University of

TM 2001 Men’s February 5, 2001 MEDIA RELATIONS: (206) 543–2230 FAX: (206) 543–5000 CONTACT: Dan Lepse INTERNET: www.gohuskies.com

Thurs., Feb. 8 — UW at (#11) Arizona; 5:30 p.m. PST / 6:30 MST (Fox Sports NW) Huskies Hope to Halt McKale (14,489); Tucson, Ariz. Desert Drought Sat., Feb. 10 — UW at Arizona State; 5:00 p.m. PST / 6:00 MST (Fox Sports Net) UW Plays at #11 Arizona on Wells Fargo Arena (14,198); Tucson, Ariz. Thursday & ASU Saturday The (9-12, 3-6) travel south to the state of Arizona this week, embarking on what has perennially proven to be their toughest trip. Washington meets 11th- The Huskies have a 2-23 combined record ranked Arizona (15-6, 7-2) on Thursday, Feb. 8 at McKale Center. Tip-off is 5:30 p.m. on the road at Arizona and ASU since Pacific Time (6:30 p.m. Mountain Time) for the game that will be televised live on Fox 1989, including seven straight losses. Sports Northwest. The Wildcats won seven of the last eight meetings against the Huskies, including both games last season and an 89-64 win earlier this season (Jan. 13) in . Will Perkins leads the Pac-10 with eight On Saturday, Feb. 10, Washington plays Arizona State (10-10, 2-7) at Wells Fargo Arena double-doubles. No UW player regis- in Tempe. The game will be televised live on Fox Sports Net at 5 p.m. PST (6 p.m. MST). tered a double-double last season. The Huskies posted a 70-68 overtime win over Arizona State earlier this year, on Jan. 11 in The Huskies have a 7-1 record in games Seattle. Washington defeated Washington State 78-72 on Saturday in its last outing, halting decided by six or fewer points and are 3- a three-game losing streak. 0 in overtime contests this season. Desert Drought: The annual trek to the state of Arizona has traditionally been the most difficult trip for the Huskies. Washington was swept last year in the desert for the 10th time Freshman guard Curtis Allen regis- in its last 12 visits. Since 1989, UW has a 2-23 combined record at Arizona (1-11) and tered double-figure points in three of his Arizona State (1-12). The Huskies, who lost 69-62 at Arizona last season, won only once last five games, including a career-high in their last 16 visits to Tucson dating to 1985. They posted an 80-79 overtime upset at 18 on Saturday against Washington State. Arizona in 1996 to snap an 11-game losing skid at McKale Center. Washington lost 90-80 2001 UW Schedule & Results at Arizona State last season, its 12th loss in the last 13 visits to Tempe. (9–12, 3–6 in Pac-10) Huskies vs. Ranked Foes: The Huskies have a 60-174 all-time record against ranked Nov. 21 UTEP (@KeyArena) L 61–73 opponents. They are winless in four meetings this season, against 17th-ranked Alabama Nov. 25 New Mexico State W 81–77 (69-60), No. 21 Arizona (89-64) and No. 1 Stanford (94-63) at home and at No. 20 USC (87- Nov. 28 Portland State W 94–63 61). Washington lost its last eight encounters with ranked foes, last winning 63-62 over No. Nov. 30 at Wichita State W 69-66 24 UCLA on Jan. 6, 2000 in Seattle. Four teams on the UW schedule are listed in the current Dec. 2 at Gonzaga L 74–86 Associated Press top-25 poll, including No. 2 Stanford, Arizona (#11), Alabama (#18) and Dec. 5 Saint Louis L 61–69 USC (#22). Dec. 16 at Florida International W 63–61 TV/Radio Coverage: Thursday’s game at Arizona will be televised live on Fox Sports Dec. 20 at American-PR W 67–47 Northwest at 5:30 p.m. Pacific Time. Saturday’s game at Arizona State will be televised live Dec. 21 vs. #17 Alabama L 60–69 on Fox Sports Net at 5 p.m. Pacific Time. All Husky men’s basketball games are broadcast Dec. 21 vs. Clemson W ot 77–76 live on KOMO Radio (AM 1000) and its affiliates by play-by-play announcer Bob Rondeau. Dec. 28 UC Irvine L 55–56 The radio broadcasts can be accessed via the internet at: http://www.audionet.com/ Dec. 30 San Diego L 54–72 schools/washington/ Jan. 4 • at UCLA L 64–86 Jan. 6 • at #20 USC L 61–87 Projected Husky Starting Lineup: Jan. 11 • Arizona State W ot 70–68 Washington Huskies (9–12, 3–6 in Pacific-10 Conference) Jan. 13 • #21 Arizona L 64–89 Pos.-No. Name Hgt. Wgt. Yr. Hometown Points Rebs. Jan. 18 • at Oregon W ot 72–71 F — 1 Will Perkins 6-8 195 Sr. Omaha, Neb. 13.7 7.6 Jan. 20 • at Oregon State L 56–63 F — 42 Thalo Green 6-7 220 Sr. Salem, Ore. 11.6 4.8 Jan. 25 • #1 Stanford L 63–94 C — 50 David Dixon 6-11 300 Jr. Houston, Texas 4.3 3.0 Jan. 27 • California L 64–79 G — 20 Curtis Allen 6-0 160 Fr. Tacoma, Wash. 5.6 1.7 Feb. 3 • Washington State W 78–72 G — 23 Michael Johnson 6-4 195 Sr. Seattle, Wash. 7.8 3.2 Feb. 8 • at #11 Arizona (Fox NW) 5:30 pm Feb. 10 • at Arizona State (Fox Net) 5:00 pm Notable: Washington leads the Pac-10 in 3-point defense, holding opponents to 30-percent Feb. 15 • Oregon State 7:00 pm from beyond the arc. Last year, UW ranked 9th in the conference when foes shot 36% on Feb. 17 • Oregon (Fox Net) 5:00 pm treys ... The Huskies hit 52 percent of their shots from the field (31-60) on Saturday against Feb. 22 • at California 7:30 pm Washington State, their first 50-percent performance in 14 games dating to a 55-percent Feb. 24 • #2 Stanford 5:00 pm effort at Florida International on Dec. 16 ... Saturday’s win was the 750th for Washington Mar. 3 • at Washington State 1:00 pm at Edmundson Pavilion, the most wins for any NCAA team in its present arena ... David Mar. 8 • #22 USC 7:00 pm Dixon blocked five shots on Saturday against WSU, the most by a Husky since Todd Mar. 10 • UCLA (Fox Net) 3:00 pm MacCulloch had five blocks against UNC Wilmington on Nov. 16, 1998 ... The Huskies implemented 11 different starting lineups, including 10 during the last 16 games. Ten of Pacific Times Listed • Pac-10 Game + Exhibition UW’s 12 active players started at least once and no Husky has started every game. Washington Basketball (Feb. 5, 2001) Page 2

