
Grizzlies end nation’s longest home winning streak, knock off Jackrabbits
12/22/2018 9:15:00 PM | Men's Basketball
BROOKINGS, S.D. – For the first time in 714 days, an opposing team came to Frost Arena and walked away with a win. Montana led for the final 23 minutes on Saturday, coming away with an 85-74 road victory to close non-conference play.
South Dakota State's 26-game home winning streak was the nation's longest active streak entering the night, last losing on its home court on Jan. 7, 2017. The Jackrabbits own the nation's best home record over the past eight seasons, and hadn't lost a non-conference home game since Nov. 14, 2013 – to Montana.
Montana was impressive on both sides of the ball, scoring 14 points above SDSU opponents' season average. On defense, Montana held the 13th-best scoring offense 11 points below its season average. The Jackrabbits entered the night ranked in the top seven nationally for shooting, three-point shooting and free-throw shooting, but were held below their season averages in all three categories.
As he is known to do, senior Michael Oguine was at his best when the lights were shining bright. He scored 23 points while collecting a team-high nine rebounds. During a 15-6 run in the first half, Oguine had 10 of Montana's points, including seven in a row. SDSU fought back to take a four-point lead before the Grizzlies closed the half on a 15-5 run.
The Grizzlies led for the entire second half, including by eight or more for the majority of the period. The closest SDSU got was four points with under 6 minutes to play. The Grizzlies responded with scores on their next three possessions to push the lead back to double digits.
With the win, Montana closed non-conference play with a 7-4 mark, its best winning percentage since 2010-11.
Game Notables
(12/22/2018) MBB: at South Dakota State (12.22.18)
Quoting DeCuire
(on his team's mentality)
"I wrote on the board, 'Let it hang, give what you got. Play through adversity and don't let it affect your effort on either side of the floor.' This is the best our team has prepared mentally. These last two days, they've been focused, they've been energetic, nothing distracting them other than this game, and they played like it."
(on his team's performance this week, and what changed)
We had a family intervention going into that Arizona game. I thought we played with the same effort and energy in that Arizona game, so it's been a great week for us. The biggest thing is just settling into your jobs, don't worry about others' jobs, don't worry about individual achievements. Let's just come together and make the most of every performance, and every time we come on the floor play the game with some energy like you love the game. They did that."
(on the energy from the bench)
"Our bench has to have more energy than the other bench. All 14 guys have to help us win, and they did that tonight."
(on Oguine's 23-point performance)
Mike got us going early. He put us on his back and let them know it was going to be a dog fight. He jumped up and made big threes, got offensive rebounds, out-scrapped them. When their back was against the wall we kept pushing."
"Then Sayeed (Pridgett) took over. Ahmaad (Rorie) was getting the ball where it needs to get. Kendal (Manuel) knocks down a three. Timmy (Falls) plays great D, Bob (Moorehead) plays great D. The presence of Jamar changes who we are."
(on holding SDSU below its season averages for shooting)
"The key is to make (two-time Summit League Player of the Year Mike) Daum work for his points. You have to make him earn it (he shot 8-for-20). The biggest thing was our energy and our attention to detail. Our help was where it needed to be, and we made adjustments. Once we took away the back doors, we were fine."
(on the non-conference season overall)
"It was a successful non-conference. Our goals were to win more than we did, and I think if we were healthy early on we'd win another one or two, maybe even three. But everyone we lost to was a good team, potentially NCAA tournament teams. To be 7-4, with the adversity we faced, we're in a good spot, and hopefully we weathered the storm and can go into conference and make the most of it."
Looking Ahead
Montana will now break apart for the Christmas holiday before reconvening in Arizona to begin Big Sky play. The Grizzlies, picked to repeat as Big Sky champions, begin their title defense at Northern Arizona (Dec. 29) and Southern Utah (Dec. 31).
South Dakota State's 26-game home winning streak was the nation's longest active streak entering the night, last losing on its home court on Jan. 7, 2017. The Jackrabbits own the nation's best home record over the past eight seasons, and hadn't lost a non-conference home game since Nov. 14, 2013 – to Montana.
Montana was impressive on both sides of the ball, scoring 14 points above SDSU opponents' season average. On defense, Montana held the 13th-best scoring offense 11 points below its season average. The Jackrabbits entered the night ranked in the top seven nationally for shooting, three-point shooting and free-throw shooting, but were held below their season averages in all three categories.
As he is known to do, senior Michael Oguine was at his best when the lights were shining bright. He scored 23 points while collecting a team-high nine rebounds. During a 15-6 run in the first half, Oguine had 10 of Montana's points, including seven in a row. SDSU fought back to take a four-point lead before the Grizzlies closed the half on a 15-5 run.
