Aggies host Mercer in CIT championship game

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This is it.

No matter the outcome tonight, the Aggie men?s basketball season will come to an end at the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum.

?This is the last game of the season, everybody knows that on both sides,? Utah State guard Preston Medlin said. ?There is no more after this. The seniors know that this is their last game of their career. We?ll be ready to play.?

The Aggies host Mercer University in the CollegeInsider Postseason Tournament championship.

?It?s good to still be playing and it?s a little odd to still be playing in some respects,? USU head coach Stew Morrill said. ?Hard to believe this is the week of the Final Four as I said the other night. We?re excited that we have extended our season.?

For a pair of Aggie seniors, this really is it. Point guard Brockeith Pane and forward Morgan Grim will be suiting up for USU (21-15) for the final time.

?I?ve thought about it, but I don?t know if it has hit me yet,? Grim said. ?We?ll see tomorrow ... as long as we make it a good celebration at the end. I?m happy to go out on that. It would be awesome.?

The Aggies certainly come into the CIT title game on a roll. They have averaged 83.2 points in four CIT games, while shooting 50.9 percent from the field. USU is allowing 69.8 points a game during the tournament, while opponents are shooting 39.3 percent.

In Sunday?s semifinal game, the Aggies blew by Oakland 105-81. They shot 63.8 percent.

?We?ve been playing good lately,? said Medlin, who ranks 12th in the nation in 3-point shooting at 43.5 percent. ?Coach Morrill has been telling us we need to come out, play relaxed and play like we?ve been playing with a lot of energy, and we will be fine.?

Grim agreed with Medlin in how the Aggies have loosened up of late. He said the team is enjoying practice and games, which has translated into wins. Perhaps the pressure of expectations got to this team before the CIT run.

?There is always pressure, got to win the conference, got to win the (WAC) tournament, got to be an NCAA Tournament team, got to be a postseason team,? Grim said. ?We didn?t even know if we were going to be a postseason team. It turns out we?re going to be one of the record-book Aggies. We just came through as another Aggie team. ... When we let go of that whole pressure of being an Aggie team, we turned out to be an Aggie team.?

USU has never won a postseason tournament. The Aggies reached the regional final of the NCAA Tournament in 1970, before losing to eventual champion UCLA. In 1960, USU reached the semifinals of the NIT, losing to Providence.

While the Aggies try to make history with their first postseason tournament championship, the visiting Bears (26-11) also have the same goal. Located in Macon, Ga., Mercer has made the NCAA Tournament twice in school history, with the last time coming in 1985. This is the first postseason action for the Bears since then. The university is having a viewing party back on the Georgia campus to watch the game.

?Obviously I?m very impressed with Mercer,? Morrill said. ?They?ve won 26 games, they?re big and skilled and come in here having won a couple of road games in this tournament. We know that we have got our hands full.?



The Bears opened the CIT with home wins over Tennessee State (68-60) and Georgia State (64-59). In the last two contests, they went on the road, winning at Old Dominion (79-73) and Fairfield (64-59).

Mercer finished second in the Atlantic Sun Conference, dropping two close games to league champion Belmont.

?You look at their field goal percentage defense and watch them on film and you know they?re very sound,? Morrill said of the Bears. ?I would use that term on both ends of the floor. They run a lot of very good offense, and they?re very sound defensively.?

Offensively, the Bears are well balanced. Six players average between 8.2 and 11.3 points per game. Mercer has used the same starting lineup in 36 of its 37 games this season.

?They?re extremely balanced, like some of the teams that we?ve had in the past,? Morrill said. ?They?ve got a variety of different guys who can score the ball and they utilize their personnel really well. They can throw it inside, they set a variety of ball screens and they will back door you. They just have a good system. It?s impressive to watch their system function in the game tapes we have.?

Mercer also has size, an area this USU team is lacking somewhat. Bears point guard Langston Hall is 6-foot-4, while a pair of 6-11 players patrol the paint.

?This is going to be a tough game, but we?ll be ready,? Medlin said.


--hjnews.com
 

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Mercer set for CIT tournament title game





Practice had started, and Mercer was a few weeks into workouts back in October.

The Bears were made up a collection of mostly freshmen and sophomores, picked to finish in the middle of the A-Sun after having a better season than expected the year before.

When the team broke huddles at practice, it was with ?Bears on 3? and then ?Bears? each time out.

Jake Gollon, a second-year sophomore in his fourth year at Mercer, had another idea.

?I went to the coaches,? he explained a few days before the A-Sun tournament started earlier this month. ?I said, ?Hey, I want to get it into their heads. I?m just gonna break it down, ?Championship? every time we end practice.? ?

