New Mexico Basketball: Ball Dawgs Classic Preview, How To Stream & More

New Mexico Basketball: Ball Dawgs Classic Preview The Lobos get things started with the Toledo Rockets late Tuesday night. Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire The Lobos head on the road for a three-game stand in Feast Week Multi-team event, The …

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New Mexico Basketball: Ball Dawgs Classic Preview


The Lobos get things started with the Toledo Rockets late Tuesday night.


Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire

The Lobos head on the road for a three-game stand in Feast Week Multi-team event, The Ball Dawgs Classic.

WHO: New Mexico (2-1, 0-0 in the MWC) vs. Toledo (3-0, 0-0 in the MAC), Rice (1-2, 0-0 in AAC) & Pepperdine (3-2, 0-0 in WCC)

WHEN: Tuesday November 21st-Friday November 24th

WHERE: The Dollar Loan Center, Henderson, NV

STREAM: FLO Hoops ($)

It’s that time of year folks, with the holidays heavily upon us college basketball fans are gearing up for maybe their favorite time of year not named March Madness, Feast Week.

The second to last week in November always provides quality basketball matchups in a variety of venues and cities almost daily. For the New Mexico Lobos that means picking up shop and making the Dollar Loan Center in Henderson, NV their home for the holiday “break”.

This comes after the Lobos were taken down to the wire in their lone game of week two of the college basketball season by UT Arlington. New Mexico looked out of sorts that game and let foul trouble combined with nearly zero post defense create a nail biter in the Pit.

In his post-game interview Thursday night, Head Coach Richard Pitino acknowledged a lack of chemistry as one of the teams biggest issues at the moment.

“We know our best basketball is ahead of us. We’ve dealt with so many injuries, we’ve dealt with Nelly (Junior-Joseph) missing four crucial months of practice, we just have to find a way. This team will progress as the season goes on with so many new guys.” said Coach Pitino

“Although I am excited about the future of this team and program. We have eight new players and when you take a veteran like Jaelen House out, we’ll now you got a lot of new guys on the court. And we are not going to be perfect right now. You have to learn from every opportunity you get.”

Now they’ll gear up and head west for three games in four days against MAC title hopefuls Toledo, AAC newcomers Rice and Lorenzo Romar’s Pepperdine Waves. It’s a tough task, but aside for the chance to grab some quality wins over top-175 KenPom ranked teams. It’s a chance for this Lobo squad to find more team chemistry before a very tough homestand the following week.

Team previews below

Larry Muniz covers college basketball as a writer for Mountain West Wire and WAC Hoops Digest. Also as a co-host of the college basketball podcast “Hoops Talk W/Jay & Larry”. He is also a USWBA Member.

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New Mexico vs. UT Arlington: Preview, How To Stream, Odds & More

After a road loss to top-25 ranked Saint Mary’s, Richard Pitino’s Lobos return to the Pit and host undefeated UT Arlington.

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New Mexico vs. UT Arlington: Preview


The Lobos look to bounce back at home against the Mavericks.


Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire

Richard Pitino’s Lobos return to the Pit and host undefeated UT Arlington.

WHO: New Mexico (1-1, 0-0 in the MWC) vs. UT Arlington (2-0, 0-0 in the SWAC)

WHEN: Thursday, November 16th, 7:00 PM MT, 8:00 PM CT

WHERE: University Arena aka “The Pit”, Albuquerque, NM

STREAM: Mountain West Network

Line: KenPom, The Lobos are favored by 16 Points

College basketball is both beautiful and heartbreaking, take the starts of the last two seasons New Mexico has had for example. Flashback just one year ago and the Lobos were about to embark on a 16-game winning streak as the nation’s last remaining undefeated team.

One year later and the Lobos fell on the road to one of the best mid-major teams in the entire country in the second game of the season. A game likely to be their biggest game of the non-conference season. Tis the nature of college basketball, or sports in general really. They make you feel great when it’s great and crumby when it’s crumby.

But a bad week, game or skid never means all hope is lost. Especially not in the second week in November. So cheer up folks, the story isn’t over, there is still plenty of college basketball to watch in Albuquerque. With the next chapter taking place Thursday the 16th inside the Pit against the UT Arlington Mavericks.

Losing to a top-25 ranked St. Mary’s team hurts the resume no doubt. But it appeared as though New Mexico just wasn’t prepared to take on a team of this caliber or consistency.

The Gaels have been coached by the same coach (Randy Bennett) for over twenty-years and haven’t experienced a sub .500 season since they hired Bennett. The program is an outlier in all levels of college basketball and that consistency/winning cultured showed.

