Tech men's basketball team back in Eblen Center to host SIUE Thursday

Tech men's basketball team back in Eblen Center to host SIUE Thursday

By Mike Lehman, TTU Sports Information

COOKEVILLE, Tenn. – The Tennessee Tech men's basketball team is finally back in the Eblen Center Thursday night, kicking off the home portion of its Ohio Valley Conference campaign with the second act of a league doubleheader against SIUE starting approximately at 7:30 p.m. CT.

Tennessee Tech (5-10, 1-1) vs. SIUE (5-9, 1-1)
Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019
7:30 p.m. CT
Eblen Center (7,500) – Cookeville, Tenn.

The Broadcasts
TV: None
Radio: 106.1 The Eagle (Roger Ealey)
Webcast: ESPN+ (Dylan Vazzano & Frank Harrell)

SERIES NOTES
This marks the 13th meeting all-time between the two programs, with Tech owning a 9-3 lead in the series.

The Golden Eagles have won each of the past four meetings between the two programs, including both match-ups last season. Tech faced the Cougars in the regular season in Edwardsville before squaring off again in Evansville in the first round of the OVC Tournament.

The purple and gold are a perfect 4-0 all-time against SIUE in the comfort of the Eblen Center, dating back to the first match-up between the two programs back on Dec. 1, 2010, a 78-65 victory by the Golden Eagles.

Tech claimed a close, 68-67 victory at the Vadalabene Center last season, holding on late as a Cougar desperation 3-pointer fell short at the buzzer.

Kajon Mack led the Golden Eagles in the contest, scoring 18 points with four boards and five assists. Shaq Calhoun recorded a double-double with 16 points and 11 rebounds. Mason Ramsey added 11 points and seven boards.

Tech didn't see the Cougars again until the first round of the OVC Tournament in Evansville, dispatching SIUE 60-51 to advance to the quarterfinals against Jacksonville State.

It was Ramsey leading the Tech attack in the contest, posting 19 points. Kajon Mack chalked up a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds. Courtney Alexander II snagged 10 boards as well with seven points.

TRENDING
Graduate transfer Malik Martin turned in a strong showing at Belmont, leading the Golden Eagles with 17 points on a 7-for-12 showing from the floor. He also snagged six rebounds in the contest.

With 12 points at Belmont, Jr. Clay has now recorded 11 double-digit scoring efforts this season. He is on pace to finish with 22 such games this year, a mark that would rank second all-time among Golden Eagle freshmen behind only Earl Wise's 25 in 1986-87. Only three Tech rookies have reached the 20 double-digit performance plateau; Wise with 25, Stephen Kite with 21 (1982-83) and Anthony Avery with 20 (1985-86). Rounding out the top-five is Pete Abuls with 19 (1978-79) and Marc Burnett with 17 (1977-78).

Junior big man Micaiah Henry leads the OVC in field goal percentage with at least five attempts per game, hitting 66.7 percent of his shots from the floor. He also ranks in the top-15 nationally. His current mark is within spitting distance of the highest in school history for a single season, just trailing Greg Morgan's 67.1 percent clip during the 2001-02 campaign.

Freshmen Jr. Clay and Hunter Vick are both on pace to become the first Tech rookies to average double figures in scoring since Bruce Oglesby averaged 11.5 points per game in 1990-91. They would represent the first Golden Eagle teammates to average double figures as freshmen since Pete Abuls (13.3) and Paul Chadwell (11.6) during the 1978-79 campaign. Clay's current scoring average of 12.5 points per game ranks as the fourth best in program history among freshmen.

The 2018-19 schedule has proven one of the most daunting for the Golden Eagles in program history. Preseason rankings placed it as the first season in team history where the Golden Eagles faced three preseason top-10 teams. (No. 6 Tennessee, No. 8 North Carolina and No. 10 Michigan State).

Those teams were ranked as follows when Tech made its visit during the non-conference slate: No. 3 Tennessee, No. 7 North Carolina and No. 11 Michigan State.

Tech faced three different top-15 teams just one other time in school history, back in 1993-94. Then head coach Frank Harrell's squad took on No. 1 Kentucky, No. 12 Indiana and No. 14 UConn throughout the season.

Tech was predicted to finish fifth overall in the 2019 OVC race in voting by the league's head coaches and SIDs.

ROSTER BREAKDOWN
The 2018-19 Tech roster features 17 players (13 scholarship student-athletes) representing five states.

Ten Golden Eagle players hail from the state Tennessee, while Georgia boasts a total of three Tech players. Florida represents home to two Golden Eagles while both Alabama and Illinois are represented by one Tech player each.

Tech has two graduate students, two seniors, four juniors, one sophomore, one redshirt freshman and seven true freshmen.

Ten Golden Eagles stand 6-foot-5 or taller while the other seven measure in at 6-foot-4 or shorter.

A whopping 11 members are new to the Tech squad for 2018-19, including Spencer ChandlerJr. ClayGarrett GoldayMalik MartinChris McNealCaden MillsChase RidenourJared SherfieldTyler ThompsonJohnnie Vassar and Reece Wilkinson.

WINDS OF CHANGE   
Last year, the Golden Eagles returned 71.0 percent of their scoring. This season, things look a little different for the purple and gold. Just 19.4 percent of Tech's points will return in 2018-19.

In 2017-18, seven of TTU's top eight scorers returned to help lead the team to 19 wins. This season, the Golden Eagles have lost their top five scorers from last year, all of which averaged double figures.

Senior Courtney Alexander II represents the top returner at 6.8 points per game.

Tech represents the only OVC team in the league not returning at least one of its top five scorers from a season ago.

Alexander also marks the only returning starter from 2017-18, making 32 starts in 33 games. He led the team in both rebounds and blocks last season.

Tennessee State is the only other team in the OVC returning just one starter from last season. The team also hired a new head coach in the offseason.

Tech's five returning players who saw action in 2017-18 ranks the Golden Eagles as the second-lowest in the league behind Southeast Missouri's four. Belmont also returns just five players from last year.

Overall, the Golden Eagles return just 27.1 percent of their total minutes played from 2017-18, the 12th lowest percentage in the nation. Of Tech's opponents in 2018-19, only Chattanooga returns less (15.2 percent).

Photo by Tony Marable