Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

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  • mitch497
    Rookie
    • Aug 2014
    • 94

    #1

    Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

    Hey y'all. I've had this CH2K8 chise sitting for a while (like over a year now) but I have a renewed interest in the game so I've decided to bring it back and bring it over to Operation Sports. Enjoy.
  • mitch497
    Rookie
    • Aug 2014
    • 94

    #2
    Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

    Mitch497 Hired at North Dakota State

    FARGO, N.D. - North Dakota State University has tabbed former Binghamton University assistant Mitch497 as its new head men's basketball coach for the 2007-08 season.

    Mitch replaces Tim Miles, who left to take the head coaching job at Colorado State University. North Dakota State will be competing in a Division I conference for the first time in this upcoming season, joining the Summit League.

    "We are excited to get this thing rolling," said Mitch. "Becoming a full division I member is huge. This is a huge step forward for our program. Being an independent just isn't the same. This is the big thing - getting to get a balanced schedule, prestige, and a better chance to compete in the NCAA tournament."

    While Binghamton only had moderate success during Mitch' tenure as an assistant, his tireless work ethic, especially on the recruiting trail, and his ties to the area (He grew up in nearby Aberdeen, South Dakota), were enough to convince NDSU that he was the right man for the job.

    "We had a number of candidates and Mitch impressed us the most," said NDSU men's sports Athletic Director Matt Larsen. "He is the perfect man for the job, and we are confident we will soon be making regular appearances in the NCAA Tournament.

    Mitch will announce the team's schedule soon and begin preparations for the upcoming season.

    Comment

    • mitch497
      Rookie
      • Aug 2014
      • 94

      #3
      Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

      Season Preview: North Dakota State

      The track record of schools who have recently moved into a Division I conference, either from the independent ranks or the Division II ranks, is not exactly pretty.

      Last season, the Central Arkansas Bears moved to the Southland Conference from the Gulf South Conference in Division II, and went 10–20, 4–12. Kennesaw State and North Florida both joined the ranks two seasons ago, and neither has posted a winning record to date, with UNF going 3–27 last season.

      This season, after three years as a Division I independent, the North Dakota State Bison are making the move to the Summit League. With a new coach, a relatively new team, a now a new conference, there is confidence abound in Fargo.

      Enigmatic head coach Tim Miles led the Bison through their transition from Division II into the independent ranks, but bolted for an opening at a larger job in Mountain West Conference school Colorado State. In response, North Dakota State went out and hired another young, enigmatic coach, tabbing Mitch497, formerly an assistant at Binghamton University in Vestal, New York. Mitch grew up just across the southern border in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and played basketball for four years at Central High School.

      His time at Binghamton wasn't very successful, but he is known as a tireless recruiter, and his ties to the area were too good to ignore. When Binghamton head coach Al Walker was let go, Mitch searched for opportunities, and a start-up program in the Bison seemed like the perfect fit.

      North Dakota State has had a successful run as an independent – they went 20–8 last season with a win over then-#8 Marquette, and defeated then-#15 Wisconsin two seasons ago. However, than success led to an unexpected departure for Miles, which left NDSU in a position they did not expect to be in – looking for a coach.

      The cupboard is far from bare for Mitch, however. A surplus of talent returns at the two-guard position, with senior Lawrence Alexander, junior Kory Brown, and sophomore Carlin Dupree all back. While the team lacks a true big man, 6'6" Dexter Werner and 6'8" Chris Kading both return to anchor the front court.

      Aside from those six returners, Mitch has an influx of youth on his roster. There are six freshmen on the team, making up more than half of the squad. If North Dakota State wants to succeed, they are going to have to rely on their youngsters to provide valuable bench scoring.

      A.J. Jacobson is a wing player who redshirted last season. A product of Fargo, Jacobson will provide three point shooting, but is known as a poor defender. Also a newcomer at the wing position is 6'7" Trey Miller, considered very raw, but with significant potential. He is unlikely to see big minutes.

      Mitch also has two good-sized freshmen big men to rely on, though both are more 4's than true centers. 6'7" Evan Wesenberg is a big, defensive big man with a raw offensive game. On the other side of the spectrum, 6'9" Spencer Eliason is weak defensively, but has offensive potential.

      Two young point guards also join the program, Jake Showalter and Paul Miller. Miller is a terrific perimeter defender with a weak jumpshot, while Showalter is the opposite. In order to succeed, Mitch will need both to make valuable contributions with their passing as backup point guards.

      The Summit League isn't a particularly strong conference, but North Dakota State looks like it could be a contender for last place. Coach Mitch is confident that he can be a leader and lead the program to new heights in 2007–08.

      Comment

      • mitch497
        Rookie
        • Aug 2014
        • 94

        #4
        Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

        Season Preview: The Summit League

        The Summit League is experiencing a period of turnover.

        Valpariaso, Chicago State, and Centenary have all departed the conference over the past two academic years. New to the conference this year is South Dakota State, North Dakota State, IPFW, and South Dakota.

        "We have always felt ten teams is a perfect size for a conference," said commissioner Tom Douple. Well, he got his wish this year. The conference is up at 10 teams, and it looks like it could be another strong year for the Summit.

        This isn't a two-bid league, and their conference champion likely won't win a game in the NCAA tournament. However, with some games on ESPN3 now and then, this will be an entertaining league to watch now and then when there isn't much on mid-week.

        PRESEASON SUMMIT PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Martez Harrison, UMKC

        Harrison was a three star recruit, getting offers from Creighton and South Carolina, before he decided to stay in his own backyard and become UMKC's biggest recruit in team history. Well, he lived up the hype and went out and scored 17.2 points a game last season, winning Summit League Freshman of the Year honors. This year, the undersized point guard will continue to lead a UMKC team searching for a sliver of hope, in a long stretch of mediocrity. Besides being an average defender, Harrison is above-average in just about everything, including being a lights-out shooter. He's a candidate to lead the conference in scoring.