For pretty much every time the team was together, that?s what Gollon wanted heard.

?It?s more symbolic than anything,? he said. ?It?s symbolic of the attitude we have. That?s what we do, to keep it in our heads constantly.?

And now a championship awaits.

One program lacking in postseason participation takes on a veteran of tournament play when Mercer visits Utah State in the CollegeInsider.com tournament championship game Wednesday at the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum in Logan, Utah.

Mercer left early Tuesday morning for its third road game in a week, and the Bears? success in those previous two has caught the eye of Utah State head coach Stew Morrill.

?They?ve won 26 ballgames; they?re big and skilled,? he said. ?And (they) come in here having won a couple road games in this tournament. We know we?ve got our hands full.?

Because of Mercer?s defense, Morrill doesn?t expect anything to be like it was in the Aggies? 105-81 win Sunday over Oakland in a semifinal.

?Baskets are going to be a lot harder to come by,? he said. ?The pace isn?t going to be nearly the same.?

Mercer head coach Bob Hoffman hopes Morrill is right.

?They hit every shot they took,? he said of the Aggies? performance against Oakland. ?They execute at a high, high level on offense.?

Less than a point separates the teams? scoring averages on offense, and they?re both in the top 71 in field goal percentage.

Morrill noted Mercer?s solid height advantage with 6-foot-11 sophomores Daniel Coursey and Monty Brown. Utah State has only two players at 6-8 or taller with 6-8 Igor Premasunac and 6-10 Jordan Stone, but Stone plays only 9.4 minutes per game and Premasunac has played in 13 games.

Mercer?s Justin Cecil is a quality 3-point threat and would be tied for 36th nationally at 39.9 percent, but he is 10 made 3s short of qualifying. Utah State?s Preston Medlin is 74th nationally at 43.5 percent.

Morrill is particularly impressed with guard Langston Hall and Gollon, saying, ?Those two guys make a lot of plays for them.?

There are similarities with the Bears and Aggies.

They?re basically even in free-throw accuracy, assists per game, 3-point percentage offense, assist-turnover ratio and turnover margin.

Even the coaches? description of the opponent is similar.

?They run a lot of very good offense. They utilize their personnel really well,? Morrill said of the Bears. ?They can throw it inside, the set a variety of ball screens, they back-door you. They?ve got a good system, and it?s impressive to watch their system function.

?For us, we?ve got to try and limit easy baskets, and they get quite a few of those.?

?They have a lot of shooters. I?ve watched them over the years. (Morrill) is a great coach,? Hoffman said of the Aggies. ?They run a lot of sets, a lot of quick-hitters. They know how to read how you play them, and they have different endings based on you guard them.

?They get a lot of easy baskets because of it.?

For all of the scouting breakdowns, Morrill had a good idea from afar before looking at tape what Mercer would carry into the game.

?When you?re playing Belmont toe to toe in that league -- and everybody?s aware of Belmont and what they?ve done, and this team was right there with them -- and you?ve won 26 games, you?re good,? he said. ?When you?ve won two road games in this tournament, you?re good.

?That?s what we?re facing.?

The postseason is old hat for the Aggies, so Morrill?s team might be facing a hungrier opponent, as well, one that has 12 more wins than a year ago and has set program records and responded from a disappointing A-Sun tournament finish with a loss in the semifinals.

?We have high character players that listen to Coach,? Gollon said. ?As far as expectations go, other people have expectations. We have goals. We knew that how hard we worked, we would be a team to be reckoned with this year.?

And one that may shout ?championship? again on Wednesday night before winning one.

--macon.com
 

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CIT Championship games

2009

Old Dominion 66, Bradley 62

In 2009-10: Bradley was the fifth seed in the Missouri Valley Conference tournament and went 1-1 to and finished 16-15. ODU won the CAA regular-season and tournament titles, beat Notre Dame 51-50 in the NCAA tournament first round and lost to Baylor 76-68 in the second round to finish 27-9.

2010

Missouri State 78, Pacific 65

In 2010-11: Pacific lost to UC Santa Barbara 79-67 in the Big West tournament quarterfinals to finish 16-15. Missouri State won the Missouri Valley regular-season title and lost in the tourney finale to Indiana State, then beat Murray State 89-76 and lost to Miami 81-72 in the NIT to finish 26-9.

2011

Santa Clara 76, Iona 69

In 2011-12: Iona won the Metro Atlantic regular-season title, lost to Fairfield in the second round, and got an at-large NCAA bid, losing 78-72 to BYU in its first game to finish 25-8. Santa Clara finished 8-22 overall, 0-16 in the West Coast Conference, a conference that put four teams in this year?s NCAA tournament.
 
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