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12/2/1999 12:00 AM | Men's Basketball
Dec. 2, 1999
SALT LAKE CITY - A Quick Look at Utah - The Runnin? Utes are 2-2 after an 84-72 loss at Weber State on Wednesday night. Utah defeated Stony Brook, 74-45, to open a three-game week on Monday night at the Huntsman Center. Both of Utah?s wins have come at home this season, while both losses have come on the road.
Senior 6-7 forward Alex Jensen leads the team in scoring (11.8 ppg) and rebounding (8.8 rpg). Jensen is also shooting 57.1 percent from the field. Junior 6-11 center Nate Althoff is second is scoring (10.5 ppg) and rebounding (5.0 rpg). Senior 5-11 guard Jeremy Killion is the third Ute averaging in double figures in scoring (10.2 ppg). Senior 6-5 point guard Tony Harvey leads the team in assists (4.0 apg) and is shooting 92.3 percent from the free throw line. Junior 6-0 guard Trent Whiting, who is averaging 6.0 points per game, is shooting 50.0 percent (5-of-10) from three-point range.
Utah is outscoring the opposition 67.5 to 57.0 points per game and has a 36.0 to 30.2 edge in rebounding. The Utes are shooting 46.6 percent from the field, 36.2 percent from three-point range and 68.9 percent from the free throw line.
Ute head coach Rick Majerus welcomes back four starters and nine letterwinners in 1999-2000. Utah retains 76.3 percent of its scoring and 70.8 percent its rebounding from a team that went 28-5 overall in 1998-99, advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament, won the Western Athletic Conference Pacific Division title with a 14-0 record and claimed the WAC Tournament championship.
The Game at a Glance
Utah Coach: Rick Majerus
Alma Mater: Marquette '70
Augusta State Coach: Gary Tuell
Alma Mater: Louisville '73
Record at Utah: 240-66/11th Season
Overall Record: 339-118/16th
Record at ASU: 27-35/3rd Season
Season Overall Record: 223-151/13th Season
Radio: Utah Sports Network (570 K-NEWS in Salt Lake City and affiliate stations). Bill Marcroft (play-by-play), Jeff Jonas (analyst) and Brad Stone (host).
Rankings: Utah is 20th in the A.P. poll and 19th in the USA Today/ESPN poll.
Series Record: First Meeting
Majerus vs. Augusta State Overall: 0-0 At Utah: 0-0
Utah Probable Starters
No. | Pos. | Name | Ht. | Wt. | Cl. | Ppg | Rpg | Hometown |
50 | F | Alex Jensen | 6-7 | 225 | Sr. | 11.8 | 8.8 | Centerville, Utah |
35 | F | Jeff Johnsen | 6-4 | 200 | So. | 7.2 | 5.0 | Murray, Utah |
40 | or | Phil Cullen | 6-9 | 215 | So. | 5.0 | 2.2 | Chelan, Wash. |
52 | C | Nate Althoff | 6-11 | 260 | Jr. | 10.5 | 5.0 | Delano, Minn. |
5 | G | Tony Harvey | 6-5 | 200 | Sr. | 7.5 | 3.0 | Carson, Calif. |
32 | G | Jeremy Killion | 5-11 | 190 | Sr. | 10.2 | 2.0 | San Diego, Calif. |
Utah Off the Bench
No. | Pos. | Name | Ht. | Wt. | Cl. | Ppg | Rpg | Hometown |
3 | G | Gary Colbert | 6-1 | 175 | So. | 3.0 | 4.0 | Alta Loma, Calif. |
4 | G | Adam Sharp | 6-2 | 180 | So. | 2.3 | 0.3 | Salt Lake City |
15 | F | Nick Jacobson | 6-3 | 185 | Fr. | 0.0 | 0.0 | Roseville, Minn. |
21 | G | Trent Whiting | 6-0 | 180 | Jr. | 6.0 | 2.2 | Kuna, Idaho |
25 | G | Brandon Sluga | 6-4 | 210 | Sr. | 2.0 | 0.0 | Taylorsville, Utah |
42 | F | Mike Puzey | 6-8 | 215 | Fr. | 4.2 | 1.0 | Roy, Utah |
Augusta State Probable Starters
No. | Pos. | Name | Ht. | Wt. | Cl. | Ppg | Rpg | Hometown |
25 | F | Gary Boodnikoff | 6-6 | 195 | So. | 12.2 | 5.5 | Alice Springs, Australia |
31 | F | Demetric Taylor | 6-4 | 220 | Sr. | 13.5 | 4.3 | Coushatta, La. |
4 | C | Festus Hawkins | 6-10 | 280 | Jr. | 13.8 | 7.3 | Pine Bluff, Ark. |
23 | G | Chris Harriman | 6-1 | 185 | Fr. | 4.2 | 2.0 | Balgownie, Australia |
24 | G | Oliver Ottley, Jr. | 6-2 | 190 | Sr. | 9.3 | 3.2 | Augusta, Ga. |
1999-2000 Record
Overall 2-2
Mountain West Conference 0-0
Home/Away/Neutral 2-0/0-2/0-0
After This
The Runnin? Utes host Utah State on Tuesday at 7:05 p.m. (MST) and play at Washington State on Saturday at 4:06 p.m. (PST) before a break for finals week.
