Barry Hinson announces the signing of two JUCO players

Tom Weber – Southern Illinois University Media Services

 

SIU recruits

CARBONDALE, IL  — Southern Illinois men’s basketball coach Barry Hinson announced the program has signed a pair of junior college transfers — guard Eric McGill and center Kavion Pippen — to bring an immediate infusion of court-ready talent for the 2017-18 season.

A native of Memphis, Tennessee, McGill (6-3, 185) played his freshman season in 2016 at SEMO, where he saw action in 27 games and averaged 7.0 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.8 assists. He made 13 starts for the Redhawks and shot 32 percent from 3-point range. In 2017, McGill played for Panola College, where he averaged 11.6 points, 3.4 rebounds and 5.6 assists per contest. He shot 39 percent from 3-point.

“This is a young man who has played Division I basketball and who scored 20 points in a game against Murray State as a freshman,” Hinson said. “We felt like we needed to add an athletic guard who can not only pass, dribble and shoot, but who can get to the rim. We wanted a guard who realized the importance of being unselfish and distributing the basketball.”

Panola College, which is located in Carthage, Texas, finished the season 26-9 and won the NJCAA Region 14 North Division. McGill was named honorable mention All-Conference. The Ponies advanced to the NJCAA tournament, where McGill was named to the Region 14 All-Tournament team. He gives SIU two Panola College alums, joining senior Jonathan Wiley, who transferred to Southern last spring. Assistant coach Brad Autry was the lead recruiter on both players.

Hinson said next year’s team will have multiple options at the point guard position, including Saint Louis transfer Marcus Bartley, sophomore Aaron Cook, and McGill.

“I’ve always said, if we could ever get to a point in a basketball game where we play three point guards at one time, and you can find these guys with any size and length, that’s what your ideal basketball team would look like,” according to Hinson. “My thought process is we don’t put numbers on our kids. We don’t want to put limitations on them.”

If the name Pippen sounds familiar, that’s because Kavion is the nephew of NBA great Scottie Pippen. A native of Hamburg, Arkansas, Kavion is also the cousin of one of SIU’s all-time great volleyball players, Taylor Pippen. 

“Taylor was a wonderful ambassador for our university,” Hinson said. “She was able to draw upon her family relationship with Kavion. This was a great example of how a sport crossed lines to help another sport. She was just wonderful.”

The 6-foot-10, 220-pound pivot played in 27 games and made 17 starts for Three Rivers Community College last season. Located in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, Three Rivers finished 25-8 and advanced to the NJCAA District 4 playoffs. Pippen averaged 10.5 points, 7.3 rebounds and 1.9 blocked shots per game. 

“I go to church on Sunday and I’ve got everybody asking me if we’ve got a big man yet,” Hinson joked. “We had a specific need on the interior. We feel like this young man can come in and contribute immediately and make an impact on our program.”

Assistant coach Anthony Beane, who himself played at Three Rivers for head coach Gene Bess, was the lead recruiter on Pippen. 

“We haven’t had a guy in our program in a long time, a true center, that can play with his back to the basket, can defend and score around the basket,” Hinson said. “We think Kavion’s upside is absolutely incredible.”

SIU returns eight lettermen and three starters — Armon FletcherSean Lloyd and Thik Bol — from last year’s team that finished 17-16, but must replace the production of its top two scorers and assist leaders in Mike Rodriguez and Sean O’Brien. The composition of the 2017-18 roster is brimming with upperclassmen — three seniors, seven juniors, one sophomore and one freshman on scholarship. Five of the 10 upperclassmen are transfers from either a junior college or four-year institution.

“With the mass transfer exodus that’s gone on in college basketball in recent years, we’ve really put a heavy emphasis on junior college players,” Hinson said.

