Washington State University Athletics
Photo by: James Snook-USA TODAY Sports
WSU Wraps Regular Season in Los Angeles
February 24, 2026 | Men's Basketball
WASHINGTON STATE COUGARS (12-17, 7-9) at LOYOLA MARYMOUNT LIONS (14-15, 5-11)
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 25, 2026
8:05 p.m. PT
Los Angeles, California
Gersten Pavilion
Capacity: 4,156
COUGAR SPORTS NETWORK
Seattle 770AM & 94.5FMÂ
Spokane 920AM & 100.7FM
Pullman 104.3FM | Tri-Cities 610AM
Chris King & Craig Ehlo
TV & STREAMING
ESPNU & ESPN App
Play-by-Play: Chris Sylvester
Analyst: Jerod Haase
Producer: Ryan Fullam
SERIES HISTORY
All-Time: 5-2
at LMU: 1-0
First Meeting: Dec. 21, 1950 (70-52)
Last Meeting: Jan. 2, 2026 (78-76)
OPENING TIPS
1. Washington State returns to Loyola Marymount for the first time in 76 years, facing the Lions at 8 p.m., Wednesday, February 25, at Gersten Pavilion. The Cougars last visited LMU's campus in the programs' first all-time meeting in December 1950. Earlier this season, the Cougs beat LMU in a 78-76 thriller in Pullman when Ace Glass scored the game-winner.
2. True freshman Ace Glass, a three-time WCC Freshman of the Week, leads the Cougs in scoring, averaging 16.0 points per game. Glass broke the WSU freshman single-game scoring record with 40 points vs ASU. The Rialto, California native ranks fifth in the WCC in scoring, best by a freshman, and top-20 nationally for a freshman.
3. ND Okafor leads the Cougars in shooting efficiency and blocks. The Irishman shoots at 59.5% from the floor and averages 5.4 rebounds per game, 12th in the WCC. Okafor is second in the WCC in blocks with 44 rejections and ranks 57th nationally. The Irishman has scored 10+ points in nine of the last 10 games, including 15 points in the win vs Pacific.
4. Since returning from a two-game injury, Rihards Vavers has dominated the Cougar offense, averaging a team-best 16.0 points per game over the 9-game stretch, including 24 points against Seattle U and 21 against Pacific. Vavers is a lethal outside shooter, delivering 29 threes on 53% shooting over nine games.
5. Eemeli Yalaho averages 10.1 points per game and team-best 5.6 rebounds per game, 10th in WCC. Against Pacific, the Finn grabbed a team-high eight rebounds and has led the Cougs in rebounding 12 times with three double-doubles.
SERIES HISTORY VS LMU LIONS
Washington State University and Loyola Marymount University have met seven times dating back to a December 1950 contest at LMU, an 18-point win for Washington State College. The Lions have never traveled to Pullman for the first time in program history this January, suffering a 78-86 loss at the hands of an Ace Glass game-winner. The Cougars and Coach Riley are 3-0 against LMU as conference foes. WSU returns to the LMU campus for the first time in 76 years, having met the Lions at a neutral site in 1991.
LAST TIME OUT
Washington State led for much of the first half and showed flashes of its best basketball before Saint Mary's pulled away in the second half, handing the Cougars an 83-67 loss Saturday night at Beasley Coliseum. It was a tale of two halves with WSU making seven first-half 3-pointers before going scoreless from beyond the arc in the second half with a season-low 28 points. Ace Glass led the Cougs with 15 points on 5-of-12 shooting, and Rihards Vavers added 12 points and six rebounds. ND Okafor contributed 15 points, leading the Cougars in scoring for the first time in his career, on 7-of-14 shooting in 26 minutes.Â
UP NEXT
The Cougars conclude the regular season, Saturday, February 28, in Malibu to face Pepperdine. WSU tips off against the Waves at 5 p.m. on ESPN+. In the first meeting this season, the Cougs beat Pepperdine 95-79 behind distributed scoring across six double-figure scorers, including Glass, Hildebrandt, Okafor, Ugbo, Vavers, and Yalaho.
PICK YOUR POISON
Four Cougars average 10+ points per game, 10 different players have scored in double figures, and six Cougs have delivered 20-point performances at least once this season, including Glass, Okafor, Thrastarson, Ugbo, Vavers, and Yalaho. Both Okafor and Yalaho have each recorded double-doubles. WSU has shot over 50% from the floor six times in the last 10 games.
