awinning strategy makes all the difference - Pac-12

Transcription

awinning strategy makes all the difference - Pac-12
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I
Basketball.
2010-11 PAC-10 MEN'S BASKETBALL
PAC-10 MEN’S BASKETBALL DIRECTORY
ARIZONA
McKale Center
1 National Championship Drive
Tucson, AZ 85721)
www.arizonaathletics.com
Head Coach: Sean Miller
Office: (520) 621-4813
Basketball SID: Richard Paige
email: [email protected]
Office/Home: (520) 621-4163/(520) 850-2118
Press Row: (520) 621-4334
ARIZONA STATE
Carson Student-Athlete Center
500 East Veteran’s Way
Tempe, AZ 85287
www.thesundevils.com
Head Coach: Herb Sendek
Office: (480) 965-3261
Basketball SID: Doug Tammaro
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (480) 965-5799/(480) 734-7795
Press Row: (480) 965-7274/4778
CALIFORNIA
349 Haas Pavilion
Berkeley, CA 94720
www.calbears.com
Head Coach: Mike Montgomery
Office: (510) 642-0361
Basketball SID: Tim Miguel
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (510) 643-1741/(510) 326-9761
Press Row: (510) 642-3098
OREGON
2727 Leo Harris Parkway
Eugene, OR 97401
www.goducks.com
Head Coach: Dana Altman
Office: (541) 346-4346
Basketball SID: Chris Geraghty
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (541) 346-5488/(541) 335-9158
Press Row: (541) 346-4497
OREGON STATE
Gill Coliseum 103
Corvallis, OR 97331
www.osubeavers.com
Head Coach: Craig Robinson
Office: (541) 737-2076
Basketball SID: Shawn Schoeffler
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (541) 737-7473/(541) 231-1430
Press Row: (541) 737-3020
STANFORD
Arrillaga Family Sports Center
Stanford, CA 94305
www.gostanford.com
Head Coach: Johnny Dawkins
Office: (650) 723-0562
Basketball SID: Brian Risso
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (650) 723-4418/(650) 200-9513
Press Row: (650) 723-4418
UCLA
Morgan Center
325 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
www.uclabruins.com
Head Coach: Ben Howland
O: (310) 825-8699
Basketball SID: Ryan Finney
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (310) 206-6831/(424) 832-0676
Press Row: (310) 825-1899
USC
Heritage Hall 103
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0602
www.usctrojans.com
Head Coach: Kevin O’Neill
Office: (213) 740-3815
Basketball SID: David Tuttle
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (213) 740-8480/(213) 725-3102
Press Row: (213) 740-3900
WASHINGTON
202 Graves Building
Seattle, WA 98195
www.gohuskies.com
Head Coach: Lorenzo Romar
Office: (206) 685-9104
Basketball SID: Brian Tom
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (206) 543-2230/(206) 455-5361
Press Row: (206) 543-2230
WASHINGTON STATE
Bohler Athletic Complex, Room 195
Pullman, WA 99164-1610
www.wsucougars.com
Head Coach: Ken Bone
Office: (509) 335-0240
Basketball SID: Jessica Schmick
email: [email protected]
Office/Cell: (509) 335-2684/(509) 781-0550
Press Row: (509) 335-0270
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE
Conference of Champions ........................4-5
THE 2010-11 SEASON
Pac-10 Notebook .....................................6-8
Pac-10 Composite Schedule ..................9-10
Pac-10 Television Schedule .......................11
2011 NCAA Bracket/Schedule ..................12
Pac-10 Basketball .....................................13
Team Previews .....................................14-34
2009-2010 IN REVIEW
Standings/Notes/Honors .......................35-39
Overall/Conference Statistics ................40-44
2011 PAC-10 TOURNAMENT
Notes/Bracket ......................................45-46
History/Records/Hall of Honor ..............46-56
PAC-10 HISTORY & RECORDS
Yearly Standings...................................57-66
Team vs. Team Results.........................67-78
Final National Polls ..............................79-80
Team vs. Team in Rankings ..................81-82
NCAA/NIT History ................................83-90
Yearly Team Leaders ............................91-93
Yearly Individual Leaders ......................94-96
Team/Individual Records ......................97-98
Career Leaders...................................99-101
Season/Game Bests .........................102-104
Coaching Records ............................105-106
Conference Honors ..........................107-119
National Honors ...............................120-121
NBA Draft History ............................122-123
Pac-10 Conference Staff ..................124-131
Pac-10 and NCAA Championships ...132-138
PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE
1350 Treat Blvd., Suite 500, Walnut Creek, CA 94597
Phone ...............................................................................................................(925) 932-4411
Fax ...................................................................................................................(925) 932-4601
Website.............................................................................................................www.pac-10.org
Communications Department
Danette Leighton, Chief Marketing Officer .................................................dleighton@pac-10.org
Dave Hirsch, Vice President, Communciations............................................ [email protected]
(men's basketball contact) ................................................................... Cell: (415) 370-7112
Kirk Reynolds, Vice President, Public Affairs............................................ [email protected]
Natalia Ciccone, Assistant Commissioner, Communications ...................... [email protected]
Rachel Caton, Communications Intern............................................................ [email protected]
Allison Yee, Communications Intern.................................................................ayee@pac-10.org
(men's basketball contact) ................................................................... Cell: (510) 301-7485
Wendy Heredia, Comm. Administrative Assistant ...................................... [email protected]
CREDITS: This 2010-11 Pac-10 Men’s Basketball Media Guide has been produced by the
Pac-10 Communications Department. Prepared by Dave Hirsch and Allison Yee. Contributions
from the SID offices of Pac-10 institutions. Special thanks to Randy Craycraft, Dome Printing of
Sacramento, Calif. Copies of this guide are available to non-media for $12.00 (includes postage
and handling) through the Pac-10 Office (1350 Treat Blvd., Suite 500, Walnut Creek, CA 94597).
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
3
PAC-10 CONFERENCE
The Pac-10 Conference continues to uphold
its tradition as the “Conference of Champions”
®, claiming an incredible 171 NCAA team titles
over the past 20 years,
including eight in 200910, averaging nearly nine
championships per academic year. Even more impressive has been the
breadth of the Pac-10’s success, with championships coming in 26 different men’s and women’s
sports. The Pac-10 has led the nation in NCAA
Championships in 44 of the last 50 years and finished second five times.
Spanning nearly a century of outstanding athletics achievements, the Pac-10 has captured
390 NCAA titles (267 men’s, 123 women’s), far
outdistancing the runner-up Big Ten Conference’s
226 titles.
The Conference’s reputation is further proven
in the annual Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup competition, the prestigious award that honors the
best overall collegiate athletics programs in the
country. STANFORD won its unprecedented 16thconsecutive Directors’ Cup in 2009-10, continuing
its remarkable run. Seven of the top 25 Division I
programs were Pac-10 member institutions: No.
1 STANFORD, No. 4 UCLA, No. 9 CALIFORNIA,
No. 13 USC, No. 14 OREGON, No. 22 ARIZONA
STATE and No. 24 WASHINGTON. The Pac-10’s
three teams in the top 10 was second-most for any
conference, behind only the ACC (4), while the Big
12, Big Ten and SEC had one team each.
It was also a historic year for the Pac-10 off the
field. After 26 years as Pac-10 Commissioner, Tom
Hansen retired from his position and on July 1,
2009, was succeeded by Larry Scott, the former
Chairman and CEO of the WTA Tour, a 2008 TIME
Magazine Best Sports Executive and a former
All-American tennis player at Harvard University.
Eleven months later, the Conference announced
the expansion of the Pac-10 to include Colorado
(2012) and Utah (2011), the first time since 1978
the league has invited new members.
ketball (STANFORD), men’s gymnastics (STANFORD), men’s swimming (CALIFORNIA), women’s
swimming (STANFORD), men’s indoor track and
field (OREGON), baseball (UCLA), softball (ARIZONA), women’s golf (USC), women’s rowing
(CALIFORNIA), women’s outdoor track and field
(OREGON) and women’s water polo (STANFORD).
Overall, the Conference had 33 teams finish in the
top four at 20 NCAA Championship events.
Participation in the postseason was a common
occurrence for the Pac-10 in 2009-10. Of the 22
sports sponsored by the Conference, 19 witnessed
at least half its teams participating in NCAA or other postseason action. The men sent 64 of a possible 90 teams into the postseason (71.1 percent),
while the women sent 73 of a possible 99 teams
(73.7 percent).
