Men’s Basketball Preview: Yellowjackets Will Count on Mix of Youth
and Experience
Six Players Return as Foundation of New Look Team
BILLINGS, MT – NCAA basketball teams begin
practice around the country this Wednesday, and the men’s team at
MSU Billings will open camp with its sights set on recapturing the
Pacific West Conference title. For the Yellowjackets, who have
won four PacWest titles including their last one in 2002, the key
to success in 2003-3004 will be mixing a solid nucleus of
returning players—including four seniors—with a handful of new
recruits.
After finishing third in the PacWest a year
ago with an 8-7 conference mark and an 18-9 overall record, the
Yellowjackets were picked to finish second this year by the
league’s coaches. Despite graduating three players who earned
all-conference recognition, including first team selection Dan
Thompson, one of the biggest reasons MSUB is receiving notice from
its opponents is the fact that the Jackets return a group of
players who have the ability to score points in a hurry.
Tabbed as one of the conference’s top five
returning players for 2003-2004, Cameron Munoz (6-3 So, Chino, CA) will be one of the
Yellowjackets’ and the conference’s most dangerous scoring
threats. Munoz was named PacWest Freshman of the Year after
leading the conference in three-point shooting last season. He
ranked fifth in the nation for three-pointers per game, dropping
in 96 from behind the arc in 26 games. Munoz’s 96 threes is the
eighth-highest single-season total in school history.
Returning to the lineup to take some of the
scoring pressure off Munoz will be seniors Jerett Skrifvars (6-5 Sr., Brea, CA) and Dave
Carse (6-1 Sr., Billings, MT). Both missed a majority of last
season with injuries which required surgery. Skrifvars was
averaging over 22 points a game when he went down in the fifth
game of the season, while Carse was scoring nine points and
handing out almost four assists per game before he was lost for
the season after the seventh game. Both players are healthy and
will return as co-captains to lead the 2003-2004 squad.
Coach Craig Carse’s team returns three other players who saw
significant playing time last season and are expected to be key
contributors this year. Justin Hassell (6-4 Sr., Brooklyn, NY) is the top returning
scorer behind Munoz. Hassell played in all 27 games and averaged
13.4 points per game. A slashing guard, he also averaged just
under six rebounds a game and led the team by getting to the foul
line 161 times. Bill
Day (6-8 Sr., Boise, ID), the fourth senior on the
Yellowjacket roster, provides a defensive presence in the paint.
He averaged 5.3 points and 5.1 rebounds a game before missing the
final four games of last season with a torn medial collateral
ligament. Also returning for MSUB is guard Buddy Windy Boy (6-6 So., Lodge Grass, MT), who played in all
27 games last season. Windy Boy missed considerable practice time
due to various illnesses, but still averaged 6.7 points in 18.5
minutes per game. He is healthy and could be a dangerous long
range threat opposite Munoz.
Even though the team will be built around six
returning players, the 2003-2004 Yellowjackets will have a
distinctly different look than the teams of the past few years.
MSUB won’t have the big man in the middle like they had with Brian
Cook and Kyle Stirmlinger. Instead, they will most likely
resemble Carse’s early teams at MSU Billings with an up-tempo
style and a barrage of three-pointers.
“We won’t be as big as we have been the past
few years with Brian and Kyle,” said Carse. “So we’ll probably go
back to more of a three-point shooting team and play up-tempo.
We’ve got seven guys who will be ready to play right away and we’d
like to be able to use two platoons by the time we get to the
conference schedule.”
New to the Yellowjackets are a pair of junior
college transfers and four freshmen. Carse’s top recruit is Trae Fortier (6-7 Jr., Los Angeles, CA) who comes to
MSU Billings from Antelope Valley College. Fortier averaged 11
points and nine rebounds in leading Antelope Valley to a 29-3
record last season. The other transfer is Alex Galloway (6-7 Jr., Berkeley, CA), who played last season
at City College of San Francisco, the same school from which
Hassell transferred last year.
