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Posts Tagged ‘larry hunter’

SPORTS: WCU basketball jumps to eighth in poll

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Western Carolina’s red-hot basketball team has ridden a nine-game winning streak and Saturday’s upset of Rick Pitino’s Louisville Cardinals to a number eight spot in the most recent CollegeInsider.com mid-major poll, released Monday night.

The Catamounts are up from 15 the week before.

Western has also risen to number 10 in the national RPI rankings.

A variety of national polls are reflecting the success of coach Larry Hunter’s team. Read more here from the university’s sports site, catamountsports.com.

Read a feature from Tyler Norris Goode in Tuesday’s Asheville Citizen-Times here.

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WCU sports notes: Men’s basketball

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

2009-12-08Slam Online’s Joey Whelan’s take on Western’s win at Bradley:

Western Carolina out of the SoCon took down Bradley last night, significant because the MVC is looking stacked this season and because the Catamounts are now looking pretty at 8-1, their only loss coming to Texas. The rest of the early season schedule includes the aforementioned win over the Braves, solid victories over conference opponents Furman and Wofford and the win to hang your hat on for now, an 83-77 squeaker over Duquesne. This is an offense by committee with six players averaging between six and 11 points and five averaging been four and six rebounds. It’s always hard to gauge how these hot starts can carry over into the near year, but with the type of balance Western Carolina is showing, I like them in the SoCon to make some noise.

2009-12-08 – WCU beats Bradley.

2009-12-07 -Western Carolina’s mens basketball team enters tonight’s game against Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois, with six straight wins in its back pocket, and a 7-1 overall record.

The Catamounts rose today to 15th in the collegeinsider.com mid-major poll.

The Cats are coming off of consecutive league victories over Wofford and Furman, and Western is ranked 97th in the Sagarin college basketball rankings from USA Today. Bradley, which competes in the Missouri Valley Conference, is 93rd. On the other hand, the Cats are 32nd in the national RPI rankings, Bradley 86th.

Western is playing a steady — and luxurious — ten-man rotation, and has had six different high-scorers in eight games. The Catamounts have shown flashes of potential on offense, including a record-setting night from three-point territory in a victory over Duquesne, but have hung their hats on their defense. Western is forcing 21 turnovers per game, good for a nationally fifth-best turnover ratio of 7.8. The Catamounts are ranked eighth in steals.

Tonight’s game is the first of a three-year three-game series with the Braves; two in Illinois, one in Cullowhee.

2009-11-29 – WCU at #52 in the national RPI, one spot behind Bradley, who Western plays next week.

2009-11-29 – Western Carolina forced 29 turnovers in a comfortable 75-59 win Saturday at Gardner Webb. As the the Shelby Star reported, Western beat the Runnin’ Bulldogs at their own up-tempo game. Brandon Giles, a senior all-conference selection, had 24 points after a quiet start to his season. This was Larry Hunter’s first win in four tries against Gardner Webb.

2009-11-26WCU tops Duquesne (post)

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A championship hoops contender in Cullowhee

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–While Western Carolina’s men’s basketball program has had its moments, those moments have most often been related to individual performances, or nice late-season runs.

The Catamounts beat Nebraska, Tennessee, Florida State, Georgia Tech and Kansas State over the years. Danny Manning’s 1988 national championship Kansas Jayhawks team topped Western by only five points that year in Cullowhee. And Western once made a torrid run through the SoCon tournament and on to within a hair’s breadth of becoming the first 16th seed NCAA tourney team to knock off a number one seed, losing to Purdue by two in 1996.

WCU was also the first white southern school to admit African-American athletes (basketball players, in 1964); and a few pro players, including one of the NBA’s top current scorers, played college ball in Cullowhee.

Still, not since Western’s earliest years in the Southern Conference, some thirty years ago, have the Catamounts been regular, solid contenders, and never has a Western team been a preseason pick to win the league.

Finally, things have changed in Cullowhee. Coach Larry Hunter, one of the winningest coaches in college basketball, enters his fifth year at Western with a fully-stocked pantry of talent, and the Cats, coming off their first winning season in over a decade and a SoCon north division co-championship, are picked as the team to beat.