The Pac-10 experienced continued success in
football as the league sent seven teams to bowl
games, tying a Pac-10 record for most bowl participants. The Pac-10 faced tough competition in the
Bowl season, as four of the seven opponents were
ranked in the top 20. Oregon claimed its eighth
Pac-10 title in the sport and first since 2001, posting an 8-1 league record. Meanwhile, ARIZONA
(Pacific Life Holiday), CALIFORNIA (San Diego
County Credit Union Poinsettia), OREGON STATE
(Maaco Las Vegas), STANFORD (Brut Sun), UCLA
(EagleBank) and USC (Emerald) also earned bowl
bids. OREGON and USC were ranked in the top25 of the Associated Press’ poll at season’s end,
finishing 11th and 22nd, respectively.
Pac-10 regular-season champion WASHINGTON and tournament champion CALIFORNIA
represented the Conference in the NCAA Men’s
Basketball Tournament, and two others competed
in other postseason events. The Pac-10 saw a balanced race crown the Golden Bears regular-season champions for the first time since 1960, while
every team logged at least six league wins, a first
in the history of the league. After winning the tournament title, the Huskies advanced to the NCAA
Sweet Sixteen, knocking off No. 6-seed Marquette
and No. 3-seed New Mexico.
The Pac-10 captured eight NCAA titles in 200910, tying with the ACC for the most in the country.
Of the eight titles, Pac-10 teams claimed a nation’s-best five women’s NCAA crowns. California
also captured the IRA National Championship in
men’s rowing, the Pac-10’s ninth national title of
the season.
4
On the women’s side, two teams competed in
the NCAA Tournament and four others competed
in postseason play. STANFORD made its thirdstraight NCAA Women’s Final Four appearance,
advancing to the national championship game
for the second time in three years. UCLA made
its first postseason appearance since 2005-06.
CALIFORNIA captured its first-ever WNIT crown,
and ARIZONA STATE and OREGON also garnered
WNIT bids, and WASHINGTON participated in the
first-ever WBI.
Without question, the Conference has dominated the softball field, winning 22 national championships in the sport since 1982. UCLA hoisted
the 2010 NCAA trophy, the program’s 11th in the
sport, an NCAA record. It was an all-Pac-10 final,
as the Bruins defeated ARIZONA in the championship series to claim the crown. Seven Pac-10
teams earned NCAA Tournament bids, with three
advancing to the NCAA Women’s College World
Series, including Pac-10 Champion WASHINGTON, which captured the league title with a 17-4
record.
It was a historic year for the Pac-10 in baseball as a Conference-record eight teams earned
NCAA Tournament bids. ARIZONA STATE and
UCLA reached the NCAA Men’s College World
Series with the Bruins advancing to the championship series. ARIZONA, CALIFORNIA, OREGON,
OREGON STATE, STANFORD and WASHINGTON
STATE also represented the Conference in the
postseason event. The 80 percent postseason
participation rate marked the best percentage by a
conference in NCAA Division I history.
OREGON, STANFORD, UCLA and USC each
claimed NCAA team titles in the last academic
year. The Trojans were the only team in the nation
to win three crowns, while the Cardinal and Bruins joined USC as three of only nine institutions to
claim multiple crowns.
The Trojans swept the men’s and women’s water polo titles, also adding the men’s tennis crown
to its trophy case. The Cardinal claimed the top
spot in men’s volleyball and women’s tennis, while
the Bruins took home titles in women’s gymnastics and softball. The Pac-10 also had runners-up
in 14 NCAA Championship events: men’s cross
country (OREGON), women’s soccer (STANFORD), men’s water polo (UCLA), women’s bas-
Nikola Vucevic, USC
The Conference swept two men’s and women’s
sports, capturing national championship in water polo and tennis. USC claimed the men’s and
women’s in water polo. The Trojans also claimed
the men’s tennis title, while STANFORD came out
on top in the women’s bracket.
Jeremy Green, Stanford
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
On the men’s side, Pac-10 members have won
267 NCAA team championships, far ahead of the
200 claimed by the runner-up Big Ten. Men’s
PAC-10 CONFERENCE
NCAA crowns have come at a phenomenal rate for the Pac-10 - 15 basketball
titles by five schools (more than any other conference), 51 tennis titles, 44
outdoor track & field crowns, and 26 baseball titles. Pac-10 members have
won 24 of the last 41 NCAA titles in volleyball, 36 of the last 51 in water polo,
and 21 in swimming & diving national championships.
Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number of NCAA
men’s individual champions, as well, boasting 1,171 individual crowns.
On the women’s side, the story is much the same. Since the NCAA began
conducting women’s championships 29 years ago, Pac-10 members have
claimed at least four national titles in a single season on 21 occasions, including 2009-10. Overall, the Pac-10 has captured 123 NCAA women’s titles,
easily outdistancing the SEC, which is second, with 74. Pac-10 members
have dominated a number of sports, winning 22 softball titles, 19 tennis
crowns, 13 of the last 20 volleyball titles, 13 of the last 21 trophies in golf, and
11 in swimming & diving.
Pac-10 women student-athletes shine nationally on an individual basis, as
well, having captured an unmatched 527 NCAA individual crowns, an average of nearly 19 championships per season.
PAC-10 CONFERENCE HISTORY
The roots of the Pacific-10 Conference date back over 90 years to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at
a meeting at the Oregon Hotel in Portland, Ore. The original membership
consisted of four schools - the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon State College (now
Oregon State University). All still are charter members of the Conference.
2010-11 PAC-10 CONFERENCE
CHAMPIONSHIP DATES AND SITES
BASEBALL
Champion determined by three-game round-robin play
BASKETBALL (M)
at STAPLES Center, Los Angeles, Calif. » March 9-12, 2011
Host: Pac-10 Conference
BASKETBALL (W)
at Galen Center/STAPLES Center, Los Angeles, Calif.
March 9-12, 2011 » Host: Pac-10 Conference
CROSS COUNTRY (M&W)
at Jefferson Golf Course, Seattle, Wash. » October 30, 2010
Host: Washington
DIVING (M&W)
at Weyerhaeuser King County Aquatic Center, Federal Way, Wash.
February 23-26, 2011 » Host: Pac-10 Conference
FOOTBALL
Champion determined by regular season schedule of nine Pac-10 games.
GOLF (M)
at Stanford Golf Course, Stanford, Calif. » April 29-May 1, 2011
Host: Stanford
Pacific Coast Conference play began in 1916 and, one year later, Washington State College (now Washington State University) was accepted into the
league, with Stanford University following in 1918.
GOLF (W)
at Karsten Golf Course, Tempe, Ariz. » April 17-19, 2011
Host: Arizona State
In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams with the admission of the University of Southern California (USC) and the University of Idaho. In 1924, the
University of Montana joined the league roster, and in 1928, the PCC grew to
10 members with the addition of UCLA.
GYMNASTICS (W)
at Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles, Calif. » March 19, 2011
Host: UCLA
The Pacific Coast Conference competed as a 10-member league until
1950, with the exception of 1943-45 when World War II curtailed intercollegiate athletic competition to a minimum. During that time, the league’s first
commissioner was named. Edwin N. Atherton was Commissioner in 1940
and was succeeded by Victor O. Schmidt in 1944. In 1950, Montana resigned
from the Conference and joined the Mountain States Conference. The PCC
continued as a nine-team Conference through 1958.
ROWING (M&W)
at Sacramento State Aquatics Center, Lake Natoma, Calif.
May 15, 2011 » Host: Pac-10 Conference
In 1959, the PCC was dissolved and the Athletic Associates of Western Universities was formed and Thomas J. Hamilton was appointed Commissioner
of the new league. The original AAWU membership included California, Stanford, Southern California, UCLA and Washington. Washington State joined the
membership in 1962, while Oregon and Oregon State joined in 1964. Under
Hamilton’s watch, the name Pacific-8 Conference was adopted in 1968. In
1971, Wiles Hallock took over as Commissioner of the Pac-8.
Ten years later, on July 1, 1978, the University of Arizona and Arizona
State University were admitted to the league and the Pacific-10 Conference
became a reality. In 1986-87, the league took on a new look, expanding to include 10 women’s sports. Thomas C. Hansen was named the Commissioner
of the Pac-10 in 1983, a role he would hold for 26 years until 2009. Hansen
was succeeded by current Commissioner Larry Scott, who took on the new
role in July 2009.
Currently, the Pac-10 sponsors 11 men’s sports and 11 women’s sports.
Additionally, the Conference is a member of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) in four other men’s sports and three women’s sports.
The University of Colorado accepted an invitation to join the Pac-10 on
June 11, 2010, and on June 17, 2010, the University of Utah agreed to join
the Conference. The Buffaloes and Utes will become the 11th and 12th members of the Conference, the first additions to the league since 1978.
The Pacific-10 Conference offices are located 25 miles east of San Francisco in Walnut Creek, Calif.
