March
17, 2010
Northern Colorado holds off Portland
Box Score
GREELEY, Colo. -- It’s simple now. Tad Boyle’s fourth
installment of Northern Colorado basketball can now lay claim to
the title of “Best team in school history.”
Senior Will Figures led five Bears in double figures with 20
points Wednesday night, and Northern Colorado shot a sizzling 72
percent in the second half and scored its second-most second
half points of the season in defeating Portland 81-73 in the
Opening Round of this year’s CollegeInsider.com Postseason
Tournament (CIT).
The win pushed the Bears into next Monday’s CIT Quarterfinals
and gave them 25 wins this season, the very most ever won by a
Northern Colorado men’s basketball team in 106 years of play.
The Bears’ 1988-89 team, featuring future NBA player Mike
Higgins, finished its season at 24-6, but Wednesday’s victory,
Northern Colorado’s first postseason win since 1994, brought
this year’s squad to the forefront of any future “best-ever”
discussions.
The Bears will potentially get a chance to further solidify
their place in school history at home Monday. All indications
are, pending confirmation from CIT officials, Northern Colorado
would host in that game Pacific, which defeated Loyola Marymount
in the CIT on Wednesday night.
“We’ve obviously done a lot this year, in terms of the
accomplishments this program has achieved,” Northern Colorado
coach Tad Boyle said. “But this is absolutely one of those
things that will forever live with these guys. This school has
been playing for more than 100 years, and to do something that
can never be taken away from us is pretty special. I am so proud
of each and every one of these kids. Tonight’s win was
absolutely huge for our program.”
And the Bears did it against arguably one of the toughest
opponents they’ve faced all season. Portland was ranked No. 79
in this week’s NCAA RPI report (that’s the best mark of any team
on NC’s schedule) and defeated earlier in the season Minnesota,
UCLA (by 27) and St. Mary’s.
The Gophers were ranked 16th at the time of the defeat, UCLA is
one of the best programs in the history of the NCAA, and St.
Mary’s has won 26 games this year and is in this year’s NCAA
Tournament field, as is Minnesota.
“Portland is a good team, and they’ve got some really good
players,” Boyle said. “The WCC (West Coast Conference) is no
joke, now, and they finished third behind some big-time programs
(Gonzaga, St. Mary’s). But we’re a good team, too. I’m just glad
we were at home. Our fans were absolutely fantastic tonight.
This was a great night for UNC basketball.”
Figures got to at least 20 points for the 14th time this season
by pouring in 14 in the second half, and Chris Kaba (14), Mike
Proctor (13), Taylor Montgomery (13) and Neal Kingman (10)
backed him in helping Northern Colorado improve to 13-1 this
season and win its second straight against the West Coast
Conference Pilots.
True-freshman Connor Osborne snagged down a career-high six
rebounds in 15 minutes of play, and Northern Colorado also got
great glasswork from Montgomery (six) and Kingman (five) to win
the rebounding battle against a bigger Portland squad.
Boyle and his assistants all week in practice stressed the
talent level of the Pilots’ interior quartet of Robin Smeulders
(6-10), Kramer Knutson (6-9), Luke Sikma (6-8) and Jasonn
Hannibal (6-10), and they knew it would take an over-the-top
effort from Montgomery, Proctor and Osborne to get a victory in
this one.
“We really challenged our big guys before the game started,”
Boyle said. “We said, ‘This is the best group of big guys we’ve
played against,’ and they just battled their tails off. We
talked about pressuring the basketball and we talked about not
pacing yourself.
“I’ve said it a lot this season, but this was a total-team
effort. We got great contribution from every single player we
put out there tonight. We played composed, we played smart and
we really left it all on the floor. There’s a reason this time
of year is so popular with fans, because the stakes are so high
every time you step out there. We’ve been stressing to the guys
all season to not have any regret, and they played like that
tonight.”
The Bears had four leads of nine or more points, but they were
never able to completely shake the hot-shooting Pilots, who
entered the game ranked ninth in the NCAA in three-point
shooting percentage and featured junior Jared Stohl, who is
currently tops in the NCAA from beyond the arc (48 percent).
Portland made 12-of-22 3-pointers overall and seven-of-11 in the
second half (64 percent) to stay in the game and 12-until a 15-6
run over the final three minutes put the game away and moved the
Bears into a group of 40 teams that come Monday will still be
playing during the 2009-10 season.
“We left Ogden (following a Big Sky Championship semifinal loss)
with a lot still to prove,” Figures said. “We’ve had a great
year, but we didn’t want it to end like it did. We’ve worked
hard this season, and the guys who have been here awhile have
worked hard for more than just this season to get to this point.
We deserve this (getting 25 wins), and we’re still excited to
lace ‘em back up and move on to the next step.”

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