Junior Arthur JohsonsJunior Arthur Johsons
Men's Basketball

Tigers Look to Impeach Austin Peay Governors on Saturday

Nov. 28, 2002

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Tigers Take on Austin Peay on Saturday

The University of Missouri men's basketball team will look to impeach the Governors of Austin Peay on Saturday. The Tigers will take on the Govs in a 1 p.m. matchup that features two early-season undefeated teams.

Mizzou, which is currently ranked #18 in the Associated Press poll and #17 in the USA Today/ ESPN Coaches Poll, is coming off of a season-opening 72-57 win over the Eagles of American last Friday. Junior guard Ricky Clemons sprung for 25 points and pulled down five rebounds in the win. For his efforts, he was named the Phillips 66 Big 12 Athlete of the Week for the week of Nov. 17-24.

The matchup with APSU is the first of three games for the Tigers this week as they welcome Sacramento State to Hearnes for a Monday tilt before heading to the Anaheim, Calif., to play the USC Trojans in the John R. Wooden Classic on Dec. 7.

About the Austin Peay Governors

The Govs are red-hot coming into Saturday's matchup at 2-0. Their latest win came on Monday night as they used runs of 13-3 and 14-0 in the second half to take out Bluefield College, 90-66.

APSU's other win was a big time upset of Memphis on Nov. 22 at the Pyramid in Memphis. The Govs clinched a thrilling 81-80 overtime victory

Guard Corey Gipson leads a very balanced scoring attack into Saturday's contest. He is averaging 15.0 points and 3.5 rebounds per contest this season including 19 points against instate rival Memphis.

Three other Govs are averaging 12.0 or more points in the early going of the season. They are coached by Dave Loos, who is in his 13th year at APSU. He sports a record of 177-173 as the Governor of the Govs and an all-time record of 259-226 in 17 seasons. His teams are 0-3 in games against Mizzou all-time.

The Tigers lead the all-time series with APSU 7-0, including their latest triumph over the Govs, a 63-53 win on Nov. 23,1998 in Columbia. Loos' and Snyder's teams have never played eachother

Clemons Named Phillips 66 Big 12 Rookie of the Week

Junior put in 25 points in Tigers' win over American last Friday.

Columbia, Mo.-University of Missouri junior point guard Ricky Clemons was named the Phillips 66 Big 12 Rookie of the Week for the week of Nov. 17-24, as announced Tuesday by the Big 12 Conference Office. Clemons led the Tigers to a season-opening 72-57 win over American last Friday with 25 points, 17 of which came in the second half on 5-of-8 (63%) shooting from the field.

The Raleigh, N.C., native who transferred to Mizzou from the College of Southern Idaho this semester also pulled down five boards in 38 minutes against the Eagles. He was 8-of-15 from the field overall and 4-of-9 from 3-point range while leading the Tigers in field goals, 3-point field goals, points, steals and assists in the win.

An Interesting Opener

The Tigers opened their 2002-03 campaign last Friday with a 72-57 win over American. Mizzou was outstanding in the first half jumping out to a 19 point lead with 3:53 left in the 1st half. The jump was sparked by an 11-0 run over a 4:15 span in from 9:50 to 4:24.

The Tigers were stingy on defense in the half as well forcing the Eagles to open the game with 0-of-8 shooting while out-rebounding AU, 11-4 in the first 4:24 of the contest. Junior Ricky Clemons paced the Tigers with 25 points while also pulling down five rebounds.

The Tiger starters were strong in the contest as they recorded 66 of the Tigers' 72 points with four of the five reaching double figures in scoring.

Junior All-American candidate Rickey Paulding got of to a quick start in the game scoring the Tigers first six points of the contest. He also registered the Tigers last six points of the fist half scoring 17 of his 19 points in the opening stanza. He also equaled a career-best with three steals in the win.

The Tigers were unbelievable in the paint in the first half, outscoring the undersized Eagles, 22-2 in the paint. After recording a team best 11 double-doubles last season, Arthur "Doc" Johnson picked up right where he left off putting in 11 points while pulling down 10 boards for his first double-double of the season. Fellow junior big man Travon Bryant was not far off, going for 11 points and 8 'bounds while also recording two blocks in the contest.

According to the Pollsters

While its true that the only poll that matters will come out after the first weekend of April, it is noteworthy to watch the polls as the season progresses. In honor of having the Governors in town, here is a look at how the Tigers have opened in the polling in the Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll so far this season.

		AP	ESPN/Coaches
Preseason	#18	#18
Poll #2	 #20	#18
Poll #3	 #18	#17

The Skinny On McKinney

Freshman guard Jimmy McKinney continues to heal after fracturing his frontal sinus late in the Tigers' match up against the EA Sports All-Stars on Nov. 2.

McKinney missed the American contest as part of his four-week layoff due to the injury. There is a possibility that he will be able to return for the Tigers' game with Austin Peay and if not then, it will be for the Sacramento State game.

The 6-3 shooting guard from Vashon High School has been cleared to practice in non-contact drills and will be wearing a protective mask for the next several weeks upon his return to the lineup. The mask was designed by Cathy Barrow, an occupational therapist at University Hospital.

Prior to the injury, he had scored five points and pulled down six rebounds in 14 minutes of action in the EA Sport All-Stars.

Like a Bear Grabbing a Trout

The Tigers continue to develop into one of the top rebounding teams in the Big 12. While Mizzou lost almost 55% percent of its scoring when senior Clarence Gilbert graduated and junior and current LA Laker Kareem Rush departed for the NBA, the Tigers still boast the team's top rebounders.

The Tigers have carried that strong rebounding into this season. They out-rebounded the Eagles, 11-4 in the first 4:24 of the contest and out-rebounded AU, 45-34 overall. Junior Arthur Johnson was powerful pulling down 10 boards while fellow juniors Travon Bryant and Rickey Paulding pitched in with eight and five rebounds respectively.

The emphasis on rebounding and toughness has grown more and more apparent every season since Head Coach Quin Snyder arrived at Missouri. After being out-rebounded by 5.0 boards per game in his first season at Mizzou, the Tigers turned the tables last season, out-rebounding opponents by nearly 4.5 reb. per outing. Below is a look at the progression Mizzou has made over the past four years on the boards:

	Year		Reb. Margin
	1999-00	 -5.0
	2000-01	 -0.6
	2001-02	 +4.4
	2002-03	 +11

Quite an Exhibition

While they didn't count in the official statistics for the season, the Tigers' two exhibition contests did offer a chance to play in front of a crowd and also against someone other than themselves.

Mizzou went 2-0 in the contests taking out EA Sports in overtime on Nov. 2, 81-80, and then proceeded to boat-race the Midwest All-Stars, 102-79 on Nov. 8.

Several Tigers had quality exhibition showings earlier this month. Junior All-American candidate Rickey Paulding was strong, averaging 19.0 points per outing while also pulling down 7.0 boards per contest.

Fellow guard and junior Ricky Clemons was also a pleasant surprise to Tiger faithful who hadn't seen him play, averaging 17 points and 7.5 assists per contest. He led the Tigers with 21 points against EA Sports and just missed a triple-double against the Midwest All-Stars with 21 points, 10 assists and 8 rebounds. Josh Kroenke also was a valuable contributor, handing out six assists against EA Sports while hitting three 3-point shots.

Junior big men Arthur Johnson and Travon Bryant were solid in the middle averaging 13.5 and 12.5 points per game respectively. Johnson was also mighty good on the boards, averaging 10 boards per contest.

Tigers Dominant in 102-79 Win over Midwest All-Stars

Five Tigers reach double figures in scoring.

Nov. 8, 2002

Columbia, Mo.-The No. #18 University of Missouri basketball team mixed a well balanced scoring attack with timely swarming defense to grab a 102-79 win over the Midwest All-Stars in front of 6,664 fans at the Hearnes Center.

Five Tigers reached double-figures in the scoring column and the Tigers out-rebounded the All-Stars, 44-36, en route to the win.

After trailing early in the first half, 11-6, the Tigers went on a 46-23 run to take a 52-34 halftime advantage. Junior Rickey Clemons came out of the gates on fire in the opening stanza, registering 15 of his game-high 21 points on 5-of-9 shooting from the field. Junior Arthur Johnson also had a solid opening half, pouring in 13 points while pulling down eight boards.

Mizzou would continue its solid play in the second half, extending its lead to as many as 28, using 58.1 percent shooting from the field in the half and 55.1 percent for the contest.

Junior Rickey Paulding finished the contest with a quiet 16 points and six boards while juniors Josh Kroenke and Travon Bryant had eight and nine points, respectively. The Tigers bench came up huge in the win, pitching in 29 points including 10 points each from sophomores Jeffrey Ferguson and Najeeb Echols. Freshman Kevin Young impressed once again, just missing a double-double with nine points and eight rebounds in only 15 minutes of action.

4 Sure

The fourth place spot has been the vogue place to pick Mizzou to finish this season in the Big 12. The Big 12 Coaches, media from around the league and ESPN.com have all picked the Tigers to finish in the No. 4 spot behind Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas and ahead of Texas Tech.

The Tigers have some time to get their feet under them before they face any of the top three picks. Their first tilt with any of those three teams doesn't come until January 25th when they travel to Austin to hook up with the Texas Longhorns.

Below is a breakdown of where each school was picked by the Big 12 Coaches, media and ESPN.com in preseason polls:

School	 Coaches	Media	ESPN
Kansas		1	1	1
Oklahoma	2	2	2
Texas		3	3	3
Missouri	4	4	4
Texas Tech	5	5	5
Oklahoma St.	6	6	6
Iowa St.	7	7	7
Baylor		8	9	8
Colorado	9	8	9
Nebraska	10	10	10
Kansas State	11	11	11
Texas A&M	12	12	12

Quin Snyder Leads Mizzou into Year Four

Exactly 101 games into his career as a head coach at Missouri, Head Coach Quin Snyder sports a 63-38 mark. He has led the Tigers to the NCAA Tournament in each of his first three seasons and the Tigers have progressed one round further every season. Snyder and the Tiger's most recent post-season run yielded an appearance in the Elite Eight, MU's first trip to the round of eight since 1994.

Snyder guided his first squad to an 18-13 overall record, and he was named National Rookie Coach of the Year by Basketball Times. In 2000-01, the Tigers went 20-13, despite playing one of the nation's toughest schedules, and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Snyder's mission is to continue to build on the foundation the Tigers have built over the past three years and take them to the next level. And if that next level represents the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament, Snyder will be a repeat visitor. In 10 years at Duke, he took part in five Final Fours -- three as a player (1986, 88, 89) and two more as a coach (1994, 99).

Pre-Season Picks

Here's a brief look at where MU is being picked by a handful of preseason polls:

	FoxSports.com	 10th
	Sporting News		18th
	Lindy's		 9th
	Street and Smith's	24th

Picking Up Where They Left Off

Mizzou ended the year last season on an unbelievable hot streak which was ended by Big 12 foe Oklahoma in the NCAA Tournament's Elite Eight.

The run began with consecutive wins over #5-seed Miami (93-80) and #4 Ohio State (83-67) in Albuquerque, N.M. That put the Tigers in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1994, and the 6th time in school history. Mizzou then notched its 1st win in six tries against UCLA, as they came back from an 8-pt. deficit to win, 82-73 in San Jose, Calif., putting the Tigers in their third Elite Eight in school history.

October 1, 2004

That is the forecasted opening date of the Tigers' new arena that they will call home for the next several years. The ground breaking for the state-of-the-art building was Sept. 21, 2002. The yet-to-be-named facility is penciled to cost $75 million, and was kick-started by a generous $25 million donation by the Laurie Family.

The State of Missouri will contribute $35 million in bond appropriations. The additional $15 million will be raised through athletic fund-raising efforts.

The Hearnes Center will continue to be utilized by MU Athletics Olympic sport programs.

Fans will be able to monitor the progress of the new arena as it grows from the ground up, by logging on to www.mutigers.com. A web-cam is positioned on the southwest corner of the Hearnes Center and provides a live, 24-7 shot of the site as the building is being completed.

Going Vertical

Over the past two seasons, 2002-03 Wooden Award Candidate Rickey Paulding has dazzled Mizzou fans with a dizzying array of rim-rocking dunks and high-flying action.

The talented junior was en fuego in his first action of 2002-03 pouring in 19 points on 8-of-16 shooting from the field. 17 of those points came in the first half where he scored the Tigers first six and last six points of the half.

While he is known best for his crazy athleticism and above-the-rim antics, Paulding has become one of the most well-rounded players in the conference.

One of the indicators of Paulding's dedication and desire to become a well-rounded player was his increased accuracy from the perimeter. After going 12-of-56 (including a stretch where he went 0-for-22) from the three-point arc during his freshman season in 2000-01, Paulding was the Tiger's most accurate marksman last season, which is pretty impressive considering he was on a team with two of the most prolific shooters (Clarence Gilbert and Kareem Rush) in MU history.

He shot a team-high 44% (50-of-113) from the land of trey including 53.3% in the NCAA Tournament. Rick averaged 18.3 points and was named to the All-West Region Team during the Tigers' run to the NCAA Tournament's Elite Eight.

Detroit-Block City

Pardon the Kiss reference, but Arthur Johnson has kissed several opponent's shots good-bye over the past two years. Possibly one of the most underrated big men in the country, Johnson has been a powerful presence in the middle for the Tigers.

Doc started 2002-03 with a bang picking up right where he left off with his first double-double of the season with 11 points and 10 rebounds against American.

Arthur has led the Tigers in blocks and rebounds each of the last two seasons while averaging 10.7 points per game over the course of his two-year stint at Mizzou.

In fact, AJ will need just 14 blocked shots to surpass former Tiger great Steve Stipanovich for the all-time MU blocked shots mark. AJ sits in second on the chart right now with 136 swats right behind Stipanovich's 149.

Possessing great hands and a veritable plethora of quality interior moves, Johnson has been named All-Big 12 honorable mention each of the last two seasons and was named to the Big 12 All-Defensive team following his 71 blocks last season.

Trav"On Fire"

Since arriving at Mizzou, junior Travon Bryant has been one of the hardest workers on the team. He showed flashes of brilliance against American last Friday putting in 11 points while pulling down eight boards in 30 minutes of work.

Bryant's hard work payed off at the end of last season when he earned a starting spot on the squad for 25 of the Tigers' final 29 games.

His play in the final five games was nothing short of awesome. He averaged 7.8 points and 8.4 rebounds during that stretch that included an outstanding effort against the Tigers' NCAA first round opponent, Miami (Fla.) in which he scored 11 points while pulling down 10 rebounds.

Chances are when the charismatic lefty puts up a shot, it is probably going to go in. Tra was one of the most accurate Tigers last year, shooting just under 58% from the field. He also developed the ability to step outside and hit the three this past summer, a weapon that will make him hard to guard on the perimeter for big men around the league.

The Crafty Veteran

Junior guard Josh Kroenke will be one of the Tigers' fearless leaders this season. A great hustler, Kroenke goes after loose balls with reckless abandon and is not afraid to defend against the best guards in the country.

The native of Columbia has become one of the Tigers' most lethal spot up shooters and will be called upon to continue to contribute quality minutes whenever he is in the game.

Super Sophomores

Najeeb Echols and Jeffrey Ferguson enter their second year with a sense of urgency. The two outstanding athletes made good contributions in their freshman seasons.

Ferguson proved solid down low for Mizzou. He averaged 7.1 minutes per contest last season, putting 1.7 points and 1.8 rebounds per contest. He is one of the Tigers' top shot blockers and is one of the best dunkers on the team.

Echols has now fully recovered from a knee injury he experienced during his senior year of high school. Jeeb has looked more athletic and explosive in early-season practice and will get to move back to his more natural position at guard and small forward after spending much of the year at power forward last season.

With Arms Wide Open

The Tigers welcome three newcomers to the squad this season. Junior Ricky Clemons, and freshmen Kevin Young and Jimmy McKinney join a Tiger squad that lost three starters from a year ago.

Clemons has fit in nicely at the point for the Tigers. A natural floor leader, Clemons averaged 17 points and seven assists per contest in the Tigers' two preseason games. A transfer from the College of Southern Idaho, Clem averaged 18 points and almost eight assists last season.

McKinney, who is a native of St. Louis, displays a high level of maturity and will be called upon to play both the off-guard and point guard position. He is currently sitting out due to a fracture of his frontal sinus, but is expected to return to the Tiger lineup by either the Austin Peay or Sacramento State game.

Kevin Young, who has been tabbed as the "Jamaican Sensation" by the media relations office, has dropped 53 pounds since coming to Mizzou in June. While Young has dropped the pounds, he has picked up his play to a higher level every day. An extremely coachable young man, Kevin will have a year to learn from AJ, Tra and sophomore Jeffrey Ferguson.

Quin and Helen Snyder Announce the Formation of the "Q Foundation"

Sept. 27, 2002

Columbia, Mo.-University of Missouri men's basketball coach Quin Snyder and his wife Helen announced the launching of the "Q Foundation." The organization's primary focus will be to encourage the educational ambitions of young men and women by promoting educational opportunities and literacy. The Q Foundation will look to support educational institutions, ranging from pre-school to high school, and provide scholarship opportunities for educational enhancement. It will also focus on developing community center literacy programs in economically disadvantaged areas as well as promoting literacy through participation in reading programs. The foundation will feature a board of directors that will oversee and guide the foundations undertakings. The President of the Board will be Coach Snyder's former Duke teammate: current ESPN personality and attorney Jay Bilas. Other board members include former Duke and current NBA star Shane Battier as well as several prominent business leaders from around the country and throughout the state of Missouri. For more information on the Q Foundation, call 573-882-1495.

Construction Camera Will Showcase Mizzou Basketball Arena Project

Columbia, Mo.- The University of Missouri athletic department announced the launching of a new feature on its web site on Friday. Mizzou fans and supporters can now log on to www.mutigers.com and monitor the progress of the new arena that is being constructed just south of the Hearnes Center.

A camera has been mounted on the southwest corner of the Hearnes Center and is linked to the web site, sending a continuous picture the arena site 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Tiger faithful can point their browsers to www.mutigers.com, click on the Arena Cam icon on the front page, and view the site, as it looks at that very minute.

The project, which is set for completion Oct. 1 of 2004, will be home to the men's and women's basketball teams and will have a capacity of approximately 15,000 people.

Portland Prep Standout Signs With Mizzou

Thomas Gardner will join Tigers for 2003-04 season.

Columbia, Mo.- Thomas Gardner, a 6-foot-5, 210-pound shooting guard from Portland, Ore., has signed a national letter of intent to attend the University of Missouri next fall, Head Men's Basketball Coach Quin Snyder announced. Gardner is the first member of the 2003-04 recruiting class to sign. Dave Telep of InsidersHoops.com ranked Gardner, who is a senior this year at Jefferson High School in Portland, as one of the top 30 players in the country. He was also listed as the No. 24 player in the country according to ESPN.com in its Top 100 prospects. Under the tutelage of Oregon coaching legend Marshall Haskins, he averaged 16 points, seven rebounds and two steals per contest and received honorable mention on the Class 4A all-state team last season as a junior.