SOCCER (M&W)
Champion determined by double round-robin play.
SOFTBALL
Champion determined by three-game round-robin play.
SWIMMING (M)
at Belmont Plaza Olympic Pool, Long Beach, Calif. » March 2-5, 2011
Host: Pac-10 Conference
SWIMMING (W)
at Weyerhaeuser King County Aquatic Center, Federal Way, Wash.
February 23-26, 2011 » Host: Pac-10 Conference
TENNIS (M&W)
at Ojai Valley Athletic Club/Libbey Park, Ojai, Calif.
April 28-May 1, 2011 » Host: Pac-10 Conference
TRACK & FIELD (M&W)
at Drachman Stadium, Tucson, Ariz.
Multi-events: May 6-7, 2011; Championship: May 13-14, 2011
Host: Arizona
VOLLEYBALL (W)
Champion determined by double round-robin play
WRESTLING
at Gill Coliseum, Corvallis, Ore. » February 27, 2011
Host: Oregon State
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
5
2010-11 PAC-10 MEN’S BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK
ARIZONA - The Wildcats have 11 returning letterwinners, most among all Pac-10 teams, including four returning starters that were instrumental
in Arizona’s fourth-place Pac-10 finish in coach
Sean Miller’s first season in Tucson. . . . Arizona
saw its streak of 25 straight NCAA Tournament
appearances snapped last season. However, the
talent certainly is there to begin a new streak. .
. . Sophomore F Derrick Williams led the Wildcats in scoring at 15.7 ppg, and rebounding at 7.1
rpg. He was an All-Pac-10 selection last season,
as well as being named the Pac-10 Freshman of
the Year. . . . Williams, along with senior F Jamelle
Horne (9.4 ppg/5.6 rpg) and sophomore F Solomon HIll (6.7 ppg/4.4 rpg) give the Wildcats one
the league’s top frontcourts. . . . While the Wildcats
will miss the services of All-Pac-10 point guard
Nic Wise, the back court looks to be in capable
hands with junior Kyle Fogg (11.1 ppg/3.1 rpg)
and sophomore Lamont Jones (6.6 ppg/1.8 rpg),
as well as talented freshman Jordin Mayes. . . .
Sophomore G/F Kevin Parrom (4.6 ppg/4.2 rpg)
will provide the Wildcats with versatility and defensive toughness. . . . Look for freshman Daniel
Bejarano to provide the Wildcats with points from
outside the three-point arc.
ARIZONA STATE - At 12-6 in league play, the Sun
Devils are coming off their best Pac-10 showing
since back-to-back second place finishes in 1980
and 1981. . . . Coach Herb Sendek earned Pac10 Coach of the Year honors, just the second ASU
coach to earn the honor in 32 years of Pac-10
play (Ned Wulk, 1980). . . . Sendek will rely on
senior G Ty Abbott (12.0 ppg/4.4 rpg), senior G
Jamelle McMillan (6.6 ppg/2.8 apg), and senior
G/F Rihards Kuksiks (12.1 ppg/3.6 rpg). Abbott’s
numbers were even better in league play where
he averaged 14.7 points and 5.7 rebounds. Abbott and Kuksiks combined for 159 three-pointers,
shooting a combined 39.4 percent from beyond
the arc. . . The Sun Devils are coming off a third
straight 20-win season and will look to be first team
in school history to win 20 games in four consecutive seasons. . . . Defensively, the Sun Devils grind
down their opponent as witnessed by their 58.7
points allowed last season, which ranked eighth
in the nation. . . . Certainly missed will be the floor
leadership of Derek Glasser - he only set ASU career records for games played (131), assists (551)
and free throw percentage (.839). . . . Freshmen
looking to contribute will be G Keala King, F Kyle
Cain and C Jordan Bachynski. At 7-2, Bachynski
will be counted on to give a lift to the Sun Devils
on the boards as they were ninth in the league in
rebounding last season.
CALIFORNIA - Last season, the Golden Bears
captured their first league title in 50 years. Now
what they need to overcome for the 2010-11 season - returning players accounted for just 11.7
percent of the team’s scoring and 28.0 percent of
the team’s rebounding totals from last year. . . .
Defensively, Cal will look to junior G Jorge Gutierrez (5.5 ppg/3.0 rpg) to continue to be the catalyst
for a pressuring defense. He also is tops among
the team’s returning players in assists with 81 (2.7
apg) last year. . . . The Bears hope junior F Harper
Kamp is healthy and returns to his 2008-09 form
when he averaged 3.8 points and 3.2 rebounds
per game. He’ll be counted on to pair up with
senior C Markhuri Sanders-Frison (3.3 ppg/3.0
rpg) to give Cal physical low post play. Freshman
F Richard Solomon also will contend for playing
time in the front court . . . Coach Mike Montgomery will have plenty of backcourt depth along with
Gutierrez, he’ll look to sophomore Brandon Smith,
and freshmen Allen Crabbe and Gary Franklin to
compete for minutes. . . . With only two returning
players having just two years of experience each,
the Bears will take advantage of eight home games
before Conference play begins to find the right
combination of talent among the six newcomers.
OREGON - First-year coach Dana Altman has
taken his last 13 squads to the postseason. If he
plans to continue that streak in Eugene, he’ll need
to rely on a junior G Malcolm Armstead (10.3
ppg/2.6 rpg) to lead the way. Armstead returns as
the league’s top assist distributor, having dished
out 4.3 assists per game last season. In addition,
his single-season school-record 65 steals (2.0
spg) are tops among all returnees as well. . . . Joining Armstead in the backcourt will be juniors Teondre Williams (6.4 ppg/2.4 rpg) and Garret Sim
(4.2 ppg/1.7 rpg). Sim is the Ducks top three-point
threat having connected on 26 treys last season.
. . . After missing all but four games last season
with an ailing back, senior F Joevan Catron was
granted a medical hardship waiver and will return
in 2010-11. He posted quality numbers in 200809 with 7.2 points per game and 6.6 rebounds
per game and has played in 96 career games
for the Ducks, starting 57 of those outings. . . .
Having Catron back will certainly help a thin front
court as the Ducks return just two letterwinners
with front court experience - sophomore G/F E.J.
Singler (6.1 ppg/4.3 rpg) and junior F Jeremy Jacob (7.5 ppg/4.8 rpg). . . . A couple of big dates
on the schedule - Saturday, January 1 vs. Arizona
State is the final game in Mac Court, while Thursday, January 13 vs. USC will be the unveiling of
Matthew Knight Arena, Oregon’s state-of-the-art
12,500-seat arena.
Ty Abbott, Arizona State
6
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
Derrick Williams, Arizona
OREGON STATE - Head coach Craig Robinson
will look to blend his veteran group of seniors All-Pac-10 G Calvin Haynes (12.5 ppg/2.3 rpg/50
3FG), F Daniel Deane (3.1 ppg/3.0 rpg), F Omari
Johnson (4.7 ppg/2.6 rpg), and G Lathen Wallace
(5.3 ppg/1.5 rpg) - with a talented group of underclassmen to provide the Beavers with one of
the deepest teams that Corvallis has seen in several years. . . . A solid back court will be centered
on Haynes and Wallace, as well as sophomore G
Jared Cunningham (6.2 ppg/2. 0 rpg) and freshmen G Roberto Nelson and G Ahmad Starks. . .
. The Beavers will provide a front court presence
that may be one of the biggest in the league with
four players standing 6-10 or taller. While sophomore F/C Joe Burton (4.7 ppg/4.5 rpg) may be
the shortest among the frontline players, his
280-pound frame will be a tough one for the opposition to encounter in the paint. In addition to
sophomore F/C Angus Brandt, Robinson will have
five freshmen at his disposal to rotate in the front
court, led by 6-10 C Eric Moreland and 6-11 C
Chris Brown. . . . While the Beavers have been
in back-to-back CBI postseason tournaments,
they are looking to take the next step and find
themselves placed among the 68-team field in the
NCAA Tournament.
STANFORD - One of three Pac-10 squads that
find themselves senior-less this season (also UCLA
and Washington State) . . . . While the Cardinal
lose the services of All-Pac-10 forward Landry
Fields, a second round NBA draft pick of the New
York Knicks, an impressive recruiting class arrives
on campus for head coach Johnny Dawkins. . . . A
veteran back court should keep the young talent in
check. Junior G Jarrett Mann (5.8 ppg/3.4 rpg/4.3
apg) will run the offense, while junior G Jeremy
Green (16.6 ppg/3.8 rpg) will be looked to as the
go-to guy for the Cardinal. Green set a Cardinal single-season record last year with 93 three-pointers.
