2022 Mountain West Tournament Bracket, TV Schedule Announced

2022 Mountain West Tournament Bracket Regular season is in the books Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire Everyone heads to Las Vegas The 2022 Mountain West basketball tournament bracket is set. The 11 teams in the league will head to the Thomas & …

2022 Mountain West Tournament Bracket


Regular season is in the books


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Everyone heads to Las Vegas

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The 2022 Mountain West basketball tournament bracket is set. The 11 teams in the league will head to the Thomas & Mack Center this week with the opening round games starting on March 9.

Below is the bracket and schedule for this week.

Wednesday, March 9

Game 1: New Mexico vs. Nevada, 2 p.m. ET, TV: Mountain West Network

Game 2: Utah State vs. Air Force, 4:30 p.m. ET, TV: Mountain West Network

Game 3: Fresno State  vs. San Jose State, 7 p.m. ET, TV: Mountain West Network

Thursday, March 10 (Quarterfinals)

Game 4: Boise State vs. Game 1 winner, 3 P.M. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)

Game 5: Wyoming vs. UNLV, 5:30 P.M. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)

Game 6: Colorado State vs. Game 2 winner, 9 P.M. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)

Game 7: San Diego State vs. Game 3 winner, 11:30 P.M. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)

Friday, March 11 (Semifinals)

Game 8: Game 4 winner vs. Game 5 winner, 9:30 p.m. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)

Game 9: Game 6 winner vs. Game 7 winner, 12 a.m. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)

Saturday, March 12 (Championship)

Game 10: Game 8 Winner vs. Game 9 Winner 6 p.m. ET, TV: CBS (Watch for free with FuboTV Trial)


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Boise State Claims Mountain West Title With Win Over Nevada

Boise State Claims Mountain West Title With Win Over Nevada Broncos are the regular season champions Contact/Follow @MWCwire Boise State gets a close win. Boise State hangs on to beat Nevada, 73-67 in what would be an offensive battle for both …

Boise State Claims Mountain West Title With Win Over Nevada


Broncos are the regular season champions


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Boise State gets a close win.

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Boise State hangs on to beat Nevada, 73-67 in what would be an offensive battle for both teams.

It was quite a different start for the two squads Tuesday night. At the first media break of the half, Boise State led 12-5 behind 45% from the field and 50% from deep. Nevada looked uncomfortable on offense, with their usual suspects struggling to score.

The Wolf Pack’s scoring slump was able to subside in the middle of the first half. Nevada was able to make six of seven field goals to go on a 7-0 run to bring the game to within one with nine minutes left in the first half. Boise State was able to go on a run of their own, which was matched by Nevada’s strong scoring output in the final minutes in the first half. Boise State would be able to fend off the Wolf Pack’s run with a run of their own to end the half. The Broncos would lead 41-35 at the break.

Despite shooting 56% from the field, Nevada trailed at the half. This was in part due to 12 turnovers in the first half, which led to 14 Boise State points. The Wolf Pack were led by their big men. Leading the way was Will Baker with 10 points, followed by Warren Washington with eight points. The Broncos were extremely explosive on offense, shooting 48% from the field and 29% from the field. Marcus Shaver Jr and Abu Kigab led the way for Boise State, both scoring 14 points in the first half.

The hot shooting would continue after the halftime break. Nevada would close the gap to five behind 66% shooting at the U16 media break. Akot would stay hot as well, scoring a quick six points early in the half. An 8-0 scoring run would give the Broncos a 55-44 lead with 12 minutes left in the contest. Both teams would trade baskets, with the Broncos scoring 6-6 from the field and the Wolf Pack scoring 5-5 from the field in a five minutes span. Boise State would lead 68-65 with just over three minutes to play in the game.

As the game would tighten up, so would the teams as both went on a scoring drought longer than two minutes. The drought was broken by an Emmanuel Akot basket, putting the Broncos up 71-65 with 1:43 left in the game. Grant Sherfield was able to score two at the free-throw line, cutting the lead to four, 71-67 with only 50 seconds to play.

Nevada couldn’t capitalize, missing shots late in the game. Boise State was able to hang on to win this game, 73-67. While Nevada made things close during the second half, the Wolf Pack didn’t score a field goal in the final five minutes of the game. This scoreless stretch would prove to be the downfall for Nevada. 

