The winner will remain one game behind WAC-leading Utah State in the loss column.
Greg Graham called it the best half that his Boise State men's basketball team played all season.
The Broncos outscored Nevada 53-34 in the second half on Jan. 19 in Reno, paving the way for a 95-80 win over the Wolf Pack.
Graham's team made 15-of-27 shots from the field after halftime to erase a four-point deficit. The Broncos sealed the win by making 17-of-23 from the foul line. They made 13-of-22 shots from 3-point range.
"They obviously lit us up at our place," Wolf Pack coach Mark Fox said.
The Broncos (17-6 overall, 8-3 WAC) say they'll need the same kind of performance at 7 p.m. Thursday when the Wolf Pack (16-8, 8-3) come to town for a pivotal conference game (KBOI, 670 AM and KTVB 24/7).
The winner will stay just one game behind first-place Utah State (18-7, 8-2) in the loss column, while the loser likely will fall to fourth place and have the same number of losses as fifth-place Hawaii.
"This rematch is big," BSU forward Mark Sanchez said.
Since losing to BSU, the Wolf Pack have won six of their past seven games. Their only loss came at Utah State, which is unbeaten at home this season.
Nevada committed only four turnovers Monday night in an 85-80 home win over Utah State to avenge that earlier loss.
"We have a much greater understanding of how we want to play on offense," Fox said. "We're showing signs of maturity, but we still have our moments of immaturity."
Nevada, which starts a freshman and two sophomores, is a different team from the first meeting, Graham said.
"I just think their young guys have become more solid," Graham said. "They got off to a slow start because of how young they were. (Fox) brought them along slowly. They've always been good, it just took them some time."
The Broncos, meanwhile, are coming off their worst loss of the season - 99-80 at New Mexico State on Saturday. BSU hasn't lost consecutive games since November, when it fell to Washington State and Montana State.
The Broncos are eager to redeem themselves from the latest loss, particularly forward Matt Nelson.
Nelson, who averages 15.2 points and 7.6 rebounds while making 64.7 percent of his shots (seventh in the country), had just three points and seven turnovers. He said he won't try to do too much against Nevada to compensate for his game against New Mexico State.
"After that last one, I've just got to move on," Nelson said. "Everyone has rough games. That was mine."
A silver lining in Nelson's performance was it gave Sanchez more minutes with the starters. He responded by pulling down eight rebounds and scoring four points in 13 minutes.
"I think the big thing is feeling comfortable when you get in," Sanchez said. "If the coaches have confidence in you, you can only have confidence in yourself."
Graham said the BSU bench has been playing well. In the first meeting against Nevada, four bench players combined for 14 points to back all five starters, who were in double figures.
"That's going to be important down the stretch," Graham said. "Our bench played well (the last game) and needs to do that again."
Fox's top concern is trying to slow BSU's offense. The Broncos are the WAC's highest-scoring team (82.5 points) and lead the nation in field-goal percentage (51.6 percent).
"I'm going to try to get six guys on the court because they score from everywhere," Fox said. "They're a terrific offensive team. You pick your poison. You're not going to shut out anyone, but you hope to slow a couple of them down."
Greg Graham called it the best half that his Boise State men's basketball team played all season.
The Broncos outscored Nevada 53-34 in the second half on Jan. 19 in Reno, paving the way for a 95-80 win over the Wolf Pack.
Graham's team made 15-of-27 shots from the field after halftime to erase a four-point deficit. The Broncos sealed the win by making 17-of-23 from the foul line. They made 13-of-22 shots from 3-point range.
"They obviously lit us up at our place," Wolf Pack coach Mark Fox said.
The Broncos (17-6 overall, 8-3 WAC) say they'll need the same kind of performance at 7 p.m. Thursday when the Wolf Pack (16-8, 8-3) come to town for a pivotal conference game (KBOI, 670 AM and KTVB 24/7).
The winner will stay just one game behind first-place Utah State (18-7, 8-2) in the loss column, while the loser likely will fall to fourth place and have the same number of losses as fifth-place Hawaii.
"This rematch is big," BSU forward Mark Sanchez said.
Since losing to BSU, the Wolf Pack have won six of their past seven games. Their only loss came at Utah State, which is unbeaten at home this season.
Nevada committed only four turnovers Monday night in an 85-80 home win over Utah State to avenge that earlier loss.
"We have a much greater understanding of how we want to play on offense," Fox said. "We're showing signs of maturity, but we still have our moments of immaturity."
Nevada, which starts a freshman and two sophomores, is a different team from the first meeting, Graham said.
"I just think their young guys have become more solid," Graham said. "They got off to a slow start because of how young they were. (Fox) brought them along slowly. They've always been good, it just took them some time."
The Broncos, meanwhile, are coming off their worst loss of the season - 99-80 at New Mexico State on Saturday. BSU hasn't lost consecutive games since November, when it fell to Washington State and Montana State.
The Broncos are eager to redeem themselves from the latest loss, particularly forward Matt Nelson.
Nelson, who averages 15.2 points and 7.6 rebounds while making 64.7 percent of his shots (seventh in the country), had just three points and seven turnovers. He said he won't try to do too much against Nevada to compensate for his game against New Mexico State.
"After that last one, I've just got to move on," Nelson said. "Everyone has rough games. That was mine."
A silver lining in Nelson's performance was it gave Sanchez more minutes with the starters. He responded by pulling down eight rebounds and scoring four points in 13 minutes.
"I think the big thing is feeling comfortable when you get in," Sanchez said. "If the coaches have confidence in you, you can only have confidence in yourself."
Graham said the BSU bench has been playing well. In the first meeting against Nevada, four bench players combined for 14 points to back all five starters, who were in double figures.
"That's going to be important down the stretch," Graham said. "Our bench played well (the last game) and needs to do that again."
Fox's top concern is trying to slow BSU's offense. The Broncos are the WAC's highest-scoring team (82.5 points) and lead the nation in field-goal percentage (51.6 percent).
"I'm going to try to get six guys on the court because they score from everywhere," Fox said. "They're a terrific offensive team. You pick your poison. You're not going to shut out anyone, but you hope to slow a couple of them down."
