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USF coach Evans to get first look at WCC opponents



USF coach Jessie Evans says playing the West Coast Conference's two Los Angeles schools on the road would be a tough challenge for anyone.

That's especially true for a coach making his conference debut, and with two of his regulars day-to-day with injuries.

The Dons open conference play tonight at Loyola Marymount, facing a team that is apparently ready to leave its doormat days behind.

The Lions, picked as a lower division team before the season, are a somewhat surprising 8-5. They're coming off their first winning season under fifth-year coach Steve Aggers.

"They've got momentum with them," Evans said.

The Dons come in 9-4 and possibly without starting point guard Andre Hazel, who hasn't played since injuring a knee Dec. 18 at Pacific, and forward Johnny Dukes, who sprained his ankle before Tuesday's win over Penn.

Both could play, but no decision will be made until closer to game time.

Evans said the Lions are driven by guards Charles Brown (12.1 points per game) and Brandon Worthy (11.5). Both are threats from the perimeter and Brown leads the team with 23 3-pointers. On the inside, Matthew Knight leads LMU in scoring (15.8) and rebounding (6.4).

"We've got to defend them on the perimeter and find a way to compete inside," Evans said.

The trip gets tougher Sunday when the Dons visit Pepperdine, 10-5 in nonconference games and expected to contend for the WCC title.

"They have very, very athletic players and they're very good," Evans said.

He was especially wary of Yakhouba Diawara (14.2 points, 5.6 rebounds), calling him "possibly the best inside man in the conference."

The Dons had a seven-game win streaking until losing at Texas Tech on Jan. 1.

The Dons feature the conference leader in scoring, guard John Cox, who is averaging 20.9 points per game.
 

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BRIEFLY
Finally home, the Loyola Marymount University men's basketball team (8-5, 0-0) will begin West Coast Conference play this Friday when they host the University of San Francisco (9-4, 0-0) at 7:05 p.m. in Gersten Pavilion. It will be the Lions first home game since Dec. 18 when they defeated San Diego State 72-68. The Lions completed a five-game road swing that took them more than 11,000 miles and into four different states. The Lions will complete their two-game homestand with San Diego on Sunday, Jan. 9

TOUGH STRETCH
With the new year came the close of the non-conference portion of LMU's 2004-05 schedule. It was quite the stretch for the Lions as the final seven games of the Lions' non-conference schedule came against teams with a combined record of 52-29, with the trip to Minnesota the last of five straight contests coming on the road. The road swing started with a 64-54 win over Colgate on Dec. 21 and took the Lions 11,340 miles when they return from Minnesota. All told the Lions traveled from New York, Virginia, Utah and Minnesota. The Lions finished 2-3 in the final road games, winning two of the first three including an overtime loss to No. 25 Virginia. It doens't get much easier for the Lions when they return home for West Coast Conference play as they take on two teams that enter WCC play on a roll. San Francisco has won eight of their last nine to enter the start of conference at 9-4. San Diego, who the Lions play Sunday, has won five straight and enter the start of WCC play 8-5.

TOUGH BREAK
After missing all of last season with a hand injury, sophomore Brandon Worthy returned in a big way for the Lions before tearing a ligament in his right knee. Worthy had surgery on Dec. 29 to repair the knee and is said to be out four to six weeks. The San Jose, Calif., native left third on the team in scoring (11.5 ppg). In the Lions' game against UC Riverside, Worthy broke-out with 26 points, eight assists and five steals while hitting 3-of-4 from the three-point line and going a perfect 9-for-9 from the charity stripe. Worthy, who ranked 10th all-time in free throws made for a season with 149 his freshman season, scored all 10 of his points against Long Beach State from the charity stripe. For the season he is shooting 51.5 percent from the field (35-for-68) to rank second in the West Coast Conference. He is also ranked 14th in scoring, second in steals and fifth in assists. He finished the game against Washington with 10 of 18 points in the final five minutes to put the Lions within striking distance.

GO TO GUY
Sophomore Matthew Knight continues to be the go-to-guy for the Lions, earning his second straight double-double with 19 points and a career-best 12 rebounds against Northern Arizona. The Australian native is the first player since Ime Oduok in 1994 to have back-to-back double-double games. On the season he has scored in double figures in 11 of the Lions' 13 games, including at least 17 in five of the last six games. He had 17 against Minnesota to close non-conference. On the season his scoring average (15.8 ppg) ranks him seventh in the West Coast Conference and his rebound average (6.4 rpg) is eighth in the WCC. His average is 10.9 points per game better than last season, the best turnaround among returning players from the 2003-04 season in the WCC. He is also fourth in the conference with a 54.0 field goal percentage. He has been getting it done on the offensive end of the boards and is leading the WCC with nearly four offensive rebounds per game (3.69).

BENCH SCORING
In the last seven games the bench has provided a big lift for the injury depleted Lions. LMU had another 29 points from their bench in the win over Northern Arizona, getting a season-best 10 from junior Chris Ayer. The Lions' bench out scored Washington 35-7 thanks to junior Dustin Brown's season-high 18 points. Freshman Jon Ziri then powered the bench scoring in the 72-68 win over San Diego State with his career-high 11 points. Brown was at it again in the win over Colgate with 14 points and then 15 in another heartbreaker to a ranked team, at #25 Virginia. In the final two games of non-conference, the Lions had 19 bench points against Utah State, earning another eight from Brown, and 21 against Minnesota, another 10 coming from the junior Ayer.
 
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