University of Washington

TM 2000-01 Men’s December 21, 2000 MEDIA RELATIONS: (206) 543–2230 FAX: (206) 543–5000 CONTACT: Dan Lepse INTERNET: www.gohuskies.com

Wed. - Fri., Dec. 20Ð22 ¥ UW at Puerto Rico Holiday Classic Huskies Meet #17 Ala- Eugene Guerra Sports Complex (2,500); San Juan, P.R. bama in Second Round Thu., Dec. 21 — UW vs. #17 Alabama; 3:30 pm PST (7:30 pm AST) Fri., Dec. 22 — Winner vs. Clemson/Cincinnati winner; 3:30 pm PST (7:30 pm AST) UW in Winner’s Bracket of — Loser vs. Clemson/Cincinnati loser; 1:00 pm PST (5:00 pm AST) Puerto Rico Holiday Classic The Washington Huskies (5-3) face their most difficult task to date this season, meeting undefeated and 17th-ranked Alabama (8-0) on Thursday, Dec. 21 in the semifinal round of Eighth-year coach Bob Bender posted his the Puerto Rico Holiday Classic. Tip-off is 3:30 p.m. Pacific Time (7:30 p.m. Atlantic Time) 100th win at Washington on Wednesday. at the Eugene Guerra Sports Complex. Washington won a 67-47 first-round decision over Thalo Green scored a career-high 20 points host American-Puerto Rico on Wednesday while the Crimson Tide advanced to the second against American, the first 20- game round by virtue of a 64-56 victory over Northern Iowa. The two schools have never before by a Husky player this season. met in men’s basketball. The winner has a championship-game date with the Cincinnati- Clemson winner on Friday, Dec. 22 at 3:30 p.m. PST (7:30 p.m. AST). The losers meet at The Huskies are playing in their third straight 1 p.m. PST (5 p.m. AST) to determine who takes home the third-place trophy and who regular-season tournament. They won the finishes fifth in the tournament. The Huskies are in the midst of a 10-day, 7,658-mile journey 1998 Big Island Invitational and were fifth at that began in Miami on Dec. 16 with a 63-61 victory at Florida International. Between the 1999 Great Alaska Shootout. Christmas and New Year’s Day, the Huskies host a pair of home games at Bank of America Senior forward Will Perkins has four Arena, against UC Irvine on Dec. 28 at 7 p.m. and versus San Diego on Dec. 30 at 2 p.m. double-doubles. No UW player regis- Puerto Rico Holiday Classic Field: Along with Washington, the Puerto Rico Holiday tered a double-double last season. Classic field includes 2000 NCAA Tournament participant Cincinnati, Atlantic Coast 2001 UW Schedule & Results Conference competitor Clemson and Southeast Conference member Alabama. Rounding (5Ð3, 0-0 in Pac-10) out the field are host American University-Puerto Rico, the Huskies’ first-round foe, Florida Nov. 21 UTEP (@KeyArena) L 61–73 Atlantic, Northern Iowa and Youngstown State. Washington meets either Cincinnati or Nov. 25 New Mexico State W 81–77 Clemson on Friday in the third and final round of the tournament. Nov. 28 Portland State W 94–63 TV/Radio Coverage: Thursday’s Washington-Alabama game will not be televised. All Nov. 30 at Wichita State W 69-66 Husky men’s basketball games are broadcast live on KOMO Radio (AM 1000) and its Dec. 2 at Gonzaga L 74–86 affiliates by play-by-play announcer Bob Rondeau. The radio broadcasts can be accessed Dec. 5 Saint Louis L 61–69 via the internet at: http://www.audionet.com/schools/washington/ Dec. 16 at Florida International W 63–61 Dec. 20-22 at Puerto Rico Holiday Classic Projected Husky Starting Lineup: Dec. 20 at American-PR W 67–47 Washington Huskies (5Ð3, 0Ð0 in Pacific-10 Conference) Dec. 21 vs. Alabama 3:30 pm Pos.-No. Name Hgt. Wgt. Yr. Hometown Points Rebs. Dec. 21 vs. Clemson or Cincinnati 10:30 am/3:30 pm F — 1 Will Perkins 6-8 195 Sr. Omaha, Neb. 13.3 8.4 Dec. 28 UC Irvine 7:00 pm F — 21 Greg Clark 6-7 225 Sr. San Diego, Calif. 7.9 2.8 Dec. 30 San Diego 2:00 pm C — 44 Marlon Shelton 6-10 260 Jr. Rochester, Mich. 5.1 4.4 Jan. 4 • at UCLA 7:30 pm G — 23 Michael Johnson 6-4 195 Sr. Seattle, Wash. 10.0 3.8 Jan. 6 • at USC 7:00 pm G — 32 Bryan Brown 6-3 205 Sr. Mercer Island, Wash. 8.0 1.9 Jan. 11 • Arizona State 7:00 pm Tournament Trends: The Puerto Rico Holiday Classic marks Washington’s third Jan. 13 • Arizona (Fox NW) 7:00 pm regular-season tournament appearance in as many years. The Huskies won the 1998 Big Jan. 18 • at Oregon 7:00 pm Island Invitational in Hilo, Hi. with a 76-60 victory over Georgia Tech. They finished fifth Jan. 20 • at Oregon State (Fox NW) 7:00 pm at the 1999 Great Alaska Shootout last year in Anchorage. Jan. 25 • Stanford (Fox Net) 7:30 pm Jan. 27 • California 2:00 pm Time Zones: The UW hoop squad traversed four time zones to play in Puerto Rico which Feb. 3 • Washington State(Fox Net) 3:00 pm is in the Atlantic Time Zone and is four hours earlier than Pacific Time. Feb. 8 • at Arizona (Fox NW) 5:30 pm Notable: Bob Bender posted his 100th win at Washington on Wednesday and ranks fourth Feb. 10 • at Arizona State (Fox Net) 5:00 pm all-time at the school. Only Hec Edmundson (488), Marv Harshman (246) and Tippy Dye Feb. 15 • Oregon State 7:00 pm (156) won more games as the Husky head coach ... For the third straight season, Washington Feb. 17 • Oregon (Fox Net) 5:00 pm dispatched the host school in a tournament. UW beat Hawaii-Hilo in the first round of the Feb. 22 • at California 7:30 pm 1998 Big Island Invitational and defeated Alaska-Anchorage in the 1999 Great Alaska Feb. 24 • Stanford 5:00 pm Shootout ... Thalo Green became the first Husky to post a 20-point game this season, Mar. 3 • at Washington State 1:00 pm scoring 20 against American on Wednesday ... The team that registered the higher shooting Mar. 8 • USC 7:00 pm percentage from the field won all seven UW games this season ... Washington had a player Mar. 10 • UCLA (Fox Net) 3:00 pm register double-figure rebounds five times this season. Last year, UW players accounted for Pacific Times Listed • Pac-10 Game + Exhibition only seven double-figure efforts during the entire campaign. Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000) Page 2