Augusta State University is a school of 5,350 students in Augusta, Ga. It competes as an NCAA Division II school in basketball in Peach Belt Athletic Conference. Augusta State is 3-3 after a 72-53 loss to Winston-Salem State on Wednesday night. Last weekend, the Jaguars defeated Savanah State (91-55) on Friday and Clark Atlanta (106-83) on Saturday in the Town Center Invitational, hosted by Kennesaw State.
Junior 6-10 center Festus Hawkins leads the team in scoring (13.8 ppg) and rebounding (7.3 rpg), and is shooting 65.8 percent from the field. Senior 6-4 forward Demetric Taylor is averaging 13.5 points and 4.3 rebounds per game. Freshman 6-1 point guard Chris Harriman leads the team in assists (3.7 apg). Augusta State has the edge over its opponents in scoring (75.3 to 73.0 ppg) and rebounding (40.5 to 35.3 rpg), and is shooting 45.3 percent from the field and 41.0 percent from three-point range.
Augusta State went 19-10 last season and tied for first place in the North Division of the Peach Belt with a 13-3 record.
Second Meeting for Majerus and Tuell
Although Utah and Augusta State are meeting for the first time, Friday night?s game will be the second meeting between Rick Majerus and ASU head coach Gary Tuell. Tuell brought his St. Thomas team to Salt Lake City on Dec. 15, 1995 when it lost to the nationally-ranked Utes, 87-63.
Scouting the Aggies
Utah State takes a 3-2 record into Saturday night?s home game against UC San Diego. The Aggies lost at Northern Arizona (64-52) on Tuesday. Prior to that, USU went 2-1 in the Maui Classic (Nov. 22-24), losing to Florida (60-58) before defeating Chaminade (70-48) and Southern California (52-50).
Senior 6-2 guard Troy Rolle (11.6 ppg) leads the team in scoring and is shooting 45.8 percent from three-point range. Junior 6-6 forward Shawn Daniels is the team?s leading rebounder (7.0 rpg) and is averaging 9.4 points per game. Junior 6-11 center Dimitri Jorsen, who averaged 11.3 points and shot 76.5 percent in the first three games, is out with an ankle injury until possibly late December. Utah State has outscored (62.0 to 55.8 ppg) and outrebounded its opponents (38.4 to 36.2 rpg).
The Aggies return one starter and three letterwinners from last year?s team that went 15-13 overall and finished tied for fourth place in the Eastern Division of the Big West Conference with an 8-8 mark.
Head Coach Stew Morrill
Stew Morrill is a familiar coaching foe to Rick Majerus. From 1992-98, Morrill was the head coach at Colorado State, a member of the WAC and Mountain West Conference with the Utes. Morrill had a 3-10 record against Utah, winning three of the first four meetings. Morrill won his first game against the Utes as USU?s head coach (62-54) last season in Logan, Utah. The Provo, Utah, native was also the head coach at Montana from 1987-91.
The Series
The Utes lead the all-time series with the Aggies, 125-86, and has a 75-32 edge in games played in Salt Lake City. Utah State is Utah?s second-oldest rival. Utah had won five straight and 12 of 15 before last year?s 62-54 loss.
Last Meeting
Utah lost to Utah State, 62-54, on Nov. 18, 1999 in Logan, Utah. After the Utes led 28-27 at halftime, the Aggies outscored the U. 35-26 in the second half and had 40.8 to 34.4 percent advantage in field goal shooting for the game.
Utah was led by an 18-point night from Andre Miller. Alex Jensen had 11 points and seven rebounds. Nate Althoff, Phil Cullen and Jeremy Killion each had four points. Troy Rolle had 11 points and six rebounds to lead Utah State. The Aggies outshot the Utes 40.8 to 34.4 from the field and limited Utah to 18.2 percent three-point shooting.
The Utes led by two (54-52) with 2:44 to play after a Jensen three-pointer. However, Tony Brown answered back with a three-pointer 17 seconds later to put USU up for good as Utah did not score the rest of the game.
Battle for the Old Oquirrh Bucket
The Old Oquirrh Bucket (named after the Oquirrh Mountains to the west of Salt Lake City) is the symbol of in-state basketball supremacy in Utah. The trophy is awarded every year to the in-state college team (Utah, BYU, Southern Utah, Utah State and Weber State) which has the best won-loss record against in-state competition. Utah won the trophy last season, posting a 4-1 record against in-state foes.
Utah lost the first of its in-state games to Weber State (84-72) on Dec. 1. Utah State has yet to play an in-state game.
Game #4 Rewind
Weber State scored 58 points and shot 72.4 percent from the field in the second half to overcome a 31-26 halftime deficit and defeat 20th-ranked Utah, 84-72, on Wednesday night at the Dee Events Center. Eddie Gill scored a career-high 25 points and Harold Arceneaux added 15 in the second half after a scoreless first half to lead the Wildcats.
