
Tigers Head To Big 12 Tournament
3/5/2002 12:00:00 AM | Men's Basketball
March 5, 2002
Complete Release in PDF Format![]()
Download Free Acrobat Reader
|
Big 12 Men's Basketball Coaches Teleconference Audio March 4, 2002 Requires Real Player | |
|
* Baylor * Colorado * Iowa State * Kansas * Kansas State * Nebraska |
* Oklahoma * Oklahoma State * Missouri * Texas * Texas A&M * Texas Tech |
6th Annual Phillips 66/Big 12 Tournament
March 7-10, 2002 - Kemper Arena - Kansas City, Mo.
TIGERS LOOK TO REKINDLE 'KEMPER KARMA' AT BIG 12 TOURNAMENT
The 6th-seeded Missouri Tigers (20-10 overall, 9-7 in Big 12 Conference play) head to Kansas City, where they'll take on the 11th-seeded Iowa State Cyclones (12-18, 4-12) in the 1st round of the 2002 Big 12 Tournament. Tipoff is set for 8:35 p.m. Thursday at Kemper Arena, and the game will be shown nationally on ESPN2. Thursday's winner will advance to play 3rd-seeded Texas (19-10, 10-6) at 8:20 p.m. Friday.
Missouri is looking to bounce back from a tough 95-92 home loss to #1 Kansas on Sunday - a game in which MU led in the final 2 minutes. The Tigers had won 2 straight prior to Sunday's defeat.
Iowa State comes to Kansas City off of a similarly-tough home loss to Texas on Saturday (79-76). The Cyclones led for most of that contest before the Longhorns took control in the final minutes.
Missouri and Iowa State split a pair of regular-season meetings this year, with the home team winning each time. Iowa State claimed a 71-67 win in Ames in January, and MU followed with a 76-73 win in Columbia in February.
Mizzou looks to improve to 5-0 in Big 12 Tournament 1st-round games. MU and Iowa State have met once previously in Big 12 Tournament play, and the Tigers claimed a 74-55 win in the 1st round of the 1998 tourney.
KANSAS CITY, HERE WE COME!
After finishing in 6th place during the Big 12 regular season, Missouri will look to string together a nice run at the Big 12 Tournament to solidify it's post-season position.
At 20-10 overall, and 49th in the RPI (as of Tuesday, according to www.collegerpi.com), conventional wisdom has Missouri as likely to receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament on Sunday.
Of course, winning 4 games in Kansas City would give the Tigers an automatic bid to the "Big Dance", but that is an extremely tough task, something that hasn't yet been accomplished in the short history of the Big 12.
Most pundits believe that MU is in the Tournament now, but 1 win certainly wouldn't hurt.
TIGER BRAGGING RIGHTS
With 20 wins under its belt, Missouri appears on course for its 3rd straight NCAA Tournament appearance under Head Coach Quin Snyder, and 4th straight overall.
Here's a few of bragging facts:
MORE NCAA FODDER
While everyone and their brother has their opinion of who is in and who is out of the upcoming NCAA Tournament, one historical fact bodes well for MU.
In the short history of the Big 12 Conferece, no league team has ever not received an NCAA bid when they've won at least 19 regular-season games and had no worse than a .500 league record.
The closest time came during the 1998-99 season, when Nebraska went 18-11 during the regular season and finished 10-6 in the league (tied for 5th). The Huskers' RPI that year was a solid 47, but Nebraska was relegated to the NIT even after winning 1 game at the Big 12 Tournament in Kansas City.
POST-SEASON HONORS ROLL IN
On Monday, four different Tigers were honored as part of the Associated Press year-end Big 12 awards.
MU AT KEMPER ARENA
Missouri is no stranger to Kemper Arena, as the Tigers are 50-24 alltime there (67.6%). That includes a 2-0 mark earlier this season as MU won the inaugural NABC Guardians Classic with wins over Alabama and Iowa.
Prior to this season, MU has gone 6-5 in Big 12 Tournament play, 29-13 in the old Big Eight Tournament at Kemper, 10-5 in the last 3 years of the old Big Eight Holiday Tournament (1974-77), regular season wins over LaSalle (1981) and Notre Dame (1982) and a 1-1 record in the 1986-87 BMA Classic (win over Oral Roberts and a loss to Alabama).
MU is playing as the #6 seed in the Big 12 Tournament for the 4th time in the last 5 years, including 3 straight.
The Tigers are 3-3 in Kemper as the big 12's No. 6 seed, splitting games in 1998, 2000 and 2001.
Missouri has never lost a 1st-round Big 12 Tournament game, going 4-0 with wins in 1997, 1998, 2000 and 2001.
KANSAS CITY SON RUSHES HOME
MU forward Kareem Rush is a native of Kansas City, and he likes playing in Kemper Arena, according to his past history in Big 12 Tournament games.
Rush has averaged 18.3 points per game in Big 12 tourney action, and scored 16 points last year against Texas A&M and 31 against Oklahoma with a cast on his shooting hand as he was coming back from torn ligaments in his thumb.
Rush has shot 54.9% from the floor (28-of-51) and 52.4% from 3-pt. range (11-of-21) in 4 career Big 12 Tournament games in Kemper.
Additionally, senior Clarence Gilbert is averaging 17.2 points per game in Big 12 Tournament games, with a career-best of 30 in last year's 1st-round against Texas A&M. Gilbert also led MU to the Guardians Classic in Kemper earlier this year, as he scored 18 in the semis vs. Alabama and followed with a 27-pt. outing vs. Iowa on the way to tournament MVP honors.