Travel Data: Washington Assistant Media Relations Director Dan Lepse will travel with the team and be available to handle any media requests. He will stay with the team Media Information in San Juan, Puerto Rico from Sunday, Dec. 17 through Saturday, Dec. 23 at the University of Washington Wyndham Condado Plaza Hotel. Phone: (787) 721-1000, Fax: (787) 721-4613. Athletic Department, Box 354070 Messages can be left for Lepse at his office voice mail: (206) 685-3120. Seattle, WA 98195-4070 Injury Report: The status of Washington players for the next game: Box 354070 • Probable– Will Perkins, Missed practice all week while battling a virus that was first Enrollment: 34,000 (25,000 undergrad) discovered Saturday after the Florida International game. Played only 10 minutes in Founded: Nov. 4, 1861 Wednesday’s game against American. President: Richard McCormick • Probable– Bryan Brown, Bruised his thigh during practice this week and was limted Director of Athletics: Barbara Hedges to 16 minutes in Wednesday’s game against American. Colors: Purple & Gold • Out – DeMarcus Williams, Sidelined since the exhibition opener with a sore right Nickname: Huskies plantar fascia (foot). Also has a sore back and will likely apply for a medical red-shirt. Head Coach: Bob Bender (8th year) Career Record (12th year): 160-164 The Alabama Series: UW Record (8th year): 100-107 > Washington and Alabama have never played each other in men’s basketball. 2000 Record: 10-20 > The Huskies have a 3-4 all-time record against Southeastern Conference oppo- 2000 Pac-10 Record: 5-13 (8th, tie) nents: Florida (1-1), Kentucky (0-1), LSU (1-2) and Mississippi State (1-0). Starters Returning / Lost: 2 / 3 Lettermen Returning / Lost: 9 / 4 > Third-year Crimson Tide coach Mark Gottfried, who was an assistant coach at UCLA under Jim Harrick, has never competed against UW as a head coach. Husky Media Relations > In his eighth season at UW, Bob Bender has never coached against Alabama. Jim Daves, Assistant AD Dan Lepse, Men’s Basketball SID The Season So Far: Coach Bob Bender posted his 100th win at Washington with a E-mail: [email protected] 67-47 victory on Wednesday over American in the first round of the Puerto Rico Holiday Main Office Phone: (206) 543-2230 Classic. UW began its current four-game road trip with a 63-61 victory at Florida Lepse Direct Phone: (206) 685-3120 International (Dec. 16) on Greg Clark’s late basket. The Huskies fell to Saint Louis 69- Fax: (206) 543-5000 61 in their last home game (Dec. 5). Washington achieved a split on its first road trip of the season, winning 69-66 at Wichita State (Nov. 30) before an 86-74 loss at Gonzaga Ticket Office (Dec. 2). UW capped a three-game homestand with a 94-63 victory over Portland State (206) 543-2200 (Nov. 28), registering the most points in its last 67 games and its largest margin of victory Bank of America Arena (31 points) in 61 games. The Huskies returned to their on-campus venue in triumphant 3870 Montlake Boulevard N.E. fashion on Nov. 25, defeating New Mexico State 81-77. Washington played all of its Capacity (built): 10,000 (1927) home games last season, and this year’s season opener, at KeyArena in downtown Seattle. Renovated: March 1999 - Nov. 2000 UW opened the season with a 73-61 loss to Texas-El Paso (Nov. 21). The season-opening, Directions: Located on the southeast sec- three-game homestand was a welcome change for the Huskies who were on the road for tion of the Washington campus and 40 minutes the first 22 days of the 1999-2000 season. They played their first six games on the road north of Sea-Tac Airport. From Interstate-5 take last season and didn’t play in Seattle until Dec. 13. Washington won both of its exhibition the Hwy. 520 exit toward Bellevue-Kirkland games this season, rallying for an 83-81 overtime victory at Seattle Pacific (Nov. 10) (east). Travel 1/4 mile and take the Montlake before beating Brewster Packing 84-80 (Nov. 14). Boulevard exit. At the end of the off ramp there Last UW Game: UW 67, American-Puerto Rico 47 (Dec. 20, 2000; Bayamon, is a stop light at Montlake Boulevard. Turn P.R.) — Bob Bender became the fourth coach to reach the 100-win plateau at Washington LEFT. Travel across the Montlake Bridge. Husky which defeated host American University-Puerto Rico 67-47 in a first-round Puerto Rico Stadium will be visible on the RIGHT with Bank Holiday Classic matchup at the Guerra Sports Complex. Thalo Green scored a career- of America Arena visible to the north of the high 20 points for the Huskies (5-3). He hit 7-of-9 shots from the field, including his only stadium. To access E-10, E-11 or E-12 parking 3-point attempt, to become the first UW player to register a 20-point game this season. losts, turn RIGHT at the stoplight by the stadium Washington scored the game’s first nine points en route to a 35-23 halftime advantage. marquee. To access the Graves Building, con- The Huskies replicated that feat, opening the second half with nine unanswered points. tinue through the stoplight and turn RIGHT Green capped the run with a hook shot and , pushing the margin to 44-23 with immediately after the pedestrian overpass bridge. 16:47 left in the game. The NCAA Division II Pirates (1-3) rallied to trim the deficit to Internet 48-40 on a free throw by Ivan Rios with 9:48 remaining. Sparking the rally was a full- www.gohuskies.com court press that forced 11 Husky turnovers during a six-minute span. American held UW scoreless for a 4:15 stretch during a 19-4 streak. Washington responded to the Pirates’ Info Connection 1-800-300-2050 surge with a 13-3 run, capped by a layin from senior forward Greg Clark at 6:09 that (call 770-399-0096 for Personal ID Number) extended the lead to a comfortable 60-43. Clark finished with 10 points and eight 3715 — UW release rebounds, all in the second half. He led a 45-27 rebounding advantage for the Huskies. 3718 — UW latest game boxscore The UW defense limited American to 28-percent shooting from the field (14-of-51). The 1015 — Pac-10 release Pirates missed all 11 of their 3-point attempts. UW’s season leading scorer, senior forward Weekly Bob Bender Radio Show Will Perkins, compiled seven points and six rebounds in only 10 minutes due to a virus. Mondays at 6 p.m. on KOMO AM 1000 Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000) Page 3

2001 UW Victory / Defeat Margins: Last Year’s Record after 8 games: 4Ð4 Last Year’s Record after 9 games: 4Ð5 Margins 123456789101112131415161718192021222331 UW Wins 111 1 1 ------UW Losses 12

