March 16, 2005
It's not exactly March Madness in the traditional sense, but the University of Denver will take it. Especially when all of the Pioneers' Front Range rivals are staying home.
DU will play its first National Invitation Tournament game in 46 years tonight when its men's basketball team visits the University of San Francisco.
DU, the regular-season champion of the Sun Belt Conference, saw its NCAA Tournament hopes dashed by a loss last week against Louisiana-Lafayette in the league final, yet the Pioneers aren't looking at the NIT as an unfortunate consolation prize.
"It's sweet being the only local team in the postseason," senior point guard Rodney Billups said. "Not CU. Not CSU. Not Air Force. They can't say DU isn't a good program anymore."
Pioneers coach Terry Carroll already understands what the postseason invitation can do for his program. Three years after an 8-20 debut season at DU, Carroll practically jumps out of his chair when he discusses what it means for current and future Pioneers players to be in the same tournament with teams such as Indiana, Notre Dame, Maryland and Clemson.
"I'm happy for our two seniors, Rodney and Erik (Benzel)," Carroll said. "I'm also happy for our underclassmen and the fact that we get four more practices and another tough-game situation.
"Going into homes, now we can tell kids we were one game away from the NCAA Tournament and we played in the postseason. That's huge. We can compete for a whole other level of player because of this. Young people want to know you have a chance of playing in the tournament."
Tonight's winner will face either Cal State Fullerton or Oregon State on Saturday. In order for the Pioneers to advance, they will need to address a few of the shortcomings that led to their downfall in the Sun Belt tournament.
Yemi Nicholson, the team's top scorer (18.2) and rebounder (8.6) averaged only 13.7 points and 7.7 rebounds in three league tournament games. Nicholson's aggression was held in check during the final two games after he picked up two early fouls in each contest. Nicholson didn't record more than nine rebounds in a game in the SBC tournament, the first time since December he went more than one game without a 10-rebound effort.
Sophomore forward Antonio Porch also struggled. Porch entered the SBC tournament with a scoring average of 13.2 but hit only seven of 25 shots while averaging 8.7 points.
Benzel was a bright spot, hitting 12 of 28 three-point attempts and averaging 18 points, nearly five more than his regular-season average.
"San Francisco is an athletic, senior-dominated team," Carroll said. "They had two (close losses) to Gonzaga. They beat St. Joe's, Pacific, Fresno and Penn, so they are a quality team."
? Notes: This is the Pioneers' first NIT appearance since March 14, 1959, when they lost 90-81 to New York University . . . The winner will play Oregon State or Cal State Fullerton on Saturday . . . DU and USF played three times between 1946 and 1950. San Francisco leads the series 2-1 . . . DU is 1-5 all-time in postseason tournaments. The Pioneers are 0-1 in the NIT, 0-1 in the NAIA National Tournament, and 1-3 in the NCAA Division II tournament . . . This is Evans' first season at San Francisco after spending seven years at Louisiana-Lafayette, which defeated DU in the final of the Sun Belt Conference tournament. Carroll is 1-6 against Evans . . . This will be Benzel's 118th game at DU, matching a school record set by Doug Wilson.
It's not exactly March Madness in the traditional sense, but the University of Denver will take it. Especially when all of the Pioneers' Front Range rivals are staying home.
DU will play its first National Invitation Tournament game in 46 years tonight when its men's basketball team visits the University of San Francisco.
DU, the regular-season champion of the Sun Belt Conference, saw its NCAA Tournament hopes dashed by a loss last week against Louisiana-Lafayette in the league final, yet the Pioneers aren't looking at the NIT as an unfortunate consolation prize.
"It's sweet being the only local team in the postseason," senior point guard Rodney Billups said. "Not CU. Not CSU. Not Air Force. They can't say DU isn't a good program anymore."
Pioneers coach Terry Carroll already understands what the postseason invitation can do for his program. Three years after an 8-20 debut season at DU, Carroll practically jumps out of his chair when he discusses what it means for current and future Pioneers players to be in the same tournament with teams such as Indiana, Notre Dame, Maryland and Clemson.
"I'm happy for our two seniors, Rodney and Erik (Benzel)," Carroll said. "I'm also happy for our underclassmen and the fact that we get four more practices and another tough-game situation.
"Going into homes, now we can tell kids we were one game away from the NCAA Tournament and we played in the postseason. That's huge. We can compete for a whole other level of player because of this. Young people want to know you have a chance of playing in the tournament."
Tonight's winner will face either Cal State Fullerton or Oregon State on Saturday. In order for the Pioneers to advance, they will need to address a few of the shortcomings that led to their downfall in the Sun Belt tournament.
Yemi Nicholson, the team's top scorer (18.2) and rebounder (8.6) averaged only 13.7 points and 7.7 rebounds in three league tournament games. Nicholson's aggression was held in check during the final two games after he picked up two early fouls in each contest. Nicholson didn't record more than nine rebounds in a game in the SBC tournament, the first time since December he went more than one game without a 10-rebound effort.
Sophomore forward Antonio Porch also struggled. Porch entered the SBC tournament with a scoring average of 13.2 but hit only seven of 25 shots while averaging 8.7 points.
Benzel was a bright spot, hitting 12 of 28 three-point attempts and averaging 18 points, nearly five more than his regular-season average.
"San Francisco is an athletic, senior-dominated team," Carroll said. "They had two (close losses) to Gonzaga. They beat St. Joe's, Pacific, Fresno and Penn, so they are a quality team."
? Notes: This is the Pioneers' first NIT appearance since March 14, 1959, when they lost 90-81 to New York University . . . The winner will play Oregon State or Cal State Fullerton on Saturday . . . DU and USF played three times between 1946 and 1950. San Francisco leads the series 2-1 . . . DU is 1-5 all-time in postseason tournaments. The Pioneers are 0-1 in the NIT, 0-1 in the NAIA National Tournament, and 1-3 in the NCAA Division II tournament . . . This is Evans' first season at San Francisco after spending seven years at Louisiana-Lafayette, which defeated DU in the final of the Sun Belt Conference tournament. Carroll is 1-6 against Evans . . . This will be Benzel's 118th game at DU, matching a school record set by Doug Wilson.