New Mexico on the other hand looked like a team with five returning players who saw action last season, including two starters. Sometimes putting a near entirely new roster together, no matter how talented can be tricky. Throw in unexpected injuries to key players like Jaelen House and Isaac Mushila and your non-conference slate may come with growing pains.

Thursday night the Lobos are hoping to put some of those growing pains in their rear view. When they host undefeated UT Arlington and their first year head coach with an impressive resume as a longtime Assistant Coach in the industry.

UT Arlington Breakdown

The Mavericks are on a path of resurgence with first year Head Coach KT Turner at the helm in Arlington. Turner comes from several of college basketball royalties coaching trees. Having spent time on the staffs of Larry Brown, Shaka Smart, Porter Moser & John Calipari, Turner has picked up a thing or two over the past decade or so.

His hiring by UT Arlington this offseason seemed like a home run for a Mavericks program who hasn’t been to an NCAA Tournament or had a 20-win season since the departure of Scott Cross back in 2018. Turner amassed an impressive recruiting class to go along with several returning contributors from last season.

His gem of that class though Phillip Russell, a high scoring point guard who led his SEMO team to their first big dance since 2000 has been ruled ineligible for the entire season. With his move to UT Arlington being his third as an undergrad.

The Mavericks are instead led by former New Mexico State Aggie DaJuan Gordon and NAIA transfer Akili Vining. With plenty of role players ready to step up if either of those players are having a tough night offensively.

Players to Watch:

G Donovan Dent-New Mexico

After glimpses of talent as a freshman behind one of the best backcourt duos in the nation last year, offseason praise was high for Dent in year two. Lobo fans knew they were looking at their point guard of the future, most would have never guessed the future was week one of his sophomore year.

To his credit he has adapted, averaging team highs in points (13.5 PPG), assists (5.5 APG) & steals (2.0 SPG) as coach Pitino’s point guard. UT Arlington is another perfect test for the young floor general, a chance for him to develop his scoring and playmaking skills. Both will be needed this season if Jaelen House’s injury becomes an issue.

G DaJuan Gordon-UT Arlington

Gordon would have been a familiar face for Lobo fans as he was apart of the New Mexico State men’s basketball team last season. Folks never got to see the former SEC transfer grace the hardwood of the Pit last season, due to an off the court incident that saw the state’s most hyped hoops rivalry canceled and nearly suspended indefinitely.

Now, fans inside the Pit will get their chance to watch the 6-5 195 graduate transfer who is leading his team in nearly all categories, 19.0 PPG, 12.5 RPG & 3.0 SPG in two contests.

A breakout game for Gordon could propel UT Arlington to the upset, coach Pitino needs to find the right defensive matchup to make sure that doesn’t happen.

Keys to the Game

For New Mexico: Halt 3-point shooting, Maximize their own 3-point shooting & Own the glass

One thing New Mexico has to do on Thursday night is crash the boards. The Mavericks boast a long and athletic starting five, one that is averaging 51.5 RPG (9th nationally). Yes it’s early in the season to be looking at averages, but the statistic on a box score is impressive nonetheless.

UT Arlington may have a great rebounding core but in the first two games of their season they’ve made plenty of their money from beyond the arc. The Lobos will have to defend the perimeter while knocking down their own shots on the other end help create separation from a quality Mavericks squad.

Prediction: New Mexico 85, UT Arlington 72

If the Lobos can receive a variety of scoring from their still gelling roster, winning should be a breeze. Yes, there will be high major length and athleticism on the opposing squad but the Lobos deep roster should be the prevailing factor for a double-digit win.

Larry Muniz covers college basketball as a writer for Mountain West Wire and WAC Hoops Digest. Also as a co-host of the college basketball podcast “Hoops Talk W/Jay & Larry”. He is also a USWBA Member.

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New Mexico vs. Texas Southern: Preview, How To Stream, Odds & More

New Mexico vs. Texas Southern: Preview Mountain West title challengers New Mexico face SWAC title favorites Texas Southern. Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire Richard Pitino’s Lobos enter season opener with plenty of hype, their first test of …

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New Mexico vs. Texas Southern: Preview


Mountain West title challengers New Mexico face SWAC title favorites Texas Southern.


Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire

Richard Pitino’s Lobos enter season opener with plenty of hype, their first test of the season is repeat visitor to the big dance Texas Southern.