Both teams scored the ball at an incredible rate. Both Boise State and Nevada shot 50% from the field. The Broncos had the edge from deep, shooting 36% from beyond the arc, compared to Nevada’s 25%. While both teams played mediocre defensively, the Broncos forced 19 Nevada turnovers, resulting in 20 points. 

Nevada was led by Kenan Blackshear who had 16 points and set the tone for the Wolf Pack defensively. Will Baker, Warren Washington, and Grant Sherfield were also able to get in double-digit scoring, finishing with 13, 12, and 10 points respectively. It is worth noting that Nevada’s leading scorers struggled Tuesday night, combining for 19 points, the lowest combined total by the duo since the loss to Utah State in late January. 

Boise State was led by Abu Kigab. The 6’7 forward finished with 23 points, four rebounds, and three assists. Also scoring in double digits were Emmanuel Akot and Marcus Shaver Jr., with both Bronco players scoring 16 points. Boise State did a fantastic job at slowing down Nevada’s star duo and limited what the rest of the Wolf Pack could do offensively. 

MVP

The Most Valuable Player in this contest was undoubtedly Abu Kigab. Kigab finished with 23 points on 9-12 from the field and made his last four shot attempts down the stretch. The big man would also add two shots from beyond the arc. Kigab looked confident in all aspects of the game and exploited Nevada’s cushioned defense. 

Up Next

Boise State (24-6, 15-2) ends their regular season on a stunner as the Broncos travel to face Colorado State (23-4, 13-4) Saturday at 7:30 PM PST. Nevada (12-16, 6-11) look to end their season on a high note as the Wolf Pack host San Diego State (19-7, 11-4) on Saturday night at 7:30 PM PST for senior night. 


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2022 Mountain West Tournament: Who Are Bye Teams This Week?

2022 Mountain West Tournament: Who Are Bye Teams This Week? Who is projected to win the tournament? Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire Who gets a bye? The Mountain West basketball season is wrapping up with its final week of the regular season …

2022 Mountain West Tournament: Who Are Bye Teams This Week?


Who is projected to win the tournament?


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Who gets a bye?

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The Mountain West basketball season is wrapping up with its final week of the regular season and the byes are of vast importance. For those who are just tuning into college basketball now that March is right in front of us, the Mountain West allows five teams with a bye for the conference tournament.

Leading into Monday night’s games, the five teams with a bye are Wyoming, Boise State, Colorado State, and San Diego State are locks. The last bye up for grabs is UNLV and Fresno State. The Rebels are one-game ahead of the Bulldogs.

Fresno State has three games left with UNLV only two. The Bulldogs schedule is quite difficult as they are facing New Mexico on Monday night but then it gets really difficult with back-to-back road games against San Diego State and Wyoming.

As for UNLV, they host Wyoming and then go on the road to face New Mexico to wrap the season.

Looking at those two schedules, it seems that the Rebels have the edge for that final bye spot.

Projected Winner?

We have been using TeamRankings.com which is projecting the conference tournaments and the past two weeks it has been San Diego State as the favorite.

The Aztecs are still the favorite despite being very likely to be the fourth seed and their percentage to win is at 22.34% and that is slightly ahead of Boise State who is sitting at 22.06%. There are five total teams with 10% chance to win and Wyoming is not one of them.


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Nevada vs. Wyoming: Game Preview, How To Watch, Odds

Nevada vs. Wyoming: Game Preview, How To Watch, Odds Cowboys looking to stay at the top of the conference Contact/Follow @MWCwire Can Nevada play spoiler? Wyoming (22-5, 11-3) looks to get back to their winning ways as the Cowboys host Nevada …

Nevada vs. Wyoming: Game Preview, How To Watch, Odds


Cowboys looking to stay at the top of the conference


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Can Nevada play spoiler?

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Wyoming (22-5, 11-3) looks to get back to their winning ways as the Cowboys host Nevada (12-14, 6-9), who is coming off a loss of their own. 

