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Northern Colorado has Montana on its mind
As Northern Colorado tore through its basketball schedule down the stretch last season, winning seven of its final eight regular-season games to gain enough momentum for a possible NCAA Tournament berth, one loss lingered like a hanging domino.
A two-point defeat to Montana way back in January eventually dropped the Bears to a second seed in the Big Sky Conference Tournament, forcing them to hit the road in a very home-friendly league.
This season, the Bears are again angling toward national attention. Before a Thursday game, UNC had a one-game lead in the Big Sky — and with it, an early claim to host the postseason tournament.
That lingering loss from last season sets the backdrop to a crucial road game for UNC this weekend. The Bears (13-9, 9-2 in the Big Sky before Thursday) travel to Missoula to face Montana (16-7, 8-3) on Saturday at 7 p.m. Montana trails UNC in the league standings by one game.
Just three league games remain for UNC after this weekend, so Saturday's matchup should play like a de facto regular-season title game — and with it, the right to host the Big Sky tournament.
"This is what our body of work has built up to," UNC senior forward Neal Kingman told the Greeley Tribune this week.
The Bears fell in the Big Sky semifinals in Utah last season and missed the NCAA Tournament.
This season, UNC has been perfect at home, going 9-0 at Butler- Hancock Pavilion. As host of the Big Sky Tournament, the Bears would be favored to earn an automatic NCAA bid.
"We've earned our position where we are at. We're going to go up there and take care of business," Kingman said.
In January, Northern Colorado routed Montana by 18 points in Greeley. And the Grizzlies are coming off two road losses last week.
For matchups, UNC's Devon Beitzel ranks second in the Big Sky with 19.2 points a game, just ahead of Montana's Will Cherry (15.5).
Northern Colorado has Montana on its mind
As Northern Colorado tore through its basketball schedule down the stretch last season, winning seven of its final eight regular-season games to gain enough momentum for a possible NCAA Tournament berth, one loss lingered like a hanging domino.
A two-point defeat to Montana way back in January eventually dropped the Bears to a second seed in the Big Sky Conference Tournament, forcing them to hit the road in a very home-friendly league.
This season, the Bears are again angling toward national attention. Before a Thursday game, UNC had a one-game lead in the Big Sky — and with it, an early claim to host the postseason tournament.
That lingering loss from last season sets the backdrop to a crucial road game for UNC this weekend. The Bears (13-9, 9-2 in the Big Sky before Thursday) travel to Missoula to face Montana (16-7, 8-3) on Saturday at 7 p.m. Montana trails UNC in the league standings by one game.
Just three league games remain for UNC after this weekend, so Saturday's matchup should play like a de facto regular-season title game — and with it, the right to host the Big Sky tournament.
"This is what our body of work has built up to," UNC senior forward Neal Kingman told the Greeley Tribune this week.
The Bears fell in the Big Sky semifinals in Utah last season and missed the NCAA Tournament.
This season, UNC has been perfect at home, going 9-0 at Butler- Hancock Pavilion. As host of the Big Sky Tournament, the Bears would be favored to earn an automatic NCAA bid.
"We've earned our position where we are at. We're going to go up there and take care of business," Kingman said.
In January, Northern Colorado routed Montana by 18 points in Greeley. And the Grizzlies are coming off two road losses last week.
For matchups, UNC's Devon Beitzel ranks second in the Big Sky with 19.2 points a game, just ahead of Montana's Will Cherry (15.5).