Injury Report: The status of UW players for the next game: Pacific-10 Conference Standings Probable– Greg Clark, Sprained right ankle in the second half vs. Alabama (Dec. 21) • (As of Feb. 5) Pac-10 Pct. Overall and missed four games. Hasn’t practiced, but participated in each of the last five games. 1. Stanford 8–1 .889 20–1 • Out – DeMarcus Williams, Sidelined since the exhibition opener with a sore right 2. Arizona 7–2 .778 15–6 plantar fascia (foot). Also has a sore back and will likely apply for a medical red-shirt. UCLA 7–2 .778 13–6 Travel Data: Washington associate media relations director Dan Lepse will travel with 4. USC 6–3 .667 16–5 the team and be available to handle any media requests. The team is staying in Tucson, California 6–3 .667 15–6 Ariz. from Wednesday, Feb. 7 until the morning of Friday, Feb. 9 at the Marriott 6. Washington 3–6 .333 9–12 University Park. Phone: (520) 792-4100. Fax: (520) 882-4100. The Huskies will stay Oregon 3–6 .333 12–7 in Tempe, Ariz. from Friday, Feb. 9 through Saturday, Feb. 10 at the Tempe Mission 8. Arizona State 2–7 .222 10–10 Palms. Phone: (480) 894-1400. Fax: (480) 968-7677. Messages can also be left for Oregon State 2–7 .222 8–13 Lepse at his office voice mail: (206) 685-3120. 10. Washington State 1–8 .111 8–11 The Arizona Series: > Arizona has a 31-15 lead in the all-time series that began in 1965. > The Wildcats won seven of the last eight meetings against Washington, capped by an 89-64 decision earlier this season on Jan. 13 in Seattle. > Arizona boasts an 18-4 record against the Huskies in Tucson, including a 69-62 win last year. The Wildcats won the last four, and 15 of the last 16 meetings against UW at McKale Center. The lone Husky win during that span was an 80-79 overtime decision on Feb. 1, 1996 that halted an 11-game losing streak at McKale Center dating back to 1984. > 18th-year Arizona Coach has a 25-11 all-time record against the Huskies. > Eighth-year Washington coach is 4-11 against Arizona. Bender twice played against Lute Olson-coached Iowa in 1976. A freshman on Indiana’s undefeated national championship team, Bender played six minutes in a 101-81 win at Indiana (Feb. 23, 1976) and two minutes in an 88-73 win at Iowa (Jan. 26, 1976). Upsetting Arizona: Since the 1990-91 season, Washington has a 6-15 record against Arizona. Only UCLA (9) and California (7) have won as many against the Wildcats during that span. Since 1991, Washington has a 4-28 record against top-10 ranked opponents, all four wins coming against Arizona. Seven of the Huskies’ last 18 wins over teams ranked in the top 25 came against Arizona. During the 1996 season, UW defeated a 14th-ranked Wildcat team 80-79 in overtime for its first win in Tucson since 1984. The Last Meeting: (#21) Arizona 89, UW 54 (Jan. 13, 2001; Seattle) — registered the 13th triple-double in Pac-10 history with 13 points, 10 rebounds and 10 blocked shots to lead 21st-ranked Arizona to an 89-64 win at Bank of America Arena. The triple-double was the second in Woods’ career and the first ever against Washington (7-9, 1-3). His 10 blocks were three more than any other opponent ever had against the Huskies. Arizona (10-5, 3-1) also got a double-double from Michael Wright who had 26 points and 10 rebounds. The Wildcats were playing their fifth game under interim coach Jim Rosborough during Coach Lute Olson’s leave of absence. Will Perkins posted a double-double for UW with a career-high 21 points and 13 rebounds. The Huskies out- rebounded Arizona 54-49, including 30 offensive rebounds. The Wildcats’ 41-29 halftime advantage was trimmed to 42-34 on a 3- pointer by Thalo Green with 17:28 left to play. The UA lead was 75-62 with 5:04 remaining before a 14-2 game-closing run by the Wildcats. Neither team shot well from outside. Arizona hit 1-of-12 treys and Washington was 2-of-17 from 3-point range. The Huskies shot just 29 percent (24-84) from the field, their poorest shooting game since Jan. 11, 1995. Shuffling Starters: Washington has implemented 11 different starting lineups this season with 10 of the team’s 12 active players drawing at least one starting assignment. Washington’s Largest in 2001 The Huskies used the same starting lineup for first five games of the season, but have Lead ...... 33 vs. Portland State utilized 10 different rotations in the last 16 outings due to a rash of injuries. No UW player has started every game this season. The chart below lists the win/loss record of Deficit ...... 35, at UCLA each Husky starting unit with the most recent group in bold. Margin of Victory ...... 31, vs. Portland State Record Forward Forward Center/Forward Guard Guard Margin of Defeat ...... 31, vs. Stanford 1–0 Perkins Green Dixon Allen Johnson 1–0 Coffee Green Perkins B. Brown Johnson Halftime Lead .. 13 (38-25) vs. Washington State 1–0 Coffee Green Shelton B. Brown Johnson Halftime Deficit ...... 33 (49-16) at UCLA 2–1 Perkins Clark Shelton B. Brown Johnson Deficit in Win ...... 10, at Wichita State 3–2 Perkins Clark Dixon B. Brown Johnson 1–2 Perkins Green Shelton B. Brown Massingale Halftime Deficit in Win .. 5 (27-32) vs. Arizona St. 0–1 Perkins Green Dixon Allen B. Brown Lead in a Loss...... 8 at Gonzaga 0–1 Perkins Green Dixon B. Brown Johnson 0–1 Coffee Green Perkins Allen Johnson Halftime Lead in Loss ..... 1 (41-40) at Gonzaga 0–1 Clark Green Coffee B. Brown Johnson UW Scoring Run ...... 13 vs. Portland State 0–3 Perkins Green Shelton B. Brown Johnson Opponent Run ...... 17, Stanford Washington Basketball (Feb. 5, 2001) Page 3

2001 UW Victory / Defeat Margins: Last Year’s Record after 21 games: 8–13 Last Year’s Record after 22 games: 8–14 Margins 12345678910111213141516171819202225263031 UW Wins 2211 1 1 1 ------UW Losses 1 111 2 1 1 111 1