WHO: Nevada (12-14, 6-9) at Wyoming (22-5, 11-3)

WHERE: Arena-Auditorium; Laramie, Wyoming

TIP: 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT

TV: CBS Sports Network

STREAM: FuboTV — Get a free seven-day trial

ODDS: Cowboys -7

Wyoming has been one of the hottest teams in the Mountain West, consistently sitting atop the conference and even ranking 22nd in the country. However, the Cowboys have been struggling as of late. Wyoming had a bad loss to New Mexico a little over a week ago and recently lost to Colorado State Wednesday night. Nevada has been on an up and down rollercoaster themselves. The Wolf Pack went to San Jose State and beat the Spartans by 30, and then hosted inter-state rival UNLV and lost 62-54. 

Wyoming is led by the dynamic duo of Graham Ike and Hunter Maldonado. The pair is averaging nearly 40 points a game combined and are truly proving to be a top-tier duo in the conference. Ike is averaging 20 points and nine rebounds a game, making a true case for Mountain West Player of the Year. Maldonado isn’t fair behind his teammate, averaging 19 points, five rebounds, and six assists per game. Both players had great games the first time these two teams met in Reno. Ike scored 24 points, while Maldonado scored 11 in a 77-67 win for Wyoming. The Wolf Pack will also have their eye on the Cowboy’s third-leading scorer, Drake Jeffries. Jeffries averages 10 points a game, but exploded against the Wolf Pack, notching 20 points including six threes in the win. 

Nevada is coming off a loss against UNLV which marked their first sweep against the Wolf Pack since the 2013-14 season. It is worth noting that Desmond Cambridge Jr. sat out against the Rebels, which hindered the Wolf Pack’s scoring ability. If Cambridge Jr. does play, the Wolf Pack will once again lean on the guard play of Grant Sherfield and Cambridge Jr. Nevada has to hope that their two all-conference guards can produce and receive help from a third option. Warren Washington had a good game against UNLV, scoring 12 points and 11 rebounds.

Will Baker has been playing well as of late but slumped against the Rebels. One player that played well in the middle of the season, but has struggled as of late, is Kenan Blackshear. Blackshear averages eight points per game but can prove to be a scoring threat when hot. If Cambridge Jr. is out yet again, look for Blackshear trying to get into a rhythm early. 

Keys for Wyoming

The Cowboys play incredibly well on both sides of the ball, ranking second in scoring and third in field goal percentage in the Mountain West. When getting down low, Wyoming rarely misses, ranking 10th in the nation in 2-point percentage with 56.6%. The Cowboys need to stick with what they do best and feed Ike and Maldonado. In the loss against Colorado State, the two had a combined 12 points. Both Maldonado and Ike will need to increase their scoring total in what will be a big bounce-back game from the two players. Wyoming will also need to key in on Grant Sherfield. With or without Cambridge Jr., Nevada’s offense flows through Sherfield, dictating the Wolf Pack’s offensive success. If Wyoming can limit the offensive production of Nevada’s guards, they will be in a good position to get back to their scoring ways. 

Keys for Nevada

Nevada’s success will largely be dependent on the playing status of Cambridge Jr. If the guard can play, then Nevada will need to do what they have been doing all season and lean on their guards and hope they can contribute. It is becoming a mystery which the third scorer for the Wolf Pack will step up. If either Will Baker or Warren Washington can provide valuable offensive minutes down in the paint, things could open up offensively for the Wolf Pack. 

Prediction

This contest against Wyoming will be an uphill battle if Nevada is fully healthy, start taking Wolf Pack players out of this game, and it will be a long contest in Laramie Saturday evening. If Cambridge Jr plays, it will be a closer game, but either way will end in a Cowboys victory. Wyoming will be fired up coming off a loss to Colorado State and will look to get back to their winning ways. Nevada doesn’t have the offensive firepower to keep up with Wyoming at home. The Cowboys take this game, 78-64.


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Mountain West power rankings: Wyoming Is At The Top

Mountain West power rankings has Wyoming at the top Contact/Follow @MWCwire Wyoming holds top spot 1.) Wyoming Wyoming remains the top team in this iteration of Mountain West power rankings. But they’ve lost two of their last three games and sit 1.5 …

Mountain West power rankings has Wyoming at the top


 

Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Wyoming holds top spot

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1.) Wyoming

Wyoming remains the top team in this iteration of Mountain West power rankings. But they’ve lost two of their last three games and sit 1.5 games behind Boise State in the Mountain West regular-season race. Superstar Graham Ike only scored eight points on 3-13 shooting in Wednesday’s loss to Colorado State. 