Bender Bio: Bob Bender has participated in the NCAA Tournament at every school with which he has been affiliated, including back-to-back berths with Washington in 1998 and 1999. He has an eight-year record of 100Ð107 with the Huskies. The UW tied for eighth in the Pac-10 with a 5-13 record in 2000 and had a 10-20 overall record that snapped a string of four consecutive winning seasons. In 1999, Washington was 17-12, capped by an NCAA Tournament appearance. The 1998 Huskies posted a 20-10 record that marked the school’s finest winning percentage since 1985. Among the 1998 Husky highlights were their first 20-win season since 1987, their first NCAA berth since 1986 and their first Sweet 16 appearance since 1984. The 1997 UW team posted a 17Ð11 record, capped by the Huskies’ second straight National Invitation Tournament appearance. Washington’s record improved four straight seasons under Bender, including a 16-12 mark in 1996 after which he was voted the Pac-10 Coach of the Year. The UW was 5-22 in 1994 and 10- 17 in 1995. His 100 victories rank fourth among all-time Washington coaches. Bender, who began his career with a four-year stint at Illinois State (1990-93), has a 12-year career record of 160Ð164. His Illinois State squads were 60-57, earning two Missouri Valley Conference championships, one conference tournament title and an NCAA Tournament berth in 1990. Prior to his inaugural head coaching assignment at ISU, Bender served as an assistant on Mike Krzyzewski’s Duke staff (1983-1989). The Blue Devils qualified for the NCAA Tournament in each of Bender’s six seasons on the staff, including four trips to the Final Four. Bender, 43, is the only individual to play on two different teams in the NCAA Championship game. He was a freshman on Bobby Knight’s undefeated 1976 Indiana team and played at Duke from 1977-80, including an appearance in the 1978 title game against Kentucky. Coaching Staff: Bob Bender’s staff is comprised of associate head coach Byron Boudreaux along with assistant coaches Eric Hughes and Al Hairston. Boudreaux begins his sixth season on the staff, his second as the associate. Hughes has been with Bender during his entire seven-year tenure at UW. Hairston, a former Seattle Sonic and legendary prep coach at Seattle’s Garfield High School, begins his first season. He replaces Jason Hamilton who left to pursue interests outside of coaching. Campaign 2000-01: A five-man senior class is the nucleus around which eighth-year coach Bob Bender seeks to form a winning unit. Washington finished with a 10-20 record last season, snapping a string of four consecutive winning seasons that culminated in postseason berths. The Huskies tied for eighth place in the Pacific-10 Conference with a 5-13 record. In addition to the five seniors, who collectively have played 317 career games, the roster includes four other returning lettermen (9 total), four scholarship newcomers and two walk-ons. Two primary starters return, seniors Will Perkins and Michael Johnson along with senior forward Thalo Green who has been a part-time starter for three seasons. No returning player averaged double-figure points last season. Johnson is the leading returning scorer with a 9.9-point average last year while Perkins averaged 7.8 points and a team-high 5.9 rebounds. Green averaged 6.3 points and 4.9 rebounds per game in 1999-2000. Highlighting the season is the return to the on-campus arena that has Husky hopes hovering. The 17,072-seat KeyArena in downtown Seattle never really felt like home despite an average attendance of 7,851. As a result, UW had with a better record in enemy arenas (6-9) than at home (4-9) for only the third time in school history.

