Lobos look for revenage against the Aztecs

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AFter losing three games in a row, all the New Mexico Lobos need is to face an angry San Diego State team but unfortunately for the Lobos the Aztecs come into the Pit on Tuesday having lost to Boise State 66-63 on Saturday a loss that snapped the "streak," in which San Diego State had won 164 straight games when leading with five minutes left in the game.

While it didn't get much national attention while it was going on all that often, but the end of the streak had every one from ESPN to NBC Sports reporting on the end of it. The impact of the loss was far beyond the streak for the Aztecs as they are now in the same position as the other ten teams in the Mountain West Conference as the Aztecs will have to win the conference tournament to advice to the NCAA tournament.

The Lobos on the other hand, come into Tuesday's game in the middle of a free fall by losing three games in a row and five of their last seven. Many New Mexico fans will point to the blown call by Mountain West Conference refs that cost the Lobos a win in Viejas Arena back on Feb. 7 as the start of the Lobos losing ways.

The play in question starter after Xavier Adams was ruled out of bounds on a trick inbounds play and the Mountain West issued a statement stating that they missed the call. However, Malik Pope still had to make the three to tie the game which eventually let to a 78-71 win by the Aztecs.

The Lobos who had won three straight and were just two games behind the Aztecs did not respond in their next game against Utah State got blown out by the hot shooting Aggies.

Since playing San Diego State at the beginning of the month, Lobo fans have become impatient with Craig Neal as they have bad losses against the Air Force, Colorado State, and Utah State. Many have called for Neal's job while and it has been reported that guard Cullen Neal is receiving death threats.

Things have gotten so bad in Albuquerque that there are now rumors that Cullen may transfer at the end of the season. This game against the Aztecs is important for so many reasons not only does the team want to avenge their first loss but they now are in a must win situation every game, sitting at 9-7 in conference play the Lobos are in fifth place but are just two games ahead of UNLV and Colorado State which is important because the six through eleven seed must play on the first day of the tournament.

If the Lobos are going to win against the Aztecs they must find some balance on the offensive end. Elijah Brown has been on tear lately scoring 41 points in a loss to Fresno State but during the second half of were Brown did most of his scoring the offense was stagnant as everyone just watched him score. Tim Williams has been good for the Lobos but teams have focused on stopping him making the Lobos beat them from the outside. Williams is still scoring around 17 points a game but his touches have been limited.

The Lobos have yet to find a third scoring option as Cullen Neal has struggled and is not playing his game as it seems that the criticism from the local fan base has caused him to alter his game.

If the Lobos are going to win either Neal needs to have a break out game or the rest of the supporting cast needs to step up. Sam Logwood played more aggressive against Fresno State but he still has not become the consistent scorer that many thought he would be at the beginning of the season.

On the defensive side New Mexico seems to bring out the best in every teams they allowed a slumping Utah State to get hot, they allowed Air Force to score 76 points, got blown out by Colorado State and gave up 92 points to Fresno State so there's a good chance the Aztecs can have their best offensive game of the season, unless New Mexico figures out how to play defense.

New Mexico is capable of locking down a team but it tends to put all of their energy into the offensive side and hope that they can out score their opponents.

The Aztecs have a balanced team led by freshman Jeremey Hemsley who scores 13.5 points per game. Hemsley came alive at the end of the second half and overtime of the teams' first meeting he scored 23 points eight of which came in overtime. Also, look for Winston Shepard to have a big game in his last visit to the Pit. Shepard always seems to have big games against the Lobos.

Even though the Lobos have been down the last couple of seasons the Lobo and Aztecs are still the two teams that have dominated the Conference over the last seven years. The Aztecs need this game to stay in the conversation for an at large bid. While New Mexico is just looking for momentum they really need a positive moment to define this season and a win against the Aztecs might be just what they need.

A victory will not stop the Neal hate, it won't put the Lobos on the National map nor will it move them into the two or three seed but it may be what the Lobos need to regain the confidence that was lost in San Diego 23 days ago.
 

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Aztecs head to The Pit for heated affair
SDSU's meltdown Saturday adds intrigue to a game New Mexico has been salivating for





The fire alarm went off during San Diego State basketball practice Monday morning, which could mean several things.

Maybe it was for a team still smoldering from an uncharacteristic meltdown two days earlier against Boise State at Viejas Arena ? up nine points with just over a minute to go, miss seven straight free throws, give up two 3-pointers after allowing one all game, lose 66-63.

Maybe it was for the flammable atmosphere expected Tuesday night at New Mexico (6:30 p.m. PST, CBS Sports Network), its players and fans still steaming over last month?s loss at Viejas Arena after a purportedly blown call helped SDSU force overtime.

Or maybe, as coach Steve Fisher coyly suggested to his players, he purposely had someone yank the alarm so they could practice overcoming the external distractions that define this most pressurized part of the college basketball season.

Whichever it was, the piecing beeps and flashing strobes and computerized voice instructing people to head for the nearest exit served as an ominous backdrop for a team badly in need of a win, less for external purposes than internal validation.

?I?m not going to kid you,? coach Steve Fisher said in the aftermath of Saturday?s debacle. ?It will be hard going into New Mexico on Tuesday. But if we have what I think we have, we?ll go in and play like crazy.?