RLC Baseball makes it six-straight with doubleheader sweep

Reece Rutland – Rend Lake College Media Services 

RLC sophomore Jake Vernon (Elkhart, Ind.) launches a double during game one of Tuesday's doubleheader against Lake Land College.  (Reece Rutland/RLC Public Information)

RLC sophomore Jake Vernon (Elkhart, Ind.) launches a double during game one of Tuesday’s doubleheader against Lake Land College.
(Reece Rutland/RLC Public Information)

The Rend Lake College Warrior baseball team notched a pair of victories in dramatic fashion on Tuesday as they sealed the double-header sweep with a walk-off victory in the second game against conference foe Lake Land College.

In the first contest of the day, Warrior bats came out strong in support of starting pitcher Blake Deatherage (O’Fallon). For his part, Deatherage tossed five frames of one-hit ball and recorded 10 punch-outs.

Offensively, Jake Vernon (Elkhart, Ind.) led the charge with a pair of clutch doubles that resulted in four RBIs. Every other RLC position player reached safely at least once in the contest. The final tally of the first game saw the Warriors with an 8-2 victory.

REND LAKE BOX SCORE;  GAME ONE

 

HITTERS AB R H RBI BB SO LOB
Ian Walters 2b 4 2 0 0 1 0 2
TJ Byrd cf 5 1 2 1 0 1 3
Jake Vernon rf 3 2 2 4 2 1 0
Cody Clark c 4 0 1 1 1 1 3
Sam Troyer ss 5 0 1 1 0 3 4
Brady Austin lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 3
Dixon Craft 1b 4 1 2 0 0 1 1
Grant Brueggenjohann dh 3 0 1 0 1 2 1
Tanner Maskey 3b 2 2 1 0 0 0 1
Blake Deatherage p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
   Darick Hayes 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
   Jay Benard 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 8 11 7 5 11 18
BATTING
2B: Jake Vernon 2; Cody Clark; Tanner Maskey
3B: Brady Austin
RBI: TJ Byrd; Jake Vernon 4; Cody Clark; Sam Troyer
Sac: Tanner Maskey
BASERUNNING
SB: Ian Walters; TJ Byrd 2; Tanner Maskey
PITCHERS IP H R ER BB SO HR
Blake Deatherage (W, 2-1) 5.0 1 2 1 2 10 0
Jay Benard 2.2 0 0 0 1 3 0
Darick Hayes (Sv, 3) 1.1 1 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 9.0 2 2 1 4 13 0

Game two had all the drama. RLC railed four runs in the bottom of the seventh to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. Warrior batters showed great patience, earning three consecutive walks from a fresh Lakers’ reliever. It was all downhill from there for the visitors 

Following the trifecta of free passes, Cody Clark (Calverty City, Ky.) singled to drive in a run. Sam Troyer (Goshen) got plunked to move another Warrior across home. Things just got worse for the Lakers as Bailey Schimpf (Zeigler) was also hit by a pitch to bring the score level, allowing for Grant Brueggenjohann (Ballwin, Mo.) to perform walk-off heroics with a single to plate the winning run for a final of 7-6.

REND LAKE BOX SCORE:  GAME TWO

 

ITTERS AB R H RBI BB SO LOB
Ian Walters 2b 3 2 2 1 1 0 0
TJ Byrd cf 3 1 1 1 1 0 2
Jake Vernon c 3 2 1 0 1 0 1
Cody Clark 1b 4 0 3 2 0 0 1
Sam Troyer ss 3 0 0 1 0 2 3
Brady Austin lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 4
Dixon Craft p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Grant Brueggenjohann rf 4 0 1 1 0 1 1
Tanner Maskey 3b 2 0 0 0 1 1 1
Blake Deatherage 1 0 0 0 0 1 0
Bailey Schimpf 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Zach Zarifian 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 28 7 9 7 4 6 14
BATTING
2B: Ian Walters; TJ Byrd; Cody Clark 2
RBI: Ian Walters; TJ Byrd; Cody Clark 2; Sam Troyer; Grant Brueggenjohann; Bailey Schimpf
Sac: Martin Ward
PITCHERS IP H R ER BB SO HR
Dixon Craft 1.1 4 5 5 2 2 0
Martin Ward 3.2 4 1 1 1 4 0
Josh Hart 1.0 0 0 0 1 2 0
Brady Austin (W, 1-0) 1.0 1 0 0 0 1 0
Totals 7.0 9 6 6 4 9 0