        FOUR MORE NAMES TO KNOW:
        • Cody Larson, South Dakota State: A true stretch four who has grown over his three years with the Jackrabbits, should produce this year.
        • Obi Emegano, Oral Roberts: Part 1 of Oral Roberts' top backcourt. A dead-eye shooter and impressive on the defensive end and on the boards for being 6'3".
        • Korey Billbury, Oral Roberts: And Part 2, Billbury is more of a distributor, but can still score and defend at a high level. They are both only juniors. Yikes.
        • Garret Covington, Western Illinois: Talented scorer who could use more work on the defensive end, but could also contend the conference scoring title.


        PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH

        1. IPFW

        The Mastodons look like favorites to win the conference in their first year as a member, a testament to their depth. All five starters could likely start on any team in the league. Steve Forbes is a back to the basket big man, Mo Evans is a distributing point guard, Max Landis is the best three-point shooter in the league, Joe Ewards is a slashing 3 and Joe Reed is a true stretch four. A balanced team can always win, but bench depth may be an issue.

        2. Oral Roberts

        Oral Roberts has by far the best backcourt in the league with Obi Emegano and Korey Billbury, but not much else after that. Bobby Word and Jabarr Singleton are both very talented sophomores, but both are stuck in a crowded backcourt. Their best wing, Darian Harris, transferred from Creighton and is ineligible this season. The biggest flaw on this team is that they lack a true big man (with super raw 6'9" freshman Albert Owens being their tallest player), but the backcourt is good enough to carry them.

        3. Oakland

        Oakland, just like IPFW, is led by a well-balanced starting five that is filled with players that fit the roles of their respective positions. The best of the bunch is 6'10" center Corey Petros, a very talented big with impressive defensive skills and a keen eye at looking for the pass. Dante Williams is a wing player with supreme athleticism, and uses it to wreck havoc driving the lane. Khalil Felder is undersized at 5'9", but makes up for it with an impressive jumpshot. 6'8" Tommie McCune can't score, but is a terrific defensive presence inside. And Max Hooper is a great three pointer shooter with defensive flaws. This may be the most balanced team in the league, but besides their starting five, the rest of the bench is weak, mainly because it includes six freshmen.

        4. UMKC

        Matt Brown, a former West Virginia assistant, is one of only two new head coaches in the league this season, and he inherits the league's best player and a solid supporting class. Martez Harrison, as detailed above, is a dynamic player who will absolutely lead this team. Frank Williams, Jr., is a big guard at 6'6", and he is impressive at ball handling, passing, and driving the lane. Reese Holliday, a small forward, is actually smaller than Williams, Jr., but is a much better wing defender and shooter. Two unknowns man the front court, with 6'8" Shayok Shayok (quite possibly the best name in the league) and 6'10" Isaac Kreuer both raw, but big. The bench is filled with young, high potential players. This may not be the year for the Kangaroos, but they could be scary in a few seasons.

        5. Western Illinois

        Garret Covington is a lot like Harrison, a sophomore scoring guard and playmaker who will lead his club offensively this season. The big difference is that Covington doesn't have a Frank Williams, Jr., playing alongside him. Sophomore Jabari Sandifer is a pass-first guard who also is excellent on the class and in the lane. Tate Stensgaard and Mike Miklusak are both talented young wings who can score and defend. However, this team does not have a true big man who can contribute immediately, which may lead to struggles this season.

        6. South Dakota State

        Scott Nagy has been head coach at South Dakota State for what seems like for ever, from their domination of Division II to their time as a Division I independent. Now, he's ready to take them to the next level in their first year in the Summit League. Cody Larson is the league's best player not mentioned above, a 6'9" power forward with the ability to both post up and stretch the floor. Jake Bittle is a score-first 2 guard who struggles to defend, while Zach Hortsman is a slashing wing. Connor Devine is a wild card, a 6'10" redshirt sophomore from Alaska who is raw, but this Jackrabbits team is desperate for size outside of Larson. Their biggest need, however, may be a pure point guard - they will have to wait on that, as Wisconsin transfer George Marshall is ineligible this season.

        7. South Dakota

        New to the conference this year, the Coyotes have a bunch of good players, but nobody great. Canadian point guard Brandon Bos is the best of the bunch, a scoring guard who needs to work on defense. That will be a theme of this Coyotes team all season - they may be the worst defensive team in the entire conference. They have a surplus of point guards, with Trey Norris and Casey Kasperbauer, and a dearth of big men, with 6'10" James Hunter and 6'9" Edson Avila ineligible due to transfer rules. That leaves the tallest eligible player on their team as raw 6'8" freshman Austin Sparks, who may not see much floor time. This is a young team, and they may need a few years.

        8. IUPUI

        Actually, South Dakota has a contender for worst defensive team in the Summit League - meet IUPUI. Three of the best players in the program, Nick Osborne, Matt O'Leary and Darell Combs, are ineligible this season due to transfer rules. The Jaguars will be led by Khufu Najee, a 6'4" off-guard who is an excellent three point shooter and the best defender on the team, by far. With Osborne and O'Leary ineligible, Josh James at 6'9" is the tallest on IUPUI's roster, and he is not starter material. This is going to be a rebuilding year for the Jaguars, but with their transfers eligible in 2008-09, they could be a lot better.

        9. North Dakota State

        North Dakota State is the fourth team to join the Summit this season, and they also have a new head coach in former Binghamton assistant Mitch497. This is a very young team with a lot of potential, but it may be a few years before it is harnessed. Lawrence Alexander is the best player, a balanced guard who can do all kinds of things on the court. Kory Brown and Carlin Dupree are both guards in similar molds to Alexander. The Bison have lots of guards, but are lacking size, with 6'8" Chris Kading their top big man. This is a rebuild year, but NDSU is putting their faith in Coach Mitch.