. . Stanford returns a pair of front court starters in
junior forwards Jack Trotter (6.8 ppg/4.5 rpg) and
Andrew Zimmermann (4.4 ppg/2.9 rpg). However,
there will be a battle over minutes with the addition
PAC-10 MEN'S BASKETBALL
83 blocked shots last season as well. . . . While
senior G Donte Smith (3.8 ppg/1.1 rpg) and junior G Marcus Simmons (3.0 ppg/2.0 rpg) provide
experience in the back court, expect freshman G
Bryce Jones and Maurice Jones to have an immediate impact for the Trojans. In addition, similar
to last season when Mike Gerrity became eligible
at the break and provided a spark to the Trojan
offense, look for junior transfer Jio Fontan to step
into a key role after the conclusion of the semester in December. The difference this year is that
the Trojans will have the opportunity at postseason
play. . . . The Trojans don’t back down when it
comes to non-conference scheduling. The docket
includes games at Nebraska, Kansas and Tennessee, in addition to home games with Texas and
NCAA Tournament participant Lehigh.
Isaiah Thomas, Washington
of highly-rated freshmen recruits Dwight Powell,
Anthony Brown and Josh Huestis. . . . Redshirt
freshmen F Andy Brown was expected to contribute this season, but injured his knee and will be
out for the season. However, the Cardinal received
some good news during the summer when junior
F Josh Owens (6.9 ppg/3.6 rpg in 2008-09), who
sat out last season for health issues, was given
the green light to resume his playing career. . .
. The Cardinal put together a challenging nonconference schedule that includes Virginia, as well
as NCAA Tournament participants Murray State,
UNLV, Butler and Oklahoma State.
UCLA - After posting their first losing season since
2004, head coach Ben Howland is ready to guide
the Bruins back into the NCAA Tournament, but
will have to accomplish the feat without a senior
leader. . . . The back court of junior Malcolm Lee
(12.1 ppg/4.4 rpg/3.1 apg) and junior Jerime Anderson (5.8 ppg/1.9 rpg/3.4 apg), along with the
addition of junior college recruit Lazeric Jones,
will give UCLA solid perimeter play. . . . Freshman G Tyler Lamb can provide a much-needed
scoring punch from long distance as the Bruins
return just 29.7 percent of the team’s three-point
scoring from a year ago. . . . Lean on front court
experience, the Bruins will need consistent play
from sophomore forwards Tyler Honeycutt (7.2
ppg/6.5 rpg), Reeves Nelson (11.1 ppg/5.7 rpg)
and Brendan Lane (2.2 ppg/2.8 rpg). Honeycutt
and Nelson earned Pac-10 All-Freshman team
honors last season and will be joined by redshirt
freshman C Anthony Stover and McDonald’s AllAmerica C Joshua Smith in the post.
USC - Head Coach Kevin O’Neill will lean on his
veteran front court players junior F Nikola Vucevic
(10.7 ppg/9.4 rpg) and senior F Alex Stepheson
(8.4 ppg/7.2 rpg). Vucevic, the Pac-10‘s top rebounder last year and the Pac-10’s Most Improved
Player, teams with Stepheson to provide the the
Trojans with the top front court players in the
league. The duo not only rank 1-2 as the Pac-10’s
top returning rebounders, but they combined for
WASHINGTON - The Huskies put together an
impressive finish to the 2009-10 season, winning
14-of-16 before bowing out of the NCAA Tournament in the Sweet 16. Head coach Lorenzo Romar
returns four starters from that squad. Leading the
way will be junior G Isaiah Thomas, an All-Pac-10
performer who posted 16.9 ppg and 3.2 apg last
year. He’s already amassed 1,134 points in his first
two seasons. The Husky back court also features
sophomore Abdul Gaddy (3.9 ppg/1.4 rpg/2.3
apg) and senior Venoy Overton (8.5 ppg/2.9
rpg/3.1 apg). Overton’s hounding presence on
defense earned him Pac-10 All-Defensive Team
honors. . . . Missed will be forward Quincy Pondexter and his 19.0 ppg/7.4 rpg averages. Pondexter
was an NBA first round draft pick, giving the Pac10 a first round pick in each of the last 22 NBA
drafts. . . . Senior F Matthew Bryan-Amaning (8.8
ppg/5.9 rpg) was impressive down the stretch last
season, averaging 11.8 points and 7.5 rebounds
over the final 14 games, while shooting 59.8 percent from the field. Joining Bryan-Amaning on the
front line will be athletic senior F Justin Holiday
(5.9 ppg/4.5 rpg) and junior F Darnell Gant (2.5
ppg/2.4 rpg), . . . Newcomers expected to make
immediate contributions will be freshman G Terrence Ross and sophomore C Aziz N’Diaye, who
stands 7-0 and tips the scales at 260 pounds.
WASHINGTON STATE - While head coach Ken
Bone’s Cougar squad does not include one senior, he does have the advantage of being the
only coach in the Pac-10 to return all five starters.
Among those five include junior G Klay Thompson (19.6 ppg/5.1 rpg), an All-Pac-10 selection
and the league’s top returning scorer. He scored
20 or more points 17 times last season, including
a 43-point effort vs. San Diego that earned him
Great Alaska Shootout Most Outstanding Player
honors. . . . Joining Thompson in the back court
will be sophomore Reggie Moore (12.7 ppg/2.4
rpg/4.2 apg), a Pac-10 All-Freshman pick, and
junior Marcus Capers (6.9 ppg/4.1 rpg). . . . A stabile front court features junior F DeAngelo Casto
(10.7 ppg/7.0 rpg) and junior F Abe Lodwick (2.5
ppg/2.4 rpg). Casto earned Pac-10 All-Defensive
Team honors after leading the league with 67
blocked shots (2.2 bpg). With Lodwick earning
second team All-Academic honors, the Cougars
were the only team to place a player on the Pac10‘s All-Conference, All-Freshman, All-Defensive,
and All-Academic squads. . . . The starters saw a
lot of minutes last season, so the Cougars will look
for contributions from the bench in order to avoid
wearing down during the later part of the season.
Big 12/Pac-10 Hardwood Series
Year four of the Big 12/Pac-10 Hardwood Series
continues during the 2010-11 season. Here are
the matchups:
Thursday, Dec. 2, 2010
Arizona State at Baylor, 6 p.m. (ESPN2)
Missouri at Oregon, 8 p.m. (FSN)
UCLA at Kansas, 8 p.m. (ESPN)
Friday, Dec. 3, 2010
Kansas State at Washington State, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Saturday, Dec. 4, 2010
Oregon State at Colorado, 8 p.m. (ESPNU)
Texas Tech at Washington, 1 p.m. (FSN)
California at Iowa State, 1 p.m. (FSN)
Sunday, Dec. 5, 2010
Oklahoma at Arizona, 2 p.m. (FSN)
Texas at USC, 7:30 p.m. (FSN)
Outside the four-day window
Sat., Nov. 27: USC at Nebraska, 5 p.m. (FSN)
Sat., Dec. 11: Washington at Texas A&M, 3:30
p.m. (ESPN2)
Tues., Dec. 21: Stanford at Okla. State, 4 p.m.