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 104–116 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 17–11 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 104 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 164–173. 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 ’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 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) 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): 164-173 (.487) Record at Washington (eight years): 104-116 (.473) 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 (Feb. 5, 2001) Page 4 Shooting Story: When the Huskies shoot well, they usually win. The opposite is Media Information also true. Washington has an 8-1 record when posting a superior percentage to its opponent and is 1-11 when being outshot. The Huskies are shooting 11 percent Athletic Department, Box 354070 better from the field in their victories and over 12 percent better from 3-point range. Seattle, WA 98195-4070 UW shot 52 percent (31-60) against Washington State in its last outing, the first time Box 354070 above 50 percent in 14 games dating to a 55-percent outing at Florida International on Deb. 16. The chart below compares Washington shooting success in wins versus losses. Enrollment: 34,000 (25,000 undergrad) UW Points OPP Points UW FG% OPP FG% UW 3PT% OPP 3PT% Founded: Nov. 4, 1861 UW Wins (9) 74.6 66.8 48.1% 38.5% 36.2% 25.3% President: Richard McCormick UW Losses (12) 61.4 76.9 37.2% 48.5% 23.9% 33.9% Director of Athletics: Barbara Hedges Colors: Purple & Gold Last UW Game: UW 78, Washington State 72 (Feb. 3, 2001; Seattle) — Nickname: Huskies Curtis Allen scored 12 of his career-high 18 points in the second half, including a 3- Head Coach: Bob Bender (8th year) pointer that turned back a late Washington State rally in Washington’s 78-72 victory Career Record (12th year): 164-173 at Bank of America Arena. The Huskies (9-12, 3-6) won for the eighth time in their UW Record (8th year): 104-116 last nine meetings with WSU (8-11, 1-8) which lost its 30th straight Pac-10 road game. 2000 Record: 10-20 UW led the entire game, taking a season-best 13-point halftime lead at 38-25. Allen 2000 Pac-10 Record: 5-13 (8th, tie) opened the second half with a pair of free throws following a WSU bench technical. Starters Returning / Lost: 2 / 3 The Cougars steadily trimmed the margin, drawing within 54-53 on a 3-pointer by Jerry Lettermen Returning / Lost: 9 / 4 McNair with 9:57 left to play. Mike Bush’s 3-pointer with 2:12 remaining drew WSU Husky Media Relations within 70-68. Allen responded with a trey on the ensuing possession and Bryan Brown had a and layin to secure the win. Thalo Green scored 21 points for Washington Jim Daves, Assistant AD and Will Perkins tallied all 13 of his points in the second half. UW’s David Dixon had Dan Lepse, Men’s Basketball SID 16 points, hitting all seven of his shots from the field, and blocked a career-high five E-mail: [email protected] shots. Framecio Little paced WSU with 16 points while Bush and McNair each had Main Office Phone: (206) 543-2230 14. The Huskies shot 52 percent (31-60) from the field, their first 50-percent outing Lepse Direct Phone: (206) 685-3120 in 14 games dating back to Dec. 16 at Florida International. Fax: (206) 543-5000 The Season So Far: In their last outing, the Huskies stopped a three-game losing Ticket Office streak with a 78-72 win over Washington State that was the eighth win in their last nine (206) 543-2200 meetings with the Cougars ... Washington was swept at home by the Bay Area schools, Bank of America Arena losing 79-64 against California (Jan. 27) and 94-63 against No. 1 Stanford which tied 3870 Montlake Boulevard N.E. a school record with its 18th consecutive victory ... Washington lost 63-56 at Oregon Capacity (built): 10,000 (1927) State (Jan. 20) to first-year coach Ritchie McKay, a former Husky assistant coach ... Renovated: March 1999 - Nov. 2000 The Huskies won 72-71 at Oregon (Jan. 18) on a spinning layup by Curtis Allen with Directions: Located on the southeast sec- 0:06 left in overtime. They won 67-58 last year, marking UW’s first back-to-back wins tion of the Washington campus and 40 minutes at McArthur Court since 1981 & 1982 ... Arizona dealt UW an 89-64 defeat (Jan. 13) north of Sea-Tac Airport. From Interstate-5 take behind the triple-double of Loren Woods (13 points, 10 rebounds, 10 blocks) ... UW the Hwy. 520 exit toward Bellevue-Kirkland snapped a four-game losing streak with a 70-68 overtime decision over Arizona State (east). Travel 1/4 mile and take the Montlake (Jan. 11) ... The Huskies were swept in , capped by an 87-61 setback at Boulevard exit. At the end of the off ramp there USC (Jan. 6). They opened Pac-10 play with an 86-64 loss at UCLA (Jan. 4) despite is a stop light at Montlake Boulevard. Turn the 25-point output of freshman C.J. Massingale ... Washington completed its non- LEFT. Travel across the Montlake Bridge. Husky conference schedule with a 6-6 record and suffered back-to-back non-conference Stadium will be visible on the RIGHT with Bank home losses for the first time since Dec. 1992. The Huskies lost 72-54 to San Diego of America Arena visible to the north of the (Dec. 30) following a 56-55 setback against UC Irvine (Dec. 28) ... UW clinched third- stadium. To access E-10, E-11 or E-12 parking place in the Puerto Rico Holiday Classic with a 77-76 win over Clemson (Dec. 22) on losts, turn RIGHT at the stoplight by the stadium a last-second shot by Michael Johnson ... The Huskies lost 69-60 to No. 17 Alabama marquee. To access the Graves Building, con- in the semifinals (Dec. 21) ... Coach Bob Bender posted his 100th win at Washington tinue through the stoplight and turn RIGHT with a 67-47 first-round victory over host American (Dec. 20) ... UW began a four- immediately after the pedestrian overpass bridge. game road trip with a 63-61 victory at Florida International (Dec. 16) on Greg Clark’s late basket ... Former Husky , the coach at Saint Louis, dealt his alma Internet mater a 69-61 loss in Seattle (Dec. 5) ... Washington achieved a split on its first road www.gohuskies.com trip of the season, winning 69-66 at Wichita State (Nov. 30) before an 86-74 loss at Info Connection 1-800-300-2050 Gonzaga (Dec. 2) ... UW capped a three-game homestand with a 94-63 victory over (call 770-399-0096 for Personal ID Number) Portland State (Nov. 28), registering the most points in its last 67 games and its largest 3715 — UW release margin of victory (31 points) in 61 games ... The Huskies returned to their on-campus 3718 — UW latest game boxscore venue in triumphant fashion on Nov. 25, defeating New Mexico State 81-77 ... 1015 — Pac-10 release Washington played this year’s season opener at KeyArena in downtown Seattle. UW Weekly Bob Bender Radio Show opened the season with a 73-61 loss to Texas-El Paso (Nov. 21) ... The Huskies won Mondays at 6 p.m. on KOMO AM 1000 both of their exhibition games, rallying for an 83-81 overtime win at Seattle Pacific (Nov. 10) before beating Brewster Packing 84-80 (Nov. 14). Washington Basketball (Feb. 5, 2001) Page 5 Century Mark: Eighth-year coach Bob Bender posted his 100th win at Washington 2001 Individual Superlatives on Dec. 20 with a 67-47 decision at American-Puerto Rico. He has led the Huskies to Double–Doubles (points & rebounds) 104 victories. Only (488), Marv Harshman (246) and (156) Will Perkins ...... 8 have won more games as the Husky coach. Marlon Shelton...... 1 Double Trouble: Senior forward Will Perkins registered eight double-doubles to Double–Figure Points lead all Pac-10 players. No Husky player recorded a double-double during the entire Will Perkins ...... 18 season last year. Perkins had double-figure points and rebounds against Texas-El Paso Thalo Green ...... 9 (15/10), New Mexico State (14/10), Portland State (11/12), Gonzaga (18/11), Clemson Michael Johnson ...... 7 (20/10), Arizona State (13/10), Arizona (21/13) and Stanford (12/11). The Omaha, Greg Clark ...... 5 Nebraska native leads the team in scoring (13.7 ppg) and rebounds (7.6 rpg), ranking Bryan Brown ...... 5 11th and fourth, respectively among Pac-10 players. Perkins is shooting 51 percent C.J. Massingale ...... 3 (110-214). He led UW last year in rebounds (5.9 rpg), field goal percentage (47.9%) Curtis Allen ...... 3 and blocks (39). David Dixon ...... 3 Fabulous Frosh: The Washington roster features a pair of freshmen guards from Marlon Shelton...... 2 Tacoma, Curtis Allen (Wilson HS) and C.J. Massingale (Mount Tahoma HS). They 30–Point Game are the first UW scholarship players in 21 years from Tacoma, since Steve Matzen None ...... 1 (1977-80). Both rookie guards have raised their level of play during the Pac-10 season. 20–Point Game Massingale ranks third on the team in scoring during conference games, averaging 7.8 Thalo Green ...... 3 points per outing while shooting 45 percent (9-20) from 3-point range. He entered the Will Perkins ...... 2 Pac-10 opener at UCLA (Jan. 4) with 24 total points in 10 non-conference games and C.J. Massingale ...... 1 erupted for 25 against the Bruins, the highest single-game total by a UW freshman since Double–Figure Rebounds Mark Sanford had 26 points against ASU on March 2, 1995. Massingale drew three Will Perkins ...... 8 starts while Allen started three of the last four games. Allen hit a pair of spinning shots Marlon Shelton...... 2 in the lane at Oregon (Jan. 18), forcing overtime with the first and hitting the game Double–Figure Assists winner with 0:06 left with the second. Allen tallied double-figure points in three of the None last five games, including a career-high 18 against Washington State (Feb. 3). 5-or More Assists Close Calls: The Huskies have been winning their close games this season, posting Bryan Brown ...... 4 a 7-1 record in games decided by six or fewer points. Three of Washington’s last four Curtis Allen ...... 3 wins were overtime decisions. The Huskies have a 3-0 record in overtime games, the Will Perkins ...... 1 first season they won three overtime contests since the 1984 squad was 3-0. UW has C.J. Massingale ...... 1 a trio of game-winning baskets within the final 0:06 this season: Greg Clark with 0:03 20– Game left at Florida International (Dec. 16), Michael Johnson at the buzzer versus Clemson None (Dec. 22) and Curtis Allen with 0:06 left at Oregon (Jan. 18). UW Leading Scorer (ties included) Dixon’s Line: Junior center David Dixon has put up some outstanding stat lines in Will Perkins ...... 11 recent boxscores. The last outing was his best as Dixon amassed a career-high 16 points Thalo Green ...... 8 against Washington State on perfect 7-for-7 shooting from the field. He blocked a C.J. Massingale ...... 2 career-high five shots, grabbed six rebounds, distributed two assists and had one steal Michael Johnson ...... 2 in Saturday’s victory over the Cougars. Dixon registered back-to-back double-figure Greg Clark ...... 1 scoring performances, including 12 points against California (Jan. 27). The 6-foot-11 UW Top Rebounder (ties included) Houston, Texas native is shooting 62 percent from the field (23-37) against Pac-10 Will Perkins ...... 12 opponents. He hit 15-of-19 shots from the field in the last three games. Marlon Shelton...... 4 Hoopsters Honor CW: Like their football counterparts, the Husky basketball team Thalo Green ...... 4 is wearing patches on their jerseys to support senior Curtis Williams who suffered a Greg Clark ...... 2 spinal cord injury during an Oct. 28 football game at Stanford. The UW basketball David Dixon ...... 1 players will display the initials “CW” to honor Williams who is in a San Jose, Calif. C.J. Massingale ...... 