        10. Southern Utah

        Along with the other teams near the bottom of this list, the Thunderbirds are very young, with most of their probable major contributors not yet seniors. It will be a rebuilding year, but coach Nick Robinson has the 'Birds headed in the right direction. Guard Trey Kennedy is a high effort defensive player with lots of talent, and A.J. Hess is one of the best players on the team despite not being on scholarship. Like many teams in this conference, they are hungry for size, but 6'8" Casey Oliverson is a solid player, especially under the basket. It is going to be a rough year, but the Thunderbirds can pull some upsets.

        Comment

        • mitch497
          Rookie
          • Aug 2014
          • 94

          #5
          Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

          Classless

          #13 Gators blow out Bison to open season


          GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Billy Donovan is typically known as one of the "nice guys" in college basketball.

          After a demolition at the hands of his Florida Gators, North Dakota State Bison rookie head coach Mitch497 had some interesting words.

          "He's classless," Mitch said. "When you're up 50, reserves or not, you don't need to be shooting threes. Period. Our motivation dropped. Our hearts dropped. We didn't play like a team, because nobody wanted to be out there. It's ridiculous. I had a lot of respect for him, but a lot of it went down the drain after today."

          The Gators completely overmatched the Bison, rolling to a 121–70 win, one of the most complete dominations in college basketball in recent years. The Gators raised the banner for their second straight National Championship before the game, and played like they could win another one after the game.

          Donovan did not show up at his scheduled press conference. Associate head coach Bryan Washburn instead took questions. "A lot of the kids who played out there today, they don't get a lot of playing time," he said, "And they want to play hard. They don't mean to run up the score, they just want to win." But is it OK to keep scoring when up 50 points?

          For about ten minutes in the start of the game, it looked like the Bison were going to keep it close. With 9 minutes left in the first half, it was 19–13 Gators.

          By halftime, Florida led 57–29.

          "Layups were a huge problem," Mitch remarked. We kept missing easy, easy shot, kept getting shots blocked, kept missing free throws. Those are huge problems." It was not a great night for Mitch's head coaching debut. The Bison looked lost all around, with players taking ill-advised shots, bad passes, and just looked effortless.

          Lawrence Alexander, who led the Bison in scoring with 14, remarked that the team didn't feel motivated after the Gators went up 40 points. "To start the second half, we got out there fast," he said, referring to the Bison opening the second half on a 19–4 run. "But then everything just collapsed. They are a good team, no doubt. But we really beat ourselves today."

          "They shouldn't take any hard feelings," Washburn said, "Our kids just want to win. That's all."

          There is no indication that North Dakota State will take action on Mitch for his word choice. The Bison are back in action on Sunday, as they visit Rutgers.

          North Dakota State Bison at Florida Gators
          Nov 10, 20071ST2NDSCORE
          North Dakota State (0–1)294170
          #13 Florida (1–0)5764121
          North Dakota State Bison
          STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
          Kory Brown311–70–32–2062014
          Lawrence Alexander275–113–31–44330014
          A.J. Jacobson255–150–01–46010211
          Chris Kading204–110–00–0521018
          Dexter Werner203–110–02–2701018
          BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
          Carlin Dupree160–20–00–0310030
          Evan Wesenberg143–80–03–4811139
          Jake Showalter91–81–42–2200005
          Paul Miller121–21–10–0001033
          Spencer Eliason92–50–00–3300104
          Trey Miller171–40–22–4110014
          TEAM TOTALS26–845–1313–2539141021570
          Florida Gators
          STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
          Kasey Hill202–50–05–6451009
          Michael Frazier II177–102–33–31310019
          Dorian Finney-Smith153–71–20–1310017
          Devin Robinson162–60–22–4622126
          Jon Horford181–20–04–6212506
          BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
          Brandone Francis249–100–02–23331220
          Chris Chiozza203–41–12–2292049
          Eli Carter165–90–13–65100213
          Chris Walker278–130–03–511123019
          Alex Murphy192–61–10–0811205
          Dillon Graham93–42–30–2210108
          TEAM TOTALS45–767–1324–374728141311121

          Comment

          • mitch497
            Rookie
            • Aug 2014
            • 94

            #6
            Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

            European Influence

            Doorsen leads Rutgers over North Dakota State


            PISCATAWAY, N.J. -- When you think of talented Dutch athletes, the first sport that may jump to your mind is association football. With talents like Robin Van Persie and Arjen Robben roaming the sidelines for major European clubs, it's no wonder basketball gets overshadowed in the central European nation.

            There's a new Dutch talent making waves across NCAA basketball this season. Freshman big man Shaquille Doorsen put up 17 point and 9 rebounds to lead the Rutgers Scarlet Knights over the North Dakota State Bison, 73–67 Sunday at the RAC.

            Rutgers led the Bison 31–30 at halftime, and didn't start to pull away until there were less than four minutes left in the second half. It was a change of pace for Bison rookie head coach Mitch497, whose team was demolished by Florida on Friday.

            "It's a welcome sight, really," said Mitch, still in search of his first win as a head coach, "We played really well out there. Not all of our contributions showed up on the stat sheet. Play like this every game, and you'll win quite a few."

            Doorsen ignited the Rutgers offense under the basket, with fellow big men Kadeem Jack and Junior Etou combining for 25 points and 13 rebounds. "Physical post play is what led us to victory today," said Rutgers head coach Eddie Jordan.

            "They are very strong in the post," said Bison forward Chris Kading, who led North Dakota State with 17 points. "They kept muscling with me all day, very physical. It was tough to get good shots off." A bold statement for a forward who shot 8–13 from the floor.