Three Utes scored in double figures, led by 15 points from Alex Jensen, who went 5-of-8 from the field and 2-of-3 from behind the arc. Jeff Johnsen missed his career high by one with 11 points, going 4-of-5 from the floor and 1-of-2 from three-point range. Nate Althoff only missed one of his six field goals to get 11 points. Jensen and Johnsen also added five rebounds and three assists a piece for the Utes, while Althoff blocked two shots. Mike Puzey had career-highs of eight points and three rebounds.
Weber State coach Joe Cravens, an assistant to Rick Majerus at Utah from 1989-93, beat his old boss as the Wildcats extended their homecourt winning streak to 26 games and ended a four-game losing streak to the Utes (2-2).
Weber State (3-1) opened the second half with a 14-6 run and took the lead for good at 38-37 on a three-pointer by Shawn Moore with 16:43 to play. Utah couldn't seem to buy a basket down the stretch. Tony Harvey appeared to score when he drove with 6:06 to play but he was called for an offensive foul. After getting a couple of layups, the Utes went scoreless for a stretch of almost three minutes and the Wildcats extend to a 74-58 lead.
The Utes hurt themselves with 17 turnovers and gave up 16 offensive rebounds to WSU. The Utes outshot Weber State 53.1 to 47.5 percent for the game, but was outrebounded 36 to 30.
Odd and Ends
Weber State scored the most points (58) and had the best field goal percentage (72.4) in a single-half against a Majerus-coached Utah team in the second half on Dec. 1 ... Utah?s 12-point loss to Weber State (84-72) was its worse since a 13-point loss to Kentucky (72-59) Mar. 22, 1997 in the NCAA West Regional final ... Utah?s most lopsided loss all of last year was eight points (66-58) to Miami-Ohio in the second round of the NCAA Tournament on Mar. 14 ... Utah shot a season-best 50.9 percent from the field against Stony Brook on Nov. 29 after not shooting higher than 41.9 percent in either of its first two games. The Utes sank 27-of-53 shots, led by a 4-for-5 effort by Alex Jensen and 6-for-10 night by Nate Althoff. Utah also made 9-of-18 three-pointers (.500) after shooting 33.3 and 30.0 percent from beyond the arc against Arkansas State and Kentucky, respectively. Jensen made all three of his long-range shots and Jeremy Killion hit 3-of-5.
In the Polls
Utah was ranked 19th in the USA Today/ESPN poll released on Sunday and 20th in Associated Press poll released on Monday. Utah has been ranked in the national polls for 11 consecutive weeks, dating back to last season.
Utah fell out of the rankings for the first time since the start of the 1994-95 season on Dec. 14, 1998. After a seven-week absence, the Utes returned to the national polls on Feb. 1, 1999. Utah has finished the season ranked among the top 10 teams in the nation three consecutive years.
Awesome Alex
Senior forward Alex Jensen (6-7, 225) has started all 71 games since the start of the 1997-98 season after returning from a two-year LDS church mission. A preseason all-Mountain West Conference selection, Jensen is off to a great start to the season. He is Utah?s leading scorer (10.5 ppg), shooting 57.1 percent from the field, and top rebounder (8.8 rpg). Jensen has led Utah in scoring twice and rebounds three times in four games this season. He has also scored in double figures in all but one game.
Jensen had a game-high 14 rebounds (5 offensive), three assists and one steal in 29 minutes against Arkansas State on Nov. 16. He nearly missed a double-double with 10 points, a game-high nine rebounds and three assists at Kentucky on Nov. 19. Jensen led the Utes with 13 points and 7 rebounds in 17 minutes against Stony Brook. On Dec. 1, he had a team-best 15 points in 22 minutes at Weber State. Jensen is also an excellent defensive player who can defend all five positions on the floor.
Perhaps one of the best unknown players in the country, Jensen earned first team all-Western Athletic Conference Pacific Division honors last season and was named to the league all-defensive team. A well-rounded player, Jensen led Utah in scoring four times, rebounds 14 times and assists six times. Jensen was also voted the WAC Tournament MVP after averaging 16.0 points and 6.3 rebounds in three games, leading the Utes to the championship.
Last season, Jensen scored in double figures 23 times and had 20 points or more twice. Jensen posted 10 double-doubles and one rare triple double (points, rebounds, assists). His triple-double of 16 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists against Fresno State on Jan. 25, 1999 was only the second in the 31-year history of the Jon M. Huntsman Center, the other was posted by Magic Johnson of Michigan State in the semifinals of the 1979 NCAA Final Four.
Jensen ranks third in career offensive rebounds (270) and sixth in defensive rebounds (421) at the U.
M?tt?l? Sidelined with Knee Injury
Utah senior forward Hanno M?tt?l?, a preseason candidate for the Wooden and Naismith awards, could be sidelined until late December due to a medial collateral tear in his left knee.
M?tt?l? sustained the injury after taking a charge with 5:30 left to play in an exhibition game against the California All-Stars on Nov. 9 at the Huntsman Center.
Mentioning M?tt?l?
Hanno M?tt?l? was rated among the top players in college basketball during the preseason. Playboy magazine selected M?tt?l? to their 10-player All-America team. He was also named one of the early finalists for the Wooden and Naismith National Player of the Year awards. Basketball News named M?tt?l? as the 12th-best inside-outers in college basketball. The Mountain West Conference media selected M?tt?l? as the preseason player of the year, while both the media and coaches placed him on the preseason all-conference team.
