Bowling Green State University Athletics

Photo by: Brad Phalin, BGSU Marketing and Communications
Falcons Compete In Centennial Cup At Kent State Sunday
January 16, 2010 | Men's Basketball
Complete Game Notes (.pdf)
FOUR THINGS TO KNOW
• Bowling Green and Kent State will battle for a Centennial Cup point in Sunday's game, a year-long contest between the two schools to celebrate each institution's Centennial Anniversary. Kent State holds a 3.5-2.5 lead in the standings with men's and women's games taking place this weekend.
• A credit to the strength of the Bowling Green program, this is the first 0-2 start in MAC play since the 1991-92 season. That team went on to finish 8-8 in conference play and won a first round game in the league tournament. No BGSU team has started 0-3 since 1988-89.
• Sophomore Scott Thomas showed his potential Thursday night when he scored a career-high 21 points and added a career-best 10 rebounds for his first collegiate double-double. Thomas hit a crucial three-pointer in the final two minutes with the Falcons trailing 65-60. It was the first 20/10 performance since Nate Miller had 22 points and 10 rebounds in BGSU's MAC Tournament win over Ohio a year ago.
• Bowling Green continues to turn around its free-throw woes. Through 11 games, Bowling Green was one of the worst free-throw shooting teams in the country (ranking 329th out of 334) but the Falcons have made 56-of-70 (80.0 percent) in the last three games. In fact, the team ranks second in the MAC in free-throw shooting in league games only (77.6 percent). Both Dee Brown and Joe Jakubowski have active streaks of 10 consecutive free-throws made.
THE SERIES
Bowling Green and Kent State have met 142 times in program history, the second-most times the Falcons have played any team (BG has played Toledo 159 times). The Falcons hold a 79-63 edge in the series and BGSU has beaten Kent State more times than any other team. The two teams have split the season series each of the last two years with the home team winning each game. The Falcons have lost three in a row at the M.A.C. Center since a 79-74 win there on Jan. 26, 2006. The series started way back in 1917 (just the second year of the BGSU program) when Kent eeked out a 23-22 win on Jan. 23. The Falcons bounced back to beat Kent State 53-16 later that year on March 2, 1917.
SCOUTING THE KENT STATE GOLDEN FLASHES
Kent State enters Sunday's contest with Bowling Green at 10-6 on the season and 1-1 in Mid-American Conference play. The Golden Flashes have played two road games to open league action, getting a two-point win at Ohio and losing by two points in overtime at Miami. Kent State takes great care of the basketball, committing just 12.3 turnovers per game and leading the MAC with a +4.13 turnover margin. Chris Singletary is just fourth on the team with 9.8 points per game but he makes the offensive engine run with 4.0 assists per game and an assist/turnover ratio that ranks among the league leaders. He is also third in the conference in steals, helping that league-leading turnover margin. Justin Greene is also a critical piece of the puzzle, leading the team with 13.0 points per game while shooting 50.4 percent and grabbing 6.1 rebounds. One thing Kent State does not do well is shoot three-pointers. The Golden Flashes rank last in the MAC with a .298 three-point percentage.
THE COACHES
Bowling Green Head Coach Louis Orr has just about done it all. As a player at Syracuse, he made four NCAA Tournament appearances and spent eight years in the NBA. As a coach, he was named Big East Coach of the Year at Seton Hall and was named Mid-American Conference Coach of the Year after guiding the Falcons to the MAC regular season crown in 2008-09. He has a career record of 139-118 in his ninth season and 39-38 in his first three years at Bowling Green. Kent State Head Coach Geno Ford is in his second year at the helm with a record of 29-21. Before taking over the program, he had served two stints as an assistant coach at KSU and had recorded a 51-32 record in three seasons as head coach at Shawnee State and Muskingum.