WHO: New Mexico (0-0, 0-0 in the MWC) vs. Texas Southern (0-0, 0-0 in the SWAC)

WHEN: Monday, November 6th, 7:30 PM MT, 8:30 PM CT

WHERE: University Arena aka “The Pit”, Albuquerque, NM

STREAM: Mountain West Network

Line: KenPom, The Lobos are favored by 16 Points

The excitement has returned to New Mexico basketball and in turn the city of Albuquerque. Lobo basketball is the main show in town and when the program is good, the Pit crowd shows out. Just look at last season’s expedited turnaround which saw a 14-0 start to the season as the nation’s last remaining undefeated team. Not to mention the program’s return to the AP Top-25 for the first time in nearly a decade. This brought 228,000 fans to the historic Pit in 2022-2023, including five games with over 15,000 fans in attendance.

All of this led to head coach Richard Pitino receiving a contract extension that gave him an annual pay bump ($1.1 million next season) and locked in his job as the Lobos’ lead man until 2027-2028.

The third year head coach turned the New Mexico program into a competitive force again in an ever-growing competitive Mountain West Conference. And according to the head man, maybe a bit ahead of schedule given the coaches lackluster first season in Albuquerque in which he went 13-19 (5-12 in MWC, 9th place finish).

Though along with the hype that has returned to New Mexico, so has has the expectations. Both are high, sky high in fact after a successful offseason that saw the Lobos go shopping in the transfer portal. They emerged with quality commitments from Nelly Junior-Joseph (Iona), Jemarl Baker Jr. (Fresno State), Mustapha Amzil (Dayton), Isaac Mushila (Texas A&M-Corpus Christi) and Deraji Agbaosi (North Alabama).

To match a revamped roster Coach Pitino released the team’s non-conference schedule back on October 3rd. A tad late because of the difficulty he encountered when attempting to build an attractive non-conference schedule. At least as far as the NCAA Tournament selection committee is concerned.

The 2023-2024 schedule could be considered both a win & loss in that regard. With big brand high majors lacking but several quality games against teams favored to win their conferences locked in. And Monday’s season opener at home against predicted SWAC favorites Texas Southern is a perfect example of this.

The Tigers may be the perfect test for what could be a short staffed Lobo squad. With star guard Jaelen House and impact transfers Jemarl Baker Jr. and Isaac Mushila absence from their team’s two exhibition wins and still question marks for the season opener. Texas Southern will be a quality opponent for some younger Lobos to get their feet wet against a D-I tournament team, here’s why.

Texas Southern Breakdown

The Tigers are coming off of their 3rd straight NCAA Tournament appearance after an 84-61 loss to eventual tourney darlings Fairleigh Dickinson in the East Region’s first four. That marks trips to the big dance in three out of the five seasons former Nevada Wolf Pack associate head coach Johnny Jones has been in charge of the program.

This is the appeal of the Tigers program, not a 100% guarantee to run the table of the SWAC (14-21, 7-11 8th last season). But a culture in a program that gives opportunity go dancing nearly every season. And for some of the regions most sought after transfers, that was enough to join the team for a chance to do it all again this season.

Aside from losing their leading scorer Davon Barnes to northern neighbor Sam Houston State, Texas Southern were big time winners in the transfer portal. Securing commits from backcourt members Johnathan Cisse (Incarnate Word), Deon Stroud (Fresno State/Eastern Washington) and big men Josh Farmer (UTSA), Kenny Hunter (Louisiana Tech) & Jahmar Young Jr. (SMU). This mix of battle hardened returners and a quality transfer class should be a tougher than expected first game of the season.

Players to Watch:

G Donovan Dent-New Mexico

As of media availability last week, starting point guard Jaelen House could miss the Lobos’ season opener against the Texas Southern Tigers on Monday night. But worry not, as this may be the perfect opportunity to witness returning sophomore floor general Donovan Dent in what many expect to be his future role in the starting lineup a year early.

The 6-2 point guard was one of the more exciting and developed freshman to dawn the cherry and silver in several years. Dent displayed an advanced ability to attack the rim in his first year in college basketball. Which led to season averages of 5.6 PPG, 2.3 APG, 2.0 RPG & 0.9 SPG in 18.5 mpg as the first man off of the bench. He’s taken on a bigger role in House’s absence , averaging 24.5 PPG, 5.0 APG & 2.5 SPG in New Mexico’s two exhibition wins.

G PJ Henry-Texas Southern

Henry is the SWAC Preseason Player of the Year after help lead his squad to a conference tournament championship as the 8th seed. Including two wins against co-regular season champions Alcorn St. & Grambling, and posting 18.7 points a game while shooting 40.7% from deep in three wins.