2000-01 Washington Basketball Roster (* Used red-shirt season, % Will red shirt the 2000-01 season) No Name Pos Hgt Wgt Yr Exp Hometown (High School/Junior College) 00 David Hudson % G 6-0 185 Fr. HS Seattle, Wash. (Rainier Beach HS) 1 Will Perkins F 6-8 195 Sr. 1V Omaha, Neb. (Omaha South HS / Iowa Western JC) 2 DeMarcus Williams F 6-9 270 Fr. HS Upland, Calif. (Upland HS) 3 Sterling Brown G 6-4 190 Fr. HS Woodinville, Wash. (Woodinville HS) 10 C.J. Massingale G 6-3 195 Fr. HS Tacoma, Wash. (Mount Tahoma HS) 15 Doug Wrenn % F 6-6 210 So. TR Seattle, Wash. (O’Dea HS/Connecticut) 20 Curtis Allen G 6-0 160 Fr. HS Tacoma, Wash. (Wilson HS) 21 Greg Clark F 6-7 225 Sr. * 2V San Diego, Calif. (Grossmont HS / Long Beach State) 22 Travis Duty G 6-3 175 Jr. SQ Seattle, Wash. (O’Dea HS) 23 Michael Johnson G 6-4 195 Sr. 3V Seattle, Wash. (Ballard HS) 31 Grant Leep F 6-7 225 Jr. 2V Mount Vernon, Wash. (Mount Vernon HS) 32 Bryan Brown G 6-3 205 Sr. 3V Mercer Island, Wash. (Mercer Island HS) 34 Ben Coffee F 6-5 200 So. 1V Portland, Ore. (Benson Tech HS) 42 Thalo Green F 6-7 220 Sr. * 3V Salem, Ore. (South Salem HS) 44 Marlon Shelton C 6-10 270 Jr. 2V Rochester, Mich. (Rochester HS) 50 David Dixon C 6-11 300 Jr. 1V Houston, Texas (Westbury Christian HS / Tyler JC) Head Coach: Bob Bender, eighth year (Duke, 1980) Record: Overall (12 years): 160-164 (.494) Record at Washington (eight years): 100-107 (.483) Associate Head Coach: Byron Boudreaux, sixth year (Tulsa, 1987) Assistant Coaches: Eric Hughes, eighth year (Cal State Hayward, 1989), Al Hairston, first year (Washington, 1972) Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000) Page 4 Hoopsters Honor CW: Like their football counterparts, the Husky basketball team 2001 Individual Superlatives is wearing patches on their jerseys to support senior Curtis Williams who suffered a DoubleÐDoubles (points & rebounds) spinal cord injury during an Oct. 28 football game at Stanford. The UW basketball Will Perkins ...... 4 players will display the initials “CW” to honor Williams who is in a San Jose, Calif. DoubleÐFigure Points rehabilitation center. Will Perkins ...... 7 Double Trouble: Senior forward Will Perkins registered double-doubles in four of Michael Johnson ...... 4 Washington’s first eight games. No Husky player recorded a double-double during the Thalo Green ...... 4 entire season last year. Perkins had 15 points and 10 rebounds against Texas-El Paso Bryan Brown ...... 3 (Nov. 21) followed by a 14-point, 10-rebound performance against New Mexico State Greg Clark ...... 3 (Nov. 25) and an 11-point, 12-rebound outing against Portland State (Nov. 28). The 30ÐPoint Game Omaha, Nebraska native had his three-game double-double streak stopped at Wichita None ...... 1 State (Nov. 30) as he had a team-high 16 points, but only five rebounds. He rebounded 20ÐPoint Game with an 18-point, 11-board effort at Gonzaga (Dec. 2). Perkins leads the team in both Thalo Green ...... 1 scoring (13.3 ppg) and rebounds (8.4 rpg) while shooting 53 percent (41-78). Last year, DoubleÐFigure Rebounds he led the Huskies in rebounds (5.9 rpg), percentage (47.9%) and blocks (39). Will Perkins ...... 4 Hair Raising Experience: Senior forward Thalo Green avoided the barber’s Marlon Shelton...... 1 shears for 16 months before taking his place in the chair at the Montlake Cut barbershop DoubleÐFigure Assists on July 12, 2000. Green had his hair cut for the first time since March of 1999 and None donated his hair to the Wigs for Kids, a national, non-profit organization that solicits 5-or More Assists donations in an effort to provide relief for children in situations of hair loss. Hair Curtis Allen ...... 2 donations are woven into wigs and given to children affected by hair loss due to chemotherapy, burns and other medical conditions. “I’m in a position, playing Bryan Brown ...... 1 basketball at Washington, to give exposure and promote the Wigs for Kids program,” Will Perkins ...... 1 Green explains. “I decided to grow my hair out throughout the whole season and try 20ÐRebound Game to raise awareness for the program. It seemed like the perfect opportunity to do None something good for a good cause.” Green regularly drew taunts from spectators at UW Leading Scorer (ties included) opposing arenas last season as his curly, red hair frequently flopped into his eyes and Will Perkins ...... 4 eventually required a headband to control it. That shaggy coif was in stark contrast to Thalo Green ...... 4 his sophomore season in 1998-99 when Green’s head was almost completely shaven. Michael Johnson ...... 1 Sonics & Sons: Two former Seattle SuperSonics have sons on the 2000-01 UW Top Rebounder (ties included) Washington basketball roster. The former NBA players (and sons) are: Fred Brown Will Perkins ...... 5 (Bryan) and (Marlon). A graduate of Iowa, Fred Brown was the Marlon Shelton...... 2 Sonics’ all-time leading scorer with 14,018 points. That record was broken this season Thalo Green ...... 1 by Gary Payton. Brown played his entire 13-year NBA career (1972-84) in Seattle and Greg Clark ...... 1 was a 1976 all-star. Bryan wears the same jersey No. 32 that his father had retired by UW Top Assister (ties included) the Sonics. Shelton was a 1975 All-Pac-8 Conference selection at Oregon State. He Bryan Brown ...... 3 played 10 NBA seasons (1977-86) and was a 1982 all-star. Shelton played from 1979- Michael Johnson ...... 2 83 in Seattle. Brown and Shelton were members of Seattle’s 1979 NBA Championship Curtis Allen ...... 1 squad. Two other former sons of Sonics were on the team in 1999, Donald Watts (father Will Perkins ...... 1 Slick) was a four-year letterman and walk-on Michael Westphal (father Paul) left after his freshman year. An additional tie to the Sonics is first-year Husky assistant coach Al Hairston who played with Seattle’s NBA team in 1969 and 1970. Frequent Flyers: The Huskies have accumulated thousands of air miles on lengthy road trips during the last four years. This season is no different as they make a 10-day, 7,658-mile round trip to Puerto Rico with a stopover in Miami, Fla. for one game against Florida International. Washington traveled nearly 10,000 air miles during a two-week span last year, flying from Seattle to Moraga, Calif. (782 miles), from Moraga to Anchorage, Ak. (2,227) and from Alaska back to Seattle (1,445). After two days at home, the Huskies boarded a plane for Wilmington, N.C. (2,460) where they took a bus to Norfolk, Va. and flew back to Seattle (2,585). During the 1998-99 season, UW amassed over 8,000 miles during a 10-day stretch, traveling from Seattle to Hawai’i to Chicago and back to Seattle. In 1998, Washington traveled to South Alabama for a single game. Later that year the Huskies criss-crossed the country twice during the 1998 NCAA Tournament. UW flew from Seattle to Washington, D.C. for the first two rounds, returned to Seattle for one day and flew to Greensboro, N.C. for the Sweet 16. Home Sweet Home: The Huskies returned to their on-campus basketball venue after a one-season absence. They are playing home games at Bank of America Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion. The Pavilion underwent a 19-month renovation from March of 1999 to November of 2000. The interior was completely redesigned while the building’s exterior went unchanged. Despite an increased seating capacity from 7,900 to approximately 10,000, the arena possesses a more intimate, basketball-only configuration. The Huskies have won 748 games in the Pavilion since it opened on Dec. 27, 1927, more victories than any other school in its current arena. Washington compiled a 47-9 record in its final four seasons (1996-99) at the old Pavilion before playing last season at KeyArena in downtown Seattle during renovations. Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000) Page 5 2001 UW Record When The Cincinnati Series: > Cincinnati and Washington met on four previous occasions with the Bearcats Ahead at Halftime 2–1 owning a 3-1 series advantage. Tied at Halftime 1–0 After winning the inaugural meeting 91-81 on Jan. 14, 1972 in Seattle, the Huskies Behind at Halftime 2–2 > lost the last three meetings with Cincinnati. The Bearcats won 82-80 (12/23/73) Overtime Games 0–0 and 88-72 (12/3/93) at home and 82-69 in Seattle (2/10/97). Three-Point or less Final Margin 2–0 FG % is above 50 % 3–0 > The Huskies have a 14-16 all-time record against Conference USA opponents: Cincinnati (1-3), DePaul (2-2), Houston (3-1), Louisville (1-1), Marquette (0-2), FG % is exactly 50 % 0–0 Memphis (1-1) and Saint Louis (6-6). FG % is below 50 % 2–3 Opponent FG % is above 50% 1–1 > Twelfth-year Bearcat coach Bob Huggins has a 2-0 record against Washington. Opponent FG % is below 50% 4–2 > In his eighth year at UW, Bob Bender in winless in two meetings with Cincinnati. Outshooting Opponent 5–0 The Last Meeting: #8 Cincinnati 82, UW 69 (Feb. 10, 1997; Seattle) — Danny Outshot by Opponent 0–3 Fortson amassed 22 points and 11 rebounds, helping eighth-ranked Cincinnati to an 82- Outrebounding Opponent 4–1 69 win over Washington at Edmundson Pavilion. Washington led 23-21 before the Rebounds equal Opponent 0–0 Bearcats closed with a 14-3 run over the final 6:26 to claim a 35-26 halftime advantage. Outrebounded by Opponent 1–2 Darnell Burton tallied 12 of his 19 points in the first half, including four of his five 3- Less Turnovers than Opponent 1–2 pointers. Cincinnati led by as many as 15 points in the second half. Washington scored Turnovers equal Opponent 0–0 eighth unanswered points, four each by Mark Sanford and Donald Watts, to cut the More Turnovers than Opponent 4–1 margin to 68-62 with 3:57 left in the game. Bobby Brannen responded with a jumper in Bench outscores Opponent 5–2 the lane and Fortson sank two free throws on the subsequent foul called under the basket. Bench outscored by Opponent 0–1 Damon Flint followed with an eight foot jumper to secure the win. The Bearcats turned UW Scores 40–49 Points 0–0 the ball over 15 times in the first half, but only once in the second. They shot 61 percent UW Scores 50–59 Points 0–0 (28-46) from the field to counter the Huskies' 52-percent accuracy (26-50). Sanford UW Scores 60–69 Points 3–2 topped all UW scoreres with 18 points. UW 7-footers Todd MacCulloch both fouled out. UW Scores 70–79 Points 0–1 The Clemson Series: UW Scores 80–89 Points 1–0 > Washington won the only previous meeting, downing Clemson 76-66 on Nov. 28, UW Scores 90-99 Points 1–0 1982 in the third-place game of the Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage, Ak. Opponent Scores 40–49 Points 1–0 > The Huskies have a 4-11 all-time record against Atlantic Coast Conference Opponent Scores 50–59 Points 0–0 opponents: Clemson (1-0), Duke (1-3), Florida State (1-1), Georgia Tech (1-2), Opponent Scores 60–69 Points 3–1 North Carolina (0-1) Virginia (0-1) and Wake Forest (0-3). Opponent Scores 70–79 Points 1–1 > Third-year Tiger coach Larry Shyatt has never coached against Washington. Opponent Scores 80–89 Points 0–1 > In his eighth season at Washington, Bob Bender has never coached against Opponent Scores 90–99 Points 0–0 Clemson. Bender did play against the Tigers as a point guard at their ACC rival Duke between 1978-80. Departures: Four players departed from last year’s team, including three starters and reserve guard Andrew Moritz. The biggest loss is guard Deon Luton who completed his career as the Huskies’ No. 8 all-time scorer with 1,488 points. Luton owns every UW 3-point record, including career (212), season (75) and single-game (7) treys. Forward Chris Walcott started 20 games and was a solid inside-outside presence for Washington. Senque Carey started two years at point guard before transferring during the summer to New Mexico. Carey led the team last year with 137 assists, the third-best season total in UW history. Washington’s Largest in 2001 Newcomers: The Washington roster is bolstered by the addition of three scholarship Lead ...... 33 vs. Portland State recruits, including a pair of guards from Tacoma, Wash. Both Curtis Allen, from Deficit ...... 15 vs. UTEP & Gonzaga Wilson High School, and C.J. Massingale, from Mount Tahoma High School, will battle for playing time at point guard as they ranked Nos. 7 and 8 among prospects in Margin of Victory ...... 31, vs. Portland State the West at that position by Pac-West Hoops. They are the first Tacoma natives to Margin of Defeat ...... 12 vs. UTEP & Gonzaga receive scholarships from the Washington basketball team since Steve Matzen who Halftime Lead ...... 12 (35-23) at American lettered from 1977 to 1980. Allen was the state Class 4A player of the year, averaging 25.2 points and 4.0 assists per game. Massingale averaged 22 points, 8 rebounds and Halftime Deficit ...... 9 (34-25) vs. UTEP 6 assists to win his second straight Narrows League Bridge Division MVP award. Deficit in Win ...... 10, at Wichita State Bolstering the frontcourt is 6-9, 270-pound DeMarcus Williams from Upland (Calif.) High School. Williams was rated the West’s No. 12 center prospect by Pac-West Hoops Halftime Deficit in Win .. 3 (33-36) at Wichita St. and was an honorable mention All-America pick by Blue Ribbon magazine. Invited Lead in a Loss...... 8 at Gonzaga walk-on freshmen Sterling Brown (Woodinville HS) and David Hudson (Rainier Halftime Lead in Loss ..... 1 (41-40) at Gonzaga Beach HS) are also new to the team. Sophomore Doug Wrenn, a transfer from Connecticut, will red-shirt this season. UW Scoring Run ...... 13 vs. Portland State Opponent Run ...... 11, UTEP & Gonzaga Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000) Page 6 Puerto Rico Holiday Classic December 20Ð22, 2000; Eugene Guerra Sports Complex; San Juan, Puerto Rico Fri., Dec. 22 Thur., Dec. 21 Wed., Dec. 20 Thur., Dec. 21 Fri., Dec. 22 Clemson Florida Atlantic Clemson 94, Clemson Florida Atlantic 81 Game 5 Florida Atlantic Game 7 8:00 am PST Cincinnati 1:00 pm PST Youngstown State Cincinnati 74, Cincinnati Game 10 Youngstown State 65 Game 12 Consolation Game Youngstown State Championship Game (4th / 6th Place) Alabama 10:30 am PST 3:30 pm PST Northern Iowa Alabama 64, Alabama Northern Iowa 56 Game 6 Northern Iowa Game 8 10:30 am PST WASHINGTON 3:30 pm PST American-PR Washington 67, WASHINGTON American-Puerto Rico 47 Game 9 Game 11 American Univ.-PR 7th / 8th-Place Game 3rd / 5th-Place Game 8:00 am PST • Pacific Times are listed • 1:00 pm PST