1 rehabilitation center. UW Top Assister (ties included) Bryan Brown ...... 10 Home Sweet Home: The Huskies returned to their on-campus basketball venue after Michael Johnson ...... 5 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 Will Perkins ...... 4 1999 to November of 2000. The interior was completely redesigned while the Curtis Allen ...... 4 building’s exterior went unchanged. Despite an increased seating capacity from 7,900 Thalo Green ...... 2 to approximately 10,000, the arena possesses a more intimate, basketball-only configu- C.J. Massingale ...... 2 ration. The Huskies have won 750 games in the Pavilion since it opened on Dec. 27, Ben Coffee ...... 1 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 (Feb. 5, 2001) Page 6 Hair Raising Experience: Senior forward Thalo Green avoided the barber’s shears 2001 UW Record When for 16 months before taking his place in the chair at the Montlake Cut barbershop on July At Bank of America Arena 4–6 12, 2000. Green had his hair cut for the first time since March of 1999 and donated his At KeyArena 0–1 hair to the Wigs for Kids, a national, non-profit organization that solicits donations in an On the Road 4–4 effort to provide relief for children in situations of hair loss. Hair donations are woven At a Neutral Site 1–1 into wigs and given to children affected by hair loss due to chemotherapy, burns and other Scoring First 4–6 medical conditions. “I’m in a position, playing basketball at Washington, to give Opponent Scores First 4–6 exposure and promote the Wigs for Kids program,” Green explains. “I decided to grow Ahead with 5:00 left 7–2 my hair out throughout the whole season and try to raise awareness for the program. It Trailing with 5:00 left 1–10 seemed like the perfect opportunity to do something good for a good cause.” Green Ahead at Halftime 4–1 regularly drew taunts from spectators at opposing arenas last season as his curly, red hair Tied at Halftime 1–1 frequently flopped into his eyes and eventually required a headband to control it. That shaggy coif was in stark contrast to his sophomore season in 1998-99 when Green’s head Behind at Halftime 3–10 was almost completely shaven. Green currently ranks second on the team in scoring (11.6 Overtime Games 2–0 ppg) and rebounds (4.8 rpg) and has a team-high three 20-point outings this season. Three-Point or less Final Margin 4–1 5 Huskies Score in Double Figures 0–0 Sonics & Sons: Two former Seattle SuperSonics have sons on the 2000-01 Washing- 4 Huskies Score in Double Figures 3–0 ton basketball roster. The former NBA players (and sons) are: Fred Brown (Bryan) and 3 Huskies Score in Double Figures 5–5 Lonnie Shelton (Marlon). A graduate of Iowa, Fred Brown was the Sonics’ all-time leading scorer with 14,018 points. That record was broken this season by . 2 Huskies Score in Double Figures 1–5 Brown played his entire 13-year NBA career (1972-84) in Seattle and was a 1976 all-star. 1 Husky Scores in Double Figures 0–2 Bryan wears the same jersey No. 32 that his father had retired by the Sonics. Shelton was FG % is above 50 % 4–0 a 1975 All-Pac-8 Conference selection at Oregon State. He played 10 NBA seasons FG % is exactly 50 % 0–0 (1977-86) and was a 1982 all-star. Shelton played from 1979-83 in Seattle. Brown and FG % is below 50 % 4–12 Shelton were members of Seattle’s 1979 NBA Championship squad. Two other former Opponent FG % is above 50% 1–4 sons of Sonics were on the 1999 team, Donald Watts (father Slick) was a four-year Opponent FG % is below 50% 7–9 letterman and walk-on Michael Westphal (father Paul) left after his freshman year. Outshooting Opponent 8–1 Another tie to the Sonics is first-year UW assistant coach Al Hairston who played with Outshot by Opponent 1–11 Seattle’s NBA team in 1969 and 1970. Outrebounding Opponent 5–3 Puerto Rico Recap: Washington completed a 10-day, 7,658-mile trip in December Rebounds equal Opponent 0–0 with a 3-1 record. UW capped the road trip in fine fashion with a 77-76 overtime triumph Outrebounded by Opponent 3–9 over Clemson (Dec. 22) on a last-second shot by Michael Johnson that secured the third- Less Turnovers than Opponent 3–4 place trophy in the Puerto Rico Holiday Classic. The Huskies defeated host American Turnovers equal Opponent 0–1 University-Puerto Rico 67-47 (Dec. 20) in the opening round before falling 69-60 to then More Turnovers than Opponent 5–7 17th-ranked Alabama in the semifinals. Washington led the Tide for much of the game Bench outscores Opponent 6–5 despite playing without leading scorer and rebounder Will Perkins. Thalo Green was Bench scoring equals Opponent 1–0 named to the all-tournament team after averaging 17.7 points, including a then career- Bench outscored by Opponent 1–7 high 20 points in the opener. UW Scores 40–49 Points 0–0 The Arizona State Series: UW Scores 50–59 Points 0–3 > Arizona State holds a 29-19 lead in the all-time series that began in 1978. UW Scores 60–69 Points 3–8 UW Scores 70–79 Points 3–1 > Washington won this year’s first meeting, a 70-68 overtime decision on Jan. 11 in UW Scores 80–89 Points 1–0 Seattle. UW Scores 90-99 Points 1–0 > The Sun Devils own a 17-6 series advantage at home and won 12 of the last 13 Opponent Scores 40–49 Points 1–0 meetings against Washington in Tempe. Opponent Scores 50–59 Points 0–1 > Third-year Sun Devil Coach Rob Evans has a 3-2 record against Washington. Opponent Scores 60–69 Points 4–3 > In his eighth year at Washington, Bob Bender has a 6-9 record against ASU. Opponent Scores 70–79 Points 3–3 Opponent Scores 80–89 Points 0–4 The Last Meeting: UW 70, Arizona State 68 ot (Jan. 11, 2001; Seattle) — Will Opponent Scores 90–99 Points 0–1 Perkins and C.J. Massingale each tallied 13 points, helping Washington snap a four-game losing streak with a 70-68 overtime win over Arizona State at Bank of America Arena. The Huskies (7-8, 1-2) hit 11-of-24 shots from 3-point range, including a string of six straight treys in the second half that helped erase a nine-point deficit. Arizona State (8-6, 0-3) extended a 32-27 halftime lead to 43-34. The margin was 46-38 before reserve Grant Leep began a 20-8 UW run on a 3-pointer with 10:31 left in regulation. Leep made another trey while Massingale and Michael Johnson each hit two during the run that ended at 2:55 with the Huskies ahead 58-54. ASU scored four straight points, including a put-back by Donnell Knight with seven seconds left, to force overtime. UW converted 9-of-15 free throws during overtime, taking the lead for good at 69-66 on a pair by Thalo Green with 42 seconds to play. For the game, Leep hit all three of his 3-points attempts and Massingale was 3-of-4. Bryan Brown had two treys and 12 points. Knight finished with 15 points and 13 rebounds and Alton Mason scored 12 points for ASU. Awvee Storey had 10 points and led a 55-31 Sun Devil rebounding advantage with 15 boards. Perkins had 10 rebounds for his sixth double-double. Washington Basketball (Feb. 5, 2001) Page 7 Husky Tickets: Good seats are available for all Washington home games, including Where the Huskies Rank in special ticket packages. New this season is the Pepsi “Fun for Four” Family Pack for the Pac-10 Statistics quartets of all ages. Get four general admission game tickets, four Pepsi drinks and four hot dogs for only $25. Reserved seats for individual Husky games are $18 and $16 while (As of February 5 Pac-10 release) general admission seats are $6. University of Washington students with current student identification can purchase individual game tickets for $3 or buy a student season pass INDIVIDUAL for $30 that is also good for women’s games. Visit the Husky Ticket Office, located Double-Doubles in the Graves Building, or call (206-543-2200) for information. Will Perkins 8 .. 1st (tie) Wait ’til Next Year: A pair of Huskies are not competing in games this year, waiting until next season until they are eligible. 1998 Parade All-American and Washington Scoring state Player of the Year Doug Wrenn is red-shirting this season after transferring from Will Perkins 13.7 ...... 11th Connecticut prior to the 2000-01 campaign. The supremely athletic 6-6 forward, who prepped at Seattle’s O’Dea High School, will be a red-shirt sophomore next season. Rebounds True freshman DeMarcus Williams has battled foot (plantar fascia) and back injuries Will Perkins 7.6 ...... 4th and will apply to the NCAA for a red-shirt season. The 6-9 forward from Upland (Calif.) High School played a combined five minutes in the Huskies’ two exhibition Field Goal Percentage games. Thalo Green 55.1 ...... 7th Signed, Sealed, Delivered: Washington received commitments during the early Blocked Shots signing period (Nov. 8-15) from a five-man group that has been ranked among the best Marlon Shelton 1.52 ...... 2nd 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 Offensive Rebounds list of prep players is Kentwood’s Mike Jensen who was rated by Pac-West Hoops as Will Perkins 2.95 ...... 3rd 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 Defensive Rebounds Prep, Chief Sealth’s Erroll Knight, one of the nation’s finest scoring guards, and Will Perkins 4.65 ...... 9th Anthony Washington, a rising power forward prospect from Garfield. “We accom- plished what we wanted to do in a very big way,” said Coach Bob Bender. “We are very TEAM 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 (per game averages listed) class that we have ever had the opportunity to recruit and that coming in together would Scoring 67.0 ...... 9th 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 Scoring Margin - 5.5 ...... 10th scholarships to offer during the spring letter of intent period that runs from April 11 Field Goal Percent 41.7 ...... 10th through May 15. 3-Point Percent 28.9 ...... 10th Josh Barnard—6-6, 210, guard, Tacoma, Wash. (Bethel HS / Tacoma Rebounding 36.9 ...... 5th Community College) Averaged 15.1 points, 5.4 rebounds and 3.4 assists last year at Tacoma Community Scoring Defense 72.6 ...... 8th College ... Converted a school-record 49-percent of his shots from 3-point range ... Percent 57.0 ...... 10th Helped TCC to a 30-4 record and fourth-place Northwest Community College tournament finish. Opponent Field Goal % 44.3 ...... 7th Jeffrey Day—6-9, 215, forward, Seattle, Wash. (Seattle Prep HS) Opponent 3-Point % 30.0 ...... 1st Averaged 13 points and eight rebounds per game as a junior last season for state Opponent Rebounds 38.1 ...... 10th champion Seattle Prep ... Rated as the West’s No. 17 ranked power forward in the Pac- Rebound Margin - 1.3 ...... 9th West Hoops listings. Mike Jensen—6-8, 210, forward, Covington, Wash. (Kentwood HS) Assists 13.4 ...... 8th The top-ranked power forward in the West by Pac-West Hoops ... Averaged 14.4 points Turnover Margin - 0.62 ...... 8th and 10.5 rebounds last year to lead Kentwood High School to a 21-9 record and seventh- Offensive Rebounds 14.0 ...... 3rd place finish at the state 4A tournament ... Selected among the nation’s top 100 players by nearly every scouting service, including a No. 66 ranking by The Sporting News. 3-Pointers Made 5.1 ...... 9th Erroll Knight—6-6, 200, guard, Seattle, Wash. (Chief Sealth HS) Blocked Shots 3.3 ...... 6th The No. 2-ranked in the West by Pac-West Hoops, rated No. 59 Steals 6.8 ...... 6th nationally among all positions by that service ... Averaged 16 points and eight rebounds /Turnover Ratio 0.75 ...... 9th last year at Chief Sealth High School ... Selected among the nation’s top 100 players by nearly every scouting service, including a No. 71 ranking by The Sporting News. Defensive Rebounds 22.9 ...... 8th 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 (Feb. 5, 2001)

