Gloger key figure
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Steve Virgen
Back in high school, before Jeff Gloger transferred to Capistrano
Valley and before he became the starting point guard for the UC
Irvine men’s basketball team, he had a nickname. People called him,
“Flea.”
Six years later, the 6-foot-4 redshirt freshman still lives up to
the name he received in his one year at Santa Margarita.
“I was just annoying and pestering people on defense,” Gloger
said. “I guess you could still say that now.”
Gloger, a.k.a. Flea, who set UCI’s single-season record in steals
with 70, could very well be the difference-maker when the Anteaters
face Cal State Northridge in a quarterfinal game of the Big West
Conference Tournament tonight at 6 at the Anaheim Convention Center.
The ‘Eaters also feature senior forward Jordan Harris, a
first-team All-Big West honoree who leads UCI in scoring, and junior
center Adam Parada, who earned second-team laurels.
Ian Boylan, who leads Northridge in scoring (15.9 points per game)
and steals (2.2 per game), broke his nose in the Matadors’ season
finale Saturday. He should be a game-time decision tonight and is
expected to wear a mask if he plays. He did not practice Monday or
Tuesday.
UCI, the No. 2 seed, split with the seventh-seeded Matadors this
season. Gloger did not score and he had three turnovers in the 69-63
loss at Northridge, Jan. 25. He scored 12 points and dished out six
assists when the Anteaters defeated the Matadors, 64-57, Feb. 20.
However, Gloger also had five turnovers.
The Matadors, who are led by 6-foot-7 guard Curtis Slaughter (14.0
ppg), will most likely use full-court pressure defense to take
advantage of their athleticism while trying to attack UCI’s youth at
the ball-handling position in Gloger. However, the ever-confident
Gloger said he would rise to the challenge and UCI Coach Pat Douglass
supported those comments.
“He’s an unusual talent,” Douglass said of Gloger, who broke
through with a brilliant performance in UCI’s first victory of the
season at Pepperdine Nov. 30, and established himself as the team’s
point guard. “He has been the glue to our team. He’s competitive. He
comes to play all the time. Sometimes freshmen drop off during the
season, but that didn’t happen with him. Also, most of the (UCI) fans
have enjoyed his play more than any other player.”
Perhaps a reason Gloger has become a fan favorite is because he
epitomizes the Anteaters in regard to UCI’s placement in the college
basketball scene. Earlier this week, a local television station
tabbed UCI as the best-kept secret in Southern California college
basketball. The same could be said for Gloger, who is hardly a
scoring option, yet sometimes finds his points in transition after
steals. He has also shown a knack for scoring after offensive
rebounds, a testament to his relentless hustle.
“Even though I’m younger, in terms of a physical standpoint, I
don’t see anybody who is much bigger and stronger than me at my
position,” said Gloger, who dribbles and runs the UCI offense with a
bit of a swagger. “I really attribute that (confidence) to my two
older brothers. Playing against them and in their summer leagues all
the time, I was always playing against older players.”
Gloger’s elder brothers, Brad, 24, who played at Columbia, and
Spencer, 22, who just finished his season at Princeton, used to pick
on the younger Gloger. But that only made him stronger.
“They would just play rough with me and push me,” Gloger said.
“When I played against them, I knew I wasn’t going to play anyone
considerably better than any one of my brothers. That gave me a sense
of security.”
Gloger’s defense has been his greatest strength, thus far, and
that can also be attributed to his redshirt season, when he had to
guard Jerry Green most of the time during practice. Gloger said that
forced him to build a competitive spirit last year, which was
fortified this season.
Now, he said, he wants to be a part of making history. UCI has
never reached the NCAA Tournament and the Anteaters know the only way
to do so is to win the Big West tourney. The first step in that
process comes tonight against Northridge.
“Make no mistake about it, we are going in with the intent of
winning it all,” said Gloger, who made the Big West All-Freshman team
this season. “I really do think this is our year. We’re going to go
in there and try to not let what has happened the past two years
happen again.”
UCI won the Big West regular-season title in 2001, but lost in the
conference tournament.
Then, the Anteaters won a share of the conference’s 2002
regular-season championship, but again lost in the tourney. The
‘Eaters have not reached the Big West Tournament final in Douglass’
five seasons.
“In recent years, we went through a (bad) stretch at the end of
the year,” Douglass said. “I think we’re fresher than we have been .
We’re going to be relaxed because we’re not the No. 1 seed.
“We’ll just go out there with every intention of winning the
tournament, but, at the same time, realizing that any team can win it
and you have to play three ballgames.”
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