            On the other hand, the Bison's guards were not as sharp with their jumpshots. Lawrence Alexander was only 3–11 (0–3 from beyond the arc), and Kory Brown just 3–8. Rutgers senior point guard Myles Mack scored 16 points, but was 6–20 from the field and 4–10 from three point range.

            "Shooting is something we have to work on," said Mack, "I took a lot of bad shots today. That's on me. Thankfully, I've got a good team around me that helped get us the win."

            Rutgers improves to 2–0, and is next in action against Florida on Saturday. North Dakota State falls to 0–2 and hosts Montana State on Wednesday.

            North Dakota State Bison at Rutgers Scarlet Knights
            Nov 11, 20071ST2NDSCORE
            North Dakota State (0–2)303767
            Rutgers (2–0)314273
            North Dakota State Bison
            STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
            Kory Brown293–80–12–3222008
            Lawrence Alexander283–110–32–2211128
            A.J. Jacobson173–61–12–2512009
            Chris Kading308–130–01–27230317
            Dexter Werner272–60–04–4841018
            BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
            Carlin Dupree211–30–00–1430042
            Evan Wesenberg72–20–02–2000116
            Jake Showalter131–20–00–0211002
            Paul Miller100–40–00–0030010
            Spencer Eliason101–20–05–7100107
            Trey Miller70–30–20–0111010
            TEAM TOTALS24–601–718–2332181131367
            Rutgers Scarlet Knights
            STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
            Myles Mack296–204–100–01410516
            Bishop Daniels252–50–01–3521125
            Ryan Johnson280–40–10–2511210
            Kadeem Jack255–120–01–28233111
            Shaquille Doorsen255–70–07–89121217
            BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
            Junior Etou176–80–02–25201014
            Mike Williams181–20–00–0042012
            Malick Kone121–40–10–0311012
            Nkeruwem Okoro80–00–02–2001002
            Ibrahima Diallo132–40–00–1200004
            Dwayne Foreman-- DID NOT PLAY --
            Greg Lewis-- DID NOT PLAY --
            TEAM TOTALS28–664–1213–2038171281373

            Comment

            • mitch497
              Rookie
              • Aug 2014
              • 94

              #7
              Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

              Stealing the Show

              Showalter scores 16 off bench to pace Bison

              FARGO, N.D. -- Jake Showalter isn't used to attention.

              At Germantown High School is the small village of Germantown, Wisconsin, Showalter was overshadowed by Lamonte Bearden, now a freshman at Buffalo. After Bearden chose to take his talents east, Showalter joined teammate Evan Wesenberg by committing to North Dakota State. He didn't expect to see much time as a freshman and thought he may even be red-shirted.

              He was given a chance Wednesday and did not disappoint.

              Showalter scored 16 points in just 13 minutes, including two key threes, to power North Dakota State to a 90–87 win over Montana State at Scheels Arena.

              "I definitely wasn't expecting a performance like that when I checked him in," said Bison head coach Mitch497, who earned his first collegiate win, "He's definitely earned by trust now."

              "After the first three, I totally missed it, and coach talked to me at the timeout," Showalter said. "He said, 'I don't want you taking any more threes'. And I listened, but when I was open, I couldn't resist."

              With the Bison clinging to a small lead late the in the second, Showalter hit two threes on back-to-back possessions and Mitch's club took a nine point lead.

              "I told him not to shoot, but I have my faith in him now," Mitch said.

              Chris Kading was huge in the post for the Bison, putting up 24 points on 8 of 10 shooting and going a perfect 8 for 8 at the free throw line. He out muscled the Bobcats' two big, Danny Robison and Eric Norman, holding them to just six points total.

              Montana State made a late push, but several late free throws from Kading sealed the deal. "I definitely felt good out there today," Kading said, "They pushed me around a bit, but I felt I played really well."

              The Bison get the weekend off before Mitch attempts to win his second career game when North Dakota State visits Tennessee Tech (0–2) on Monday.

              Montana State Bobcats at North Dakota State Bison
              Nov 14, 20071ST2NDSCORE
              Montana State (0–3)404787
              North Dakota State (1–2)424890
              Montana State Bobcats
              STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
              Marcus Colbert302–60–05–8243049
              Stephan Holm268–110–01–42210017
              Terrell Brown247–120–01–22210115
              Danny Robison261–30–01–2650223
              Eric Norman201–30–01–2721533
              BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
              Michael Dison252–30–04–6221038
              Kavell Bigsby-Williams162–20–00–0420004
              Zach Green121–81–50–0020003
              Bradley Fisher116–101–10–02012113
              Quinn Price105–70–02–22010012
              Blake Brumwell-- DID NOT PLAY --
              Ryan Shannon-- DID NOT PLAY --
              TEAM TOTALS35–652–615–262921991487
              North Dakota State Bison
              STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
              Kory Brown203–50–12–2321028
              Lawrence Alexander275–172–51–23100013
              A.J. Jacobson274–110–24–65230112
              Chris Kading308–100–08–89220124
              Dexter Werner191–70–02–2421114
              BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
              Carlin Dupree221–20–11–2202003
              Evan Wesenberg214–80–01–2620019
              Jake Showalter136–102–32–21010116
              Paul Miller20–20–00–0000030
              Spencer Eliason100–20–00–0121101
              Trey Miller90–10–10–0300010
              TEAM TOTALS32–754–1322–2837131121190

              Comment

              • mitch497
                Rookie
                • Aug 2014
                • 94

                #8
                Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                Bench Press

                Late defensive stand leads Bison to victory

                COOKEVILLE, TENN. -- The usual suspects didn't play much of a role offensively for North Dakota State on Monday night.

                It didn't matter.