Coach Jones will lean on him heavily to lead this still youthful and newly put together title contender. Henry showed he was cable to just that last season. After missing the first six games of the Tigers’ SWAC slate he returned and aided in the team’s run to a conference title. The pieces are in place for Henry to elevate his game and better elevate those around him, a matchup against sophomore Donovan Dent

Keys to the Game

For New Mexico: Halt 3-point shooting, Maximize their own 3-point shooting & Stay out of foul trouble

The Tigers made most of their money inside the arc last season, with a long history of impact players in the front court. This season should be no different with the additions of Farmer, Hunter & Young. The Lobos will need to stay out of foul trouble as Texas Southern attempted twenty free throws a game last season, good enough for 69th in the country.

Now this strength balanced out a near non-existent game beyond the arc (27.7%). But, that is where Jonathan Cisse comes in. The 6-1 combo guard averaged 16.0 PPG last season at Incarnate Word and his 40.9% on 137 3-PT attempts is a big reason why. He’ll give the Tigers a more balanced attack from the perimeter.

An attack New Mexico will need to defend the perimeter as they might not have the depth or experience to properly defend the post. While also knocking down their own attempts if their frontcourt still hasn’t found their footing yet on opening night.

Prediction: New Mexico 80, Texas Southern 72

If the Lobos have a full healthy roster on Monday night, I can see the 16-point KenPom prediction holding true. But that’s likely not going to be the case and we can’t forget transfer big man Nelly Junior-Joseph’s still getting adjusted to a late start after visa delays all offseason.

Given what we have seen in recent lineups, I think New Mexico will put a competitive team on the floor regardless of injuries. I think they’ll secure the win but may be in for a bigger fight than anticipated.

Larry Muniz covers college basketball as a writer for Mountain West Wire and WAC Hoops Digest. Also as a co-host of the college basketball podcast “Hoops Talk W/Jay & Larry”. He is also a USWBA Member.

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Lobos Open The Season With Win At Home : New Mexico 89, Southern Utah 81

[jwplayer TtpJIvlc-sNi3MVSU] Game Recap: New Mexico 89, Southern Utah 81 New Mexico holds off the Thunderbirds in 2022-2023 season opener. Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire Jaelen House helps lead the Lobos past a pesky Southern Utah team in …

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 Game Recap: New Mexico 89, Southern Utah 81


New Mexico holds off the Thunderbirds in 2022-2023 season opener. 


Contact/Follow @HardwoodTalk & @MWCwire

Jaelen House helps lead the Lobos past a pesky Southern Utah team in season opener

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ALBUQUERQUE, NM–The New Mexico Lobos kicked off their 2022-2023 college basketball season Monday night. As they played host to Todd Simon and his Southern Utah Thunderbirds.

There has been plenty of hype surrounding the Lobos program this offseason. With the return of five of their top six scorers and six players who started ten games of more last season. Not to mention what many called a successful transfer class filled with the very thing New Mexico lacked last season, experienced bigs. Everything in Albuquerque seemed primed for a Lobo resurgence.

So fast forward to opening night, with an up and coming Southern Utah squad making their first trip back to the Pit since 2007. Plenty has changed since then, the Thunderbirds are on their third conference. Currently in their inaugural season in the revamped WAC, after spending a decade in the Big Sky Conference. Former UNLV assistant and interim head coach Todd Simon is building Southern Utah into quite the formidable foe, the Lobos experienced that Monday night.

The first game of the season will always bring jitters and display some sloppy gameplay. Practicing all summer will hardly ever prepare you for live action in front of thousands of fans inside The Pit. The Lobos took control early, leading the Thunderbirds almost the entire night and only tied for less than a minute. New Mexico’s athletic dominance was on display early, but their high intensity play on both ends led to foul trouble for all involved. A grand total of 50 fouls were called all night, and the Lobos response to the referees whistle on both sides of the ball was what led to the victory at home.

Big runs from a few players kept Southern Utah in the game. That and how each team dealt with fouls all night long. In the first half the Thunderbirds drew plenty, and executed going 7-8 on free ones. While the Lobos shot similarly throughout the night, around 66.7% both halves. And while the home team struggled regularly. They were able to draw contact and get to the free throw line nearly three times as much as their visitors. Giving the Lobos the slight edge in what was otherwise a toe-for-toe shootout, with very whistle happy officials.