HOME SWEET HOME & ROCKY ROAD
The Cougars hold a 9-6 record at home, where 75% of their wins have come. In contrast, WSU has won just one true road game, at Portland to begin conference play, December 28. The Cougs picked up a pair of neutral site wins in Spokane and Maui.
AARON ACING ROOKIE SEASON
True freshman Ace Glass has stepped into a leading roll for the Cougars, averaging a team-best 16.0 points per game, breaking the WSU freshman single-game scoring record with 40 points versus Arizona State, and picking up three WCC Freshman of the Week honors. The Rialto, California kid ranks fifth in the West Coast Conference in scoring, best by a freshman, and top-20 nationally by a rookie. Glass scored 20 points in the loss to Santa Clara, delivering his eighth 20-point performance, and has scored in double figures 24 times. Against Portland, Glass delivered a career-high seven assists and sits third on the team with 66 total assists.
OKAFOR BLOCKS MORE
ND Okafor is the Cougars' leading rim protector, having led the Cougs 19 times in single-game blocks, totalling 44 on the season, second in WCC and 57th nationally. The Irishman has registered three blocks in four of the last six games. Okafor's average scoring and rebounding have doubled since last season.
ROAD WARRIORS
The Cougs have played the 45th toughest schedule in the country according to NCAA NET rankings. With its arrival to Los Angeles, WSU has traveled over 22,100 commercial airlines miles and played games in four time zones.
LINE IN THE SAND
As a team, Washington State is shooting the ball at 47.4%. When the Cougars shoot over 45% they have won 11 times, but just once when held under 45% shooting. The Cougs also have 11 wins when scoring 70+ points, however when held under 70 points, WSU is just 1-11. The Cougars have scored 90+ points seven times this year, but hold just a 4-3 record in those games.
CONTROL THE ROCK
Washington State has struggled to control the ball in several key areas including assist-to-turnover ratio, turnovers forced, steals per game, turnover margin, and three-point defense. The Cougars assist-to-turnover ratio of 1.03 ranks 287th national. WSU is forcing just 10.14 turnovers per game, 318th in Division-I, with 5.6 steals per game (296th). WSU ranks 345th nationally with a negative turnover margin of -2.9, while sitting 307th in defensive 3-point percentage allowing opponents to shoot 35.9% from beyond the arc.
EFFICIENCY IS THE KEY
In contrast to the previous note, the Cougars have steadily improved their overall field goal percentage, three-point field goal percentage, rebounding margin, and effective field goal percentage. Nationally, WSU ranks in the top-70 with a 47.4% field goal percentage (58th), a 37.3 three-point field goal percentage (30th). The Cougars also make 9.5 three-pointers per game (t-62nd) and hold the 38th-best effective field goal percentage at 55.7%.
GO YALAHO GO
Junior Texas Tech transfer Eemeli Yalaho has quietly become a double-double threat, delivering three this season. The Finn scored a career-best 26 points against Portland, January 31, and is averaging 10.1 points per game and team-best 5.6 rebounds per game, 10th in the WCC. Twice this season Yalaho has pulled down a career-high 11 rebounds and scored 10+ points on 16 occasions.Â
RIHARDS RETURNS TO ACTION
Junior Rihards Vavers returned to action, January 21, at San Diego after suffering a head injury that sidelined him for two games. Over the nine-game stretch since returning, Vavers has scored in double figures every game, averaging 16.0 points per game, including a 24-point performance in the win over Seattle U and 21-point game against Pacific. The Latvian laser is also shooting the ball at a 53% clip from beyond the arc, 29-of-55, since returning to the hardwood.
MORTON MOJO
Morehead State transfer Jerone Morton has found his footing, sharing ballhandling responsibilities through 26 starts in 29 games and dished 79 assists, second-most on the team. Morton is averaging 7.6 points per game, 2.7 assists per game, and 1.9 rebounds per game. In the Cougs' loss at No. 12 Gonzaga, February 10, Morton scored 15 points, including a perfect 5-of-5 at the free throw line. The Kentucky kid dished a career-high nine assists against Saint Mary's in the first meeting, January 10.
