Northwestern University Athletics

Men's Basketball Hits Road for Michigan
1/19/2000 12:00:00 AM | Men's Basketball
Jan. 19, 2000
NORTHWESTERN MEN'S BASKETBALL (4-11, 0-3) vs. Michigan (10-3, 2-1)
DATE/TIME: Jan. 19, 2000/7 p.m. CT
SITE (Cap.): Crisler Arena (13,562)
TV: ESPN Regional
RADIO: WGN 720-AM
THE MATCHUP
The Wildcats face their second road test of the Big Ten season as they travel to Ann Arbor, Mich., to take on the Wolverines. It will be the first of two trips to the state of Michigan this week for NU, the Wildcats face Michigan State Saturday. The Wolverines defeated Illinois on Sunday in overtime, 95-91. The Wildcats won the last meeting between the two schools, 58-34, in their only meeting last season.
THE SERIES: Michigan leads 89-48
OFFICIALS: Dan Chrisman, Tom Clark, Sam Lickliter
NU PROBABLE STARTERS
F ? #30 ? Jason Burke (6-6, 190, Fr., Plano, Texas) 2.2 ppg, 1.3 rpg
F ? #14 ??Steve Lepore (6-5, 200, So., North Olmstead, Ohio) 10.1 ppg, 4.0 rpg
C ? #43 ??Brody Deren (6-7, 242, Fr., Harlan, Iowa) 4.4 ppg, 4.1 rpg
G ? #5 ? Ben Johnson (6-2, 180, Fr., Minneapolis, Minn.) 12.7 ppg, 3.7 rpg
G ? #32 ?Collier Drayton (6-2, 189, So., Lyons, N.Y.) 3.1 ppg, 3.7 rpg
OFF THE BENCH
F ? #33 ? Tavaras Hardy (6-8, 223, So., Joliet, Ill.) 7.9 ppg, 5.5 rpg
G ? #24 ??David Newman (5-11, 170, So., Des Moines, Iowa) 5.4 ppg, 1.5 rpg
F ? #3 ??Winston Blake (6-5, 191, Fr., Plano Texas) 4.9 ppg, 1.4 rpg
C ? #55 ??Aaron Jennings (6-11, 210, Fr., Atkins, Iowa) 3.5 ppg, 3.2 rpg
F ? #41 ? Adam Robinson (6-10, 210, Fr., Cedar Falls, Iowa) 0.5 ppg, 1.0 rpg
G ? #44 ? Jeff Eschmeyer (6-2, 192, Jr., New Knoxville, Ohio) 0.0 ppg, 0.0 rpg
G ? #10 ? Langston Hughes (5-11, 186, Fr., Waukegan, Ill.) 0.0 ppg, 0.0 rpg
SCOUTING THE WOLVERINES
Michigan has won two overtimes games in a row and has five wins in their last six games. The Wolverines score 82 points per game as a team, but a giving up 19 points. They are led in scoring by three freshmen - Jamal Crawford at 17.1 ppg, Lavell Blanchard at 15.1 ppg and Kevin Gaines at 12.9 ppg. UM was given a boost four games ago by the return of junior forward Brandon Smith. Smith had offseason knee surgury and has averaged 9.0 points and 30 minutes per game since his return to the lineup.
OHIO STATE RECAP
Northwestern (4-11, 0-3) battled back from a slow start but No. 18 Ohio State was too tough in the end and defeated the Wildcats, 58-44, at Welsh-Ryan Arena. The Buckeyes hit six of their first eight field goal attempts and scored the game?s first 14 points. Freshman Jason Burke, making his first career start, converted a backdoor layup to get the ?Cats on the board, as they began to chip away at the lead. Northwestern hit four first-half three-pointers, and a jumper by freshman Ben Johnson trimmed the deficit to eight, 28-20, heading into halftime. The Wildcats hung tough through the early stages of the second half behind the strong play of Johnson and freshman Brody Deren. However, Buckeye point guard Scoonie Penn (15 points, seven rebounds, four steals) took matters into his own hands, hitting two three-pointers and coming up with two steals to help Ohio State put the game away. Johnson continued his strong play in his rookie campaign, scoring a game-high 18 points (7-for-13 from the floor) to go with four steals. Ohio State had four players in double figures, led by Penn?s 15 points.
