Wyoming
BYU basketball: Cougars rely on their defense to throttle Wyoming at the Delta Center
Whenever BYU and former conference rival Wyoming tangle in any sport, the results are never all that pretty for either side.
So when BYU star Richie Saunders collided with Wyoming’s Jordan Nesbitt early in Saturday night’s nonconference basketball game in front of 11,217 at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City and got the worst of it, suffering a bloody and lacerated lip that would keep him out the remainder of the contest, it appeared it was going to be another one of those classic Cougars-Cowboys contests.
BYU’s defense, led by specialist Mawot Mag, a seldom-used transfer from Rutgers, had other ideas.
Special Collector’s Issue: “1984: The Year BYU was Second to None”
Get an inclusive look inside BYU Football’s 1984 National Championship season.
Not known for its defensive prowess in its previous nine games, BYU upped the intensity on that end of the floor almost the entire 40 minutes and ran away with a 68-49 win to improve to 8-2 and push its winning streak over Wyoming to 15 games.
The 49 points tied 5-5 Wyoming’s lowest output of the season, the other coming in a 96-49 loss at Texas Tech.
“It was a good win. I thought our defensive execution was outstanding. They are a team that gets to the line quite a bit,” said BYU coach Kevin Young.
““I thought we forced them into some shots that they are not comfortable taking, then kept them off the free-throw line. That was really the key to the game. I am happy with the defensive execution more than anything.”
With BYU leading 4-0 and Saunders heading to the locker room with head athletic trainer Rob Ramos, Young turned to Dawson Baker and then Mag, and the duo displayed the depth that the Cougars will need to rely on all the more when they get into Big 12 play.
Young called Mag’s performance “inspiring” and said it was the difference in the game. The graduate transfer who was raised in Australia had season-highs across the board: 11 points (on 4 of 5 shooting), three rebounds in 23 minutes.
“I just told the team that it was (huge),” Young said. “He has been dealt a tough hand here, coming back off an injury and he just hasn’t found his footing, and I have not given him much opportunity to find his footing, so he has had to grind through stuff as a guy who has played major minutes at a major college basketball level and has had a great attitude and it was just really inspiring what he did.”
Wyoming would appear to be rather average by Mountain West standards, but consider that the Cowboys lost their last three games by a combined seven points, and on Dec. 4 in Logan, they pushed undefeated Utah State to the brink before the Aggies won, 70-67.
Offensively, the Cowboys are on the explosive side despite playing at a slower pace than most opponents BYU has faced this season. Obi Agbim scored a game-high 21 points, but no other Cowboys reached double figures.
“His defense was tremendous,” Young said of Mag, “and they were daring him to shoot shots. He took good shots and made them (3 of 4 from 3-point range for the career 27% 3-point shooter). “That kid he was guarding out there is a good player. I thought our guys rallied around it and it was a cool moment for our team.”
What was the key to Mag’s success?
“Just staying ready. Coach always tries to tell us if things are not going your way, just stay ready,” Mag said. “It is a long season and we have a lot of talent.
“There can only be a certain amount of people on the floor. Just stay ready and get better every day and just wait your turn because you never know.”
With freshman Egor Demin watching from the bench for the second straight game with a knee contusion and Saunders exiting early, it fell upon Trevin Knell and Baker to pick up the scoring slack, and that’s what they did.
Knell went 6 for 7 for 15 points in 28 minutes, while Baker had 11 points, five rebounds and two assists. Young said Saunders “will continue to be evaluated” and didn’t have any other details on the injury that drew blood and silenced the Delta Center crowd for a good minute before he was helped to his feet.
“Richie’s injury was unfortunate, but everybody stepped up, including myself and Eli (Crawford),” Mag said. “I am just glad we came out here and got the W.”
Added Baker: “No matter who it is, when someone goes down it is just our instincts as brothers to get behind each other and push forward and that’s what we did tonight. I am really excited and proud of the guys.”
