Anteaters have one big appetite
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Barry Faulkner
With 66 wins and at least a share of two Big West Conference
regular-season championships the last three seasons, UC Irvine has
fully emerged from the nether world of men’s college basketball.
Now part of at least the regional discussion that follows a
mid-major disclaimer, Coach Pat Douglass’ Anteaters long for a
postseason seat at the grown-up table, otherwise known as the NCAA
tournament.
To that end, UCI, still stinging from an NIT snub after last
season’s 20-9 campaign, as well as three straight semifinal exits in
the Big West Conference tournament, has beefed up its schedule.
The Anteaters, boasting a blend of experience and promising
underclassmen, could face as many as five participants from last
year’s Big Dance. UCI, last year’s Big West regular-season runner-up,
opens the season Saturday at the Dell Black Coaches Association
Classic against Illinois-Chicago, which was 21-9 and played in the
NIT last season.
The eight-team BCA Classic also includes 2003 NCAA tournament
participants University of San Diego, a potential second-round foe,
and Xavier.
The Anteaters play host to Stanford (Nov. 25) and visit California
(Dec. 3), both of which lost in the second round of last year’s NCAA
tournament. UCI, of course, also battles Utah State, which won the
conference tournament to earn the Big West’s lone NCAA bid last
season. The Aggies are picked to finish second in this year’s
conference race, behind defending regular-season champion UC Santa
Barbara and ahead of UCI.
“This is definitely the most challenging schedule we have faced in
[my] seven years at UCI,” Douglass said of a slate that also includes
Bracket Buster Saturday (Feb. 21) against a mid-major power to be
determined.
But with three starters and eight players back who saw
considerable action last season, the Anteaters fully expect to live
up to the label of noteworthy opponent on every schedule on which
they appear.
“This is the first time in my seven years here we’ve had so many
seasoned players,” said Douglass, whose veteran cast includes 7-foot
senior center Adam Parada, a two-time second-team all-conference
performer who was named to CollegeInsider.com’s 25-man preseason
mid-major All-American team.
Parada averaged 12.2 points and 6.2 rebounds and led the Big West
by shooting 54.5% from the field last season. He is also UCI’s career
leader in blocked shots with 111 and is poised to move up the
school’s career list in scoring (currently 16th with 977 points) and
rebounding (10th with 598).
Though he has shown flashes of brilliance, Parada has, many
believe, lacked consistency and, to this point in his career, failed
to become the dominant inside presence his size and athleticism might
suggest.
“I don’t think Adam was pleased with his productivity last year,”
Douglass said of the player tabbed by Street & Smith as the Big
West’s best pro prospect. “But I’ve seen a different motivation on
his part and I know he wants to have a great senior year.”
One of many Anteaters who dedicated himself to off-season weight
training -- a point of emphasis with Douglass, who believes his team
was pushed around in last year’s semifinal conference tournament loss
to Utah State -- Parada has added 20 pounds of muscle after playing
at 240 last season.
Parada also gained valuable experience against top international
competition in August, averaging 4.9 points and 5.1 rebounds
representing Mexico in the FIBA Tournament of the Americas in Puerto
Rico.
And while Douglass would like to see more consistency and
production from Parada, he is not being counted upon to carry the
team.
“We have a lot of different guys who can score,” Douglass said.
“If Adam can provide a defensive presence by the bucket and block
shots, he’s going to help us win.”
Sophomore point guard Jeff Gloger also returns after a strong
redshirt freshman campaign in which he set a school record for steals
(75) and ranked 14th nationally with 2.6 thefts per game. He also
supplied efficiency and confidence, shooting 52.3% from the field (80
of 153), 51.9% from three-point distance (14 of 27) and committing 20
fewer turnovers (66) than assists.
The 6-4 Gloger averaged 8.2 points, 4.3 rebounds and nearly three
assists per game and he added seasoning by competing on a college
all-star team that toured Europe in August. He also put on 10 pounds
in the weight room.
