Two teams with NCAA Tournament hopes meet on national TV in BracketBuster opener.
Winthrop coach Gregg Marshall easily could dwell on negatives in previewing his team's BracketBuster matchup tonight with Missouri State in Hammons Student Center.
Consider that Marshall's Eagles played a home game Wednesday night in Rock Hill, S.C., caught a flight to the Ozarks on Thursday afternoon and were met by bitter wind-chills upon arrival.
It's short preparation time for a game that will help shape Winthrop's NCAA Tournament prospects, if not its NCAA seeding.
But Marshall was all sunshine on his way to a team dinner Thursday night.
"This is a great opportunity for us, playing one of the marquee teams in the BracketBuster in prime time on ESPN2," Marshall said.
"This won't make or break our season, but it certainly can help us playing a team with an RPI under 40. That's the way we have to look at it."
Winthrop brings a 22-4 record and a 12-game winning streak into the 6:05 p.m. tipoff. The game leads off the fifth BracketBuster weekend and matches teams craving an NCAA Tournament berth next month.
A win tonight provides a valuable addition to that resume.
Missouri State coach Barry Hinson calls the Eagles the "real deal."
"Our guys know how good they are. This is one of the better teams that we've played this season."
Winthrop leads the Big South Conference with a 12-0 record. They lost in overtime earlier this season at Wisconsin, led North Carolina at halftime before losing by seven and the Eagles' other losses were at Maryland and Texas A&M.
Missouri State, of course, beat Wisconsin for its marquee victory. Winthrop could have, leading by two in the final seconds before the Badgers sent it to overtime.
Along with a near-similar result against No. 3-ranked Wisconsin, the Bears and Eagles appear near mirror images in other ways.
Both teams average 74.7 points and have six players averaging between 7.3 and 15.8 points. Both are shooting 48 percent from the field. Winthrop's opponents are shooting 40.6 percent, Missouri State's 41.6.
Listen to Marshall describe his team is like listening to Hinson talk about the Bears.
"We're gonna try to play a good brand of defense, number one, and try to force teams to take contested shots," Marshall said. "We're gonna share the basketball, look to try and get out in transition when the opportunity creates itself through our defense or rebounding.
"We try to play hard and play smart and really get after it."
In looking at Missouri State video, Marshall sees the similarities, though he believes the Bears "shoot it a little better."
Winthrop is led by junior guard Michael Jenkins, who averages 15.8 points and has made 81 3-pointers.
Torrell Martin, an athletic senior wing forward, is getting 14.1 points and 5.1 rebounds. Craig Bradshaw, a 6-10 senior center, averages 12.2 points and 6.2 rebounds.
Martin and Bradshaw already have been invited to the prestigious Portsmouth Invitational in April for NBA hopefuls to showcase their talents.
There's some mystery as to how the Bears will respond after an emotional Missouri Valley Conference home-court loss to 16th-ranked Southern Illinois on Tuesday. Last month after a home loss to Northern Iowa, the Bears were flat in the next game and lost at Evansville.
"We hope so," Hinson said about avoiding the hangover effect. "We had a great practice (Thursday) and everybody seemed really good, really upbeat and energetic.
"We'll find out more as the game gets going. We've tried to move on. You can't linger on about it."
Junior center Drew Richards said the players have tried to draw upon the positives from the SIU game, such as the quality defense the team played most of the way.
"It was a tough loss, but like coach said, we deserved to win the game because of the defensive effort we put forth," Richards said. "If we play defense like that, nine out of 10 times we are going to win."
Richards said the Bears are aware how good Winthrop is, but he and Ahearn are glad to get a night away from the Valley grind.
"You play conference opponents two times a year and it's like they know everything you're going to do and you know everything they are going to do," Richards said. "When it comes to nonconference games, the (pace) is usually more up and down the floor."
Toughness apparently is not an issue for the Eagles. Marshall has an action figure of professional wrestler "Junk Yard Dog" that he awards to players who exhibit rugged, tough play.
An example: senior Phillip Williams had a front tooth knocked backward at a 90-degree angle during the first half of a game against Liberty earlier this month. After a quick trip to the team dentist to wire the tooth into place, he returned to play in the second half and had a go-ahead dunk with 7 minutes to go.
It's that kind of attitude that the Eagles have carried since losing a two-point heartbreaker to Tennessee in the first round of last year's NCAA Tournament. They have been a team on a mission to get back to the tournament, but win this year.
Tonight's game is another important step that the Eagles ? and Bears ? hope leads to the NCAAs.
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Three things to watch vs. Winthrop
Mental game: Coming off a tough home-court loss to 16th-ranked Southern Illinois, the Bears cannot allow that to drag their mental process in any way against a Winthrop team that's eager to knock them off.
Make free throws: Pretty matter-of-fact stuff, but poor foul shooting cost the Bears against SIU as it has often this season. They've slid to eighth in the Valley at 69.3 percent. Winthrop has struggled even more, making 60.6 percent, maybe the only weakness it has.
Protect the ball: Winthrop averages 9 steals per game and the Bears have been careless lately, committing 18 turnovers against SIU, many of those unforced. More than 15 turnovers tonight will mean trouble for MSU.