(ESPNU)
Klay Thompson, Washington State
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
7
PAC-10 MEN’S BASKETBALL
CAREER LEADERS (ACTIVE)
RETURNING STARTERS
Arizona (4)
Derrick Williams, So., F ................15.7 ppg/7.1 rpg
Jamelle Horne, Sr., F......................9.4 ppg/5.6 rpg
Kyle Fogg, Jr., G ...........................11.1 ppg/3.1 rpg
Solomon Hill, So., F........................6.7 ppg/4.4 rpg
Arizona State (3)
Ty Abbott, Sr., G .............. 12.0 ppg/78 3FG/4.4 rpg
Rihards Kuksiks, Sr., G/F. 12.1 ppg/81 3FG/3.6 rpg
Jamelle McMillan, Sr., G.... 6.6 ppg/3.4 rpg/2.8 apg
California (1)
Jorge Gutierrez, Jr., G........ 5.5 ppg/3.0 rpg/2.3 apg
Oregon (2)
Malcolm Armstead, Jr., G 10.3 ppg/2.6 rpg/4.3 apg
E.J. Singler, So., F ..........................6.1 ppg/4.3 rpg
Oregon State (3)
Jared Cunningham, So., G .............6.2 ppg/2.0 rpg
Daniel Deane, Sr., F .......................3.1 ppg/3.0 rpg
Calvin Haynes, Sr., G....................12.5 ppg/2.3 rpg
Stanford (4)
Jeremy Green, Jr., G ....... 16.6 ppg/93 3FG/3.8 rpg
Jarrett Mann, Jr., G ........... 5.8 ppg/3.4 rpg/4.3 apg
Jack Trotter, Jr., F...........................6.8 ppg/4.5 rpg
Andrew Zimmerman, Jr., F .............4.4 ppg/2.9 rpg
UCLA (3)
Tyler Honeycutt, So., G ...................7.2 ppg/6.5 rpg
Malcolm Lee, Jr., G .......... 12.1 ppg/4.4 rpg3.1 apg
Reeves Nelson, So., F ..................11.1 ppg/5.7 rpg
USC (2)
Nikola Vucevic, Jr., F....................10.7 ppg/9.4 rpg
Alex Stepheson, Sr., F ....................8.4 ppg/7.2 rpg
Washington (4)
Isaiah Thomas, Jr., G ...... 16.9 ppg/3.9 rpg/3.2 apg
Matthew Bryan-Amaning, Sr., F ......8.8 ppg/5.9 rpg
Justin Holiday, Sr., F.......................5.9 ppg/4.5 rpg
Abdul Gaddy, So., G .......... 3.9 ppg/1.4 rpg/2.3 apg
Washington State (5)
Klay Thompson, Jr., G ..................19.6 ppg/5.1 rpg
Reggie Moore, So., G ...... 12.7 ppg/2.4 rpg/3.4 apg
DeAngelo Casto, Jr., F ..... 10.7 ppg/7.0 rpg/2.0 bpg
Marcus Capers, Jr., G.....................6.9 ppg/4.1 rpg
Abe Lodwick, Jr., G/F .....................2.5 ppg/2.4 rpg
Jorge Gutierrez, California
8
RETURNING PRODUCTION
POINTS
Isaiah Thomas (Jr.), WASH .................1,134
Klay Thompson (Jr.), WSU .................1,023
Ty Abbott (Sr.), ASU ..............................971
Calvin Haynes (Sr.), OSU ......................957
Rihards Kuksiks (Sr.), ASU ....................893
Jeremy Green (Jr.), STAN ......................748
Matthew Bryan-Amaning (Sr.), WASH ....648
Lathen Wallace (Sr.), OSU .....................627
Joevan Catron (Sr.), ORE .......................579
Omari Johnson (Sr.), OSU .....................535
SCORING
1. Arizona...................................... 79.5%
2. Washington State....................... 76.6%
3. Washington ............................... 63.6%
4. Oregon State ............................. 62.2%
5. Arizona State ............................. 56.3%
6. UCLA ........................................ 52.3%
7. Stanford .................................... 50.6%
8. Oregon ...................................... 48.6%
9. USC .......................................... 42.9%
10. California .................................. 11.7%
REBOUNDS
Joevan Catron (Sr.), ORE .......................482
Matthew Bryan-Amaning (Sr.), WASH ....447
Jamelle Horne (Sr.), ARIZ .....................417
Ty Abbott (Sr.), ASU ..............................398
DeAngelo Casto (Jr.), WSU ....................345
Nikola Vucevic (Jr.), USC ......................344
Klay Thompson (Jr.), WSU ....................297
Rihards Kuksiks (Sr.), ASU ....................289
Justin Holiday (Sr.), WASH ....................266
Venoy Overton (Jr.), WASH ....................249
REBOUNDING
1. Arizona ..................................... 89.3%
2. Washington ............................... 66.3%
3. UCLA ........................................ 65.4%
4. Oregon State ............................. 64.7%
Washington State....................... 64.7%
6. USC .......................................... 63.7%
7. Stanford .................................... 57.4%
8. Arizona State ............................. 55.8%
9. Oregon ...................................... 41.6%
10. California ................................... 28.0%
THREE-POINT FIELD GOALS
Rihards Kuksiks (Sr.), ASU ....................210
Ty Abbott (Sr.), ASU ..............................199
Klay Thompson (Jr.), WSU ....................143
Jeremy Green (Jr.), STAN ......................140
Calvin Haynes (Jr.), OSU .......................114
Lathen Wallace (Sr.), OSU .....................106
Isaiah Thomas (Jr.), WASH ....................104
Jamelle McMillan (Sr.), ASU ....................81
Omari Johnson (Sr.), OSU .......................68
Jamelle Horne (Sr.), ARIZ .......................68
THREE-POINT FIELD GOALS
1. Oregon State ............................. 80.0%
2. Arizona...................................... 73.7%
3. Washington State....................... 73.3%
4. Arizona State ............................. 72.6%
5. Washington ............................... 72.0%
6. Stanford .................................... 51.0%
7. Oregon ...................................... 41.1%
8. USC .......................................... 31.7%
9. UCLA ....................................... 26.9%
10. California ..................................... 7.9%
ASSISTS
Venoy Overton (Sr.), WASH....................287
Jamelle McMillan (Jr.), ASU ..................209
Isaiah Thomas (Jr.), WASH ....................202
Joevan Catron (Sr.), ORE .......................159
Ty Abbott (Sr.), ASU ..............................153
Jarrett Mann (Jr.), STAN........................151
Rihards Kuksiks (Sr.), ASU ....................143
Jerime Anderson (Jr.), UCLA .................142
Malcolm Armstead (Jr.), ORE ................138
Calvin Haynes (Sr.), OSU ......................136
ASSISTS
1. Washington ............................... 81.4%
2. Oregon ...................................... 72.7%
3. Arizona...................................... 72.1%
4. Washington State....................... 70.7%
5. UCLA ....................................... 59.5%
6. Stanford .................................... 49.9%
7. Arizona State ............................. 49.4%
8. Oregon State ............................. 48.7%
9. USC .......................................... 36.1%
10. California ................................... 25.6%
STEALS
Venoy Overton (Sr.), WASH....................141
Ty Abbott (Sr.), ASU ..............................102
Lathen Wallace (Sr.), OSU .......................82
Calvin Haynes (Sr.), OSU ........................80
Matthew Bryan-Amaning (Sr.), WASH ......78
Joevan Catron (Sr.), ORE .........................75
Isaiah Thomas (Jr.), WASH ......................75
Klay Thompson (Jr.), WSU ......................74
Rihards Kuksiks (Sr.), ASU ......................69
Jamelle McMillan (Sr.), ASU ....................66
STEALS
1. Washington State....................... 77.3%
2. Washington ............................... 72.0%
3. Arizona ..................................... 70.4%
4. Oregon ...................................... 67.3%
5. UCLA ........................................ 63.4%
6. Arizona State ............................. 58.7%
7. Oregon State ............................. 54.7%
8. USC .......................................... 28.6%
9. Stanford .................................... 27.3%
10. California ................................... 20.7%
BLOCKS
DeAngelo Casto (Jr.), WSU ....................106
Matthew Bryan-Amaning (Sr.), WASH ....104
Jamelle Horne (Sr.), ARIZ .......................55
Nikola Vucevic (Jr.), USC ........................48
Alex Stepheson (Sr.), USC .......................44
Justin Holiday (Sr.), WASH ......................40
Ty Abbott (Sr.), ASU ................................39
Josh Owens (Sr.), STAN ..........................30
Tyler Honeycutt (So.), UCLA ....................30
Joevan Catron (Sr.), ORE .........................29
Omari Johnson (Jr.), OSU .......................29
BLOCKS
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Arizona...................................... 97.4%
Washington State....................... 90.0%
USC ......................................... 68.9%
Washington ............................... 64.0%
UCLA ........................................ 55.6%
Oregon State ............................. 52.3%
Arizona State ............................. 48.7%
Stanford .................................... 37.0%
Oregon ...................................... 34.0%
California ................................... 22.1%
PAC-10 MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Wed., Nov. 24
UNC Charlotte at Oregon State, 7 p.m. (FSN NW)
UCLA in NIT semifinals, TBD (ESPN) (12)
Cal State Fullerton at USC, 7:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
Washington at Maui Invitational, TBD (16)
All times listed are local to site.
Thurs., Nov. 4
Westmont College at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (BruinTV) (X)
Fri., Nov. 5
Lewis-Clark State at Washington State, 6 p.m. (X)
Northwest Christian at Oregon, TBA (X)
Sat., Nov. 6
Point Loma Nazarene at USC, 2 p.m. (USCTrojans.com) (X)
St. Martin’s at Washington, TBA (X)
Sun., Nov. 7
Augustana College at Arizona, 4 p.m. (X)
Tues., Nov. 9
Western Oregon at Oregon State, 7 p.m. (X)
Cal State Los Angeles at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (BruinTV) (X)
Thurs., Nov. 25
Arizona State vs. Houston Baptist, 5 p.m. (5)
California vs. Temple, TBA (6)
Stanford vs. Murray State, 6 p.m. (ESPNU) (9)
Fri., Nov. 26
Arizona vs. Santa Clara, 7:30 p.m. (KWBA) (2)
Arizona State at Great Alaska Shootout, TBD (5)
California vs. Georgia/Notre Dame (6)
Stanford at Tulsa/UNLV, TBA (ESPNU) (9)
UCLA in NIT finals, TBD (ESPN) (12)
Washington State at Fresno State, 7 p.m.