MU-IOWA STATE HISTORY
Missouri and Iowa State will meet for the 213th time when they tussle on Thursday in Kansas City. MU holds a 136-76 edge in the series, and the 136 wins are the most for Mizzou over any opponent.
MU and ISU have met just once previously in the Big 12 Tournament. That came in 1998, when #6-seeded MU claimed a 74-55 win over #11-seeded ISU.
The rivals split their regular-season meetings this year (see below), and MU Coach Quin Snyder is 2-4 vs. ISU and Larry Eustachy.
MORE MU-ISU NOTABLES
EARLIER THIS YEAR VS. IOWA STATE
MU 76-ISU 73 - COLUMBIA
ISU 71-MU 67 - AMES
THE QUIN SNYDER FILE
The 15th head coach in Missouri basketball history, Quin Snyder is 58-36 in his third season as a head coach, and is already MU's 4th-winningest coach ever. He earned his 50th career win on Jan. 12th at Kansas State.
After getting out to a 9-0 start to the season, Mizzou was perched #2 in the AP top-25 poll. That marked the highest an MU team has been ranked since the 1989-90 season. When MU won the Guardians Classic in November with its miraculous comeback vs. Iowa, it gave MU its first in-season tournament championship since 1989.
Snyder guided Missouri to a 20-13 record in 2000-01, including the schools' first NCAA Tournament win since 1995, when MU defeated Georgia in the opening round.
He was named the national rookie coach-of-the-year by Basketball Times after leading the Tigers to an 18-13 record and an NCAA appearance in the 1999-2000 campaign.
Snyder's mission is to take the Tiger program 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).
Snyder had served as Duke's associate head coach the previous two seasons, and was entrusted with numerous on-court coaching responsibilities, as well as recruiting duties for the Blue Devils by Head Coach Mike Krzyzewski. He was widely credited with recruiting the group of student-athletes (including 1999 national player-of-the-year Elton Brand) at Duke who compiled a 37-2 record in 1998-99 and finished as NCAA runners-up.
In just 2-plus seasons, Snyder is already the 4th-winningest coach in MU history.
WHO'S HOT...
IT'S A BLOCK PARTY
With 5 blocked shots Sunday vs. Kansas, Missouri set a single-season team record for rejections. The Tigers enter Thursday's game with 135 blocks, which is 3 more than the old record of 132 set by last year's squad.
As a team, MU ranks 2nd in the Big 12 in blocks, with its per-game average of 4.50.
Individually, sophomore Arthur Johnson ranks 2nd in the league in blocks, with an average of 2.13 per game. A.J. is 2 blocks shy of breaking his own single-season record of 65, set last year as a freshman.
A.J.'s 129 career blocks already ranks him 2nd on the MU career blocks list, behind only former All-American Steve Stipanovich (1st - 149).
SENIOR SENDOFF
Sunday represented the final home game for senior guard Clarence Gilbert. Gilbert was honored in a pre-game ceremony, then did not disappoint the throng of MU fans as he led Mizzou with 27 points in the Tigers' near upset of #1 Kansas.
Gilbert came to Missouri from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and has entrenched himself among the school's greats.
He enters Thursday's game ranked 8th on the alltime MU scoring chart, with 1,574 career points. He is the Big 12 Conference's leading active career scorer, and ranks 4th on the league's alltime scoring list.
Additionally, if MU receives an NCAA bid, Gilbert would go down in history as one of a proud few who have helped guide the Tigers to 4 consecutive NCAA Tournaments.
Only 3 previous senior classes can say that they played in the Big Dance all 4 years. They include the senior classes of 1990, 1989 and 1983. MU also went to 4 straight NCAAs from 1992-93-94-95, but there were no 4th-year seniors on the 1995 squad.
Gilbert would become the 9th Tiger to play in the NCAA each of his 4 years.
MORE ON GILBERT
To help illustrate just what a solid overall player Clarence Gilbert has been in his career, consider the fact that he is on pace to end his Tiger career in the top-10 in scoring, 3-point field goals, assists and steals. He would join former All-American Melvin Booker as the only Tiger to rank in the top-10 of each of those categories.
GILBERT GETS A DOZEN
Senior guard Clarence Gilbert further enhanced his reputation as one of the nation's most dangerous scorers on Feb. 23 at Colorado, as he scored 40 points in leading Mizzou to its critical 96-83 win in Boulder.
Gilbert was unconscious from long range, as he nailed a Big 12 and MU record 12 3-pt. field goals (12-of-17).
Here's a look at the records he broke:
MORE THREE-PT. RECORDS
Missouri hit a school-record and Big 12 record 20 3-pt. field goals (in a school-record 37 attempts) at Colorado.
That eclipsed the previous league mark of 18, set by Texas (1-12-97 vs. Kansas State), and the previous MU record of 17 set by this year's squad (12-6-01 vs. Southern).
MU's 20 makes is the 16th-most in NCAA history. The alltime record is 28 by Troy State (12-10-94 vs. George Mason).
RUSH NAMED NAISMITH FINALIST
Junior Kareem Rush has lived up to his pre-season All-American billing of late, as the smooth lefty has averaged 21.4 points per game in Missouri's last 9 games.
Accordingly, Rush was recently named one of 20 national finalists for the prestigious Naismith Award, given annually to the top player in college basketball.
MU-KANSAS POST-GAME NOTES




