Jeff Pollard

Men's Basketball Washington State Athletics

WSU Opens Second Half of Pac-12 Play Hosting UCLA Wednesday

The Cougars and Bruins meet Wednesday, Feb. 1 at 6 p.m. at Beasley Coliseum.

WASHINGTON STATE WELCOMES LOS ANGELES SCHOOLS FOR SECOND HALF OF CONFERENCE PLAY: After winning its first game in the desert since 2010, Sunday, Washington State men's basketball (11-10, 4-5) turns its attention to Los Angeles foes, No. 11/8 UCLA (19-3, 6-3) and USC (18-4, 5-4), hosting the Bruins first, Wednesday, Feb. 1 at 6 p.m. at Beasley Coliseum.
• The Cougars end the homestand hosting the Trojans, Saturday, Feb. 4 at 5 p.m. at Beasley Coliseum. 
• Both games will be televised on the Pac-12 Network. 

COUGARS VERSUS BRUINS: 
• Washington State and UCLA are meeting for the 122nd time in the two schools' histories, as the Bruins hold a 104-17 advantage in the all-time series. 
• WSU split the two meetings with UCLA last year, beating the then-No. 25 Bruins, 85-78, at Pullman the opening weekend of Pac-12 play, Jan. 3, 2016, before falling to the Bruins at Los Angeles, 83-50, Jan. 30, 2016.
• The Cougars' win last season at Pullman was their only Pac-12 victory of 2016.    
• WSU currently holds a three-game home winning streak against UCLA, which ties for the Cougars' longest home winning streak in the series (Dec. 8, 1936 - Dec. 14, 1937).
• WSU has only had one other home winning streak against UCLA in series history (two games; Jan. 2, 1982 - March 7, 1983).
• The Bruins haven't won at Pullman since Feb. 4, 2012 (63-60). 

WSU AGAINST RANKED OPPONENTS:
• UCLA is ranked 11th in this week's Associated Press Poll, marking WSU's fourth ranked opponent of the season.
• The Cougars are 49-230 all-time against ranked foes, 0-3 this season, and have lost five-straight games to ranked foes. 
• WSU's last win against a ranked opponent came last season, Jan. 3, 2016 against then-No. 25 UCLA.
• Washington State lost to then-No. 7 Arizona last week (Jan. 26), to then-No. 15 Oregon (Jan. 7) and then-No. 22 Creighton (Nov. 18) this season, and then-No. 23 and then-No. 18 Arizona (Feb. 3, 2016 and Jan. 16, 2016) last season. 
• The Cougar's last win over a top-15 team came Dec. 23, 2010 against No. 15 Baylor at the Diamond Head Classic.
• The Cougars are 5-66 all-time against Bruin teams ranked in the AP Top 25, with their last win over them being their last win over a ranked opponent. 
• WSU is 5-5 against the No. 11 team in the country and hasn't played the 11th-ranked team since Jan. 29, 2005, a 70-63 win at Arizona. 
• Washington State and UCLA have met once with the Bruins ranked 11th, a three-point loss for the Cougars, Jan. 28, 1999 (69-66) at Pullman.
• The Cougars have won their last two games against ranked UCLA teams (Jan. 3, 2016, March 6, 2013) and three of their last four (Feb. 21, 2009).

JOSH HAWKINSON EYEING RECORD BOOKS:
• Senior Josh Hawkinson has his eyes on several milestones and records at Washington State.
• With 911 rebounds, he is just 81 rebounds away from the WSU record (992) set by Steve Puidokas from 1974-77, and just 89 away from becoming the 13th Pac-12 student-athlete to grab 1,000 rebounds in his career. 
• With 1,271 points, he became the 35th Cougar to score 1,000 career points, and currently ranks 18th on WSU's career scoring list. 
• Over the last two seasons, Hawkinson averaged 15.1 points per game...if he continues that this season he will finish with 468 points this season and will finish his career with 1,403 points which would put him 12th in WSU's career scoring record books.
• Hawkinson is also just two double-doubles away from the school record, also held by Puidokas...as he's second with 51.

IROEGBU PASSES 1,000 POINT MARK: 
• Senior Ike Iroegbu scored 12 points, Jan. 7 versus Oregon, and became the 36th Cougar to score 1,000 in his career. 
• Iroegbu joins his classmate, Josh Hawkinson, as the second Cougar to reach the milestone this season, as Hawkinson scored the 1,000th point of his career, Nov. 19 against Montana.
• Iroegbu and Hawkinson are the first Cougar teammates to reach the 1,000-point plateau in the same season since then-seniors Derrick Low and Kyle Weaver reached 1,000 points during the 2007-08 season. 
• Iroegbu is currently 24th on WSU's career scoring list with 1,083 points.
• He's also climbing up the assists list, ranking ninth with 330 career assists. 