THE CHARITY STRIPE
Through the first 11 games of the season, Bowling Green was one of the worst free-throw shooting teams in the country, ranking 329th out of 334 Division I teams at 56.6 percent. But in the last three contests, the Falcons have found a rhythm at the charity stripe, making 56-of-70 (80.0 percent). Bowling Green has increased its shooting from the free-throw line to 62.8 percent on the season.
BLOCK PARTY, HOSTED BY OTIS
Senior Otis Polk started the 2009-10 campaign by blocking a shot against Wayne State, a familiar sight for Bowling Green fans. He now has 15 blocked shots this year and is already the school's all-time blocked shot leader with 137, surpassing Tom Hall's mark of 117 from 1989-92. With every shot he blocks, he'll be setting a new standard for current and future Falcons to aim for. Both Marc Larson and Erik Marschall are not to be forgotten inside either. Larson has 74 career blocks, including two against St. Louis, and Marschall picked up his 50th career block with two against Savannah State and now has 54. Starting forward Scott Thomas has become a factor in this area as well, posting three consecutive multi-block games at one point including three against Florida International and is tied for third on the team with nine on the season.
"O" IS FOR OTIS AND OFFENSE
Otis Polk reached double figures in scoring just 11 times in his first three years at Bowling Green, but Polk has scored at least 10 points in eight of the team's first 14 games this year, including a pair of double-doubles. In the team's win over Towson, he posted 17 points and a career-high 16 rebounds. Earlier in the year, he picked up his second career double-double with 13 points and 11 rebounds against Milwaukee. He has just missed double-doubles on three other occassions and is averaging 10.1 points per game, a large increase over his average of 6.1 points a year ago. Over the last 11 games, he is averaging just shy of a double-double with 10.2 points and 9.4 rebounds.
SENIOR LEADERSHIP
Bowling Green's three senior post players -- Otis Polk, Erik Marschall, and Marc Larson -- have all stepped up their games and produced at a higher level than the trio did a year ago. Those three are combining for 23.2 points and 17.9 rebounds per game, a much higher total than last year's 14.6 points and 12.0 rebounds.
OTIS ADDS THE BOARDS
Otis Polk has been dominant on the boards this year, averaging 8.2 rebounds per game (third in the MAC) and has been especially strong on the offensive glass, leading the Mid-American Conference with 3.9 offensive boards per game. He had a career-high 16 rebounds in the team's win over Towson and has grabbed at least six rebounds in 11 straight games, averaging 9.4 per contest during that stretch.
CONSISTENT LINEUP
Through the first 10 games of the year, Bowling Green Head Coach Louis Orr started the same lineup of Joe Jakubowski, Dee Brown, Scott Thomas, Marc Larson, and Otis Polk. In the past four games, Marschall has been inserted into the lineup for Larson and both have responded. Marschall had a career-high 10 rebounds at Towson and is averaging 7.0 points and 6.5 rebounds per contest as a starter. Larson posted eight points and a career-best nine rebounds against St. Louis in 26 minutes off the bench. He is also 9-for-11 (81.8 percent) from the free-throw line since coming off the bench.
RIDING THE PINE
In 2008-09, Bowling Green's depth was a strength early in the season until injuries forced the Falcons into a shorter rotation. In 2009-10, BGSU's bench has been a telling factor in how successful the Falcons are. In the team's seven wins, the bench has outscored the opponent's bench 112-88 but in the seven losses has been outscored 203-102.
FEED THE POST
Head Coach Louis Orr's philosophy is to play an inside-out game and the Falcons have scored at least 20 points in the paint in 12-of-14 games, peaking with 50 against Towson. In that contest, the Falcons dominated the paint 50-21.
DIRECTING THE OFFENSE
Junior Joe Jakubowski and freshman Jordon Crawford have done an excellent job of running an efficient offense so far in the 2009-10 season. Jakubowski ranks second in the MAC (and 60th nationally) with a 2.25 assist/turnover ratio, while Crawford's 1.63 ratio would be sixth in the league if he had enough assists to qualify for the top 10.