Sat., Nov. 27
Arizona vs. Kansas, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) (2)
Arizona State at Great Alaska Shootout, TBD (5)
Oregon vs. Duke, 1 p.m. (FSN) (8)
Oregon State at Howard, 4 p.m.
USC at Nebraska, 5 p.m. (FSN) (3)
Wed., Nov. 10
Sonoma State at California, TBA (X)
Cal State Monterey Bay at Stanford, TBA (X)
Fri., Nov. 12
North Dakota State at Oregon, TBA (7)
Cal State Northridge at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (BruinTV)
Sun., Nov. 28
Stanford at Anaheim Classic, TBA (ESPNU) (9)
Sat., Nov. 13
Denver at Oregon, TBA (7)
UC Irvine at USC, 1 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
McNeese State at Washington, 1 p.m.
Southern at Washington State, 5 p.m.
Mon., Nov. 29
USC at TCU, 7 p.m. (15)
Tues., Nov. 30
Long Beach State at Washington, 8 p.m. (FSN NW)
Sacramento State at Washington State, 7 p.m.
Sun., Nov. 14
Idaho State at Arizona, 3 p.m. (FSAZ)
UC Santa Barbara at Oregon, TBA (7)
Texas-Arlington at Oregon State, 1:30 p.m.
Wed., Dec. 1
Arizona at Rice, 7 p.m. (CBSC)
UC Davis at California, TBA
Utah Valley at Oregon State, 7 p.m.
Mon., Nov. 15
San Diego at Stanford, 7 p.m.
Pepperdine at UCLA, 8 p.m. (ESPNU) (10)
Santa Clara at USC, 7:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
Tues., Nov. 16
Arizona State at New Mexico, 8 p.m. (Versus)
Cal State Northridge at California, TBA
Nevada/Pacific at UCLA, 8:30 p.m. (ESPNU) (10)
Eastern Washington at Washington, 7 p.m. (FSN NW)
Idaho at Washington State, 7 p.m.
Wed., Nov. 17
Oregon State at Seattle, 7 p.m. (FSN NW)
Rider at USC, 7:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com) (14)
Thurs., Dec. 2
Arizona State at Baylor, 6 p.m. (ESPN2) (3)
Missouri at Oregon, 8 p.m. (FSN) (3)
UCLA at Kansas, 8 p.m. (ESPN) (3)
Fri., Dec. 3
Kansas State at Washington State, 8 p.m. (FSN) (3)
Sat., Dec. 4
Oregon State at Colorado, 8 p.m. (ESPNU) (3)
Texas Tech at Washington, 1 p.m. (FSN) (3)
California at Iowa State, 1 p.m. (FSN) (3)
Sun., Dec. 12
Southern Mississippi at California, TBA
Texas Pan-American at Oregon State, 1:30 p.m.
UC Riverside at Stanford, 5 p.m.
Mon., Dec. 13
Jacksonville State at Oregon, TBA
UC Davis at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (Prime Ticket)
Wed., Dec. 15
North Carolina A&T at Stanford, 7 p.m.
Oregon State at Montana, 7 p.m.
Thur., Dec. 16
Northern Arizona at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. (FSAZ)
Fri., Dec. 17
Arizona State at Nevada, 6 p.m. (ESPNU)
Oregon at Virginia, TBA
Sat., Dec. 18
Cal Poly at California
George Washington at Oregon State, 4:30 p.m. (FSN NW)
Stanford at Butler, 11 a.m. (CBS)
UCLA vs. BYU, 2:30 p.m. (FSN) (13)
USC at Kansas, 11 a.m. (ESPN)
San Francisco at Washington, 6 p.m. (FSN NW)
Sun., Dec. 19
Arizona at North Carolina State, 4:30 p.m. (FSN)
Washington State at Santa Clara, 7 p.m.
Tues., Dec. 21
Long Beach State at Arizona State, 5 p.m. (FSAZ)
Idaho at Oregon, TBA
Stanford at Oklahoma State, 4 p.m. (ESPNU) (3)
Montana State at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (BruinTV)
USC at Tennessee, 7 p.m. (Prime)
Wed., Dec. 22
Robert Morris at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. (FSAZ)
Kansas at California, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Illinois-Chicago at Oregon State, 7 p.m.
Nevada at Washington, 6 p.m. (FSN NW)
Washington State vs. Mississippi State, 9 a.m. (ESPNU) (20)
Thurs., Dec. 23
North Carolina A&T at Arizona State, 12 noon (FSAZ)
UC Irvine at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (Prime Ticket)
Lehigh at USC, 5:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
Washington State at Diamond Head Classic, TBD
(ESPNU) (20)
Sun., Dec. 5
Oklahoma at Arizona, 2 p.m. (FSN) (3)
Richmond at Arizona State, 12 noon (FSAZ)
Portland State at Oregon, TBA
Montana at UCLA, 7 p.m. (Prime Ticket)
Texas at USC, 7:30 p.m. (FSN) (3)
Thur., Nov. 18
New Mexico State at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. (FSAZ)
Virginia at Stanford, 7:30 p.m. (FSN)
Mon., Nov. 20
UAB at Arizona State, 2 p.m.
New Mexico at California, TBA
San Jose State at Oregon, TBA
USC vs. Bradley, 5 p.m. (15)
Mon., Dec. 6
Portland at Washington, 7 p.m. (FSN NW)
Wed., Dec. 8
Cal State Fullerton at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. (FCS)
San Diego State at California, TBA
Gonzaga at Washington State, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Sun., Nov. 21
Northern Colorado at Arizona, 3 p.m. (FSAZ) (1)
Texas Southern at Oregon State, 7 p.m.
Arkansas-Pine Bluff at Stanford, 5 p.m.
USC vs. New Mexico State, 2:30 p.m. (15)
Fri., Dec. 10
Washington State vs. Texas Pan American, 7 p.m. (19)
Mon., Nov. 22
UCLA in NIT consolation, TBA (11)
Washington vs. Virginia, 6 p.m. (ESPN2) (16)
Tues., Nov. 23
Bethune-Cookman at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. (FCS) (1)
Texas Southern at Oregon, TBA
UCLA in NIT consolation, TBA (11)
Washington vs. Oklahoma/Kentucky, TBD (16)
Washington State vs. Portland, 7:30 p.m. (FSN NW) (18)
Sat., Dec. 11
Arizona at BYU, 4 p.m. (BYUTV) (4)
Gardner-Webb at Arizona State, 12 noon
Willamette at Oregon, TBA
Cal Poly at UCLA, 5 p.m. (Prime Ticket)
Northern Arizona at USC, 1 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
Washington at Texas A&M, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN2) (3)
Malcolm Armstead, Oregon
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
9
PAC-10 MEN’S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Sat., Dec. 25
Washington State at Diamond Head Classic, TBD (20)
Oregon State at Stanford, 5 p.m. (CSNBA)
Oregon at California, TBA
Tues., Dec. 28
Hartford at California
Yale at Stanford, 7 p.m. (CSNBA)
Sun., Jan. 30
Washington at Washington State, 7 p.m. (FSN)
Wed., Dec. 29
Washington at USC, 7:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
Washington State at UCLA, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Thur., Dec. 30
Arizona at Oregon, 7 p.m.
Arizona State at Oregon State, 7:30 pm. (FSN NW)
Fri., Dec. 31
Washington at UCLA, 1 p.m. (FSN)
Washington State at USC, 3 p.m. (FSW)
Sat., Jan. 1
Arizona State at Oregon, TBA
Sun., Jan. 2
Arizona at Oregon State, 7 p.m. (FSN)
California at Stanford, 5 p.m. (CSNBA)
Thur., Jan. 6
California at Arizona, 8:30 p.m. (FSN)
Stanford at Arizona State, 6:30 p.m. (FSAZ)
Oregon at Washington, 5:30 p.m. (FSN NW)
Oregon State at Washington State, 7 p.m.
Sat., Jan. 8
Stanford at Arizona, 4:30 p.m. (FSAZ)
California at Arizona State, 12:30 p.m. (FSN)
Oregon at Washington State, 7:30 p.m.
Oregon State at Washington, 3:30 p.m. (FSN NW)
Sun., Jan. 9
UCLA at USC, 7:30 p.m. (FSN)
Wed., Jan. 12
Tulsa at Arizona State, 6:30 p.m. (FSAZ)
Thur., Jan. 13
USC at Oregon, 7:30 p.m. (FSN)
UCLA at Oregon State, 5:30 p.m. (FSN NW/Prime Ticket)
Washington State at California, TBA
Washington at Stanford, 7 p.m.