That BYU would get its eighth win wasn’t really in question early as the Cougars jumped out to an 11-0 lead, but Young’s squad seemed to lose interest a bit after building a 30-16 advantage with 7:20 remaining in the first half and only scored four points on their last 10 possessions of the half, allowing Wyoming to scratch back and make it 34-25 at halftime.
BYU scored 27 points in the first 10 minutes of the first half and just seven points in the last 10 minutes of the half. Credit the Cowboys for dictating the tempo the last 10 minutes of the first half.
“That last four-minute stretch (of the first half) wasn’t great for us offensively,” Young acknowledged. “Weird combinations, probably poor subbing on my part. I will have to look at the film to see exactly what (happened). We couldn’t find a rhythm, execution was poor.”
The second half was a different story. With Knell and Mag drilling 3-pointers, the Cougars quickly regained control and had a 56-37 lead with just under 10 minutes remaining on a Baker layup.
“Outside of the first play of the half, I thought we executed extremely well in the second half,” Young said. “I don’t think the stats will show it. How many layups did we miss at the basket? It felt like a bunch after running some really good offense. I thought the execution was much better, though.”
BYU took much better care of the ball in the second half after committing eight turnovers in the first half. The Cougars finished with 13, but a few of those came in garbage time.
They adjusted well to an NBA arena as well, making 9 of 20 3-point attempts (45%) and shooting 52% from the field, despite the plethora of missed bunnies that Young referenced.
BYU’s bench outscored Wyoming’s bench 37-14 and the Cougars enjoyed a 24-18 advantage in the paint.
“We gotta continue to compete against some of the power conference teams to continue to learn about ourselves, but I think our defensive identity particularly in the last two games is really starting to come together,” Young said.
“Offensively we are playing the way I would like us to play, for the most part. … We are one game away from Big 12 play so we gotta do it in short order, but so far we are getting closer.”
The Cougars’ next game is Friday against Florida A&M at the Marriott Center.
Wyoming
Cowgirls prepare to take on South Dakota
LARAMIE, Wyo. — The Wyoming Cowgirl basketball team will continue its month-long road trip on Sunday when they face South Dakota at noon.
Wyoming will be coming off a nine-day stretch in between games and a 62-50 loss at Missouri State on Dec. 6. The Cowgirls had four players in double figures that game, as Allyson Fertig led UW with 15 points and 10 rebounds, Tess Barnes and Emily Mellema had 11 points each and Malene Pedersen added 10. Barnes,
So far this season, Fertig ranks in the top three in the Mountain West in 12 statistical categories. She is second in the league in scoring with 18.1 points per game, while her 11.1 rebounds a contest leads the MW and ranks fifth in the nation. Fertig’s five offensive rebounds per game ranks seventh-best in the country. Fertig also leads the league with a 57% field goal percentage, and is second in field goals made.
Mellema and Pedersen enter Sunday scoring in double figures this season, averaging 12.6 and 11.2 points per game, respectively.
South Dakota is led by its do-it-all guard Grace Larkins, who leads the Coyotes in points, rebounds, assists and steals. She averages 22.8 ppg, 8.2 rpg, 5.7 apg and 1.6 spg. USD has two other athletes, both scoring 12.5 points per game, in Carley Duffney and Alexi Hempe. Hempe has a team-high 27 made 3-pointers on the year while shooting 37.5% from beyond the arc.
The Coyotes are scoring at a clip of 70.6 points per contest while allowing 76.7 a game. South Dakota shoots 41.6% from the field.
Related
Wyoming
High wind warning in effect today through Sunday in central Wyoming
CASPER, Wyo. — A high wind warning was issued just after midnight on Saturday by the National Weather Service in Riverton. The warning is in effect until Sunday evening.
According to the NWS in Riverton, some areas of Natrona County — including Outer Drive in Casper — could see gusts of up to 70 mph.
According to the Wyoming Department of Transportation, Outer Drive is closed to high-profile vehicles due to extreme blowover risk as of 6:30 a.m. Saturday.