 

The pair of victories moves the team to 21-15 on the season and a sterling 11-4 in conference play. RLC’s Warriors have won six straight, all conference games. They are back in action on Thursday, traveling to powerhouse Olney Central (12-0 in conference play) for a 4 p.m. first pitch. They return home Friday for a doubleheader against the Blue Knights, starting at 1 p.m.

 

 

MVC Commissioner Doug Elgin’s statement on Wichita St. leaving the league

“The Missouri Valley Conference has undergone many changes in membership throughout our 110-year history, and the news today of Wichita State University’s departure brings us to another stage in the evolution of our league. The Valley has always been resilient and progressive in the face of these changes, and we have never been defined by a single institution.”

“We now have an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to competitive excellence and to a continuing investment in athletics.  We have strong campus leadership – our Presidents Council has always been responsive and decisive when called upon to chart the future course of our conference.  We have a membership process in place and we will be very deliberate in taking appropriate steps to provide the best opportunities to grow and strengthen our league.  We will not waver in our determination to put our student-athletes and teams in the best possible position to compete on the national stage.”

“The MVC and our campus personnel will not be discussing our plans or our intentions until we have made important decisions and have taken steps to address our current membership issues

 

American Athletic Conference votes unanimously to add Wichita State

WSU Twitter account

WSU Twitter account

(Brett McMurphy – ESPN – Please click to read the full story. Here is an excerpt.) The American Athletic Conference unanimously voted Friday morning to add Wichita State as a league member for the 2017-18 season. Wichita State announced it would accept the AAC’s invitation and leave the Missouri Valley Conference, where the Shockers have been members since 1945. Wichita State will join the AAC in all sports, except football, giving the AAC both a 12-team football and basketball league. The AAC has 11 all-sports members (Cincinnati, UConn, East Carolina, Houston, Memphis, South Florida, SMU, Temple, Tulane, Tulsa and Central Florida) and Navy is a football-only member. Wichita State has not had a football team since 1986.

Warrior standout Holder Takes program’s reigns

Reece Rutland- Rend Lake College Media Services

New Rend Lake College Basketball Coach Tommy Holder (RLC Media Services)

New Rend Lake College Basketball Coach Tommy Holder (RLC Media Services)

Tommy Holder has carried many titles at Rend Lake College. He’s been a Warrior basketball standout, a graduate, the six-year assistant coach, academic advisor, tutoring administrator and instructor. But today, RLC is pleased to announce Holder has gained a new title, that of head men’s basketball coach.

Holder came to Rend Lake College in 2005 as a student. He was offered a basketball scholarship to the college after playing in the Lion’s Club All-Star Game at RLC. Unfortunately, Holder was injured during that initial season, so he redshirted. He came back with a vengeance and was a force for the Warriors in his first year of eligibility in 2006.

“I had a pretty successful year. I had a very good year as far as personal performance. That second year I played, the team had much more success. So, with the team improving, my stats dipped a bit because we had some other guys step up and perform at a high level. But, that’s what it’s all about,” Holder explained.

Following his career at RLC, Holder had an opportunity to go on, playing a season at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and graduating with a bachelor’s degree in Community Recreation.

After his graduation, Holder went on to take an assistant coaching position at Brehm Preparatory School in Carbondale where the team found a lot of success.

“We sent kids all over the country to play at the next level. We had players go to Vanderbilt, Oregon, Louisville, Minnesota and a bunch of other colleges. It was a great program. But, after our third year at the school, we were told there would no longer be a basketball program,” he explained.

Luckily, Holder had maintained communication with several of coaches in the Great Rivers Athletic Conference as well has his former college coach, now Rend Lake College Athletic Director Tim Wills.