What the Utes Lose in Hanno
Senior forward Hanno M?tt?l? (6-9, 250), out until possibly late December with a medial collateral tear in his left knee, earned first team all-Western Athletic Conference Pacific Division honors last season and was named second team all-WAC in the Mountain Division in 1997-98. The Helsinki, Finland, native started all 67 games the last two seasons, and is Utah?s top returning scorer (15.3 ppg) and second-leading returning rebounder (5.4 rpg) from 1998-99.
As a junior, M?tt?l? ranked 13th in the WAC in scoring (15.3 ppg) and was Utah?s top scorer during the conference season with an average of 16.4 points per game. He led the conference in free throw percentage (.833) and was ninth in field goal percentage (.482). M?tt?l? also made 35.4 percent of his three-point field goals (34-of-96).
M?tt?l? led the Utes in scoring a team-best 13 times, scoring in double figures in all but four of the 33 games and tossing in 20 points or more on nine occasions. He was the team?s leading rebounder in 11 games and had two double-doubles.
M?tt?l? ranks high in several career statistical categories at the U. He is 22nd all-time in scoring (1,134), seventh in defensive rebounds (305), 10th in offensive boards (145) and 12th in blocked shots (38).
Althoff Stepping Up
Now in his junior season, 6-11 center Nate Althoff is asserting himself as a presence in the paint this season. Through four games, the Delano, Minn., native, is averaging 10.5 points, 5.0 rebounds and 1.8 blocked shots per game. Althoff is also shooting 56.2 percent from the field. He has scored in double figures three times, including a career-high 14 points against Arkansas State on Nov. 16.
Last season, Althoff averaged 4.9 points, 4.5 rebounds and 1.3 blocked shots per game. Althoff has improved his numbersthis season despite playing with a back sprain that kept him out of both exhibition games and has limited his practice time significantly.
Slow Start, Fast Finish
Going into Friday?s game against Augusta State with a 2-2 record is not unfamiliar territory for the Utes. Last season, Utah started the season with a 5-4 record before winning its next 23 games. Here is a statistical comparison between Utah?s first nine games last year and its first four games this year.
'98-99 | FG% | 3-FG% | PPG | RPG | AS/TO Ratio |
Utah | 44.6 | 29.7 | 66.0 | 36.2 | .976 |
Oppon. | 39.9 | 40.3 | 59.3 | 31.2 | .793 |
'99-00 | FG% | 3-FG% | PPG | RPG | AS/TO Ratio |
Utah | 46.6 | 36.2 | 67.5 | 36.0 | 1.09 |
Oppon. | 39.9 | 32.3 | 57.0 | 30.2 | .959 |
Defense, Defense, Defense
One of the trademarks of a Rick Majerus coached team is a stifling half-court defense. In 10 seasons under Majerus, Utah has ranked in the top 30 in the nation eight times in field goal percentage defense, seven times in the top 25 in scoring defense, seven times in the top 25 in scoring margin and seven times in the top 30 in rebound margin.
Through four games this season, Utah?s opponents are shooting just 39.9 percent from the field and 32.3 percent from three-point range.
Utah ranked fourth in the NCAA in scoring defense last season, giving up just 55.4 points per game. The Utes have been in the top eight three times in 10 seasons. The Utes ranked ninth in the nation in rebound margin last season (8.2 rpg) and have been ranked among the top 15 teams in the country in that category five years in a row. Utah has been among the top 30 teams in the nation in field goal percentage defense five consecutive years, including four top-10 rankings. The Utes were 29th in the NCAA in field goal percentage defense last season, limiting their opponents to 39.5 percent shooting from the floor.
Thanks to their stifling defense, the U. has also ranked among the top 25 teams in the nation in scoring margin five years in a row and seven times in the last 10 years. The Utes ranked fifth in the nation in scoring margin in 1998-99, outscoring the opposition by an average of 15.9 points per game.
Home Unbeaten Streak at 37 Games
After defeating Stony Brook on Monday, Utah has the third-longest active homecourt winning streak in NCAA Division I. The Utes have won 37 straight games in the Jon M. Huntsman Center dating back to a Dec. 31, 1996 loss to Wake Forest. Utah?s streak, which began with an 84-63 win over Colorado State on Jan. 4, 1997, ranks behind Murray State?s (43) and Duke?s (38). It is also the longest homecourt winning streak in school history.
Utah went 14-0 at home in 1998-99 to post the sixth undefeated home season in the 30-year history of the Jon M. Huntsman Center. Five of those undefeated home seasons have come under Rick Majerus: 1990-91 (16-0), 1992-93 (15-0), 1994-95 (15-0), 1997-98 (13-0), 1998-99 (14-0). The Utes are 131-10 (.929) in the Huntsman Center under Majerus and have never lost back-to-back home games.
The Utes also won 27 consecutive home games from Jan. 29, 1994 through Jan 2, 1996. The streak ended with a 65-64 loss to Fresno State on Jan. 8, 1996.
