WASHINGTON STATE COUGARS (19-6, 10-4) vs STANFORD CARDINAL (12-12, 7-7)
Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024
3 p.m. PT // Pullman, Wash.
Beasley Coliseum // 11,671
Radio Coverage
Cougar Sports Network // KXLY 920AM
Matt Chazanow & Craig Ehlo
Television Coverage
Pac-12 Network // Wash. // Bay Area
Greg Heister & Ben Braun
OPENING FIVE
1. Wazzu hosts Stanford in the 150th all-time meeting between the programs, Saturday, Feb. 17 at 3 p.m. from Beasley Coliseum and on Pac-12 Networks
2.
Myles Rice is a strong candidate for Pac-12 FOTY, the reigning and 6-time Freshman of the Week, the Cougs leading scorer, the Pac-12's highest scoring freshman, the country's 5th-highest scoring freshman, WSU's freshman single-game scoring recordholder (35 points), and the only high-major freshman leading his team in points, steals, and assists
3. The Cougars hold opponents to just 40.7% shooting, best in the Pac-12 and 35th in D-I, 32.2% from 3-point range, while blocking 5.3 shots per game, 2nd in the Pac-12 and 17th in the country
4. Wazzu is one of the hottest team's in the country, winners of 6-straight and 9 of the last 10 contest – its most successful 10-game stretch in Conference play since finishing the 1944-45 Pacific Coast Conference season 9-1 – the Cougars have their best start of the Pac-12 era and best 25-game start since starting 20-5 in 2007-08
5. A correction was made to WSU's attendance number in Thursday night's win over Cal – the previously reported attendance of 2,744 was corrected up to 3,773 to properly account for all students in attendance
SERIES HISTORY WITH STANFORD
Washington State and Stanford first met in 1917 and competed regularly as members of the Pacific Coast Conference. The Cardinal holds an 84-65 advantage in the all-time series, while WSU has recent success, winning the last four meetings and five of the last six. Last season, WSU achieved back-to-back wins at Maples Pavilion for the first time since 1982-83.
LAST TIME VS STANFORD
Myles Rice exploded for a WSU freshman single-game scoring record 35 points in a freshmen duel at Stanford. Rice also dished out a career-high eight assists in the win, the 3rd-straight on The Farm. Rice buried 15 of 24 shots, including 5 of 10 from 3-point range. Jones finished with 24 points, sank 11 of 17 shots and grabbed five rebounds.
Oscar Cluff totaled 12 points and a career-high 14 rebounds for his first career double-double. Stanford freshman Kanaan Carlyle had a season-best 31 points for the Cardinal. Maxime Raynaud pitched in with 22 points and 12 rebounds. Washington State scored 19 points off 17 Stanford turnovers. The Cougars outscored the Cardinal 58-28 in the paint and had a 14-2 advantage in second-chance points.
CURRENT COUGS VS STANFORD
WSU Head Coach
Kyle Smith holds a 5-4 record against the Cardinal at the helm of the Cougar program. During his time at USF, Smith split with Stanford, going 1-1, for a 6-5 career record. Only
Andrej Jakimovski has played significant minutes against the Cardinal across multiple seasons, scoring in double figures four times with a 4-2 record against the Cardinal, dating back to 2020-21.
COUGARS VS CARDINAL
WSU and Stanford meet for the 150th time, Saturday, Feb. 15 at Beasley Coliseum. Tipoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. PT with coverage on the Pac-12 Network. The Cardinal holds an 84-65 advantage in the all-time series, while WSU has had more recent success, winning four-straight and 5 of the last 6 against Stanford. WSU won at Maples Pavilion in January for the 3-straight season, marking the first time since winning 5-straight on The Farm from 1976-80.
LAST TIME OUT // VS CALIFORNIA
WSU 84 // CAL 65 // FEB. 15, 2024 // PULLMAN, WASH.
Washington State defeated California, 84-65, Thursday night in Beasley Coliseum to improve to 19-6 and 12-1 at home. The Cougars extend their record to 9-1 over the last 10 games. Standout redshirt-freshman
Myles Rice led the game with 25 points on an efficient 9 of 16 shooting, five rebounds, and grabbed three steals.
Andrej Jakimovski and
Jaylen Wells both had 12 points.
Isaac Jones had 21 points on 8 of 10 shooting and grabbed a team-high nine rebounds in a dominate performance. The Cougars outscored Cal 40-24 in the paint and outrebounded 39-28. Cal's Fardaws Aimaq had 18 in the last meeting, however, the Wazzu big men held him to just one field goal and six points.