COUGAR CONNECTION:
• Standout UCLA freshman point guard, Lonzo Ball, has a connection to Washington State, as his father, Lavar Ball, played one season of basketball at Washington State between stints at West Los Angeles Junior College and Cal State Los Angeles. 
• The elder ball played forward for the Cougars during the 1987-88 season under head coach Kelvin Sampson, averaging 2.2 points, 2.3 rebounds and 11.5 minutes per game in 26 games. 

PASSING THE POINT:
• Freshman Malachi Flynn started at point guard for the Cougars in their season opener, Nov. 11, against Montana State.
• He became the first Cougar freshman to start a season opener since his teammate, senior Ike Iroegbu started his first game, Nov. 9, 2013, a victory over CSU Bakersfield, also at point guard. 
• Flynn came one rebound shy of a double-double with 10 points and 9 boards, adding 2 assists against the Bobcats.
• In his second career game, Flynn led the Cougars in scoring with 18 points against Central Washington.
• Flynn had his best game in the seventh of his career, Nov. 30 against Utah Valley.
• He finished with a career-high 27 points on 11-for-14 shooting from the field.
• His 27 points are the sixth-most in a single game by a WSU freshman and his 11 field goals are a freshman single-game record.
• Flynn is joined in the top-six for single-game freshman scoring by Isaac Fontaine, Klay Thompson, Steve Puidokas and Bennie Seltzer.
• Flynn has scored in double figures in 14 of WSU's 21 games this season, including two 20-points games.
• Five of his double-figure scoring efforts are in Pac-12 play.
• In his first three Pac-12 games, he averaged 13.0 points per game, 8.7 of those in the second half. 
• Currently Flynn is sixth on WSU's freshman list for scoring average with 11.2 points per game, just over a point behind Klay Thompson in fourth.
• He's also third for freshman 3-point field goal percentage (.446), sixth for assists average (2.95), and tied for sixth in total 3-pointers made with 41 (27 away from Klay Thompson's freshman-record 68).

HOT CONFERENCE START:
• The Cougars got their first win in a conference opener since 2007-08 when they defeated the Huskies, 79-74, Jan. 1, 2017.
• The last time WSU had won a conference opener was the Pacific-10 opener at Washington, Jan. 5, 2008.
• With WSU's win over Oregon State, Jan. 4, 2017, it moved to 2-0, marking the first time it had started 2-0 in league play since that same season, 2007-08.
• The Cougars defeated USC at Los Angeles, Jan. 10, 2008 to move to 2-0 that year. 
• This year the Cougars matched their record in their first three Pac-12 games (2-1) in Ernie Kent's first year as head coach...WSU went on to start 3-1 in league play that year. 
• The Cougars have already surpassed their win total from 2015-16 (nine) and tripled their Pac-12 win total from a year ago (one).

SHORT BENCH:
• The Cougars were short manned during the nonconference season, as they were down to just eight players Saturday, Dec. 10 at Kansas State.
• Sophomore guard Viont'e Daniels missed four games due to a concussion, while freshman forward Jeff Pollard also missed four due to sickness...it was announced that junior guard Derrien King transferred at the end of the semester, as his last game was Dec. 7.
• Three Cougars are redshirting this season, freshmen Milan Acquaah, Arinze Chidom and Jamar Ergas.
• Against Kansas State, Dec. 10, walk-on, junior guard Steven Shpreyregin saw his first action with the Cougars, logging 10  minutes, while scoring 3 points. 
• After that game when the Cougars had just 8 men available, they went 4-0 in their next four games. 
• The Cougars are the only team in the league to have three players ranked in the top-10 in the Pac-12 for minutes played per game (Hawkinson, Flynn, Iroegbu).

HAWKINSON MASTERS HIS CLASSES: 
• Senior Josh Hawkinson graduated with his business degree in the summer after just three years at WSU.
• He is currently working on his master's in business administration in WSU's one-year program. 

TOP OF THE PAC:
• Five different Cougars rank in the top 10 in the Pac-12 in nine different categories:
    • Josh Hawkinson (points per game, rebounds per game, defensive rebounds per game, double-doubles, free throw percentage, minutes played).
    • Conor Clifford (field goal percentage).
    • Malachi Flynn (3-point field goal percentage, minutes played).
    • Ike Iroegbu (minutes played).
    • Charles Callison (steals).
• Hawkinson is also top-25 nationally in three different categories: double-doubles (20th), defensive rebounds per game (ninth), and rebounds per game (25th).

