Planes, trains and automobiles greet Lights

By Ryan Divish/Havre Daily News Sports Editor/rdivish@havredailynews.com

The players and coaches in the Montana State University-Northern basketball programs had to feel just like they were in a movie. No, it wasn't "Hoosiers," "Blue Chips" or any other basketball movie. It was more like "Planes, Trains and Automobiles."

Unfortunately, Steve Martin and John Candy aren't on this trip for entertainment as the Lights and Skylights left Wednesday to head south to Salt Lake City to play Westminster College tonight and hit the road to face Lewis-Clark State on Saturday.

While every road trip in the conference is difficult, this trip is particularly grueling because of the the form of travel. The Lights and Skylights will literally be taking planes, trains and automobiles on this trip, just not in that particular order. And thus far their trip has gone much like the movie.

Northern left Havre Tuesday afternoon on Amtrak headed west to Spokane to catch a Wednesday evening flight to Salt Lake City. However, the trip took a little longer than planned - by about eight hours. The teams finally rolled into Spokane at 10 a.m. on Wednesday. After a quick practice at Gonzaga, they flew into Salt Lake City.

"It's definitely been an interesting trip so far," said Lights head coach Shawn Huse on Wednesday night.

Obviously, interesting can be defined in several ways. But to say that the travel debacle doesn't take its toll on a team would be naive.

Skylights head coach Mike Erickson referred to the effects of travel before his team left Havre and on its two-day odyssey.

"It's hard to stay focused when you are traveling that long and that far," Erickson said. "Obviously, going through all the changes will be difficult, but every road trip in the Frontier Conference is difficult on some level."

Besides the distractions, this trip will be challenging on the court as well. Both Westminster teams are playing very good basketball as of late, while Lewis-Clark State was picked to finish first in both preseason polls, with both teams featuring rosters loaded with talent.

LIGHTS FACE NO.25, NO. 16 TEAMS

The Northern men have the particularly daunting task of facing two teams ranked in the NAIA Division I top 25 this weekend.

Strangely, neither Westminster nor Lewis-Clark is leading the Frontier Conference. Both teams share the same 3-2 conference records as the Lights. The three teams are locked in a three-way tie for second place behind Rocky Mountain College and UM-Western, which are tied for first place at 4-1.

Westminster moved into the top 25 after scoring a huge 77-55 win over LC in Lewiston, Idaho. At 15-8, the Griffins record is bit deceiving considering the level of their nonconference opponents.

Both of Westminster's losses have come against Rocky Mountain College and UM-Western, the same teams Northern has lost to.

A year ago, the short-handed Lights squad went into Westminster and were promptly spanked 94-71. Northern was without post player Charlie Ereaux and the taller Westminster players out-rebounded the Lights 37-28 and dominated play inside with a physical, aggressive style.

Both Westminster and Northern are very different teams from a year ago, but once again the Lights will go into this trip short-handed.

Reserve forward Berhane Williams, who is coming off of one of his best games of the season, has been suspended indefinitely for violation of team rules and will not be making the trip.

The loss of Williams will be somewhat tempered by the fact that Westminster lost the majority of its inside presence from last year. Gone is forward Nic Sparrow, who torched Northern for 47 points and 14 rebounds in two games last year. Instead, Westminster shifts its offensive to its guard play. The bulk of the scoring load falls directly on the shoulders of senior Adam Hiatt.

So far this season, Hiatt has responded. The 6-2 shooting guard is leading the conference in scoring at 22.4 points per game.

"Westminster isn't quite as physical as last year," Huse said. "They're getting more of their production from their guards, particularly Hiatt. He's always a threat whenever he touches the ball. And if he gets going, it could be a very long night."

Hiatt's backcourt mate Shane Humphreys is second on the team in scoring at 12.4 points per game while shooting 42 percent from three-point range.

Humphreys is second in the frontier in three-pointers made with 61. Westminster isn't totally void of an inside presence.

Freshman forward Nate Sanchez is averaging 10.8 points per game while shooting 61 percent from the field. Freshman forward Nick Booth chips in with 9.6 points and 6.7 rebounds a game.

Playing Westminster isn't so much about personnel, but playing against an offensive system. The Griffins play a patient, deliberate style of basketball similar to the NCAA Division I Princeton Tigers. Like Princeton, Westminster likes to spread teams out, use the entire shot clock and exploit opponents' defensive aggressiveness with backdoor cuts and counter direction.

"They still run their Princeton sets and they run them well," Huse said. "It really puts you in some weird situations defensively. They are very effective, very crisp in what they do. It's the type of offense that wears you down mentally because they are so patient."

It's obviously a style that Northern has played before, but would like change if possible. The Lights lead the Frontier in scoring at 94.2 points per game and would like to impose a fast-paced game on the Griffins. It won't be easy. Westminster is second in the Frontier in scoring defense, holding teams to 63.7 points per game.

Besides the contrast of styles, Northern has to contend with the trend of not playing well on the opening night of the weekend schedule. Both of the Lights losses have come on the first night of the two-game weekend schedule, something Huse would like to change.

"It seems to be first night of the weekend thing," Huse said. "It started the first weekend against Great Falls when we didn't exactly burn the house down with our shooting. We need to come right out at the opening tip off. We know we're capable of it. We just haven't put together the type of game we know we can play during conference."

It doesn't get any easier for Northern on Saturday. Even after a day break in between, playing Lewis-Clark State on its home floor ranks right up there shoveling snow in Havre's recent weather.

The Warriors are ranked 16th in the country with a 19-4 overall record and have a roster loaded with talent.

"Without a doubt, they have plenty of talent and weapons at every position," Huse said. "From top-to-bottom, they are probably the most talented team in the conference. They don't have any one person you can focus on."

Indeed, the Warriors have seven players averaging from eight to 12 points per game, led by shooting guard Joey Ray's 12.3 points per game.

LC is a mixture of size and athleticism with 6-10 center Adam Trombley (10.3 ppg, 6.7 rpg), 6-5 slashing forward James Idoko (9.6 ppg, 6.5 rpg) player and ultra-quick point guard Ricky Frazier (8.4 ppg, 4.2 apg).

The Warriors also have plenty of toughness in former Northern player Dustin Endsley and outside shooting with Danny Allen and UGF transfer Danny Ball.

Another factor aiding LC is the gym it plays in - if you can call it a gym. The Warrior Gym is a throwback to the old days with low-hanging balconies and tight playing quarters.

"It only seats about 1,000 people and with the balconies the fans are right on top of you," Huse said. "Some people in the conference say the floor isn't regulation length. It's a definite home court advantage and totally different from any other gym in the conference."

With the frenzied crowd and LC's offensive firepower, Huse said his team must slow down or match any big Warrior scoring runs.

"We can't allow them to stretch the lead on us," Huse said. "That's a tough place to come back in."