Utes Favored to Win Inaugural MWC Championship
Both the league coaches and media overwhelmingly selected Utah to finish atop the conference and claim the first-ever Mountain West Conference men?s basketball title. New Mexico was picked second in both polls, followed by a third-place tie in the coaches' poll with UNLV and Wyoming. Colorado State was selected to finish fifth, BYU sixth and then another tie for seventh place between San Diego State and Air Force. In the media poll, UNLV was chosen to finish third, followed by Wyoming, Colorado State, BYU, San Diego State and Air Force.
Ute seniors Alex Jensen and Hanno M?tt?l? were named to the preseason all-conference team by both the coaches and the media. The media honored M?tt?l? as the league?s top returning player.
Harvey, Jensen and M?tt?l? Rated Among Top 25 at Their Position
Three Utes were ranked among the top 25 players in the nation at their respective positions by Dick Vitale?s College Basketball. Tony Harvey (6-5, 200) was ranked as the 21st-best shooting guard in the nation, while Alex Jensen (6-9, 250) was rated as the 20th-best swing forward. Hanno M?tt?l? (6-9, 250) was rated at the fourth-best power forward in the country.
Ute Frontcourt Rated One of the Best in the Nation
Utah?s frontcourt of Hanno M?tt?l? (6-9, 250), Alex Jensen (6-7, 225) and Nate Althoff (6-11, 260) was ranked as the third-best in the nation by Athlon Sports. The Ute trio was rated behind UConn?s Kevin Freeman, Jake Voskuhl, Ajou Ajou Deng and Cincinnati?s Pete Mickeal, Kenyon Martin, Jermaine Tate and DerMarr Johnson.
Summer Action for M?tt?l? and Althoff
Hanno M?tt?l? played for the Finnish National Team in a four-country tournament with Lithuania, Russia and Germany in Helsinki in May. M?tt?l? ranked second in the tournament with averages of 16.3 points and 6.7 rebounds. He also led the tournament in three-point field goals by going 7-of-9 (.778).
Nate Althoff played for the Nike NIT All Stars team that toured Austria and the Czech Republic for 13 days in early August. He averaged 3.5 points and 2.2 rebounds per game during the trip. He also shot 78.6 percent from the free throw line.
Noting the 1998-99 Season
Five Straight 25 Win Seasons
Utah joined an elite group in college basketball history by posting its fifth consecutive 25-win season in 1998-99. Only 13 times has an NCAA Division I program won 25 games in five consecutive seasons. The Utes are tied with five other programs with five straight 25-win campaigns, owning the only active streak among that group. This season, Utah could tie Syracuse?s run of six straight 25-win seasons from 1990-96 for the seventh-longest streak of 25-win seasons. UCLA tops the list with 10 consecutive 25-win seasons from 1966-76.
Twenty-Twenty Vision
For the 27th time in its history, Utah won 20 games in 1998-99. Under current coach Rick Majerus, Utah has hit for 20 wins in eight of his 10 seasons, including the last five in a row. Majerus? 20-win seasons at Utah: 1990-91 (30-4), 1991-92 (24-11), 1992-93 (24-7), 1994-95 (28-6), 1995-96 (27-7), 1996-97 (29-4), 1997-98 (30-4), 1998-99 (28-5).
Utes Move to Mountain West Conference
The 1999-2000 season marks the beginning of a new era in Utah basketball history. The Utes joined seven other institutions on July 1, 1999 in the launch of the new Mountain West Conference. It is the newest NCAA Division I conference, but the names of the members should be very familiar. The new conference?half of whose schools were charter members of the Western Athletic Conference when it was formed back in 1962?consists of Utah, Air Force, Brigham Young, Colorado State, UNLV, New Mexico, San Diego State and Wyoming.
Craig Thompson is the conference?s first commissioner. Amy Turner is the Assistant Commissioner for Communications. The league concludes its first season of competition with the Mountain West Conference Tournament, March 9-11 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
Of the eight teams comprising the new league, five received postseason invitations a year ago: Utah and New Mexico were in the NCAA Tournament field, each advancing to the second round, Colorado State, UNLV and Wyoming played in the NIT.
M?tt?l? Third Ute Academic All-American in Two Years
Hanno M?tt?l?, carrying on in the tradition of academic success under head coach Rick Majerus, was selected as a GTE second-team Academic All-American in 1998-99. M?tt?l? carried a 3.33 cumulative GPA in economics.
Utah has more Academic All-Americans than any other program in the last two years. Michael Doleac and Drew Hansen were both named to the GTE Academic All-America team as seniors in 1997-98. Doleac, biology major, was a first-team selection with 3.41 GPA. Hansen, holder of a near-perfect 3.99 GPA in political science/economics, made the third team. Because of them, Utah became the first NCAA Final Four team to have two Academic All-Americans in its starting line-up.
Classroom Champions
Three of the five starters for the Runnin' Utes?Hanno M?tt?l?, Alex Jensen and Jeremy Killion?made the U. of U. academic honor roll for the 1999 spring semester. Reserve Adam Sharp, as well as walk-ons Zac Dalton, Charles Huff, Sid Krommenhoek and Brandon Sluga, were also selected to the honor roll. M?tt?l? and Sharp were named to the Western Athletic Conference all-academic team and honored as WAC scholar-athletes.