COUGS ON HISTORIC CURTAIN CALL THROUGH CONFERENCE
Kyle Smith has become associated with the most successful coaches to come through the Palouse, including George Raveling, Kelvin Sampson, and Tony Bennett. The Cougs are 19-6 for the first time since 2007-08, when Wazzu started 20-5, and went to the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16. Kyle has guided the Cougs to their best 25-game start in the Pac-12 era with a 10-4 Conference record, best since starting 11-3 during the 2006-07 season. The Cougars have clinched back-to-back postseason berths for the first time since the Tony Bennett era (2008 and 2009) and are seeking three-straight postseason appearances for just the second time in program history. Washington State has won 6-straight games and 9 of the last 10 matchups, its best 10-game Conference stretch since the end of the 1944-45 Pacific Coast Conference schedule, finishing 9-1.
JONES CLOSES IN ON 1,000 POINTS
With 21 points in Thursday night's win over California, Jones pulled within six points of the 1,000-point career scoring mark. Jones, who is ineligible for WSU's career record marks, which require two seasons on the Cougar team, would be the first WSU student-athlete since C.J. Elleby to eclipse 1,000 career points, and the 39th in Cougar men's basketball history. Jones has reached the milestone in efficient fashion, playing just 56 career games, averaging 17.8 points per game on 61.1% shooting.
JAKIMOVSKI SET TO SURPASS 500 REBOUNDS
Four-year veteran
Andrej Jakimovski pulled within 10 rebounds of the 500-career rebounds mark in Thursday night's win. Jakimovski has 490 career rebounds in 110 games and is on pace to eclipse the mark in the next few games. The North Macedonian would become the first Coug since Robert Franks (2015-19) to surpass 500 career rebounds.
COACH KYLE - KING OF THE PNW
Since arriving on the Palouse prior to the 2019-20 season, WSU Head Coach
Kyle Smith has dominated his fellow Pac-12 Pacific Northwest opponents. Against Oregon, Oregon State, and Washington, Coach Smith is a combined 20-7 and defeated all three regional rivals in back-to-back-to-back succession on the road for the first time since 1993-94 under Kelvin Sampson. The Cougars swept the Huskies, Ducks, and Beavers in Pullman for two-straight seasons and finished a 3-game PNW roadswing unblemished. Coach Smith is 11-2 at Beasley Coliseum against Conference PNW opponents.
DON'T SQUANDER THE LEAD
Wazzu is 17-0 this year when entering the halftime break with a lead. Mostly recently, the Cougs beat Cal, 84-65, after taking a 12-point lead into intermission. By contrast, WSU is 2-6 this year when trailing or tied at the half.
KYLE ECLIPSES 250
With the Jan. 18 win over Oregon State in Corvallis, WSU Head Coach
Kyle Smith earned his 250th Division-I coaching victory, the final 86 coming at Washington State. Smith holds the sixth-most wins in WSU coaching history, and sits eighth in all-time career wins by a WSU coach.
RICE MAKING FRESHMAN HISTORY
Redshirt-freshman
Myles Rice has emerged as a national story, as WSU's leading scorer at 16.0 points per game, the 3-time reigning Pac-12 Freshman of the Week, and most-decorated Cougar freshman in program history with six weekly awards. Rice is the Pac-12 highest scoring freshman, 5th-highest scoring freshman in the country, and the only freshman in the six major Conferences to lead his team in points, steals (1.68), and assists (3.68). The Columbia, S.C. native has scored in double figures in 11 of the last 12 games, capped by a 25-point game in the win over California. Seven times in Pac-12 play, Rice has distributed at least five assists. Rice is re-writing several WSU freshman records, including his points per game average, which would be second-best all-time by a Coug freshman. Rice is projected to finish in the top-2 in WSU freshman history in steals, steals per game average, assists, and assists per game average.
ISAAC IS HIM
In his outing in the win vs California, Jones scored 20 points for the seventh time this year. Jones shoots the ball at a .585 clip (148 of 253), fourth in the Pac-12 and 27th nationally. Jones has excelled on the glass and at the free throw line. The fifth-year senior is 97 of 133 at the charity stripe, going 45 of 59 over the last 10 games. Jones has also led the Cougars in rebounding 13 times.