HEAD COACH KEVIN O'NEILL
Now in his third season at the helm of the Northwestern basketball program, Kevin O?Neill has brought his own brand of intensity, excitement and basketball talent to Evanston. In just two seasons, O?Neill has turned the Wildcats into postseason contenders. Northwestern made postseason play for the third time in the school?s history last season when they were selected to play in the National Invitation Tournament. O?Neill?s work was nothing short of miraculous considering the ?Cats started three freshmen and played in a conference that had seven teams ranked in the top 25 for most of last season. O?Neill owns a career record of 189-183 (.508) and is 29-42 in his tenure at NU. O?Neill?s intensity translates to the court as pressure defense, and the Wildcats proved last season to be one of the best in the country on that side of the floor. NU finished ranked third in the NCAA in field goal defense (.373) and sixth in the NCAA in scoring defense (57.1 ppg). O?Neill, 42, knows what it takes to turn around a program. In 1994, he inherited a Tennessee program which won only five games the previous campaign, and took them to the NIT two seasons later. At Marquette, the two-time Great Midwest Conference Coach of the Year took over a program which, like Tennessee, hadn?t enjoyed a winning season in many years. In 1990-91, his first season, he guided the Golden Eagles to a 15-14 record and an appearance in the NIT. Three seasons later (1993-94), he directed Marquette to a 20-8 mark and a spot in the NCAA tournament. The next season, he coached the Golden Eagles back to their glory days by advancing to the Sweet 16 and finishing with a 24-9 record. He left Milwaukee with an impressive mark of four winning campaigns in five years and a Great Midwest Conference championship in 1994. Tabbed as one of the nation?s top recruiters, O?Neill has already overhauled the Northwestern program in just two recruiting classes.
O'NEILL WIN TOTAL
Head coach Kevin O?Neill begins his third season in Evanston. His 25 wins through his first two seasons at NU is second only to William Rohr, who won 28 from 1957-59.
AGE BEFORE BEAUTY - ?Cats Are Youngest In The Nation
According to statistics compiled by Stats Inc., Northwestern is the youngest basketball team in Division I basketball. NU has 99.9 percent of its minutes played by freshmen and sophomores. Walk-on Jeff Eschmeyer?s two minutes are the only minutes played by an upperclassman. Only three other Big Ten teams are in the top 125. Michigan is 16th at 78.23 percent. Illinois is 43rd at 62.98 percent and Minnesota is 57th at. 58.18. NU is also the least experienced team in America. Stats Inc. rated all 319 Division I basketball teams experience based on eligibility of the athletes and the percentage of minutes played by each class. NU grades out at 1.418 (1.00 = freshmen have played 100% of minutes, 4.00 = seniors have played 100% of minutes). Michigan is fifth at 1.698, while Minnesota is 31st at 2.116.
DEREN RETURNS
In his first game back after a broken elbow, freshman forward Brody Deren scored a career-high 12 points and equalled a career-high seven rebounds against Penn State on Thursday. Deren started the first seven games of the season before suffering a broken left elbow against Nicholls State on Dec. 11. Deren was back in the starting lineup the next game against Ohio State on Jan. 15.
JOHNSON SHINES IN FIRST YEAR
Freshman guard Ben Johnson has lived up to his advance billing coming out of De La Salle High School in Minneapolis, Minn. Johnson, NU?s leading scorer, has started every game as a true freshman. In his Big Ten debut, Johnson led the ?Cats in scoring with 17 points at Iowa on Jan. 5. On Jan. 15 against Ohio State, the freshman led all scorers with 19 points against the Buckeyes. Johnson has led the ?Cats in scoring nine times this season. He is averaging 16.0 ppg. (T-9th with Michael Redd) in Big Ten play. At the Hoop and Quill Classic over Thanksgiving weekend, Johnson registered nine points against Evansville, 18 (career-high) vs. Nebraska, and 17 against Mississippi State. On Dec. 14 vs. Jacksonville, he equaled his career-high point total with 18 against the Dolphins. Johnson is leading the team in scoring at 12.3 ppg and ranks fourth in the Big Ten in free throw percentage (41-of-50 from the line). In addition, he leads the team in minutes played averaging 33.3 per game.
LEPORE NAMED BIG TEN PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Sophomore Steve Lepore was named the Big Ten?s Player of the Week for his play during the week of Dec. 13-19. Lepore helped NU run its win streak to three games with a pair of stellar outings. Against Jacksonville, he scored 14 points on 5-of-8 shooting (4-of-6 from three point land) as NU won, 67-59. In the ?Cats 78-54 win over Western Carolina, he scored a career-high 25 points on 9-of-12 shooting (5-of-6 from three-point) and added four boards and two assists. Lepore scored 19 of his 25 points against WCU in the first half when Northwestern set the tone for the victory. Overall, Lepore is averaging a team-high 14.4 points per game, has 35 rebounds and 11 assists.
A BOY NAMED ?T?
