A fun read from 22 years ago ...
Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 9:56 pm
The year after the NCAA appearance against St. Johns, the Cats damn near beat the University of Washington in the NIT opener:
HUSKIES GUN DOWN BOBCATS IN OT
By Dan Raley P-I Reporter
THURSDAY, March 12, 1987
Section: Sports, Page: B1
In this land of pickup trucks, cowboy boots and shotgun racks, the University of Washington basketball team didn't back down.
And it was the little guys, not the big ones, who got in the best punches.
Knocked out in the opening round of the 50th annual NIT last night was Montana State, which took a 98-90 overtime defeat on the chin as Husky guards Greg Hill and Eldridge Recasner both scored career highs, hitting 26 and 18 points, respectively, before a sellout crowd of 7,848 at Breeden Fieldhouse.
The Huskies (19-14) now advance to the NIT's second round and meet an undetermined opponent, possibly at home, on Monday or Tuesday. The opposing team should be named by Saturday night. Montana State (21-8) finished the season by having its 17-game homecourt winning streak snapped.
"I really thought we showed a lot of character," said Husky Coach Andy Russo. "We really kept our poise when we had to."
It was billed as the Bobcats' biggest home game in 12 years, since a Mychal Thompson-led Minnesota team left here with an 83-75 win.
The Huskies gave the rowdy, standing-room-only crowd another eight-point disappointment when Chris Welp hit a baseline jumper with four seconds left in regulation play to tie the game 80-80, and Hill finished off the Bobcats in the extra session.
Hill, the game's leading scorer, provided the first five points of the overtime, and had 11 overall in the five-minute period. Nine seconds into it, he dropped in a three-pointer from the top of the key and, after a Montana State miss, he canned a 15-footer.
Recasner, who actually tied his personal best, was far too quick for the home team, which had neutralized the Huskies' size with a deadly outside game. The New Orleans native hit 7 of 11 shots, most coming on baseline drives, to keep his team close down the stretch.
"They weren't slow, they just didn't play good defense," explained Recasner. "They just wanted to outscore you."
Hill disagreed.
"They were pretty slow," the Los Angeles native said.
Montana State coach Stu Starner agreed with Hill.
"I thought we did a good job defensively inside, but perhaps not as good on the guards," said Starner. "They were a little quicker than us."
Welp still finished with 25 points and a game-high 12 rebounds, the Huskies enjoying a 41-29 edge on the boards. Teammate Phil Zevenbergen, a 6-10 forward, scored 15 points and had seven rebounds.
Kral Ferch, a 6-4 forward and the Bobcats' lone senior, finished with a team-high 25 points, guards Ray Willis and Shann Ferch had 19 and 18 points, respectively, while 6-8 forward Tom Damako added 14.
Damako, the Big Sky Player of the Year and scoring champ, hit only 6 of 18 shots and was held six points below his average. Zevenbergen was largely responsible.
"I just got up in his face a little closer than usual," said Zevenbergen.
Said Starner: "You have to hit those open shots, because against them you're not going to get second ones."
The Huskies were slow starters, trailing for the first 12 minutes of the contest and falling behind by as many as five at 26-21. The Bobcats had four three-pointers, two from Willis, by that point, hitting them from as far out as 25 feet.
"It was so unnatural to go out as far as they shot, it made it impossible for us," said Russo.
The Bobcats finally hit a dry spell, allowing Washington to grab its first lead at 27-26, but were back on top by intermission with a 40-39 edge.
The Huskies scored the first 12 points after the break for a 51-40 lead, with Zevenbergen and Welp scoring two baskets each, and led by as much as 59-47 before the Bobcats got hot again.
Shann Ferch's two free throws put Montana State on top 80-78 with 14 seconds left, but Welp calmly hit a turnaround jumper with time running out and Hill came up with his late heroics.
"I saw the whole season of blowing leads. It was 'Oh, no, not again,' " said Hill. "I didn't want to let it end that way."
He didn't.
HUSKIES GUN DOWN BOBCATS IN OT
By Dan Raley P-I Reporter
THURSDAY, March 12, 1987
Section: Sports, Page: B1
In this land of pickup trucks, cowboy boots and shotgun racks, the University of Washington basketball team didn't back down.
And it was the little guys, not the big ones, who got in the best punches.
Knocked out in the opening round of the 50th annual NIT last night was Montana State, which took a 98-90 overtime defeat on the chin as Husky guards Greg Hill and Eldridge Recasner both scored career highs, hitting 26 and 18 points, respectively, before a sellout crowd of 7,848 at Breeden Fieldhouse.
The Huskies (19-14) now advance to the NIT's second round and meet an undetermined opponent, possibly at home, on Monday or Tuesday. The opposing team should be named by Saturday night. Montana State (21-8) finished the season by having its 17-game homecourt winning streak snapped.
"I really thought we showed a lot of character," said Husky Coach Andy Russo. "We really kept our poise when we had to."
It was billed as the Bobcats' biggest home game in 12 years, since a Mychal Thompson-led Minnesota team left here with an 83-75 win.
The Huskies gave the rowdy, standing-room-only crowd another eight-point disappointment when Chris Welp hit a baseline jumper with four seconds left in regulation play to tie the game 80-80, and Hill finished off the Bobcats in the extra session.
Hill, the game's leading scorer, provided the first five points of the overtime, and had 11 overall in the five-minute period. Nine seconds into it, he dropped in a three-pointer from the top of the key and, after a Montana State miss, he canned a 15-footer.
Recasner, who actually tied his personal best, was far too quick for the home team, which had neutralized the Huskies' size with a deadly outside game. The New Orleans native hit 7 of 11 shots, most coming on baseline drives, to keep his team close down the stretch.
"They weren't slow, they just didn't play good defense," explained Recasner. "They just wanted to outscore you."
Hill disagreed.
"They were pretty slow," the Los Angeles native said.
Montana State coach Stu Starner agreed with Hill.
"I thought we did a good job defensively inside, but perhaps not as good on the guards," said Starner. "They were a little quicker than us."
Welp still finished with 25 points and a game-high 12 rebounds, the Huskies enjoying a 41-29 edge on the boards. Teammate Phil Zevenbergen, a 6-10 forward, scored 15 points and had seven rebounds.
Kral Ferch, a 6-4 forward and the Bobcats' lone senior, finished with a team-high 25 points, guards Ray Willis and Shann Ferch had 19 and 18 points, respectively, while 6-8 forward Tom Damako added 14.
Damako, the Big Sky Player of the Year and scoring champ, hit only 6 of 18 shots and was held six points below his average. Zevenbergen was largely responsible.
"I just got up in his face a little closer than usual," said Zevenbergen.
Said Starner: "You have to hit those open shots, because against them you're not going to get second ones."
The Huskies were slow starters, trailing for the first 12 minutes of the contest and falling behind by as many as five at 26-21. The Bobcats had four three-pointers, two from Willis, by that point, hitting them from as far out as 25 feet.
"It was so unnatural to go out as far as they shot, it made it impossible for us," said Russo.
The Bobcats finally hit a dry spell, allowing Washington to grab its first lead at 27-26, but were back on top by intermission with a 40-39 edge.
The Huskies scored the first 12 points after the break for a 51-40 lead, with Zevenbergen and Welp scoring two baskets each, and led by as much as 59-47 before the Bobcats got hot again.
Shann Ferch's two free throws put Montana State on top 80-78 with 14 seconds left, but Welp calmly hit a turnaround jumper with time running out and Hill came up with his late heroics.
"I saw the whole season of blowing leads. It was 'Oh, no, not again,' " said Hill. "I didn't want to let it end that way."
He didn't.