During the 1998 fall semester, nine Utes (seven on scholarship) were named to the academic honor roll. Scholarship players making the list with at least a 3.00 GPA were M?tt?l?, Sharp, Shane Willis, Killion, Phil Cullen, Gary Colbert and Brad Crockett. Walk-ons Dalton and Krommenhoek also made the list.
All players on Utah?s roster are on track to graduate and the team?s cumulative grade point average is above a 3.00. Utah?s team GPA has been above a 3.05 in each of the last three years. Rick Majerus has had 18 players make the honor roll a combined 108 times during his tenure.
Majerus Featured in DIRECTV and ESPN Commercials
Utah head coach Rick Majerus has been named DIRECTV?s advertising spokesman for its college basketball pay-per-view package, ESPN FULL COURT, during the 1999-2000 season. Majerus will appear in both print ads and television commercials produced by DIRECTV throughout the 1999-2000 college basketball season. Majerus will also appear with college basketball analyst Dick Vitale in an ESPN commercial promoting the cable network?s college basketball coverage.
NCAA Tournament Returns to the Huntsman Center in March
The University of Utah?s Jon M. Huntsman Center will host NCAA Tournament West Region first and second round games in March. Four first round games will be played on March 16 and two second round games will take place on March 18.
Recognized as a site of championships, the Huntsman Center, which opened its doors in 1969, has housed numerous national championships. In 1979, the arena accommodated the NCAA Final Four?deemed one of the most successful ever held?featuring Michigan State?s Magic Johnson and Indiana State?s Larry Bird in the championship game. The arena has also hosted eight national gymnastics championships.
This marks the 13th time the Huntsman Center has hosted the NCAA Tournament. The JMHC ranks third among the nation?s arenas for the most NCAA Tournament games hosted, with 63 having been played in the building.
Utes on Television
A record of 22 Utah games will be televised this season, including all 14 Mountain West Conference regular-season games. The Utes will be featured 11 times on ABC, ESPN and ESPN Regional Television. Utah?s game at Washington State on Dec. 11 will also be carried nationally by Fox Sports Net.
The Utes? game at New Mexico on Feb. 19 will be broadcast regionally by ABC at 4:00 p.m. (MST). Five of Utah?s Mountain West Conference games?three of which are at home?will be televised as a part of ESPN?s ?Big Monday? line-up at 10:00 p.m. (MST). The national cable network will carry Utah?s games at San Diego State on Jan. 10, Colorado State at home on Jan. 24, New Mexico at home on Jan. 31, UNLV at home on Feb. 21 and at Wyoming on Feb. 28. ESPN will also televise the Utah?s home game against Texas on Dec. 22 at 10:00 p.m. (MST).
ESPN Regional Television, a syndicated over-the-air network under the moniker of ESPN+Plus, will feature Utah three times in its Mountain West Conference ?Game of the Week? package. KJZZ-TV is the network?s Salt Lake City affiliate. Ten Utah games will also be televised locally by KJZZ-TV.
Utah Tradition
Utah Sports Radio Network
Blanding | KUTA | 790 AM |
Delta | KNAK | 540 AM |
Las Vegas | KSHP | 1400 AM |
Price | KOAL | 1080 AM |
Richfield | KSVC | 980 AM |
Salt Lake City | K-NEWS | 570 AM |
St. George/Cedar City | KSGI | 1450 AM |
Vernal | KVEL | 920 AM |
KALL-910 AM in Salt Lake City carries the Utah Coach?s Show on Tuesdays from 6:00-7:00 p.m.
Utes in the Mountain West Conference Stats Team (As of Nov. 29)
Rank | |||
Scoring Offense | 62.0 | 7th | |
Scoring Defense | 49.5 | 1st | |
Scoring Margin | +12.5 | 5th | |
FG Percentage | .415 | 7th | |
FG Pct. Defense | .378 | 5th | |
FT Percentage | .706 | 3rd | |
Reb. Offense | 38.5 | 5th | |
Reb. Defense | 30.0 | 3rd | |
Rebound Margin | +8.5 | 3rd | |
3 Pt. FG/Game | 6.0 | 3rd | |
3 Pt. Percentage | .316 | 7th | |
3 Pt. FG Pct. Defense | .240 | 3rd | |
Assists | 12.5 | 7th | |
Turnover Margin | -4.5 | 8th | |