“Realistically, we have to look at our
experience as a key with six guys returning,” said Carse. “We
also have to hope that Jerett and Dave can return without their
injuries holding them back. Trae is probably as talented
athletically as we’ve had, and we’ll rely on him a lot early along
with our six returning players. I think some of our freshmen have
the potential to contribute as the year progresses. We’ll have to
rely on the new players to contribute by the time we get into the
conference.”
The Yellowjackets’ top freshmen recruits are Jonathan Wiley (6-7 Fr., Westlake Village, CA) and Justin
Hynes (6-7 Fr., Upland, CA). Wiley averaged 21 points, seven
rebounds and five assists for Westlake High School, earning first
team all-league and second team all-CIF honors. Hynes averaged a
double-double of 15 points and ten rebounds in leading Upland High
School to a conference championship.
Also joining the Yellowjackets are a pair of
central Montana standouts in Derek Taylor (6-1 Fr., Lewistown, MT) and Jason Dembek (6-7 Fr., Winnett, MT). Taylor earned all-state
honors after leading Fergus County High School to the 2002 Class A
state tournament with 13 points, five rebounds and 2.6 assists per
game. Dembek was a first team all-conference selection after
averaging 19.8 points and five rebounds at Winnett.
Carse has built a non-conference schedule
that was designed with reaching the post season in mind. After
opening with three home games, the Yellowjackets will hit the road
in mid-December to face a pair of tough regional opponents. The
first road game of the season will be December 13 at Humboldt
State, the team that some polls are picking as the nation’s
preseason No. 1. They follow with a game at Western Oregon on
December 16.
“To have a couple exhibitions and three home
games out of the blocks will be nice because of all the new guys,”
said Carse. “Then we open with Humboldt on the road. They’ve got
to be one of the best teams in the country, and they have two
legitimate All-Americans. With Western Oregon on the same trip,
that will be a good test to see where we’re at.”
Reaching the NCAA Tournament in Division II
is a numbers game with wins over regional competition the most
important factor. The Yellowjackets will return from the trip to
Humboldt and Western Oregon to host those same two teams plus St.
Martin’s before opening PacWest competition in January.
“With five straight regional games before
conference play begins, we’ve tried to position ourselves to get
to the Tournament,” said Carse. “We’ll tee it up and see what
happens.”
MSU Billings will open the PacWest schedule
on January 6 in Hawaii with two games against Hawaii Pacific and
one against defending PacWest Champion BYU-Hawaii. After a pair
of non-conference contests at home against Green Mountain College
from Vermont, the Jackets will host Hawaii-Hilo on January 20 in
their conference home opener. The Vulcans were picked as the
PacWest favorites in the preseason coaches’ poll. MSUB will host
UHH again on January 22 and Chaminade on January 24.
After a pair of road games at Western New
Mexico to end January, MSU Billings will play four straight home
games including two against BYU-Hawaii and one against Hawaii
Pacific. The Yellowjackets’ second trip to Hawaii will come at
the end of February when they’ll face Chaminade twice and
Hawaii-Hilo once.
“Without question, we have to find a way to
be more successful in Hawaii,” said Carse of his team’s 0-6 record
there last year. “We’ve had years where we won all of our games
over there. We need to be able to win there for a shot at the
post season.”
By the end of the second Hawaii trip, the
Yellowjackets will have a good idea what their post season chances
look like. They will then close the regular season with two home
games against Western New Mexico on March 4 and 6. Last season
the Yellowjackets set a single-game scoring school record against
the Mustangs with 146 points. If everything goes as planned, MSUB
will be able to start preparing for the “second season” on March 7
with tickets to the NCAA Tournament on March 11.
“We don’t have that one all-around player who
comes in and dominates,” said Carse. “But we have a point guard
who knows what I want done on the floor. We have a shooter in
Cameron and a slasher in Jerett who can both score. With Bill,
Justin and Trae, we have solid three, four and five players who
can get the job done, and in our system if you have five guys who
fit well, you can be pretty good.” |