#20 Curtis Allen High Games Career Season Guard, 6-0, 160, Fr., Tacoma, Wash. (Wilson HS) Points 18 Same • The Washington state Class 4A Player of the Year as a senior in 2000. Rebounds 6 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 • Tallied the game-winning basket in overtime at Oregon (Jan. 18) on a spinning layin. Steals 3 Same • Scored career-high 18 points against Washington State (Feb. 3) and distributed 5 assists. Minutes 27 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 5 Same • Wears No. 32, the same number worn with the NBA’s Sonics by his father, “Downtown” Fred Brown. Assists 6 Same • 43 of his 70 career field goals were 3-point baskets. Blocks 1 Same • Started 19 of 21 games this season. Steals 4 Same • Had career-high 15 points, including 4-of-5 shooting on 3-pointers, at Wichita State (Nov. 30). Minutes 39 Same

#3 Sterling Brown High Games Career Season Guard, 6-4, 190, Fr., Woodinville, Wash. (Woodinville HS) Points 6 Same • Walk-on who was an honorable mention all-state selection last year. Rebounds 2 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 11 games this season. Steals 0 Same • Scored 6 points at USC (Jan. 6) in a season-high 15 minutes of play. Minutes 15 Same

#21 Greg Clark High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 225, Sr., San Diego, Calif. (Grossmont HS / Long Beach State) Points 13 Same • 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 • Missed 4 games after spraing right ankle vs. Clemson (Dec. 22), halting a streak of 68 games played. Blocks 1 Same • Hit the game-winning shot, a 17-foot jumper with 3.2 seconds left at Florida International (Dec. 16). Steals 4 Same • Scored career-high 13 points on Saturday at Oregon State (Jan. 20) in a reserve role. Minutes 38 33

#34 Ben Coffee High Games Career Season Forward, 6-5, 200, So., Portland, Ore. (Benson Tech HS) Points 7 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 3 Same • Played 18 games last season, including two starts (against California and Arizona). Blocks 21 • Played 18 games this season, including 3 starts. Started both games in Oregon. Steals 3 Same • Registered career-high six rebounds at American (Dec. 20). Minutes 27 Same

#50 David Dixon High Games Career Season Center, 6-11, 300, Jr., Houston, Texas (Westbury Christian HS / Tyler JC) Points 16 Same • A 1999 junior college All-American. Rebounds 6 Same • Hails from Tyler (Texas) JC that produced NBA players Robert Pack, Sam Mack and David Benoit. Assists 2 Same • Scored career-high 16 points against Washington State on Feb. 3. Blocks 5 Same • Blocked a career-high five shots against WSU (Feb. 3), the most by a Husky since Nov. 16, 1998. Steals 1 Same • Started 8 games, including the last three outings. Minutes 23 Same Washington Basketball (Feb. 5, 2001)

#42 Thalo Green High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 220, Sr., Salem, Ore. (South Salem HS) Points 22 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 2 Same • Voted to the Puerto Holiday Classic All-Tournament Team after averaging 17.7 points in three games. Steals 43 • Has three 20-point games, including career-high 22 points at Oregon (Jan. 18). Minutes 38 Same

#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 76 • 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 • Hit the game-winning basket at the buzzer in a 77-76 overtime win over Clemson (Dec. 22). Steals 33 • Sprained right ankle at UCLA (Jan. 4) and is missed the USC game (Jan. 6). Started 17 games. Minutes 41 Same

#31 Grant Leep High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 225, Jr., Mount Vernon, Wash. (Mount Vernon HS) Points 10 9 • 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 2 Same • Played all 21 games this season. Blocks 1 Same • Hit two 3-pointer vs. San Diego (Dec. 30), snapping a string of 24 straight missed treys by Huskies. Steals 1 Same • Had season-high 9 points against Arizona State (Jan. 11), hitting all three of his 3-point tries. Minutes 25 20

#10 C.J. Massingale High Games Career Season Guard, 6-3, 195, Fr., Tacoma, Wash. (Mount Tahoma HS) Points 25 Same • Two-time MVP of the Narrows League Bridge Division in 1999 and 2000. Rebounds 6 Same • Averaged 22 points, eight rebounds and six assists as a senior in 2000 for Mount Tahoma High. Assists 5 Same • Rated the No. 8 point guard prospect in the West by Pac-West Hoops. Blocks 0 Same • Posted 3 double-figure scoring performances. Started 3 Pac-10 games. Steals 2 Same • Scored 25 points at UCLA (Jan. 4), the highest point total for a Husky this season. Minutes 28 Same

#1 Will Perkins High Games Career Season Forward, 6-8, 195, Sr., Omaha, Neb. (Omaha South HS/Iowa Western JC) Points 21 Same • Two-time all-league pick at Iowa Western and a 1999 honorable mention JC All-American. Rebounds 13 Same • Led Washington in rebounds last season, averaging 5.9 boards per game. Assists 5 Same • Registered 8 double-doubles to lead all Pac-10 players. No Husky had a double-double last year. Blocks 43 • Started 19 games. Led all UW scorers on 11 occasions and all rebounders 12 times. Steals 4 Same • Missed the Alabama game and 2 weeks of practice due to a virus that was discovered Dec. 16. Minutes 38 Same

