky.aspx. Tickets to EWU home games are available via the EWU web site at
http://goeags.com/tickets.
Eastern is now 16-8 overall and 9-4 in the league, having fallen out of first place in the Big Sky Conference standings with a 92-82 loss at Montana on Feb. 6. After games played on Thursday, the Eagles are 1 1/2 games behind the Grizzlies (10-3) and is tied with Northern Colorado (9-4) for third. That trio is followed by Southern Utah (7-6), Montana State (7-6), Northern Arizona (7-7), Portland State (6-7), Weber State (6-8) and Sacramento State (6-8). Eastern had originally moved into first place in the standings when Montana lost its second-straight game, 88-81 to Portland State on Jan. 30.
Most concerning for EWU heading into the Portland State game is how they were defeated by Idaho. The Eagles had 17 turnovers, out-shot 50 percent to 38 percent and were dominated in rebounding, 46-28. Eastern trailed 41-28 at halftime, and followed its lowest-scoring half of the season with its eighth-highest scoring half of the year (fourth-best versus NCAA Division I competition) of 48 points.
"We can't get beat on the glass like that," said Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans of the main reason EWU didn't register its 17th victory of the season. "I keep looking at that stat and I can't get over it."
Saturday, Eastern faces an even more dangerous opponent on the glass and in other areas that could slow down the Eagle offense, which ranks seventh in NCAA Division I in scoring at 81.2 points per game. The Vikings rank third in NCAA Division I in offensive rebounds per game (14.6), and are 32nd nationally and first in the league in steals (8.2). The Vikings average 77.0 points per game to rank 39th nationally and second in the league behind EWU.
"We have to go back and figure that out because we play a great offensive rebounding team at Portland State," said Legans. "They were probably watching the Idaho game and salivating – they can't wait to play us."
Portland State is 6-7 in the Big Sky and 12-13 overall, and is coming off an 83-71 upset win at Northern Colorado on Monday (Feb. 10). The Bears had a chance to pull into a tie with Eastern for second place in the Big Sky standings, and now the Vikings are at home with hopes of pulling off another upset.
Eastern is 9-2 at home this season, but is also an impressive 7-5 on opponent home courts. However, EWU has lost the last three times it has played the Vikings in Portland, including a 13-point loss in 2019 (78-65), a 13-point loss in 2018 (94-81) and a 16-point setback in 2017 (107-91). In fact, Portland State has won 10 of the last 11 meetings in Portland dating back to 2007, with a seven-game winning streak broken in a 92-85 EWU win in 2015.
Eastern beat Portland State 71-69 in the previous meeting in Cheney on Jan. 4. The Vikings are 7-2 at home and 4-11 on the road this season (1-0 on neutral courts), and are out-scoring opponents by an average of 12.0 points per game at home, while getting out-scored by an average of nearly five points per game away from the Viking Pavilion.
Holland Woods, a 6-foot-1 junior guard, paces Portland State with averages of 17.3 points, 5.2 assists, 1.9 steals and 2.4 rebounds per game. Senior 6-2 guard Matt Hauser averages 14.1 points, 4.4 rebounds, 2.2 assists and 1.4 steals. Senior 6-6-6 forward Alonzo Walker averages 10.0 points, 5.5 rebounds and 0.7 blocks, and 6-8 senior center Sal Nuhu chips in 9.8 points, 7.0 rebounds and 2.1 blocks per outing.
The good news for Eastern is that after PSU, four of its last six league games are at home at Reese Court, including next Thursday (Feb. 20) when Sacramento State visits. The Eagles also host Northern Arizona (Feb. 22), Idaho State (March 5) and Weber State (March 7). Eastern defeated six of its final seven opponents in the first half of league play, with the lone loss on the road at Idaho State.
Now three games into the second half of the league season, seeding for the Big Sky Conference Tournament March 11-14 in Boise, Idaho, becomes an important consideration. The top five teams receive a bye to the quarterfinal round on Thursday, March 12, while the other six play on Wednesday, March 11, and must win four games to win the title and the automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.
Eastern fell out of first place in the Big Sky Conference standings with a 92-82 loss at Montana on Jan. 6, but improved to 9-3 in the league two days later with a convincing 74-49 home victory over Montana State. Despite playing its fourth game in eight days, the Eagles rolled to a 35-16 halftime lead with its best defensive half of the season to improve to 9-1 at Reese Court this season. In leading by as many as 19 in the first half and 36 in the second, the 25-point winning margin was EWU's best versus a Big Sky opponent and second-best versus a NCAA Division I opponent this season.
Montana is the two-time defending Big Sky Conference champion, and EWU has missed out on NCAA Tournament berths by falling to the Grizzlies in both the 2018 (82-65) and 2019 (68-62) championship games of the league tournament. Both EWU and UM are the preseason picks to win the league title in the 2019-20 season – Eastern by the coaches and Montana by the media. With a season sweep over EWU, the Grizzlies have a tiebreaker advantage over the Eagles.
Game Notes
Eagles Seventh in NCAA Division I in Scoring
Through games of Feb. 13, Eastern is now ranked seventh in NCAA Division I in scoring with a league-leading average of 81.2 points per game, with Gonzaga leading at 88.5 per game. The Eagles also rank fifth in assists (17.5 per game) and 22nd in assist-to-turnover ratio (+1.29 per game) to lead the league, and are 69th in field goal percentage (.459) and 25th in 3-point field goals per game (9.4) to rank second in the Big Sky.
Individually, sophomore
Kim Aiken Jr. is fourth in NCAA Division I in defensive rebounds per game (8.4) and 35th in rebounding overall (9.9). He leads the Big Sky in both categories, and is also 28th in the nation with 10 double-doubles. Senior
Mason Peatling is 78th in rebounding overall (8.7 to rank second in the league behind Aiken) and 52nd in offensive rebounds per game (3.1 to rank second in the BSC). He has nine double-doubles to rank 47th nationally and second in the league behind Aiken. Junior
Jacob Davison is 78th nationally and fourth in the Big Sky in scoring (18.0) and Aiken is first in the league and 53rd in the nation in steals (1.92). True freshman
Ellis Magnuson is 65th in the nation in assists (4.8 to rank third in the Big Sky) and is 97th in assist-to-turnover ratio (+1.92 per game to rank second in the league).
Davison, Aiken and
Mason Peatling all rank in the top 12 in the Big Sky in scoring, with Peatling averaging 16.3 (seventh) and Aiken at 13.9 (11th).
Trio of Eagles Averaging in Double Figures
The Eagles thus far are 9-2 at home and 7-6 on the road, having won its first road contest of the season at Seattle University 74-66 on Nov. 9. Eastern also picked up a 90-74 road win at High Point on Nov. 23, marking EWU's first victory in the Eastern time zone since knocking off Indiana 88-86 in Bloomington, Ind., on Nov. 24, 2014. Eastern's non-conference wins at home came against Portland Bible College (107-25 on Nov. 5), Belmont (87-82 on Nov. 26), North Dakota (98-82 on Dec. 8), Multnomah (146-89) and Omaha (97-56).
Leading EWU in scoring with a 18.0 average is junior
Jacob Davison, Eastern's newest member of the 1,000-point club. After a 21-point effort versus Idaho on Feb. 13 that put him over the 1,000-point mark, he has had 10 20-point performances this season and 19 in his career, with three of 30 or more. He had 34 points in a Feb. 6 loss at Montana, and a pair of 26-point performances in wins over Montana State on Jan. 18 and Portland State on Jan. 4. He had a 39-point effort earlier this season against North Dakota to rank as the 11th-most in school history (10th at the time). He had 19 points in the first half and 20 in the second, and his total of 17 field goals made ranks second in school history (now third). The Eagles trailed by four in the second half, but he scored 18 of EWU's last 45 points as the Eagles led by as many as 19 in the closing minutes. His career high of 41 – now the ninth-most – came versus Northern Arizona on Feb. 4, 2019. Davison also scored 25 in the Seattle win earlier this season on Nov. 9 and had 26 versus Boston College on Nov. 20. He scored 12 at Washington and had 21 against Multnomah. In his now 80-game career (50 as a starter), he's averaged 12.6 points, 3.2 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 1.2 steals while sinking 46.3 percent of his shots from the field, 35.5 percent from the 3-point stripe (97-of-273) and 76.5 percent of his free throws. He now has 1,008 career points to rank 22nd on EWU's all-time list of 1,000-point scorers, joining teammate
Mason Peatling as one of 23 in the club.