The Cowboys host Nevada this weekend. 

2.) Boise State

Boise State snagged the narrow over Utah State, as the game stayed tight throughout. A Rylan Jones three-pointer chopped the lead to 57-55 with less than three minutes left before the Broncos exploded on an 11-2 run to finish out the contest. Marcus Shaver Jr scored 20 points on 6-9 shooting in the 11-point victory. On Tuesday, Boise State carried a 30-20 lead into halftime before San Diego State stormed back, taking the lead with 24 seconds left on an outstanding play leading to Matt Bradley finding Nathan Mensah for an alley-oop. A questionable foul call on the other end gave Abu Kigab two free throws with less than two seconds left — Kigab drilled both with ease. 

Boise State travels to the Mountain West tournament site in Vegas, where they’ll face Bryce Hamilton and UNLV. 

3.) Colorado State

It’s almost like the 2021-22 UNLV Runnin’ Rebels have some bizarre superpowers over Colorado State, as the Rams lost their second battle with UNLV this year. It adds another loss, but only of the quadrant two variety, so Colorado State’s at large resume remains solid. CSU bounced back on Wednesday, beating Wyoming by six in Fort Collins. David Roddy scored 26 points in the contest. 

The Rams look to add another quality win on Sunday, facing Utah State in Logan. 

4.) San Diego State

San Diego State looked to potentially turn a corner offensively, but the issues crept up again in the loss to Boise State. Even when the game got close, there wasn’t a ton of ball movement leading to open shots. The idea of missing the NCAA Tournament is starting to get serious; the Aztecs only hold five wins in the first two quadrants, which doesn’t help the committee select them into the dance.

SDSU hosts San Jose State this weekend in a must-win game to keep their tournament dreams afloat.

5.) UNLV

If you’re trying to zero in on a bid-stealing contender from the Mountain West, look no further than the host team. That’s the UNLV Rebels, who blew out Colorado State for the second time this season; Bryce Hamilton only had 20 points, but the Runnin’ Rebels stout defense gave the Rams problems all game. UNLV defeated Nevada by double-digits for the second time in Reno. 

UNLV doesn’t have any NCAA Tournament chance aside from making a run in the Mountain West tournament but can play spoiler when meeting up with Boise State on Saturday. Even though there’s only a sliver of hope for the NCAA Tournament — making the NIT is very much in the realm of possibility. 

6.) Fresno State

The Bulldogs followed their five-game losing skid up by knocking off Air Force. Star forward Orlando Robinson refound his conference player of the year caliber form, scoring 26 points while hitting eight of 11 shots. After Robinson went 6-24 with 16 points in two home losses to UNLV and San Diego State, that’s a promising sign.

Fresno State doesn’t take the court again until Monday when New Mexico comes to town.

7.) Nevada

Grant Sherfield scored 46 points while adding 18 assists in Nevada’s two victories over San Jose State last week, with the potential to grow their win streak to four games when facing UNLV. The Wolf Pack fell short and were short-handed as Desmond Cambridge Jr didn’t dress for the game. Sherfield and Warren Washington contributed 31 of the team’s 54 points in their loss. 

It isn’t easy to beat Nevada when the two guards are clicking, and they’ll face Wyoming in Laramie as the Cowboys look to punch their NCAA ticket.

8.) Utah State

Utah State snapped their four-game losing streak on Tuesday when New Mexico went to Logan. Justin Bean scored 21 points, and Brandon Horvath added 19 points in the convincing victory over New Mexico. It’s surprising the Aggies conference record is 7-9, but don’t sleep on Ryan Odom’s team.

9.) San Jose State

The Spartans notched their first win since league play started, knocking off New Mexico 71-55. Omari Moore led the winning effort with 18 points on 9-14 shooting while dishing out ten assists. While there won’t be a high number in the win column, there are plenty of positive takeaways from Tim Miles’s first season in San Jose.

The Spartans face an arduous task with San Diego State this weekend. 

10.) New Mexico

The Lobos have immense potential when Jaelen House and Jamal Mashburn Jr make plays, but they’ve lost three consecutive games by 66 combined points. I see UNM very comparable to last year’s Wyoming squad — first-year head coaches with talented teams, but there are some real ebbs-and-flows. In the San Jose State loss, House only scored 14 points on 3-15 shooting. House and Mashburn Jr only scored 16 total points on Tuesday in the 25 point loss in Logan.

