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Men's Basketball Hosts Eastern Michigan On Bracket Buster Saturday

Men's Basketball Hosts Eastern Michigan On Bracket Buster Saturday

Feb. 17, 2004

Contact: Brian McCann

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GAME 26

Bracket Buster Saturday Eastern Michigan (10-11) at Cleveland State (4-21)

Date: Saturday, Feb. 21, 2004

Time: 5:30 p.m. EST

Site: Goodman Arena (13,610) CSU Convocation Center

TV: None

Radio: WKNR, 850 AM (Frank DeMarco)

Series: EMU Leads, 20-9

Last CSU 75, EMU 61 Meeting: Dec. 9, 1992 in Cleveland

Sponsor: Fat Fish Blue

Promo: Fan Appreciation Night

Senior Night

Doubleheader Night (CSU women play Detroit at 3 p.m.)

Tickets: $8, $10 & $12

Single game tickets for all Viking home games are currently available at the CSU Convocation Ticket Office or by contacting Ticketmaster.

The Coaches: * Mike Garland (Northern Michigan '77) At CSU: 1st year (4-21) Overall: 1st year (4-21)

Garland served as an assistant coach at Michigan State for seven years (1996-03), helping the Spartans to six straight NCAA appearances. He worked with teams that went to the NCAA Final Four in 1999, 2000 and 2001, winning the national championship in 2000. His MSU squads amassed a 173-62 record (.736), winning four Big Ten regular season and two Big Ten tournament titles.

EASTERN MICHIGAN

* JIM BOONE (West Virginia State '71) At EMU: 13-36 (2nd year) Overall: 286-173 (16th year)

SETTING THE SCENE: Cleveland State (4-21) takes a final break from the conference slate to take part in the second annual Bracket Buster Saturday. Forty-six teams from 11 different conferences are taking part in the event with the Vikings hosting Eastern Michigan (10-11) on Saturday, Feb. 21 beginning at 5:30 p.m. in the CSU Convocation Center. Senior's Jermaine Robinson and Pape Badiane, who will be playing their final game in the Convocation Center, will be saluted in a ceremony before the game. The game will serve as Fan Appreciation Night with every fan in attendance receiving a promotional giveaway and over $20,000 in prizes being awarded. The contest is also part of a doubleheader with the CSU women's basketball team hosting Detroit beginning at 3:00 p.m.

CLEVELAND STATE PROBABLE STARTERS 2003-04 Statistics F 5 Omari Westley, 6-7, 205, Jr., Cleveland, Ohio 15.5 pts, 8.6 reb, 2.1 ast F 42 Pape Badiane, 6-11, 220, Sr., Les Ulis, France. 6.0 pts, 5.5 reb, 2.6 blk C 33 Pete Ritzema, 7-2, 300, Jr., Clarkston, Mich. 2.1 pts, 1.9 reb, 0.3 blk G 1 Jermaine Robinson, 6-2, 180, Sr., Philadelphia, Pa. 19.8 pts, 5.0 reb, 2.7 ast G 3 Victor Morris, 6-0, 175, Fr., Inkster, Mich. 5.9 pts, 2.2 reb, 1.9 ast

PREVIEWING EMU: The Eagles (10-11) begin the week as one of the hottest teams in the Mid-American Conference, winning four of its last six games to combat a slow start in league play. EMU hosts Buffalo on Wednesday night. The strength of the Eagle lineup is their balance as four players average in double figures. The starting trio of senior James "Boo" Jackson (11.3 ppg, 7.7 rpg), junior Markus Austin (12.8, 3.3) and sophomore John Bowler (13.5, 8.0) gives EMU one of the toughest frontlines in the MAC with swingman JaQuan Hart coming off the bench to average 10.4 points a game. The Eagles shoot .467 from the field to lead the MAC but are just 11th with a .345 three-point field goal shooting percentage. Defensively, EMU ranks 11th (out of 13) with a .458 field goal defense.

PREVIEWING THE VIKINGS: The Vikings find themselves in a precarious position, owning a 4-21 record. CSU has lost 19 straight games going back to mid-December and injuries and other problems have left first-year head coach Mike Garland with just seven relatively healthy and eligible scholarship players. CSU has gotten steady play from senior guard Jermaine Robinson, who has led the team in scoring in 15 games and averages 19.8 points a game, the second highest total in the league. Omari Westley, a junior college transfer who has shaken off the rust from a year off to average 15.5 points and leads the league with 8.6 rebounds a game, has been even better in league play, averaging 16.9 points and 8.4 rebounds.