Senior
Mason Peatling is averaging 16.3 points, 8.7 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 1.5 blocks, including a pair of monster games in late January. Peatling came three assists from a triple double in an 89-84 win over Northern Colorado on Jan. 27, finishing with 21 points and 22 rebounds – second most in school history. He also had seven assists and three blocked shots as he had the 12th performance in school history to come within a combination of three points/rebounds/assists from a triple double, in addition to the lone triple double in school history. That game was part of his current stretch of six double-doubles in eight games, including 21 points and 10 rebounds versus Idaho on Feb. 13. Peatling hit a significant milestone on Jan. 25, hitting the 1,000-point mark in his career in an 81-78 overtime home victory over Southern Utah. He finished that game with 30 points, 11 rebounds, five blocked shots and five assists. One game prior to the Southern Utah game, he had a double-double with 17 points and 11 rebounds against Montana State on Jan. 18, and also had 14 points, 14 boards and four assists at Northern Arizona on Feb. 3. He is now just the sixth player in school history to have at least 1,000 points and 525 rebounds in his career. Coming to Eastern from Melbourne, Australia, Peatling is only the second player to couple that with 50 blocked shots. Fellow Australian Venky Jois had 1,803 points, 1,015 rebounds and 240 blocks in his career from 2013-16. Peatling has now played 111 games in his career to rank 16th in school history, and he became the 22nd player all-time at Eastern to hit the 1,000-point mark (he currently ranks 16th with 1,107). His .551 shooting percentage in his career currently ranks seventh, his 650 rebounds are seventh and his 103 blocked shots are third as he became the third Eagle in school history to hit the century mark in blocks. In his career (89 games as a starter), Peatling has averaged 10.0 points and 5.9 rebounds with a total of 141 assists, 76 steals and 103 blocks. He now has 17 double-doubles in his career – including nine this season and six in the last eight games -- with a record of 15-2. His 54 points against Multnomah on Dec. 13 broke a nearly 50-year conference record of 53 points and shattered the previous school record of 45. His 24 field goals made were league and EWU records, and his 30 attempts were the most all-time at Eastern as he earned the first of his two Big Sky Player of the Week accolades. He also had 13 rebounds and four assists to finish with his first double-double of the season. One of just two Eagle seniors on this year's team, Peatling and teammate
Jacob Davison were among the six players chosen league-wide as preseason All-Big Sky selections for the 2019-20 season. Peatling was sidelined a year ago with a foot injury when the Eagles were just 1-9, but since then Eastern is 31-17 (15-9 last year, 16-8 this season) heading into EWU's game at Portland State on Feb. 15.
Averaging nearly a double-double is sophomore
Kim Aiken Jr., who is averaging 13.9 points and 9.9 rebounds per game. In fact, he was averaging a double-double from Nov. 9 until Feb. 13 when he had just four boards in a 74-71 home loss to Idaho. He is also averaging a league-leading 1.92 steals, as well as 1.4 assists and 1.1 blocked shots. He had a career-best 26-point effort at Washington on Dec. 4, and thus far has 10 double-doubles this season. Four of his double-doubles came at home in the preseason – 11 points and 15 rebounds in a 98-82 win over North Dakota on Dec. 8; 11 points and 11 rebounds in an 87-85 win over Belmont on Nov. 26; 16 points and 22 rebounds against Multnomah on Dec. 13; and 23 points and 10 caroms versus Omaha on Dec. 17. His 22 rebounds versus Multnomah were a career high and equal the second-most in school history behind the record of 28. Against Belmont he scored eight of EWU's last 12 points and had four defensive boards in the final 44 seconds. He had 19 points and five rebounds against High Point on Nov. 23, but prior to that had a string of three-straight double-doubles. He had 11 points and 19 rebounds against Seattle in which EWU used an 11-1 run in the second half to overcome a nine-point deficit. Aiken followed with a double-double of 13 points and 13 rebounds at Saint Louis, then had 17 and 13, respectively, at Boston College. Thus far in his 54-game career (35 as a starter), he is averaging 9.8 points and 7.1 rebounds with 14 career double-doubles (10-4 record).
That trio has combined for 59 percent of EWU's scoring, 58 percent of its rebounding and 78 percent of its blocked shots. In addition, they have combined for 63 percent of the team's free throws made, 55 percent of its steals, 49 percent of its 3-pointers made, 60 percent of its field goals overall and 46 percent of the total minutes for the Eagles.
Junior guard
Jack Perry, who missed five games in November and early December with a high ankle sprain, is back in the starting lineup and is averaging 5.5 points and 2.3 assists, and hit a 3-pointer – the 100th of his career -- to give EWU the lead for good in a 78-75 victory at Idaho on Jan. 16. He made five 3-pointers in the second half to finish with 15 points in a 77-66 win at Northern Arizona on Feb. 3, coming three points from his career high. He is currently just off EWU's all-time career 3-point percentage list at 39.4 percent (115-of-292). He started EWU's Big Sky Conference opener on Dec. 28 versus Weber State in a 79-77 road win, then scored 10 in a loss at Idaho State. He's played 86 total games as an Eagle (54 as a starter) and has averaged 5.5 points, 1.9 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game.
Eastern's youth movement has also been impressive, with true freshman
Ellis Magnuson cracking the starting lineup. Magnuson has started all 24 EWU games at point guard and has averaged 4.8 assists and 5.7 points per game. He scored only four points in EWU's first four games, but had 12 and 13 in back-to-back wins against High Point and Belmont. He had nine assists versus Belmont, eight versus High Point and Washington, and 10 in his collegiate debut versus Portland Bible College. He had 14 points versus North Dakota when he also had a team-high six assists, and had 10 points and seven dishes versus Omaha. He produced 12 points, seven assists, six rebounds and a pair of steals in his Big Sky Conference debut on Dec. 28 versus Weber State in a 79-77 victory. He had a season-high 16 with five assists versus Idaho on Jan. 16 in a 78-75 win.
Redshirt freshman
Casson Rouse has chipped in 6.1 points and 1.8 assists while making 30-of-73 3-pointers (41.1 percent), and sophomore
Tanner Groves has come off the bench to average 6.1 points, 3.4 rebounds and 0.7 blocks. He scored a career-high 17 points versus Multnomah on Dec. 13, including a rebound dunk that was the No. 1 play by ESPN's Sportscenter that night and had 2 1/2 million views. He came off the bench to score 16 versus Montana State on Feb. 8, hitting 4-of-5 3-pointers. Thus far in his 52-game career (three as a starter) he's averaged 4.3 points, 2.7 boards and has 35 blocks. His brother, true freshman
Jacob Groves, is averaging 2.7 points and 1.5 rebounds in the 18 games he has played – the first two in victories against High Point and Belmont. He had his high game with eight points versus Multnomah.
Eastern's other senior, guard
Tyler Kidd, has come off the bench to average 5.6 points and 1.4 assists, including 12 points versus UW and 16 versus Gonzaga on a perfect 5-of-5 from the field (two 3-pointers) and 4-of-4 at the free throw line. So far in his 45-game career (19 as a starter), he's averaged 8.6 points and 2.6 assists per outing.
Eagles Selected by Coaches to Win Big Sky Conference Title
The coaches in the Big Sky Conference think the Eagles are the preseason pick to return to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2015. The league's head coaches selected Eastern as the preseason choice to win the Big Sky title in the 2019-20 season, the league office announced Oct. 17. The Eagles were picked third in the media poll, which was also announced.
Eastern was also picked to win the title by both the coaches and media in the 2002-03 season, then finished as the runner-up in the league (regular season and tournament) and advanced to the NIT Tournament. In 2003-04 when they won the first of their two Big Sky Tournament titles, the Eagles were picked second in both polls. The success that year resulted in EWU being picked first in both polls in 2004-05, but EWU slipped to 8-20 overall and 5-9 in the league. In 2014-15, when EWU also advanced to the NCAA Tournament, EWU was picked second by the coaches and third by the media.