Wills had recently transitioned from head coach to AD the year before and brought in Benton-native Randy House to lead the program, but the college was searching for a quality assistant coach to help lead the Warriors.

“Randy is a great guy. He didn’t have an assistant at the time. So, Tim thought it would be a good fit. Randy invited me in. We did an interview. I watched the team play in the region tournament that year. We talked about our philosophies. One of my biggest priorities was making sure I was going to be able to be hands on and active in coaching. All the stuff Randy said clicked with what I wanted. So I joined on. We ended up taking RLC to nationals for the first time in school history. And then, we followed that season up by recruiting some more talented kids, making it back to nationals and winning the whole thing,” he said.

Holder always saw coaching as his future. In high school, he said he was too realistic to plan for the NBA, but at the same time, he wanted to carry basketball with him for as long as he could. He said he knew in the back of his mind, even if he got the opportunity to play at higher levels, coaching was his best option to say around the game for the greatest length of time.

As far as his former coach and now boss is concerned, Holder is the right pick for the position.

“Tommy has been a part of this program for a number of years, first as a player and then serving a number of years as our assistant coach. He’s proven himself. He’s done a great job for us, and we are looking forward to what he can accomplish,” Wills stated.

“Any time a former player goes on and finds success, it’s rewarding. It’s great to see him succeed. Tommy was always going to be a coach. You could see it when he was a player. He just had such a high basketball knowledge. He knew where everyone was on the floor. He knew what to say to motivate his teammates. You could just tell he had a gift for it.”

“The thing about Tommy is he’s a Warrior. He’s a RLC guy. He’s got a history here, and I know he will do well. We are excited about the future.”

Holder shares that excitement. As the Warriors assistant coach he was able to develop his patience and learn to establish a methodical game plan from a “good Xs and Os coach” in House.

Now that the torch has been passed, Holder is ready to put everything he’s learned to practice, building upon his skillset of skill development, defensive fundamentals and passion-driven performance.

Most of all, Holder is looking forward to putting his own mark on the program by doing what he loves most, recruiting.

“Honestly, recruiting is one of my favorite aspects about coaching. The fact that you get to go recruit players that you think have potential and put them together to achieve something is really gratifying. You get to select kids that you believe in. When all the hard work is over, you get to see the fruits of your labor. Watching these players grow into their potential is just a great feeling,” the new head coach expressed.

Along those same lines, Holder is looking forward to being more hands-on with his student athlete’s academics as well. As a full-time academic advisor and instructor at the college, Holder has a passion for student success and wants to make sure RLC’s basketball Warriors are dominating on and off the court.

“I love Rend Lake. I’ve been dedicated to the school for the past six year serving as an assistant coach. I’m a graduate. I believe in the people that work here. I believe in the administration. I have great respect for President Wilkerson and Coach Wills. I’m a fan of doing things the right way, and that’s what this school is about. We put students first, and that’s what I’m about and want to be a part of,” Holder explained.

 

Morthland College names Steve Rhoads as head football coach

Reid Cure- Morthland College Media Services

Coach Rhoads on the sidelines in the 2016 season in a game against Robert Morris-Peoria

Coach Rhoads on the sidelines in the 2016 season in a game against Robert Morris-Peoria

West Frankfort, Ill. – The Morthland College Athletic Department has named Steve Rhoads its newest head football coach for the upcoming 2017-18 school year.

Rhoads, who recently completed his second season with the football program, has played an integral part in the conception and growth of the team since it’s beginning in the fall of 2015.

Before his tenure under previous head coach Mike Popovich, Rhoads served under the original coach, Mike Rude, who began the program at Morthland.

In the 2016 season, Rhoads was the Associate Head Coach and Running Backs Coach, aiding the Patriots to their 7-3 finish to mark a historical first year as a varsity program.

