Salt Lake
and Lewiston becoming
Frontier graveyard
George Ferguson
Havre Daily News sports editor
gferguson@havredailynews.com
Life on the road in the Frontier Conference can be an extremely difficult time
for even the best of basketball programs. But playing at Westminster College in
Salt Lake City and Lewis-Clark State in Lewiston, Idaho, is a whole other
nightmare altogether.
Just ask Montana State University-Northern men's head coach Shawn
Huse or Skylights head man Chris Mouat.
Both MSU-N teams took No. 24 rankings into Westminster
and LC State last weekend and both came away with nothing but bad losses and
headaches, as the Lights and Skylights went a combined 0-4 on the road trip.
But before anyone feels too sorry about the teams' woes last weekend, just know
they aren't alone. In fact, over the last three seasons the Griffins and Warriors
have been nearly impossible to beat on their home floor.
The Westminster
men have have a record of
20-1 over the last three years in Frontier games on their home floor. So far
this season the Griffins are 2-1, but that loss came at the hands of their
closest rival - LC State. The Westminster
women also have just one loss at home this season to - who else - LC State. But
since the 2002 season, the Griffins are a combined 16-5 on their home floor.
The going gets even tougher when Frontier teams journey to Lewiston.
The LC state men are undefeated at home in 2005-06. In fact, the Warriors have
rattled off 17 straight wins in conference play on their home floor. The last
time they lost a conference game at home was Jan. 16, 2003, when they dropped a 76-72 decision to Carroll
College. That loss snapped an
18-game home winning streak for the Warriors.
Like the men, the LC State women have yet to lose a game on their home floor
this season, and have been equally unbeatable over the last three years. Since the
beginning of the 2003 campaign, the LC State women are a combined 20-1 on their
home floor in conference play.
This weekend marks the halfway point of the Frontier Conference season and
three of the aforementioned four programs are ranked in the latest NAIA poll.
The LC State women (5-0, 17-2) are tied atop the Frontier standings with
UM-Western, and are ranked ninth in the nation. The Bulldogs also moved up a
notch this week to No. 5. The LC State men are 3-2 in conference play and 15-4
overall. But the Warriors made a huge leap in the poll this week, debuting at
No. 18.
The Westminster men slipped out of
the Top 25 last week, but after a sweep of then No. 24 MSU-N and the University
of Great Falls, the Griffins (3-2,
13-5) are back in at No. 22. The surprise team in the Frontier Conference on
the women's side is the Westminster
women. After wins over MSU-N and UGF this past weekend, the Griffins (3-2,
10-8) are knocking on the poll's door at an unofficial No. 26, receiving 40
votes this week.
In keeping with the Westminster
theme, the school might have the league's top MVP candidates on both teams. Westminster
senior Shalee Fackrell is
leaving little doubt about who the women's MVP will be and, quite possibly, who
the best player in the NAIA is.
Fackrell is averaging 27 points per game, which leads
the league by eight points. MSU-N senior guard Jaci Heny is second at 19 points per game. Fackrell
is also second in the league in rebounding at 10.3 per game, third in
free-throw percentage and third in blocked shots.
The Westminster men also boast two
potential player of the year candidates in Jared Ruiz (17.4 ppg)
and Nick Booth (16.0 ppg). Both players torched the
Lights and Argos last weekend,
averaging a combined 48 points over the course of the weekend. Only UM-Western
sharpshooter Ty Palmer (18.0 ppg) is scoring more
than the Westminster duo.
The UGF men might be off to a 0-6 start in league play this season, but the
Argos are happy to boast having the NAIA's top assist
man in former Cut Bank star Keithan Gregg. The
6-3 guard is averaging 9.8 assists per game, which leads the nation. He is also
second in the conference in steals.
Gregg decided against playing basketball out of high school, instead opting for
a tennis scholarship to Eastern Washington
University. Gregg was a four-time
Montana Class B-C state singles champion in tennis, and fared well for the
Eagles, before deciding to give college basketball a try.
The MSU-Northern Lights will be next up for Gregg and the Argos,
and both teams are in need of a win when they hook up in Great
Falls on Saturday night. Northern (3-3, 14-8) has
dropped two straight games after upsetting then No. 2 Carroll College in Havre
two weeks ago.
Another key game to watch this week on the men's side is on Saturday night when
No. 6 Carroll (5-1, 18-2) visits Billings
to take on second-place Rocky Mountain
College (4-2, 12-9). Heading into
the weekend, the Bears have been the surprise team on the men's side this
season, and they trail the first-place Saints by one game. However, the Bears
are only holding on to second place by a half game over LC State and Westminster.
The MSU-Northern (2-4, 12-6) women also need a win in Great
Falls on Saturday night against the Argos
(1-5, 5-16). The Skylights are losers of three straight, and are coming off
their worst loss of the season, a 20-point defeat at LC State last Saturday.
The two teams have already met this season in a nonconference
affair in Havre, with the Skylights handling UGF fairly easily.
The game of the week on the women's side will certainly be on Saturday night
when LC State and UM-Western square off in Dillon in a matchup
of two of the NAIA's top 10 teams. Both squads sit
atop the Frontier standings at 5-0.
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Havre Daily News