                Spencer Eliason and Dexter Werner combined for the last eight points of the game to lead the Bison to a 73–69 win over the host Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles at the Eblen Center.

                The Bison were down 69–65 with 2 minutes left in the game, before Werner converted on a three point play. Eliason then proceeded to hit three out of four free throws, both coming after offensive rebounds. Werner's lay-in with 25 seconds left all but sealed the win for North Dakota State. A key full-court press denied any offensive flow and the Golden Eagles turned the ball over to end the game.

                On a night where the Bison had their two leading scorer, Lawrence Alexander and Chris Kading, combined for 8 points on 3–15 shooting, head coach Mitch497 needed contributions from the rest of the players on his team.

                He got that with 10 points from Kory Brown, 14 points and four steals from A.J. Jacobson, 15 and 8 from Werner, 9 points and a three from Wednesday's hero Jake Showalter, and 10 and 6 from Eliason.

                "It was a true team effort tonight," Mitch said after picking us his second career win. "When everyone noticed that Lawrence and Chris were off their game, we all stepped up. A.J. hit two big threes. Dexter played strong in the paint. Kory played tight on the perimeter."

                Perhaps Werner's biggest contribution was shutting down Dwan Caldwell, a 6'8" power forward considered the Golden Eagles' best player. He was held to just 5 points and 4 rebounds on 2 of 3 shooting. "I thought Dexter played really well defensively," Mitch said, "He was really playing hard in the post."

                The two halves of the game couldn't have been any more different. The first half was dominated by constant lead changes, and the Golden Eagles went into the break up 40–39. The second half was more defensive, and a half of runs. The Bison started out on a 10–0 run, before falling to a 12–2 Tennessee Tech run, and several minutes later clinched the win with an 8–0 run.

                "Everybody in the team buys in," Eliason said. "When we got in the huddle down eight, and we drew up a play, every one of us knows our role. And that's why we win."

                Kory Brown impressed for Mitch's squad with 10 points, 3 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 steals and even a block, but he was matched pound-for-pound with the Golden Eagles' point guard Jordan Johnson. The 6'0" Georgia native posted 16 points and hit two threes, but had nine turnovers.

                "Winning the turnover battle was key," Mitch, whose team committed just 8 turnovers to Tennessee Tech's 19, said, "That and the battle on the boards. Play like this consistently and you'll see good things."

                Tennessee Tech falls to 0–3 and visits Northwestern State on Saturday. That same day the Bison (2–2) will trip up to Green Bay, Wisconsin, to square off with Wisconsin–Green Bay (1–3).

                North Dakota State Bison at Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles
                Nov 19, 20071ST2NDSCORE
                North Dakota State (2–2)393473
                Tennessee Tech (0–3)402969
                North Dakota State Bison
                STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                Kory Brown254–90–12–33431010
                Lawrence Alexander241–71–10–1611013
                A.J. Jacobson234–142–54–82040014
                Chris Kading252–80–01–11100005
                Dexter Werner285–100–15–68010115
                BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                Carlin Dupree200–30–02–2002032
                Evan Wesenberg141–30–11–2400013
                Jake Showalter134–91–30–2011029
                Paul Miller50–10–00–0121000
                Spencer Eliason135–90–00–06310010
                Trey Miller101–40–10–0302002
                TEAM TOTALS27–774–1315–254413161873
                Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles
                STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                Jordan Johnson316–152–72–33110916
                Josiah Moore303–100–21–2441017
                Javon McKay273–70–00–0711036
                Anthony Morse102–40–00–0500114
                Dwan Caldwell172–30–01–441015
                BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                Deondre Haynes141–10–00–0210022
                Shirmane Thomas91–20–02–3211014
                Charles Jackson233–80–16–610101012
                Ryan Martin233–40–01–2610007
                Savonte Frazier-- DID NOT PLAY --
                Josh Bougher162–30–42–3002016
                Aleksa Jugovic-- DID NOT PLAY --
                TEAM TOTALS26–632–1415–234311641869

                Comment

                • mitch497
                  Rookie
                  • Aug 2014
                  • 94

                  #9
                  Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                  Brick City

                  Horrific shooting performance leads to North Dakota State collapse

                  GREEN BAY, Wisc. -- Missed three after missed three. Missed layup after missed layup. Missed free throw after missed free throw.

                  North Dakota State shot a horrific 26% from the field and the Bison fell to host Wisconsin-Green Bay, 83–67, Saturday at the Resch Center.

                  The Bison started the game shooting 2–20, but somehow, only found themselves down by 12. They stormed back to take a two point lead at halftime, and were up 10 with 10 minutes left in the second half.

                  "I thought we had them there," Bison head coach Mitch497 said, "We were cruising along. I was thinking that as long as we win, I'll take it, even if we need to improve on shooting."

                  Ultimately, the Bison's shooting woes came back to hurt them, as they forced up many threes and became victims of a huge second late charge by UW–Green Bay, who ended up outscoring the Bison 52–34 in the second half.

                  Leading the charge for North Dakota State was Jake Showalter. The freshman was a hero against Montana State last Wednesday, but shot 0–12 from the field and 0–6 from three. Kory Brown was 0–5, and big man Chris Kading was 3–15.

                  "To shoot 3 for 15, as a big man, is unacceptable," Mitch said. "Chris realizes his mistakes and vowed to improve on them for next game." Despite the shooting woes, Kading still scored 11 points, hit a three, and grabbed nine rebounds and four steals.

                  Green Bay was without star point guard Isaiah Sykes, a senior who is a projected lottery pick. Sykes played just seven minutes in the season opener against Oakland before leaving with a shoulder injury, later diagnosed as separated.