Signed, Sealed, Delivered: Washington received commitments during the early signing period (Nov. 8-15) from a five-man group that has been ranked among the best recruiting classes in the nation by several analysts. The signing class includes junior college standout Josh Barnard and four prominent high school recruits. Heading the list of prep players is Kentwood’s Mike Jensen who was rated by Pac-West Hoops as the top power forward in the West. A trio of players from high schools in Seattle signed with the Huskies. Those three are Jeffrey Day, from state Class AAA champion Seattle Prep, Chief Sealth’s Erroll Knight, one of the nation’s finest scoring guards, and Anthony Washington, a rising power forward prospect from Garfield. “We accomplished what we wanted to do in a very big way,” said Coach Bob Bender. We are very proud of the fact they are all from right here in state. Every single player is a Washington player and that is our priority. We really emphasized how they could be the greatest class that we have ever had the opportunity to recruit and that coming in together would put them in position to be one of the top classes in the nation. They all are very, very talented, but collectively they’re very special.” The Huskies do not have any remaining scholarships to offer during the spring letter of intent period that runs from April 11 through May 15. Josh Barnard—6-6, 210, guard, Tacoma, Wash. (Bethel HS / Tacoma Community College) Averaged 15.1 point, 5.4 rebounds and 3.4 assists last year at Tacoma Community College ... Converted a school-record 49-percent of his shots from 3-point range ... Helped TCC to a 30-4 record and fourth-place Northwest Community College tournament finish. Jeffrey Day—6-9, 215, forward, Seattle, Wash. (Seattle Prep HS) Averaged 13 points and eight rebounds per game as a junior last season for state champion Seattle Prep ... Rated as the West’s No. 17 ranked power forward in the Pac-West Hoops listings. Mike Jensen—6-8, 210, forward, Covington, Wash. (Kentwood HS) The top-ranked power forward in the West by Pac-West Hoops ... Averaged 14.4 points and 10.5 rebounds last year to lead Kentwood High School to a 21-9 record and seventh-place finish at the state 4A tournament ... Selected among the nation’s top 100 players in by nearly every scouting service, including a No. 66 ranking by The Sporting News. Erroll Knight—6-6, 200, guard, Seattle, Wash. (Chief Sealth HS) The No. 2-ranked in the West by Pac-West Hoops, rated No. 59 nationally among all positions by that service ... Averaged 16 points and eight rebounds last year at Chief Sealth High School ... Selected among the nation’s top 100 players in by nearly every scouting service, including a No. 71 ranking by The Sporting News. Anthony Washington—6-9, 220, forward, Seattle, Wash. (Garfield HS) The ninth-rated power forward in the West by Pac-West Hoops ... Listed as the No. 100 player nationally by The Sporting News ... Emerged on the recruiting scene with stellar performances during the spring and summer camp sessions ... Averaged five rebounds per game as a reserve on a senior-laden Garfield High School squad last season. Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000)

