Huskies to face one of nation?s top defenses at San Diego State

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The Washington Huskies scored 107 points in their last basketball game.

The Washington Huskies will not score 107 points in their next basketball game.

Their second-round National Invitation Tournament matchup at San Diego State at 5:30 p.m. Monday night will not only represent one of UW?s more difficult road ventures this season. It will also likely prove to be the biggest test of the year for the Huskies? offense, because the Aztecs play defense better than anyone in the Pac-12 and better than most in the nation.

According to KenPom.com, San Diego State leads the country in effective defensive field-goal percentage and ranks second nationally in adjusted defensive efficiency. SDSU also leads the nation in field-goal percentage defense at 36.9, holds opponents to just 30.0 percent shooting from 3-point range and allows an average of just 60.1 points per game.




Those numbers might remind of last season?s contest between these teams, a 49-36 Huskies victory in Seattle on Dec. 7, 2014.

It was an ugly, slow game in which the Aztecs made only 20.4 percent of their field-goal attempts, and so the Huskies won by 13 points despite shooting only 37.5 percent from the field themselves.

If Monday?s game has a similar feel, it likely won?t be to the Huskies? favor. They play much faster now than they did then, and San Diego State is still the kind of team that forces opponents to settle into their halfcourt offense and work harder than usual for clean looks at the basket.

?We?re going to always try to force tempo,? UW coach Lorenzo Romar said. ?But every time we don?t set a screen, if we don?t come off of a screen hard, if we don?t have the proper angle on a screen, if we drive to the basket halfheartedly and we?re not aggressive, it?ll be really rough for us to score. We have to make sure that we?re efficient on offense.?

Romar noted that he often runs into SDSU?s coaching staff when recruiting, because both teams tend to pursue similar players ? those with long limbs and remarkable athleticism.

The Huskies (19-14) use those players to force turnovers and then push a fast tempo offensively. San Diego State (26-9) does a far better job protecting the basket, even if it doesn?t emphasize steals and turnovers the same way as UW.

?They?ve got some guys that have been in that system and have played that defense and they know it like the back of their hand,? Romar said. ?And that makes them really good defensively.?

Still, UW must try to establish its own tempo, and ideally score in transition to prevent SDSU from setting up in the halfcourt.

?We know their strength is defense, but on the other end, we know that one of our strengths is our offense,? UW senior guard Andrew Andrews said. ?So I think it will be a battle of trying to push the pace, making them play a fast-paced game so we can get out in transition.?

Another area in which the Aztecs excel: offensive rebounding. And preventing offensive rebounds is Washington?s biggest weakness.

San Diego State rebounds 33.4 percent of its own misses, a figure that ranks 55th nationally, per KenPom. And the Huskies allow opponents to grab 35.6 percent of their own misses, a figure that ranks 348th.

It was a problem for UW all season, and perhaps the primary reason why the Huskies are playing in the NIT instead of the NCAA tournament. And while the Aztecs are not a stellar offensive team, they will become one if UW continues to allow second-chance points.

?You have to box out, because those guys are relentless on the boards,? Romar said. ?Their starting lineup right now, the smallest guy is 6-4, then they?re 6-6, 6-8, 6-9. They?re very long, athletic and ferocious on those offensive boards.?
 

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SDSU faces talented but young Huskies in NIT
Washington has three NBA prospects but it also has struggled to win on the road




The worst part might not have been the 36 total points, the fewest in 46 Division I seasons and 1,374 Div. I games at San Diego State. It might not have been the 20.4 percent shooting, or the 15 points in the first half or the 25 with three minutes to go or the 11?-minute stretch without a basket.


It might not have been coach Steve Fisher having everybody report to a conference room and watch the entire game tape ? minute by agonizing minute ? as soon as they returned to the hotel that night despite at 6:30 a.m. bus to the airport the next morning.

The worst part as the bleary-eye San Diego State players shuffled through airport security after the 49-36 embarrassment against Washington last season was that it was the final game of the nonconference series, and they wouldn?t get a chance at redemption against the Huskies anytime soon unless the postseason tournament gods were in a particularly gratuitous mood.

Which they were.

The NIT can be an inconspicuous, anonymous, humbling 16 days in March, played in the immense shadow of the NCAA Tournament, but occasionally it serves up a particularly delectable matchup, full of scrumptious story lines. And so we give you Aztecs vs. Huskies, Monday night at 8:30 at Viejas Arena.

You have a team that plays at one of the slowest tempos in the nation (SDSU ranks 311th out of 351 Div. I schools in average possessions per game at 66.0) against one of the fastest (Washington is No. 2 at 78.2).

A team allowing 60.1 points per game (third in the nation) against one averaging 84.1 (sixth).

A team that scored 36 the last time they met against a team that scored 107 in its last game.

?If we score 36 points like we did last year, we have no chance of winning,? SDSU coach Steve Fisher said. ?If we hold them to 49, like we did last year, we have a very good chance of winning.?