“Last year, Jeff was a big surprise, especially the way he played
the passing lanes,” Douglass said of the Big West all-freshman
selection. “This year, we need Jeff to be more sound, fundamentally,
to make up for the loss of Jordan Harris and Mike Hood.”
Harris, a first-team all-conference pick as a senior, averaged a
team-leading 12.7 points last season.
Hood averaged 10.3 points and led the team with 54 three-pointers.
Helping fill the void left by Harris and Hood will be 6-5
sophomore Mike Efevberha, who has sparkled in the Anteaters’ two
exhibition wins. Efevberha averaged 5.0 points and shot just 35.9%
from the field while making the transition to the collegiate level
after a prolific prep career at Ganesha High in Pomona.
He scored a game-high 28 points in a 94-91 exhibition win over the
EA Sports Southwest All-Stars Nov. 1, then had a team-high 13 points
in 22 minutes in a 75-49 romp over Cal State Los Angeles, Nov. 6. He
made half of his 26 field-goal attempts in the two games.
Douglass believes Efevberha is ready for a breakout season.
“He can bounce it on you, post you up, or shoot the three,”
Douglass said.
Joining Efevberha and Gloger in the three-guard starting lineup is
6-5 sophomore Ross Shraeder, while 6-8 junior forward Greg Ethington
has, at least for the opener, replaced 6-11 senior returning starter
Stanislaus Zuzak in the lineup.
Schraeder’s 31 three-pointers last season were second-most on the
team and he converted 43.1% of his attempts from beyond the arc, en
route to averaging 4.3 points as a redshirt freshman.
Ethington averaged 3.6 points and 3.2 rebounds in 2002-03, his
first after serving a two-year church mission in Canada. Douglass
said the two-year layoff (missionaries are seldom allowed to devote
time to sports) hurt Ethington all last season, but he has already
shown he can help provide the inside presence the ‘Eaters will need
to achieve their goals.
Ethington collected 16 rebounds, nine offensive, and scored 18
points in 29 combined minutes during the exhibition season.
Zuzak, a native of the Czech Republic who turns 23 in February,
averaged 7.9 points and 2.7 rebounds as a junior, a decline from his
sophomore season in which he averaged 8.2 points and 3.8 rebounds.
Douglass believes Zuzak, who for the first time in his UCI career
lifted and did individual skill workouts on campus during the summer,
is ready to take a step up.
“He has played very well in preseason practice,” Douglass said at
the Nov. 5 conference media day.
Zuzak’s 73 career three-pointers rank 10th in school annals.
Senior Matt Okoro, a high-flying 6-7 senior forward, and 6-4
senior guard Aras Baskauskas should both contribute heavily off the
bench.
Okoro, whom Douglass calls the best team player on the squad,
could be a defensive demon. He averaged 5.1 points and 4.6 rebounds
as a junior and his energetic play and thundering two-handed dunks
have made him a crowd favorite.
Baskauskas, a graduate student who started the first two games of
last season, provides valuable depth at point guard. His defensive
intensity has also provided a spark throughout his career.
Nic Campbell, a 6-6 freshman sharpshooter from Australia, received
a medical redshirt for last season, when a back ailment limited him
to just three games and eight points.
A sprained ankle sidelined Campbell for both exhibition games, but
he is back at work and Douglass believes his three-point prowess will
come in handy off the bench.
Mark Hill a 6-5 freshman, was a star in football (18 touchdown
catches as a receiver, Douglass said) and basketball at Bishop Gorman
High in Las Vegas last year. He had five points and five rebounds in
20 combined exhibition minutes and Douglass believes Hill’s
athleticism and toughness give him a chance to contribute.
Junior J.R, Stephens and senior Ryan Snook, both walk-ons, round
out the active roster, while freshmen Jim Paullin, a 7-1 center from
Washington, and Patrick Sanders, a 6-6 forward from Orange High, are
slated to redshirt.
UCI opens the Big West season Jan. 3 at home against Cal Poly San
Luis Obispo.
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