With three starters back and eight total letterwinners returning, Eastern has the ingredients to get back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2015.
"It's great to be recognized, and we've put in a lot of hard work," said Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans. "I've been here 11 years and this may be the first time we've been picked first – that's a great accomplishment in itself. Our players have done an unbelievable job of getting better each year. Our coaching staff gets them ready and prepared, and our guys play with a lot of confidence. I think that's what the other coaches have seen in some of our players."
Eastern received eight of 11 first-place votes cast by the coaches, and had 96 total points. Montana, with the other three first-place votes and 87 total, was picked to finish as the runner-up, with Weber State a close third with 86 points. Last season, for the second-straight year, Montana beat Eastern in the Big Sky Conference Tournament championship game to advance to the NCAA Tournament.
"Our team wants it a lot, but you can say that about every team in the country," Legans said. "We all want to get to the NCAA Tournament, and sometimes you have to be lucky to get there. We've gotten to the championship game but have fallen short, losing to Montana both times. Getting there is a great accomplishment and it's something we do think about. We just have to get better as the season progresses and have the depth we need when we get to the conference tournament."
In the media poll, Eastern was third with 330 points and received nine first-place votes, just behind Montana with 354 points (13 first-place votes) and Weber State with 345 (12). Northern Colorado was fourth with 275 points and a pair of first-place tallies.
Southern Utah, which advanced to the Collegeinsider.com Tournament a year ago, was picked to finish fourth by the coaches and fifth by the media, with UNC fifth in the coaches poll. The next six teams were all the same in both polls – Portland State, Montana State, Northern Arizona, Sacramento State, Idaho State and Idaho.
"The Big Sky schedule is most important for us," added Legans, whose team started the season 1-9 a year ago before going 12-8 in the league to finish at 16-18 on the season. "You lose one game in the Big Sky Tournament and you aren't going to the NCAA Tournament. Your goal is to try to play your best basketball in the three or four games you play in the tournament. You have to make sure you are ready for that."
Peatling Earns Big Sky POW Honors for Monster Weekend
Senior
Mason Peatling followed a monster game with a monster sweep, and won a pair of awards for it. Producing huge statistics in a pair of overtime victories for EWU, Peatling was honored as the Big Sky Conference Ready Nutrition Player of the Week on Jan. 28 and received the same honor from College Sports Madness on Feb. 3. It's was the second time this season and career that he was honored by the league, and the fourth such accolade for an Eagle this season. In two overtime victories at home, Peatling averaged 25.6 points, 16.5 rebounds, 6.0 assists and 4.0 blocked shots per game. He sank 52.6 percent of his field goal attempts (20-of-38) and 71.4 percent of his free throws (10-of-14). He followed those games with a performance of 12 points, seven rebounds and five assists at Sacramento State on Feb. 1, then had 14 points, 14 rebounds and four assists in a road win at Northern Arizona on Feb. 3.
Peatling came three assists from a triple double in an 89-84 win over Northern Colorado, finishing with 21 points and 22 rebounds – second most in school history. Peatling also had seven assists and three blocked shots as he had the 12th performance in school history to come within a combination of three points/rebounds/assists from a triple double, in addition to the lone triple double in school history. In overtime, Peatling saved the ball after an EWU miss for his 20th rebound of the game, and that play ended up as a 3-pointer by Aiken with 1:04 to put EWU up by two and gave the Eagles the lead for good. Peatling had a rebound basket with 41 seconds left that put the Eagles up 84-79.
Peatling hit a significant milestone on Jan. 25, hitting the 1,000-point mark in his career in an 81-78 overtime home victory over Southern Utah. The Eagle senior hit the mark with his second basket of overtime, which gave Eastern the lead for good. Peatling finished with 30 points, 11 rebounds, five blocked shots and five assists, and hit a key 3-pointer at the end of regulation to send the game to OT. In helping EWU rally from an 11-point deficit in the second half, he made 11-of-16 shots from the field and 7-of-11 from the free throw line in the game.
Davison is Big Sky Player of the Week For the Second Time This Season and in His Career
If you pick the wrong poison against EWU,
Jacob Davison can score points virtually at will. The Big Sky Conference selected him as its Big Sky Conference Player of the Week on Jan. 21 for his performances in EWU's road sweep of games on Jan. 16 and 18. It was his second POW honor from the league this season and third in his career, and came one day after he received the same accolade from College Sports Madness.
Davison averaged 21.5 points, 2.5 steals, 2.5 assists, 3.5 rebounds and 1.5 blocked shots per game in wins over Idaho (78-75) and Montana State (71-58) to help EWU improve to 4-2 in the league. He scored 17 points and had three steals with a block in EWU's win at Idaho. He scored eight of his points in the second half, all coming in the last 4:58 as EWU prevailed down the stretch. He provided the final point of the game with a free throw with two seconds remaining.
Davison followed that with 26 points, five assists, two steals, five rebounds and two blocks at Montana State. His steal and layup tied the game at 40 after EWU fell behind by four in the second half, and he went on to score eight points during EWU's game-deciding 23-6 run. Included were a pair of 3-pointers as EWU opened a 59-46 lead with 5:11 to play. He made his final six points from the free throw line in the last 3:30 of the contest.
The Eagle junior was selected as the Big Sky Conference Player of the Week on Dec. 10 after recording what was then the 10th-most points in school history (now 11th) with 39 in a 98-82 victory over North Dakota two days earlier. Davison finished 17-of-27 from the field, including a 3-of-5 performance from the 3-point stripe, and he also had a career-high five steals with six rebounds and five assists. He had 19 points in the first half and 20 in the second, and his total of 17 field goals made ranks second in school history (now third). The Eagles trailed by four in the second half, but he scored 18 of EWU's last 45 points as the Eagles led by as many as 19 in the closing minutes. The Eagles scored their most points (98) and had their best shooting performance at the time versus a NCAA Division I opponent this season (52.5 percent).
Davison scored 12 at Washington in a 90-80 loss on Dec. 4, and also had eight rebounds and four assists. His career high of 41 – the eighth-most all-time at EWU – came versus Northern Arizona on Feb. 4, 2019. Davison also scored 25 in the Seattle win earlier this season on Nov. 9 and had 26 versus Boston College on Nov. 20. He and teammate
Mason Peatling were among the six players chosen league-wide as preseason All-Big Sky selections for the 2019-20 season.
Until an ankle injury on Feb. 16, 2019, forced him to miss the last 10 games, Davison had been the hottest player for the Eagles if not the entire Big Sky. He averaged 23.8 points in his last nine outings, including his 41 versus Northern Arizona which helped him earn his first Big Sky Conference Player of the Week honor. Davison started 19 of the 22 games he played, and finished with averages of 15.2 points on the season and a team-leading 18.5 in league play, which would have ranked fifth in the Big Sky if he had played enough of EWU's games to qualify (75 percent). Besides missing the last 10 games, wrist and ankle injuries kept Davison out of the first two games and preseason practices.
Peatling and Aiken Are Selected to Mid-Season All-Big Sky Squad
Eastern senior
Mason Peatling and sophomore
Kim Aiken Jr. were among the five players on the mid-season All-Big Sky Conference team announced in early January by Jon Teitel from the college basketball web site HoopsHD.com. Selected based on their all-around statistical accomplishments from November and December, they were joined on the squad by Montana's Sayeed Pridgett, Montana State's Harald Frey and Sacramento State's Joshua Patton. Pridgett was the web site's Player of the Year So Far (POYSF). Both Peatling and Aiken started all 11 of EWU's preseason games, with Aiken averaging a double-double at 15.6 points and 11.2 rebounds per game. Peatling averaged 15.0 points and 6.9 boards. Aiken also had 21 steals, 13 assists and 10 blocked shots in the 11 games, and Peatling had 24 assists, 13 blocks and seven steals.
True Freshman Ellis Magnuson Earns Honor from College Sports Madness
True freshman
Ellis Magnuson is already living up to the high expectations of his head coach. The point guard protégé of
Shantay Legans was selected by College Sports Madness as its Big Sky Conference Player of the Week for his performance in EWU's win over mid-major powerhouse Belmont on Nov. 26 in Cheney.