CSU IN THE NCAA STATS: The Vikings received a single mention in the latest NCAA statistics, which were released on Feb. 10. Senior Jermaine Robinson was 29th in the nation in scoring (19.9 ppg). The statistics will be released by the NCAA every Tuesday through the end of the season.

A POSSESSION HERE, A POSSESSION THERE: In his comments to the media following the Butler game, Mike Garland indicated that his team could not give possessions away. No words could be truer. Ten of the games during CSU's current 19-game losing streak have been decided by a total of 29 points including six by two points or less.

Margin (# of Games) Opponents 1-point (2): at UW-Green Bay, Butler 2-points (4): at Akron, at Boston University, YSU, UW-Green Bay 3-points (1): vs. Drake 4-points (1): at Youngstown State 5-points (1): Wright State 7-points (1): Loyola

. . . AND THE BUZZER-BEATERS HAVE BEEN KILLERS: Losing close games is one thing. How CSU has lost the close games has been especially painful as seven games have been decided by three-points or less with the Vikings having a chance to tie or win the game in the last 10 seconds of each contest. A blow-by-blow look at the buzzer heartbreakers follows:

Akron 59-61 Zips score winning basket with five seconds left at Boston Univ. 62-64 Ryan Butt makes two-of-three free throws with 2.7 seconds left. vs. Drake 80-83 CSU rallies from 11 down with 3 minutes left but last-second shot doesn't fall. at UWGB 69-70 Robinson's last-second shot rims out from 20 feet. Youngstown St. 59-61 Two Penguin offensive rebounds in last 43 seconds deny CSU of last-second shot. UW-Green Bay 58-60 Rohde breaks tie with basket with 4.1 seconds left. Butler 56-57 Mike Monserez hits winning 12-footer with :00.1 left.

A SENIOR SALUTE: The Eastern Michigan game will serve as Senior Night as Viking seniors Jermaine Robinson and Pape Badiane will be honored in a pre-game ceremony. Robinson ranks ninth in CSU history with 1,335 points while Badiane, a three-year regular in the lineup, is third with 127 career blocks.

VIKINGS HAVE TIES TO EASTERN MICHIGAN & YPSILANTI: Although Eastern Michigan and Cleveland State haven't met on the hardwood in almost 12 years, several Vikings are more than familiar with the Eagles. Head coach Mike Garland was born and raised in Ypsilanti, Mich., attending high school in nearby Belleville, Mich. He began his coaching career at Belleville High in 1987, remaining at the school until leaving for Michigan State in 1996. Lee Reed, who is in his second year as director of athletics at CSU, worked at Eastern Michigan from 1995-2002, starting as director of ticket operation in 1995 and eventually serving as assistant to the president (1996-98) and associate athletic director (1998-02).

RITZEMA CELEBRATES A START: With Patrick Tatham out with a knee injury, Mike Garland inserted Pete Ritzema into the starting lineup against Butler, allowing the junior to start for the second time in his career and the first time this year. Ritzema responded by scoring a career-high 13 points, on six-for-eight shooting, while adding a career-high-equalling five rebounds. He scored seven of CSU's first nine points of the game. He surpassed his previous best of nine points set against Detroit last year. Ritzema started again vs. UIC on Saturday, scoring two points with four rebounds.

BADIANE'S BACK: Senior center Pape Badiane returned to the lineup on Feb. 5 after missing 11 games with a broken right hand that he suffered in the opening moments of the Dec. 29 game against Georgia Southern at the Islander Classic. Badiane, who had surgery on Jan. 2, returned to practice on Feb. 2 for limited participation and played 22 minutes against UW-Green Bay. He scored two points with seven rebounds and four blocks. He moved into the starting lineup against Detroit, scoring eight points in 30 minutes.

. . . BUT TATHAM IS OUT: The return of Pape Badiane to the lineup afforded freshman center Patrick Tatham the opportunity to take himself out of the lineup in order to get a painful knee injury corrected. Tatham has been playing with considerable pain since the condition flared up just before Christmas but has battled to play no less than 20 minutes in each of his last 20 games. Tatham had surgery on the knee on Friday (Feb. 13) and will miss the remainder of the season. He started 14 of the 23 games he played in, averaging 3.8 points and 4.7 rebounds a game.

