Tech hoops to host Eastern Illinois in 6:00 p.m. CT Monday tilt

Tech hoops to host Eastern Illinois in 6:00 p.m. CT Monday tilt

By Mike Lehman, TTU Sports Information

COOKEVILLE, Tenn. – The Tennessee Tech men's basketball team will play host to Eastern Illinois in its final Monday tilt of the season, squaring off with the Panthers in a 6:00 p.m. CT contest.

The two squads were originally slated to battle in the Hooper Eblen Center back on Jan. 8, but Golden Eagle COVID protocols led to a postponement to Monday. The two programs will face each other again on Thursday up in Charleston, Ill., representing the third straight week the purple and gold will play a back-to-back series against a league foe.

Fans can follow the action on ESPN+, with Dylan Vazzano and Frank Harrell on the call, or on 106.1 The Eagle with Roger Ealey providing radio coverage of the contest.

Tennessee Tech (5-18, 2-8) vs. Eastern Illinois (4-18, 2-7)
Monday, Feb. 7, 2022
6:00 p.m. CT
Eblen Center – Cookeville, Tenn.

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

Game Notes
Tennessee Tech
Eastern Illinois

SERIES/OPPONENT NOTES
Monday marks the 46th meeting all-time between Tech and Eastern Illinois, with the Golden Eagles owning a 27-18 lead in the series.

In Cookeville, the Golden Eagles hold a 16-6 advantage over the Panthers, including an 80-67 victory in Eblen Center during last season's match-up on Feb. 13.

Tech's Shandon Goldman flirted with a triple-double in the contest, posting career-highs of 20 points and eight assists and securing a double-double with 11 rebounds. He hit 4-of-8 tries from distance and chipped in a pair of steals while playing 32 minutes.

Jr. Clay led the Golden Eagles with 22 points in the contest, also draining four attempts from beyond the arc. Coming off the bench, Keishawn Davidson produced 18 points with five boards and six dimes.

Leading the Panthers in the tilt was Jordan Skipper-Brown (who has since transferred to Murray State), scoring a team-high 21 points and grabbing a team-best seven rebounds. Former EIU guard Mack Smith added 19 points to the mix.

EIU's longest winning streak in the series sits at four games from Jan. 10, 1998 through Feb. 4, 1999.

Tech's longest winning streak in the series was six consecutive victories spanning Jan. 24, 2004 through Jan. 19, 2006.

The Panthers have won four of the last six meetings between the two OVC programs, with four of the contests occurring in Charleston, Ill. The two teams have split the previous 10 meetings, with Tech owning a 3-1 advantage at home in that span.

QUICK HITTERS
The Golden Eagles dropped a heartbreaker in overtime to Belmont, falling 100-92 in a contest that saw the Bruins visit the charity stripe 35 times. Tech finished 6-of-8 from the free throw line on the night.

Five Tech players scored in double figures, including Kenny White Jr. (16), Keishawn Davidson (14), Jr. Clay (14), Diante Wood (12), and Mamoudou Diarra (11).

Tech dished out 25 assists in the loss, the first time the team has doled out 20+ dimes in a losing effort this season. Davidson led the way with a career-high 11 helpers as part of his fourth career double-double.

Tech's home loss to Belmont marked the sixth consecutive loss in overtime for the Golden Eagles, with the team's last triumph in extra time coming in a 78-69 win against SIUE back on Jan. 10, 2019.

Kenny White Jr. went off for 23 points in Tech's win over SIUE, while Jr. Clay chipped in 20 of his own off the bench, as well as five dimes and four steals. It marked the first time this season a pair of Golden Eagles scored 20+ points in the same game.

When Tech squared off with SIUE Thursday, it marked 35 days between home games for the purple and gold, with the last coming against Montreat College on Dec. 16, 2021. The gap ranks in the top-10 in the country this season.

With a 76-70 victory at UT Martin last Saturday, Tech picked up its first road win since a 62-60 decision over Southeast Missouri on Feb. 20, 2020 and the first of this season.

When the Golden Eagles suited up against Belmont Thursday evening, it had been 23 days since Tech's most recent contest, a 76-67 loss at Cincinnati back on Dec. 21, 2021.

The 23-day hiatus from the hardwood marked the longest in-season break since the 2015-16 season, which featured a whopping 26-day stretch between contests. That year, Tech fell to Austin Peay in the first round of the OVC Tournament on Mar. 2, 2015 and later competed in the first-ever and only Vegas 16 Tournament against Old Dominion on Mar. 28, 2016.