The Catamounts opened with a 23-point home win last weekend over NAIA St. Catherine, but leap directly into the fire tonight, when they visit number three Texas, in Austin.

Here’s a season preview from the WCU media folks:

Coming off its first winning season since 1996-97 and the program’s second conference divisional title a year ago, Western Carolina was today tabbed as the preseason favorite in the Southern Conference’s North Division as voted upon by the league’s 12 head coaches.

Western Carolina returns all five starters from a team that tied for the North Division Championship last season with an 11-9 mark in league play. The Catamounts earned 10 first-place votes and finished the balloting with 64 points, the most of any squad in the conference.

According to available records, WCU’s preseason first-place pick in the North Division is the first in program history since joining the SoCon in 1977-78. The media preseason poll will be announced next week as a part of the SoCon Preseason Head Coaches’ Teleconference.

Additionally, senior guard Brandon Giles and reigning conference freshman of the year, red-shirt sophomore Harouna Mutombo, were named to the preseason All-SoCon team as three teams put two teammates on the 10-man honorary squad.

Giles, who became the 37th different Catamount to eclipse the 1,000-point career plateau a season ago, earned third team All-SoCon plaudits from the media a season ago after ranking 13th in the league in scoring at 13.3 points per game. He led WCU in scoring on nine occasions including scoring 20-or-more five times.

Mutombo became the fourth different Catamount all-time to garner SoCon Freshman of the Year plaudits, and the first since Jarvis Hayes in 2000. The Pickering, Ontario native was the top-scoring freshman – and only one of three in the top 30 in the SoCon – with a 14.6 point per game average. He posted 24 double-digit scoring outings in his first season, reaching the 20-point plateau six times including a career-best 29 in the home win over UNC Greensboro.

Behind the first-place Catamounts, Appalachian State earned the remaining two first-place votes in the North Division and finished with 55 points. Samford (44) was chosen third while last season’s tournament champion, Chattanooga (39), was slotted fourth. Elon and UNC Greensboro tied for fifth place with 22 points apiece.

Opposite WCU in the South Division, the College of Charleston – led by preseason Player of the Year, Andrew Goudelock – was selected by the head coaches to finish first, garnering eight first-place votes. The Cougars finished 15-5 in league play a season ago and advanced to the tournament championship before falling to the Mocs.

Wofford picked up three first-place votes and finished second in the preseason balloting with 54 points. Davidson, which has won the South Division each of the past three years, earned the final first-place vote in the South Division and came in third with 48 points. The Citadel (36) finished fourth, followed by Furman (24) and Georgia Southern (21).

In addition to aforementioned Giles, Goudelock and Mutombo, the preseason all-conference team included Tony White, Jr., from the College of Charleston; Noah Dahlman and Junior Salters from Wofford. Other members of the preseason team included Will Archambault (Davidson), Kellen Brand (Appalachian State), Willie Powers (Georgia Southern) and Cameron Wells (The Citadel).

The regular season opens Friday, November 13 when nine teams hit the court with 11 of the 12 SoCon teams will begin play over that weekend. Western Carolina takes to the hardwood for the first time on Saturday, Nov. 14, as it hosts St. Catharine’s College at 7:00 pm in the Ramsey Center.

SoCon Men’s Basketball Predicted Order of Finish

North Division

Team (1st Place Votes) Total

1. Western Carolina (10) – 64

2. Appalachian State (2) – 55

3. Samford – 44

4. Chattanooga – 39

5. Elon – 22

UNC Greensboro – 22

South Division

Team (1st Place Votes) Total

1. College of Charleston (8) – 63

2. Wofford (3) – 54

3. Davidson (1) – 48

4. The Citadel – 36

5. Furman – 24

6. Georgia Southern – 21

2009-10 Preseason All-Conference Team

Will Archambault, Davidson

Kellen Brand, Appalachian State

Noah Dahlman, Wofford

Brandon Giles, Western Carolina

Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston

Harouna Mutombo, Western Carolina

Willie Powers, Georgia Southern

Junior Salters, Wofford

Cameron Wells, The Citadel

Tony White, Jr., College of Charleston

2009-10 Preseason Player of the Year

Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston

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SPORTS: Southern Conference hoops life without Stephen Curry

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

CHATTANOOGA–David Uchiyama at the Chattanooga Times Free Press writes about the legacy of Stephen Curry, who earned all-America stripes while leading tiny Davidson to the elite eight of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Curry left Davidson a year early, was drafted way up the NBA list, and now plays for Golden State.