KENT IN YEAR THREE: 
• Veteran head coach and former Fox Sports and Pac-12 Networks basketball analyst was named the 18th head coach in WSU men's basketball history, March 31, 2014.
• Kent came to Pullman with a 325-254 (.561) mark as a head coach, having spent six seasons at the helm for Saint Mary's in Moraga, Calif., and 13 at Oregon.
• In his 13 years at Oregon, Kent compiled a 235-174 (.575) record and a 109-125 (.466) conference mark. 
• His 121 conference wins rank tie him for 15th-best in Pac-12 history (including Pacific-8 and Pacific-10 Conferences). He is tied for the mark with former UCLA coach Ben Howland.
• While at Oregon, Kent led the Ducks to seven postseason appearances, including five NCAA Tournament Appearances (2000, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008) as well as a Pac-10 regular-season (2002) and two conference tournament (2003, 2007) titles.
• Kent's first season with the Cougars wasn't much different than his first with the Ducks, as he led Oregon to a 13-14 overall record and 8-10 league mark as Oregon finished sixth in the then-Pacific-10 Conference...he led WSU to a 13-18 overall record and 7-11 league mark.
• WSU's 13 wins in his first season tied him for third-best in Washington State history for wins by a men's basketball coach in his first season…he's tied with Kelvin Sampson (1987-88) and Dick Bennett (2003-04), as both of those were also improvements from the previous season. 
• Kent has 358 career wins, as he got his 350th win Nov. 19 against Montana at the Paradise Jam. 

JOSH HAWKINSON NAMED TO KAREEM ABDUL-JABAR:
• For the second-straight year, Josh Hawkinson has been named to the 20-member 2017 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award watch list.
• Last season, as a junior, Hawkinson made the mid-season list of 10.
• He is one of three Pac-12 student-athletes to be named to the list, as he's joined by Chris Boucher of Oregon and Thomas Welsh of UCLA.
• By mid-February, the watch list of 20 players for the 2017 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award will be narrowed down to just 10. 
• In March, five finalists will be presented to Abdul-Jabbar and the Hall of Fame's selection committee.

HAWKINSON A CANDIDATE FOR THE SENIOR CLASS AWARD:
• Senior Josh Hawkinson has been named one of 30 men's basketball candidates for the Senior CLASS Award. 
• To be eligible for the award, a student-athlete must be classified as an NCAA Division I senior and have notable achievements in four areas of excellence: community, classroom, character and competition.
• In February, the 30 candidate class will be narrowed to 10 finalists, and those 10 names will be placed on the official ballot.

KENT NAMED TO NCAA COMMITTEE:
• WSU Head Coach Ernie Kent was chosen to serve on the newly created Division I Men's Basketball Competition Committee which will report directly to the Division I Men's Basketball Oversight Committee in an advisory role.
• One student-athlete, two current head coaches, four Division I staff members and three members of the public with significant men's basketball experience will form the committee. 
• The committee also will have regular communication with the NCAA Men's Basketball Rules Committee and will review student-athlete health and safety, sportsmanship and integrity, game operations and presentation, technology, and statistical trends. 
• The group will develop strategic principles in these areas, subject to the approval of the Men's Basketball Oversight Committee.
• This committee was announced Dec. 2, 2016. 
• The other coach on the committee joining Kent is Bob McKillop of Davidson College. 

ABOUT THE COUGARS:
• Washington State returns seven letterwinners including three starters to the 2016-17 squad, led by two-time All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention, Josh Hawkinson.
• Fellow seniors, guards Ike Iroegbu and Charles Callison, return as 2015-16 starters, while classmate, center, Conor Clifford also returns after starting 14 games last season.
• Sophomores Viont'e Daniels and Robert Franks round out the returnees for the Cougars.
• Seven newcomers join the WSU men's basketball program, led by Washington's 2015-16 4A Player of the Year, freshman guard Malachi Flynn.
• Sophomore guard KJ Langston and freshman forward Jeff Pollard look to contribute this season, while three freshmen are projected to use their redshirt seasons.
• Freshmen guards Milan Acquaah and Jamar Ergas and forward Arinze Chidom all look to use their redshirts, while walk-on junior guard Steven Shpreyregin may see minutes. 