A 2019 graduate of Borah High School in Boise, Idaho, Magnuson scored 13 points and had nine assists in the 87-82 win over Belmont, which was ranked ninth entering the game in the Collegeinsider.com Mid-Major top 25 poll. He made 5-of-9 shots from the field and 3-of-4 from the free throw line, and equally distributed his production with six points and five assists in the first half, and seven points and four assists in the second half in which EWU out-scored the Bruins 47-40. Belmont was 27-4 a year ago and advanced to the NCAA Tournament, but EWU's win dropped the Bruins to 4-3.
That was just his sixth game as a collegian. Magnuson was the
USA Today Idaho 5A Player of the Year in his senior season when he led the Lions to the State 5A title and a 24-3 record. He averaged 15 points, six assists and two steals per game over his last two years in the program.
Magnuson had his breakout game when Eastern jumped out to a 15-2 lead and beat High Point on the road on Nov. 23 in North Carolina. Magnuson scored 12 points in the first half, including a pair of 3-pointers after entering the game 0-of-7 as a collegian. Besides his 12 points, Magnuson also finished with eight assists and three steals. He had a season-high 14 points versus North Dakota when he also had a team-high six assists.
Numerous Big Sky and EWU Records Fall in 146-89 Victory
There were a total of four Big Sky Conference and eight Eastern Washington all-time records broken in EWU's 146-89 victory over Multnomah on Dec. 13, 2019. It could have been more too – by scoring 80 points in the first half, Eastern came just two from the league record of 82 set by Idaho State at Montana on 2/2/70 and
Mason Peatling's 34 first-half points were three behind the league mark of 37 set by Geno Crandall of North Dakota against Troy on 11/10/17. Below is the list of records broken versus Multnomah:
Team
146 Points - old Big Sky & EWU record 130 (EWU vs. Portland State on 2/4/17 & Weber State vs. West Coast Baptist on 11/19/19)
59 Field Goals Made - old Big Sky record 55 (Weber State vs. Idaho State 1/22/66); old EWU record 50 (vs. George Fox 11/15/15)
93 Field Goals Attempted - old EWU record 92 (vs. U.S. International 2/2/91)
67 Rebounds - old EWU record 64 (vs. Delaware State 12/20/91)
39 Assists - old EWU record 33 (vs. Cascade 12/29/99 & U.S. International 2/2/91).
Individual
54 Points by Mason Peatling - old Big Sky record 53 (Willie Humes, Idaho State vs. Montana State 2/20/71); old EWU record 45 (
Bogdan Bliznyuk vs. Portland State 2/4/17, Jacob Wiley vs. Portland State 2/4/17 & Rodney Stuckey vs. Northern Arizona 1/5/06.
24 Field Goals Made by Mason Peatling - old Big Sky record 21 (Willie Humes, Idaho State vs. Montana State 2/20/71); old EWU record 18 (Jacob Wiley vs. Portland State 2/4/17 & David Peed vs. UC-Irvine 12/13/88))
30 Field Goals Attempted by Mason Peatling - old EWU record 29 (
Bogdan Bliznyuk vs. Portland State on 2/4/17)
Eagles Play Five NCAA Tournament Teams From a Year Ago in 2019-20
The Eagles will once again be road-tested, but December's miles will be significantly less. While November was highlighted by long road trips, December featured two short trips against a pair of NCAA Division I powerhouses and a trio of home games for the Eagles and their 2019-20 schedule.
Eastern played 11 non-conference opponents – including five at home – prior to the start of its Big Sky Conference schedule on Dec. 28. All but two of the opponents were NCAA Division I foes.
In the second game of the season on Nov. 9, Eastern played at Seattle (74-66 win) in what has become an annual game against the Redhawks and former EWU head coach Jim Hayford. Eastern played at Washington on Wednesday, Dec. 4, and three weeks later took on Gonzaga on Saturday, Dec. 21. While EWU has played the Huskies three times in the last six seasons, EWU hasn't played the Bulldogs since Nov. 11, 2011.
Both the Huskies and Bulldogs advanced to the NCAA Tournament in the 2018-19 season, with the Huskies finishing 27-9 overall and 15-3 in the Pac-12 Conference. Gonzaga was 33-4 and a perfect 16-0 in the West Coast Conference.
Three other teams EWU faces this season advanced to the Big Dance, including Saint Louis (23-13/10-8 Atlantic 10 Conference), Belmont (27-6/16-2 Ohio Valley Conference) and Montana (26-9/16-4 Big Sky). Advancing to the Collegeinsider.com Tournament were Seattle (18-15/6-10 Western Athletic Conference) and Southern Utah (17-7/9-11 Big Sky).
In all, Eastern faced nine non-conference foes from eight different leagues who combined for a 191-108 record (.666) a year ago, and were a collective 96-56 (.632) in their respective leagues.
"We go on the road recruiting and talk about our schedules and who we are playing," said Legans. "We're playing Washington, Gonzaga and Seattle, and we are always trying to get Washington State on the schedule."
The Eagles opened the season on Tuesday, Nov. 5, with a home game versus Portland Bible College (3-20) of the Pacific Christian Athletic Conference, and won handily 107-25. The Eagles then played at Seattle on Nov. 9 and won that 74-66 before playing four games in the Gotham Classic. After losing 82-60 at Saint Louis, Eastern was edged 72-68 by Boston College (14-17/5-13 Atlantic Coast Conference). Eastern then picked up a 90-74 win at High Point (16-15/9-7 Big South) on Nov. 23 before registering a huge 87-82 triumph over Belmont on Nov. 26, with both of those games also a part of the Gotham Classic.
A 90-80 loss to Washington – then ranked 22nd in NCAA Division I by Associated Press and 23rd by the coaches followed. Eastern then played a trio of home games and won all three -- Dec. 8 versus former Big Sky member North Dakota (12-18/6-10 Summit League), Dec. 13 against Multnomah (15-15/6-12 Cascade Collegiate Conference) and Dec. 17 versus Nebraska Omaha (21-11/13-3 Summit League). Eastern beat North Dakota 98-82, then romped past Multnomah 146-89 and Omaha 97-56.
The non-conference schedule concluded with a 112-77 loss at Gonzaga – ranked second in both polls on Dec. 16 -- followed by the team's Big Sky opener at Weber State on Dec. 28. The Big Sky Conference Championship, which will take place in Boise, Idaho, for the second year of a three-year agreement, is scheduled for March 11-14, 2020 at CenturyLink Arena.
"There are a lot of changes with the coaches and the programs," said
Shantay Legans of his third tour of the Big Sky as a head coach. "At the same time, the teams in the Big Sky are very tough. They know how to play against you and it's going to be a lot of fun. There are a lot of teams that are up in the air at this point. Southern Utah has a lot of their guys back, and Montana and Weber State are looking good. Idaho has a lot of players that people haven't seen -- they have had a lot of changes but they have potential to be very good. Idaho State has a new head coach coming in, and Ryan Looney has been very successful in the Northwest and in California. So, all in all, it's going to be a lot of fun to see where we stack up against some of these teams in the Big Sky."
After EWU started the 2018-19 season 1-9,
Mason Peatling returned from a toe injury and Eastern was 15-9 the rest of the season to finish 16-18. Eastern was just 1-3 to start league play, but then won 13 of its final 19 games of the season after most of its injury woes subsided, but the Eagles did play the final 10 games of the season without All-Big Sky guard
Jacob Davison.
"Our players are healthy to start the year and we've set high goals and expectations for ourselves," added Legans. "I couldn't be more excited for the season to get rolling."
A Look at Returning Eagles from the 2018-19 Season
Entering his third season at the helm, Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans is dreaming of a year of health for his Eagle squad. An injury-plagued season in 2018-19 ended with a second-straight appearance in the Big Sky Conference Tournament championship game for the Eagles, and four of the main players from that squad return. Eastern had its fourth-straight season with 10 Big Sky wins or more and a sixth-straight year with a winning league record. Eastern is 65-29 in Big Sky play in those six years for a .691 winning percentage.