Of course, this game didn?t need another layer of emotion and intrigue. It already was going to be wild and wooly after what happened Feb. 6 in Viejas Arena, even if it has since been rendered meaningless in terms of the regular-season conference championship.

The situation: The Lobos lead by three with 12 seconds left and are inbounding under SDSU?s basket. They run a play where a second player steps out of bounds to receive a pass (which is legal after a made basket), then quickly inbounds to an open teammate.

Except veteran official Randy McCall rules Xavier Adams has not established the required one foot out of bounds before receiving the pass. Aztecs? ball. Malik Pope hits a 3. Overtime. Lobos lose 78-71.

An hour later, New Mexico athletic director Paul Krebs was fanning the flames on Twitter: ?Incorrect call at key moment in game. Fortunately we get the Aztecs again at home.?

The result extended SDSU?s famed win streak to 161 when leading with five minutes to go (it was ended by Boise State on Saturday). Frank Mercogliano, New Mexico?s assistant athletic director for communications, tweeted: ?161*-0.?

Two hours later, the Mountain West took the unusual step of issuing a statement ? on a Saturday night, no less ? that conceded it was ?a very close judgment call made at full speed? and non-reviewable on courtside video monitors but also was ?in fact incorrect.?

The Pac-12 faced a similar situation last week, when an Oregon State player made a game-winning 3 at the buzzer after replays indicated he might have travelled. It waited until the following day to issue a statement and merely said: ?Travelling is a non-reviewable judgment call.?

Which brings us to Tuesday night at The Pit (sorry, WisePies Arena). The Lobos came to Viejas Arena at 7-2 in the Mountain West. They are 2-5 since and eager to unload a month?s worth of frustrations on the team that started them.

(And remember, this is a fan base that threw a cup at SDSU players two years ago and reportedly directed death threats toward Cullen Neal, the son of head coach Craig Neal, earlier this season.)

?I expect for it to be fully packed,? SDSU guard Trey Kell said, ?the fans yelling at us, the student section yelling that we got lucky.?

Did they?

?No,? junior Dakarai Allen said. ?We hit shots. Malik hit a big shot, we won the game in overtime. We won. That?s the bottom line. We got the W. That?s it.?

Just as Boise State got the W on Saturday. New Mexico poses an inside-outside challenge with transfers Tim Williams and Elijah Brown, who combined for 44 points in the first meeting. The bigger challenge for the Aztecs may be in their own huddle, in their own heads.

?You get ready to play the next game,? SDSU assistant coach David Velasquez said. ?I don?t think there?s any magic potion. Coach Fisher?s famous line: You can?t let Boise beat us twice. We have to move forward, have the right mindset, be confident in everything we?ve done. We?re still the best team in this conference. We?ve proven that.

?We have a lot of guys who have been in this program and won a lot of games and have been through some tough losses as well, and they?ve had to bounce back and come to practice the next day ready to go. We?re excited to play. I think that will be one way to move a little bit further away from Saturday, when the ball gets tipped (Tuesday) night.?

Velasquez was a student manager for the 2004-05 team that suffered a similarly unfathomable collapse at Viejas Arena, leading by 10 points with 20 seconds left in regulation and losing in overtime.

?I don?t even want to compare the two, to be honest,? Velasquez said. ?Our program is in two different places than it was in 2005 and where it is now. I could take another 11 years without having to go through another one, though.?
 

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Lobos update: They are a combined 12-5 in the last two Januarys and 3-13 in the last two Februarys, which doesn?t exactly put coach Craig ?Noodles? Neal on terra firma with a demanding fan base. They enter Senior Night having lost three straight, most recently 92-82 at home against Fresno State despite 41 points from Elijah Brown. The three-man attack is now basically two with Brown (21.8 ppg) and Tim Williams (17.7 ppg, 7.4 rpg) as Cullen Neal continues to struggle. After being blown out at Colorado State, Noodles said: ?It?s getting down to the pressure time late in the conference, and I just think we?ve lost our hunger. I can?t coach effort.? The big mystery is whether he dons the Cherry Blazer, which is passed down by Lobos head coaches and worn for what the media guide calls ?crucial? home games. Neal is 8-2 in the blazer, the losses coming against SDSU last year and Fresno State on Saturday. He?s worn it for Senior past two seasons. But will he wear it in back-to-back games?


Aztecs update: A win breaks the MW record for conference road wins in a season. Six teams have seven; the Aztecs currently are 7-1 entering this, their final road game. It will be interesting to see what coach Steve Fisher does with G Jeremy Hemsley, who has barely practiced for the past three weeks with what is described as a bone bruise on his foot. With the conference title locked up and an NCAA at-large berth looking iffy, do you shut him down until the MW tournament begins March 10? Or do you continue to have him come off the bench for whatever minutes his foot can handle? Hemsley had 13 points in his first two games off the bench, then played, in his words, ?like a freshman? with six turnovers in Saturday?s crushing loss against Boise State. The Broncos played zone for all but a couple possessions, and the Aztecs should see more against New Mexico, which constantly switches between 2-3, 3-2 and 1-3-1. Maybe SDSU?s biggest advantage is its depth, something the Lobos don?t have.
--MARK ZEIGLER
 
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