BADIANE IS BACK AFTER THE BLOCKED SHOT LEAD: It is almost like the story of the tortoise and the hare. Pape Badiane blocks 27 shots in the first 10 games to open a huge lead on the Horizon League blocked shots chart, only to sit out 11 games with a broken hand. The rest of the league finally caught up with Badiane in early February when Loyola's Louis Smith and Demetrius Williams passed his early season total. With the blocked shot lead out of his hands for the first time in over a year, Badiane returned to the lineup on Feb. 5 and blocked nine shots in his first four games to regain the lead. In 14 games, Badiane is averaging 2.57 blocks per game, well ahead of Smith (35 blocks in 24 games, 1.46) and Williams (29, 22, 1.32).

A BAD BREAK: When senior center Pape Badiane broke his right hand in the opening minutes of the Georgia Southern game on Dec. 29, it not only caused the Vikings to lose one of the top defensive players in the conference, but it gave CSU a totally different look on the court. In the nine games leading up to the injury, CSU used its interior defense to lead the Horizon League with 55 blocked shots, a +7.8 rebounding margin and a .390 field goal defense (223-572) while allowing 71.9 points a game. In the 12 games without him following the injury, the Vikings were outrebounded, 409-395 (-1.2) and blocked just 26 shots. An even more significant stat was that CSU's opponents shot .486 from the field (319-657) and averaged 76.3 points a game. Only one of CSU's first nine opponents shot above .431 from the field, a figure that was achieved in all but two games with Badiane out of the lineup.

. . . AND THE SURVEY SAYS: With Pape Badiane playing over 20 minutes in each of the last four games, it is pertinent to see which set of statistics held true from the note above. In the four games, the Vikings blocked 18 shots (4.5 bpg) and were out-rebounded, 136-115. The three opponents shot .449 from the field (96-214).

ROBINSON THREE-POINT STREAKS COME TO AN END: An 0-for-7 shooting performance from three-point against Youngstown State on Jan. 24 brought to an end a pair of record-setting shooting streaks for senior Jermaine Robinson. By failing to make a three-pointer for the first time, Robinson now holds a share of two records for consecutive games making a three-pointer. He shares the record of 18 consecutive games with a trey in one season with Greg Allen (1991-92) and his 19 straight games going back to last year equals William Stanley's mark originally set from Feb. of 1989 through Jan. of 1990. Robinson has started a new streak, making treys in each of the last six games, giving him at least one three-pointer in 24 of the 25 games this year.

VIKING MASH UNIT: When the Vikings opened the season on Nov. 22nd, they featured one of the biggest and deepest front lines in the country. That depth has suddenly disappeared somewhere in the training room as just about every Viking player on the front line has missed time with some ailment. They are:

Pete Ritzema: Missed eight games with three different injuries this year, the latest being a bad back that has kept him out of six games and slowed him in three others. In the first 24 games, he played in just 15 contests, totalling 93 minutes.

Pape Badiane: The Vikings' starting center missed 11 games with a broken right hand suffered vs. Georgia Southern on Dec. 29. He returned to the court and played over 20 minutes in the last four games.

Patrick Tatham: The freshman, who has started 14 games at center, will miss the rest of the season after surgery on Feb. 13. He played for over six weeks with considerable pain caused by tendonitis in his knee.

Amadou Koundoul: Hasn't fully come back from off-season surgery to alleviate tendonitis in his knee and the condition continues to limit him this year. He has played just 95 minutes in the last 11 games, missing the UW-Green Bay because of the problem.

Walt Waters: Missed both games at the Islander Classic following a death in his family and is sidelined for the remainder of the year because he did not meet institutional academic eligibility standards.

Walt Chavis: Okay, he's not a post-player but the starter for the Vikings at point guard in the first 18 games has sat out the last seven contests with a broken hand.

WESTLEY RESOLVES TO BE MORE PRODUCTIVE: It is almost as if junior Omari Westley sat down on New Year's Eve and decided that one of his resolutions for the new year would be to be more aggressive on the basketball court in 2004. Already one of the leaders in the Horizon League in most statistical categories, Westley has raised his game to a new level in the 14 games in January and February. He scored a then-league season best 30 points against Loyola on Jan. 5 and is averaging 16.9 points and 8.4 rebounds a game since the new year. That is a considerable improvement from the 13.7 points he averaged in the 11 games in 2003.