SOPHOMORE SENSATIONS
Scott Thomas and Dee Brown had somewhat up-and-down freshman campaigns in 2008-09, but both players have taken on a bigger role on the team in 2009-10. Thomas and Brown have both started every game this year and Brown leads the team in scoring, while Thomas ranks third. Brown scored a career-high 20 points against Florida International and was then named MAC East Division Player of the Week after guiding the team to wins over Savannah State and Fordham. Along with averaging 10.2 points per game, he is 16-of-35 on three-pointers, leading the MAC at 45.7 percent. Thomas is third on the team at 10.0 points per game and is averaging 5.9 points and 2.6 assists, ranking second on the team with 14 steals and adding nine blocks. He posted his first career double-double with career-highs of 21 points and 10 rebounds against Buffalo.
DEE-LIGHTFUL
Sophomore guard Dee Brown has risen to the occasion since posting his first career double-digit scoring game against Milwaukee. Since that time, Brown has scored in double figures in 8-of-11 games and was named Mid-American Conference East Division Player of the Week on Dec. 7 after averaging 10.0 points and 5.5 rebounds per game, while shooting 56 percent from the field, in wins over Savannah State and Fordham. He has carried the team offensively during critical stretches of key non-conference wins against Florida International, Fordham and Canisius. He leads the MAC in three-point shooting at 45.7 percent.
YOUR HALFTIME ENTERTAINMENT -- THE FAT LADY
So far in 2009-10, Bowling Green has had little reason to play the final 20 minutes of games. The team leading at the break in each of BGSU's 14 games has gone on to win the contest.
GETTING THERE IS HALF THE BATTLE
Through the first three games of the season, Bowling Green struggled to get to the free-throw line and that culminated with just two free-throw attempts at Iowa. During that stretch, the Falcons attempted just 9.0 free-throws per game, 28 less than their opponents. However, over the past eleven games, Bowling Green has been to the line an average of 21.7 times (239 total), 35 more than opponents.
WE MUST PROTECT THIS HOUSE (THAT ROARS)
Anderson Arena has always been a difficult place for opponents and the Falcons are 4-2 in 2009-10. The Falcons are 451-182 (.712) all-time in Anderson Arena and 165-56 (.747) in the past 17 years.
DEFENSE WINS
Bowling Green has held opponents below 44 percent shooting in all seven of its victories, a trend for success that has been the norm under Head Coach Louis Orr. A year ago, BGSU held 26-of-33 opponents below 45 percent shooting and the Falcons are just 3-16 under Orr when an opponent reaches that 45 percent threshold, as Xavier, Iowa, Detroit, and Temple has. Opponents shot just 39.3 percent in 2008-09 which was the lowest total since the 1963-64 season. That team also held opponents to just 61.2 points per game, the lowest total since the 1949-50 season. In the Falcons' last ten games, of which BGSU is 6-4, opponents are shooting just 39.5 percent from the field and scoring only 60.7 points per contest.
BASKETBALL U.
Bowling Green fans have the opportunity to see the best basketball in the Mid-American Conference night in and night out. The 2009-10 men's and women's teams are a combined 20-11 overall and 3-2 in MAC play, looking to build on last year's combined marks of 48-19 and 26-6 in conference play, easily the best in the MAC in both. Bowling Green was the No. 1 seed for both the men's and women's tournament, the first time that has occurred in the MAC since Kent State was the top seed for both tournaments in 2002. It also marks the first time both the Bowling Green men's and women's teams qualified for postseason play since 1990. Only Eastern Michigan (21-9) has a better overall combined record this year than BGSU and only Akron (4-1) has a better combined MAC record.