#44 Marlon Shelton High Games Career Season Center, 6-10, 270, Jr., Rochester, Mich. (Rochester HS) Points 13 Same • Attended ’s Big Man Camp during the summer of 2000. Rebounds 13 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-double with 11 points and 13 rebounds vs. UC Irvine (Dec. 28). Steals 21 • Tallied a career-high 13 points against 17th-ranked Alabama (Dec. 21). Minutes 30 Same 2000-01 Washington Men’s Basketball Cumulative Statistics - as of Feb. 4 ALL GAMES

RECORD: OVERALL HOME AWAY NEUTRAL ALL GAMES...... (9-12) (4-7) (4-4) (1-1) CONFERENCE...... (3-6) (2-3) (1-3) (0-0) NON-CONFERENCE...... (6-6) (2-4) (3-1) (1-1)

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 - AVG ------01 Perkins, Will 20 19 567 28.4 110 214 .514 0 1 .000 54 93 .581 59 93 152 7.6 69 5 30 45 15 20 274 13.7 42 Green, Thalo 20 13 500 25.0 86 159 .541 14 32 .438 46 65 .708 38 57 95 4.8 58 3 24 52 5 16 232 11.6 23 Johnson, Michael 20 17 529 26.5 55 151 .364 13 59 .220 33 53 .623 16 48 64 3.2 28 0 42 39 1 17 156 7.8 32 Brown, Bryan 21 19 561 26.7 46 141 .326 27 86 .314 12 26 .462 9 28 37 1.8 30 1 60 50 3 25 131 6.2 21 Clark, Greg 17 9 363 21.4 35 95 .368 18 60 .300 13 20 .650 12 28 40 2.4 37 0 25 21 1 19 101 5.9 20 Allen, Curtis 21 3 405 19.3 44 120 .367 12 59 .203 18 23 .783 4 32 36 1.7 25 0 45 45 1 19 118 5.6 10 Massingale, C.J. 19 3 251 13.2 34 87 .391 10 24 .417 16 35 .457 16 14 30 1.6 28 0 21 26 0 10 94 4.9 44 Shelton, Marlon 21 11 377 18.0 35 99 .354 0 0 .000 26 45 .578 40 58 98 4.7 60 0 8 29 32 6 96 4.6 50 Dixon, David 21 8 285 13.6 41 69 .594 0 0 .000 9 28 .321 28 36 64 3.0 52 0 7 29 10 2 91 4.3 31 Leep, Grant 21 0 199 9.5 23 66 .348 10 34 .294 4 6 .667 13 23 36 1.7 19 0 7 3 1 2 60 2.9 34 Coffee, Ben 18 3 186 10.3 10 40 .250 3 15 .200 13 30 .433 8 23 31 1.7 18 1 10 27 1 7 36 2.0 03 Brown, Sterling 11 0 50 4.5 7 20 .350 1 4 .250 4 9 .444 5 5 10 0.9 4 0 2 5 0 0 19 1.7 22 Duty, Travis 2 0 2 1.0 0 3 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 2 0 2 1.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM REBOUNDS...... 45 36 81 3 ------Washington 21 4275 526 1264 .416 108 374 .289 248 433 .573 295 481 776 37.0 428 10 281 374 70 143 1408 67.0 ------Opponents 21 4275 535 1212 .441 102 340 .300 352 513 .686 273 528 801 38.1 421 10 272 361 62 165 1524 72.6 ------

SCORE BY HALVES(and OTs): 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Opponents 752 748 24 0 0 0 1524 Washington 639 741 28 0 0 0 1408