Interstate 25 and U.S. Highway 87 between Chugwater and Wheatland are currently closed to high-profile vehicles, as are I-80, U.S. 287 and U.S. 30 between Rawlins and Laramie.
A winter storm is expected to impact western Wyoming, with up to 8 inches of snowfall in the Yellowstone area, according to the NWS in Riverton. Casper has only a slight chance of light snow overnight on Sunday.
Related
Wyoming
How to Watch, Stream Penn State Wrestling Vs. Wyoming
The top-ranked Penn State wrestling team gets a bonus match at the Bryce Jordan Center this season. Penn State shifted Sunday’s match against Wyoming from Rec Hall to the Bryce Jordan Center because the Penn State women’s volleyball team is hosting an NCAA Tournament regional at Rec Hall this weekend.
Penn State (2-0) won its 59th consecutive match last Sunday at Allentown’s PPL Center, defeating Lehigh 36-3. The Nittany Lions proved dominant, winning nine of 10 bouts and finishing with a 21-1 advantage in takedowns. Penn State scored 10 bonus points through a pin by Levi Haines, technical falls by Mitchell Mesenbrink and Greg Kerkvliet and major decisions from Shayne Van Ness, Carter Starocci and Josh Barr.
This is Penn State’s last home dual of 2024. Here’s what and how to watch.
How to watch, stream the Penn State vs. Wyoming wrestling match
Tickets are available for the match at the Bryce Jordan Center. Though the match will not be televised, BIG+ will stream the Penn State-Wyoming match beginning at 1 p.m. ET.
What to watch when Penn State wrestles Wyoming
The Nittany Lions seek their 59th consecutive dual-meet victory dating to 2020. Wyoming (2-2) is ranked 26th and has five wrestlers ranked by InterMat: Jore Volk (7th at 125), Cole Brooks (28th at 141), Gabe Willochell (20nd at 149), Jared Hill (19th at 157) and Joey Novak (13th at 197). However, Wyoming said that its top two wrestlers, Volk and Novak, are injured and will not make the trip. The Cowboys also are entirely new to Plenn State. No Wyoming wrestler has competed against any Nittany Lion.
Penn State’s primary lineup is 53-1 so far this season, and the Nittany Lions have an 18-2 dual-match record. Penn State has outscored its dual-match opponents, Drexel and Lehigh, by a combined score of 77-6.
The Nittany Lions could roll out different lineup combinations for their last home dual of the season, but here’s the expected starting lineup. All rankings are according to InterMat:
Penn State wrestling notes
Penn State wrestling coach Cael Sanderson is pursuing his fifth consecutive unbeaten dual-meet season with the Nittany Lions. Sanderson’s teams have won 59 consecutive duals since the 2019-2020 season. Penn State has lost just one Big Ten dual in the past nine seasons.
Against Lehigh, redshirt freshman Josh Barr (197) scored three takedowns in an 11-3 decision over formerly unbeaten Michael Beard. Barr moved up to No. 7 in the InterMat rankings with the win.
Penn State wrestlers are a combined 82-17 so far this season. That includes 64 bonus-point victories with 21 falls.
Up next
Penn State will compete in the Journeymen Collegiate Duals on Dec. 22 in Nashville. The Nittany Lions are scheduled to wrestle three matches against Binghamton, Arkansas-Little Rock and No. 15 Missouri.
More Penn State Wrestling
Carter Starocci scores statement win in NWCA All-Star Classic
What to know about Penn State wrestling’s 2024-25 season
Cael Sanderson says the “best years are still ahead for Penn State wrestling”
-
Technology1 week ago
Struggling to hear TV dialogue? Try these simple fixes
-
Business6 days ago
OpenAI's controversial Sora is finally launching today. Will it truly disrupt Hollywood?
-
Politics2 days ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology3 days ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Politics1 day ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology1 day ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics3 days ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
-
Technology1 day ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit