After the conclusion of interviews with seven players and two coaches from the 2007 Montana Grizzlies basketball team, the message had become clear: what sorely vexed last year’s highly talented but inconsistent Grizzly team is now gone.
In its place at the beginning of a new season is a Grizzly squad -- loaded with a highly touted junior
college transfer (Ceylon Elgin-Taylor), two talented freshmen
(6’-11 center Brian Qvale and 6’-10 forward Derek Selvig), and two quality transfers (Jack McGillis and Michael Taylor) -- laboring with the daily construction of a team into a cohesive unit.
It’s early. But the 1007-08 Grizzlies show promise of becoming a team with depth, improved defensive grit and a multi-faceted look on offense.
PHOTO: Sophomore Cameron Rundles is guarded by sophomore transfer Michael Taylor.
Sophomore floor general Cameron Rundles put it concisely. ”On this team we have no guys who are talking about I,” said Rundles. “We’re playing together this year better than we ever have.”
Rundles cited teammate Jordan Hasquet as a catalyst.
“Jordan set the tone early, “ said Rundles. “Jordan said we weren’t going to lose in the second half because we were tired. After we were finished running he got after us and said we were going to run some more.”
“I liked that, “ said Rundles. “I fed off of that.
“And that’s just carried on to the start of the season and so we’re excited to get it started Friday,” said Rundles.
The players stressed that two major fundamental game plans are critical for season-long success: improved defense and game-long offensive discipline.
“Defensive intensity is important for us from the start,” said Hasquet. “We’re going to have to get opposing teams to realize we’re going to be up in their face and intense the whole game.
“We think that if we come out really intense on defense, then it’ll transition well to the offense,” said Hasquet.
Both factors were missing early last year and the team absorbed several painful early-season losses.
“We definitely want to get a few more pre-season wins this year,” said Hasquet.. Last year was kind of tough on us. We started in a hole and it was kind of tough to have to dig ourselves out.”
Things won’t be any easier this year. The Grizzlies play formidable competition early. On the slate are the 12th ranked Gonzaga Bulldogs (Nov. 11), 8th ranked Washington State Cougars (Nov. 23), and games against Air Force, Cal Fullerton (home and home) Pacific and Santa Clara, all teams which are expected to battle for conference titles.
The Griz will be led by three-year senior starters Andrew Strait at center and Matt Martin at off guard (see Grizzly Journal senior profiles). Last year’s team MVP, Hasquet, a junior, returns at power forward. Rundles, a sophomore who quickly won the starting point guard as a freshman, returns to man that post. The only true newcomer (though he played minutes last year) is 6’-4” wing Ryan Staudacher, who’s expected to be a long-range threat.
Grizzly coach, Wayne Tinkle, hasn’t fully set his starting rotation and will experiment with several lineup looks in early games. Junior Kyle Sharp -- who continues to show that there'll be little or no dropoff when he subs for Strait -- and promising freshman center 6’-11’ Brian Qvale will see considerable action.
Backup point guard Elgin-Taylor (see newcomer profile) and 6’-10” forward Selvig (who may still redshirt) will also see action. Selvig has exceptional court vision and will likely gain minutes as the season progresses.
Of the Grizzly reserves, Hasquet thinks Qvale will give the Griz an imposing new front-court look.
“Brian Qvale I think will step in right away, Said Hasquet. “He’s tough down low, changes shots and rebounds and that’s just what the team needs.”
Junior guard Greg Spurgetis, an accomplished long-range shooter, will likely see some time at off-guard. Redshirt freshman Zach Graves, an intense defender with accomplished ball-handling skills, will see more time as the season progresses. Sophomore post Dave Vanderjagt has been hurt, but will provide the Griz matchup size against some opponents. Transfers McGillis and Taylor are ineligible until next year. Freshman Tyler Hurley of Anaconda will redshirt.
The Grizzlies jump into the fray early, hosting a young but imposing Colorado State Rams squad of the Mountain West Conference before traveling to Spokane Sunday to take on the Bulldogs.
The Rams have height (two seven-footers), speed, and will throw 2-3 zone defense at the Griz. Last year’s Grizzlies struggled early in the season against zones, so Friday’s game will be an early test to see if the Griz can get “into the zone” early.
The Grizzlies game plan is set, said Rundles. “We have to get the shots down low, even if they’re contested. We have to play by committee on offense, defense and on rebounding,” said Rundles.
Rundles said the Grizzlies would appreciate fan support early this year. “But no excuses,” said Rundles. “We have to take care of business. If we do, I think the fans will come.”
Added Staudacher, “Hopefully, when we start winning games and get people started believeing in Griz basketball, maybe things will start going the right way and more people will come out to the games.”