UNM will head home to face Air Force, which hasn’t won in over a month.

11.) Air Force 

Air Force lost eight consecutive games dating back to January 25th — during the losing streak, the Falcons haven’t held a team to less than 1.00 points per possession. 

Air Force will meet the tough New Mexico offensive on Saturday in the PIT. 

 


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UNLV Tops Rival Nevada, 62-54

UNLV Tops Rival Nevada, 62-54 Rebels take care of Wolf Pack Contact/Follow @MWCwire UNLV gets a solid win UNLV extends its winning streak to three, taking the Tuesday night contest against inter-state rival Nevada, 62-54. With the win Tuesday night, …

UNLV Tops Rival Nevada, 62-54


Rebels take care of Wolf Pack


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

UNLV gets a solid win

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UNLV extends its winning streak to three, taking the Tuesday night contest against inter-state rival Nevada, 62-54.

With the win Tuesday night, the Runnin’ Rebels swept Nevada for the first time since the 2013-14 season. UNLV shot nearly 50%, outscoring the Wolf Pack 49-38 in the second half. This scoring spree in the second half was led by none other than Rebels leading scorer, Bryce Hamilton. Hamilton led both teams with 27 points, on 10-25 shooting. The 6’4 guard also grabbed eight rebounds in what would be yet again an impressive night leading the Rebels. 

Both teams started slow, with turnovers and missed shots leading to a slim 8-7 Nevada lead at the first U-16 media timeout. UNLV then went on an 8-2 run to go up four points with 11 minutes in the first half. Sherfield was able to score back-to-back baskets to tie the contest at 15 with eight minutes to go in the half. In a low-scoring, defense-dominated half, Nevada would hold on to a 26-23 lead heading into the locker room. 

The second half was where the Rebels won the contest. Hamilton scored 19 of his 27 points in the second half, which directly correlated to the win for UNLV. Nevada’s gauge of success, Grant Sherfield, scored 11 points and got little to no help in the second half. The Wolf Pack went scoreless for four full minutes late in the contest. Nevada couldn’t get a bucket from the seven-minute mark to the three-minute mark in the game. The Rebels were able to go on a 10-0 run which proved to be the dagger for the Wolf Pack. 

This game was a true win-by-committee for UNLV. All nine Rebel players that saw the court scored a basket. Justin Webster was UNLV’s next leading scorer with eight points. UNLV seemed to have more energy, fighting for every rebound. Despite the height disadvantage, the Rebels out-rebounded Nevada, 41-34. UNLV also grabbed 13 offensive rebounds, which led to 16 second-chance points. 

One other huge difference in this contest was the bench productivity for the Wolf Pack. Nevada’s second-leading scorer, Desmond Cambridge Jr. was sidelined in this game, which further limited Nevada’s choices on offense. Grant Sherfield led the Wolf Pack with 19 points and eight assists. Sherfield got some much-needed help on offense from Warren Washington. In the first game back from nearly a month out due to injury, the 7’0 big man finished with a double-double, scoring 12 points and grabbing 11 rebounds. Outside of those two, Nevada got little to no productivity on offense, leading to a disastrous second half. The Wolf Pack played from behind and relied heavily on the three-point ball, shooting 3-18 (16%) in the second half. UNLV wins in Reno, 62-54.

MVP

The MVP for this game has to be Bryce Hamilton. Hamilton finished with 27 points, eight rebounds, and three assists. However, it was what Hamilton did in the second half that truly sealed things up for UNLV. The 6’4 guard scored 19 points in the second half, leading the Rebels to the first sweep of Nevada since the David Carter era. 

Up Next

UNLV (17-11, 9-6) hosts the Boise State Broncos (22-6, 13-2) in a 7 PM PST matchup on Saturday. Nevada (12-14, 6-9) travels to Wyoming (22-4, 11-2) to play a hot Cowboys team Saturday at 5 PM PST.


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Mountain West Tournament: Who Gets A Bye If It Starts Today?

Mountain West Tournament: Who Gets A Bye If It Starts Today? Just a few weeks left Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire Who has the best chance to win it all? The conference tournament for the Mountain West is a few weeks away and things are …

Mountain West Tournament: Who Gets A Bye If It Starts Today?