ROAD WARRIORS
A year ago, the Bowling Green basketball team used a road warrior mentality to take the Mid-American Conference regular season championship, winning six consecutive road games during one stretch of league play. This year, the Falcons have opened the season by going 3-5 on the road, including 3-2 on the team's five-game non-conference road stretch. Last year, the six-game road conference winning streak was the longest in program history. It was also the longest MAC road winning streak since the 2001-02 Kent State team won seven consecutive MAC road contests. Despite that success, Bowling Green did not win a non-conference road game a year ago and snapped a nine-game losing streak in those contests with a 67-46 win over Fordham earlier this year.
GIANT KILLERS
Bowling Green tends to have success when a team carries a top 25 ranking into a game at Anderson Arena. The Falcons have won four consecutive home games against nationally ranked opponents, most recently an 89-83 win over No. 23 Kent State on March 1, 2008. BGSU defeated fifth-ranked Michigan State (all rankings according to Associated Press) in December of 1990, topped No. 23 Eastern Michigan on Valentine's Day, 1996, and defeated No. 25 Miami in February of 1999. The Brown and Orange's last home loss to a top 25 opponent came more than three decades ago to No. 16 Marquette on Dec. 6, 1978. Since the Associated Press began conducting a poll on Jan. 20, 1949, the Falcons have a record of 22-48 against nationally-ranked foes. BGSU is now 13-9 all-time in home games vs. AP Top 25 opponents, including a 7-5 mark since Anderson Arena opened prior to the 1960-61 season. The Falcons' last road win against a team ranked in the top 25 came when the team beat No. 25 Michigan State on Dec. 18, 1989 by a score of 81-79.
TO BE THE MAN, YOU'VE GOTTA BEAT THE MAN
In back-to-back games, Bowling Green beat head coaches with more than 450 career wins. In wins over Towson and St. Louis, the Falcons defeated coaching legends Pat Kennedy and Rick Majerus. Kennedy has won more than 450 games leading teams at Iona, Florida State, DePaul, Montana, and Towson, while Majerus has reached that mark at Marquette, Ball State, Utah, and St. Louis.
DISSECTING THE SCHEDULE
Bowling Green's only remaining non-conference game will be a home game in the ESPNU BracketBusters series. Overall, the 13 game non-conference slate is added to the 16 game MAC schedule for 29 total games, one less than a year ago. Eight of the team's 28 games against known opponents will take place against a team that competed in the postseason a year ago. Xavier was a No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament, Temple was a No. 11 seed and was ranked No. 21 in the country at the time of the contest, and Akron, who the Falcons play twice, was a No. 13 seed. Bowling Green will also play Buffalo twice and the Bulls competed in the College Basketball Invitational. Finally, Kent State played in the CollegeInsider.com Tournament and will face the Falcons twice in MAC play.
FALCONS ADD TWO IN EARLY SIGNING PERIOD
The Bowling Green coaching staff signed two prep players during the fall early signing period this year, adding 6-foot-6, 200 pound win Craig Sealey and 6-10, 230 pound forward/center Cameron Black. Sealey plays at Brookhaven High School in Columbus, Ohio and is described as an explosive wing who runs the floor well, is a slasher, and strong offensive rebounder. Black plays at Kent Roosevelt High School in Kent, Ohio who is a presence on the defensive end and has a high basketball IQ.
PICKED FIFTH
Despite winning the Mid-American Conference regular season championship a year ago, the MAC News Media Panel picked the Falcons to finish finish in the East Division in 2009-10. Bowling Green had 54 total points, including one first-place vote, to finish in front of Ohio. Defending MAC Tournament champion Akron was selected to win the East, followed by Kent State, Buffalo, and Miami (Ohio). Central Michigan was picked to win the West, followed by Northern Illinois, Eastern Michigan, Ball State, Western Michigan, and Toledo. The Falcons also did not have a player selected to the preseason East Division All-MAC team.