#20 Curtis Allen High Games Career Season Guard, 6-0, 160, Fr., Tacoma, Wash. (Wilson HS) Points 9 Same • The Washington state Class 4A Player of the Year as a senior in 2000. Rebounds 3 Same • Averaged 25.2 points and four assists per game last season at Wilson High School. Assists 5 Same • Rated the No. 7 point guard prospect in the West by Pac-West Hoops. Blocks 1 Same • Played all 8 games this season. Steals 2 Same • Distributed 5 assists against both Portland State (Nov. 28) and American (Dec. 20). Minutes 24 Same

#32 Bryan Brown High Games Career Season Guard, 6-3, 205, Sr., Mercer Island, Wash. (Mercer Island HS) Points 15 Same • Named MVP of the 1997 Washington state tournament for champion Mercer Island. Rebounds 4 Same • Wears No. 32, the same number worn with the NBA’s Sonics by his father, “Downtown” Fred Brown. Assists 6 Same • 31 of his 45 career field goals were 3-point baskets. Blocks 1 Same • Started all 8 games this season at point guard. Steals 2 Same • Had career-high 15 points, including 4-of-5 shooting on 3-pointers, at Wichita State (Nov. 30). Minutes 34 Same

#3 Sterling Brown High Games Career Season Guard, 6-4, 190, Fr., Woodinville, Wash. (Woodinville HS) Points 4 Same • Walk-on who was an honorable mention all-state selection last year. Rebounds 1 Same • Averaged 20.2 points, eight rebounds and four assists per game as a senior at Woodinville High. Assists 1 Same • Father, Dave Brown, played 15 NFL seasons and was on the 1975 Super Bowl champion Steelers. Blocks 0 Same • Played 4 games this season and scored 4 points against Portland State (Nov. 28). Steals 0 Same Minutes 6 Same

#21 Greg Clark High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 225, Sr., San Diego, Calif. (Grossmont HS / Long Beach State) Points 12 11 • Transferred to UW prior to the 1997-98 season after his freshman year at Long Beach State. Rebounds 8 Same • Brother, Tony Clark, is a standout first baseman with the Detroit Tigers. Assists 43 • Played all possible 60 games during his career. Blocks 10 • Started all 8 games this season. Steals 4 Same • Hit the game-winning shot, a 17-foot jumper with 3.2 seconds left at Florida International (Dec. 16). Minutes 38 33

#34 Ben Coffee High Games Career Season Forward, 6-5, 200, So., Portland, Ore. (Benson Tech HS) Points 3 Same • Helped Benson Tech to the 1999 Oregon state championship. Rebounds 6 Same • Labeled the “best offensive rebounder in the state” by The Oregonian newspaper in 1999. Assists 1 Same • Played 18 games last season, including two starts (against California and Arizona). Blocks 20 • Played 5 games this season. Steals 1 Same • Registered career-high six rebounds at American (Dec. 20). Minutes 14 Same

#50 David Dixon High Games Career Season Center, 6-11, 300, Jr., Houston, Texas (Westbury Christian HS / Tyler JC) Points 12 6 • A 1999 junior college All-American. Rebounds 65 • Hails from Tyler (Texas) JC that produced NBA players Robert Pack, Sam Mack and David Benoit. Assists 21 • Scored career-high 12 points against Oregon State on Jan. 23, 2000. Blocks 21 • Started 5 games after drawing 2 starts last season. Steals 10 Minutes 23 21 Washington Basketball (Dec. 21, 2000)

#42 Thalo Green High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 220, Sr., Salem, Ore. (South Salem HS) Points 20 Same • Voted the 1996 Oregon state Player of the Year after leading South Salem to the state championship. Rebounds 10 7 • Got haircut on July 12 for first time in 16 months and donated the clippings to Wigs for Kids. Assists 43 • Missed both exhibitions and the opener after having arthroscopic surgery (left knee) on Nov. 1. Blocks 20 • Scored 17 points against New Mexico State (Nov. 25) in his first game back from surgery. Steals 42 • Tallied career-high 20 points at American (Dec. 20), the first 20-point game by a Husky this season. Minutes 37 30

#23 Michael Johnson High Games Career Season Guard, 6-4, 195, Sr., Seattle, Wash. (Ballard HS) Points 22 18 • All-time Washington state prep scorer for large classifications with 2,271 career points. Rebounds 75 • The 1996 Gatorade state Player of the Year and the 1997 USA Today state Player of the Year. Assists 84 • Leading returning scorer for the Huskies after ranking third last year with 9.9 points per game. Blocks 21 • Started all 8 games this season. Steals 33 • Tallied double-figure points in 4 of 8 games this season. Minutes 38 33

#31 Grant Leep High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 225, Jr., Mount Vernon, Wash. (Mount Vernon HS) Points 10 8 • Two-time all-state performer who led Mount Vernon High to the state semifinals his final two years. Rebounds 7 Same • Missed the final 19 games last season with a torn medial collateral ligament in his right knee. Assists 1 Same • Played all 8 games this season. Blocks 1 Same Steals 1 Same Minutes 25 20

#10 C.J. Massingale High Games Career Season Guard, 6-3, 195, Fr., Tacoma, Wash. (Mount Tahoma HS) Points 7 Same • Two-time MVP of the Narrows League Bridge Division in 1999 and 2000. Rebounds 2 Same • Averaged 22 points, eight rebounds and six assists as a senior in 2000 for Mount Tahoma High. Assists 1 Same • Rated the No. 8 point guard prospect in the West by Pac-West Hoops. Blocks 0 Same • Played 7 games this season. Steals 2 Same • Scored 7 points in his collegiate debut against UTEP (Nov. 21) and matched that vs. Portland State. Minutes 14 Same

#1 Will Perkins High Games Career Season Forward, 6-8, 195, Sr., Omaha, Neb. (Omaha South HS/Iowa Western JC) Points 20 18 • Two-time all-league pick at Iowa Western and a 1999 honorable mention JC All-American. Rebounds 13 12 • Led Washington in rebounds last season, averaging 5.9 boards per game. Assists 5 Same • Registered a double-double in 4 of the first 8 games. No Husky had a double-double last year. Blocks 410 • Started all 8 games and led all UW scorers on 5 occasions. Steals 42 • Missed practice all week and was limited to 10 minutes vs. American due to a virus. Minutes 34 Same