ECLIPSING THE CENTURY MARK
In the January 31st win over Portland, the Cougars scored 104 points in regulation, its the first time in triple digits since scoring 100 points against Portland State in Coach Riley's WSU debut, November 4, 2024. The 104 points against the Pilots marked the most points scored by the Cougs at Beasley Coliseum since scoring 108 points versus Oregon in overtime, January 15, 2015. The last time the Cougars scored as many points in a regulation game at home came against CSUN with 106 points, January 25, 1995.Â
COMEBACK KIDS
Washington State is the only Division-I team in the country since the start of last season to play multiple games in which both team held a 17-point lead. WSU won two of the three contests. Against Chaminade, November 24, the Cougars trailed by as many 20 points before rallying to victory. In David Riley's first game as Cougar head coach in 2024-25, WSU rallied from a 17-point deficit against Portland State, to secure victory. In the Cougars' loss to Oregon State, WSU spoiled a 17-point second-half lead, becoming the only D-I team on both sides of a 17-point comeback this season.
UNFORCED ERRORS
In non-steal turnovers, the Cougars rank 311th nationally, according to KenPom. In other terms, the majority of the Cougars turnovers as unforced errors and not caused by the opponent defense with an 8.4 non-steal turnover percentage.
ADRIA DISHES SPANISH FLARE
Incoming senior Adria Rodriguez, a member of Spanish second-division club Alicante, has shown his floor general prowess as the Cougs leading assister in 14 games. The Catalonia kid is averaging a team-best 3.2 assists per game, including some eye-popping between-the-legs passes through heavy traffic. Adria has led the team in steals 11 times and pulled down a career-high eight rebounds against No. 9 Gonzaga, January 15. Against Portland he delivered a season-high nine assists and has increased his field goal percentage by six points from nonconference to WCC play, shooting over 46% since the start of conference action.
TOMAS TURNS UP
Tomas Thrastarson returned to the court for the first time in 2026, after suffering a stress fracture in his foot, December 30, which forced him to miss 50 days and 12 games. Thrastarson turned heads with his offseason development after being named to the 2024-25 WCC All-Freshman Team, playing in 31 games with 11 starts, averaging 4.5 ppg, 3.1 rpg, and 19 blocks. Thrastarson has matched or bested his career-high three times, including a 20-point game versus Nevada. In the opener against Idaho, Thrastarson finished 11-of-12 from the charity stripe.
UNITED NATIONS OF COUGS
WSU boasts players from eight different countries across North America and Europe. WSU has six Americans and eight international student-athletes. The West Coast Conference men's basketball teams have the greatest percentage of international student-athletes of any Division I conference with 39.3 percent of rosters made of international student-athletes.Â
HONORING GEORGE RAVELING
In partnership with Nike, Washington State wore custom pre-game shooting shirts and Book2 shoes to honor former WSU Head Coach George Raveling. The shoes, with custom 'RAV' typography on them, were provided to all schools the former Coug coached or played at, including USC, Iowa, Howard, Villanova, Georgetown, and WSU. Raveling, the first Black coach in the Pac-8 Conference, elevated the Cougar men's basketball program to national prominence during his time in Pullman. Raveling guided the Cougars from 1972-1983. During his 11 years in Pullman, Raveling led WSU to two NCAA tournaments in 1980 and 1983. WSU's 1980 NCAA appearance was the first for the Cougars since finishing national runner-up in 1941.
THE CLOCKTOWER COLLECTION
In January, Washington State introduced the "Clock Tower Collection," a limited-edition retro uniform and retail merchandise, which was worn Saturday, February 7, against Santa Clara. The Cougars auctioned off the game-worn jerseys to support the WSU student-athlete NIL fund. WSU's alternate white uniforms feature a Crimson arch across the chest, emblazoned with 'Cougars' in large print above the player number. The matching shorts feature skyline iconography encompassing WSU's Bryan Hall Clock Tower. The uniform is finished with a thick Crimson trim around the color and sleeves.
SPOKANE ARENA HISTORY
Washington State hosted Oregon State at Numerica Veterans Arena in Spokane, January 4, improving to 24-19 all-time at Spokane Arena dating back to 1995. The Cougars are 4-1 all-time in conference games at Veterans Arena and improved to 4-0 against OSU in the Lilac City.
