Jan 25, 2020

Kansas State plays at Alabama Saturday

Posted Jan 25, 2020 3:19 AM
ksu bbbb.jpg
ksu bbbb.jpg

Big 12/SEC Challenge

Saturday, January 25, 2020 >> 5:05 p.m., CT >> Coleman Coliseum (15,383) >> Tuscaloosa, Ala.

BIG 12/SEC CHALLENGE

Bragging rights will be up for grabs when the 10 Big 12 teams play 10 from the SEC in the seventh annual Big 12/SEC Challenge on Saturday. The Big 12 holds a 35-25 advantage in the series, including wins in 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2019.

Overall: K-State leads 3-3 (0-3 on the road)

TELEVISION

ESPN2

  1. Tom Hart (play-by-play)
  2. Andy Kennedy (analyst)
  3. Nicole Rachal (producer)

RADIO

K-State Sports Network

Flagships: // KMAN 1350 & WIBW 580

Online: TuneIn.com [free] / www.kstatesports.com/watch [free]

Satellite Radio: XM 380 / Internet 970

  1. Wyatt Thompson (play-by-play)
  2. Stan Weber (analyst)

LIVE STATS

www.rolltide.com

TICKETS

www.rolltide.com/tickets

(205) 348.BAMA

Reserved: $20-$30

COACHES

Kansas State: Bruce Weber (Wis.-Milwaukee ’78)

Overall: 471-254/22nd season

At K-State: 158-99/8th season

vs. Alabama: First meeting

Alabama: Nate Oats (Maranatha Baptist ‘98)

Overall: 104-53/5th season

At Alabama: 11-7/2nd season

vs. Kansas State: First meeting

PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP

Kansas State (8-10)

G: #4 David Sloan

G: #2 Cartier Diarra

G/F: #20 Xavier Sneed

F: #34 Levi Stockard III

F: #14 Makol Mawien

Alabama

G: #2 Kira Lewis, Jr.

G: #23 John Petty, Jr.

G: #5 Jaden Shackelford

G: #1 Herbert Jones

F: #3 Alex Reese

SERIES HISTORY

Overall: K-State leads 2-1

Current Streak: K-State, 2

In Tuscaloosa: Alabama leads 1-0

At Coleman Coliseum: Alabama leads 1-0

Last Meeting: W, 71-58, 12/17/2011 [Kansas City]

Weber vs. Oats: First meeting

OPENING TIP

  1. Kansas State (8-10, 1-5 Big 12) steps out of Big 12 play on Saturday afternoon, as the Wildcats travel to Tuscaloosa, Alabama to take on Alabama (11-7, 4-2 SEC) in the seventh annual Big 12/SEC Challenge. This will mark just the fourth meeting with the Crimson Tide and the first at Coleman Coliseum since 1994. The game will tip at 5:05 p.m., CT on ESPN2 with Tom Hart (play-by-play) and former Ole Miss head coach Andy Kennedy (analyst) on the call. Ironically enough, Kennedy was on the opposing sideline at Ole Miss for 2 of the Wildcats’ 3 wins in the Big 12/SEC Challenge.  
  2. K-State is 3-3 all-time, in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge, which started during the 2013-14 season, including 0-3 in road matchups (losses to Tennessee in both 2014 (65-64) and 2017 (70-58) and last season’s 65-53 loss at Texas A&M. The Wildcats defeated Ole Miss at home in 2013 (61-58) and 2016 (69-64) before beating Georgia, 56-51, in 2018. The Big 12 holds a 35-25 record in the Challenge series, including wins in 2014 (7-3, 2015 (6-4, 2016 (7-3) and 2019 (6-4). However, since winning 20 of the first 30 matchups with the SEC, the two conferences have split the last 30 meetings, including a narrow 6-4 advantage by the Big 12 to win the 2019 Challenge.  
  3. The coaching staffs of each of the two conferences’ schools will wear lapel pins during this weekend’s Big 12/SEC Challenge to help bring awareness to the Mike Slive Foundation and its fight against prostate cancer. More information on the Mike Slive Foundation can be found at mikeslivefoundation.org/.
  4. K-State holds a narrow 2-1 advantage in the series with Alabama, including a sweep of a 2-game series in 2009 and 2011 that was setup due to the longstanding friendship between then head coaches Frank Martin and Anthony Grant. The Wildcats defeated the Crimson Tide, 87-74, in a one-game tournament in Mobile, Alabama on Dec. 19, 2009 before posting a 71-58 win in the teams’ last meeting in the Wildcat Classic on Dec. 17, 2011 at the Sprint Center in Kansas City. This will be the first meeting in Tuscaloosa since Alabama posted a 79-48 win on Nov. 16, 1994.
  5. Under the direction of first-year head coach Nate Oats, who was wildly successful  as the head coach at Buffalo, Alabama is starting to hit its stride with wins in 4 of its last 5 outings, including 3 in a row over previously undefeated Auburn (83-64) and Missouri (88-74) at home and on the road at Vanderbilt (77-62) on Wednesday. The only losses in SEC play have come on the road at Florida (98-104) and Kentucky (67-76). The Crimson Tide have won 7 consecutive games at Coleman Coliseum after losing their season opener to Penn, 81-80, on Nov. 5.
  6. K-State has posted a 7-5 record so far in non-conference play, which guarantees the Wildcats a winning record in non-conference play for the 14th consecutive season.  The team has a 1-4 mark away from home this season in non-conference play, but they did earn a 60-56 win in overtime against UNLV in their lone road contest.

NOTES ON ALABAMA

  1. Alabama (11-7, 4-2 SEC) has been one of the hotter teams in the SEC with wins in 9 of its last 12 outings, including an impressive 4-2 start to league play, which includes handing archrival and previously undefeated Auburn, an 83-64 defeat at home on Jan. 15. The lone losses since the start of SEC play have come in double overtime at Florida (98-104) and at Kentucky (67-76). The Crimson Tide have won 7 straight at home.
  2. Alabama is averaging 83.1 points on 44 percent shooting, including 35.7 percent from 3-point range, to go with 41.9 rebounds, 14.2 assists, 6.3 steals and 4.6 blocks per game, while allowing 76.7 points on 40.3 percent shooting, including 30.1 percent from 3-point range. The team is connecting on 71.5 percent from the free throw line. The Crimson Tide rank third nationally in scoring, fourth in defensive rebounds (30.33, sixth in 3-point field goals made per game (10.5) and fifth in rebounding. They lead the SEC in scoring, 3-point field goal percentage and rebounding.
  3. Four players are averaging in double figures for the Crimson Tide led by guards John Petty, Jr. (16.7 ppg.) and Kira Lewis, Jr. (16.3 ppg.).  Petty is connecting on 48.3 percent from the field, including 47.7 percent from 3-point range to go with a team-best 7.3 rebounds in 34.1 minutes per game, while Lewis is connecting 43.2 percent from the field to go with 5.7 rebounds and team-bests in assists (4.7 apg.) and steals (1.8 spg.). Freshman Jaden Shackelford is averaging 12.3 points on 37.7 percent shooting, while junior Herbert Jones is averaging 10.1 points and 6.4 rebounds per game.
  4. Alabama is led by Nate Oats, who has posted a 107-50 (.682) record in his fifth season as a head coach, including an 11-7 mark in his first season with the Crimson Tide. He led Buffalo to two 20-win seasons, one 30-win season and 3 NCAA Tournament appearances from 2015-19.

SERIES HISTORY

  1. K-State and Alabama will meet for the fourth time in their histories with the Wildcats holding a narrow 2-1 advantage in a series that dates to 1994. The Crimson Tide won the first and only meeting at Coleman Coliseum, 79-48, in a Preseason NIT game on Nov. 16, 1994.
  2. K-State swept a 2-game series with Alabama in 2009 and 2011 with the Wildcats winning 87-74 in a one-game tournament in Mobile, Alabama on Dec. 19, 2009 and a 71-58 victory in the last meeting between the schools in the Wildcat Classic in Kansas City on Dec. 17, 2011. 
  3. This will be head coach Bruce Weber’s first meeting with Alabama and the first against head coach Nate Oats in his career.

BIG 12/SEC CHALLENGE

  1. K-State is 3-3 all-time in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge, including 0-3 in games played on the road. The Wildcats have defeated Ole Miss (2013 and 2016) twice and Georgia (2018) at home and lost at Tennessee (2014 and 2017) twice before last season’s 65-53 setback at Texas A&M on Jan. 26, 2019. This will be the first meeting with Alabama in the Challenge.
  2. K-State has lost back-to-back games against SEC competition, including last season’s 65-53 Challenge loss at Texas A&M and this season’s 67-61 loss to Mississippi State in the Never Forget Tribute Classic at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., on Dec. 14. Prior to those 2 losses, the Wildcats had won 5 straight against SEC competition, including wins against Missouri (82-67 in the Paradise Jam on Nov. 19) and Vanderbilt (69-58) in 2018-19.
  3. The Big 12 leads the Challenge series, 35-25, winning the event four times. Last season, the Big 12 reclaimed the trophy with a 6-4 advantage, including wins by Baylor (Alabama, Iowa State (Ole Miss, Oklahoma (Vanderbilt, Oklahoma State (South Carolina, TCU (Florida) and Texas Tech (Arkansas).

LAST TIME OUT: 3/3 KANSAS 81, K-STATE 60

  1. No. 3/3 Kansas used an early 19-2 run to propel itself to an 81-60 win over Kansas State in 292nd Sunflower Showdown before a sold-out crowd of 16,300 at Allen Fieldhouse on Tuesday night. 
  2. Kansas led for nearly 35 minutes in the game, breaking open an early 7-all tie with 9 consecutive points to take a 16-7 lead and force a timeout by K-State head coach Bruce Weber at the 12:29 mark. After a field goal by freshman Montavious Murphy, the Jayhawks answered with a 10-0 run to force yet another Weber timeout and the lead at 26-9 with 10:29 before halftime. The team would lead 39-23 at the break.
  3. K-State was able to close the deficit to 49-36 early in the second half after a 3-pointer by freshman DaJuan Gordon at the 14:03 mark but Kansas was able to push the lead back to 20 by scoring 13 of the next 16 points to extend the lead to 62-39 with 9:08 to play.
  4. Junior David Sloan led three Wildcats in double figures with a season-high 17 points on 7-of-11 field goals, including 2-of-4 from 3-point range, to go with game-tying 5 assists and 4 rebounds in just his second career start and first at Allen Fieldhouse. Senior Xavier Sneed added 16 points on 5-of-12 shooting, including 3-of-8 from beyond the arc, while fellow senior Makol Mawien chipped in 11 points.
  5. Freshman Christian Braun led all scorers with a season-high 20 points for the Jayhawks, as he connected on 7-of-15 from the field, including 6-of-10 from 3-point range, while sophomore Devon Dotson had 18 points on 6-of-12 shooting to go with 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 3 steals and 1 block in 28 minutes. Senior Udoka Azubuike added a double-double with 10 points on 4-of-5 field goals and a game-high 14 rebounds.
  6. The game was marred by a bench-clearing fight with 0.1 seconds left on the clock, in which, both teams’ benches were ejected for leaving the bench. A technical was given to Kansas’ Silvio DeSousa for taunting and senior Pierson McAtee hit 1-of-2 free throws to complete the game.
  7. The loss extended the Wildcats’ misery in Allen Fieldhouse, as they now lost 14 consecutive games at the building. K-State has not won in Lawrence since a 59-55 victory on Jan. 14, 2006.

LOVE, GORDON SUSPENDED FOLLOWING ACTIONS AT KANSAS

  1. Redshirt junior James Love III and freshman Antonio Gordon have been issued suspensions by the Big 12 Conference following their actions at the conclusion of Tuesday night’s game at Kansas, Commissioner Bob Bowlsby announced Wednesday.
  2. Love has been suspended for eight games, which will begin once he is medically cleared for competition, while Gordon’s suspension will be three games and begin immediately. Until each student-athlete has served their suspension, they are immediately prohibited from traveling with the team to away competition, participating in pregame activities, and being in the team’s bench area. However, each student-athlete may continue to practice and receive related support to their participation as a student-athlete.
  3. Additionally, both programs were reprimanded for violations of the Big 12 Sportsmanship Policies as a result of players leaving the bench area.
  4. “We do not condone this type of behavior in any circumstance and fully support Commissioner Bowlsby’s decision on this matter,” K-State Athletics Director Gene Taylor said. “There is no place for this type of conduct in the game of basketball, or any sport, and in particular this great rivalry. In addition, I would like to offer my appreciation to Jeff Long and the University of Kansas administration and staff for their efforts in resolving the situation.”
  5. “I’m extremely disappointed in our team’s actions in the aftermath of last night’s game at Kansas,” added Head Coach Bruce Weber. “They do not reflect what our program is about here at K-State. Our team will live with the consequences of those actions and move forward in a positive manner. Our focus going forward is to help our players learn from this situation and ensure that it never happens again.”

RECAPPING NON-CONFERENCE HISTORY

  1. K-State wrapped up non-conference play with a 69-67 win over Tulsa on Dec. 30. The win snapped a 2-game skid and helped the Wildcats finish with a winning record in non-conference play with 14th consecutive season. The team has one more non-conference game at Alabama on Jan. 25.
  2. K-State has a 111-8 (.932) record at home venues (includes home games played at Bramlage Coliseum, INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita and the Sprint Center in Kansas City) in non-conference play dating back to the 2006-07 season, including a 102-6 (.944) mark at Bramlage Coliseum.
  3. Despite seeing their 33-game winning streak end at Bramlage Coliseum with a loss to Marquette on Dec. 7, the Wildcats have still won 98 of their last 104 non-conference home games. The last home non-conference loss before Marquette came against Georgia, 50-46, on Dec. 31, 2014.
  4. K-State has posted a 147-41 (.781) record in non-conference play since the 2006-07 season, which includes a 10-3 (.769) mark in 2018-19. The team has posted double-digit non-conference wins in 12 of the last 13 years.
  5. Since going 7-6 in non-conference in 2014-15, which included back-to-back losses to Texas Southern and Georgia, the Wildcats has won double-digit non-conference games each of the past four seasons and is 50-14 (.781) in non-conference play since the start of 2015-16 season.

LEADING WITH DEFENSE

  1. K-State has continued its reputation as one of the top defensive teams in the country under head coach Bruce Weber, holding its first 18 opponents to 63.2 points on 41.5 percent shooting (400-of-965, including 33.3 percent (130-of-390) from 3-point range, while posting a Big 12-best 8.7 steals and forcing 16.5 turnovers per game (third in the Big 12).
  2. K-State ranks among Top 50 in 3 defensive categories, including 49th in scoring defense, 30th in steals per game and 35th in turnovers forced (16.5).
  3. K-State has held 25 of its last 52 opponents to 60 points or less with just six eclipsing 70 (with 5 occurring in the last 19 games). The squad has held 94 opponents to 60 points or less in Bruce Weber’s tenure, boasting an 85-9 mark in those contests. The Wildcats are 6-1 this season when holding an opponent below 60 points, including their first 4 wins.
  4. K-State had one of the top defensive teams in the country in 2018-19, holding opponents to 59.6 points on 41.5 percent shooting, including 31.4 percent from 3-point range, while forcing 14.8 turnovers per game and averaging 7.5 steals per game. The Wildcats ranked among the nation’s best in a number of defensive categories, including fourth in scoring defense, 16th in turnover margin (+3.5, 36th in 3-point field goal percentage defense, 43rd in total steals (256) and 48th in steals per game. 
  5. The 59.6 points per game average was the lowest opponent scoring average since the introduction of the shot clock in 1985-86, surpassing the 60.4 points per game average in 2012-13, while it was the sixth-lowest all-time and the lowest since the 1982-83 team allowed 58.4 points per game. Only eight other teams (1948-49, 1949-50, 1950-51, 1961-62, 1980-81, 1981-82, 1982-83) allowed less than 60 points per game in school history.
  6. K-State held foes to an average of 14.5 points under their average in 2018-19, including a 14.6 average in Big 12 play. Eleven opponents (6 Big 12 foes) were held to 20 or more points under their average, most notably Texas Tech (26.6, TCU (25.4 and 23.5, Iowa State (24.3) and OSU (21.8).
  7. In Big 12 play, K-State allowed 59.6 points per game on 42.6 percent shooting, including 33.8 percent from 3-point range. It is the school’s lowest defensive scoring average in a Big 12 season and a tie for the ninth-best in a conference season and the lowest since 1961-62. The Wildcats held Big 12 opponents (Iowa State, TCU [twice], Texas Tech, Oklahoma State [twice], West Virginia, Baylor and Oklahoma) to 60 points or less on 9 occasions.

POINTS OFF TURNOVERS

  1. K-State is once again using its defense to generate offense, as the Wildcats are forcing 16.5 turnovers per game, including 8.7 steals per game, while averaging 17.5 points per game off those opponent turnovers.
  2. K-State has scored 20 or more points off opponent turnovers 9 times this season, including a season-high 28 in the win over No. 12/13 West Virginia . The team has also scored 20 or more points off turnovers against Monmouth (21, Arkansas-Pine Bluff (20, Pittsburgh (24) Bradley (22, Florida A&M (20, Alabama State (26, Texas (23) and No. 23/23 Texas Tech (20).
  3. K-State has forced 5 opponents into 20 or more turnovers, including a season-best 25 turnovers by UNLV and Monmonth.
  4. K-State has scored nearly 4,000 points (3,990) off turnovers during head coach Bruce Weber’s tenure, an average of 15.5 points per game. In 2018-19, the Wildcats averaged 17.4 points off turnovers, outscoring opponents, 590-362. The team posted 12 games of 20 or more points off turnovers.

DEFICITS AND COMEBACKS

  1. K-State has had to battle back from early deficits in each of 3 of its last 5 Big 12 games, but has found a way to rally from those deficits before losing down the stretch. The Wildcats trailed TCU and Texas both by 7 points before falling behind 10-0 to No. 23/23 Texas Tech on Tuesday. 
  2. K-State was down 7-0 to start against TCU before slowing chipping away at the deficit to eventually take a 17-16 lead at the 8:19 mark of the first half and tying at 23-all before the Horned Frogs scored 12 of the last 14 points. Down 49-42 with just over 7 to play, the Wildcats tied the game at 57-all on David Sloan’s 3-pointer before losing on a tip-in with 2 seconds.
  3. K-State trailed 9-2 to start against Texas before again rallying to take an 18-16 lead with 6:40 before halftime. With the Wildcats leading 25-23 with 2:48 to play in the first half, the Longhorns would score 20 of the next 22 points to take 43-27 advantage with 13:11 remaining.
  4. K-State allowed No. 23/23 Texas Tech to score the first 10 points of the game, but the resilient Wildcats responded with 7 in a row to close to within one possession before trailing 37-30 at the half. The team again fought back to take a 46-45 lead on a layup by senior Cartier Diarra to cap an 11-2 run with 13:24 to play. The Red Raiders responded with a 16-4 run over the next 6 minutes to take a 61-50 lead with just over 7 minutes remaining.

2-POINTERS HAVE BEEN KEY

  1. With its 3-point percentage nearly identical in wins (34.2; 63-of-184) as in losses (32.5; 67-of-206, K-State’s 2-point field goal percentage has been a key factor in its wins this season. On the year, the Wildcats are connecting on 48.6 percent (282-of-580) from inside the 3-point line. 
  2. K-State is connecting on 47 percent (210-of-447) of its field goals in the 8 wins, including 55.9 percent (147-of-263) from inside the arc, while the team is hitting just 38.6 percent (202-of-523) of their field goals in the 10 losses, including 42.6 percent (135-of-317) from inside the arc.
  3. This has been illustrated in the losses to Marquette and Mississippi State, as K-State connected on 32.3 percent (20-of-62) of its field goals, including 33.3 percent (13-of-39) from inside the arc, in the 73-65 loss to the Golden Eagles and 32.6 percent (14-of-43) of its field goals, including 32 percent (8-of-25) from inside the arc, in the 67-61 loss to the Bulldogs.
  4. No 2 players have been as impactful in this statistic, as senior Xavier Sneed and junior Cartier Diarra.
  5. Sneed is averaging a team-best 17.0 points on 50 percent (46-of-92) shooting, including 63.6 percent (28-of-44) from inside the arc, in the 8 wins, while he is averaging 12.9 points on just 32.4 percent (36-of-111) shooting in the 10 losses, including 35.9 percent (19-of-53) from inside the arc.
  6. Diarra is averaging 14.9 points on 43.8 percent (42-of-96) shooting, including 51.9 percent (28-of-54) from inside the arc, in the 8 wins, while he is averaging 11.4 points on 40.4 percent (40-of-99) shooting, including 50.0 percent (27-of-54) from inside the arc, in the 10 losses.