                  Green Bay had a number of impressive performances, led by Croatian freshman big man Kerem Kanter, who scored 12 points and had 15 rebounds and four assists. Greg Mays, Kanter's frontcourt mate, had 17 points and 6 rebounds, while point guard Carrington Love had 20 points, 10 coming at the free throw line.

                  "If there's any team we want to lose to, this is it," Mitch said. "They are a great team, and we can take this as a learning opportunity as we head into our next game and into conference play."

                  North Dakota State gets the next week off before heading to Minneapolis to face off with Minnesota (2–0). Green Bay hosts Eastern Illinois (2–1) on Tuesday.

                  North Dakota State Bison at Green Bay Phoenix
                  Nov 24, 20071ST2NDSCORE
                  North Dakota State (2–3)333467
                  Green Bay (2–3)315283
                  North Dakota State Bison
                  STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                  Kory Brown180–50–00–0222000
                  Lawrence Alexander2610–211–62–31010023
                  A.J. Jacobson254–111–53–84210112
                  Chris Kading293–151–14–49140311
                  Dexter Werner161–70–01–4701003
                  BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                  Carlin Dupree171–30–00–0300012
                  Jake Showalter170–120–61–2502001
                  Evan Wesenberg153–70–00–0502026
                  Paul Miller90–00–02–2120002
                  Spencer Eliason181–30–03–3830015
                  Trey Miller100–30–22–2300002
                  TEAM TOTALS23–873–2018–284810130867
                  Green Bay Phoenix
                  STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                  Carrington Love294–102–510–123300520
                  Alfonzo McKinnie331–10–03–4810035
                  Jordan Fouse284–60–00–41122058
                  Greg Mays237–170–43–46111117
                  Kerem Kanter364–60–04–517410312
                  BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                  Kenneth Lowe61–20–00–2011002
                  Turner Botz163–81–51–4331008
                  Daeshon Francis102–30–10–1002004
                  Khalil Small-- DID NOT PLAY --
                  Henry Uwadiae153–40–01–2600107
                  Josh Humphrey10–00–00–0000001
                  TEAM TOTALS29–573–1522–385215821783

                  Comment

                  • mitch497
                    Rookie
                    • Aug 2014
                    • 94

                    #10
                    Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                    Tennessee Connection

                    Mathieu and Hollins lead Gophers over North Dakota State

                    MINNEAPOLIS -- DeAndre Mathieu and Andre Hollins both grew up in Tennessee, five hours apart. Hollins came from Memphis. Mathieu came from Knoxville.

                    They crossed paths when they both decided to head north to Minneapolis, Minnesota. They have been through a coaching change and a tumultuous three years with the Golden Gophers. This was the year things were supposed to change.

                    Things are headed in the right direction for the Gophers, who, led by Hollins and Mathieu, improved to 5–0 with a 105–73 win over North Dakota State Monday at Williams Arena.

                    The Bison's shooting and defensive woes continued, as Mitch497's club allowed over 100 points for the second time this season and shot only 34% from the floor.

                    "Another embarrassing performance," Mitch remarked. "We can't keep forcing bad shots. One of our biggest issues is that we don't use up the shot clock enough. That will be a topic of practice this coming week.

                    The Bison also continued to struggle on defense. Shots were falling all day for Minnesota, who hit an incredible 64% of their field goals. "We were getting room to work, and we made the most of it," said Minnesota head coach Richard Pitino. "We practice getting good spacing and hitting shots and then we execute it correctly in a game situation."

                    One positive for the Bison was free throw shooting, they shot 20–27 at the line, a large improvement over their previous numbers. 10 of those free throw makes came from A.J. Jacobson. The freshman scored 26 points on 7 of 16 shooting, two for four from three, and also collected five rebounds, four assists, and two steals.

                    "I felt great today," said Jacobson, "I really had my stuff together." Lawrence Alexander also added to the cause with 16 points on 7 of 18 shooting. No other member of the Bison had double digit scoring. The usually reliable Chris Kading was limited to just 2 points on one of three shooting, while Kory Brown attempted five shots and only made one.

                    The Bison took control early in the second half, on a 20–10 run, but Minnesota quickly came back and outscored them 44–36 in the second half. Hollins and Mathieu led the Golden Gophers, with Hollins scoring 31 points on 12 of 16 shooting (3–5 from three), while Mathieu dished out ten assists.

                    North Dakota State falls to 2–4, and opens conference play in Tulsa, Oklahoma on Thursday, facing off with Oral Roberts (1–5). Minnesota hosts Colorado State (3–4) on Saturday.

                    North Dakota State Bison at Minnesota Golden Gophers
                    Dec 3, 20071ST2NDSCORE
                    North Dakota State (2–4)373673
                    Minnesota (5–0)6144105
                    North Dakota State Bison
                    STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                    Kory Brown231–50–00–0100012
                    Lawrence Alexander247–180–22–26000016
                    A.J. Jacobson237–162–410–155420326
                    Chris Kading271–30–00–0152002
                    Dexter Werner194–70–00–0422008
                    BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                    Carlin Dupree211–20–02–2001014
                    Evan Wesenberg191–70–03–4721025
                    Jake Showalter151–40–02–2200004
                    Paul Miller80–20–10–0001010
                    Spencer Eliason131–51–21–2500014
                    Trey Miller101–40–20–0201012
                    TEAM TOTALS25–733–1120–2733131001073
                    Minnesota Golden Gophers
                    STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                    DeAndre Mathieu221–60–32–21101044
                    Andre Hollins1912–163–54–42122031
                    Joey King142–70–03–3320117
                    Charles Buggs141–30–00–0410102
                    Mo Walker164–40–01–1322119
                    BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                    Elliot Eliason204–60–00–0531318
                    Carlos Morris177–100–11–37000115
                    Nate Mason182–30–00–032004
                    Bakary Konate193–40–00–0701116
                    Daquein McNeil142–20–01–2151015
                    Josh Martin146–80–00–42101012
                    Kendall Shell121–10–00–0001042
                    TEAM TOTALS45–703–912–19382791014105

                    Comment

                    • mitch497
                      Rookie
                      • Aug 2014
                      • 94

                      #11
                      Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                      Week 4 Polls

                      Comment

                      • mitch497
                        Rookie
                        • Aug 2014
                        • 94

                        #12
                        Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                        Trust Renewed

                        Showalter's hot shooting helps fuel Bison comeback

                        TULSA, Okla. -- Three weeks ago, Jake Showalter was the hero against Montana State. Two weeks ago, he was the problem against Wisconsin-Green Bay. He'd had his trust revoked by North Dakota State head coach Mitch497.