NEXT UP // FINAL ROAD TRIP TO THE DESERT
WSU makes its final regular season road trip of the year, visiting Arizona to face the Arizona Wildcats, Thursday, Feb. 22 at 8 p.m. PT (9 p.m. MT). The game will be televised on FS1 live from the McKale Center. WSU beat No. 8 Arizona in January in Pullman and has won two of the last three meetings with the Wildcats.
JAK IS BACK
Senior
Andrej Jakimovski returned as the Cougars' only 4-year veteran and entered the season fully healthy for the first time since his freshman year. Jakimovski exploded for a game-high 21 points in the season opener, one shy of his career high. The North Macedonian made his 110th game appearance and started his 70th game against Cal, Feb 15, and has scored in double figures 13 times,. Jakimovski dropped a team-high 20 points at Cal, marking his third 20+ point game of the season. Jakimovski has increased his points per game average output by 4.9 ppg since arriving on campus and upped his rebounding average by 1.4 rpg over the same four-year timeframe. Jakimovski has moved into the WSU record books top-10 for career 3-pointers made (168) and 3-pointers attempted (478).
MYLES MIXES IT UP
Myles Rice has shown his skills with the ball, dominating ball control on both the offensive and defensive ends. Rice dished out a career-high eight assists at Stanford and has distributed at least three assists in 11 of his last 13 games, and 5+ assists in 3 of the last 5 games. The standout freshman leads the Cougs with 92 assists (3.68 apg, 6th in Pac-12) and moved into seventh all-time by a Cougar freshman in season assists. Rice also averages a team-best 1.68 steals per game (42 total, 5th in Pac-12) and top in the Conference for a freshman. Myles is on pace to finish as the second-highest scoring freshman in WSU history, averaging 16.0 ppg with 374 total points (fifth).
STIFLING DEFENSE
The Cougars' defense has fit Coach Smith's mold of winning with grit, as WSU leads the Pac-12 Conference in field goal percentage defense (.407) and second in the League in blocks per game (5.3). Wazzu's defensive field goal prowess ranks 35th in the country (FG defense). The Cougs limit opponents to 66.8 ppg, second in the Pac-12. In the win over No. 8 Arizona, the Cougs held the Wildcats to their lowest output of the season, following with the lowest output by Utah (57) and its worst 3-point shooting game of the year (18.2%). Most recently WSU clamped down Oregon for their lowest scoring total of the year (56) and just 22.2% from 3-point range.
JAYLEN JOINS THE CLUB
Junior transfer
Jaylen Wells has found his form in Conference play, starting the last 10 games and averaging 15.4 ppg as a starter. Most recently, Wells set a career-high with 24 points in the win at OSU, his first 20-point game of D-I, capping the weekend with a perfect 4 of 4 from downtown to finish 10 of 12 from 3-point range on the road trip. Wells has enjoyed double-digit performances in 12-straight games, averaging 13.7 points per game in Conference play. The former Division-II star and All-American scored 10 points in a win over Rhode Island to open his WSU account back in November. Since then, Wells has found his form, scoring 10+ points 17 times.
NATIONAL RIM PROTECTORS
WSU has owned the height advantage early into conference play, boasting 132 blocks, 5.3 per game, second in the Pac-12 Conference. The Cougars' average is 17th nationally and the Cougs are ranked No. 22 in the country according to KenPom's effective block percentage. True freshman
Rueben Chinyelu leads the Coug with 34 rejections, and is on pace to break the WSU freshman block record. Four Cougs have 20+ blocks each (Chinyelu, Cluff, Houinsou, and Jones). In the Dec. 2 win over Portland State, the Cougs swatted away a season-high 10 shots, marking the first time since March 2022 with 10+ blocks in a single game.
NEW YEAR SUCCESS
Washington State finished with a 6-2 record in January, marking the first time in 41 years with six Conference wins in the first calendar month. WSU last achieved the feat in 1982-83, wracking up a program-record eight wins in the month, seven Pac-10 victories under the direction of future Hall of Fame Head Coach George Raveling. The Cougars have an unblemished 4-0 record in February and have tallied their best 10-game Conference stretch since the 1944-45 season, finishing the Pacific Coast Conference schedule 9-1.