It also represented the longest regular-season break for the purple and gold since the 1960-61 campaign. Tech had an incredible 28 days between contests at Morehead State on Dec. 10, 1960 and at Murray State on Jan. 7, 1961.

In Tech's huge, 117-60 victory over Montreat, the Golden Eagles tied a 21-year-old program record, dishing out an eye-popping 36 assists. The purple and gold's previous contest with 36 helpers came against Toccoa Falls on Jan. 11, 2000.

At No. 15 Tennessee, Tech took a 35-34 lead into the locker room thanks to a 3-pointer from Jr. Clay with less than two seconds to go. It marked the Cookeville crew's first halftime advantage over its in-state rival since taking a 32-26 lead into the break in a 61-58 loss on Dec. 19, 2014.

The lead also represented the Golden Eagles' first over a Power 5 team at halftime since leading Ole Miss 32-31 in an 80-63 loss on Dec. 29, 2019.

It was the first lead for Tech over a nationally-ranked opponent since taking a 34-30 advantage at the break against No. 14 Murray State in a 69-64 home loss to the Racers back on Feb. 25, 2012.

It was also the first halftime lead for the purple and gold against a nationally-ranked foe on the road since hitting the locker room ahead of No. 25 Iowa State 49-35 in an 89-74 loss on Dec. 5, 2000.

In the win over the Bisons, Jr. Clay (9) and Keishawn Davidson (10) were special, becoming the first duo in program history to combine for 19 assists and zero turnovers.

The two guards were the first Tech pair to combine for at least 19 assists since Maurice Houston (15) and Rob West (7) teamed up for 22 in a 97-79 win over Morehead State on Jan. 11, 1993.

They are just the fourth duo in program history to post 19 assists in a single game, joining Houston and West in 1993, Van Usher (14) and Bobby McWilliams (6) in 1990, and Van Usher (17) and Mitch Cupples (2) in 1990).

In the team's loss against UNC Asheville, the Golden Eagles finished 0-for-21 from 3-point range, the first time Tech completed a contest without a make from beyond the arc since Feb. 10, 2011.

Tech was predicted to finish 8th overall in the 2021-22 OVC race in voting by the league's head coaches and SIDs.

Serving as team captains for the Golden Eagles in 2021-22 are Jr. Clay, Keishawn Davidson, Shandon Goldman, John Pettway, and Diante Wood. It marks the third-straight year serving as captains for both Clay and Davidson.

In the 2021-22 campaign, Tech will square off with eight of the 11 other Division I state institutions, including contests against Austin Peay, Belmont, Chattanooga, Lipscomb, Memphis, Tennessee State, Tennessee, and UT Martin.

TOP IN THEIR STATES
Four of Tech's players for the 2021-22 season boast a particularly impressive feat as part of their respective resumes, all finishing as finalists for the Mr. Basketball Award for their state during their high school careers.

Junior guard Jr. Clay was a two-time finalist at the TSSAA Division II Class AA level while at The McCallie School in Chattanooga, earning the honor in 2017 and again in 2018.

Sophomore guard CJ Gettelfinger was one of three finalists at the TSSAA Division II Class A level in 2018 while competing for Grace Christian Academy in Knoxville.

Freshman forward Kenny White Jr. was named a finalist for Kentucky's Mr. Basketball Award in 2020 while starring for Madisonville-North Hopkins High School in Madisonville, Ky.

Transfer guard Diante Wood was named the runner-up for Alabama's Mr. Basketball Award in 2018, prepping as a four-start recruit at Sacred Heart Catholic High School in Anniston, Ala.

Head coach John Pelphrey, a University of Kentucky Hall of Famer, was a Mr. Basketball Award winner during his high school days, claiming the honor for Paintsville High School in 1987.

ROSTER BREAKDOWN
The 2021-22 Tech roster features 16 players (13 scholarship student-athletes) representing six states and three countries.

Five Golden Eagle players hail from the state Tennessee, while Alabama boasts three Tech players and Georgia features a pair. Arkansas, California, and Kentucky each claim one Tech player.

Three international players round out the roster, including one Golden Eagle from Canada and two more from Mali.

Tech has two graduate students, three juniors, six sophomores, and five freshmen.

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

Seven members are new to the Tech squad for 2021-22, including five Division I transfers. Joining the Tech forces from other Division I institutions, are Diante Wood (Jacksonville/Alabama), Daniel Ramsey (Xavier), Mamoudou Diarra (Cincinnati), Caleb Christopher (Arizona State), and John Pettway (South Alabama).

Also new to the squad are freshmen Bailey Gilliam and Isaiah Nelson-Ododa.

Photo by Jim Dillon