Just a few weeks left


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Who has the best chance to win it all?

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The conference tournament for the Mountain West is a few weeks away and things are getting interesting.

Wyoming was ranked but then lost to New Mexico and the conference seemingly has games where the underdogs are getting a win here or there. Now there is a circle of wins and losses with San Jose State topping New Mexico.

As for how the tournament works, if you are unaware, there are byes for the top five teams. As of the third week of February, those teams that are not playing in the opening round are Boise State, Wyoming, San Diego State, Colorado State, and host UNLV.

There are still enough games left for Utah State, Nevada, and Fresno State to get into that top five and get a bye for the conference tournament.

The top four is also close as well with the uneven schedule of games due to COVID-19 pauses and even if it is just one game it can make a difference in being a top-four seed which is very valuable in this tournament.

TeamRankings.com put together their formula and for the second week in a row they have San Diego State as a solid favorite with getting nearly 1 in 4 chances to win the tournament. The Aztecs opponent on Tuesday night vs. Boise State could be a preview of the Mountain West title game.

Wyoming took a drop after that loss to New Mexico and despite being a potential regular season champ are given the sixth-best odds and behind Utah State who has been inconsistent this year but could pull an upset.

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Nevada Easily Defeats San Jose State

Nevada Easily Defeats San Jose State Wolf Pack get it done Contact/Follow @MWCwire Nevada wins by 30 Nevada dominates from start to finish, beating San Jose State 90-60. There was never a question in who was coming out on top in this contest. Nevada …

Nevada Easily Defeats San Jose State


Wolf Pack get it done


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Nevada wins by 30

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Nevada dominates from start to finish, beating San Jose State 90-60. 

There was never a question in who was coming out on top in this contest. Nevada started hot, quickly jumping to a 16-7 lead following a 7-0 run by the Wolf Pack. The Wolf Pack also made six of their first eight from beyond the arc, showing no struggle shooting from deep. Grant Sherfield was the Nevada player to lead the charge early. Sherfield scored 14 6-7 from the field including 2-2 from beyond the arc in the first half. With seven minutes still left to go in the half, the Wolf Pack were up 36-17, truly dominating offensively. In what would be a brutal first half for the Spartans, both teams would go into halftime with a score of 43-25, Nevada leading. Tre Coleman also seemed to find his groove early, the Sophmore would have eight points at the half.

It was more of the same for San Jose State coming out of halftime. The Spartans struggled to get anything going. Myron Amey Jr. was the Spartans leading scorer with 16 points on 6-13 shooting. Alvaro Cardenas was the only other San Jose State player to score in double-digits with 13. Omari Moore, who had a team-high 22 points in Tuesday’s contest, had two points and only attempted three shots. 

What would be the difference-maker in this contest compared to Tuesday’s, was the three-ball for San Jose State. In the first contest, the Spartans dropped 14 3-pointers. On Thursday, Ssn Jose State made only three 3-pointers in the first half and seven for the entire game. There was also a giant leap made by the Wolf Pack on the boards. In Tuesday’s matchup, the Wolf Pack only had nine rebounds in the first half and were getting demolished down low. In this contest, Nevada gathered 31 rebounds compared to San Jose State’s 21. 

San Jose State seemed to miss the spark they played with earlier in the week. The Spartans shot 42% from the field and only 30% from deep. Everything San Jose State would try to run would prove unsuccessful in what would be an all-night struggle to get a shot to fall. While San Jose State didn’t play terribly, they just couldn’t keep up with what Nevada was doing offensively. This was undoubtedly Nevada’s best offensive game of the season. The Wolf Pack shot an astounding 66% from the field and 52% from beyond the arc, leading to their highest point total all season. It was the Wolf Pack, start to finish as they take this one in the Bay Area, 90-60.

MVP

The Most Valuable Player Award has to go to Grant Sherfield. Although, Tre Coleman came in a close second. Sherfield had 25 points and 10 assists, which made it his fourth double-double on the season. The 6’2 Junior also had six rebounds and a steal to add to his total. Sherfield had an efficient night on offense as well, shooting 10-13 from the field and 3-4 from beyond the arc. Tre Coleman deserves an honorable mention for his 14 points, three assists, and two rebounds in what would be the sophomore’s highest point total all season.