MYLES SETS WSU FRESHMAN SCORING RECORD
The 6-time Pac-12 Freshman of the Week continued to make a strong case for Pac-12 Freshman of the Year, dropping a WSU freshman single-game record 35 points at Stanford, Jan. 18. Rice scored more points than any freshman in the Pac-12 this year, adding eight assists. Rice became just the third freshman in the last 20 years to put up 35 points with eight assists as a freshman, joining Trae Young and Markelle Fultz. Rice finished 15 of 24 from the floor, including 5 of 10 from downtown in the win on The Farm, adding four steals with just two turnovers. Rice's performance is the highest single-game scoring output by a freshman in high-major basketball this year.
DIFFERENT KINDA COUGS
WSU is built different this season, regularly with two inside men, a different look from Coach Smith's recent Palouse teams, which played with four or all five men outside. The change has results in a higher percentage of shots in the paint, and a 2-point field goal percentage over 53%.
RUEBEN'S BIG BLOCKS
True freshman
Rueben Chinyelu has turned heads on the West Coast with a 7'8" wingspan and as one of the best young rim protectors in college basketball. Chinyelu, a native of Nigeria, has 34 blocks, fourth-most by a Cougar freshman, and is on pace to finish as WSU's all-time freshman block leader at 1.4 blocks per game, currently fourth overall in the Pac-12 Conference. Chinyelu also shoots the ball at an efficient 61.8% from the floor. If Chinyelu continues to average over two field goals per game at a similar clip, he will also finish in the WSU freshman top-3 for field goal percentage. Most recently, Chinyelu passed Aron Baynes in single-season freshman rebounding and is ninth in freshman program history.
NOT SO FAST...
Fast break points have been hard to come by for Wazzu's opponents with just 142 transition points allowed all season. Wazzu is quick to get back on defense, outscoring opponents in fast break opportunities 8.6 to 5.7 points in transition per game.
GETTING PAINT TOUCHES
Kyle Smith has made it clear the Cougs thrive when everyone on the team gets paint touches. Wazzu has outscored its opponents 894-706 in the key. Against Stanford, WSU scored a season-high 58 points in the paint and three times has scored 50+ points in the key. The Cougars are getting just shy of 50% of their scoring from inside the key (35.8 points per game), while holding opponents to an average 28.2 points in the paint per game.
COUGS CLAIM BOTH WEEKLY CONFERENCE AWARDS
For the first time in Washington State history, the Cougars earned both the Pac-12 Player of the Week and Freshman of the Week honors, Jan. 15, after winning at USC and beating No. 8 Arizona at home.
Isaac Jones was named the Pac-12's Player of the Week after a pair of 20-point double-doubles, becoming the first Coug since Noah Williams earned the weekly honor, Feb. 22, 2021.
Myles Rice earned his third nod as the top freshman in the Conference, becoming the second-most decorated WSU freshman in history behind
Mouhamed Gueye, who earned five Freshman of the Week awards in 2021-22.
A CENTURY'S ACHIEVEMENT
With the Feb. 3 win in Seattle, the Cougars won four of the last five games against the Huskies in the Emerald City. The feat marked the third time in the series history when WSU won four of five at Washington. The last time WSU traveled west and picked up as many wins came during a stretch from February 1918 to March 1920, part of a larger 6 of 7 and 7 of 9 winning streak at the University of Washington.
JONES CLAIMS NATIONAL ACCOLADES
Fifth-year senior transfer
Isaac Jones has taken a leading role as the Cougars second-leading scorer at 15.8 ppg (ninth in Pac-12) and top rebounder with 7.7 rpg (fourth in Pac-12). In January, the Spanaway, Wash., native recorded back-to-back double-doubles with 26 points and 11 rebounds in a win at Southern California, before scoring 24 points with a season-high 13 rebounds in a win over then-No. 8 Arizona. The performance earned Jones several national player of the week awards, including ESPN, Naismith, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association and the Pac-12 Conference honors. Jones recognition as Pac-12 Player of the Week marked the first Cougar honoree since Noah Williams was named the Conference Player of the Week, Feb. 22, 2021. Most recently, Jones scored 21 points in the win over Cal, marking his fifth Conference game with 20+ points and 11th time in Pac-12 play with 10+ points.
CLUFF CLIMBS TO DIVISION-I
Junior college transfer
Oscar Cluff has come to life in Conference play. After 16 points in a loss at Colorado, Cluff led the Cougs with a career-high 20 points and matched a career-high with team-best eight rebounds against Oregon State. More recently, the Australian registered his first career double-double with a WSU single-game season high 14 rebounds and 12 points at Stanford, following with 13 points in the win over Utah. Cluff sits seventh in the Pac-12, just behind Jones, with a 55.6 FG percentage.