DEADBALL REBOUNDS: OFF DEF TOTAL Opponents 67 20 87 Washington 80 17 97 2001 Results Head Coach: Bob Bender (eighth year, Duke ’80) UW Record: 104–116 Career Record: 164–173 (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: 9–12 overall (4–7 home, 4–4 away, 1–1 neutral) 3–6 Pac-10 (2–3 home, 1–3 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. #17 Alabama L San Juan, Puerto Rico 200 60–69 5–4 Dec. 22 ^ vs. Clemson W San Juan, Puerto Rico 275 77–76 6–4 Dec. 28 UC-Irvine L Bank of America Arena 5,166 56–55 6–5 Dec. 30 San Diego L Bank of America Arena 4,287 54–72 6–6 Jan. 4 • at UCLA L Los Angeles, Calif. 7,354 64–86 6–7 0–1 Jan. 6 • at #20 USC L Los Angeles, Calif. 4,418 61–87 6–8 0–2 Jan. 11 • Arizona State W Bank of America Arena 5,597 70-68 ot 7–8 1–2 Jan. 13 • #21 Arizona L Bank of America Arena 10,000 (sellout) 89–64 7–9 1–3 Jan. 18 • at Oregon W Eugene, Ore. 8,786 72–71 ot 8–9 2–3 Jan. 20 • at Oregon State L Corvallis, Ore. 5,820 56–63 8–10 2–4 Jan. 25 • #1 Stanford L Bank of America Arena 9,705 94–63 8–11 2–5 Jan. 27 • California L Bank of America Arena 6,709 79–64 8–12 Feb. 3 • Washington State W Bank of America Arena 7,138 78–72 9–12 3–6 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: 108,823 ( 21 game average: 5,182 ) Home Game Attendance: 69,562 ( 11 game average: 6,324) Home Game Attendance (Pac–10 Only): 39,142 ( 5 game average: 7,828 ) Away Game Attendance: 39,061 ( 8 game average: 4,848 ) Neutral Site Attendance: 475 ( 2 game average: 238 ) 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 3–0 •5–5 DNP •10–2 2–2 6–4 DNP •15–5 •6–5 0–0 DNP INJ •13–7 INJ vs. Clemson 7–1 •8–4 DNP INJ •7–2 0–2 DNP •18–4 •12–2 0–0 2–1 20–10 •3–6 INJ UC-Irvine 2–2 •7–2 DNP INJ 3–2 4–1 DNP •8–4 •3–3 0–1 0–1 •17–5 •11–13 INJ San Diego 2–1 •0–0 0–1 0–2 1–2 12–5 DNP •5–7 •11–6 6–3 0–1 •15–4 •2–4 INJ *at UCLA 0–0 •0–1 2–1 3–1 4–4 5–5 DNP •2–3 •0–3 5–1 25–2 •18–5 •0–3 INJ *at USC 2–0 •6–3 6–1 1–1 0–2 6–1 DNP •8–1 INJ 2–2 •10–2 •12–9 •8–5 INJ *Arizona State 0–1 •12–2 0–2 INJ 4–1 0–0 DNP •8–3 6–4 9–2 •13–2 •13–10 • 5–2 INJ *Arizona 9–3 •2–1 1–0 INJ 4–5 5–4 0–2 •9–5 2–0 2–1 •3–3 •21–13 6–9 INJ *at Oregon 12–6 •5–2 DNP 2–7 •0–0 2–1 DNP •22–7 •9–4 3–0 4–0 •11–2 2–4 INJ *at Oregon State •5–1 4–1 DNP 13–3 •3–2 0–0 DNP •6–4 •5–0 2–3 6–6 •12–5 0–3 INJ *Stanford 10–1 •3–1 0–2 7–1 0–0 6–4 DNP •12–1 •6–0 2–3 4–2 •12–11 1–6 INJ *California •6–3 •11–0 0–0 0–0 0–1 •12–4 DNP •8–7 14–2 2–0 3–2 •4–4 4–1 INJ *Washington State •18–4 4–0 DNP 2–1 0–1 •16–6 DNP •21–7 •2–5 0–0 2–1 •13–7 0–0 INJ *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 Bryan 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) Johnson & 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 (L 60-69) Thalo Green ...... 15 Marlon Shelton ...... 7 B.Brown & Johnson ...... 4 vs. Clemson (W 77-76 ot) Will Perkins ...... 20 Will Perkins ...... 10 Allen, Coffee, Green, Johnson ..... 3 UC-Irvine (L 55-56) Will Perkins ...... 17 Marlon Shelton ...... 13 Johnson, B.Brown ...... 4 San Diego (L 54-72) Will Perkins ...... 15 Thalo Green ...... 7 Allen, B.Brown, Green ...... 3 at UCLA (L 64-86) C.J. Massingale ...... 25 Dixon & Perkins ...... 5 Bryan Brown ...... 3 at USC (L 61–87) Will Perkins ...... 12 Will Perkins ...... 9 C.J. Massingale ...... 5 Arizona State (W 70-68, ot) Massingale & Perkins ...... 13 Will Perkins ...... 10 Bryan Brown ...... 5 Arizona (L 64-89) Will Perkins ...... 21 Will Perkins ...... 13 Perkins & Massingale ...... 3 at Oregon (W 72-71, ot) Thalo Green ...... 22 Clark & Green ...... 7 Will Perkins ...... 4 at Oregon State (L 56-63) Greg Clark ...... 13 C.J. Massingale ...... 6 Bryan Brown ...... 5 Stanford (L 63-94) Perkins & Green ...... 12 WIll Perkins ...... 11 Will Perkins ...... 3 California (L 79-64) Michael Johnson ...... 14 Thalo Green ...... 7 Bryan Brown ...... 6 Washington State (W 78-72) Thalo Green ...... 21 Green & Perkins ...... 7 Curtis Allen ...... 5 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) Fg–Fga Pct. 3pt–A Pct. Ft–Fta Pct. Of–Def Reb Pf–Dq A–To Pts Blk–St 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. #17 Alabama (60-69) 25–67 .373 5–20 .250 5–8 .625 15–17 32 18–0 16–19 60 2–7 Dec. 22 vs. Clemson (77-76, ot) 29–63 .460 7–23 .304 12–20 .600 11–24 35 18–0 13–19 77 4–9 Dec. 28 UC Irvine (55-56) 19–44 .432 0–8 .000 17–29 .586 7–28 35 12–0 11–23 55 4–6 Dec. 30 San Diego (54-72) 23–64 .359 2–16 .125 6–13 .462 15–24 39 14–0 14–17 54 5–3 Jan. 4 at UCLA (64-86) 22–62 .355 6–22 .273 14–25 .560 15–19 34 15–0 9–23 64 2–5 Jan. 6 at USC (61-87) 25–62 .403 5–17 .294 6–12 .500 15–15 30 16–0 13–17 61 2–8 Jan. 11 Arizona State (70-68, ot) 22–58 .379 11–24 .458 15–25 .600 9–22 31 18–1 17–17 70 4–9 Jan. 13 Arizona (64-89) 24–84 .286 2–17 .118 14–26 .538 30–24 54 33–1 12–16 64 4–4 Jan. 18 at Oregon (72-71, ot) 26–62 .419 5–17 .294 15–25 .600 12–26 38 30–2 15–20 72 3–9 Jan. 20 at Oregon State (56-63) 23–55 .418 5–21 .238 5–8 .625 10–21 31 16–2 12–16 56 3–8 Jan. 25 Stanford (63–94) 23–59 .390 5–16 .313 12–24 .500 9–25 34 17–0 7–12 63 1–4 Jan. 27 California (64–79) 22–56 .393 7–27 .259 13–16 .813 10–18 28 24–1 17–21 64 2–9 Feb. 3 Washington State (78–72) 31–60 .517 3–9 .333 13–19 .684 16–20 36 22–0 17–15 78 8–7 High Marks (listed by individual category) 35–84 .549 11–27 .478 25–49 .833 30–35 54 33–2 21–23 94 8–10 Low Marks (listed by individual category) 19–44 .286 0–8 .000 2–5 .400 7–17 27 12–0 6–10 54 1–3 2001 Opponent Game-by-Game Statistics Date Opponent Fg–Fga Pct. 3pt–A Pct. Ft–Fta Pct. Of–Def Reb Pf–Dq A–To Pts Blk–St 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. #17 Alabama 22–45 .489 5–11 .455 20–26 .769 8–29 37 13–0 10–24 69 1–5 Dec. 21 vs. Clemson 28–64 .438 8–21 .381 12–19 .632 15–29 44 19–1 15–23 76 2–8 Dec. 28 UC Irvine 22–61 .361 6–16 .375 6–8 .750 10–24 34 22–0 7–19 56 2–11 Dec. 30 San Diego 29–60 .483 6–17 .353 8–12 .667 8–29 37 20–0 19–14 72 2–7 Jan. 4 at UCLA 37–69 .536 5–13 .385 7–16 .438 19–31 50 21–1 18–23 86 5–13 Jan. 6 at USC 33–58 .569 10–22 .455 11–15 .733 10–21 31 15–0 21–15 87 4–7 Jan. 11 Arizona State 26–67 .388 1–11 .091 15–26 .577 24–31 55 23–2 11–24 68 4–7 Jan. 13 Arizona 29–61 .475 1–12 .083 30–47 .638 17–32 49 21–0 16–15 89 11–8 Jan. 18 at Oregon 19–55 .345 3–22 .136 30–42 .714 15–29 44 24–1 6–23 71 4–11 Jan. 20 at Oregon State 21–47 .447 6–22 .237 15–20 .750 10–24 34 15–0 15–18 63 0–7 Jan. 25 Stanford 37–65 .569 11–26 .423 9–16 .600 5–33 38 18–0 22–8 94 2–5 Jan. 27 California 25–51 .490 3–11 .273 26–35 .743 12–25 37 17–0 14–15 79 3–11 Feb. 3 Washington State 24–56 .429 4–11 .364 20–28 .714 16–13 29 20–1 7–13 72 2–9 High Marks (listed by individual category) 37–73 .592 11–24 .471 30–47 .826 19–33 50 35–2 22–24 94 11–13 Low Marks (listed by individual category) 14–45 .275 0–5 .000 3–6 .438 8–13 25 13–0 6–12 47 0–2 2000-01 Husky Box Scores