Sat., Jan. 15
Arizona State at Arizona, 12:30 p.m. (FSN)
USC at Oregon State, 7:30 p.m. (FSN NW)
UCLA at Oregon, TBA
Washington State at Stanford, 5 p.m. (CSNBA)
Sun., Jan. 16
Washington at California, 7 p.m. (FSN)
Thur., Jan. 20
Arizona at Washington, 7:30 p.m. (FSN)
Arizona State at Washington State, 7 p.m.
Stanford at USC, 7:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
California at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (Prime Ticket)
Sat., Jan. 22
Arizona at Washington State, 7:30 p.m. (FSN NW)
Arizona State at Washington, 1 p.m. (FSN)
Stanford at UCLA, 11 a.m. (CBS)
California at USC, 8 p.m. (FSW)
Oregon at Oregon State, 3 p.m. (FSN)
Thur., Jan. 27
UCLA at Arizona, 7 p.m. (ESPN/2)
USC at Arizona State, 6:30 p.m.
Oregon State at California, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Oregon at Stanford, 7 p.m.
Sat., Jan. 29
UCLA at Arizona State, 1:30 p.m. (FSN)
USC at Arizona, 5:30 p.m. (FSAZ/Prime)
10
Wed., Feb. 2
USC at UCLA, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Thur., Feb. 3
Arizona at Stanford, 6 p.m. (FSAZ)
Arizona State at California, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Washington State at Oregon, TBA
Washington at Oregon State, 6 p.m. (FSN NW)
Sat., Feb. 5
Arizona at California, 5 p.m. (FSAZ)
Arizona State at Stanford, 3 p.m. (FSN)
Washington State at Oregon State, 5 p.m. (FSN NW)
Washington at Oregon, 1 p.m. (FSN)
St. John’s at UCLA, 10 a.m. (CBS)
Thur., Feb. 10
Oregon State at USC, 8 p.m. (FSN)
Oregon at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (Prime Ticket)
California at Washington, 6 p.m. (FSN NW)
Stanford at Washington State, 7 p.m.
Sat., Feb. 12
Oregon State at UCLA, 1 p.m. (FSN)
Oregon at USC, 7:30 p.m. (Prime)
California at Washington State, 2 p.m.
Stanford at Washington, 5:30 p.m. (FSN NW)
Sun., Feb. 13
Arizona at Arizona State, 7 p.m. (FSN)
Thur., Feb. 17
Washington State at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. (FSN)
Washington at Arizona State, TBA
USC at California, 7:30 p.m.
UCLA at Stanford, 7:30 p.m. (FSN)
Sat., Feb. 19
Washington at Arizona, 4 p.m. (ESPN/2)
Washington State at Arizona State, 12 noon (FSAZ)
USC at Stanford, 7:30 p.m. (FSW/CSNBA)
Oregon State at Oregon, 1 p.m. (FSN)
Sun., Feb. 20
UCLA at California, 7 p.m. (FSN)
Tues., Feb. 22
Washington vs. Seattle, 7 p.m. (FSN NW) (17)
Thur., Feb. 24
Arizona at USC, 7:30 p.m. (USCTrojans.com)
Arizona State at UCLA, 8 p.m. (FSN)
California at Oregon, TBA
Stanford at Oregon State, 6 p.m. (FSN NW)
Sat., Feb. 26
Arizona at UCLA, 1 p.m. (FSN)
Arizona State at USC, 4:30 p.m. (Prime/FSAZ)
California at Oregon State, 3 p.m. (FSN NW)
Stanford at Oregon, TBA
Sun., Feb. 27
Washington State at Washington, 7 p.m. (FSN)
Tues., Mar. 1
Seattle at Stanford, 7 p.m.
Thur., Mar. 3
(Wildcard selection: ESPN/ESPN2 one seledtion 6 p.m.
PT, FSN one selection 8 p.m. PT)
Oregon State at Arizona
Oregon at Arizona State
USC at Washington State
UCLA at Washington
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
Calvin Haynes, Oregon State
Sat., Mar. 5
(Wildcard selection: CBS on selection 11 a.m. PT, FSN
two selections, 2:30 p.m. PT and 7:30 p.m. PT)
Oregon State at Arizona State
Oregon at Arizona
USC at Washington
UCLA at Washington State
Stanford at California
Pac-10 Tournament
Los Angeles - STAPLES Center
Wed., Mar. 9
Pac-10 Tournament Game 1, 6 p.m. (FSN)
Pac-10 Tournament Game 2, 8:30 p.m. (FSN)
Thurs., Mar. 10
Pac-10 Tournament Game 3, 12 noon (FSN)
Pac-10 Tournament Game 4, 2:30 p.m. (FSN)
Pac-10 Tournament Game 5, 6 p.m. (FSN)
Pac-10 Tournament Game 6, 8:30 p.m. (FSN)
Fri., Mar. 11
Pac-10 Tournament Game 7, 6 p.m. (FSN)
Pac-10 Tournament Game 8, 8:30 p.m. (FSN)
Sat., Mar. 12
Pac-10 Tournament Championship, 3 p.m. (CBS)
Tournaments and neutral sites
(X) Exhibition
(1) Las Vegas Invitational - Tucson, Ariz.
(2) Las Vegas Invitational - Las Vegas, Nev.
(3) Big 12/Pac-10 Hardwood Series
(4) Energy Solutions Arena - Salt Lake City, Utah
(5) Great Alaska Shootout - Anchorage, Alaska
(6) Old Spice Classic - Orlando, Fla.
(7) BTI Invitational - Eugene, Ore.
(8) Rose Garden - Portland, Ore.
(9) Anaheim Classic - Anaheim, Calif.
(10) NIT Season Tip-Off Regionals - Los Angeles, Calif.
(11) NIT Season Tip-Off Consolation - TBD
(12) NIT Season Tip-Off Semifinals/Finals - New York, N.Y.
(13) Wooden Classic - Anaheim, Calif.
(14) Hall of Fame Classic - Los Angeles, Calif.
(15) Hall of Fame Classic - Springfield, Mass.
(16) Maui Invitational - Lahaina, Hawaii
(17) Seattle, Wash. (KeyArena)
(18) Cougar Hardwood Classic - Seattle, Wash.
(19) Spokane, Wash.
(20) Diamond Head Classic - Honolulu, Hawaii
PAC-10 MEN'S BASKETBALL TELEVISION
The 2010-11 Pacific-10 Conference basketball television package features 59 men’s contests telecast to national and regional audiences. The package includes 51 games nationally
on FSN, five nationally or regionally on CBS (including the Pac-10 Tournament championship game), and three nationally on ESPN or ESPN2. Additional appearances will be made
through other conference television agreements and various in-season tournaments.
Approximately 60 games will be arranged for local telecast and announced by the institutions. Many of these telecasts arranged by the institutions will be aired on one of several FSN
regionals and other regional sports networks in the Pac-10 market (FOX Sports Arizona, FOX Sports Northwest, Prime Ticket, FOX Sports West, Comcast SportsNet Bay Area, Comcast
SportsNet California, and Oregon Sports Network). In addition, each insitution may make games available on the internet through streaming video.
Date ............... Game ........................................... Air Time (EST/PST) .....Network
Thur., Nov. 18 .. Virginia at STANFORD ...................... 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sat., Nov. 27 .... Duke vs. OREGON (1) ...................... 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
USC at Nebraska (2) ........................ 6 p.m./3 p.m. ........ FSN Midwest
Thur., Dec. 2.... Missouri at OREGON (2) ................... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Fri., Dec. 3....... Kansas State at WASHINGTON STATE (2). 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Sat., Dec. 4 ...... CALIFORNIA at Iowa State (2) .......... 2 p.m./11 a.m. ....................FSN
Texas Tech at WASHINGTON (2) ...... 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
Sun., Dec. 5..... Oklahoma at ARIZONA (2)................ 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
Texas at USC (2) .............................. 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. .........FSN
Wed., Dec. 8 .... Gonzaga at WASHINGTON STATE ..... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Sat., Dec. 18 .... STANFORD at Butler ........................ 2 p.m./11 a.m. ....................CBS
UCLA vs. BYU (3)............................. 5:30 p.m./2:30 p.m. ............FSN
Thur., Mar. 3 .... Wildcard Team Selections ................. 9 p.m./6 p.m. ....ESPN or ESPN2
Wildcard Team Selections ................. 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
OREGON STATE at ARIZONA, OR
OREGON at ARIZONA STATE, OR
UCLA at WASHINGTON, OR
USC at WASHINGTON STATE
Sat., Mar. 5 ...... Wildcard Team Selections ................. 2 p.m./11 a.m. ....................CBS
Wildcard Team Selections ................ 5:30 p.m./2:30 p.m. ............FSN
Wildcard Team Selections ................ 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
OREGON at ARIZONA, OR
OREGON STATE at ARIZONA STATE, OR
UCLA at WASHINGTON STATE, OR
USC at WASHINGTON, OR
STANFORD at CALIFORNIA
Note: Wildcard selections for March 3 and 5, 2011, will be made on Monday, February
21, 2011.