Up Next

San Jose State looks to finally get their first conference win of the season as the Spartans (7-19, 0-14) take on the New Mexico Lobos (11-15, 3-9). Nevada (12-13, 6-8) travels back to Reno where the Wolf Pack host in-state rivals, the UNLV Rebels (15-11, 7-6). 


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Nevada Tops San Jose State, 90-60

Nevada Tops San Jose State, 90-60 Wolf Pack get an east win. Contact/Follow @MWCwire Nevada for the win There was never a question in who was coming out on top in this contest. Nevada started hot, quickly jumping to a 16-7 lead following a 7-0 run …

Nevada Tops San Jose State, 90-60


Wolf Pack get an east win.


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Nevada for the win

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There was never a question in who was coming out on top in this contest. Nevada started hot, quickly jumping to a 16-7 lead following a 7-0 run by the Wolf Pack. The Wolf Pack also made six of their first eight from beyond the arc, showing no struggle shooting from deep. Grant Sherfield was the Nevada player to lead the charge early. Sherfield scored 14 6-7 from the field including 2-2 from beyond the arc in the first half. With seven minutes still left to go in the half, the Wolf Pack were up 36-17, truly dominating offensively. In what would be a brutal first half for the Spartans, both teams would go into halftime with a score of 43-25, Nevada leading. Tre Coleman also seemed to find his groove early, the Sophmore would have eight points at the half.

It was more of the same for San Jose State coming out of halftime. The Spartans struggled to get anything going. Myron Amey Jr. was the Spartans leading scorer with 16 points on 6-13 shooting. Alvaro Cardenas was the only other San Jose State player to score in double-digits with 13. Omari Moore, who had a team-high 22 points in Tuesday’s contest, had two points and only attempted three shots. 

What would be the difference-maker in this contest compared to Tuesday’s, was the three-ball for San Jose State. In the first contest, the Spartans dropped 14 3-pointers. On Thursday, Ssn Jose State made only three 3-pointers in the first half and seven for the entire game. There was also a giant leap made by the Wolf Pack on the boards. In Tuesday’s matchup, the Wolf Pack only had nine rebounds in the first half and were getting demolished down low. In this contest, Nevada gathered 31 rebounds compared to San Jose State’s 21. 

 

San Jose State seemed to miss the spark they played with earlier in the week. The Spartans shot 42% from the field and only 30% from deep. Everything San Jose State would try to run would prove unsuccessful in what would be an all-night struggle to get a shot to fall. While San Jose State didn’t play terribly, they just couldn’t keep up with what Nevada was doing offensively. This was undoubtedly Nevada’s best offensive game of the season. The Wolf Pack shot an astounding 66% from the field and 52% from beyond the arc, leading to their highest point total all season. It was the Wolf Pack, start to finish as they take this one in the Bay Area, 90-60.

 

MVP

The Most Valuable Player Award has to go to Grant Sherfield. Although, Tre Coleman came in a close second. Sherfield had 25 points and 10 assists, which made it his fourth double-double on the season. The 6’2 Junior also had six rebounds and a steal to add to his total. Sherfield had an efficient night on offense as well, shooting 10-13 from the field and 3-4 from beyond the arc. Tre Coleman deserves an honorable mention for his 14 points, three assists, and two rebounds in what would be the sophomore’s highest point total all season.

Up Next

San Jose State looks to finally get their first conference win of the season as the Spartans (7-19, 0-14) take on the New Mexico Lobos (11-15, 3-9). Nevada (12-13, 6-8) travels back to Reno where the Wolf Pack host in-state rivals, the UNLV Rebels (15-11, 7-6). 


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Nevada Takes Care of San Jose State, 81-72

Nevada Takes Care of San Jose State Wolf Pack get the job done Contact/Follow @MWCwire Nevada wins a close. In what would be a high-powered offensive night from both teams, Nevada outlasts San Jose State, 81-72, to continue the Spartan’s winless …

Nevada Takes Care of San Jose State


Wolf Pack get the job done


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Nevada wins a close.

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In what would be a high-powered offensive night from both teams, Nevada outlasts San Jose State, 81-72, to continue the Spartan’s winless streak in conference play.