Senior
Mason Peatling is back after earning second team All-Big Sky honors for the Eagles, with junior
Jacob Davison earning third team accolades despite missing the last 10 games with an ankle injury. Both were among the six players chosen league-wide as preseason All-Big Sky selections for the 2019-20 season.
Peatling averaged 15.3 points and 7.2 rebounds a year ago, and was also selected to the Big Sky All-Tournament team after averaging 20.3 points and 9.3 rebounds in three games while sinking 62.9 percent of his shots from the field. He missed EWU's first nine games with a toe injury, and his return turned out to be the turning point of the season for the Eagles. Once he returned, Peatling was EWU's leading scorer in nine of the 22 games he played (13-9 record), and also led in rebounds eight times. An honorable mention All-Big Sky selection as a sophomore, as a junior he was seventh in league-only statistics in scoring (15.3), fifth in shooting (58.6 percent) and fourth in rebounding (7.2), but didn't rank among the overall league leaders (a player must play in 75 percent of a team's games to be ranked). Peatling scored at least 20 points three of his last four games, including 20 with seven rebounds in a 77-61 victory over Southern Utah (3/15/19) in the semifinals of the Big Sky Conference Tournament. One game earlier versus Montana State (3/14/19) he had a career-high 28 points with 14 rebounds and two blocked shots for his third double-double of the season and eighth of his career.
Until an ankle injury on Feb. 16 forced him to miss the last 10 games, Davison had been the hottest player for the Eagles if not the entire Big Sky. He averaged 23.8 points in his last nine outings, including the seventh-most points in school history with 41 versus Northern Arizona on Feb. 4 to help him earn Big Sky Conference Player of the Week honors. Davison started 19 of the 22 games he played, and finished with averages of 15.2 points on the season and a team-leading 18.5 in league play, which would have ranked fifth in the Big Sky if he had played enough of EWU's games to qualify (75 percent). Besides missing the last 10 games, wrist and ankle injuries kept Davison out of the first two games and preseason practices.
Peatling and Davison are joined by sophomore
Kim Aiken Jr., who averaged 11.3 points, 8.3 rebounds and 2.0 blocked shots with a pair of double-doubles in his first postseason experience to join Peatling in earning Big Sky All-Tournament accolades. Aiken ended his redshirt freshman season with an average of 6.5 points and 4.9 rebounds per outing as a sub off the bench in 19 of the 30 games he played (11 as a starter). A candidate for Big Sky Conference Freshman of the Year honors, Aiken averaged 8.1 points and 5.6 rebounds in Big Sky Conference play, including 11.6 and 7.7, respectively, in the last 10 games as a starter as an injury replacement for
Jacob Davison. He had three double-doubles, 11 blocked shots and 10 steals in those 10 games, shooting at a 46.1 percent clip from the field with 17 3-pointers.
Eastern's third returning starter is point guard
Tyler Kidd, who averaged 12.0 points and 3.8 assists as a junior college transfer in the 2018-19 season. Kidd ranked 23rd in the Big Sky with an average of 12.0 points per game during league play, plus averaged 3.8 assists to rank seventh. Kidd came off the bench in the first 12 games he played (he did not play in three), but started all 19 games since Jan. 10. He averaged 9.9 points and 3.1 assists overall, while scoring in double figures in 16 of the last 24 games (none in the first seven games he played). Overall, he was ninth in the league in assists (3.1), ninth in 3-point field goal percentage (.423, 41-of-97) and 11th in free throw percentage (79.5 percent, 66-of-83). In league games only, Kidd was ninth in free throw shooting (81.2 percent, 56-of-69).
Jack Perry started 11 of 32 games in his sophomore season in 2018-19 and averaged 4.1 points, 1.7 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game. Sophomore
Tanner Groves contributed 2.8 points and 2.1 rebounds with 18 blocks as a true freshman.
In all, Eastern returns eight letterwinners while losing four. Eastern's 18-player roster in 2019-20 is rounded out by six newcomers, a trio of 2018-19 redshirts and a transfer who had to sit out most of last season with an injury.
Series Notes
* Since Eastern became a member of NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season, the Eagles are now 25-24 versus Portland State. All of the meetings have come since the 1996-97 school year when PSU joined the Big Sky Conference, and Eastern is 17-8 in Cheney and 7-15 against PSU in Portland (1-1 on neutral courts) since then. The Vikings have a 27-26 edge in the overall series. Eastern is 2-1 against PSU in the Big Sky Tournament, winning 78-72 in the quarterfinals in 2018 in Reno, 81-75 in the 2006 quarterfinals in Cheney and losing 80-74 in the 1999 quarterfinals in Ogden, Utah.
* Earlier this season in Cheney, Eastern got untracked in the second half and improved to 6-0 at home when it beat Portland State 71-69 in a Big Sky Conference game Jan. 4 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. The Eagles used a frenetic 13-5 run in the final nine minutes to take the lead for good and overcome PSU's final advantage of the game. Eastern led by as many as 10 with 2:09 to play in a battle of teams averaging a combined 165 points per game. Junior
Jacob Davison paced the Eagles with 26 points, with senior
Mason Peatling and sophomore
Kim Aiken Jr. each contributing double-doubles. Peatling finished with 20 points, 13 rebounds and two blocked shots, and Aiken had 15 points and rebounds to go along with four assists. The Eagles finished the game shooting at 49 percent, making 11 of their last 16 shots (69 percent) after a 19-of-45 start (42 percent). Portland State, the NCAA Division I leader in offensive rebounds, finished with 12 but had just a 10-9 advantage in second-chance points. Eastern led in points in the paint 46-30 and fast-break points 21-9. Eastern had a 41-38 rebounding advantage and held PSU to 39 percent shooting in the game. However, EWU made just 5-of-25 3-pointers (20.0 percent), compared to 25-of-36 (69 percent) inside the arc. After leading for only 45 seconds in the first half, EWU took the lead after intermission on a 3-pointer by Aiken and a basket by Davison. After PSU regained a five-point lead, the Eagles got hot. Eastern was down by two when the Eagles went on a 13-5 run, started by a basket by Peatling. Aiken had a 3-pointer and Davison hit a pair – including two fast-break dunks – to put EWU on top 63-57 with 5:29 to play. The Eagles made 6-of-7 shots in that stretch. The Eagles led by 10, but PSU battled back and took advantage of a pair of late Eagle turnovers and the missed front end of a one-plus-one bonus opportunity to have a chance to take the lead. But the Vikings missed a 3-point attempt and Peatling rebounded with three seconds left to secure the win.
* Last season in Portland, the Vikings out-shot Eastern 68 percent to 36 percent in the second half, and used a decisive 11-0 run to overcome an EWU four-point lead in a 78-65 victory over the Eagles on Jan. 24, 2019.
Jacob Davison led the Eagles with what was then a career-high 26 points, sinking 10-of-21 shots with three 3-pointers.
Mason Peatling had 15 on 7-of-10 shooting and
Tyler Kidd had 11 as that trio combined for 52 of EWU's 65 points. Following a first half in which EWU sank 51.9 percent of its shots after season-best shooting in its last two games, the Eagles struggled through an 0-of-11 stretch during PSU's run while going 4:45 without a bucket. Eastern was out-shot in the game 60.4 percent to 43.1 percent, and PSU had a 12-0 advantage in fast-break points. In the first half versus PSU, Eastern led most of the half and used an 8-of-9 shooting stretch to open a six-point lead. Peatling had two baskets and Kidd and Davison one each during an 8-0 Eagle run. Eastern led 35-32 at halftime in a period which featured four lead changes and a pair of ties. There were an additional five lead changes and four ties in the second half before PSU took the lead for good with its 11-0 run, which included a trio of 3-pointers by Jamie Orme. Eastern could come no closer than five after that while PSU led by as many as 14. Eastern out-rebounded PSU 28-27, including a 17-8 advantage on the offensive glass. The Vikings entered with a league-best +8.9 rebounding margin (ninth nationally), while EWU entered second-to-last in the league at -3.9 per game (312th out of 351 teams nationally). It was the second-straight game EWU had a rebounding edge after having just two rebounding advantages in their first 16 games.
Schedule Notes
No. 2 Gonzaga Was Highest-Ranked Team Eagles Have Ever Faced
Eastern faced the highest-ranked opponent in school history when the Eagles lost 112-77 at second-ranked Gonzaga on Dec. 21. After an 84-80 road win at Arizona on Dec. 14, the Bulldogs had moved up to second in both the Associated Press and Coaches polls announced on Dec. 16. Eastern, which is now 1-28 all-time versus nationally-ranked opponents, faced No. 3 Kansas in 2007 and No. 3 Oklahoma State in 2004 (NCAA Tournament), losing those games 85-47 and 75-56, respectively.
Gonzaga was the second ranked team Eastern played in five-game stretch, having fallen to No. 22/23 Washington 90-80 on Dec. 4 in Seattle. Washington dropped out of the AP poll and was ranked 25th by the coaches the week after falling 83-76 to Gonzaga on Dec. 8. In the Dec. 16 poll, Washington was 22nd in both.
Games in the 2019-20 season versus Oregon and Syracuse were Eastern's 27th and 26th games versus ranked opponents, and EWU is now 1-27 after losing at Washington 90-80 on Dec. 4. Eastern head coach
Shantay Legans remembers well the only time the Eagles defeated a ranked opponent back in 2001. He was in Haas Pavilion that night on Nov. 15, 2001, when Eastern beat 10th-ranked St. Joseph's 68-67 at the BCA Classic in Berkeley, Calif. The next night, Eastern lost to 56-27 to host Cal, whose starting point guard was Legans. He had five points, an assist and a rebound in 20 minutes of action versus EWU.
In the 2014-15 season Eastern lost 77-68 to No. 22 SMU on Nov. 22, 2014; 81-77 to No. 17 Washington on Dec. 14, 2014; and then 84-74 to No. 22 Georgetown on March 19, 2015. Before that, EWU lost 82-65 to No. 15 Connecticut on Dec. 28, 2013, and 77-69 on Nov. 11, 2011, to a Gonzaga team ranked 23rd in both the Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today preseason coaches' polls. The Gonzaga game was the head coaching debut at Eastern for Jim Hayford
.
Eastern lost to Washington 98-72 on Nov. 16, 2010, and 86-57 to Gonzaga on Nov. 30, 2010, in EWU's other recent games against nationally-ranked teams. Washington was ranked 17th by Associated Press and 15th in the ESPN/USA Today coaches' poll, and Gonzaga was 24th by the coaches.
In the 2009-10 season, the Eagles fell 94-52 to Gonzaga on Dec. 28, 2009. The Bulldogs were ranked 22nd by ESPN/USA Today, but were just out of the top 25 at No. 26 by Associated Press. The 2008-09 season was the first time since 2002-03 that Eastern did not play a nationally-ranked team. The Eagles played 12 such games in the five seasons before that.
Eastern's list versus nationally-ranked teams includes three games in the 2004-05 season alone as well as three the year before. Seven of the games came under former head coach Mike Burns and five others came under Ray Giacoletti from 2000-2004.
12/21/19 vs. #2 Gonzaga – L, 77-112
12/4/19 vs. #22/23 Washington – L, 80-90
11/9/18 vs. #14 Oregon – L, 47-81
11/6/18 vs. #16 Syracuse – L, 34-66
12/20/16 vs. #17 Xavier – L, 56-85
11/17/16 vs. #21 Texas – L, 52-85
3/19/15 vs. #22 Georgetown – L, 74-84
12/14/14 vs. #17 Washington – L, 77-81
11/22/14 vs. #22 SMU – L, 68-77
12/28/13 vs. #15 Connecticut – L,65-82
11/11/11 vs. #23 Gonzaga – L, 69-77
11/30/10 vs. #24 (ESPN/USA Today) Gonzaga - L, 57-86
11/16/10 vs. #17 Washington - L, 72-98
12/28/09 vs. #22 (ESPN/USA Today) Gonzaga - L, 52-94
12/5/07 vs. #3 Kansas - L, 47-85
11/9/07 vs. #10 Washington State - L, 41-68
12/15/06 vs. #22 Oregon - L, 74-100
11/24/06 vs. #16 Washington - L, 83-90
12/19/05 vs. #8 Gonzaga - L, 65-75
12/16/05 vs. #11 Washington - L, 74-91
12/28/04 vs. #14 Arizona - L, 45-79
12/21/04 vs. #13 Gonzaga - L, 70-83
12/5/04 vs. #14 Washington - L, 56-89
3/19/04 vs. #3 Oklahoma State - L, 56-75
12/31/03 vs. #16 Gonzaga - L, 49-70
11/21/03 vs. #14 Oklahoma - L, 59-69
11/15/01 vs. #10 St. Joseph's - W, 68-67
11/25/00 vs. #4 Michigan State - L, 61-83
1/21/85 vs. #10 DePaul - L, 50-72
Eagles Face Eight Different Leagues in 2019-20 Season
In all, Eastern faces nine non-conference foes from eight different NCAA Division I leagues who combined for a 191-108 record (.666) a year ago, and were a collective 96-56 (.632) in their respective leagues.
Eastern picked up a win at Seattle University in its opener on Nov. 9, helping EWU improve to 19-16 all-time versus current teams in the Western Athletic Conference (12-13 since EWU moved to NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season). Versus Seattle, Eastern is 16-11 overall and 9-8 as a DI member.
Following an 80-62 loss at Saint Louis, the Eagles are now 1-2 all-time versus the Billikens, and are 2-3 against teams from the Atlantic 10 Conference – all with EWU as a member of NCAA Division I.
The Eagles lost at Boston College on Nov. 20 in the first-ever meeting between the two schools, and just the fourth ever against a current team in the Atlantic Coast Conference (all as DI member). Eastern lost to Pitt, Virginia Tech and Syracuse (just last season in 2019) in those other three games.
Eastern followed that by playing its first-ever meetings against High Point and Belmont, with EWU now owning a 2-0 all-time record versus current Big South Conference members after a 90-74 win over the Panthers. A 75-61 win over Winthrop on Nov. 16, 2002, was EWU's other win over a Big South opponent. After beating Belmont 87-82, the Eagles are 4-5 versus the Ohio Valley Conference (4-3 as a DI member).The last meeting versus an OVC member was on Nov. 22, 2017, when Eastern beat Eastern Kentucky 83-62 in the MGM Resorts Main Event in Las Vegas, Nevada (Eastern finished 3rd in the Middleweight Bracket).
The University of Washington of the Pac-12 Conference was EWU's next opponent, and the Eagles are now 1-16 all-time versus the Huskies with a 12-game losing streak after the 90-80 loss. Eastern hasn't beaten them since Dec. 14, 2002, and is 13-88 all-time versus the Pac-12 (3-46 as a member of DI). Eastern snapped a 21-game losing streak versus the Pac-12 with a 67-61 victory at Stanford on Nov. 14, 2017.
Former Big Sky member North Dakota was next, and EWU is now 6-7 all-time against the Fighting Hawks (4-6 as DI member) after a 98-82 triumph. That game, as well as EWU's first-ever meeting against Omaha on Dec. 17, is now part of the Big Sky Conference Versus Summit League Challenge Series. Eastern won that contest 97-56, and is now 12-16 all-time versus that league, with all but two (the first two meetings versus UND) coming with EWU as a member of NCAA Division I.
Eastern concluded its non-conference schedule with a 112-77 loss against Gonzaga, a powerhouse team ranked second in NCAA Division I at the time. Eastern is now 52-82 against all-time (5-35 since EWU moved to NCAA Division I in the 1983-84 season). The Eagles have lost the last 25 meetings in the series dating back to the last Eagle victory on Jan. 8, 1990 by a 70-55 score at GU. The last time the two teams played came on Nov. 11, 2011, and Eastern fell to the 23rd-ranked Bulldogs 77-69 in the first game of the EWU coaching career of Jim Hayford. Eastern is now 75-115 all-time versus current members of the West Coast Conference, including a 23-64 mark since moving to Division I.
Eastern in Second Year of Four-Year Big Sky Versus Summit League Challenge Series
Members of the Big Sky Conference and Summit League have agreed to a four-year men's basketball series involving four teams from each league, which began during the 2018-19 season.
Each school will play one home game and road contest against separate schools from the other league during each of the four seasons. Big Sky schools participating are Eastern, Montana State, Montana and Idaho. The Summit is represented by North Dakota State, North Dakota, Omaha and South Dakota State. North Dakota's final year of membership in the Big Sky was in 2017-18 before moving to the Summit League, but the Eagles are still playing the Fighting Hawks again as part of the four-year rivalry series between the two leagues.
So far, EWU is 2-2 in the series, losing on the road at North Dakota State (74-67) and at home versus South Dakota State (74-64) a year ago, then beating North Dakota 98-82 on Dec. 8, 2019, and Omaha 97-56 on Dec. 17, 2019, in a pair of home games the following season. The Big Sky was 4-4 in the eight games played in the challenge series last season and finished 4-4 again in 2019-20.
2019-20 (Big Sky 4-4 versus Summit) -- North Dakota State 70, at Idaho 53 (Nov. 26), at Montana State 77, South Dakota State 70 (Dec. 5), at Montana 77, North Dakota 70 (Dec. 6),
at Eastern Washington 98, North Dakota 82 (Dec. 8), at North Dakota State 79, Montana State 65 (Dec. 16),
at Eastern Washington 97, Omaha 56 (Dec. 17), at Omaha 87, Montana 82 in overtime (Dec. 21), at South Dakota State 85, Idaho 57 (Dec. 21).
2018-19 (Big Sky 4-4 versus Summit) -- at North Dakota State 74, Eastern Washington 67; South Dakota State 74, at Eastern Washington 64; at Montana State 81, North Dakota 76, at Omaha 89, Montana State 65; Montana 85, at South Dakota State 74, at Montana 60, North Dakota State 53; Omaha 89, at Idaho 80, Idaho 67, at North Dakota 54.
2020-21 -- North Dakota State at Eastern Washington, Eastern Washington at South Dakota State, Montana State at North Dakota, Omaha at Montana State, South Dakota State at Montana, Montana at North Dakota State, Idaho at Omaha, North Dakota at Idaho.
2021-22 -- Eastern Washington at Omaha, Eastern Washington at North Dakota, Montana State at South Dakota State, North Dakota State at Montana State, South Dakota State at Idaho, Idaho at North Dakota State, Montana at North Dakota, Omaha at Montana.
More on the Gotham Classic
Eastern played four games in November – including a home game against Belmont (an 87-82 Eagle win) -- as part of the Gotham Classic, which is presented by the Gazelle Group. More information on the event is available at: http://www.gazellegroup.com/main/gotham.
Besides EWU and Belmont, other teams include Saint Louis, Boston College and High Point. The Eagles appeared in the 2015 Gotham Classic, and in recent years have participated in several other events hosted by the Gazelle Group.
Eastern's four games in the tournament are highlighted by a home game versus Belmont on Tuesday, Nov. 26 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. Located in Nashville, Tenn., the Bruins finished 27-6 a year ago and received an at-large bid as a No. 11 seed to the NCAA Tournament. Belmont beat Temple 81-70 in the "First Four" and then fell to Maryland 79-77 in the first round.
As part of the Gotham Classic, EWU also played at Saint Louis on Nov. 13, Boston College on Nov. 20 and High Point on Nov. 23 in games that took the Eagles to Missouri, Massachusetts and North Carolina. Eastern beat High Point (90-74), but fell to Saint Louis (82-60) and BC (72-68).
Highlighting the Gotham Classic was a Nov. 27 matchup between Boston College and Saint Louis in Chestnut Hill, Mass., which was won by SLU 64-54. In the 2018 Gotham Classic, Notre Dame defeated Duquesne, 67-56, in the Showcase Game.
Schedule of Games
(Records: Saint Louis 4-0, EWU 2-2, Belmont 2-2, Boston College 2-2, High Point 0-4)
Nov. 13 – at Boston College 53, High Point 33
Nov. 13 – at Saint Louis 80, Eastern Washington 62
Nov. 16 – Belmont 100, at Boston College 85
Nov. 18 – at Belmont 90, High Point 51
Nov. 20 – at Boston College 72, Eastern Washington 68
Nov. 20 – at Saint Louis 67, High Point 55
Nov. 23 – at Saint Louis 60, Belmont 55
Nov. 23 – Eastern Washington 90, at High Point 74
Nov. 26 –at Eastern Washington 87, Belmont 82
Nov. 27 – Saint Louis 64, at Boston College 54
First played in 2012, the Gotham Classic features five teams from across the country in one of the most competitive events of its kind. In eight short years, the tournament has attracted the likes of Syracuse, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Louisville, Memphis, Davidson, Pittsburgh, NC State, and West Virginia, among a host of other prominent programs.
Recent Game Recaps
Vandals Hold Off Eagle Rallies for 74-71 Win as Davison Goes Over 1,000-Point Mark
Out-rebounded and out-shot by a large margin, Eastern couldn't complete a season sweep of Idaho and lost to the Vandals 74-71 on Feb. 13 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. Eastern fell behind by 18 at halftime and 24 early in the second half, and had a flurry of rallies after that to cut the lead to three with 1:16 to play and two with four ticks of the clock left. But disadvantages of 46-28 in rebounds and 50 percent to 38 percent shooting was too much to overcome as EWU missed four of its final five shots of the game, including a 35-footer at the buzzer that could have sent the game to overtime. Senior
Mason Peatling had his sixth double-double in eight games with 32 points, 10 rebounds and a pair of blocked shots to lead EWU. Junior
Jacob Davison also scored 21 points for the Eagles – 18 in the second half -- and went over the 1,000-point mark in his career.
Kim Aiken Jr. chipped in 10, and redshirt freshman
Casson Rouse came off the bench to score seven of his 10 points in the second half to help spark the Eagles late. Davison scored 21 to give him 1,008 points in his 80-game career, and became the 23rd player in Eastern's 112-year basketball history to hit the 1,000-point mark. Peatling went over the 1,000-point mark on Jan. 25, and now is 16th all-time at EWU with 1,107. Davison made 7-of-12 shots from the field and 6-of-7 free throws, and also had three assists and a pair of steals. Peatling made 4-of-7 from the field and 12-of-14 from the free throw line, and Rouse sank 4-of-7 of his shots with a pair of 3-pointers. But the rest of the team was just 6-of-30, including a 3-of-16 shooting night by Aiken, who made just 2-of-13 3-point attempts and finished with four rebounds and four steals. Junior starter
Jack Perry had a team-high seven assists with four rebounds and six points, and his 2-of-5 performance from the 3-point stripe was part of an overall 8-of-32 (25 percent) effort by EWU. Idaho senior
Trevon Allen poured in 32 points and had 11 rebounds and seven steals in the Idaho victory. Eastern lost for just the second time in 11 home games this season. Eastern led early 6-2, but the Vandals went on a 16-0 run as EWU went 5:19 without scoring. In that run alone, Allen had seven points and three steals for Idaho, which opened the early 18-6 lead. The Vandals led by as many as 18 and no fewer than eight the rest of the half, and led at intermission 41-23. Allen hit seven of his first 10 shots and had 14 in the first 20 minutes, as the Vandals out-shot EWU 49 percent to 29 percent. Idaho bumped the led to 24 in the second half at 49-24 when EWU's shooting for the night slipped to 25 percent (7-of-28). But then Davison got the Eagles going, scoring 10 of EWU's points in a 16-2 run that cut the deficit to 51-41 with 14:16 left. Eastern was able to cut the lead to eight at 10;51 and 10:10 left, but Idaho used a 7-0 run ii including five points by Allen -- to go up by 15 with 9:08 remaining. A 10-2 run got the Eagles back within single digits, then cut the lead to six at the 4:36 mark. But once again Idaho used a run of its own to bump the lead to 12. Eastern followed with a 9-0 run, using a steal and layup by Davison to pull within 72-69 with 1:16 left. Idaho missed four free throws after that to give EWU life, but the Eagles missed their next three shots and Allen all but sealed it with a free throw with eight seconds left.
Defensive Effort Paces Eastern Past Montana State 74-49
Eastern allowed just 16 points in the first half and closed a stretch of four games in eight nights with an easy 74-49 victory against Montana State on Feb. 8 at Reese Court in Cheney, Wash. Senior
Mason Peatling paced the Eagles with a double-double of 19 points and 10 rebounds, and had a pair of blocked shots to go over 100 in his career. He hit 8-of-13 shots from the field as he finished with his eighth double-double of the season and fifth in the last seven games. Sophomore
Tanner Groves came off the bench to finish with 16 points, four rebounds and two blocks, making 6-of-8 shots from the field. He made 4-of-5 3-pointers to help EWU finish with a 13-of-30 (43 percent) performance against a Bobcats team ranked 30th in NCAA Division I in 3-point field goal percentage defense (.296). Eastern's defense was superb, holding MSU to 22 percent shooting in the game and just 20 percent in the first half. Montana State's three leading scorers – all with averages of 11.6 or better – were held to a total of 15 points on 6-of-24 shooting. Harald Frey was held to just four, more than 13 below his season average. Eastern won by 25 with leading scorer
Jacob Davison finishing with just one point, leaving him 13 shy of becoming the 23rd player in Eastern's 112-year basketball history to hit the 1,000-point in his career. He also had three assists and a steal versus MSU. A total of 12 Eagles scored versus the Bobcats as EWU's bench saw significant minutes. Redshirt freshman
Casson Rouse had six points and true freshman
Jacob Groves had four off the bench. Starter
Ellis Magnuson, also a true freshman, finished with seven points and five assists, and sophomore
Kim Aiken Jr. had nine rebounds and five points. Junior
Jack Perry chipped in six points and three assists as a starter. The Bobcats made just one of their first 16 shots, but EWU couldn't capitalize fully and led only 12-4 after an early 3-of-13 start of its own. Eastern got untracked later in the half, and a 9-0 run put EWU up 24-11 on a back-to-back 3-pointers by Perry. Soon thereafter, Groves hit a pair of 3-pointers and had a rebound basket during a 9-2 run to put EWU up 32-15 just before halftime. The Eagles led 35-16 at intermission, registering its best defensive effort against a NCAA Division I opponent this season. The previous fewest was 26 at Sacramento State on Feb. 1, as EWU held the Bobcats to 20 percent shooting in the first half. Eastern finished at 41 percent, with Groves coming off the bench to score 11 points in 13 minutes of action. Eastern broke the game open in the second half with a 14-0 run, with Peatling scoring nine of the points to put the Eagles up by 31 at 49-18 with 12:41 to play. Eastern led by as many as 36 and no less than 28 the rest of the way. Montana State still had only 30 points with just over six minutes remaining as EWU flirted with allowing its fewest points ever in a Big Sky game. The record is 35 set in a 77-35 win over Idaho State on Feb. 19, 2005.
Comments from Head Coach Shantay Legans . . .
On Loss to Idaho: "They jumped all over us. Offensively I thought we took some quick shots and they beat us on the boards. When teams get you by 18 on the glass and we turn the ball over 17 times, you aren't going to win a lot of ballgames. We got down early and lost a game."
On Rebounding & Turnovers: "We have to do better as a staff and as players. When that ball goes up on the rim, rebounding is nothing but effort and hustle. We have to figure out why they didn't come prepared to hustle and get those rebounds. We had 17 assists, but 17 and 17 (turnovers) is not very good. We have to be better all the way around, throughout our team -- players 1-to-18 and our entire coaching staff."
On Not Being Able to Buy a Basket From the 3-Point Line: "We couldn't. We have to get guys some good-looking shots, make the right plays and do the right thing. We didn't really handle the success shooting early well. When we get wide-open looks we have to knock them down."
On 3-Point Shooting: "We have good shooters and we are always ready to get some shots up and ready to make some plays. We make sure we get open looks and sometimes they go in. Montana State does a good job of closing out on shooters, but we had a good shooting night from outside. When you do that you play a lot better and guys get more confidence. That's all you can ask for moving through the season in preparation for March."
On Montana Loss: "The tougher team won. We have to figure out some of the things and plays we didn't handle and do well. We are getting behind and doing things that are uncharacteristic of our prior play. We have to make sure we're prepared for that moment. I hope we get them again – it will be fun."
On Home Sweep After Win Over UNC: "We're in a fantastic league, we have fantastic coaches and there are some fantastic players who are underrated in this country. There were so many players on that court who are really good. It was a fun basketball game to coach and watch the guys play. There were so many emotions and a lot of stress throughout that game. But there was a lot of excitement too."
On Mason Peatling: "He's doing a man's work – it's tough out there getting double-teamed and tripled-teamed. He's making plays for his teammates and he's getting yelled at by his crazy coach to make layups, and he still has 30 points. He listens and handles the emotions of the game. That's what a senior leader does for you, and he's been like that since he's gotten here. He's been even keel, but he's excited when other players make plays and when he makes plays. He's showing our younger players what it means to be an Eagle, play for this university and how important everything is."
On Love of Basketball: "You have to love basketball. It's something that brings you to so many highs and so many lows, but it's great to be able to do it with people you love and like to be around. This is a great community and we are doing it for a great university. It's so much fun and I can't get enough basketball right now."
On Health: "You want to get out of preseason unscathed. We did that for the most part, and our players were smart in their recovery from games. We kept players healthy, and our athletic trainer (Hailey Haukeli) did a great job of getting them through sickness and some bumps and bruises. We have to give her 100 percent of the credit for keeping them going."
On Preseason: "All of our losses came away from our house, and came against some really, really good teams. We can look back on that and tell our team that they are pretty good."
On Mason Peatling & Multmomah Win: "Mason had a great game and it was fun to watch him play. Our guys were smart and got him touches. We have such an unselfish team – we had 39 assists against Multnomah – and we have players who put other people ahead of themselves. A lot of guys could have done that, but it was Mason's night. There were guys guarding him that weren't big enough. Our team did a great job, and it makes you proud as a coach to see them extremely happy for a teammate to be able to do something like that."
On Tanner Groves: "We want him to play tough, go to the rim and dunk the ball. He makes us better when he plays that way. Tanner is going to be one of the best big men in this conference – he's unbelievable inside, outside, shooting touch, defense and athleticism. He's going to be a player the bigger schools are going to say 'how does Eastern have a player like that.' He has a chance to be one of the best players to come out of this league – he has that type of game."
On Jacob Davison Versus North Dakota: "He did a great job, but it was all in the flow of the offense. We weren't doing anything different for him. The way they were defending is what got him those baskets. A lot of times teams have to pick their poison with us. He's such a talented scorer and does so many things on offense which makes him hard to guard. He can drive, he can hit the mid-range jump shot and he shoots the three well."
On Belmont Victory: "Our team came in and took advantage of our opportunity to play a team like that here at home. Belmont is a very well-coached team and a good basketball club. But it was our night – we played well and we played hard. We followed the game plan to a tee. We did a good job and our assistant coaches did a remarkable job of getting our team prepared. We came out with a win in front of a good crowd during a holiday week. We appreciate them coming out and the atmosphere was awesome. The last minute was surreal – it was loud in here, jumpin' and fun. It was a team effort."
On Ellis Magnuson: "He's a very good basketball player, and he is going to be very good for us down the road. He was great for us against High Point. He is an extremely hard worker -- he gets in the gym every morning and every night. He and Kim Aiken are always getting into the gym, and you always like to see those guys that work hard to see it pay off. He's a freshman point guard, and I believe that is the hardest position, especially playing for me. I'm really hard on point guards. Anyone who's been around me knows that the big guys can mess up, but the point guards have to be really good and mentally tough. He is a very mentally tough kid, and he will be a great player. He's going to break a lot of records here and had eight assists. He might have had more if guys didn't miss some shots. He sees the floor well."
On Davison & Aiken: "Those two players are very dynamic offensive players – they are both good shooters. They are going to get their shooting percentages up – it's early in the season. They will figure out where they are going to get their shots, and as we move forward for the season it's going to be good for those two guys and Mason too.
On Effort at Seattle: "If you don't get efforts like that you don't win games. This win was huge and it was a long time coming. It was well-deserved by our team – we were playing our first road game and this team is healthy. We rebounded the ball in the second half which is important, and we limited them at the 3-point line. It's an exciting time. We are so happy to play the way we did. If Eagle Nation watched this game they would be proud of this team, and the fight we will give every single night."