Sophomore forward Tavaras Hardy recorded the third double-double of his career on Dec. 14 vs. Jacksonville. He scored 13 points and grabbed 10 boards against the Dolphins. Earlier this season, Hardy scored 12 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in the loss to Nebraska on Nov. 27. The next day against Mississippi State, he came within one rebound of his second straight double-double when he registered 16 points and nine rebounds. Hardy leads the team in rebounding averaging 5.8 rebounds per game.
TOUGH ON ?D?
Last season, the ?Cats led the Big Ten and finished third in the country in field goal percentage defense (37.3%). NU was sixth in the nation in scoring defense (57.1 ppg). This season that trend continues as the ?Cats are fourth in the Big Ten in all games played at 60.7 ppg. O?Neill?s teams have held opponents to 13 points or fewer in a half five times in the past two seasons: Michigan, 2-4-99, 12 points, Oakland, 11-21-98, 13 points, Wisconsin, Chicago State and Wofford, all in the 1997-98 season, 13 points.
LEPORE FROM WAY DOWNTOWN
According to the Big Ten stats as of Jan. 17, Steve Lepore is fourth in all games in the conference with 34 three-point field goals made. He is averaging 2.27 per game, which is also fourth in the Big Ten. Lepore set a career high with six three-pointers against Florida State. His six threes are the third most in a single game in NU history. He is tied with six other players. Todd Leslie holds the record with seven. Lepore?s 13 three-point attempts against FSU is also third most in a single game in NU history. On his career, Lepore has hit 84 threes which places him sixth on the all-time list. Geno Carlisle is fifth with 103 three pointers. Lepore has led the team in scoring in five games this year.
TRAVELIN' MAN
Sophomore Steve Lepore spent the summer traveling the globe playing basketball. Lepore was a member of the United States team at the World Junior Championships in Portugal. The Americans won a silver medal and Lepore finished second on the team in scoring with a 10.5 ppg average. He started all eight games and was tops in the team in three pointers, shooting 18-36 for the tournament. Lepore also traveled to Austria with a Big Ten All-Star team in August. The Big Ten team finished 3-3, as Lepore averaged 6.5 ppg and shot 47% from the field.
OLD SOPHOMORES
David Newman and Tavaras Hardy started all 29 games as freshmen a year ago and have played in every game in their college careers. In just his second season, Newman ranks seventh on the career three-pointers made list with 70. Hardy is third on the team in scoring at 7.9 ppg., and leads the team in rebounding (5.5 rpg.) and blocked shots (20).
NU SIGNS YOUNG
Northwestern signed Jitim Young (guard, 6-2, 185, Chicago, Ill./Gordon Tech) to a National Letter of Intent to play basketball beginning in the fall of 2000. Young was the only player NU signed in the early signing period, the Wildcats have one scholarship remaining for this season. ?Jitim is a great get for our program,? said O?Neill. ?He will have a great senior year and come and make an immediate impact at Northwestern. We hope we can fill our other scholarship with as good a player as Jitim.? Young led Gordon Tech to a 22-8 record along with Catholic North and regional championships last season. He averaged 18.7 points, 6.1 rebounds, three assists and two steals per game. Young was named all-state by the IBCA and all-area by both the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times. This past summer, Young was named the Most Valuable Player of the 5-Star Camp All-Star Game and was given the 5-Star Sportsmanship and Defensive Awards. He is invited to play in the Reebok Capital Classic in April. Young is a four-year honor roll student and a member of the National Honor Society. Young chose Northwestern over Notre Dame, Michigan State, Penn State and Marquette.
WILDCATS ON THE AIR
All Northwestern regular-season games can be heard on WGN-AM Radio 720. Once again this season, Dave Eanet will handle the play-by-play duties while former DePaul head coach Joey Meyer handles the color analysis. Coach O?Neill can be heard after every game on his postgame show. At home, fans can stay and listen to the show live over the Welsh-Ryan Arena sound system.
THE KEVIN O'NEILL SHOW
Fox Sports Chicago is the home of the Kevin O?Neill Show. The half-hour show will appear 11 times during Northwestern's 1999-2000 season. Each week, the Kevin O?Neill Show will air on each Tuesday at 5 or 5:30 p.m. and rerun at 2 a.m. and 3 p.m. each Wednesday until the Big Ten Tournament. Hosting the Kevin O?Neill show will be Dave Eanet. Eanet, sports director at WGN, has handled the play-by-play duties for WGN radio the past two seasons. Again for the 1999-2000 season, fans can submit questions to Coach O?Neill via NUSPORTS.COM, the official internet site of Northwestern athletics. Three questions will be chosen weekly and answered on ?The Kevin O?Neill Show.? Every fan who has their question read on-air will receive a special gift pack courtesy of Ameritech.