WSU AT THE 2016 PARADISE JAM:
• Washington State finished sixth at the 2016 Paradise Jam, held Nov. 18-21 at the University of the Virgin Islands at St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
• WSU senior forward Josh Hawkinson has ties to the tournament as his father, Nels Hawkinson, started the tournament in 2000 after visiting the Virgin Islands on vacation. 
• The elder Hawkinson is the executive director of Basketball Travelers Inc., the company that puts on the Paradise Jam, as well as several other college and high school events, and foreign tours, including WSU's to Italy in 2016.
• Hawkinson was named to the all-tournament team after averaging 18.0 points and 11.0 rebounds in WSU's three games.
• Against Montana, Hawkinson had a career-high 29 points, adding 14 rebounds.
• In the process, Hawkinson scored his 1,000th career point to become the 35th Cougar to do so. 

BIG GAMES IN PARADISE:
• Washington State's starting big men, 6-10 forward Josh Hawkinson and 7-0 center Conor Clifford, both seniors, each had a 29-point game at the Paradise Jam.
• Clifford had his career night against No. 22 Creighton, setting career highs for points (29), field goals made (12), minutes played (28) and free throws made (5).
• Hawkinson had his the next day against Montana, setting a career high for points with 29, while grabbing a season-high 14 rebounds.

KENT STARTS GAME ON IDAHO BENCH:
• Cougar Head Coach Ernie Kent began the Dec. 7 game sitting next to Idaho coach Don Verlin on the Idaho bench, all in the name of helping to find a cure for cancer.
• Kent bid on an auction item donated by Idaho and Verlin – and won – at the 15th annual Coaches vs. Cancer Gala in Spokane, Sept. 24. 
• The 'Coach for a Day' package that Kent won, includes the chance to sit on the Idaho bench for the start of a game this season, in which Kent chose the Dec. 7 game at Pullman.
• Kent made his way to the Idaho bench shortly before tip...after WSU's first possession after winning the tip, he made his way back to the Cougar bench where he remained the rest of the game. 
• Both Kent and Verlin lost their fathers to cancer, so the cause is a close one to the pair. 

COUGARS BOND IN ITALY:
• The Cougar men's basketball team spent 10 days in August touring Italy as part of its once every four years, international tour. 
• WSU started in Rome and worked its way up to Lake Como with stops in Florence, Pisa, Venice and Vicenza, visiting numerous historical sites along the way.
•  The Cougars played five games, going 3-2 in those games. 
Josh Hawkinson led the team with 18.6 points and 9.0 rebounds, Ike Iroegbu added 16.0 points and 7.2 assists a game, while freshman Malachi Flynn started all five games and averaged 10.8 points and 6.2 assists per game.

 
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Players Mentioned

Charles Callison

#23 Charles Callison

G
6' 0"
Senior
Conor Clifford

#42 Conor Clifford

C
7' 0"
Redshirt Senior
Viont

#4 Viont'e Daniels

G
6' 2"
Sophomore
Robert Franks

#3 Robert Franks

F
6' 7"
Sophomore
Josh Hawkinson

#24 Josh Hawkinson

F
6' 10"
Senior
Ike Iroegbu

#2 Ike Iroegbu

G
6' 2"
Senior
Milan Acquaah

#5 Milan Acquaah

G
6' 3"
Freshman
Jamar Ergas

#1 Jamar Ergas

G
6' 3"
Freshman
Malachi Flynn

#22 Malachi Flynn

G
6' 1"
Freshman
KJ Langston

#10 KJ Langston

G
6' 4"
Redshirt Sophomore
Jeff Pollard

#13 Jeff Pollard

F
6' 9"
Freshman
Arinze Chidom

#25 Arinze Chidom

F
6' 9"
Freshman

Players Mentioned

Charles Callison

#23 Charles Callison

6' 0"
Senior
G
Conor Clifford

#42 Conor Clifford

7' 0"
Redshirt Senior
C
Viont

#4 Viont'e Daniels

6' 2"
Sophomore
G
Robert Franks

#3 Robert Franks

6' 7"
Sophomore
F
Josh Hawkinson

#24 Josh Hawkinson

6' 10"
Senior
F
Ike Iroegbu

#2 Ike Iroegbu

6' 2"
Senior
G
Milan Acquaah

#5 Milan Acquaah

6' 3"
Freshman
G
Jamar Ergas

#1 Jamar Ergas

6' 3"
Freshman
G
Malachi Flynn

#22 Malachi Flynn

6' 1"
Freshman
G
KJ Langston

#10 KJ Langston

6' 4"
Redshirt Sophomore
G
Jeff Pollard

#13 Jeff Pollard

6' 9"
Freshman
F
Arinze Chidom

#25 Arinze Chidom

6' 9"
Freshman
F