Mocs hit the road with eyes on prize

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The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga team bus is scheduled to make a detour on Friday to the North Charleston Coliseum.

Coach John Shulman has made this detour before, stopping to explain that it will be the site of the Mocs? three most important games of the year ? the Southern Conference tournament.

The Mocs? road to the arena began more than two months ago with a Dec. 1 game against The Citadel and Dec. 15 against the College of Charleston.

UTC will play the Cougars tonight at 7 in Kresse Arena and the Bulldogs on Saturday at 2 in McAlister Fieldhouse.

?It feels more like two years ago since we played them,? Shulman said while making the seven-hour trip to the coast.

The Mocs (15-10, 10-5 SoCon) are a different team than the last time they faced the Cougars (11-13, 6-8).

The new additions to the team have molded into key contributors. Reserves who did not play back then have been asked to play early with the game still on the line.

?We?ve matured, and we?ve been through the wars together,? sophomore Matt Gwynne said. ?We?re a lot closer than we were then. We know what it takes to win and be successful. It?s just a matter of doing it.?

Everybody was healthy before Christmas, except for a few bruises. Now, the injuries are more substantial.

Shulman described senior point guard Kevin Bridgewaters as ?possible,? with a sprained left ankle. He did not practice on Wednesday and boarded the bus without a walking boot.

?He thinks he can play,? Shulman said and Bridgewaters confirmed. ?But he thought he could play Saturday.?

The injury report also includes Khalil Hartwell who obliterated his ACL but can play at least 15 minutes, and Keyron Sheard who is getting strength back in his left shoulder and confidence in his dribbling.

?We have a few guys dealing with injuries so we?re not at 100 percent,? Hartwell said. ?But we?re mentally tougher, and we can get through it.?

Charleston coach Bobby Cremins said the Cougars have evolved as well over the last two months. After simply surviving a 10-game stretch with nine away from the confines of Kresse, Charleston seemed to hit its stride.

?Then we kind of ran into a wall,? Cremins said. ?I can?t put my finger on it. We stopped playing competitive basketball.?

Charleston is 2-5 in its last seven games and UTC is 3-3 since returning from a swing to Appalachian State and Davidson.

?At this moment, you?re either on top of the world or in a valley,? Shulman said. ?Yes, we need to play well; yes we need to win.

?It?s tough to stay level.?

But it?s not hard to find the Coliseum. Shulman wants to drive up to it several more times this year.
 

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Cougs wonder which team will show




After a "best of times, worst of times" road swing that saw the College of Charleston win at Appalachian State and then lose at Davidson by 25 points, Charleston coach Bobby Cremins may be wondering what he's going to see from the Cougars tonight when they play Chattanooga.

Either way, he's determined to remain upbeat about tonight's game, set for a 7 p.m. tipoff at John Kresse Arena.

"We got one out of two on the road, and that was big," Cremins said. "If we had just left Boone (N.C.) and come straight home to Charleston, everything would be a lot better. But I'm really proud of the win at Appalachian. We just couldn't carry it over."

Charleston (11-13, 6-8 Southern Conference) lost at Chattanooga 86-70 back on Dec. 15, but the Cougars seem to be catching the Mocs (15-10, 10-5 SoCon) in the midst of a bit of a tailspin this time around.

Chattanooga has lost three of its last four games, including an 81-61 loss at Georgia Southern, and has dropped four straight conference road games.

Even so, the Mocs still have one of the best scoring guards in the league in Stephen McDowell, who is averaging 15.3 points per game.

In addition, Cremins says he expects the Cougars to have their hands full keeping the Mocs off the boards.

"They're a good team that does a lot of things well," Cremins said. "They're a physical, rebounding team. We've really got to play well. It's an upper echelon team and very dangerous."

After their last two games, Cremins has got to be wondering which Charleston team will show up ? the one that beat the Mountaineers in what Cremins calls their "best win of the year" or the one that lost to Davidson in the school's worst Southern Conference defeat.

"I guess we'll have to wait and see," Cremins said.
 
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