Steals | 6.5 | 7th | |
Blocked Shots | 3.0 | 4th |
Individuals (As of Nov. 29)
Rank | |||
Nate Althoff | |||
Scoring | 9.0 | 30th | |
Rebounding | 6.5 | 9th | |
Offensive Reb. | 2.5 | 8th | |
Defensive Reb. | 4.0 | 11th | |
Free Throw Pct. | .800 | 13th | |
Blocked Shots | 1.0 | 7th |
Phil Cullen | |||
Free Throw Pct. | 1.000 | 1st | |
Blocked Shots | 1.0 | 7th |
Tony Harvey | |||
Scoring | 9.0 | 30th | |
Defensive Reb. | 4.0 | 11th | |
Assists | 4.0 | 5th | |
Assists/T.O. Ratio | 1.1 | 10th | |
Free Throw Pct. | .857 | 10th | |
3 Pt. FG/Game | 1.0 | 15th |
Alex Jensen | |||
Scoring | 9.5 | 29th | |
Rebounding | 11.5 | 2nd | |
Offensive Reb. | 4.0 | 1st | |
Defensive Reb. | 7.5 | 2nd | |
Assists | 3.0 | 10th | |
Assists/T.O. Ratio | 1.5 | 6th | |
3 Pt./ FG/Game | 1.0 | 13th |
Jeff Johnsen | |||
Rebounding | 6.0 | 12th | |
Offensive Reb. | 3.5 | 2nd | |
Assists | 3.0 | 10th | |
Assists/T.O. Ratio | 2.0 | 3rd | |
Steals | 2.0 | 6th |
Jeremy Killion | |||
Scoring | 10.5 | 23rd | |
3 Pt. FG Pct. | .333 | 15th | |
3 Pt. FG/Game | 1.5 | 11th |
Trent Whiting | |||
3 Pt. FG Pct. | .667 | 3rd | |
3 Pt. FG/Game | 2.0 | 8th |
Associated Press | USA Today/ESPN | ||||
1. | Cincinnati (55) | 1. | Cincinnati (27) | ||
2. | North Carolina (7) | 2. | N. Carolina (3) | ||
3. | Stanford (4) | 3. | Stanford (1) | ||
4. | Arizona (2) | 4. | Arizona | ||
5. | Connecticut | 5. | Auburn | ||
6. | Kansas | 6. | Kansas | ||
7. | Auburn | 7. | Michigan St. | ||
8. | Michigan St. | 8. | Connecticut | ||
9. | Texas | 9. | Temple | ||
10. | Temple | 10. | Florida | ||
11. | Florida | 11. | Texas | ||
12. | UCLA | 12. | Kentucky | ||
13. | Kentucky | 13. | UCLA | ||
14. | Syracuse | 14. | Syracuse | ||
15. | Ohio State | 15. | Duke | ||
16. | Illinois | 16. | Illinois | ||
17. | Duke | 17. | Ohio State | ||
18. | Tennessee | 18. | Tennessee | ||
19. | Purdue | 19. | UTAH | ||
20. | UTAH | 20. | DePaul | ||
21. | Oklahoma St. | 21. | Purdue | ||
22. | DePaul | 22. | Oklahoma St. | ||
23. | Indiana | 23. | Maryland | ||
24. | Maryland | 24. | Indiana | ||
25. | Gonzaga | 25. | Miami (Fla.) |
Utah?s Ranking by Week
Associated Press | USA Today/ ESPN | ||
Preseason | 15 | 15 | |
Nov. 14 | 16 | 15 | |
Nov. 21 | 19 | 17 | |
Nov. 28 | 20 | 19 | |
Consecutive Weeks Ranked by A.P. 11Last Time Not Ranked Jan. 25, 1999Consecutive Weeks Ranked by USA Today/ESPN 11Last Time Not Ranked Jan. 25, 1999
Utah?s Preseason Rankings
Basketball News | 17 |
Blue Ribbon Yearbook | 14 |
Dick Vitale | 16 |
Sporting News | 17 |
Street & Smith?s | 19 |
Current Homecourt Winning Streaks
1. | Murray State | 43 | |
2. | Duke | 38 | |
3. | UTAH | 37 | |
4. | Arizona | 34 | |
Cincinnati | 33 |
Conf. | Pct. | Overall | Pct. | ||
1. | UNLV | 0-0 | - - | 4-0 | 1.00 |
2. | BYU | 0-0 | - - | 2-1 | .667 |
3. | Wyoming | 0-0 | - - | 3-2 | .600 |
4. | New Mexico | 0-0 | - - | 4-3 | .571 |
5. | Utah | 0-0 | - - | 2-2 | .500 |
6. | San Diego State | 0-0 | - - | 1-1 | .500 |
7. | Colorado State | 0-0 | - - | 1-3 | .250 |
8. | Air Force | 0-0 | - - | 1-3 | .250 |
Climbing the Career Charts
Scoring
1. | Keith Van Horn (1993-97) | 2,542 | |
2. | Billy McGill (1959-62) | 2,321 | |
3. | Josh Grant (1988-93) | 2,000 | |
4. | Mike Newlin (1968-71) | 1,849 | |
5. | Luther Burden (1972-75) | 1,790 | |
6. | Jeff Judkins (1974-78) | 1,740 | |
7. | Danny Vranes (1977-81) | 1,701 | |
8. | Tom Chambers (1977-78) | 1,698 | |
9. | Mitch Smith (1985-89) | 1,628 | |
10. | Andre Miller (1995-99) | 1,618 | |
- - - | |||
22. | Hanno M?tt?l? (1996-Present) | 1,134 |
Blocked Shots
1. | Mitch Smith (1985-89) | 157 |
2. | Keith Van Horn (1993-97) | 126 |
3. | Michael Doleac (1994-98) | 124 |
4. | Josh Grant (1988-93) | 109 |
5. | Albert Springs (1983-87) | 76 |
6. | Larry Cain (1989-93) | 67 |
7. | Andre Miller (1995-99) | 65 |
8. | Paul Afeaki (1990-92) | 57 |
9. | Danny Vranes (1977-81) | 49 |
10. | Tom Chambers (1977-81) | 44 |
- - - | ||
12. | Hanno M?tt?l? (1996-Present) | 38 |
Offensive Rebounds
1. | Josh Grant, 1988-93 | 337 |
2. | Michael Doleac, 1994-98 | 288 |