The Grizzlies led for the entire second half, including by eight or more for the majority of the period. The closest SDSU got was four points with under 6 minutes to play. The Grizzlies responded with scores on their next three possessions to push the lead back to double digits.
With the win, Montana closed non-conference play with a 7-4 mark, its best winning percentage since 2010-11.
Game Notables
- The lead changed eight times through the first 17 minutes, before Montana led for the final 23 minutes (31:26 overall).
- After being out-rebounded in six consecutive games against Division-I opponents, Montana out-rebounded SDSU, 37-34. The Jackrabbits ranked 35th in the NCAA for rebounding margin (+6.7) and had been out-rebounded just three times this season.
- Opponents entered the game shooting just .292 from deep against SDSU, but Montana made 11 three-pointers on .393 efficiency. The 11 treys were UM second-most this season.
- The Grizzlies had four players score in double figures. In addition to Oguine's 23, Ahmaad Rorie had 16, in addition to six assists and two steals, while Sayeed Pridgett had 14, and Kendal Manuel scored 11 on three three-pointers. SDSU closed to within four points with 6 minutes to play before Manuel scored on back-to-back possessions, including a trey.
- Senior Bobby Moorehead hit two big three-pointers, including one in the closing seconds of the first half that gave the Griz a six-point halftime lead.
- After missing Wednesday's game at Arizona (wrist), senior Jamar Akoh returned to the starting lineup. He filled the stat line with eight points, seven rebounds, four assists, two steals and two blocked shots.
- SDSU was held to 36 first-half points – second-fewest of the season – and trialed at the intermission for the first time at home this season.
- Montana's 42 first-half points were as many as it had in Wednesday's entire game at Arizona.
- Montana's bench scored 18 points, compared to two for SDSU.
- Four Grizzlies had four or more fouls, including Akoh, who played the final 14:34 with four fouls.
- SDSU has been to the NCAA tournament in three consecutive seasons and was picked to again win the Summit League title in 2018-19.
The winning coach meets with the media to talk about tonight's big road win! #GrizHoops #GoGriz https://t.co/h6QeEdrBCD
— Montana Griz BB (@MontanaGrizBB) December 23, 2018
(on his team's mentality)
"I wrote on the board, 'Let it hang, give what you got. Play through adversity and don't let it affect your effort on either side of the floor.' This is the best our team has prepared mentally. These last two days, they've been focused, they've been energetic, nothing distracting them other than this game, and they played like it."
(on his team's performance this week, and what changed)
We had a family intervention going into that Arizona game. I thought we played with the same effort and energy in that Arizona game, so it's been a great week for us. The biggest thing is just settling into your jobs, don't worry about others' jobs, don't worry about individual achievements. Let's just come together and make the most of every performance, and every time we come on the floor play the game with some energy like you love the game. They did that."
(on the energy from the bench)
"Our bench has to have more energy than the other bench. All 14 guys have to help us win, and they did that tonight."
(on Oguine's 23-point performance)
Mike got us going early. He put us on his back and let them know it was going to be a dog fight. He jumped up and made big threes, got offensive rebounds, out-scrapped them. When their back was against the wall we kept pushing."
"Then Sayeed (Pridgett) took over. Ahmaad (Rorie) was getting the ball where it needs to get. Kendal (Manuel) knocks down a three. Timmy (Falls) plays great D, Bob (Moorehead) plays great D. The presence of Jamar changes who we are."
(on holding SDSU below its season averages for shooting)
"The key is to make (two-time Summit League Player of the Year Mike) Daum work for his points. You have to make him earn it (he shot 8-for-20). The biggest thing was our energy and our attention to detail. Our help was where it needed to be, and we made adjustments. Once we took away the back doors, we were fine."
(on the non-conference season overall)
"It was a successful non-conference. Our goals were to win more than we did, and I think if we were healthy early on we'd win another one or two, maybe even three. But everyone we lost to was a good team, potentially NCAA tournament teams. To be 7-4, with the adversity we faced, we're in a good spot, and hopefully we weathered the storm and can go into conference and make the most of it."
Looking Ahead
Montana will now break apart for the Christmas holiday before reconvening in Arizona to begin Big Sky play. The Grizzlies, picked to repeat as Big Sky champions, begin their title defense at Northern Arizona (Dec. 29) and Southern Utah (Dec. 31).
His 23 points and steak dinner were a pre-birthday celebration.
— Montana Griz BB (@MontanaGrizBB) December 23, 2018
From the restaurant, the @VoiceoftheGriz talks with tonight's MVP @michaeloguine! #GrizHoops pic.twitter.com/spcKGWvixu
Team Stats
UM
SDSU
FG%
.475
.455
3FG%
.393
.316
FT%
.720
.667
RB
37
33
TO
10
12
STL
5
4
Game Leaders
Players Mentioned
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