#44 Marlon Shelton High Games Career Season Center, 6-10, 270, Jr., Rochester, Mich. (Rochester HS) Points 10 9 • Attended Pete Newell’s Big Man Camp during the summer of 2000. Rebounds 10 Same • Father, Lonnie Shelton, was a 10-year NBA veteran and a 1975 All-Pac-10 forward at Oregon State. Assists 2 Same • Brother, L.J. Shelton, is an offensive tackle for the Phoenix Cardinals. Blocks 4 Same • Registered first double-figure rebound game on Nov. 21 with 10 boards against UTEP. Steals 21 • Blocked a career-best four shots at Gonzaga (Dec. 2). Minutes 30 Same -----

- AVG

13.3 12.9 10.0 8.0 7.9 5.3 5.1 3.4 3.1 2.5 2.1 1.6 0.0 0.0

----- 71.3 ----- 67.8 -----

ALL GAMES

Cumulative Statistics - as of Dec. 21

2000-01 Washington Men’s Basketball

RECORD: OVERALL HOME AWAY NEUTRAL ALL GAMES...... (5-3) (2-2) (3-1) (0-0) CONFERENCE...... (0-0) (0-0) (0-0) (0-0) NON-CONFERENCE...... (5-3) (2-2) (3-1) (0-0)

T O T A L 3-POINTERS R E B O U N D S P L A Y E R GP-GS MIN--AVG FG-FGA PCT FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF-DEF TOT--AVG PF-FO A TO BLK ST PTS ------01 Perkins, Will 8 8 212 26.5 41 78 .526 0 0 .000 24 43 .558 28 39 67 8.4 26 2 11 11 3 7 106 42 Green, Thalo 7 0 147 21.0 35 58 .603 5 7 .714 15 24 .625 16 21 37 5.3 18 0 9 19 0 6 90 23 Johnson, Michael 8 8 220 27.5 27 78 .346 5 30 .167 21 36 .583 10 20 30 3.8 12 0 19 16 1 8 80 32 Brown, Bryan 8 8 210 26.3 21 54 .389 15 36 .417 7 18 .389 5 10 15 1.9 11 1 21 21 2 7 64 21 Clark, Greg 8 8 203 25.4 22 49 .449 9 26 .346 10 14 .714 7 15 22 2.8 24 0 15 12 0 12 63 20 Allen, Curtis 8 0 154 19.3 18 37 .486 6 20 .300 0 2 .000 2 11 13 1.6 11 0 20 18 1 7 42 44 Shelton, Marlon 8 3 142 17.8 16 30 .533 0 0 .000 9 17 .529 13 22 35 4.4 25 0 3 9 14 2 41 31 Leep, Grant 8 0 88 11.0 11 31 .355 3 11 .273 2 2 1.00 7 13 20 2.5 9 0 2 1 1 1 27 10 Massingale, C.J. 7 0 65 9.3 9 25 .360 1 3 .333 3 10 .300 5 2 7 1.0 13 0 3 10 0 4 22 03 Brown, Sterling 4 0 14 3.5 4 6 .667 0 0 .000 2 3 .667 1 1 2 0.5 3 0 1 2 0 0 10 50 Dixon, David 8 5 107 13.4 7 14 .500 0 0 .000 3 6 .500 8 19 27 3.4 18 0 2 10 4 0 17 34 Coffee, Ben 5 0 37 7.4 1 8 .125 1 4 .250 5 8 .625 1 6 7 1.4 5 0 2 9 0 1 8 22 Duty, Travis 1 0 1 1.0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02 Williams, DeMarcus 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TEAM REBOUNDS...... 18 19 37 1 ------Washington 8 1600 212 468 .453 45 137 .328 101 183 .552 121 198 319 39.9 175 3 108 139 26 55 570 ------Opponents 8 1600 183 453 .404 33 125 .264 143 204 .701 104 178 282 35.3 173 4 91 127 20 56 542 ------

SCORE BY HALVES(and OTs): 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Opponents 259 283 0 0 0 0 542 Washington 253 317 0 0 0 0 570

