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Okay, O'Day, Experiment Passed, Move the Students ...

GrizBBIsKing

Well-known member
Right Now.

Environment was Soooooooooooo Much Better.

While your at it, close up the ceiling like it was in the old days before remodel. Way to much noise is drifting up into rafters. If you want to really turn the clock back and get it real noisy, need to plug that hole in the celing.
 
GrizBBIsKing said:
Right Now.

Environment was Soooooooooooo Much Better.

While your at it, close up the ceiling like it was in the old days before remodel. Way to much noise is drifting up into rafters. If you want to really turn the clock back and get it real noisy, need to plug that hole in the celing.

here here :clap: :clap:
 
GrizBBIsKing said:
Right Now.

Environment was Soooooooooooo Much Better.

While your at it, close up the ceiling like it was in the old days before remodel. Way to much noise is drifting up into rafters. If you want to really turn the clock back and get it real noisy, need to plug that hole in the celing.

Don't bring back that old clock though. I always thought it would break loose and crash through the floor.
 
GrizBBIsKing said:
Right Now.

Environment was Soooooooooooo Much Better.

While your at it, close up the ceiling like it was in the old days before remodel. Way to much noise is drifting up into rafters. If you want to really turn the clock back and get it real noisy, need to plug that hole in the celing.

Yep - It would be great to do it now!!! What a Great Atmosphere once again!!! I believe you might as well take out the seats and put back the folding bleachers, or no bleachers at all !!! You would get 25% more kids in there. The Zoo is Back!!! The Team looked Great tonight!!! Way to go Guys and Coaching Staff!!! Job Well done!!!
 
You could tell the crowd was going to be pretty good after that dunk a few minutes in. Off the rebound, Hasquet (I think?) just killed it and everyone erupted.
 
So here is what you do Jim O'Day. For all current ticket holders in the Zoo area allow them a seat in the Sky Club section for x number of years or any available seat with a pass that will allow them into the Sky Club for x number of years. There has to be some kind of compensation for being moved to appease them. That would only be fair. Sharpen that pencil Jim, let's get it done!!! Damn the students looked right at home last night!!!
 
Interesting to read the game recap in the Fort Collins paper. Sounds like the crowd really did play a factor.

MISSOULA, Mont. - The Tim Miles era began for Colorado State Friday night in the loud and rowdy Dahlberg Arena, and for the Rams it was a slow start as they fell 75-39 to Montana.

The Rams kept pace with the Grizzlies early, but fell behind after a 6-0 Montana run eight minutes into the game.

Montana played tough defense allowing only 19 points in the first half and limited the Rams to 33 percent from the field including 0 for 7 from behind the 3-point point line.

Even with poor shooting, the Rams kept it close. The defense held Montana to 26 firs- half points on 36 percent shooting.

"We were battling inside; that's how we kept it close in the first half," CSU senior center Stuart Creason.

The second half turned into a different story as the Rams' defense fell apart, allowing Montana to score 49 second-half points. The Grizzlies also shot 59 percent from the field in the second half.

"In the second half, we let the scoreboard get to us," Miles said. "It went from a seven-point deficit to 15 real quick, and it snowballed."

The crowd also was a factor, with the Montana student section full of boisterous fans, all with white T-shirts on that read "The ZOO".

"They got the crowd into it and they got momentum and they started to roll," CSU guard Willis Gardner said.


The Grizzlies defense did roll, holding the Rams scoreless in the last five minutes.

Creason and Gardner led the Rams with 10 points apiece.

The Rams start this season as newcomers. Coach Miles comes from North Dakota State where he lead his team from division II to a winning division I team.

The players consist of one returning starter, Creason, and only one other returning player. All others are ether junior college transfers, incoming freshman or walk-ons.

"I have a file on my desk called 'Humble Beginnings' we can put this one in that file," Miles said. "When things are going great for us, we can look at that file to keep our heads from getting too big."

The atmosphere wasn't very kind to the Rams.

"Any time you've got a bunch of new guys and 7,000 screaming fans it's going to get to you," Creason said.


The Rams have been playing together as a team for less than a month, and have known each other for less than six. That fact was obvious Friday night but the players want to use it as nothing but motivation.

"We could use that as an excuse, but you can't make excuses if you want to be a better team," Said Walker.