Rhoads’ time at Morthland details beyond the gridiron though. Currently, the Coleman Rhoads building on campus houses the library, bookstore, financial aid, admissions, athletics offices, a weight room, training room and student lounge. This building was previously owned and used by a furniture company ran by Rhoads and his associate Brent Coleman.

3 years ago, Rhoads and Coleman decided to close up shop and the conclusion was made to dontate the building to the up-and-coming Morthland College.

Due to his significant donation, the College eagerly asked for Rhoads to serve as its Vice President of Development after serving a seat on the board.

Since then, Rhoads has asked to focus more of his attention on the Patriot football program, and now he has a chance to stamp his name in its history books.

“Putting Coach Rhoads at the helm of this program makes a tremendous amount of sense,” said Athletic Director Reid Cure. “His significant role in the history of the College only parallels his football accumen and experience.”

Prior to his time at MC, Rhoads spent 25 years as a football official including nine years at the NCAA Division-I level. During that time he officiated the 1996 NCAA Division I-AA Championship Game.

Before coaching for the Patriots, Rhoads was an assistant coach at Frankfort Community High School from 2001-2010 and at Johnston City High School from 2011-2013.

“It is an honor to be able to lead this program in this stage of its development,” said Rhoads. “Helping assist the growth of these young men in their life’s journey is the best part of this job.”

Rhoads now gets to turn his attention from just offseason recruiting to leading his men into the tough 2017 schedule ahead of them.

“The schedule is beefed up this year and will challenge us early on,” said Rhoads. “Gaining experience, eliminating mistakes and challenging ourselves each and every day are our most immediate goals. We have some very fine athletes on our team and we want them to perform to the very maximum of their abilities for the ultimate success of the team.”

With any new program, the vision for the team makes its slight adjustments under the new eyes of its leader.

When asked about the future, Rhoads stated that his vision was “to foster an environment that allows [the] team to compete and be successful on the field while honoring and observing [the] core values at Morthland College.”

While the head coach may change, much of the Patriots pace of play on the field will remain similar to what gave them such success last season.

“Our players really like the spread offense concepts and playing fast,” said Rhoads. “Our young men have proven they can execute that style to our advantage.”

On the defensive side of the ball, no change is necessary, prompting the “if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it” mantra.

“Coach Ryan Patton, our defensive coordinator, picks up where we left off last year having pitched two shutouts in the final two games of the season,” said Rhoads.

Alongside Patton, Stephen Bateman makes a jump by being named the Associate Head Coach and Offensive Coordinator for the upcoming season.

“Coach Bateman is excited about the opportunity to continue to build on what we accomplished last year,” said Rhoads. “I’m confident that he is going to do a tremendous job running our offense.”

The Patriots will kick off this fall at Mississippi College on September 2. Their home opener is on September 9 versus Tabor College from Kansas.

“I’m very excited for our players and happy to serve the College and the athletic program.” said Rhoads. “I hope the people of Southern Illinois come out and support us when we play this fall.”

Morthland College is a member of the National Christian College Athletic Association. The Patriot athletic program currently sponsors six varsity sports: football, volleyball, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and softball. Follow along with all our teams on Twitter (@MC_Patriots) and Facebook (@mcpatriots). You can also check out scores, recaps, upcoming schedules and photos on our website, www.morthlandpatriots.com.

Underwood next Illini basketball coach

New Illini coach Brad Underwood and Illinois AD Josh Withman (U of I photo)

New Illini coach Brad Underwood and Illinois AD Josh Withman (U of I photo)

CHAMPAIGN, IL- (Scott Richey – Champaign News-Gazette. Click on link to read the entire post. Here is an excerpt) The search for the next Illinois men’s basketball coach is over. Illinois hired Oklahoma State’s Brad Underwood on Saturday afternoon a week after firing John Groce. A source close to the program said Underwood will be retaining assistant coach Jamall Walker, who is currently leading the Illini in the NIT as interim coach “In searching for a new coach, we were looking for a proven winner who would build upon our proud tradition while developing an unmistakable identity for Illinois basketball,” Illinois athletic director Josh Whitman said in a release. “Brad’s teams play a fast, aggressive style and show unyielding toughness. They have a tremendous energy that I believe will ignite the Orange Krush and our fans to once again make State Farm Center one of the most intimidating venues in all of college basketball..