                        Showalter made up for his mistakes Thursday.

                        The freshman scored 15 points, all in the second half, to power North Dakota State to a 71–59 over Oral Roberts at the Mabee Center.

                        North Dakota State was down 29–34 at halftime, but outscored the Golden Eagles 42–25 in the second half on the backs of some hot shooting. After shooting a combined 30% over their last two games, the Bison shot 37%, 25% from three point range, in the victory.

                        "I thought our first half was rough [shooting wise], but in the second half, we really turned it on," said Bison senior guard Lawrence Alexander, who led all scorers with 17 points and shot 8 for 18. "Everyone seemed to be playing better, and we were hitting shots."

                        The Bison managed to limit the Golden Eagles' backcourt of Obi Emegano and Korey Billbury, both pre-season all-conference selections, holding them to only 29 points combined on 12 of 37 shooting, 2 for 18 from three. "They limited us," said Oral Roberts head coach Scott Sutton. "They played hard, and defended hard."

                        It was a welcome site for Mitch, whose Bison had struggled to defend all season. The 59 points allowed was by far a season low.

                        While Oral Roberts dropped to 1–6, Mitch indicated that they are a better team than their record. "Certainly," he said, "You look at the non-conference schedule they played. Texas A&M. UTEP. Louisiana–Lafayette. Tulsa. Arkansas. All great teams in their own right, and certainly not bad losses. They will contend." The Bison and Golden Eagles will square off again in the last game of the regular season, March 1, in Fargo.

                        Others leading the charge for North Dakota State included A.J. Jacobson, who scored 14 points, Chris Kading, who rebounded from a string of tough games to post 10 points, 9 rebounds, and 6 assists, and Dexter Werner, who collected a career high 15 rebounds. "We are all rebounding well," said Werner. "Everyone buys in. That's what great about this team. We know each other's weaknesses and help out around the boards."

                        The Bison are back in action Saturday as they visit South Dakota (4–4). Oral Roberts hosts South Dakota State (3–3) that same day.

                        Summit League Scoreboard

                        IPFW defeats Southern Utah, 76–38: Southern Utah continued a stretch of horrific shooting, making just 27% of their shots, with Trey Kennedy leading the charge shooting 2 for 15, 0 for 7 from three. The Mastodons got contributions all around, with Max Landis dropping 23, Joe Edwards scoring 14 (while attempting all 14 of his shots from beyond the arc), and Joe Reed (10 and 13) and Steve Forbes (12 and 14) posting double-doubles.

                        Oakland defeats UMKC in OT, 56–51: Oakland limited Martez Harrison to just 8 points on 2 of 17 shooting, and it showed, with nobody else on UMKC able to muster much offense. Oakland had trouble scoring as well, but Khalil Felder eventually turned it on, helping lead the Golden Grizzlies to the overtime win. Tommie McCune collected 11 rebounds for Oakland but scored zero points.

                        South Dakota defeats South Dakota State, 72–60: The two rivals squared off in Vermillion and the Coyotes gained control after the second half. Tyler Flack scored 23, while Eric Robertson went pound-for-pound with Cody Larson, outscoring him 14 to 7. Logan Doyle shot a perfect 7 for 7 from the field and led the Jackrabbits in scoring with 15.

                        North Dakota State Bison at Oral Roberts Golden Eagles
                        Dec 6, 20071ST2NDSCORE
                        North Dakota State (3–4, 1–0 Summit)294271
                        Oral Roberts (1–6, 0–1 Summit)342559
                        North Dakota State Bison
                        STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                        Kory Brown300–40–10–0522010
                        Lawrence Alexander268–181–50–05011117
                        A.J. Jacobson225–131–23–45110114
                        Chris Kading294–80–02–29610110
                        Dexter Werner314–110–00–01521028
                        BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                        Carlin Dupree190–40–20–0401020
                        Evan Wesenberg181–20–01–2521103
                        Jake Showalter155–122–43–41000015
                        Paul Miller20–00–00–0000000
                        Spencer Eliason61–20–12–2310004
                        Trey Miller20–10–10–0000010
                        TEAM TOTALS28–754–1611–14521482971
                        Oral Roberts Golden Eagles
                        STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                        Obi Emegano296–131–51–11310514
                        Korey Billbury296–241–132–33020115
                        Bobby Word310–50–15–6121115
                        Drew Wilson III323–60–02–4904218
                        Denell Henderson322–40–01–1400005
                        BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                        Jabarr Singleton131–10–00–0200012
                        Brandon Conley132–30–02–4211106
                        Adrion Webber90–10–02–2320002
                        Dederick Lee-- DID NOT PLAY --
                        Aaron Young-- DID NOT PLAY --
                        Albert Owens121–20–00–0500102
                        TEAM TOTALS21–592–1915–2130895959

                        Comment

                        • mitch497
                          Rookie
                          • Aug 2014
                          • 94

                          #13
                          Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                          A Rushmore-Sized Collapse

                          Bison blow 21 point lead as Coyotes take sole possession of first in Summit

                          VERMILLION, S.D. -- Mitch497's North Dakota State Bison blew a ten point lead with ten minutes to play two weeks ago against Wisconsin–Green Bay.