Wed., Dec. 22 .. Kansas at CALIFORNIA .................... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Wed., Dec. 29 .. WASHINGTON STATE at UCLA ......... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Fri., Dec. 31..... WASHINGTON at UCLA .................... 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
Sun., Jan. 2 ..... ARIZONA at OREGON STATE............ 10 p.m./7 p.m. ....................FSN
Thur., Jan. 6 .... CALIFORNIA at ARIZONA................. 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sat., Jan. 8 ...... CALIFORNIA at ARIZONA STATE ...... 2:30 p.m./11:30 a.m. ..........FSN
Sun., Jan. 9 ..... UCLA at USC.................................... 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Thur., Jan. 13 .. USC at OREGON .............................. 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sat., Jan. 15 .... ARIZONA STATE at ARIZONA ........... 2:30 p.m./11:30 a.m. ..........FSN
Sun., Jan. 16 ... WASHINGTON at CALIFORNIA ......... 10 p.m./7 p.m. ....................FSN
Thur., Jan. 20 .. ARIZONA at WASHINGTON .............. 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sat., Jan. 22 .... STANFORD at UCLA......................... 2 p.m./11 a.m. ....................CBS
ARIZONA STATE at WASHINGTON ... 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
OREGON at OREGON STATE ............ 6 p.m./3 p.m. ......................FSN
Thur., Jan. 27 .. UCLA at ARIZONA............................ 9 p.m./6 p.m. ....ESPN or ESPN2
OREGON STATE at CALIFORNIA....... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Sat., Jan. 29 .... UCLA at ARIZONA STATE ................. 3:30 p.m./12:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sun., Jan. 30 ... WASHINGTON at WASHINGTON STATE . 10 p.m./7 p.m. ....................FSN
Pacific Life Pac-10 Tournament (Staples Center, Los Angeles)
Wed., Mar. 9 .... No. 8 seed vs. No. 9 seed................. 9 p.m./6 p.m. ......................FSN
Wed., Mar. 9 .... No. 7 seed vs. No. 10 seed............... 11:30 p.m./8:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Thur., Mar. 10 .. Quarterfinal #1 ................................. 3 p.m./12 noon ...................FSN
Thur., Mar. 10 .. Quarterfinal #2 ................................. 5:30 p.m./2:30 p.m. ............FSN
Thur., Mar. 10 .. Quarterfinal #3 ................................. 9 p.m./6 p.m. ......................FSN
Thur., Mar. 10 .. Quarterfinal #4 ................................. 11:30 p.m./8:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Fri., Mar. 11 ..... Semifinal #1 ..................................... 9 p.m./6 p.m. ......................FSN
Fri., Mar. 11 ..... Semifinal #2 ..................................... 11:30 p.m./8:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sat., Mar. 12 .... Championship .................................. 6 p.m./3 p.m. ......................CBS
Neutral Sites & Tournaments:
(1) Portland, Ore. (Rose Garden)
(2) Big 12/Pac-10 Hardwood Series
(3) Wooden Classic, Anaheim, Calif. (Honda Center)
NOTE: Live coverage of local events in each FSN region may supersede live coverage of
college basketball. Check local listing and times. Other contests may be televised as part
of an institution’s local TV package.
Wed., Feb. 2 .... USC at UCLA.................................... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Thur. Feb. 3 ..... ARIZONA STATE at CALIFORNIA ...... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Sat., Feb. 5 ...... St. John’s at UCLA............................ 1 p.m./10 a.m. ....................CBS
WASHINGTON at OREGON .............. 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
ARIZONA STATE at STANFORD ........ 6 p.m./3 p.m. ......................FSN
Thur., Feb. 10 .. OREGON STATE at USC ................... 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Sat., Feb. 12 .... OREGON STATE at UCLA.................. 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
Sun., Feb. 13 ... ARIZONA at ARIZONA STATE ........... 9 p.m./6 p.m. ......................FSN
Thur., Feb. 17 .. WASHINGTON STATE at ARIZONA ... 8:30 p.m./5:30 p.m. ............FSN
UCLA at STANFORD......................... 10:30 p.m./7:30 p.m. ..........FSN
Sat., Feb. 19 .... OREGON STATE at OREGON ............ 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
WASHINGTON at ARIZONA .............. 6 p.m./3 p.m. ................... ESPN
Sun., Feb. 20 ... UCLA at CALIFORNIA....................... 10 p.m./7 p.m .....................FSN
Thur., Feb. 24 .. ARIZONA STATE at UCLA ................. 11 p.m./8 p.m. ....................FSN
Sat., Feb. 26 .... ARIZONA at UCLA............................ 4 p.m./1 p.m. ......................FSN
Sun., Feb. 27 ... WASHINGTON STATE at WASHINGTON . 10 p.m./7 p.m. ....................FSN
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
11
2011 NCAA TOURNAMENT BRACKET/SITES
2011 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship
Second Round*
Third Round*
Regionals
National Semifinals
National Championship
National Semifinals
Regionals
Second Round*
1
16
16
8
8
9
9
5
5
12
12
4
4
13
13
6
6
11
11
3
3
14
14
Houston
April 4
7
7
10
10
2
2
Houston
April 2
Houston
April 2
15
1
15
1
NATIONAL CHAMPION
16
16
8
8
9
9
5
5
12
12
4
4
13
13
6
6
11
11
3
3
14
14
-!0#(2(%"!1*%2"!++#.,,)22%%5)++1%+%#2%)'(22%!,12./+!6&.308012
0.3-$'!,%1!0#()-!62.-5)2(2(%5)--%01!$4!-#)-'2.2(%1%#.-$
round.
7
10
2
7
10
2
%#.-$!-$2()0$0.3-$!-$0%').-!+1)2%15)++"%/+!#%$)-2(%"0!#*%2"62(%
)4)1).-%-1!1*%2"!++.,,)22%%!0#(
March 17 and 19 second/thirdround sites:%-4%0!,/!3#1.- !1()-'2.-
March 18 and 20 second/thirdround sites:(!0+.22%()#!'.+%4%+!-$3+1!
March 24 and 2 regional sites: Anaheim, New Orleans
March 25 and 27 regional sites: Newark, San Antonio
15
15
7
!2).-!+.++%')!2%2(+%2)#11.#)!2).-.#.,,%0#)!+31%5)2(.322(%150)22%-/%0,)11).-
2011 NCAA TOURNAMENT
(68-team field, 72nd Annual)
FIRST FOUR
Tuesday, March 15 & Wednesday, March 16:
Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio
(University of Dayton, host)
FIRST & SECOND ROUNDS
Thursday, March 17 & Saturday, March 19:
Pepsi Center, Denver, Colo.
(Mountain West Conference, host)
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa, Fla.
(University of South Florida, host)
McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz.
(University of Arizona, host)
Verizon Center, Washington, D.C.
(Georgetown University, host)
Friday, March 18 & Sunday, March 20:
Time Warner Cable Arena, Charlotte, N.C.
(UNC-Charlotte, host)
United Center, Chicago, Ill.
(Big Ten Conference, host)
Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland, Ohio
(Cleveland State University, host)
REGIONALS
Thursday, March 24 & Saturday, March 26:
West: Honda Center, Anaheim, Calif.
(Big West Conference, host)
Southeast: New Orleans Arena, New Orleans, La.
(Tulane University, host)
Friday, March 25 & Sunday, March 27:
East: Prudential Center, Newark, N.J.
(Seton Hall University, host)
Southwest: Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas
(UT-San Antonio, host)
FINAL FOUR
Saturday, April 2 and Monday, April 4:
Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas
(University of Houston/Rice University, hosts)
Information, website: www.ncaasports.com
Future Final Four Sites
2012 Superdome, New Orleans (Mar. 31 & April 2)
2013 Georgia Dome, Atlanta (April 6 & 8)
2014 Cowboys Stadium, North Texas (April 5 & 7)
2015 Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianpolis (April 4 & 6)
2016 Reliant Stadium, Houston (April 2 & 4)
BOK Center, Tulsa, Okla.
(University of Tulsa, host)
12
Third Round*
1
2010-11 MEN'S BASKETBALL // PREVIEW
Malcolm Lee, UCLA