SNEED GETTING HOT

  1. Senior Xavier Sneed has led the Wildcats in scoring in 8 of the last 17 games, averaging 14.9 points on 41 percent shooting (78-of-190, including 33.7 percent (34-of-101) from 3-point range, which includes wins against UNLV, Monmouth, Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Florida A&M and Alabama State.
  2. Sneed scored 19 points in the overtime win over UNLV, including the go-ahead jumper with 28 seconds left, then followed that up with a 15-point effort in the win over Monmouth on Nov. 13 before posting 21 vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Nov. 19. His 18-point effort against Florida A&M on Dec. 2 lifted him to the Top 20 scoring, while he claimed his second 20-point game with 20 against Alabama State on Dec. 11. He has a combined 121 points in the last 8 games, including a season-best 22 against Oklahoma on Jan. 4.
  3. With his first rebound against Marquette on Dec. 7, Sneed became the 13th player in school history with at least 1,000 career points and 500 career rebounds. He currently has 1,273 points in 123 career games to go with 545 rebounds. He joins a 1,000-point/500-rebound list that includes legends Dick Knostman, Jack Parr, Bob Boozer, David Hall, Steve Mitchell, Rolando Blackman, Ed Nealy, Jamar Samuels, Rodney McGruder, Thomas Gipson, Wes Iwundu and Dean Wade.
  4. Sneed is one of 9 players to rank in the Big 12’s Top 25 in both scoring and rebounding, as he ranks ninth in scoring (14.7 ppg.) and 22nd in rebounding (4.7 rpg.). He joins Iowa State’s Tyrese Haliburton, Oklahoma’s Austin Reaves, Kristian Doolittle and Brady Manek, Kansas’ Udoka Azubuike, TCU’s Desmond Bane and West Virginia’s Oscar Tshiebwe. Sneed also ranks seventh in steals (1.67, 10th in 3-point field goals made (1.94, 13th in free throw percentage (71.7) and 14th in minutes (31.6).

SNEED MOVING UP THE CHARTS

  1. Senior Xavier Sneed continues to move up several career charts, as he ranks among the Top 20 in scoring (14th, 3-point field goals made (fifth) and attempted (fourth, steals (fourth) and minutes (10th).
  2. With his 16-point effort in the win over No. 12/13 West Virginia, Sneed moved into the school’s Top 15 in scoring at No. 15 with 1,257 points, moving past former teammate Kamau Stokes (1,242, current Orland Magic Wes Iwundu (1,249) and Tyrone Adams (1,251). He is the the fourth Wildcat under head coach Bruce Weber to rank in the Top 15 in scoring, following Barry Brown, Jr. (1,781 points/fifth, Rodney McGruder (1,576/eighth) and Dean Wade (1,510/10th). He currently ranks 14th in 1,273 points with sights set on Ed Nealy (1,304) and Mitch Richmond (1,327).
  3. Sneed already ranks among the very best among all 3-point shooters in school history, passing Rodney McGruder for fifth in career makes (192) and ranking fourth in career attempts (563). He needs just 8 more 3-pointers to become just the fifth Wildcat with 200 more triples in a career.
  4. Sneed also continues to move up the steals chart with his 167 ranking fourth in school history, while he just cracked the school’s Top 10 in minutes played with 3,383 minutes in 123 games played.

DIARRA PROVING TO BE A SOLID PG

  1. Junior Cartier Diarra is proving to be a solid point guard for the Wildcats, averaging 12.9 points on 42.1 percent (82-of-195) shooting with 5.2 assists, 4.5 rebounds and 1.8 steals in 32 minutes per game. He has led the team in scoring 8 times, including 6 times in the last 11 games.
  2. Diarra’s 93 assists are the most by a Wildcat in the first 18 games since assists began being kept in 1976-77, surpassing the previous 18-game high of 92 done by (current UTSA head coach) Steve Henson in 1988-89. He has at least 5 assist

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