The Nevada Wolf Pack hosted the San Jose State Spartans Tuesday night, in what would be a hard-fought contest on both sides. The big news for San Jose State coming into this contest was 6’8 forward, Majok Kuath playing in just his third game of the season. Kuath would finish with an impressive nine points on 4-7 shooting and seven rebounds. Grant Sherfield was finally 100% healthy following his foot infection, finishing with 19 points and eight assists. 

Both teams came out of the locker room looking to score. Will Baker was able to get things started for the Wolf Pack with two easy layups. The Spartans hit their first two field-goal attempts, including a Tibet Gorener three, putting an early five points on the board. Baker would have the first six of Nevada’s points, dominating down low. Both teams were shooting above 50% from both the field and beyond the arc, the Wolf Pack would lead 14-13 with 13 minutes left in the first half. 

Nevada made no secret of their game plan early, taking advantage of their height and feeding the post with 12 of their first 16 points coming from inside the paint. With six minutes left in the half, the Spartans went on a 12-3 run, putting San Jose State up 28-19. This was fueled by the pairing of Omari Moore scoring a quick eight points and Gorener shooting 3-4 from deep. Nevada was able to claw back to tie things up at 35 with two minutes left in the first half. The Spartans were able to grab the lead going into the halftime break, 43-39. 

The Spartans would dominate down low in the first half, despite the height mismatch in Nevada’s favor. San Jose State would have an impressive 20 rebounds to Nevada’s six. The Spartans would go into the locker room with more offensive rebounds (9) than the Wolf Pack would have total rebounds. Desmond Cambridge was able to continue his ridiculously hot shooting streak, finishing with 14 points, shooting 4-7 from the field and 4-5 from deep. San Jose State looked as if they were playing against a nonexistent defense, shooting 50% from both the field and beyond the arc. Gorener led the Spartans with 11 points, but almost every San Jose State player that touched the court had a bucket. Somehow Nevada averaged 54% from the field and 80% from deep.

Myron Amy would continue the Spartan run, draining a three to put San Jose State back up by five with 18 minutes left in the contest. Four quick points by Baker down low brought the Wolf Pack to within one, 46-45 at the U16 media timeout. Grant Sherfield scored a quick six points to points the Wolf Pack up three with 11 minutes left. A pair of Spartan threes would put San Jose State up two, 62-60 with just seven minutes left in the game. A back and forth battle down the stretch brought the game to within three with Nevada up 71-68 with three minutes left. Will Baker was able to excel down the stretch, scoring seven of eight shots for 14 points in the closing minutes. The Wolf Pack were able to hang on, winning the hard-fought contest, 81-72. 

Despite the loss, it was a barrage of threes from San Jose State. The Spartans made 14 baskets from beyond the arc, shooting an efficient 44% from deep. San Jose State was led by Omari Moore who finished with 22 points including four threes. Moore also added six rebounds and four assists to the game total. The Spartans looked to Gorener down the stretch as well. The 6’9 Freshman had 14 points adding four shots from beyond the arc. 

Nevada was glad to have Grant Sherfield back in the mix. In Sherfiled’s second game back from injury, the 6’2 junior finished with 19 points and eight assists. Nevada as a whole shot the lights out of the gym. The Wolf Pack shot 56% from the field and 55% from beyond the arc. Nevada was also aggressive on the boards in the second half, bringing the rebounding total to 31-28 with the Spartans just narrowly edging by. 

MVP

While Nevada’s guards once again shined, it was 7’0 Will Baker who takes tonight’s Most Valuable Player award. Baker had 23 points, on 11-13 from the field, and six rebounds. What may be most impressive is that the big man had to sit the majority of the first half due to foul trouble. When Baker was on the court, Nevada was able to compete on the boards and supply an offensive threat on the block, which drew double-teams. This is great news for Nevada as shots will start to open up for Sherfield and Desmond Cambridge Jr., who usually have to fight tooth and nail to get a decent shot off. When double-teams weren’t supplied, Baker made the Spartan’s pay, which the Wolf Pack has been desperately needing this season. 

Up Next

Since this contest on Tuesday was a rescheduled competition due to COVID, both teams will face each other once again on Thursday as Nevada (11-13, 5-8) travels to the Bay Area to face San Jose State (7-8, 0-13).


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