The Rams' struggles on defense and execution on offense are not going to fix themselves over night, but Coach Miles is still confident in his players and their abilities.

"Tonight was an aberration," Miles said. "I really think this team is going to be alright."

For now the Rams head back to Fort Collins to work hard and get ready for the rest of the season.

"When it comes to execution and defense you can only do a little better every day," Miles said. "So we'll practice and get a little better and a little better and hopefully we will be a heck of a lot better next week for Oregon State."

Miles is now preparing his team for a trip to Alaska and the "Top of The World Classic" in Fairbanks, and with the opening game opponent of Pac-10's Oregon State the road doesn't get any easier.

"Hopefully this will be a wake up call that exhibition is over," Creason said.
 
This from the Missoulian. Andrew Strait sums it up well as to how a good home crowd helps, and it showed against CSU.

It was feeding time at The Zoo Friday evening.

The Montana men's basketball team fed the animals and the animals responded in kind, stoking the Grizzlies' fire in a 75-39 win over Colorado State in the season opener for both teams.

Included in the 6,037 fans at Dahlberg Arena were a sea of white-T-shirt-clad students in the lower-level east bleachers, seats that were once the sole domain of a student section known as The Zoo. On “Turn back the clock night,” the students reclaimed their seats for one game.


“That was great,” senior Andrew Strait said of the charged atmosphere. “I haven't seen this much energy on our team before a game, as far as being ready to play. We need that here at home. It creates a lot of momentum for us.”

It took the Griz most of a half to find their game legs against a CSU team that lost 11 players from last season and is picked to finish last in the Mountain West Conference.

The Griz led by as many as nine in the first half despite shooting just 36 percent from the floor. They settled for a 26-19 lead at the break after holding CSU to 33 percent shooting.

First-year CSU coach Tim Miles, who built North Dakota State into a program to be reckoned with, used a twin-tower lineup for parts of the first half. Seven-footers Stuart Creason and Ronnie Aguilar made the going tough for Strait and Jordan Hasquet on the inside.

“We made an adjustment at halftime,” second-year Montana coach Wayne Tinkle said. “Our guards got into the paint and caused them fits. We were able to kick out for a wide-open three, dump it off or finish at the rim. I was proud that our guys listened to the adjustments and executed them well.”

The Griz made their first five shots of the second half - three from beyond the 3-point arc - to vault to a 39-21 lead not even four minutes into the stanza. From there, the Griz just took the Rams apart from every angle.

Strait scored 10 of his game-high 14 points in the second half and Hasquet added 12. Cam Rundles and Matt Martin chipped in 11 apiece, each making three treys.

Strait played most of the night with the 7-foot, 260-pound Creason draped around his shoulders.

“It's nothing I haven't seen before,” said Strait, who made just the fourth 3-pointer of his career with the shot clock winding down late in the second half. “You've got to try to be crafty and use your body a little bit more. That's what has worked out for me.”

Aiding the Grizzlies' cause was a woeful shooting performance by the Rams, who were 0-for-10 from 3-point range and shot 34 percent from the floor overall. When Willis Gardner missed a wide-open trey from the deep corner to start the second half, Miles sighed, “We've gotta make one.”

“They asked me what our plan is for 3-point shooting and all I said was I know we'll improve,” Miles said. “But I credit Montana. They did a good job switching defenses.”

Rundles was a perfect 3-for-3 from long range and finished with eight assists against no turnovers.

“I feel as confident as I've ever been,” the ebullient Rundles said. “And it starts with Tinks. When I first came here as a freshman, Tinks had all the confidence in the world in me. He told me, ‘You're a freshman, but you have to play like a senior for four years.' I'm comfortable with that. I'm comfortable running the show.”

Colorado State, which received 10 points apiece from Gardner and Creason, failed to score in the final 5:47 of the game. The Griz scored the final 17 points of the night, including a game-ending dunk by Zach Graves.

NOTES: All 10 Griz players who saw action scored. ... The only players who didn't see action were sophomore Dave Vanderjagt, who is still recovering from a spra ined ankle, and freshman Derek Selvig. Tinkle said it may be several weeks into the season before a decision is made on whether to redshirt Selvig. ... The Griz owned a 37-25 advantage on the boards, led by Hasquet's nine, Strait's eight and Kyle Sharp's seven. ... The Griz turned the ball over seven times, only twice in the second half.
 
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