Uchiyama talked to multiple SoCon coaches for the piece, which discusses Curry’s impact on the league.

A snip:

“Players like that graduate, he just went a year early,” Western Carolina coach Larry Hunter said. “Somebody else is going to fill those shoes this year, next year or down the road.

“Hopefully for the conference, there will be a few and they’ll come quick.”

Read the whole piece here.

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WCU hoops teams have nice weekend

Monday, December 8th, 2008

CULLOWHEE–Western Carolina’s men’s basketball team is 4-2 now, and winner of three straight games without a gimme among them.

(Update: First national RPI rankings of the season put Western at 28th nationally)

After finishing the Great Alaska Shootout a week ago with a win over Mid-American Conference member Northern Illinois, the Cats ducked back into the MAC this weekend and took an 89-84 overtime win at Kent State – a program that won 28 games last year and has won more than 20 games for 10 straight seasons.

Coach Larry Hunter is getting solid performances from several players, and his bench is running deep. Western gets this week off for exams, then comes back with games against Tennessee Wesleyan and Gardner-Webb. It’s reasonable to see Western being 6-2 going into its next big challenge: a trip back in to the Big East with a visit to Marquette (currently 7-1). Western opened the season with an 81-55 loss at #2 UConn of the Big East.

Game story from the Kent Sports Report
Game story from Cleveland Plain Dealer
Game story from the Akron Beacon Journal

shr shortline WCU hoops teams have nice weekend

Western’s Lady Catamounts had a rough time last week. A mauling at UT a couple of weeks ago was followed by unexpected losses at Montana State and UNCA, and coach Kellie Harper’s Cats were on the ropes. Despite a fine recruiting class and a transfer, the Cats seemed to be having trouble adapting to the loss of four starters to graduation.

Lauren Powell

Lauren Powell

Then into Cullowhee rode Middle Tennessee State, a tough mid-major with whom Western split a couple of emotional contests last year. Although MTSU had absorbed a 20-point loss to Louisville Thursday, they’d put together four straight W’s before that, with wins over Indiana, Chattanooga, LSU and Arizona.

The result? A strong, 69-58 WCU victory in which Western led most of the way.

Interestingly, the Blue Raiders came into the game talking some in the media about “payback”, which seemed odd, given the absolute thrashing they gave Western in last season’s post-season NIT. As it turns out, MTSU held Western responsible, by way of the Catamount’s early season win last year at Murfreesboro, for knocking MTSU out of an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament last year. They were determined not to let that happen again.

Whoops.

The Cats got a breakout 25-point performance from sophomore Emily Clarke, and won the battle of the boards decisively. Harper, who usually spreads the minutes around, kept her four freshmen seated for this one. Junior point guard Jessica Jackson, a transfer from South Florida, continued to struggle, handing out four assists but losing 6 turnovers. She has 24 assists and 30 turnovers on the season. On the bright side, sophomore guard Kendra Carroll, who didn’t see a ton of time as a freshman, is showing confidence and scoring ability off the bench. A Lauren Powell three-pointer early in the second half gave her the WCU career record in that category.

Western opens SoCon play next time out, as they face the Davidson Wildcats on the 14th.

Game story from the Murfreesboro Daily News Journal

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On the elusive trail of (men’s) basketball in Cullowhee

Friday, November 28th, 2008

More coverage of WCU men’s basketball here

SYLVA–The year was, I believe, 1994, and here I was courtside at Cameron Indoor Stadium for your standard early-season mismatch between Western Carolina and Duke.

A friend and I had a couple of press passes, and we were sitting in that tiny corridor at Duke which makes up press row – two or three feet of space separating the out-of-bounds line and the hopping, howling SAT-masters that make up Duke’s student body.