SALUKIS ACCEPT BID TO WBI: FACE PANTHERS WEDNESDAY

William Becque – SIU Sports Information department

CARBONDALE, Ill. – For the second-straight season, the Southern Illinois women’s basketball team has accepted a bid to play in the Women’s Basketball Invitational (WBI) and will travel to Milwaukee, Wisc., to take on the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Wednesday at 7 p.m. inside the Klotsche Center.

The Saluki women walk off the court after upsetting MVC league leading Drake. (Daily Egyptian photo)

The Saluki women walk off the court after upsetting MVC league leading Drake. (Daily Egyptian photo)

The contest will mark the first-ever meeting between the Salukis and the Panthers. The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee plays in the Horizon League and went 20-11 this season, and has a postseason resume that includes wins over the University of Wisconsin, Loyola and Illinois State.

“We proudly accepted an invite to the WBI Tournament,” fourth-year head coach Cindy Stein said. “Postseason tournament experience is invaluable especially with eight underclassmen. It also is a reward to our three seniors who have been outstanding leaders in the development of this program. Postseason wins take tremendous heart and work ethic and we want to make Saluki Nation proud.”

For Southern, it marks its second-straight postseason appearance, and the eighth in program history. It is also just the second time in school history that the Salukis have made back-to-back postseason appearances, and the first time they have done so in 30 years.

Southern made the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance under legendary head coach Cindy Scott following the 1985-86 season, and followed that up by going 28-3 during the 1986-87 season, advancing to the NCAA Tournament for a second-straight season and winning the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament game, a 70-56 win over Louisiana Tech.

Southern Illinois (16-14, 10-8 MVC) enters the postseason having had its four-game win streak snapped by the Wichita State Shockers, who defeated the Salukis, 73-60 on Friday, March 10.

Southern holds an 11-11 all-time record against current Horizon League opponents, with its last win over a Horizon League school coming on Nov. 18, 2000 in a 57-40 win over the University of Illinois-Chicago.

SIU is led by its All-MVC First-Team selections Rishonda Napier and Kylie Giebelhausen. Giebelhausen comes into the WBI averaging a team-best 13.9 points per game, while Napier will get a chance to chase a bit more history before she hangs up her Saluki uniform. The Burbank, Calif. native is 67 points shy of breaking Cartaesha Macklin‘s school record for points and could, conceivably, each that milestone with a long run through the WBI. She also needs just one three-pointer to move into sole possession of second on the Missouri Valley Conference’s all-time list.

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is led by second team all-league selection Steph Kostowicz, as she leads the Panthers in both scoring (15.2 ppg) and rebounding (7.9 rpg) on the season.

The WBI began in 2010 and is a 16-team tournament. University of Louisana-Lafayette has won the past two championships.

Should SIU advance, the Salukis would face the winner of St. Francis (Pa.)/Campbell.

Illinois fires Groce

Photo from illinoishomepage.net

Photo from illinoishomepage.net

CHAMPAIGN, IL – (Scott Richey- Champaign News- Gazette Please click to read the full story. Here is an excerpt) The video that played before Illinois’ starting lineup was announced this season at State Farm Center featured some of the top moments in the modern era of Illini basketball. Nick Anderson hitting the buzzer-beating three-pointer to win at Indiana in 1989. Frank Williams’ driving layup at Minnesota to clinch the 2002 Big Ten title. Deron Williams’ late three-pointer against Arizona in the Elite Eight in 2005. Tyler Griffey’s game-winning layup to beat No. 1 Indiana in 2013. That Griffey highlight was the last major moment for Illinois basketball.

