Mark Schmidt knew when the athletic department struck the deal on this game last spring that his team would have its hands full.
But that was the point.
After spending the past two seasons rebuilding the St. Bonaventure men?s basketball team, Schmidt wanted a non-conference schedule fit for a program on the rise. It was the next step in legitimizing a program that might finally be ready to compete with the league?s elite.
Schmidt, set to begin his third year on the Bona sideline with a 23-37 record, got his wish.
St. Bonaventure will open arguably its most difficult non-league schedule in years when it hosts Horizon League power Cleveland State tonight (7 o?clock, WPIG-FM, WHDL-AM) in the Reilly Center.
The game marks the earliest start ever to a St. Bonaventure basketball season, and one of the Bonnies? toughest first tests in recent memory. The Vikings have won 47 games the past two seasons, captured the Horizon League championship last year and handled nationally-ranked Wake Forest in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
It?s exactly the kind of game Schmidt was looking for and the perfect litmus test for a Bona team overflowing with high expectations.
?IT?S A HUGE challenge,? Schmidt said after Wednesday?s practice. ?They went 26-11 last year. They played Arizona tough. They have a good, solid team and their coach does a heck of a job with them from a defensive standpoint.
?We knew when we took the game that it was going to be a tough game, but as we said, we wanted to improve the schedule and Cleveland State is an improvement.?
And, like Bona, an improving program.
The Vikings are fresh off posting the team?s second-straight 20-win season for the first time since the late 80s. And although they return only two starters from last year?s team - preseason all-conference guard Norris Cole (13 points, 3 rebounds) and junior guard D?Aundray Brown (7 points, 6 rebounds) - they?re tabbed to finish third in the Horizon League this season.
So what do the Bonnies have to do to come out with a victory?
?WE HAVE to take care of the basketball,? Schmidt said. ?They?re going to press us in terns of getting up into us in the halfcourt and making us make plays. We have to defend the big guy inside (6-9, 275-pound Aaron Pogue), we have to stop them from taking us off the dribble and we have to rebound the basketball.
?But we have to take care of the basketball. One of the things we struggled with last year was our assist/turnover ratio and hopefully we can do a better job tonight.?
But while Cleveland State is just the first in a long line of difficult non-conference opponents this season (one that includes Illinois State, St. John?s, Syracuse and Mississippi State), Bona has a little bit of history on its side.
THE BONNIES are 74-14 all-time in season openers and a glittering 40-3 in home openers in the Reilly Center since it opened in 1966. Then, too, Bona has won its last four home openers, the last two by an average of 14 points.
The goal is the same this season: win that first game to create some momentum for the rest of the campaign.
?You always want to win all your games,? Schmidt said. ?Our goal was to be 1-0 when we held our first meeting on the 26th of August. So we?ve been working towards this and putting all of our energies into Cleveland State. We?re not worried about what?s next; it?s the game at hand.
?And if we can win it, yeah, it will give us some momentum. But in order to win it, we have to play well, we have to do those little things and we have to play a good home court.?
There?s some concern about the big forward Pogue.
Last Friday, the Bonnies couldn?t stop a similar player in Mansfield?s Yuseff Carr, who finished the game with 19 points and 15 rebounds. It was good his young forwards got outplayed, Schmidt said, so that they have a motivational factor tonight.
There?s a concern with first-game jitters and executing the game plan on both sides of the ball. But this is the kind of game a good team wants to play. And Schmidt and the Bonnies are ready.
?It?s always exciting. It?s a new year,? he said. ?From a coaching standpoint, this is what we do. This is our life, this is fun.
?You put all your work in all through the summer time and the offseason, and this is when you get rewarded. Hopefully, we can go out and play well.?
But that was the point.
After spending the past two seasons rebuilding the St. Bonaventure men?s basketball team, Schmidt wanted a non-conference schedule fit for a program on the rise. It was the next step in legitimizing a program that might finally be ready to compete with the league?s elite.
Schmidt, set to begin his third year on the Bona sideline with a 23-37 record, got his wish.
St. Bonaventure will open arguably its most difficult non-league schedule in years when it hosts Horizon League power Cleveland State tonight (7 o?clock, WPIG-FM, WHDL-AM) in the Reilly Center.
The game marks the earliest start ever to a St. Bonaventure basketball season, and one of the Bonnies? toughest first tests in recent memory. The Vikings have won 47 games the past two seasons, captured the Horizon League championship last year and handled nationally-ranked Wake Forest in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
It?s exactly the kind of game Schmidt was looking for and the perfect litmus test for a Bona team overflowing with high expectations.
?IT?S A HUGE challenge,? Schmidt said after Wednesday?s practice. ?They went 26-11 last year. They played Arizona tough. They have a good, solid team and their coach does a heck of a job with them from a defensive standpoint.
?We knew when we took the game that it was going to be a tough game, but as we said, we wanted to improve the schedule and Cleveland State is an improvement.?
And, like Bona, an improving program.
The Vikings are fresh off posting the team?s second-straight 20-win season for the first time since the late 80s. And although they return only two starters from last year?s team - preseason all-conference guard Norris Cole (13 points, 3 rebounds) and junior guard D?Aundray Brown (7 points, 6 rebounds) - they?re tabbed to finish third in the Horizon League this season.
So what do the Bonnies have to do to come out with a victory?
?WE HAVE to take care of the basketball,? Schmidt said. ?They?re going to press us in terns of getting up into us in the halfcourt and making us make plays. We have to defend the big guy inside (6-9, 275-pound Aaron Pogue), we have to stop them from taking us off the dribble and we have to rebound the basketball.
?But we have to take care of the basketball. One of the things we struggled with last year was our assist/turnover ratio and hopefully we can do a better job tonight.?
But while Cleveland State is just the first in a long line of difficult non-conference opponents this season (one that includes Illinois State, St. John?s, Syracuse and Mississippi State), Bona has a little bit of history on its side.
THE BONNIES are 74-14 all-time in season openers and a glittering 40-3 in home openers in the Reilly Center since it opened in 1966. Then, too, Bona has won its last four home openers, the last two by an average of 14 points.
The goal is the same this season: win that first game to create some momentum for the rest of the campaign.
?You always want to win all your games,? Schmidt said. ?Our goal was to be 1-0 when we held our first meeting on the 26th of August. So we?ve been working towards this and putting all of our energies into Cleveland State. We?re not worried about what?s next; it?s the game at hand.
?And if we can win it, yeah, it will give us some momentum. But in order to win it, we have to play well, we have to do those little things and we have to play a good home court.?
There?s some concern about the big forward Pogue.
Last Friday, the Bonnies couldn?t stop a similar player in Mansfield?s Yuseff Carr, who finished the game with 19 points and 15 rebounds. It was good his young forwards got outplayed, Schmidt said, so that they have a motivational factor tonight.
There?s a concern with first-game jitters and executing the game plan on both sides of the ball. But this is the kind of game a good team wants to play. And Schmidt and the Bonnies are ready.
?It?s always exciting. It?s a new year,? he said. ?From a coaching standpoint, this is what we do. This is our life, this is fun.
?You put all your work in all through the summer time and the offseason, and this is when you get rewarded. Hopefully, we can go out and play well.?