                          There's no way they could have blown a bigger lead in that timeframe, right?

                          The Bison ended up blowing a 21 point lead with 9 minutes to play, falling 76–79 to the host South Dakota Coyotes at the DakotaDome. With the win, the Coyotes move into sole possession of first place in the Summit League standings.

                          "That was embarassing," Mitch said. "We had it in the bag. Then everything broke down." Everything did break down for North Dakota State, who led 71–50 with 9 minutes to play, and only scored 5 points over the next nine minutes. "We couldn't get anything to fall," said Mitch. "The defense wasn't awful, but we just couldn't shoot."

                          "Rushing shots was killer," said Bison guard Lawrence Alexander, who shot 9 for 20, "We need to use up more of the shot clock to get shots off." Other notable shooting performances from the Bison included 3 for 11 from A.J. Jacobson, 4 of 10 from Chris Kading, and 2 of 11 from Jake Showalter, who may very well have asserted himself as the streakiest shooter in the league.

                          Incredibly, the Coyotes stormed back from the huge deficit without the help of leading scorer Tyler Flack, who shockingly played only 11 minutes and scored just four points. Freshman big man Austin Sparks had the game of his life, with 8 points and 12 rebounds off the bench. Sparks was averaging less than one point and one rebound per game prior to the contest.

                          "Bench depth was big for us," said South Dakota head coach Greg Gary. "We were able to replace ineffective players with bench guys that could step in." In all, South Dakota got 34 of their 79 points from players off the bench, compared to just 29 for the Bison.

                          Point guard Brandon Bos led the scoring for South Dakota with 21 points on 7–16 shooting from the field. Despite a poor shooting performance (4–20 from the field, 2–10 from deep), Adam Thoseby scored a season-high 12 and collected seven rebounds.

                          Both teams are back to non-conference action as the Bison host Colorado State (4–5) and former head coaching Tim Miles on Saturday, while the Coyotes visit Louisiana Tech (1–5) on Thursday.

                          Summit League Scoreboard

                          UMKC defeats IPFW, 75–74: Four different starters scored in double figures for the Kangaroos as they pulled the upset on the road against the Mastodons. Martez Harrison scored 18, while Shayok Shayok put together a nice game with 21 points on 9 of 10 shooting. Max Landis scored 18 for IPFW, who hit 11 of their 23 three-point attempts.

                          IUPUI defeats Western Illinois, 60–58: Both teams opened their conference slate and the Jaguars withstood a late second-half rally to earn the win. IUPUI held a hurting Garret Covington to just six points, and limited the Leathernecks to just 44 shot attempts. The Jaguars got most of their contributions from big men and the bench, with 51 of their 60 points coming from the starting frontline and the bench.

                          Southern Utah defeats Oakland, 47–46: Southern Utah continued to shoot miserably, just 32% from the floor, led once again by Trey Kennedy's 2 for 15 effort (he is now scoring 9.3 points on 18% shooting). Fortunately, the Thunderbirds found another team with offensive woes, as Oakland could only muster 17 second half point after leading by five at the half. The Golden Grizzlies' Corey Petros led all scorers with 18.

                          South Dakota State defeats Oral Roberts, 58–52: A short-handed Jackrabbits squad nearly blew a 20 point halftime lead but got a big game from Jake Bittle, who scored 20 points and had nine rebounds. Oral Roberts shot 26% from the field, and the backcourt of Obi Emegano and Korey Billbury accounted for 21 of their missed shots. The road doesn't get any easier for the 1–7 Golden Eagles, who visit Texas and Utah State and host Oklahoma State before conference play begins again.

                          Interesting note: South Dakota was the only home team to win their game.

                          North Dakota State Bison at South Dakota Coyotes
                          Dec 8, 20071ST2NDSCORE
                          North Dakota State (3–5)482876
                          South Dakota (5–4)354479
                          North Dakota State Bison
                          STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                          Kory Brown281–40–11–2422043
                          Lawrence Alexander269–202–52–24000022
                          A.J. Jacobson183–110–22–3610028
                          Chris Kading304–101–14–45701213
                          Dexter Werner180–30–00–0920000
                          BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                          Carlin Dupree240–30–10–0632020
                          Evan Wesenberg204–60–04–45210012
                          Jake Showalter162–111–20–0320005
                          Paul Miller10–00–00–0000000
                          Spencer Eliason124–60–05–63000113
                          Trey Miller60–00–00–0200000
                          TEAM TOTALS27–744–1218–214719511176
                          South Dakota Coyotes
                          STARTERSMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                          Brandon Bos287–161–66–81230121
                          Trey Norris362–20–00–0071034
                          Adam Thoseby294–202–102–27310012
                          Eric Robertson342–70–10–0811004
                          Tyler Flack112–40–00–0410404
                          BENCHMINFGM-A3PM-AFTM-AREBASTSTLBLKTOPTS
                          Casey Kasperbauer101–30–07–7000009
                          Tyler Larson143–50–02–2230018
                          Tre Burnette114–60–11–2412109
                          Austin Sparks234–80–00–01200118
                          Sekou Harris-- DID NOT PLAY --
                          Duol Mayot20–00–00–0000000
                          TEAM TOTALS29–713–1818–21381886779

                          Comment

                          • mitch497
                            Rookie
                            • Aug 2014
                            • 94

                            #14
                            Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                            Week 4 Polls/Standings







                            Comment

                            • mitch497
                              Rookie
                              • Aug 2014
                              • 94

                              #15
                              Re: Mitch497's Coaching Career (CH2K8)

                              Comment

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