Jason Williams was soaking in the cold water whirlpool. Brent Murphy was moaning about having the worst case of jet lag ever. Assistant coach James Holland said it was the worst road trip he had ever been on.
The Miners dealt with the effects of a seven-day, three-game swing through northern California and Honolulu on Wednesday afternoon at the Don Haskins Center. UTEP, preparing for Friday night's meeting with Louisiana Tech in the Don Haskins Center, went through a good 90-minute practice session.
"It was good," UTEP coach Doc Sadler said. "We got some running in, got a lot of shooting in, sharpened every area. We spent a lot of time on rebounding, because that will be a key Friday night."
UTEP, 21-7 and 11-4 in the Western Athletic Conference race, is playing catch-up. The Miners finish with three home games. Nevada, 13-2, and with a two-game lead, finishes with three road games. But the UTEP players simply are trying to focus on Louisiana Tech -- and get over the effects of the long trip.
"I think we are a little tired today," junior Miguel Ayala said. "But we need to get working hard, improve for Friday night. I think everybody's a little tired. But everybody has a good attitude, and I feel sure we'll be ready for Friday night."
Williams shrugged, grinned and said, "When I first got on the court today, my knees were a little tight and my legs felt heavy. I'll just get into the cold whirlpool the rest of the week, get my legs back, get the soreness out. We'll be fine. Today was a good practice. Everybody went hard, working on a zone defense -- because we know we'll see plenty of zone Friday. We've just got to come back and do the same thing tomorrow."
The Miners have one more day to recuperate, to work and get ready for the team that dusted them 80-65 on Jan. 29 in Ruston, La. That 15-point deficit (along with Texas Tech's 72-57 win) is UTEP's largest loss of the season. However, the Miners were only six points down with three minutes to play in Ruston.
And now UTEP is simply trying to get ready -- and fresh-legged and rested -- for the final run of the regular season.
The Miners dealt with the effects of a seven-day, three-game swing through northern California and Honolulu on Wednesday afternoon at the Don Haskins Center. UTEP, preparing for Friday night's meeting with Louisiana Tech in the Don Haskins Center, went through a good 90-minute practice session.
"It was good," UTEP coach Doc Sadler said. "We got some running in, got a lot of shooting in, sharpened every area. We spent a lot of time on rebounding, because that will be a key Friday night."
UTEP, 21-7 and 11-4 in the Western Athletic Conference race, is playing catch-up. The Miners finish with three home games. Nevada, 13-2, and with a two-game lead, finishes with three road games. But the UTEP players simply are trying to focus on Louisiana Tech -- and get over the effects of the long trip.
"I think we are a little tired today," junior Miguel Ayala said. "But we need to get working hard, improve for Friday night. I think everybody's a little tired. But everybody has a good attitude, and I feel sure we'll be ready for Friday night."
Williams shrugged, grinned and said, "When I first got on the court today, my knees were a little tight and my legs felt heavy. I'll just get into the cold whirlpool the rest of the week, get my legs back, get the soreness out. We'll be fine. Today was a good practice. Everybody went hard, working on a zone defense -- because we know we'll see plenty of zone Friday. We've just got to come back and do the same thing tomorrow."
The Miners have one more day to recuperate, to work and get ready for the team that dusted them 80-65 on Jan. 29 in Ruston, La. That 15-point deficit (along with Texas Tech's 72-57 win) is UTEP's largest loss of the season. However, the Miners were only six points down with three minutes to play in Ruston.
And now UTEP is simply trying to get ready -- and fresh-legged and rested -- for the final run of the regular season.
