Results tagged “Jeff Oliver” from College Sports CCAA
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By Michelle Gardner Oliver said he believed that Cal Poly Pomona was invited back to the CCAA vs. GNAC event with Cal State Stanislaus, traditionally a middle tier team, replacing the Coyotes. |
By Michelle Gardner
Staff Writer
LAS VEGAS - The last thing Cal State San Bernardino men's
basketball coach Jeff Oliver wanted was a shootout. His team has not
played well on the offensive end of the floor and opponent Central
Washington came in averaging 92.8 points.
It was indeed a shootout but only one team participated as the
Coyotes cruised past the Wildcats 83-60 Tuesday in the Great Western
Shootout at the Centennial Hills Center.
The defense was as tenacious as always. But it was one of the more
complete efforts for the No. 10 Coyotes this season as they hit 50.8
percent from the field and came within a point of their season high.
But the perfectionist in Oliver still came out despite the
comfortable win.
``It was a great defensive effort. For us to guard a team like that
and to limit them like we did was fantastic,'' he said.
``Offensively, we're doing better but it was far from good. Maybe I'm
just a nitpicker.''
The point total was a season low for the Wildcats (3-3) and matched
their season low of a year ago. It was also their least productive
outing since 2004 when they were held to 47 once.
The Coyotes forced 22 turnovers and held their foe to 34 percent
(16-for-47) from the field. Central had 24 points from the free-throw
line so they got just 36 from the field.
``I thought they were going to be better than that, just by the
numbers they were putting up,'' senior center Michael Earl said.
``But I guess you can contribute that to us playing well.''
Cal State blew the game open in the second half. It was even at 12
but the Coyotes tallied 10 of the next 12 points, surging out to a
24-14 lead on a driving layup by Marlon Pierce. The first half ended
with the same point differential, the Coyotes up 39-29.
The Coyotes started the second half the way they ended the first.
Reggie Brown hit a 3-pointer to give the Coyotes a 45-30 lead three
minutes into the second half and Steve Gaston drained one the next
trip down the floor to give Cal State a 48-30 lead that just got
bigger.
Oliver used 15 players and 12 of those scored. Earl led the way
with 19, on 8-for-9 shooting from the field despite being slowed this
week by the flu.
Pierce and Lance Ortiz also came up big. Pierce totaled 12 with
five assists, four rebounds and two steals while Ortiz managed 11
with seven assists and four steals. The Coyotes chalked up 21 assists
as a team.
There were also some big contributors off the bench as Philip Jones
grabbed seven rebounds. Gaston added seven points, five assists and
two steals.
All said the team came off Friday's 78-75 overtime loss to NAIA
Azusa Pacific more focused.
``We worked on passing the ball hard. We had gotten
lackadaisical and were not getting guys open,'' Ortiz said. ``We came
in here focused, ready to bounce back because we knew these were big
games.''
The Coyotes play their second game of the tournament at 5 tonight
against Western Washington (7-1) which turned back Cal Poly Pomona
73-64 earlier in the day. Western Washington's only loss this season
was to Cal State in the season opener played in Seattle.
By Michelle Gardner
Staff Writer
SAN BERNARDINO — The Cal State San Bernardino men put their unbeaten record and lofty state ranking on the line again tonight but this time they will do so against an unfamiliar foe.
NAIA contender Azusa Pacific will march into Coussoulis Arena for a 7:30 p.m. contest. While the game won’t factor into the all-important regional rankings since the Cougars (5-4) are not a Division II school, it is counted in the overall record used for national ranking purposes.
Coach Jeff Oliver won’t take this game any differently however.
“It may not count in the region but we’re not taking it any differently than a conference game,” he said. “We’re going to go out there and try to win, whether it takes playing 12 guys, or shortening the bench and playing eight.”
The No. 6 Coyotes (7-0) have been idle for the last two weeks but swept Monterey Bay and San Francisco State to start CCAA play on Nov. 30. The team has been solid on defense, allowing an average of just 58 points a game and forcing an average of 19 turnovers. Now Oliver and assistant Paul Trevor have been focusing on offense where the Coyotes have struggled a bit. The bright spot is that the team has not been beaten despite being inconsistent there.
“I thought we made a lot of progress there the last two games,” said Oliver, the most successful coach in the program’s history. “But we have to keep fine-tuning. Even though we have gotten through unscathed, we know we have tougher games ahead of us.”
Unlike in years past, Oliver has used the same starting lineup in six of the seven games. That quintet includes senior guards Lance Ortiz (13.3 ppg, 5.3 apg) and Marlon Pierce (9.7 ppg, 4.7 rpg, 4.4 apg), junior guard-forward Renardo Bass, senior forward David Reichel (7.7 ppg) and senior center Michael Earl (10.9 ppg, 5.9 rpg).
Junior guard Steve Gaston has provided a spark off the bench, scoring 15 in the Coyotes last contest.
The Coyotes will also be bolstered by the return of 6-foot-5 senior forward-center Joseph Tillman. He had only one quarter of eligibility remaining so he sat out the fall but is now able to play with the posting of grades this week.
Azuza Pacific, which competes in the Golden State Athletic Conference, is coming off a 29-7 mark in 2006-2007. They are just above .500 this season despite boasting a roster that includes five Division I bouncebacks.
Among those is Upland High School product Todd Martin (9.3 ppg, 4.7 rpg), a 6-7 senior forward who came over from Troy State after his sophomore year. Other key players are 6-5 senior Davon Roberts (13.3 ppg, 6 rpg), who played previously at Sacramento State, and 6-2 sophomore guard Mike Danielian (12.3 ppg), who moved over from Cal State Fullerton.
The Cougars are directed by first-year coach Justin Leslie who had been the top assistant the last five years and played for that head coach Bill Odell.
“Anyone that thinks this is going to be an easy game because it isn’t a CCAA school is wrong,” Oliver said. “They play in a very good conference. Those top teams are just as good as the better teams in ours.”
The Coyotes will then turn their attention back to Division II play with games Tuesday and Wednesday against Central Washington and Western Washington in the Great West Shootout in Las Vegas.
The next three games will not be aired on radio but are available on the Internet through the Coyotes athletic websight at http://athletics.csusb.edu.