3. | Alex Jensen, 1994-95, 97-Present | 270 |
4. | Mitch Smith, 1985-89 | 260 |
5. | Keith Van Horn, 1993-97 | 235 |
6. | Andre Miller, 1995-99 | 189 |
7. | Walter Watts, 1988-91 | 178 |
8. | Brandon Jessie, 1994-96 | 161 |
9. | Byron Wilson, 1990-93 | 148 |
10. | Hanno M?tt?l?, 1996-Present | 145 |
Defensive Rebounds
1. | Keith Van Horn, 1993-97 | 839 |
2. | Josh Grant, 1988-93 | 729 |
3. | Michael Doleac, 1994-98 | 598 |
4. | Mitch Smith, 1985-89 | 549 |
5. | Andre Miller, 1995-99 | 454 |
6. | Alex Jensen, 1994-95, 97-Present | 421 |
7. | Hanno M?tt?l?, 1996-99 | 305 |
8. | Byron Wilson, 1990-93 | 301 |
9. | Phil Dixon, 1989-94 | 279 |
10. | Walter Watts, 1988-91 | 275 |
Rick Majerus Head Coach
11th Season at Utah
Considered as one of the top coaches in America, Rick Majerus has entrenched the University of Utah in college basketball?s power structure. The Utes? steady rise in national prominence since Majerus? arrival on the ?Hill? at the start of the 1989-90 season was crystallized by a trip to the 1998 NCAA Final Four, where Utah finished as the national runner-up.
Entering his 15th season as a college head coach, Majerus? career winning percentage of .744 was the fourth-highest among active Division I coaches and ranked 15th all-time. Among active coaches, only Roy Williams (Kansas), Jerry Tarkanian (Fresno State and John Kreese (College of Charleston) had better winning percentages. By notching his 300th career victory during the 1997-98 season, Majerus became one of just one of 12 coaches all-time to reach the 300-win plateau in 14 seasons, only five coaches have won 300 games in less time.
Majerus, who has never had a losing season, has averaged 22 wins per year over the course of his career. He has won 20 games 12 times and 30 games twice. Majerus has also guided eight teams to the NCAA Tournament and four others to the NIT.
A successful coach since the beginning, Majerus? best years have come at Utah. While leading the Utes to unprecedented success, Majerus has become the winningest coach in modern times at the U. Despite the fact that he coached just six games his first season due to heart surgery, Majerus? Utah teams have averaged nearly 24 wins a year. Take away his shortened debut season, and the Utes have won 20 games all but once, averaging 26 wins in nine full seasons under Majerus.
In each of the past five seasons, the U. has won at least 27 games, including a school-record 30 victories in 1997-98. Only 13 times has an NCAA Division I program won at least 25 games in five consecutive seasons. The Utes have claimed five consecutive Western Athletic Conference regular-season championships outright (including divisional titles the last three years) and made five straight NCAA Tournament appearances.
What Majerus? teams have accomplished since the beginning of his tenure is astounding. Consider:
The Majerus File
Year-by-Year at Utah
Year | Overall | Pct. | Conf. | Finish | Postseason |
1989-90 | 4-2 ** | .667 | - - | - - | - - |
1990-91 | 30-4 | .882 | 15-1 | 1st | NCAA Sweet 16 |
1991-92 | 24-11 | .686 | 9-7 | 4th | NIT Final Four |
1992-93 | 24-7 | .774 | 15-3 | 1st-T | NCAA 2nd Round |
1993-94 | 14-14 | .500 | 8-10 | 5th-T | - - |
1994-95 | 28-6 | .824 | 15-3 | 1st | NCAA 2nd Round |
1995-96 | 27-7 | .794 | 15-3 | 1st | NCAA Sweet 16 |
1996-97 | 29-4 | .878 | 15-1 | 1st * | NCAA Elite Eight |
1997-98 | 30-4 | .882 | 12-2 | 1st * | NCAA Runner-up |
1998-99 | 28-5 | .848 | 14-0 | 1st * | NCAA 2nd Round |
1999-2000 | 2-2 | .500 | 0-0 | ||
Totals | 240-66 | .784 | 118-30 | 11 Years | |
Career | 339-118 | .742 | 140-40 | 16 Years |
Breaking Down Majerus? Career Record
All-Time | At Utah | |
Overall | 339-118 (.742) | 240-66 (.784) |
Home | 193-28 (.873) | 131-10 (.929) |
Away | 106-68 (.609) | 75-38 (.664) |
Neutral | 40-22 (.645) | 34-18 (.654) |
Conference Games | 140-40 (.778) | 118-30 (.797) |
Conference Tournaments | 18-7 (.720) | 15-6 (.714) |
Postseason NIT | 8-4 (.667) | 4-1 (.800) |
NCAA Tournaments | 16-8 (.667) | 15-7 (.682) |