RILEY RUNS IT BACK
David Riley began his second season at WSU after finishing his first season on the Palouse 19-15 with a postseason berth to the inaugural College Basketball Crown. The selection marked a third postseason in four seasons for Coach Riley, and fourth-consecutive postseason for the Cougs.Â
COUGARS PICKED SIXTH IN WCC
Entering the 2025-26 season as an affiliate member of the West Coast Conference, Wazzu was selected sixth in the preseason coaches poll. The Cougars did not receive an honoree on the conference preseason team.
COUGS BOND IN EUROPEAN TRIP
The Cougars took an international tour this summer, visiting England and Spain. WSU played three exhibition games over 10 days, while sightseeing London, Malaga, and Barcelona. The Cougs say the London Eye, Big Ben, La Sagrada Familia, and excursioned around the Mediterranean Sea in southern Spain.
BRAYDEN KYMAN INKS DEAL
Class of 2026 senior Brayden Kyman, a 6-8 power forward from Rancho Santa Margarita, California, signed a financial aid agreement to play basketball at Washington State beginning next season. The versatile forward can score at all three levels with a deep range and length to work inside.Â
OFFENSIVE FIREPOWER
During Riley's first season the Cougs set school records in shots made (968) and assists (574), more than any previous team in school history. The Cougs finished ninth in the country in field goal percentage, 19th in assists, and 20th in blocks.
NEW PAC-12 ON THE HORIZON
The revitalized Pac-12 Conference is set to launch July 1, 2026 with a strong slate of men's basketball programs including Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, Gonzaga, Oregon State, San Diego State, Texas State, and Utah State.
COWARD JOINS THE ASSOCIATION
Cedric Coward, a 2024 WCC All-Preseason selection, and graduate of WSU, was drafted No. 11 in the 2025 NBA Draft, joining the Memphis Grizzlies after a trade. Coward, who played just six games last season prior to suffering a season-ending injury, linked up with 2024 WSU Draftee, Jaylen Wells. There are currently five Cougars playing in the NBA — Cedric Coward, Mouhamed Gueye, Isaac Jones, Klay Thompson, and Jaylen Wells.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 25, 2026
8:05 p.m. PT
Los Angeles, California
Gersten Pavilion
Capacity: 4,156
COUGAR SPORTS NETWORK
Seattle 770AM & 94.5FMÂ
Spokane 920AM & 100.7FM
Pullman 104.3FM | Tri-Cities 610AM
Chris King & Craig Ehlo
TV & STREAMING
ESPNU & ESPN App
Play-by-Play: Chris Sylvester
Analyst: Jerod Haase
Producer: Ryan Fullam
SERIES HISTORY
All-Time: 5-2
at LMU: 1-0
First Meeting: Dec. 21, 1950 (70-52)
Last Meeting: Jan. 2, 2026 (78-76)
OPENING TIPS
1. Washington State returns to Loyola Marymount for the first time in 76 years, facing the Lions at 8 p.m., Wednesday, February 25, at Gersten Pavilion. The Cougars last visited LMU's campus in the programs' first all-time meeting in December 1950. Earlier this season, the Cougs beat LMU in a 78-76 thriller in Pullman when Ace Glass scored the game-winner.
2. True freshman Ace Glass, a three-time WCC Freshman of the Week, leads the Cougs in scoring, averaging 16.0 points per game. Glass broke the WSU freshman single-game scoring record with 40 points vs ASU. The Rialto, California native ranks fifth in the WCC in scoring, best by a freshman, and top-20 nationally for a freshman.
3. ND Okafor leads the Cougars in shooting efficiency and blocks. The Irishman shoots at 59.5% from the floor and averages 5.4 rebounds per game, 12th in the WCC. Okafor is second in the WCC in blocks with 44 rejections and ranks 57th nationally. The Irishman has scored 10+ points in nine of the last 10 games, including 15 points in the win vs Pacific.
4. Since returning from a two-game injury, Rihards Vavers has dominated the Cougar offense, averaging a team-best 16.0 points per game over the 9-game stretch, including 24 points against Seattle U and 21 against Pacific. Vavers is a lethal outside shooter, delivering 29 threes on 53% shooting over nine games.
5. Eemeli Yalaho averages 10.1 points per game and team-best 5.6 rebounds per game, 10th in WCC. Against Pacific, the Finn grabbed a team-high eight rebounds and has led the Cougs in rebounding 12 times with three double-doubles.
