Conference play is different.
Teams study each other?s strengths and weaknesses, and games are usually closer because of it. The intensity level rises with a heightened sense of urgency.
What a team has done outside the conference doesn?t matter much.
?When conference play starts everything changes,? said Marshall University sophomore guard Shaq Johnson. ?They scout you and they know what you are going to do, so you have to be ready.?
Marshall puts its 11-2 non-conference record aside for a Conference USA men?s basketball contest at 7 p.m., Tuesday, against Southern Miss (9-4) in Cam Henderson Center. It?s the tip-off game on this season?s C-USA schedule.
Thundering Herd head coach Donnie Jones made a reference to conference play as the real season.
To make his point Jones mentioned Old Dominion, which beat both Marshall and No. 12 Georgtown in the preseason, then lost its Colonial Athletic Association opener at George Mason.
He also brought up Ohio State, which was once in the Top 25, beginning Big Ten play with losses to Wisconsin and Michigan.
?Your league games are always the toughest of the season,? Jones said. ?We can?t live off those 11 wins.?
Marshall?s early-season schedule, which included a loss at No. 9 North Carolina and two one-sided victories against lower-division schools, was set up to give the Herd?s young players a chance to grow.
Jones said the team has played hard for the most part and is starting to figure out its identity.
?Now, the real season begins and you hope this non-conference schedule has prepared you for what you expect to be very tough conference play,? he said.
In comparison to last season when Marshall finished 15-17 overall and 7-9 in C-USA, this team enters conference play with more depth, more experienced and in better health.
Johnson and Damier Pitts were starting players as freshmen. Senior guard Chris Lutz missed various parts of last season injured. Senior forward Tyler Wilkerson (broken jaw) and sophomore guard Dago Pena (shoulder injury) didn?t finish last season.
And, freshman 7-footer Hassan Whiteside has played well.
The Herd has a 10-player rotation with each one getting at least 10 minutes a game.
?In our style of play we?ve always wanted to play eight, nine guys,? Jones said. ?We?ve gotten better, but we?re not where we want to be. The good news is our guys have gotten experience and if you do have an injury you get to play guys not for the first time.?
Marshall is scoring 82.4 points per game, second only to Houston (85.1) in C-USA. Wilkerson leads the team with a 13.2 average with Whiteside (12.6), Johnson (11.8) and Pitts (9.6) not far behind.
Whiteside has a 9.5 rebounding average while the 6-8 Wilkerson averages 7.4.
The Herd?s 48.6 field goal percentage leads the league.
Defensively, Marshall is allowing 64.9 points a game and its 37.7 percent field goal percentage defense is first in the conference. The defense is bolstered by Whiteside averaging five blocked shots a game, which ranks third in the nation.
Southern Miss, which has wins against four NAIA teams, is led by 6-8 junior college transfer Gary Flowers averaging 14.8 points and 8.8 rebounds. Maurice Bolden, a 6-10 sophomore who sat out last season, is scoring 12.4 points and getting 7.1 rebounds.
Junior guard R.L. Horton (8.7 ppg) was a starter last season when the Golden Eagles also went 15-17, but finished 4-12 in the conference.
Four new starting players are joined in the lineup by 6-6 junior Sai?Quon Stone (3.8 ppg, 3.1 reb) who missed the 2008-09 season because of a broken foot.
Southern Cal transfer Angelo Johnson is a 6-foot sophomore guard scoring 9.3 points a game and leading the team with 41 assists.
A lot of the names changed, but Southern Miss coach Larry Eustachy?s teams play the same, Jones said.
?They?re tough and physical, a typical Larry Eustachy team,? he said.
Southern Miss averages 70.1 points and is allowing an average of 61.9.
The Golden Eagles are a 70.8 percent free throw shooting team while the Herd is last in C-USA at 66.2 percent.
Teams study each other?s strengths and weaknesses, and games are usually closer because of it. The intensity level rises with a heightened sense of urgency.
What a team has done outside the conference doesn?t matter much.
?When conference play starts everything changes,? said Marshall University sophomore guard Shaq Johnson. ?They scout you and they know what you are going to do, so you have to be ready.?
Marshall puts its 11-2 non-conference record aside for a Conference USA men?s basketball contest at 7 p.m., Tuesday, against Southern Miss (9-4) in Cam Henderson Center. It?s the tip-off game on this season?s C-USA schedule.
Thundering Herd head coach Donnie Jones made a reference to conference play as the real season.
To make his point Jones mentioned Old Dominion, which beat both Marshall and No. 12 Georgtown in the preseason, then lost its Colonial Athletic Association opener at George Mason.
He also brought up Ohio State, which was once in the Top 25, beginning Big Ten play with losses to Wisconsin and Michigan.
?Your league games are always the toughest of the season,? Jones said. ?We can?t live off those 11 wins.?
Marshall?s early-season schedule, which included a loss at No. 9 North Carolina and two one-sided victories against lower-division schools, was set up to give the Herd?s young players a chance to grow.
Jones said the team has played hard for the most part and is starting to figure out its identity.
?Now, the real season begins and you hope this non-conference schedule has prepared you for what you expect to be very tough conference play,? he said.
In comparison to last season when Marshall finished 15-17 overall and 7-9 in C-USA, this team enters conference play with more depth, more experienced and in better health.
Johnson and Damier Pitts were starting players as freshmen. Senior guard Chris Lutz missed various parts of last season injured. Senior forward Tyler Wilkerson (broken jaw) and sophomore guard Dago Pena (shoulder injury) didn?t finish last season.
And, freshman 7-footer Hassan Whiteside has played well.
The Herd has a 10-player rotation with each one getting at least 10 minutes a game.
?In our style of play we?ve always wanted to play eight, nine guys,? Jones said. ?We?ve gotten better, but we?re not where we want to be. The good news is our guys have gotten experience and if you do have an injury you get to play guys not for the first time.?
Marshall is scoring 82.4 points per game, second only to Houston (85.1) in C-USA. Wilkerson leads the team with a 13.2 average with Whiteside (12.6), Johnson (11.8) and Pitts (9.6) not far behind.
Whiteside has a 9.5 rebounding average while the 6-8 Wilkerson averages 7.4.
The Herd?s 48.6 field goal percentage leads the league.
Defensively, Marshall is allowing 64.9 points a game and its 37.7 percent field goal percentage defense is first in the conference. The defense is bolstered by Whiteside averaging five blocked shots a game, which ranks third in the nation.
Southern Miss, which has wins against four NAIA teams, is led by 6-8 junior college transfer Gary Flowers averaging 14.8 points and 8.8 rebounds. Maurice Bolden, a 6-10 sophomore who sat out last season, is scoring 12.4 points and getting 7.1 rebounds.
Junior guard R.L. Horton (8.7 ppg) was a starter last season when the Golden Eagles also went 15-17, but finished 4-12 in the conference.
Four new starting players are joined in the lineup by 6-6 junior Sai?Quon Stone (3.8 ppg, 3.1 reb) who missed the 2008-09 season because of a broken foot.
Southern Cal transfer Angelo Johnson is a 6-foot sophomore guard scoring 9.3 points a game and leading the team with 41 assists.
A lot of the names changed, but Southern Miss coach Larry Eustachy?s teams play the same, Jones said.
?They?re tough and physical, a typical Larry Eustachy team,? he said.
Southern Miss averages 70.1 points and is allowing an average of 61.9.
The Golden Eagles are a 70.8 percent free throw shooting team while the Herd is last in C-USA at 66.2 percent.