Winthrop coach Gregg Marshall easily could dwell on negatives in previewing his team's BracketBuster matchup tonight with Missouri State in Hammons Student Center.
Consider that Marshall's Eagles played a home game Wednesday night in Rock Hill, S.C., caught a flight to the Ozarks on Thursday afternoon and were met by bitter wind-chills upon arrival.
It's short preparation time for a game that will help shape Winthrop's NCAA Tournament prospects, if not its NCAA seeding.
But Marshall was all sunshine on his way to a team dinner Thursday night.
"This is a great opportunity for us, playing one of the marquee teams in the BracketBuster in prime time on ESPN2," Marshall said.
"This won't make or break our season, but it certainly can help us playing a team with an RPI under 40. That's the way we have to look at it."
Winthrop brings a 22-4 record and a 12-game winning streak into the 6:05 p.m. tipoff. The game leads off the fifth BracketBuster weekend and matches teams craving an NCAA Tournament berth next month.
A win tonight provides a valuable addition to that resume.
Missouri State coach Barry Hinson calls the Eagles the "real deal."
"Our guys know how good they are. This is one of the better teams that we've played this season."
Winthrop leads the Big South Conference with a 12-0 record. They lost in overtime earlier this season at Wisconsin, led North Carolina at halftime before losing by seven and the Eagles' other losses were at Maryland and Texas A&M.
Missouri State, of course, beat Wisconsin for its marquee victory. Winthrop could have, leading by two in the final seconds before the Badgers sent it to overtime.
Along with a near-similar result against No. 3-ranked Wisconsin, the Bears and Eagles appear near mirror images in other ways.
Both teams average 74.7 points and have six players averaging between 7.3 and 15.8 points. Both are shooting 48 percent from the field. Winthrop's opponents are shooting 40.6 percent, Missouri State's 41.6.
Listen to Marshall describe his team is like listening to Hinson talk about the Bears.
"We're gonna try to play a good brand of defense, number one, and try to force teams to take contested shots," Marshall said. "We're gonna share the basketball, look to try and get out in transition when the opportunity creates itself through our defense or rebounding.
"We try to play hard and play smart and really get after it."
In looking at Missouri State video, Marshall sees the similarities, though he believes the Bears "shoot it a little better."
Winthrop is led by junior guard Michael Jenkins, who averages 15.8 points and has made 81 3-pointers.
Torrell Martin, an athletic senior wing forward, is getting 14.1 points and 5.1 rebounds. Craig Bradshaw, a 6-10 senior center, averages 12.2 points and 6.2 rebounds.
Martin and Bradshaw already have been invited to the prestigious Portsmouth Invitational in April for NBA hopefuls to showcase their talents.
There's some mystery as to how the Bears will respond after an emotional Missouri Valley Conference home-court loss to 16th-ranked Southern Illinois on Tuesday. Last month after a home loss to Northern Iowa, the Bears were flat in the next game and lost at Evansville.
"We hope so," Hinson said about avoiding the hangover effect. "We had a great practice (Thursday) and everybody seemed really good, really upbeat and energetic.
"We'll find out more as the game gets going. We've tried to move on. You can't linger on about it."
Junior center Drew Richards said the players have tried to draw upon the positives from the SIU game, such as the quality defense the team played most of the way.
"It was a tough loss, but like coach said, we deserved to win the game because of the defensive effort we put forth," Richards said. "If we play defense like that, nine out of 10 times we are going to win."
Richards said the Bears are aware how good Winthrop is, but he and Ahearn are glad to get a night away from the Valley grind.
"You play conference opponents two times a year and it's like they know everything you're going to do and you know everything they are going to do," Richards said. "When it comes to nonconference games, the (pace) is usually more up and down the floor."
Toughness apparently is not an issue for the Eagles. Marshall has an action figure of professional wrestler "Junk Yard Dog" that he awards to players who exhibit rugged, tough play.
An example: senior Phillip Williams had a front tooth knocked backward at a 90-degree angle during the first half of a game against Liberty earlier this month. After a quick trip to the team dentist to wire the tooth into place, he returned to play in the second half and had a go-ahead dunk with 7 minutes to go.
It's that kind of attitude that the Eagles have carried since losing a two-point heartbreaker to Tennessee in the first round of last year's NCAA Tournament. They have been a team on a mission to get back to the tournament, but win this year.
Tonight's game is another important step that the Eagles ? and Bears ? hope leads to the NCAAs.
=====
Three things to watch vs. Winthrop
Mental game: Coming off a tough home-court loss to 16th-ranked Southern Illinois, the Bears cannot allow that to drag their mental process in any way against a Winthrop team that's eager to knock them off.
Make free throws: Pretty matter-of-fact stuff, but poor foul shooting cost the Bears against SIU as it has often this season. They've slid to eighth in the Valley at 69.3 percent. Winthrop has struggled even more, making 60.6 percent, maybe the only weakness it has.
Protect the ball: Winthrop averages 9 steals per game and the Bears have been careless lately, committing 18 turnovers against SIU, many of those unforced. More than 15 turnovers tonight will mean trouble for MSU.
