Miners to face red-hot Marshall

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UTEP is on the brink of something special -- but two obstacles are looming ... two very formidable obstacles.

The Miners have topped the 20-win barrier, they have cracked the Top 25 and they have clinched at least a share of the Conference USA title.

Now they are in Huntington, W. Va., ready and eager to face the first of those two obstacles -- the Marshall Thundering Herd.

Marshall is writing its own special basketball script. The Thundering Herd are now 22-7 on the season, 10-4 in Conference USA play. They have come out of virtually nowhere, riding the high-flying wings of 7-foot freshman Hassan Whiteside. The Herd are 15-2 this season at home and they have won seven straight games. Their only home losses? They lost to UAB 61-59 and to Memphis 75-72. Since that time, they have won at UAB and won at home against Tulsa.

The Miners, of course, are 22-5 overall and 13-1 in Conference USA play. A win tonight in West Virginia will give the Miners an outright conference championship. The Miners have won 12 straight games going into tonight's obstacle. If they cannot get it done tonight, they will face obstacle No. 2 Saturday night in the Don Haskins Center -- UAB ... 23-5 UAB.

UTEP coach Tony Barbee was not happy at all with his team's performance in their 78-64 win over Rice Saturday night.

"We can't go over to Marshall with the frame of mind we're in," Barbee said. "You don't want to start creating bad habits this time of
year. This will be a hard game with a quick turnaround. And Marshall is really playing good basketball right now."

Marshall certainly is playing well, leading the conference in scoring average (79.3 points per game), scoring margin (plus 13.4 points per game), field goal percentage (.479 percent) and 3-point field goal percentage (.383 percent).

Individually, senior Tyler Wilkinson leads the Herd in scoring, averaging 13.6 points a game. He also averages 6.8 rebounds an outing. Sophomore Damier Pitts leads the team in assists, averaging 4.6 per game.

But the real story for Marshall is the work of the 7-foot freshman, Hassan Whiteside. He averages 13.2 points a game, ranks second in the conference in rebounding at 8.9 a game and leads the entire nation in blocked shots, averaging 5.5 per game. Whiteside has 12 double-doubles this season, but more impressively he has three triple doubles -- double figure points, rebounds and blocks. In Saturday night's win over UCF, Whiteside had 14 points, 11 rebounds and 13 blocks. He actually broke Marshall's career blocked shots record with Saturday's effort. He now has 159 blocks in less than one season.

All that aside, Marshall barely survived UCF Saturday night. The Thundering Herd slipped past UCF 121-115 in triple overtime.

But they won and here they are -- large obstacle number one looming between UTEP and something special.

"Marshall is a good team and we know they feel they are as good as we are," UTEP point guard Julyan Stone said. "They are going to want to step up and show the nation they are better than us. We've got to get our defense and our defensive effort back."

And Miner forward Jeremy Williams said, "We've got to get back and focus on the little things, the things that have gotten us here -- rebounding and toughness."

Despite Saturday's sub-par performance, the Miners are still soaring. Randy Culpepper leads the team in scoring, averaging 18.0 points a game. Derrick Caracter is averaging 14.1 points, 8.8 rebounds a game. Williams averages 10.7 points, 5.0 rebounds a contest. Arnett Moultrie averages 10.4 points, 6.9 rebounds and Christian Polk is averaging 10.1 points a game. Stone is averaging 6.8 points, 4.9 rebounds and 5.4 assists a game.

Barbee took his team on the long trip to Huntington on Sunday and practiced at Marshall on Monday -- getting them as rested and ready as possible for this big obstacle.

Everything has tumbled into place for the Miners over the past few weeks. Or, perhaps, the Miners have simply played well, played hard, played with toughness and talent and forced everything to tumble into place. And now they are on the brink of something special.

Two obstacles loom. And the first obstacle will be staring them down at tipoff tonight in West Virginia.
 

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MU seeks Senior Night win



Darryl Merthie doesn't want this Senior Night to turn out like his last one.

Merthie's high school team in Florida lost on Senior Night. Plus, he had a broken hand and didn't play.