HERE'S TO YOU, MR. ROBINSON: No player has benefitted more from the change in offensive philosophy this year than senior Jermaine Robinson. Robinson has led the team in scoring 16 times, posting a league-best 14 games of 20 points or more. He is second in the Horizon League with a 19.8 scoring average, quite a jump from the 10.5 points he averaged a year ago. He has scored in double figures in every game, tallying 19 points or more 19 times. His ability to penetrate and score has led to him attempting a league-leading 7.8 free throws a game (194 total). His 25 points against UIC on Feb. 14 was his 24th career game of 20 points or more.

VIKINGS REBOUND TO REBOUND: The Vikings have done a complete 180 degree turnaround on the glass this season. Last year, CSU was out-rebounded by an average of 3.8 boards a game to rank eighth in the Horizon League. Through 24 games this year, CSU ranks third in the Horizon League with a +1.6 rebounding margin, including a rebounding edge in 13 games. Included in that total are six games of +10 or more, including a dominating 56-31 rebounding advantage at Norfolk State. Rebounding has been a critical statistic in games this year. In the Vikings' four wins this year, CSU has outrebounded its opponents 202-134, a margin of +17.0 rebounds a game. In the 21 losses, the Vikings have been outboarded, 745-719 (-1.2).

ROBINSON READY CONTINUES CLIMB UP SCORING CHART: A 12-point effort against Butler on Feb. 12 allowed senior Jermaine Robinson to move into ninth place on the CSU career scoring chart. He enters the Eastern Michigan game with 1,335 points. Against Butler, Robinson passed Jamaal Harris (1998-02), who totalled 1,304 points in his career and ninth-place Dave Youdath (1980-84), who has 1,306 points. He now needs 68 points to pass eighth place Eric Mudd (1985-88), who scored 1,402 points. Robinson is one of 16 players in CSU history to score 1,000 career points.

40-MINUTE MAN: Senior Jermaine Robinson loves media timeouts. He has to because they are pretty much the only breaks that he gets during a game. Over the last 20 games, Robinson is averaging 38.2 minutes a game (it would be higher except he missed eight minutes because of injury vs. Youngstown State), including 40-minute efforts against Boston University (12/22), Wright State (1/8), Detroit (1/19), Youngstown State (1/24), UW-Green Bay (2/5) and Detroit (2/7). He was the first Viking to play 40 minutes in a game that wasn't decided in overtime since Jamaal Harris went wire-to-wire against Detroit in the final game of the 2001-02 season. He has now played 35 minutes or more 39 times during his career, including in 16 of the last 17 games and 20 times in 25 contests this year. He has played 40 minutes or more in a game (counting OT) eight times in his career. Robinson played a career-high 43 minutes in an OT game against California last year and 41 minutes in an OT contest against Florida State as a freshman in 2000-01.

. . . ROBINSON ISN'T THE ONLY VIKING TO GO THE DISTANCE: The depth problems that CSU has had during the second half of the season has led four different Vikings to play all 40 minutes in a game this year. Robinson leads the way with six 40-minute games this year. Walt Chavis played 40 minutes at UIC while Omari Westley and Victor Morris joined the group with 40-minute efforts at Butler on Jan. 29.

. . . THE MINUTES FOR MORRIS INCREASE: The loss of Percell Coles and Walt Chavis has led to an increase in the playing time for Victor Morris as well. Morris has played 30 minutes or more in nine of the last 10 games, averaging 36.0 minutes over that span. He played a full 40 minutes at Butler on Jan. 29.

GIVING CHARITY: Although the Vikings have been to the free throw line 569 times this year, CSU is being outscored by its opponents at the stripe. In 25 games, Vikings opponents have attempted 583 charity tosses and own a 413-372 scoring edge from the line. CSU opponents are converting at a .708 clip, which is well ahead of the Vikings' .654 percentage. The difference has come recently as CSU has shot more free throws then its opponents only five times in the 16 games since Christmas, being outscored 267-189 over that span.

ACCEPTING CHARITY: Along with the outrageous team free throw shooting numbers come some pretty hefty individual free throw totals as well. The tandem of Jermaine Robinson (196 attempts) and Omari Westley (158) rank first and third, respectively in the Horizon League in free throw attempts. Wright State's Vernard Hollins ranks second with 162 attempts. Five different CSU players have combined to attempt at least eight free throws in a game 27 times for CSU this year. Westley made 14-of-18 free throws against Florida A&M, the sixth-highest single game total for attempts while ranking fourth for makes. Robinson opened the year by making 14 free throws in 17 attempts against Central State.

