ODU looking to stay ahead at "The Ted"
Their routines vary. Jonathan Arledge showers and relaxes in his room. Trey Freeman listens to music and calls his mother. Ambrose Mosley arrives at the arena early to shoot.
Whatever their pre-game rituals, the Old Dominion Monarchs have shared a Constant Center routine for 13 months now:
Winning.
ODU's 22-game home winning streak is the nation's seventh-longest, and the longest in the 13-season history of "The Ted." The Monarchs haven't fallen in their Hampton Boulevard home since Feb. 22, 2014.
Maintaining home court hegemony could be a difficult task tonight, when ODU (25-7) hosts Illinois State (22-12) in a second-round NIT game. A match-up that already loomed as tough could be even more so, given the uncertain status of Freeman, the Monarchs' best player.
The 6-foot-1 junior from Kellam High sprained his ankle in practice Saturday. He's been receiving treatment, but it's unclear whether he'll play.
"We're just waiting to see," coach Jeff Jones said Sunday.
Even if Freeman can't go, the Monarchs have at least one major advantage. For whatever reason, ODU is a different team at home, where it's gone 18-0 this year.
"It's hard to say why," Jones said. "I think it's probably all about confidence."
It's also about the crowd and the comforts of home, players say. ODU averaged 7,132 fans during the regular season. Even a general admission crowd of 4,736 for Wednesday's NIT first-round game was raucous. As of Saturday afternoon, about 2,500 tickets had been sold for tonight's game.
"I give it all to the fans - 100 percent," Arledge said. "We feed off the energy that they provide.
"They get us over that hump."
ODU has struggled to find that energy on the road, where the crowds are hostile and the routines can be more numbing than comforting. At home, players who live just down the street from the arena have freedom to find a pre-game ritual that works for them.
"On the road, it's like you're on a schedule non-stop," Arledge said. "You don't have time to do what you want."
The Monarchs could need all the help tonight that playing at home can provide. Illinois State, from the Missouri Valley Conference, handed them their most lopsided loss of the season, 64-45, in the Paradise Jam on Nov. 23.
ODU never solved the Redbirds' zone defense, an aggressive scheme that can morph from 2-3 to 1-3-1. The Monarchs shot just 34 percent and were outrebounded 35-26.
"We didn't attack it very well," Jones said. "Hopefully, with some time to prepare, we'll do a better job attacking and getting some better shots."
The Conference USA Newcomer of the Year, Freeman generally directs ODU's attack. As the team's leader in scoring and assists, he excels at knowing when to get others involved, and when to take over.
If Freeman can't play, backup point guard Keenan Palmore, who started all 36 games last year, could get the call. Shooting guard Aaron Bacote can also swing to the point guard position. ODU also has an experienced option in guard Deion Clark.
As Saturday's practice concluded, the Monarchs looked loose and confident, fully in their element on the court where they haven't lost in more than a year.
"It's an advantage, always an advantage (playing at home)," Mosley said. "And we owe them. That loss hurt us, and also humbled us."