UCI passes opening test
Barry Faulkner
Though, technically, the victory doesn’t count, the UC Irvine men’s
basketball team may have taken something even more noteworthy from
its 94-91 exhibition home win over the EA Sports Southwest All-Stars
Saturday night at the Bren Events Center: a supreme challenge.
“You want to play a team that stretches you and they stretched
us,” UCI Coach Pat Douglass said of the collection of former college
players, who sank 9 of 13 first-half three-pointers and led, 47-38,
at intermission.
The visitors hit another three ball to open the second half,
spurring a 7-2 run, before the Anteaters began their long climb back.
But UCI, paced by sophomore Mike Efevberha, who scored 23 of his
game-high 28 points in the second half, pulled even at 63, then again
at 72, before taking its first lead, 74-72, on a Greg Ethington
follow dunk with 7:57 left.
The two teams then traded leads before Efevberha, a 6-foot-5
swingman who averaged 5.0 points as a freshman with a high game of
17, finished the visitors off by scoring UCI’s final nine points in
the last 88 seconds.
Efevberha drove the lane for a bucket to give UCI an 87-86 lead
with 1:28 remaining, then answered an EA Sports putback with a
three-point play, on which he backed into the lane and sank an
eight-foot fallaway jumper while being fouled.
“Mike is pretty tough to guard when he gets [in deep],” Douglass
said. “We went to him [down the stretch]. He was impressive.”
Efevberha made a layup in transition, while the UCI coaches were
shouting from the bench to “Hold it!” with 23 seconds left for a
92-88 cushion.
But Chris McMillian netted EA Sports’ 14th three-pointer with 16
seconds left to pull within one.
Efevberha, who made 10 of 11 from the foul line, was fouled on the
ensuing inbounds play and converted both free throws with 15 ticks
left.
EA Sports’ desperation three-pointer sailed out of bounds with two
seconds left and UCI, with eight returning players from last year’s
20-9 unit, including three starters, mildly celebrated what could be
the first of many feel-good outcomes.
In addition to Efeverha, who came off the bench to finish 8 of 15
from the field, Douglass had praise for reserves Ross Schraeder (13
points) and Ethington (12 points and a team-high nine rebounds).
“Ross picked us up in the first half [11 points, including three
three-pointers], Efevberha played well down low and Ethington came in
and gave us some good defense,” said Douglass, who also lauded the
opponent.
“They came out making their threes in the first half,” Douglass
said. “They had some guys with a lot of talent. It was hard to tell
if it was us not playing well, or just them shooting well in the
first half. We had a problem stopping them.”
Douglass, however, said defensive intensity improved from his
team, which has developed a reputation in recent years for devouring
deficits in the final 20 minutes, particularly at home.
EA Sports shot 48.5% in the second half, including just 5 of 13
from threedom, to finish 32 of 62 (51.6%) for the game.
UCI shot 50% from the field after halftime and 45.6% for the game,
but sank 26 of 31 free throws (83.9%) and won the turnover battle,
18-10, committing just two in the second half.
Adam Parada, a 7-0 senior center, had 14 points and five rebounds
and fellow senior starter Stanislaus Zuzak was just 1 of 8 from the
field, en route to six points and five boards.
Sophomore point guard Jeff Gloger had six points, but led the team
with five assists and three steals, while senior starting forward
Matt Okoro chipped in nine points.
Former Utah standout Tony Harvey led five All-Stars in double
figures with 23 points.
ZOTS - The EA Sports Southwest All-Star team is one of five
representing the computer game company and playing exhibitions
against college teams. On the EA Sports Southeast roster is former
UCI standout Jordan Harris, as well as Estancia High product Kevin
Byrne, who played collegiately at Idaho. The Southeast team debuts
today at Penn State ... UCI Coach Pat Douglass was very familiar with
EA Southwest Coach Pete Cassidy. When Cassidy coached at Cal State
Northridge and Douglass at Cal State Bakersfield, both schools were
members of the California Collegiate Athletic Association.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.