By: Jamal Smith Sports Editor
The men’s basketball team had something to prove going into their matchup with the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA) on Saturday, Feb. 20, 2016 after a Tuesday loss to the University of Alaska Fairbanks, which was their third loss of the season.
Western rebounded from their loss and defeated the Seawolves 64-58. The close-fought victory improves the Wolves’ overall record to 23-3 and 16-2 in GNAC conference play.
More importantly, the win seals the team’s first goal: winning the GNAC Regular-Season Championship.
Senior Julian Nichols (G) led the Wolves in scoring with 17 points. Nichols flirted with a triple-double but finished just short with seven assists and seven rebounds.
Three other Wolves scored in double figures: senior Devon Alexander (G) had 14 points, redshirt sophomore Tanner Omlid (G/F) had 12 points, and the 2015 GNAC Player of the Year, redshirt senior Andy Avgi, had 11 points on a tough shooting night.
Western came out firing on all cylinders from the opening tip, scoring the first eight points of the game on consecutive three-pointers from senior Jordan Wiley (G) and Omlid, followed by a fast-break layup courtesy of Nichols.
Westerns’ lead was short lived as the Seawolves started draining shots from distance and the Wolves hit a dry spell. After an Avgi layup made the score 16-11 with the advantage to the Wolves, Western failed to score in just over five minutes of play and UAA took a 17-16 lead.
Head coach Jim Shaw, unhappy with the Wolves’ inability to score, called a timeout and regrouped his troops. Just seconds out of the timeout, junior Janvier Alaby (G) broke the Wolves’ scoring drought by scoring 4 points off of a much-needed jumper and draining two free throws, but the Seawolves would still take a 26-23 lead into halftime.
The second half went back-and-forth with both teams fighting for every point. The game was so closely contested; there were 16 lead changes with 10 coming in the second half.
With 2:37 seconds remaining in the game and UAA up 56-52, Western buckled down on defense and showed why they are the No. 1 team in Division II basketball, only allowing the Seawolves two points in the final two minutes of regulation.
In the final two minutes, Wiley and Alexander both drained the deep ball and Nichols hit four clutch free throws to give the Wolves a 64-58 lead, the largest lead by either team in the game.
Before the start of the week Western looked like the consensus No. 1 seed going into the Division II playoffs, but Tuesday’s loss to Alaska Fairbanks puts the top seed in jeopardy. Regardless, the Wolves will be in a great position for a deep playoff run.
Contact the author at jsmith15@wou.edu or on Twitter @journalsportWOU