Barrage of Montana threes spells doom for Hornets
By John Schumacher -
[email protected]
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Sometimes playing pick your poison leaves a bad taste in your mouth.
Sacramento State basketball coach Jerome Jenkins hoped an active zone defense would keep the ball away from Montana's two big men, 6-foot-9 Jordan Hasquet and 6-8 Andrew Strait, Saturday night in the Hornets Nest.
Although that strategy had some success, it left the Hornets vulnerable on the perimeter. The Grizzlies took advantage, connecting on 9 of 20 three-point shots en route to a 76-69 Big Sky Conference win.
Montana guards Cameron Rundles and Ryan Staudacher each contributed a trio of three-pointers, guard Matt Martin had two long-distance baskets, and Hasquet tossed in a three-pointer to help the Grizzlies improve to 1-2 in the Big Sky and 7-9 overall.
"That's an NCAA-caliber team," said Sacramento State junior guard Loren Leath, whose 19 points, six rebounds and four steals weren't enough to prevent the Hornets from falling to 1-4 and 3-12.
"They can score from the outside, and, remember, they've got Hasquet and Strait down low. Those guys are good."
Hasquet finished with 19 points and 11 rebounds, and Strait had 13 points and 12 rebounds. Montana shot 53.3 percent and outrebounded Sac State 39-27 to overcome 18 turnovers and win for just the second time in nine games.
"They really did a good job keeping the ball out of the post," Montana coach Wayne Tinkle said. "They got their hands on a lot of balls and created a lot of turnovers. This was a big win."
Montana led 34-32 at halftime and never trailed in the second half, building a 62-50 lead with 4:16 left. Leath scored the next seven points – on a three-pointer, a layup off his own steal and two free throws – to help the Hornets pull within 62-57 before the Grizzlies delivered two backbreaking plays.
Justin Williams went up for a dunk that would have cut the lead to three, but Hasquet blocked the shot, Strait grabbed the rebound and, after a timeout, Martin buried a three-pointer to give Montana a 65-57 cushion with 2:48 left.
Grizzlies guard Ceylon Elgin-Taylor, who entered the game shooting 40 percent from the free-throw line, made 8 of 11 free-throw attempts in the final 1:41 to keep Montana in control.
"We played good, we played hard, we played aggressive," said Williams, who made 8 of 9 shots to finish with 16 points. "We've got to keep playing together, keep battling together."
An announced crowd of 629 watched the Hornets' sixth loss in seven games.
"We lost to a very good basketball team," Jenkins said. "They're a veteran team. They've got guys who have been to the (NCAA) Tournament. …
"We're growing. …We have to learn how to win games like this."