SERIES HISTORY VS LMU LIONS
Washington State University and Loyola Marymount University have met seven times dating back to a December 1950 contest at LMU, an 18-point win for Washington State College. The Lions have never traveled to Pullman for the first time in program history this January, suffering a 78-86 loss at the hands of an Ace Glass game-winner. The Cougars and Coach Riley are 3-0 against LMU as conference foes. WSU returns to the LMU campus for the first time in 76 years, having met the Lions at a neutral site in 1991.
LAST TIME OUT
Washington State led for much of the first half and showed flashes of its best basketball before Saint Mary's pulled away in the second half, handing the Cougars an 83-67 loss Saturday night at Beasley Coliseum. It was a tale of two halves with WSU making seven first-half 3-pointers before going scoreless from beyond the arc in the second half with a season-low 28 points. Ace Glass led the Cougs with 15 points on 5-of-12 shooting, and Rihards Vavers added 12 points and six rebounds. ND Okafor contributed 15 points, leading the Cougars in scoring for the first time in his career, on 7-of-14 shooting in 26 minutes.Â
UP NEXT
The Cougars conclude the regular season, Saturday, February 28, in Malibu to face Pepperdine. WSU tips off against the Waves at 5 p.m. on ESPN+. In the first meeting this season, the Cougs beat Pepperdine 95-79 behind distributed scoring across six double-figure scorers, including Glass, Hildebrandt, Okafor, Ugbo, Vavers, and Yalaho.
PICK YOUR POISON
Four Cougars average 10+ points per game, 10 different players have scored in double figures, and six Cougs have delivered 20-point performances at least once this season, including Glass, Okafor, Thrastarson, Ugbo, Vavers, and Yalaho. Both Okafor and Yalaho have each recorded double-doubles. WSU has shot over 50% from the floor six times in the last 10 games.
HOME SWEET HOME & ROCKY ROAD
The Cougars hold a 9-6 record at home, where 75% of their wins have come. In contrast, WSU has won just one true road game, at Portland to begin conference play, December 28. The Cougs picked up a pair of neutral site wins in Spokane and Maui.
AARON ACING ROOKIE SEASON
True freshman Ace Glass has stepped into a leading roll for the Cougars, averaging a team-best 16.0 points per game, breaking the WSU freshman single-game scoring record with 40 points versus Arizona State, and picking up three WCC Freshman of the Week honors. The Rialto, California kid ranks fifth in the West Coast Conference in scoring, best by a freshman, and top-20 nationally by a rookie. Glass scored 20 points in the loss to Santa Clara, delivering his eighth 20-point performance, and has scored in double figures 24 times. Against Portland, Glass delivered a career-high seven assists and sits third on the team with 66 total assists.
OKAFOR BLOCKS MORE
ND Okafor is the Cougars' leading rim protector, having led the Cougs 19 times in single-game blocks, totalling 44 on the season, second in WCC and 57th nationally. The Irishman has registered three blocks in four of the last six games. Okafor's average scoring and rebounding have doubled since last season.
ROAD WARRIORS
The Cougs have played the 45th toughest schedule in the country according to NCAA NET rankings. With its arrival to Los Angeles, WSU has traveled over 22,100 commercial airlines miles and played games in four time zones.
LINE IN THE SAND
As a team, Washington State is shooting the ball at 47.4%. When the Cougars shoot over 45% they have won 11 times, but just once when held under 45% shooting. The Cougs also have 11 wins when scoring 70+ points, however when held under 70 points, WSU is just 1-11. The Cougars have scored 90+ points seven times this year, but hold just a 4-3 record in those games.
CONTROL THE ROCK
Washington State has struggled to control the ball in several key areas including assist-to-turnover ratio, turnovers forced, steals per game, turnover margin, and three-point defense. The Cougars assist-to-turnover ratio of 1.03 ranks 287th national. WSU is forcing just 10.14 turnovers per game, 318th in Division-I, with 5.6 steals per game (296th). WSU ranks 345th nationally with a negative turnover margin of -2.9, while sitting 307th in defensive 3-point percentage allowing opponents to shoot 35.9% from beyond the arc.