THE O-SHOW IS A SMASH HIT: The first 25 games of the collegiate career of Omari Westley have been nothing short of outstanding. He has scored in double figures 21 times with nine double-figure rebounding efforts. He leads the Horizon League in rebounding (8.6) and double-doubles (7) while leading the team in field goal percentage (.494) and is second in free throw percentage (117-158, .741) and scoring (15.5). His accomplishments include: * Records third straight double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds in season-opening win over Central State. * Leads comeback from 11-point deficit at Florida A&M, scoring 15 of his 18 points after the break - including 13 straight free throws. * Scored a career-high 20 points against North Carolina, adding 11 rebounds and six assists. * Had 11 points and a 12 rebounds at Norfolk State. * Scores 19 points with a career-high 14 rebounds (10 offensive) and three blocks against Akron. * Explodes for a career-high 30 points vs. Loyola on Jan. 5. He makes 12-of-18 field goal attempts with 13 rebounds. * Comes back against Wright State on Jan. 8 to post his second straight 20-point game, tallying 21 points with nine rebounds, shooting 7-of-9 from the field and 7-of-8 from the line. * 20 points, on eight-for-11 shooting from the field, his fourth career 20-point game. * Scored 14 points with 11 rebounds vs. Youngstown State. * Tallies 19 points with 12 rebounds against Butler, his league-leading seventh double-double of the year.

ROBINSON PLAYS IN HIS 100TH CAREER CONTEST: Jermaine Robinson reached a career milestone against Wright State on Jan. 8, playing in his 100th career game as a Viking. He enters the weekend having started 94 of the 111 games during his career, totalling 3,152 minutes. His 39-minute effort against Butler on Feb. 12 allowed him to move into seventh place on the career minutes played list, passing both Craig Caldwell (3,102 minutes) and Dave Youdath (3,111). Next up is sixth-place Eric Mudd, who played 3,175 minutes.

A SHOT-BLOCKING FAMILY: The shot-blocking performance by Pape Badiane this year should not be surprise. After all, blocking shots is a trait that is shared by his younger brother, Moussa, who is a junior at East Carolina. Moussa Badiane has blocked 69 shots in the Pirates' 21 games this year (3.3 bpg), giving him 218 blocks in his career. Moussa Badiane ranked 14th nationally in blocked shots last week while Pape Badiane's 2.57 blocks per game would have been 19th had he played in the required 75% of CSU's games.

BLEDSOE GAINS NATIONAL NOTICE: It is the goal of every young assistant coach to gain national acclaim for his performance and first year Viking assistant Sean Bledsoe has done just that. In the latest Fashion Power Index, which is compiled by Angela Lento for CollegeInsiders.com, Bledsoe is ranked as the ninth-best dressed assistant in the country. Lento writes, "This sharp-young understudy is in his first season at Cleveland State, but he brings a wealth of coaching AND clothier experience to CSU. Bledsoe, who had success as a head coach at Wilberforce University, is smooth." Bledsoe disputes the ranking. "Ninth? The blue jacket and slacks combo that I wore for the Butler game is definitely worthy of being ranked much higher but mid-major assistants never get their proper due," Bledsoe said. "I'll have to turn my wardrobe up for the rest of the season."

VIKINGS INK ONE ON SIGNING DAY: The Vikings received an added bonus on Nov. 12 when Rockford (Mich.) High standout Mike Redell signed a national letter of intent to attend CSU and play basketball beginning next fall. Redell, a 6-1 point guard, is ranked as the No. 2 point guard in Michigan this year while also being tabbed as the best defender in the state by Prep Spotlight. He is coming off a junior campaign which saw him earn first team all-state honors from the Associated Press after helping his team to win the state title and, in the process, become only the second Class A squad to go undefeated in state history (28-0). He averaged 14.3 points and 4.8 assists per game, shooting 42 percent from three-point (80-191) and 72 percent from the line (82-114).

TAKING ATTENDANCE: The crowd of 11,534 that attended the North Carolina game was the second-largest crowd to see a Viking game in the Convocation Center. It trails the record 13,055 who saw CSU open the building against Michigan on Dec. 7, 1991. The crowd ranks as the fourth-largest crowd to see a Viking game in Cleveland. Crowds of 15,314 (vs. Rhode Island in 1998-99) and 12,617 (vs. Ohio State in 1994-95) saw CSU play games in the Gatorade Rock-N-Roll Shootout at Gund Arena.

LOOKING AHEAD: The Vikings close out the 2003-04 regular season with road games at Loyola (Feb. 26) and UW-Milwaukee (Feb. 28).