Eastern Washington...

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Eastern Washington basketball is picking up where it left off: by playing in a packed gym.

Eight months after playing in the NCAA Tournament, the Eagles open the season Friday night at Mississippi State of the Southeastern Conference.

?This game has all the great ingredients for making our team tougher, better and tested,? said EWU coach Jim Hayford, noting that the Bulldogs host Alabama in football the following day and is anticipating a sellout for basketball as well.

The game ? the first of three in five days for Eastern ? tips off at 6 p.m. PST.

The Eagles are coming off their best season as a member of NCAA Division I, going 26-9 overall and finishing 14-4 in the Big Sky Conference to share the regular season title with Montana.

Despite the success, ?Our kids are hungry,? said Hayford, who plans to start transfer Austin McBroom and Sir Washington at guard, and Venky Jois, Bogdan Bliznyuk and Felix Von Hofe in the frontcourt.

With preseason practices behind them, Hayford said he expects plenty of production from a young bench. ?The big question is the consistency of the starting lineup and the maturity of the freshmen,? he said.



Mississippi State finished 13-19 overall last year and 6-12 in the SEC. The Bulldogs? first-year head coach is Ben Howland, a former head coach at Northern Arizona, UCLA and Pittsburgh.

The biggest question for Friday?s game is the status of MSU guard Malik Newman, a McDonald?s All-American who signed with the Bulldogs after being tabbed the No. 1 shooting guard in the country by ESPN.

The Eagles open their home schedule with an exhibition Sunday against Division III George Fox. That game will tip off at about 3:30 p.m. after the EWU women?s game against Air Force.

George Fox, a member of NCAA Division III, was 5-20 a year ago and 3-13 in the Northwest Conference. The afternoon matinee will feature the presentation of championship rings to the 2014-15 squad and unveiling of Big Sky championship and NCAA Tournament banners at Reese Court.

Two days later, the Eagles host a Seattle team that was 18-16 overall and 7-7 in the Western Athletic Conference last season. Seattle advanced to the semifinals of the College Basketball Insider (CBI) Tournament, falling to Loyola Chicago 63-48.
 

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When the MSU basketball team takes the court Friday for its season opener against Eastern Washington, it may be without its best player for a large portion of the contest.

Fans are anxiously waiting to witness the debut of five-star point guard Malik Newman, and while they'll likely see him play, it might not be as long as they would like.

Coach Ben Howland told the media that Newman, who's been battling a turf toe injury for the last two weeks, won't be thrown into the fire to play major minutes just yet. He obviously wants to bring Newman back slowly, and smartly so because you definitely do not want a two-week injury turning into one that nags him for an entire season.

That means I.J. Ready will log the majority of the minutes at the point, and late in the game you may even see Quinndary Weatherspoon or Craig Sword.

I don't know what the basketball gods have against Mississippi State, or what is in the water at the hump, but it seems like the injury issues didn't leave when Rick Ray walked out the door.

Eight players underwent surgeries during the offseason. Most of those players are back to relatively good health by most accounts, but freshman forward Aric Holman will be out at least another month.

Hopefully Newman won't miss any extended period of time this year. While they have the depth in the front court to make up for an injury, that's the one guy you can't afford to lose.
 
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