MISSOULA, Mont. -- Maybe being on the road isn't such a bad thing.
For one, it saves Northern Arizona's players from being barraged with questions about the assault that took place outside a Flagstaff bar early Sunday morning that left point guard DeJuan Stevens with a broken jaw and the Lumberjacks with a gaping hole in the lineup. Stevens was NAU's second-leading scorer behind guard Steve Sir.
Stevens' injury stopped being a distraction for NAU players the moment they hit the practice floor Monday and Tuesday as they prepared for the team's most important road trip of the season. The Lumberjacks meet Montana here tonight before facing off with Montana State, unbeaten in the Big Sky at 3-0, four hours down the road Saturday in Bozeman.
NAU coach Mike Adras wishes he could say the same thing. He's stopped taking phone calls and media questions about Stevens' situation, because the distractions have left him struggling to prepare for tonight's game against the Grizzlies.
"The practice court has been the best thing for me the last two days," Adras said. "I told (NAU athletics director) Jim Fallis last night that I'm not comfortable with where I'm at in my game preparation for Montana. I should be a lot further along than I am.
"Truth be told, it's been a tremendous distraction to me. ... The best thing for our guys is to just get away."
Starting point guard Kyle Feuerbach noted Wednesday that the Lumberjacks have had two days to prepare for life without Stevens, who will miss at least four to six weeks, if not the rest of the regular season. Sophomore Riley Van Patten, a reserve who has played mostly two guard this season, will pick up some of Stevens' minutes, while Feuerbach will be expected to shoulder a much larger load of minutes himself.
That's nothing new for the senior. During his sophomore year, fellow point guard Chris Ferguson went down three games into the season with a foot injury, leaving Feuerbach as the only point guard. He played nearly the full 40 minutes every game.
"I guess the positive spin is that I have a point guard who has been in this predicament before," Adras said. "He knows what he has to do. And I just think mentally, he's tougher than he was two years ago."
Van Patten's story is an interesting one. He came to NAU from Glendale, Calif., on a football scholarship and was expected to play defensive back for the Lumberjacks. But a recurring problem with the pinky finger on his left hand -- he dislocated the digit time and again -- forced him out of a football uniform. He eventually had surgery to repair the finger, and he decided to try out for the NAU basketball team.
Van Patten impressed the coaching staff with his quickness and ability to defend on the ball. Plus, he's got a nice outside shot and the ability to penetrate. So while Stevens is out, Van Patten will get a chance to show he can be an impact player himself.
"It's exciting," Van Patten said. "It's been a lot of work this week trying to cram everything in and figure things out. ... With 'D' (Stevens) gone, everyone has to step up their game."
The Grizzlies will be without a star of their own tonight. Forward Kamarr Davis has been out since December while trying to regain his academic eligibility through UM's winter-session classes. The grades from those classes have yet to be posted, meaning Davis won't play tonight. He's expected to return for Saturday's game against Sacramento State.
Montana has adapted. In Davis' absence, freshman Andrew Strait has emerged as a legitimate scoring threat. And, as always, guard Kevin Criswell is a dangerous sharpshooter with the ability to take over a game.
If NAU gets the same sort of production tonight out of freshman Cedric Hill as it did last weekend at home, when he averaged 19 points per game in two Lumberjack victories, the impact of Stevens' absence will be lessened. Like Stevens, Hill has the athletic ability to create his own shot off the dribble, an important asset on a team filled with dead-eye shooters who get their shots off screens.
"I wouldn't say there's pressure on him," Feuerbach said. "But we need him to keep playing like he did last week."