"I'm trying to win this one," he said.

Marshall University is having Senior Night salutes for Merthie, Tyler Wilkerson and Chris Lutz before their final regular season men's basketball home game Tuesday when the Thundering Herd takes on No. 24 UTEP at 7 p.m. in Cam Henderson Center.

Senior Night always stirs extra emotions in the players.

"We just have to stay focused," Wilkerson said. "Just go out and play ball."

UTEP, 22-5 for the season, leads Conference USA with a 13-1 record and has clinched at least a tie for the regular season title. The Miners can win the title outright and secure the top seed in the conference tournament next week in Tulsa, Okla., with a victory over Marshall or at home Saturday against UAB.

The Miners have a 12-game win streak while the Thundering Herd's run of seven consecutive wins is second-longest in the conference.

Marshall is 22-7 overall, 10-4 in C-USA and sits fourth in the standings with remaining games left against UTEP and Saturday at SMU. With UTEP and UAB already claming two of the byes, Marshall is in a contest with Memphis and Tulsa for the other two.

Herd coach Donnie Jones said getting a bye is important because you only have to play three games in the tournament rather than four. A bye gives the team another day of rest and a chance to watch others play.

"If we win, we're in" the top four, Jones said.

The game attracted interest of 11 scouts representing nine NBA teams with Marshall center Hassan Whiteside getting most of the attention, but they'll also be watching UTEP players such as Derrick Caracter, Randy Culpepper and Arnett Moultrie.

Whiteside collected the C-USA Rookie of the Week award for the sixth time in his freshman season after recording his third triple-double Saturday when Marshall downed UCF, 121-115, in triple-overtime. Whiteside, a 7-foot center from Gastonia N.C., is the only C-USA player to ever post three triple-doubles.

He had 14 points, 11 rebounds and a conference-record 13 blocked shots. His blocked shot average of 5.5 per game leads the nation. His 159 blocks represent the Marshall career record.

Wilkerson leads the Herd scoring with a 13.4 average followed by Whiteside (13.2), sophomore point guard Damier Pitts (10.3), sophomore guard Shaq Johnson (10.2) and Lutz (9.5). Whiteside is second in C-USA rebounds with 9.0 a game.

"Marshall is probably the most talented team in our conference," UTEP coach Tony Barbee said in a news release. "They can score in a variety of ways, both inside and out. They are a good defensive team made even better with the presence of a shot-blocker like Hassan Whiteside."

Marshall's three-hour triumph over UCF was not only lengthy, but extremely physical and could have taken a lot out of the players. Lutz was on the court for 50 of the 55 minutes and Whiteside played 47 minutes. Pitts and Johnson both logged 41 minutes.

Jones brought the squad back Sunday night for a light practice session with no running involved, then had a full-scale practice Monday.

Wilkerson, who played for only 19 minutes before fouling out, is rested, but said he didn't enjoy watching from the bench.

"I don't think I have any (finger) nails left," he said.

UTEP's Culpepper, a 6-foot junior, has an 18-point scoring average that's boosted by a 45-point performance against East Carolina and 39 in a game at UCF. Culpepper is the school's all-time leader in 3-point field goals made (239) and attempted (683).

He made nine 3-point shots against East Carolina.

Caracter joined the Miners for the conference season as a 6-9, 275-pound junior transfer from the University of Louisville. He's putting up 14.1 points per game with 8.8 rebounds and seven doubles in 21 games.

Marshall and Caracter met once before. Jones took the Marshall to Louisville in his first season (2007-08) when Caracter was with the Cardinals.

"We were playing really well there until he came in the game," Jones said. "He dominated."

Caracter touched the Herd for 18 points on 9-for-11 shooting and Louisville won, 85-75.

Moultrie is a 6-11, 235-pound sophomore averaging 10.4 points and 6.9 rebounds.

UTEP moved into The Associated Press Top 25 this week and moved up four spots to No. 21 in the USA TODAY/ESPN Top 25.

Marshall's last win at home over a ranked team was Dec. 17, 1997 against No. 23 Wake Forest.
 
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