We’d done some sneaky name tag rearrangement for seats a little closer to midcourt, and we joined Skip Foreman, a bureau chief for AP who covered the ACC. My buddy, a WCU classmate, was stringing sports for various papers at the time, and was taking well-earned grief for his actions earlier in the week, when he’d held up a nationally-televised game at the same venue by spilling his press row co-cola onto the playing surface.

Harouna Mutumbo

Harouna Mutumbo (WCU photo/Mark Haskett)

It was a dull game, plodding, predictable. But eventually, came the dunk. It was a Western Carolina dunk. I suppose I could look up the particulars but score and sequence aren’t relevant. What is relevant, at least to this post, is that Foreman, who watched way too much basketball, was dumbfounded. “Might’ve been the best dunk I’ve ever seen,” he said.

Here’s the scenario: the Cats were out ahead of the Blue Devils on a 3-on-2 fast break, and guard Anquell McCollum, now an assistant to Larry Hunter at Western Carolina, had the ball on the left wing. I don’t know who was filling the middle, but it doesn’t matter. Streaking down the right side was 6-2 swing man Frankie King, a muscular, explosive star at Western who was a few months away from being drafted by the Lakers.

McCollum slowed up a fraction to let King make up ground, and the Duke defenders relaxed a little, maybe thinking he was setting the offense. McCollum then fired his pass; not a skip pass or an alley-oop, but a long pass from around three-point range the likes of which I’d never seen. It was a pass that banked high off the glass, and that a soaring King grabbed with his off-hand and jammed home with force that shook the rafters.

A short second of silence followed, and then, if not pandemonium, lots of admiring noise, we’re-not-worthy posturing and so forth. It was easily the highlight of the night, and one of the highlights of the season for Western.

Western’s men’s basketball story for the past two decades has been made up of lots of these moments, which is good, because they are pretty much all that Catamount fans have had. Here’s another example: early nineties, Southern Conference Tourney in Asheville. Western is on its way to an early exit courtesy Chattanooga, but during a moderately-attended mid-day matchup with the Mocs, Western guard Keith Gray, whose vertical leap was astonishing, picked the pocket of Chattanooga guard Shendi Moon.

Gray wasn’t afraid to showboat, and this was as clean a breakaway as there is. But what came next boosted Gray into ESPN top-plays stardom; he stutter-stepped at the three point line, and just as he reached the foul line he slammed the ball on the floor and leaped. After jumping from somewhere near the free throw line – some 15 feet from the basket – Gray grabbed the self-fed alley-oop up near the rim and dunked it hard.

WCU photographer Mark Haskett said at the time that he caught the dunk perfectly in-frame, and that Gray was very nearly horizontal to the floor as he finished.

Needless to say, the crowd went nuts, and the highlight clip with the play-by-play call was classic. “Hey! He can’t do that! Did he do that?! I think he got away with something there! Did you see that? He can’t do that!”

Some extraordinary talent has come through Cullowhee, so much so that just about every year has seen a major league, highlight-reel player in the purple and gold. Kevin Martin, the Hayes twins, King, Gray, Terry Boyd – and this is an abbreviated list. Both ironic and instructive is the fact that it was one of the few years that Western didn’t have a standout-during McCollum’s senior year-that it won the SoCon championship and turned in a surprising performance at the big dance.

That brings us to this year’s club. Such has been the state of Western hoops for so long, and so sparse is decent media coverage in the hills, that what Hunter has on the floor this year has gone unnoticed in the pre-season. But between a strong recruiting class, some nice transfers and a core of upper-classmen, the Cats have sudden depth and talent. And after Thursday’s grittily-played basketball game between Western and San Diego State, Friday’s thumping of Louisiana Tech and Saturday’s come-from-behind win over Northern Illinois, we have reason to hope that a higher level of hoops is here to stay.

But even if some typical Cullowhee misadventure pulls this team apart, there’s still this: meet Harouna Mutumbo, nephew of Dikembe, red-shirt freshman from Toronto. What a crackerjack this kid is. Worth the price of admission, right there.

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