A FIRST TIME FOR EVERYTHING
Six players saw their first action in a Bowling Green uniform against Wayne State, including five who played their first collegiate game. Darion Goins scored seven points in his BGSU debut after playing two seasons at San Jose State. Jordon Crawford, Luke Kraus, James Erger, A'uston Calhoun, and Danny McElroy all played in their first collegiate game. Crawford, Kraus, and McElroy scored their first collegiate points against Wayne State, while Calhoun did the same against Xavier and Erger knocked down a three-pointer for his first career points against Fordham. Also, sophomores Scott Thomas and Dee Brown each got the call to start the first two games for the first time since coming off the bench for the entire 2008-09 season.
COACHING PEDIGREE
Bowling Green State University men's basketball coach Louis Orr was named the 2008-09 Mid-American Conference Coach of the Year by vote of the MAC News Media Association. It is the second time Orr has received a conference Coach of the Year award. He was named the Big East Coach of the Year following the 2002-03 season after guiding Seton Hall to the NIT. In the offseason, Orr signed a contract extension with Bowling Green which lasts through the 2013-14 season.
RIGHT HAND MAN
While Head Coach Louis Orr has a long history of success, assistant coach LaMonta Stone is also recognized as one of the best in the country. Over the summer, HoopScoop.com named Stone the fourth-best mid-major assistant coach in the country, while College Insider named him the 15th best mid-major assistant coach in the nation.
QUICK STARTS
Bowling Green's 67-45 win over Wayne State to open the season was the team's 18th consecutive home-opening victory, moving the team to 83-12 all-time in home openers, including a mark of 45-5 in Anderson Arena. In season openers, the team is now 69-26 all-time and has won two in a row.
IT WILL STILL ROAR
On Sept. 3, Bowling Green State University broke ground on the Stroh Center, the new home of Bowling Green men's and women's basketball and volleyball. Anderson Arena, "The House That Roars", will continue to host the Falcons through the end of the 2010-11 season. The Stroh Center will seat approximately 4,700 fans and is located near Doyt Perry Stadium. While Anderson Arena was named after Harold "Andy" Anderson, a long time BGSU athletics director and men's basketball coach who is also a member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, the Stroh Center will continue to honor him. The club area in the new facility has been named the Anderson Club.
AROUND THE DIAL
Bowling Green will be on regional and national television a number of times this year. All BGSU home games not being broadcast nationally appear locally on BCSN on the Buckeye Cable Network. The Feb. 27 home game against Akron will be broadcast on Fox Sports Net as part of a televised doubleheader with the BGSU women's basketball game that day.
CATCH THE FALCONS
• Bowling Green's men's basketball games can be listened to through the Falcon Sports Radio Network with Todd Walker, the voice of the Falcons, handling the play-by-play duties. Former Bowling Green basketball player Kirk Cowan does the color commentary at all BGSU home games as well. Games can be heard on the flagship station for BGSU athletics, WFRO 99.1 FM. Games can also be heard on WIMA 1150 AM in Lima, WONW 1280 AM in Defiance, and in Cleveland on both WHKW 1220 AM and WHK 1420 AM.
• All game broadcasts and the Falcons Nest Coaches Show can be heard via live stream on the official site of Falcon athletics, www.BGSUfalcons.com. Shortly after broadcasts are complete, an archived stream is available to listen to as well.
• Live statistics for all BGSU home men's basketball games are available on the web, allowing fans to view in-game stats as they occur, and may be accessed by going to www.BGSUFalcons.com. Falcon fans can utilize live stats for home events in numerous BGSU sports, including football, men's and women's basketball, hockey, men's and women's soccer, volleyball, baseball, softball, and gymnastics.
Derrick Butler, DaJion Humphrey, & Coach Simon Postgame Interview (Mar. 7, 2025)
Saturday, March 08
Marcus Johnson, Javontae Campbell, & Coach Simon Postgame Interview (Mar. 1, 2025)
Saturday, March 01
Javontae Campbell, Derrick Butler, & Coach Simon Postgame Interview (Feb. 21, 2025)
Saturday, February 22
Wilguens Jr. Exacte, Javontae Campbell, & Coach Simon Postgame Interview (Feb. 18, 2025)
Wednesday, February 19