DEADBALL REBOUNDS: OFF DEF TOTAL Opponents 25 4 29 Washington 35 4 39 2001 Results Head Coach: Bob Bender (eighth year, Duke ’80) UW Record: 100–107 Career Record: 160–164 (12th year) Associate Head Coach: Byron Boudreaux (sixth year, Tulsa, ’87) Assistant Coaches: Al Hairston (first year, Washington, ’72) Eric Hughes (eighth year, Cal State Hayward, ’89) Records: 5–3 overall (2–2 home, 3–1 away, 0–0 neutral) 0–0 Pac-10 (0–0 home, 0–0 away) Record Date Opponent (UW Ranking) W/L Site Attendance Score Overall Pac-10 Nov. 10 + at Seattle Pacific (exhibition) Seattle Pacific University N/A 83–81 ot Nov. 14 + Brewster Packing (exhibition) Seattle Pacific University N/A 84–80 Nov. 21 Texas-El Paso L KeyArena 4,031 61–73 0–1 Nov. 25 New Mexico State W Bank of America Arena 6,313 81–77 1–1 Nov. 28 Portland State W Bank of America Arena 5,112 94–63 2–1 Nov. 30 at Wichita State W Wichita, Kan. 7,687 69–66 3–1 Dec. 2 at Gonzaga L Spokane, Wash. 4,000 74–86 3–2 Dec. 5 Saint Louis L Bank of America Arena 5,504 69–61 3–3 Dec. 16 at Florida International W Miami, Fla. 543 63–61 4–3 Dec. 20 ^ at American University-PR W San Juan, Puerto Rico 178 67–47 5–3 Dec. 21 ^ vs. Alabama Dec. 22 ^ vs. Cincinnati or Clemson Dec. 28 UC-Irvine Dec. 30 San Diego Jan. 4 • at UCLA Jan. 6 • at USC Jan. 11 • Arizona State Jan. 13 • Arizona Jan. 18 • at Oregon Jan. 20 • at Oregon State Jan. 25 • Stanford Jan. 27 • California Feb. 3 • Washington State Feb. 8 • at Arizona Feb. 10 • at Arizona State Feb. 15 • Oregon State Feb. 17 • Oregon Feb. 22 • at California Feb. 24 • at Stanford Mar. 3 • at Washington State Mar. 8 • USC Mar. 10 • UCLA + Exhibition game (not counted in record) • Pacific-10 Conference game ^ Puerto Rico Holiday Classic; San Juan, P.R. # Opponent's AP ranking listed is at date of game Total Attendance: 33,368 ( 8 game average: 4,171 ) Home Game Attendance: 20,960 ( 4 game average: 5,204 ) Home Game Attendance (PacÐ10 Only): 0 ( 0 game average: 0 ) Away Game Attendance: 12,408 ( 4 game average: 3,102 ) Neutral Site Attendance: 0 ( 0 game average: 0 ) 2001 Game-By-Game Points & Rebounds (¥ starters) Opponent Allen B.Brown S.Brown Clark Coffee Dixon Duty Green Johnson Leep Massngle Perkins Shelton Williams Texas-El Paso 3–3 • 6–1 2–1 • 9–4 1–0 • 0–2 DNP INJ • 4–4 8–6 7–1 • 15–10 6–10 INJ New Mexico State 9–2 • 5–4 2–1 • 7–1 0–0 • 0–3 DNP 17–7 • 15–4 2–0 1–1 • 14–10 9–3 INJ Portland State 8–2 • 11–2 4–0 • 9–3 3–0 • 6–5 0–0 14–3 • 12–5 7–7 7–2 • 11–12 2–1 INJ at Wichita State 2–2 • 15–3 DNP • 0–1 DNP • 3–5 DNP 15–4 • 14–5 0–1 0–0 • 16– 5 4–8 INJ at Gonzaga 4–1 • 3–1 DNP • 11–1 DNP • 2–3 DNP 6–5 • 18–3 8–2 DNP • 18–11 4–2 INJ Saint Louis 5–2 • 4–2 DNP • 11–2 DNP 2–4 DNP 3–7 • 9–2 2–0 4–2 • 15– 6 • 6–6 INJ at Florida International 6–0 • 14–2 DNP • 6–2 1–1 2–2 DNP 15–6 • 6–4 0–1 0–0 • 10– 7 • 3–0 INJ at American-Puerto Rico 5–1 • 6–0 2–0 • 10–8 3–6 2–3 DNP 20–5 • 2–3 0–2 3–1 • 7– 6 • 7–5 INJ vs. Alabama or Northern Iowa vs. TBA UC-Irvine San Diego *at UCLA *at USC *Arizona State *Arizona *at Oregon *at Oregon State *Stanford *California *Washington State *at Arizona *at Arizona State *Oregon State *Oregon *at California *at Stanford *at Washington State *USC *UCLA * — Pac-10 Game + — Exhibition dnp — Did not play inj — Injured and did not play 2001 Game-By-Game Leaders Game High Scorer High Rebounder High Assists UTEP (L 73-61) Will Perkins ...... 15 Perkins & Shelton ...... 10 Brian Brown ...... 4 New Mexico State (W 81-77) Thalo Green ...... 17 Will Perkins ...... 10 Michael Johnson ...... 4 Portland State (W 94-63) Thalo Green ...... 14 Will Perkins ...... 12 Curtis Allen ...... 5 at Wichita State (W 69-66) Will Perkins ...... 16 Marlon Shelton ...... 8 Bryan Brown ...... 6 at Gonzaga (L 74-86) Michael Johnson & Will Perkins ... 18 Will Perkins ...... 11 Will Perkins ...... 5 Saint Louis (L 61-69) Will Perkins ...... 15 Thalo Green ...... 7 Michael Johnson ...... 2 at Florida International (W 63-61) Thalo Green ...... 15 Will Perkins ...... 7 Bryan Brown ...... 4 at American-Puerto Rico (W 67-47) Thalo Green ...... 20 Greg Clark...... 8 Curtis Allen ...... 5 vs. Alabama vs. Cincinnati or Clemson UC-Irvine San Diego at UCLA at USC Arizona State Arizona at Oregon at Oregon State Stanford California Washington State at Arizona at Arizona State Oregon State Oregon at California at Stanford at Washington State USC UCLA 2001 Washington Game-by-Game Statistics Date Opponent (Score) FgÐFga Pct. 3ptÐA Pct. FtÐFta Pct. OfÐDef Reb PfÐDq AÐTo Pts BlkÐSt Nov. 21 Texas El-Paso (61-73) 22–61 .361 6–16 .375 11–23 .478 19–26 45 24–1 8–22 61 4–5 Nov. 25 New Mexico State (81-77) 27–51 .529 2–10 .200 25–49 .510 14–25 39 29–0 14–16 81 4–5 Nov. 28 Portland State (94-63) 35–68 .515 11–23 .478 13–22 .591 14–35 49 14–0 21–15 94 2–10 Nov. 30 at Wichita State (69-66) 26–53 .491 6–21 .286 11–20 .550 10–28 38 24–0 17–18 69 3–9 Dec. 2 at Gonzaga (74-86) 29–73 .397 6–20 .300 10–12 .833 19–17 36 21–1 13–10 74 5–3 Dec. 5 Saint Louis (61-69) 23–66 .348 4–22 .182 11–19 .579 23–17 40 26–1 6–18 61 3–9 Dec. 16 at Florida International (63-61) 28–51 .549 5–13 .385 2–5 .400 10–17 27 14–0 16–19 63 1–7 Dec. 20 at American-Puerto Rico (67-47) 22–45 .489 5–12 .417 18–33 .545 12–33 45 23–0 13–21 67 4–7 Dec. 21 vs. Alabama

High Marks (listed by individual category) 35–68 .549 11–23 .478 25–49 .833 23–35 49 29–1 21–22 94 5–10 Low Marks (listed by individual category) 22–45 .348 2–10 .182 2–5 .400 10–17 27 14–0 6–10 61 1–3

2001 Opponent Game-by-Game Statistics Date Opponent FgÐFga Pct. 3ptÐA Pct. FtÐFta Pct. OfÐDef Reb PfÐDq AÐTo Pts BlkÐSt Nov. 21 Texas El-Paso 23–57 .404 4–16 .250 23–29 .793 12–26 38 21–0 12–17 73 4–7 Nov. 25 New Mexico State 24–58 .414 5–15 .333 24–38 .632 13–23 36 35–2 9–12 77 2–6 Nov. 28 Portland State 25–73 .342 4–24 .167 9–14 .643 14–22 36 19–0 8–16 63 2–8 Nov. 30 at Wichita State 20–59 .339 6–22 .273 20–26 .769 17–22 39 21–0 13–17 66 1–6 Dec. 2 at Gonzaga 31–57 .592 5–15 .333 19–23 .826 13–26 39 16–0 22–13 86 5–2 Dec. 5 Saint Louis 21–49 .429 1–5 .200 26–39 .667 16–26 42 24–0 9–19 69 4–5 Dec. 16 at Florida International 25–49 .510 8–17 .471 3–6 .500 9–16 25 14–0 12–18 61 1–11 Dec. 20 at American-Puerto Rico 14–51 .275 0–11 .000 19–29 .655 10–17 27 23–2 6–15 47 1–11 Dec. 21 vs. Alabama

High Marks (listed by individual category) 31–73 .592 8–24 .471 26–38 .826 17–26 42 35–2 22–19 86 5–11 Low Marks (listed by individual category) 14–49 .275 0–5 .000 3–6 .500 9–16 25 14–0 6–12 47 1–2