EFFICIENCY IS THE KEY
In contrast to the previous note, the Cougars have steadily improved their overall field goal percentage, three-point field goal percentage, rebounding margin, and effective field goal percentage. Nationally, WSU ranks in the top-70 with a 47.4% field goal percentage (58th), a 37.3 three-point field goal percentage (30th). The Cougars also make 9.5 three-pointers per game (t-62nd) and hold the 38th-best effective field goal percentage at 55.7%.
GO YALAHO GO
Junior Texas Tech transfer Eemeli Yalaho has quietly become a double-double threat, delivering three this season. The Finn scored a career-best 26 points against Portland, January 31, and is averaging 10.1 points per game and team-best 5.6 rebounds per game, 10th in the WCC. Twice this season Yalaho has pulled down a career-high 11 rebounds and scored 10+ points on 16 occasions.Â
RIHARDS RETURNS TO ACTION
Junior Rihards Vavers returned to action, January 21, at San Diego after suffering a head injury that sidelined him for two games. Over the nine-game stretch since returning, Vavers has scored in double figures every game, averaging 16.0 points per game, including a 24-point performance in the win over Seattle U and 21-point game against Pacific. The Latvian laser is also shooting the ball at a 53% clip from beyond the arc, 29-of-55, since returning to the hardwood.
MORTON MOJO
Morehead State transfer Jerone Morton has found his footing, sharing ballhandling responsibilities through 26 starts in 29 games and dished 79 assists, second-most on the team. Morton is averaging 7.6 points per game, 2.7 assists per game, and 1.9 rebounds per game. In the Cougs' loss at No. 12 Gonzaga, February 10, Morton scored 15 points, including a perfect 5-of-5 at the free throw line. The Kentucky kid dished a career-high nine assists against Saint Mary's in the first meeting, January 10.
ECLIPSING THE CENTURY MARK
In the January 31st win over Portland, the Cougars scored 104 points in regulation, its the first time in triple digits since scoring 100 points against Portland State in Coach Riley's WSU debut, November 4, 2024. The 104 points against the Pilots marked the most points scored by the Cougs at Beasley Coliseum since scoring 108 points versus Oregon in overtime, January 15, 2015. The last time the Cougars scored as many points in a regulation game at home came against CSUN with 106 points, January 25, 1995.Â
COMEBACK KIDS
Washington State is the only Division-I team in the country since the start of last season to play multiple games in which both team held a 17-point lead. WSU won two of the three contests. Against Chaminade, November 24, the Cougars trailed by as many 20 points before rallying to victory. In David Riley's first game as Cougar head coach in 2024-25, WSU rallied from a 17-point deficit against Portland State, to secure victory. In the Cougars' loss to Oregon State, WSU spoiled a 17-point second-half lead, becoming the only D-I team on both sides of a 17-point comeback this season.
UNFORCED ERRORS
In non-steal turnovers, the Cougars rank 311th nationally, according to KenPom. In other terms, the majority of the Cougars turnovers as unforced errors and not caused by the opponent defense with an 8.4 non-steal turnover percentage.
ADRIA DISHES SPANISH FLARE
Incoming senior Adria Rodriguez, a member of Spanish second-division club Alicante, has shown his floor general prowess as the Cougs leading assister in 14 games. The Catalonia kid is averaging a team-best 3.2 assists per game, including some eye-popping between-the-legs passes through heavy traffic. Adria has led the team in steals 11 times and pulled down a career-high eight rebounds against No. 9 Gonzaga, January 15. Against Portland he delivered a season-high nine assists and has increased his field goal percentage by six points from nonconference to WCC play, shooting over 46% since the start of conference action.
TOMAS TURNS UP
Tomas Thrastarson returned to the court for the first time in 2026, after suffering a stress fracture in his foot, December 30, which forced him to miss 50 days and 12 games. Thrastarson turned heads with his offseason development after being named to the 2024-25 WCC All-Freshman Team, playing in 31 games with 11 starts, averaging 4.5 ppg, 3.1 rpg, and 19 blocks. Thrastarson has matched or bested his career-high three times, including a 20-point game versus Nevada. In the opener against Idaho, Thrastarson finished 11-of-12 from the charity stripe.
