Oliver, Coyotes reload for next run

Well the Cal State San Bernardino men’s basketball program has announced the first wave of newcomers set to join the fold in th fall. Like all signing classes, it looks good on paper.

All four are transfers, as is usually the case at Cal State. Coach Jeff Oliver is particularly high on 6-foot-7 forward Brandon Brown, a native of New Orleans who comes to the Coyotes via Holmes Community College in Mississippi.

Of course whevever you’re talking big men and Cal State, you have to think of Ivan Johnson, the behemoth Division I bounceback from Oregon that led the Coyotes to the Division national semifinal in 2007. Johnson had great agility for a guy 6-7 and 250 pounds but he didn’t always rebound like a guy that size should. And he was a little rough around the edges as they say.

Johnson, who played last season in the NBA’s D-League, was intimidating. But Oliver said Brown is more of a true scorer and has great moves around the basket. That is something the Coyotes lacked last season.

Other newcomers are Larry DeHughes, a 6-4 junior guard out of Fullerton College. I saw that team play a couple of times against the locals but they had lots of stars so I can’t say I remember him.

Then there’s Lawrence Tyson, a 6-2 point guard out of Northeastern Junior College in Colorado. He also played at Cal State Northridge. With Omar Krayem, a highly touted player who redshirted last year, leaving – Tyson could land a starting spot.

And lastly, Michael Frazier, a transfer from Northern Colorado who also isn’t totally unfamiliar with Southern California having played a year at Mt. San Jacinto JC.

Oliver still has a couple of scholarships available and always seems to come up with a gem in September. This looks like a good start but a few pieces are still missing, especially since the Coyotes graduated seven players, four of them full-time starters.

There are also a few question marks, one of them the availability of Renardo Bass, who started some games. He never seemed to have an impressive line, but did all the little things well and came up with some huge plays when needed. Bass, who has overcome multiple hardships in his life, has fallen behind academically and has a long way to go to be eligible.

But Oliver will have a contender come November. That always seems to be the case.

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Cal State names full-time softball coach

By Michelle Gardner

Staff Writer

Tacy Duncan’s job just got a lot easier.

Trying to compete in one of the premier conferences in the country was tough enough. And when Duncan took over three years ago the program was the conference doormat.

She did that while holding down a full-time job in the Alvord Unified School District in Riverside. Then a year ago motherhood factored into the mix as she gave berth to twins.

But the load has been lightened considerably as Duncan’s position has been elevated to full time. She becomes the first full-time coach in the 11-year history of the program.

The school had planned on making the full-time appointment last year but the timing wasn’t right so it was put on hold until this year.

Duncan had to go through the interview process all over again with job having to be advertised, even though she had done a stellar job in her three years as a part-time coach, highlighted by her selection as CCAA coach of the year by her peers.

She was still the best person for the job.

“We got a good pool of applicants,” Cal State athletic director Kevin Hatcher said. “But I think much of the reason for that was the success she had last year and the recognition she brought to our program. We couldn’t not look at what she has been able to do in a short time.”

The Coyotes are coming off their best season in school history. Cal State went 36-32 overall (17-13 in CCAA play), advancing to the postseason for the first time ever. They also advanced to the Division II West Region, before being eliminated by Humboldt State which went on to win the national championship.

That was a significant improvement over the 2007 season in which the Coyotes were sixth in the conference and 27-27 overall.

The team went 21-32 in Duncan’s first year and that represented a 10-win improvement over the previous year.

To put the progress in perspective, the Coyotes were a combined 38-129 overall and 24-70 in conference play the three seasons before Duncan took over.

Hatcher said he expects the program to continue to grow, thanks in part to the Western Interchange Program adopted by the school for the coming calendar year. The program gives all students from the western part of the country in-state tuition. That should make it easier for coaches to lure in top talent from out of the area.

“I see how well she has done evaluating talent,” he said. “I can’t imagine how much better she will do with more time to do it.”

But Hatcher said the school will still stick to its core area for the majority of its players.

“We have great talent in this area,” he said. “There is no reason we shouldn’t get the bulk of our players from around here.”

Duncan earned her bachelor’s degree in education from the University of Mary in North Dakota where she also earned All-American honors as a player. She got a master’s in counseling from the University of Redlands while serving as an assistant coach from 2002 to 2005.

Seven of the Coyotes 11 head coaches are full time. The exceptions are women’s tennis coach Heather Lehman, women’s water polo coach Tom Finwall, women’s cross country coach Tom Burleson and men’s golf coach Tom Mainez.

Hatcher said he would eventually like to have the other four coaches at full-time status as well.

“I’m asking them to go out there and win conference titles and it’s hard for me to look them in the face and ask them to do it when this is their second job.”

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Cal State baseball program adds three

The Cal State San Bernardino baseball team signed three players,
all of them Inland Empire products and familiar names to local
enthusiasts.

Leading the trio is right-handed pitcher Andrew Schile out of A.B.
Miller High School and Chaffey College. Joining him are Riverside
Community College infielder Cody Madison and Upland Christian’s Ethan
Chapman.

Schile posted a 9-3 record for the Foothill Conference champion
Panthers in 2008. He posted a 2.94 ERA with 46 strikeouts in 64
innings and limited opposing hitters to an overall batting average of
.212. He was chosen conference pitcher of the year.

Madison, out of Moreno Valley, batted .329 for the Tigers. He had
two home runs, 32 RBI and a .419 on-base percentage on a team that
went 34-20 and made it to the state championship tournament. He had a
.976 fielding percentage.

Chapman had an impressive high school career. He earned
all-league four times and was an all-CIF Southern Section selection
twice, as well as prep all-America.

He was the 2007 CIF player of the year in his division as Upland
Christian won the section championship and was the Arrowhead League
offensive player of the year in 2007 and 2008. He batted .685 as a
senior with eight home runs, 74 RBI and 30 stolen bases in 33
attempts.

Chapman led his team to a 19-11 season (12-0 in league) and a
second straight appearance in the CIF championship game. In his 92 at
bats over 30 games, he had 63 hits, 16 doubles, 10 triples and a
slugging percentage 1.337. His on-base percentage was .723. He plays
for the Southern California Bombers in travel ball.

The Coyotes graduated 16 seniors, including the bulk of their
pitching staff. Earlier this spring head coach Don Parnell signed
pitchers Dan Stenavich (all-Southern California first-team selection)
and Jorge Dryjanski from Pacific Coast Conference champion
Southwestern College along with lefthanders Kevin McLaughry and
Garret Nelson from Grossmont College.

Other recruits to date are Aaron Brooks, an all-CIF and all-area
pitcher-infielder from Cajon; Andrew Harrison, a slugging first
baseman from Riverside’s Norte Vista; Matt Winn, an outfielder from
Canyon Springs HS; Darren Dworak, an infielder from Damien and Ken
Othman, a catcher from Riverside’s Martin Luther King.

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