Demons' moment arrives

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Two seasons of losing for Northwestern State built levels of frustration. If the Demons win this afternoon, those two years will melt away into distant memories.

The top-seeded Demons face No. 2 seed Southeastern Louisiana for the Southland Conference tournament championship. ESPN2 will televise the game.

"(Today) will set off this program and take it to another level," forward Jermaine Spencer said.

The biggest game at Prather Coliseum tips off at 1 p.m. One of the arena's largest crowds will watch -- possibly the largest ever -- and a national television audience will tune in to see a champion crowned.

The situation exudes pressure. Yet, Northwestern State experienced too much hardship and too many losses the last two seasons to let this moment elude it.

The Demons took its lumps as the youngest team among all 323 Division I programs.

They were the little brother of the Southland Conference and night after night the league's 10 teams pounded them.

Five juniors and a redshirt sophomore on this year's squad endured those difficult seasons and the 38 combined losses. They were the force behind the Demons' first Southland Conference regular-season title and their first crown in 31 seasons.

They are one win from adding a conference tournament title to their belt and a spot in the NCAA Tournament.

"I knew all the hardships we went through we were going to reap the benefits," forward Clifton Lee said. "We're not going to let it slip away."

Guards Tyronn Mitchell, Jermaine Wallace, center Alfonse Dyer, forward Byron Allen, Spencer and Lee had to adapt quickly when they came into the program. The losses piled up as they learned the system not from the bench, but on the court.

Then there were the 6:30 a.m. workouts. The early morning practices became the standard for the team, giving them a couple of hours to focus on basketball.

"Everything is coming together now," Forges said. "Everything is paying off."

The Demons beat the Lions back on Jan. 15. The win became the tie-breaker to give them the top seed for the tournament.

"They can get physical, but we've got three more guys coming off the bench," Spencer said. "We can let them bang and get tired and we can come back with fresh people.

"We're too close to let it slip away. We've been working too hard."
 

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NATCHITOCHES ? Looking for a chance at history, the Southeastern men?s basketball team plays its biggest game in the program's history Sunday when it faces in-state rival Northwestern State in the championship game of the O?Reilly Auto Parts Southland Conference Basketball Championships at Prather Coliseum.

Tip-off is scheduled for 1 p.m. and will be televised nationally on ESPN2. The game can also be heard in the Hammond area on KSLU-FM (90.9) and on the internet at www.LionSports.net.

Already with a school-record 23 wins to its credit, No. 2-seeded Southeastern (23-8) can advance to the NCAA Championships for the first time as a Division I program with a win over the top-seeded Demons (21-11). The Lions advanced to Sunday?s final after a hard-fought 71-62 win over Sam Houston State before the 11th-largest crowd in school history (2,912).

But to make history, the Lions will have to overcome a 14-game losing streak to Northwestern State in Natchitoches dating back to 1985, including a 65-63 loss to the Demons on Jan. 15.

Ricky Woods posted a game-high 19 points and 12 rebounds while for Southeastern while Jonathan Patton added 14 points. Terry Bryant, who scored 13 points and went 6-of-6 from the free throw line, made four shots from the stripe in the final 1:41 as the Lions beat Sam Houston State for the third time this season (and second time in five days) and finished the season 13-1 at home.

Woods, the SLC?s Newcomer-of-the-Year and second-leading scorer, leads Southeastern with 17.2 points per game. The 6-foot-6 Woods, who scored 496 points in the regular-season, has averaged 19.0 points per game in the postseason and has scored 534 points -- the fifth-most in school history. Woods is three points shy of passing the legendary C.A. Core (536 points in 1964-65) for fourth place and is 15 points from tying former Lion Sam Bowie (549 in 1994-95) for third.

Patton (11.8) and Nate Lofton (11.5) are next in scoring for Southeastern, which averages 64.1 as a team while allowing 56.0. Bryant (9.0) is next for the Lions with sixth-man Jonathan Walker (5.7) following. The 6-10 Lofton, who ranks second in school history in blocked shots, leads Southeastern in rebounds (7.2), blocks, steals and assists.

The Lions suffered a setback in Thursday?s win as fifth-year senior Neill Berry, the Lions? defensive stopper, was injured late in the second half and is out for Sunday?s game. Expected to replace Berry in the lineup is junior college transfer Chris Lee, a 6-3 guard.

Clifton Lee scored 17 points and grabbed eight rebounds for Northwestern State in a 90-75 win over fifth-seeded Lamar on Thursday. The win propelled Northwestern State into the SLC tournament championship game for the third time in six seasons under coach Mike McConathy.

Against the Cardinals, the Demons shot 57 percent from the floor and got 48 points from their bench as reserves Alfonse Dyer (14) and Kerwin Forges (12) led the surge. Starting forward Jermaine Spencer scored 10 points and shared game-high rebounding honors with Lee, grabbing eight, as the Demons posted a commanding 49-21 rebounding advantage.

With one of the deepest lineups in the Southland Conference, Northwestern State has 11 players who average more than 10 minutes per game with only one ? leading scorer Jermaine Wallace (11.9 ppg) averaging more than 25 minutes. Clifton Lee (9.5), Jermaine Spencer (8.2), Byron Allen (7.4) and Kerwin Forges (6.8) follow Wallace in the scoring column for Northwestern State, which ranks third in the SLC in scoring offense (75.8). Spencer leads the Demons in rebounds (5.1) with Tyronn Mitchell ranking second in the SLC in steals (2.2) and assists (4.4).

The Demons are shooting for their second NCAA Tournament appearance in five seasons, after going 1-1 in their first-ever trip to the NCAAs in 2001. The Demons defeated Winthrop in the 2001 Play-In game before losing to Illinois in the opening round.
 
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