?Obviously, hopefully, that doesn?t happen again,? Skylar Spencer said. ?It was a really bad game for us. Hopefully we can make up for it.?

The good news for the second-seeded Aztecs is that the game isn?t in Seattle, where they have suffered two of the worst losses in the Fisher era ? and really, how many have there even been? There was the 36-point debacle last year, and a 98-69 thumping 10 years earlier to the day in which their opening five possessions went turnover, turnover, turnover, turnover, turnover.

The third-seeded Huskies (19-14) are supremely talented, with three NBA prospects and two who are considered lottery picks, and have wins against NCAA Tournament teams Texas, USC and Colorado. But they?re also very young (six members of the nine-man rotation are freshmen) and, predictably, very shaky on the road, where they went 3-6 and didn?t beat anyone that finished over .500.

SDSU is 26-9. And 12,414-seat Viejas Arena is approaching a sellout, which would make it larger than any of the 50-plus NIT games played over the last two years.

What the Huskies are is fun to watch, a 40-minute highlight tape featuring the fruits of a top 10 recruiting class. One NBA mock draft has 6-foot-4 freshman guard Dejounte Murray as the 10th pick this summer should he decide to leave early; another mock draft has 6-9 freshman forward Marquese Chriss going No. 10. Oh, and the Huskies also have the Pac-12?s leading scorer in senior point Andrew Andrews (21.1).

Score of their first-round NIT win against Long Beach State: 107-102.

Second-half score: 61-51, Huskies.

Murray, Chriss and Andrews: 30, 27 and 25 points.

?They?re a team that?s really athletic and they play uptempo,? said SDSU sophomore Trey Kell, who shot 0 of 7 at Washington last season and didn?t score. ?We have to make sure that we try to slow them down a little bit, but not fully because you won?t be able to.?

?They make you play at a pace that you?re uncomfortable with,? Fisher said.

?We?re always trying to force the issue,? Washington coach Lorenzo Romar said.

It makes for a fascinating matchup in a tournament that is largely an afterthought for the rest of America. Fast vs. slow, youth vs. experience, road jitters vs. home comforts, an ugly history vs. a hopeful present.

The turnaround to Wednesday?s quarterfinal is quick, and it could be in San Diego, Seattle or Columbia, S.C., depending on what happens Monday night on opposite coasts. If top-seeded South Carolina beats Georgia Tech, the Gamecocks host the SDSU-Washington winner. If Georgia Tech wins, the Yellow Jackets travel west as the lower seed.

After playing four games in six days ? three in the Mountain West tournament and the opening NIT win against IPFW ? the Aztecs had a six-day break. One way they apparently didn?t spend it was watching NCAA Tournament games.
 

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Records: Washington is 19-14; SDSU is 26-9
NIT: Washington beat Long Beach State 107-102 in the first round; SDSU beat IPFW 79-55. The winner plays South Carolina or Georgia Tech in the quarterfinals Wednesday.
Series: Washington leads 3-1, with the lone SDSU win being a 70-63 decision at Viejas Arena in 2013.
Huskies update: They have lost seven of 11 overall and five straight on the road. But they are 16-1 when scoring 85 or more points, and they have topped 90 a dozen times (and 100 three times). SDSU has hit triple digits just once against a Div. I foe in the last 20 years (119-82 vs. Campbell in 2006). Over the last four games, three players are averaging at least 18 points and five rebounds: G Andrew Andrews (26.3, 6.0), G Dejounte Murray (21.0, 5.3) and F Marquese Chriss (18.0, 7.3). Andrews is a senior, but Murray and Chriss are both freshmen. Another freshman, F Matisse Thybulle, starts and three others come off the bench. They have only three road wins and all were close: 99-95 in OT at Washington State, 89-85 at Arizona State, 86-85 at UCLA. Coach Lorenzo Romar has been on the hot seat after failing to reach the NCAA Tournament for a fifth straight year, but his current crop of freshmen plus the arrival of five-star Markelle Fultz next season might save him.
Aztecs update: The six days between games has been a welcome break. ?Bodies get tired,? Skylar Spencer said. ?It was really good for us to relax and take a break for a little bit and get our minds re-focused.? Point guard Jeremy Hemsley (foot) has been able to return to practice, although coach Steve Fisher said Dakarai Allen and Malik Pope ?probably? would remain in the starting lineup with Trey Kell moving to point and Hemsley still coming off the bench. Over the last six games, Allen is averaging 10 points, 3.7 rebounds while shooting 53.5 percent. Over the same six games, Pope is averaging 14.8 points and 6.5 rebounds while making 62.5 percent of his 3s. The Aztecs have won six straight at Viejas Arena against Pac-12 schools not ranked in the Top 15. They?ll be playing close attention to fourth-seeded Georgia Tech at top-seeded South Carolina (6 p.m. Monday, ESPN). SDSU would host Wednesday?s quarterfinals if Georgia Tech wins and get on a plane Tuesday if South Carolina does.
--MARK ZEIGLER
 
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