Player Spotlights

New Mexico: Jaelen House

With

Southern Utah: Tevian Jones

The Thunderbirds never waivered. And even though the Lobo lead reached double digits multiple times Monday night, senior guard Tevian Jones led the attack. The 6-7 former Big Ten guard at Illinois has been what you can imagine a high major transplant in mid-major basketball would be, fun to watch. His big time frame and athleticism combined with guard skills have earned him All-Big Sky Conference honors twice since arriving in Cedar City and Monday’s display of scoring shows why.

Jones started this one out very cold, logging only 4 points in the first half off of 1-3 shooting from the field and going 0-2 from deep. He would come out after halftime like a man possessed, logging a quick 10 points in the first five minutes of the second half.

Keeping his squad in the game single handedly at times, Jones (6-7, 197) utilized his six inch height advantage over the Lobos’ best defender Jamal Mashburn Jr. (6-2, 195). Although Mashburn made Jones reach into his bag of tricks and make tough shots, he in turn drained his fare share of those shots.

The preseason All-WAC First Team selection showed just what foes in conference play are not looking forward to later this year. Jones turned it on, when his team needed it most. Finishing with a game-high 28 points & 5 rebounds while shooting 52.6% from the field and 50% from three point territory, all in just twenty four minutes. And that’s why he gets out Southern Utah highlighted player of the game.

Five Takeaways

  • The Lobos don’t appear to have as much frontcourt depth as we may have hoped for at the moment. Sophomore Swedish big man Sebastian Forsling was held out of Monday night’s matchup with ankle injury. Also on the sidelines in plain clothes was redshirt junior guard Emmanuel Kuac, who often gets minutes in the paint. With that, early foul trouble for the rest of the Lobo big men caused them to play reserved. Avoiding fouling out of the game and decreasing a defensive intensity that gave them the edge early on.
  • Freshman point guard Donovan Dent is the real deal and provided relief for primary ball handlers Jaelen House and Jamal Mashburn Jr. Monday night and turned in a solid performance. The 6-2 true freshman from Riverside, CA saw 11 minutes of action against the Thunderbirds. Logging just 2 points but grabbing an offensive board and logged 3 assists with 0 turnovers in that time. Where he displayed room for improvement was his work at the charity stripe. Showing an ability to draw contact, but contributing to the Lobos woes from the free throw line overall (24-36, 66.7%) with a 2-5 performance.
  • The Lobos new frontcourt, compliments of the transfer portal proved formidable and maybe just the right mix of both worlds against the Thunderbirds. While graduate transfer Morris Udeze made his impact on the score, contributing 14 points on the night as the Lobos third double digit scorer. Fellow transfer forward Josiah Allick logged no points but made up in an area Udeze lacked with 8 rebounds and a blocked shot in his 21 minutes of play. Yes both are different types of bigs, but a little more contributions from each player where they lacked Monday night could really propel the Lobos forward.
  • The one-two punch of Jaelen House and Jamal Mashburn Jr. is once again keeping fans loud and on their feet in Albuquerque this season. Their announced return this offseason was surely some of the biggest news around the Mountain West. Both compliment each other so well in the one and two positions. And with Third Team All-Mountain West honors for both of them last season and Mashburn Jr.’s recognition last month as a Preseason All-Conference selection. The sky’s the limit for these two this year, and Lobo fans are ready.
  • Lastly, this team’s identity feels oddly similar to last season. With House and Mashburn leading the offensive charge and those around them working in between. Now, different are the new complimentary pieces like Udeze, Allick and Dent. But with some lackluster performances against Southern Utah, we saw a high energy House doing what he does best, which is a big of everything honestly. And Jamal Mashburn Jr. doing what he does best, scoring a team high 24 points while doing so a tad under the radar and VERY efficiently (53.8% FGs, 2-3 3FGs & 8-9 FTs). To be different than last year’s squad we need to see others step up and clean up the mistakes. Yes, it is early in the season but progress towards more efficient scoring and defensive efforts should go miles in the right direction come January.

Next Up:

New Mexico prepares to play host once more this week. As they welcome Richie Riley and his South Alabama Jaguars to the Pit this Friday. Southern Utah was no cake walk and maybe a combination of let’s say “strict” officiating and first game jitters are long behind the Lobos later this week.

But keeping with coach Pitino’s confidence in his squad and challenging non-conference slate, South Alabama will be another early season gauge of the Lobos battle toughness. That matchup tips-off at 7:00 PM MST, and can be streamed live on the Mountain West Network.

Larry Muniz covers college basketball as a writer for Mountain West Wire and WAC Hoops Digest. Also as a co-host of the college basketball podcast “Hoops Talk W/Jay & Larry”. He is also a USWBA Member.

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