KRYPTONITE KYLE
Kyle Smith is the only head coach to hold Tommy Lloyd's Arizona Wildcats to under 35% field goal shooting on multiple occasions. Arizona has only shot under 35% five times under Lloyd, and WSU is the only school to claim multiple clampdowns against the 'Cats. With the win over then-No. 8 Arizona, WSU claimed wins over a top-10 team in back-to-back seasons since the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons. WSU snapped a 14-game home losing streak to U of A and secured wins over Arizona in consecutive seasons for the first time since the 2008-09 and 2009-10 seasons.
KYMANY THE "FRENCH ARMY KNIFE"
Sophomore
Kymany Houinsou does a little bit of everything and has taken over additional guard duties with Yesufu out, dishing out 56 assists. At USC, Jan. 10, Houinsou played in his 50th collegiate game. At Washington, Feb. 3, Houinsou sealed the win fo Wazzu with clampdown defense on the final overtime possession. In the Cougars win over California, Feb. 15, Houinsou dished five assists, matching a Conference game career-high, while adding four rebounds and two blocks.
WINNING THE GLASS BATTLE
The Cougars have used their height advantage all season, outrebounding opponents in all but four games. On the defensive glass, WSU holds opponents to an average of 8.0 second-chance points per game. In the game at Utah, Dec. 29, the Cougs grabbed a season-high 51 rebounds, the most in two years. WSU boasts a +5.6 rebounding margin, which ranks 37th nationally, and scores 11.8 second chance points per game. In the win over Utah, the Cougs outscored the Utes 21-4 on second-chance points, later beating Colorado with a 16-4 advantage in second-chance, outscoring the Buffs 13-0 in the second half.
WATTS WORKS INTO LINEUP
True freshman
Isaiah Watts had his best game of his young career against Oregon, Jan. 6. The West Seattle native finished with a career-high 10 points and matched a career high with three rebounds. Watts matched a career-high with 21 minutes played in the win over USC, adding his first-career steal and block in Conference play.
HOMEGROWN ROSTER
The Cougars boast six student-athletes on the 2023-24 roster from the state of Washington, including three former Washington State Players of the Year. Senior
Jabe Mullins was named the WIAA 4A Player of the Year in 2020, followed by sophomore
Dylan Darling in 2022, and incoming freshman
Parker Gerrits last spring.
COUGS INSIDE TOP 40 OF LATEST NCAA EVALUATION TOOL
In the 2023-24 season's NET rankings released by the NCAA, Feb. 16, Washington State checks in at No. 35. The Cougars are the 3rd-highest Pac-12 team, ranked behind national No. 3 Arizona and Colorado. WSU climbed as high as No. 24 early in nonconference play.
TOP HALF OF THE PAC
The Cougars finished fifth in the Pac-12 last season, earning
Kyle Smith's highest finish in four seasons at WSU. For the first time since the 2007-08 season, Wazzu finished with back-to-back winning Conference records. Smith is the only coach in Washington State history to post a winning record in the Pac-12 era. It's the first time WSU finished in the top half of the Pac-10/12 back-to-back years since the 2006-07 and 2007-08 seasons. In the Pac-X Conference era, WSU has posted 14 winning conference records.
KYLE STARTING WITH SUCCESS
Kyle Smith is the first head coach in Washington State men's basketball history to finish with a .500+ record in his first four seasons on the Palouse. Tony Bennett posted three-consecutive winning seasons before leaving the program.
MYLES' MIRACLE RETURN
Redshirt-freshman
Myles Rice waited two seasons on the sideline before getting to play his first college basketball game. After redshirting his true freshman year during 2021-22, Rice was diagnosed with Hodgkin's Lymphoma prior to the 2022-23 season and underwent chemotherapy treatment throughout the academic year. Last spring, Myles received his last chemotherapy treatment and was declared in remission. The Columbia, S.C. native got the starting nod in the season opener and played 29 minutes in the win.
TWO COUGS SIGN TO PLAY FOR WAZZU
WSU announced two new Cougars who signed National Letters of Intent to play college basketball in Pullman next fall. Evan Stinson signed as the No. 2 prospect in Washington State, a small forward from Cheney, Washington. Marcus Wilson, a native of Albuquerque, signed as a combo guard currently competing at highly-regarded Bella Vista Prep.