UNITED NATIONS OF COUGS
WSU boasts players from eight different countries across North America and Europe. WSU has six Americans and eight international student-athletes. The West Coast Conference men's basketball teams have the greatest percentage of international student-athletes of any Division I conference with 39.3 percent of rosters made of international student-athletes.Â
HONORING GEORGE RAVELING
In partnership with Nike, Washington State wore custom pre-game shooting shirts and Book2 shoes to honor former WSU Head Coach George Raveling. The shoes, with custom 'RAV' typography on them, were provided to all schools the former Coug coached or played at, including USC, Iowa, Howard, Villanova, Georgetown, and WSU. Raveling, the first Black coach in the Pac-8 Conference, elevated the Cougar men's basketball program to national prominence during his time in Pullman. Raveling guided the Cougars from 1972-1983. During his 11 years in Pullman, Raveling led WSU to two NCAA tournaments in 1980 and 1983. WSU's 1980 NCAA appearance was the first for the Cougars since finishing national runner-up in 1941.
THE CLOCKTOWER COLLECTION
In January, Washington State introduced the "Clock Tower Collection," a limited-edition retro uniform and retail merchandise, which was worn Saturday, February 7, against Santa Clara. The Cougars auctioned off the game-worn jerseys to support the WSU student-athlete NIL fund. WSU's alternate white uniforms feature a Crimson arch across the chest, emblazoned with 'Cougars' in large print above the player number. The matching shorts feature skyline iconography encompassing WSU's Bryan Hall Clock Tower. The uniform is finished with a thick Crimson trim around the color and sleeves.
SPOKANE ARENA HISTORY
Washington State hosted Oregon State at Numerica Veterans Arena in Spokane, January 4, improving to 24-19 all-time at Spokane Arena dating back to 1995. The Cougars are 4-1 all-time in conference games at Veterans Arena and improved to 4-0 against OSU in the Lilac City.
RILEY RUNS IT BACK
David Riley began his second season at WSU after finishing his first season on the Palouse 19-15 with a postseason berth to the inaugural College Basketball Crown. The selection marked a third postseason in four seasons for Coach Riley, and fourth-consecutive postseason for the Cougs.Â
COUGARS PICKED SIXTH IN WCC
Entering the 2025-26 season as an affiliate member of the West Coast Conference, Wazzu was selected sixth in the preseason coaches poll. The Cougars did not receive an honoree on the conference preseason team.
COUGS BOND IN EUROPEAN TRIP
The Cougars took an international tour this summer, visiting England and Spain. WSU played three exhibition games over 10 days, while sightseeing London, Malaga, and Barcelona. The Cougs say the London Eye, Big Ben, La Sagrada Familia, and excursioned around the Mediterranean Sea in southern Spain.
BRAYDEN KYMAN INKS DEAL
Class of 2026 senior Brayden Kyman, a 6-8 power forward from Rancho Santa Margarita, California, signed a financial aid agreement to play basketball at Washington State beginning next season. The versatile forward can score at all three levels with a deep range and length to work inside.Â
OFFENSIVE FIREPOWER
During Riley's first season the Cougs set school records in shots made (968) and assists (574), more than any previous team in school history. The Cougs finished ninth in the country in field goal percentage, 19th in assists, and 20th in blocks.
NEW PAC-12 ON THE HORIZON
The revitalized Pac-12 Conference is set to launch July 1, 2026 with a strong slate of men's basketball programs including Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, Gonzaga, Oregon State, San Diego State, Texas State, and Utah State.
COWARD JOINS THE ASSOCIATION
Cedric Coward, a 2024 WCC All-Preseason selection, and graduate of WSU, was drafted No. 11 in the 2025 NBA Draft, joining the Memphis Grizzlies after a trade. Coward, who played just six games last season prior to suffering a season-ending injury, linked up with 2024 WSU Draftee, Jaylen Wells. There are currently five Cougars playing in the NBA — Cedric Coward, Mouhamed Gueye, Isaac Jones, Klay Thompson, and Jaylen Wells.
Players Mentioned
WSU MBB: "Gotta Attack these 4 Games" | David Riley Gonzaga Postgame | 2/10/26
Wednesday, February 11
WSU MBB: "Get over the Hump" | David Riley/Eemeli Yalaho/Ace Glass | Santa Clara Postgame | 2/7/26
Sunday, February 08
WSU MBB: "Tough Pill to Swallow" | David Riley Oregon State Postgame | 2/4/26
Thursday, February 05
WSU MBB: Highlights vs. Portland | 1/31/26
Sunday, February 01























