Mustangs end UCI season
Barry Faulkner
After the final buzzer sounded and he congratulated the victors, UC
Irvine senior Aras Baskasuskas shuffled, shoulders slumped, head
down, to the locker room. He moved slowly, as if delaying his arrival
would somehow defer the reality that the season, and the career of he
and four senior teammates, was over.
What began as a season of great promise, indeed, is history for
the Anteaters, after host Cal Poly San Luis Obispo earned a 70-62 Big
West Conference men’s basketball victory Saturday before a sellout
crowd of 3,032 at Mott Gymnasium.
The win lifted the Mustangs (11-15, 6-12 in conference) into an
eighth-place tie with UCI (11-17, 6-12) and Cal Poly, which by virtue
of sweeping a UC Riverside team that split with UCI, owned the
tiebreaker advantage to claim the final berth in the eight-team
conference tournament that begins next week at the Anaheim Convention
Center.
“It’s a terrible feeling of disappointment for everyone involved,”
said UCI sophomore Jeff Gloger, who did not start for only the second
time all season as Coach Pat Douglass tried to empower his top four
seniors by inserting them into the starting five.
“I told them, ‘OK, this is your shot,’ “Douglass said of seniors
Adam Parada, Stanislav Zuzak, Matt Okoro and Baskauskas, who joined
sophomore Ross Schraeder to open the game.
It was, however, Cal Poly seniors Varnie Dennis, Shane Schilling
and Eric Jackson, who were honored in pregame senior night
festivities, that provided the kind of veteran play that coaches
thoroughly appreciate.
Dennis amassed 27 points and eight rebounds, both game highs,
while Schilling added 14 points and seven boards and Jackson chipped
in eight points and five assists.
“I haven’t seen that kind of spring in Varnie’s step in awhile,”
said Cal Poly Coach Kevin Bromley, who has seen his 6-foot-8 post
limp through conference play with knee and ankle ailments.
“And I thought Shane played really hard. I’m happy for all my
kids, but it was a storybook night for the seniors.” Dennis,
Schilling and Jackson all received standing ovations as they exited
the game in the final seconds, while Irvine was left to ponder what
went wrong this season.
“What I can surmise about our season and what I can share with [a
reporter] are two different things,” said Douglass, who praised Cal
Poly’s intensity, effort and execution Saturday.
“Varnie played very well, they dominated us inside and we couldn’t
convert at our end,” Douglass said. “[Cal Poly’s play] is what you
want out of your seniors on senior night.” The Anteaters, who finish
1-11 on the road this season, including nine straight losses away
from home, used an 11-0 run to take a 30-27 lead with 2:38 left in
the first half.
But the hosts closed the half on a 7-0 run, to hold a 34-30
intermission advantage. The Mustangs then opened the second half with
a 7-2 spurt and when Dennis’ overhead left-handed hook banked in with
12:25 left in the game, he and Schilling had combined to produce 16
of the team’s first 17 second-half points (10 by Dennis) to widen the
led to 52-42.
UCI, led by Schraeder’s 18 points, including four three-pointers,
eventually closed to within 59-54 with 7:15 left. But the visitors
could not maintain any accuracy from three-point range (hitting just
3 of 12 three-point tries in the second half) to finish just 21 for
55 from the field (38.2%).
Cal Poly shot 49% from the field (25 of 51) and had just 12
turnovers to the Anteaters’ 17.
Schraeder also expounded on the disappointing season that followed
three consecutive 20-win campaigns. Those three seasons included two
regular-season conference titles and a runner-up finish in the Big
West.
“We had high expectations for this season, but we just didn’t get
it done. It’s really disappointing.”
ZOTS -- With seven rebounds Saturday, senior Adam Parada increased
his career total to 775. He moved past Mike Heckman (1966-69) into
sole possession of the No. 3 spot on the school’s career list. Parada
has 1,320 points to rank No. 8 in UCI annals and is the school’s
career leader in blocked shots with 149-plus ... Senior Stanislav
Zuzak finished his career with 108 three-pointers, the eighth most in
school history, and sophomore Jeff Gloger enters next season with 135
steals, 27 behind career leader Jerry Green (1998-2002) ... With 11
road losses this season, only the 1998-99 (13) and the 1996-97 (14)
UCI teams have lost more in a single season in the 27 seasons since
the school has competed in Division I ... UCI was denied its fifth
straight trip to the Big West Tournament ... UCI Coach Pat Douglass
completed his third losing season in 23 seasons as a four-year head
coach. He is now 106-94 in seven seasons at the Anteaters’ helm...
UCI’s average home attendance this season in 11 games was 2,768,
fourth best in the conference and an increase from last year’s 2,596
average in nine home games... UCI’s six home wins this season tied
the fewest in Douglass’ tenure (matching the 1998-99 team) ... UC
Santa Barbara Coach Bob Williams said after the Gauchos’ win Thursday
over UCI he believed there were “three surprising teams in the Big
West this season: [University of the] Pacific with where it is [tied
for first place heading into Saturday], UCI and us. And UCI and us
are the opposite surprise from UOP ... Saturday’s starting five of
Parada, Zuzak, Matt Okoro, Aras Baskauskas and Ross Schraeder was the
‘Eaters’ 11th different lineup this season.
*--*
Big West Conference
Cal Poly SLO 70, UC Irvine 62
UC Irvine - Zuzak 5, Okoro 8, Parada 12, Schraeder 19, Baskauskas 0, Gloger 5, Campbell 5, Ethington 8. 3-pt. goals - Schraeder 4, Gloger 1, Campbell 1. Fouled out - Schraeder. Technicals - None. Cal Poly SLO - Schilling 14, Enzweiler 11, Dennis 27,
Gray 9, Jackson 8, Manley 1. 3-pt. goal - Gray 2, Dennis 1, Schilling 1, Enzweiler 1. Fouled out - None. Technicals - None. Halftime - Cal Poly SLO, 34-30.
*--*
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