USC series special to Broncos' Hawkins

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After tonight's game at the University of Southern California, the series between Western Michigan and the Trojans will be no more. Like often happens, the contract expires and there is no plan to renew.

Yet, this three-game set won't fade out of WMU's memory bank any time soon. The reason: The meeting on Nov. 21, 2003, and the significance of that 83-65 win on the Bronco program.

``For me, it was huge on so many levels. So many subplots went into that game,'' said WMU head coach Steve Hawkins, who grew up in southern California and whose father was in attendance. ``No. 1, it was my first game as head coach. It was important from a program standpoint and the kids' standpoint because we had never played that system until that year and it worked in the game. We had never run the ball before here. ... That day we got out and ran.

``It was also against a Pac-10 team that was picked to do pretty well that year. It let us know how good we could be.''

That confidence was the catalyst in what turned into a 26-5 season that included a Mid-American Conference championship and a berth in the NCAA Tournament.

It was also the beginning of ``The Zoo,'' WMU's black-shirt student section at University Arena.

``We spent a lot of time in the residence halls trying to get the students out,'' Hawkins said. ``We had an incredible turnout and it hasn't let up since.

``I have very fond memories. I'd be lying if I didn't say that game was special.''

For senior Brian Snider, one of only three players remaining from the Broncos' roster that season, the 2003 USC contest was more valuable for its contrast with WMU's next game than anything else.

``We beat USC by 18 and then lost to a just average Detroit team just as badly,'' Snider said. ``The two games were extreme opposites. It showed how good we could be if we played the way coach Hawkins wanted and how bad we could be if we didn't.''
 

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Probable starters

For WMU: Senior Brian Snider

(6-foot-6, 11.4 points per game) and freshman Shawntes Gary (6-2, 4.2) at guard; senior Stane's Bufford (6-5, 10.0) and sophomore Andrew Hershberger (6-7, 13.8) at forward; and sophomore Joe Reitz (6-7,

14.8) at center.

For USC: Sophomore Gabe Pruitt (6-4, 15.9), freshman Ryan Francis (5-11, 6.3) and junior Lodrick Stewart (6-4, 10.4) at guard; sophomore Nick Young (6-6, 16.6) and freshman RouSean Cromwell (6-10, 5.3) at forward.

WMU (2-3) is coming off its first win over a Division I opponent (73-72 against IUPUI) after three straight losses. Gary should return to the starting lineup after two games coming off the bench, one due to injury, the other a death in the family. The Broncos are yet to win away from University Arena this season. This will be the first of six tries in a row as WMU doesn't return home until Jan. 7. The Broncos also haven't shown themselves to be a solid team offensively late in games. That will have to change for WMU to leave Los Angeles with a win. USC (5-2) is about as young as the Broncos, starting two freshmen, two sophomores and a senior. The Trojans have won five in a row but none of the victories have come in impressive fashion. USC escaped Loyola Marymount, 71-69, on Saturday and did the same with Division II Alaska Anchorage on Nov. 26, 57-56.

How WMU wins

Reitz has his way with a taller-but-far-leaner Cromwell inside and the Broncos are able to find a dozen or so points in transition against a defense that sells out to get back.
How USC wins

No transition game for the Broncos means no win, and the Trojans keep WMU's offense in the half court.



North Carolina visits USC next Wednesday and Floyd's team likely has a bit of Carolina on its mind. The Trojans aren't good enough to beat WMU if they don't treat the Broncos like the Tar Heels.
 
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