Illinois State squeaks by Saluki Men’s Basketball, 50-46

Tom Weber- SIU Media Services

NORMAL, Ill. — Illinois State continues to live on the edge in its quest for a conference championship, squeaking by Southern Illinois on Wednesday night, 50-46, after trailing by three points with 6:37 to go.

The Redbirds (24-5, 16-1), who remained tied with Wichita State for first place with one game remaining, have won their last three games by a combined margin of seven points. They did it with defense tonight, holding Southern to 39 percent shooting, including 2-of-11 from 3-point, and closing the game on a 14-7 run.

SIU Senior Sean O'Brien looks to drive around ISU defender Javika Thomspon

SIU Senior Sean O’Brien looks to drive around ISU defender Javika Thomspon

ISU opened the second half with a 9-1 burst to build a 36-26 advantage, and seemed on the verge of taking control of the game. Wrong. Their offense went into hibernation for the next 11 minutes, converting just one field goal as SIU switched defenses and pieced together a 15-2 run. Forward Sean O’Brien scored six of his 11 points during the stretch, and the pressure kept building on the home team to make a shot — any shot.

They finally did. The game turned when Tony Wills and Deontae Hawkins hit 3-pointers on back-to-back possessions to give Illinois State a 46-41 lead with 4:21 remaining that brought a Senior Night crowd of 6,545 to its feet.

“We are getting good at making big plays in close games,” said ISU head coach Dan Muller, who won his 100th career game in five seasons with the Redbirds and was mobbed on the floor by his team after the game.

Wills was the unlikely offensive hero for ISU with 16 points. He made 4-of-9 from long range.

“That was by design,” said SIU head coach Barry Hinson. “We gave up 16 points to a guy that we didn’t feel like we needed to guard, but Senior Night and he made shots.”

Front-court stars Hawkins (5 points) and MiKyle McIntosh (0 points) were mostly silent. Hawkins played only 21 minutes due to foul trouble, while McIntosh is only three weeks removed from knee surgery, and his minutes have been limited in both games and practice.

“Clearly, our two best scorers didn’t have their best nights,” Muller acknowledged.

The Salukis (15-15, 8-9) turned in their best defensive performance of the season, holding ISU to 34 percent shooting. They played the first seven minutes of the game in zone, and switched to man-to-man and matchup zone thereafter. Illinois State never found a rhythm to its offense.

“I thought Southern Illinois played their hearts out,” Muller said. “Their defense was terrific.”

SIU’s offense just couldn’t connect on a perimeter shot down the stretch. Southern had opportunities. Wills twice missed the front end of the 1-and-1 in the final minute, leaving the door cracked open for the Salukis, but Armon Fletcher missed a deep 3-pointer, Mike Rodriguez missed a pull-up jumper, and the final possession ended with a turnover.

“People are going to come out of here and say we didn’t shoot the ball well — but we didn’t shoot the ball well because of Illinois State,” Hinson said. “I think Illinois State didn’t shoot the ball well because of SIU. I just think it was a good, Missouri Valley, February, end-of-the-season type game.”

Illinois State completed a perfect 16-0 mark at home and have one game left at Northern Iowa.

“I played here and Redbird Arena means a lot to me,” Muller said. “It bothers me that when I was a player we never went undefeated at home. If you’re going to be a great program you have to protect your home court. Period.”

The Salukis are locked into the 4-5 game at the conference tournament next week. They will play either Loyola or Northern Iowa on March 2, at 2:30 p.m. The opponent will likely hinge on the outcome of Saturday’s regular-season finale against the Ramblers at SIU Arena.

Hinson was already looking forward to Arch Madness.

“We need to beat a Wichita or Illinois State so people understand we’re starting to turn the corner at SIU,” he said. “I know we’re turning the corner. It’s just the guys in the basement eating Cheetos in their underwear that just drive me nuts, that make all the anonymous postings. I hate those guys.”

http://siusalukis.com/boxscore.aspx?path=mbball&id=7647

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