Texas El-Paso 73, Washington 61 Washington 94, Portland St. 63 Nov. 21, 2000; KeyArena, Seattle, Wash. 1 Nov. 28, 2000; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 3 Washington Texas-El Paso Washington Portland State FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 7-12 0-0 1-2 10 0 15 31 Owens 0-3 0-1 2-2 5 2 2 32 Perkins 5-10 0-0 1-4 12 3 11 23 Thomas 6-8 0-0 2-2 7 1 14 30 Clark 3-9 2-5 1-2 4 2 9 31 Smallwood 3-6 0-0 3-4 5 4 9 28 Clark 2-5 1-2 4-4 3 1 9 16 Lackey 3-10 0-3 3-4 8 0 9 22 Dixon 0-1 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 10 Wolfram 9-21 0-0 3-6 9 1 21 35 Dixon 2-2 0-0 2-4 5 0 6 17 Boxley 1-5 0-0 2-2 7 2 4 27 Johnson 1-9 0-3 2-7 4 2 4 26 Neal 2-4 2-4 2-2 0 0 8 30 Johnson 4-11 1-4 3-4 5 3 12 24 Madison 9-24 3-16 0-0 1 1 21 36 B. Brown 1-5 1-4 3-4 1 4 6 27 Costello 6-16 2-9 12-13 8 3 26 40 B. Brown 4-10 3-8 0-0 2 3 11 27 Wilcher 3-11 1-4 1-4 1 2 8 26 S. Brown 1-1 0-0 0-1 1 0 2 2 Jarrell 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 15 S. Brown 2-3 0-0 0-0 0 1 4 6 Jordan 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 8 Massingale 3-6 0-0 1-3 1 0 7 14 Luces 1-1 0-0 1-2 0 0 3 4 Massingale 3-7 1-2 0-1 2 1 7 14 Dean 1-4 0-0 0-0 2 0 2 18 Allen 1-2 1-1 0-0 3 0 3 17 Enzweiler 1-4 0-2 0-0 8 2 2 16 Allen 3-4 2-3 0-0 2 5 8 21 Briggs 0-1 0-0 102 0 1 1 14 Duty 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Lang 1-7 0-1 0-0 2 0 2 13 Leep 3-7 2-2 0-0 6 0 8 20 Leep 3-6 1-2 0-0 7 1 7 19 Bailey 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 3 Coffee 0-1 0-1 1-2 0 0 1 3 Coffee 1-1 1-1 0-0 0 1 3 9 Hamilton 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 3 Shelton 2-8 0-0 2-2 10 0 6 19 Green 5-7 1-1 3-5 3 0 14 14 Totals 22-61 6-16 11-23 45 8 61 200 Totals 23-57 4-16 23-29 38 12 73 200 Shelton 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 2 2 9 Fouls: UW 24 (B. Brown 5), UTEP 21. Turnovers: UW 22 (Johnson 5), UTEP 17(Jarrell 4). Totals 35-6811-2313-22 49 21 94 200 Totals 25-73 4-24 9-14 36 8 63 200 Blocks: UW 4 (Shelton 2), UTEP 4 (Smallwood 3). Steals: UW 5 (B. Brown 2), UTEP 7 (Smallwood 3). Fouls: UW 14, PSU 19. Turnovers: UW 15 (B. Brown, Allen 4), PSU 16 (Madison, Wilcher 4). Blocks: UW 2, PSU 2. Steals: UW 10 (Four with 2), PSU 8 (Boxley, Wilcher 2). FG%: Half—.286 (8-28) Final—.361 FG%: Half—.448 (13-29) Final—.404 3-FG%: Half—.143 (1-7) Final—.375 3-FG%: Half—.167 (1-6) Final—.250 FG%: Half—.351 (13-37) Final—.515 FG%: Half—.368 (14-38) Final—.342 FT%: Half—.615 (8-13) Final—.478 FT%: Half—.778 (7-9) Final—.793 3-FG%: Half—.300 (3-10) Final—.478 3-FG%: Half—.214 (3-14) Final—.167 FT%: Half—.600 (6-10) Final—.591 FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.643 Halftime Score: UTEP 34, UW 25 Attendance: 4,031 Halftime Score: PSU 36, UW 35 Attendance: 5,112 SEATTLE -- Junior college transfer Eugene Costello scored 26 points as Texas-El Paso SEATTLE -- Will Perkins posted his third straight double-double with 11 points and 12 raced out to an early lead before holding off a late Washington rally for a 73-61 win at KeyArena rebounds, helping Washington turn a one-point halftime deficit into a 94-63 rout of Portland in the season opener for both teams. The Huskies (0-1) had won their previous six season- State at Bank of America Arena. The Vikings (0-3) held UW scoreless for nearly four minutes, opening games. Washington trailed by as many as 15 points before cutting the deficit to 58- opening a 6-0 lead. The Huskies hit only three of their first 18 shots from the field en route to 56 on a basket by Michael Johnson with 3:48 left in the game. Costello answered with a 3-pointer a 36-35 halftime deficit. Washington (2-1) scored the first 10 points of the second half, including at 3:33 to start a 15-5 game-closing run for the Miners (1-0). UTEP hit 8-of-10 free throws during four from Perkins, to take the lead for good at 45-36 with 16:51 left to play. Greg Clark scored the final 1:48 to secure the victory. Will Perkins had15 points and 10 rebounds to lead UW which seven of his nine points in a three-minute stretch late in the game, fueling a 13-point UW run did not have a player register a double-double during the entire 1999-2000 season. Marlon that put the game out of reach. The 31-point margin was the Huskies’ largest in 61 games while Shelton also had 10 boards for the Huskies who had a 45-38 rebounding advantage. Brandon the 94-point output was their biggest in 67 games dating to March of 1998. PSU shot just 34- Wolfram scored 21 points, including a jumper with 16:18 left in the first half that capped an 11- percent (25-73) for the game. The Vikings were led by the 21 points of Charles Madison. Jamaal 0 Miner run. UTEP had leads of 11-1, 22-8 and 26-11 before the Huskies closed to within 34- Thomas added 14 points for PSU. Joining Perkins in doubld-figure scoring were Thalo Green 25 at halftime. with 14 points, Michael Johnson with 12 and Bryan Brown with 11. Washington 81, New Mexico State 77 Washington 69, Wichita State 66 Nov. 25, 2000; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 2 Nov. 30, 2000; Levitt Arena, Wichita, Kan. 4 Washington New Mexico State Washington Wichita State FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 5-8 0-0 4-11 10 1 14 28 Noopila 2-5 1-2 1-2 2 0 6 22 Perkins 5-8 0-0 6-8 5 0 16 31 Robinson 4-7 0-2 1-1 8 1 9 24 Clark 1-4 1-4 4-5 1 3 7 21 Hines 0-2 0-0 1-4 6 0 1 16 Clark 0-2 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 23 Davis 0-3 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 19 Dixon 0-0 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 15 Norvell 3-9 0-1 2-2 4 1 8 27 Dixon 1-3 0-0 1-2 5 0 3 12 Mack 4-10 0-0 6-8 4 0 14 22 Johnson 4-10 0-3 7-13 4 4 15 28 Channing 8-17 1-3 7-10 4 4 24 35 Johnson 6-14 1-8 1-2 5 2 14 31 Benton 7-17 4-10 6-8 3 1 24 36 B. Brown 2-3 0-0 1-8 4 1 5 27 Trammell 2-6 1-4 3-4 1 1 8 20 B. Brown 4-6 4-5 3-4 3 6 15 34 McFall 2-13 1-5 0-0 8 4 5 35 S. Brown 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 4 Jones 0-0 0-0 2-2 1 0 2 1 Massingale 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 Tshomba 2-5 1-4 5-5 5 0 10 21 Massingale 0-4 0-0 1-2 1 1 1 11 Dildy 2-4 1-2 0-0 2 2 5 18 Allen 1-3 0-2 0-0 2 4 2 15 Clark 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Allen 4-6 1-3 0-0 2 3 9 19 Moore 3-6 0-0 7-9 3 0 13 19 Leep 0-2 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 9 Phillips 0-1 0-1 0-1 2 5 0 16 Leep 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 6 Mason 4-8 1-2 0-2 2 1 9 15 Green 7-11 1-2 0-3 4 2 15 22 Grundvig 1-3 0-0 2-3 1 2 4 22 Coffee 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Crooks 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 5 Shelton 2-4 0-0 0-1 8 1 4 19 White 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 Green 5-7 0-0 7-8 7 1 17 19 McDermott 0-0 0-0 1-3 8 0 1 22 Totals 26-53 6-21 11-20 38 17 69 200 Totals 20-59 6-22 20-26 39 13 66 200 Shelton 4-5 0-0 1-2 3 0 9 20 Fouls: UW 24, WSU 21. Turnovers: UW 18 (B. Brown 4), WSU 17 (McFall 7). Totals 27-51 2-10 25-49 39 14 81 200 Totals 24-58 5-15 24-38 36 9 77 200 Blocks: UW 3, WSU 1. Steals: UW 9 (Johnson 3), WSU 6 (Robinson 2). Fouls: UW 29, NMSU 35 (Channing, Moore 5). Turnovers: UW 16 (Johnson, Green 4), FG%: Half—.464 (13-32) Final—491 FG%: Half—.406 (13-32) Final—.339 NMSU 12 (Mason, Norvell 3). Blocks: UW 4 (Shelton 2), NMSU 2. Steals: UW 4, NMSU 6. 3-FG%: Half—.273 (3-11) Final—.286 3-FG%: Half—.385 (5-13) Final—.273 FT%: Half—.571 (4-7) Final—.550 FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.769 FG%: Half—.462 (12-26) Final—.529 FG%: Half—.346 (9-26) Final—.414 Halftime Score: WSU 36, UW 33 Attendance: 7,687 3-FG%: Half—.167 (1-6) Final—.200 3-FG%: Half—.250 (2-8) Final—.333 FT%: Half—.556 (5-9) Final—.510 FT%: Half—.571 (8-14) Final—.632 WICHITA, Kan. -- Bryan Brown scored nine of his career-high 15 points inside the final Halftime Score: UW 30, NMSU 28 Attendance: 6,313 5:21, helping Washington hold off a late Wichita State rally en route to a 69-66 win at Levitt Arena. The Huskies (3-1) trailed by as many as 10 points in the first half before a 10-3 run over the final SEATTLE -- Thalo Green scored a career-high 17 points in his return from knee surgery, five minutes cut the halftime margin to 36-33. Washington took the lead for good with an 11- helping Washington defeat New Mexico State 81-77 in the inaugural game at the newly renovated 2 surge to open the second half, netting a 44-38 advantage with 14:45 left to play. Brown Bank of America Arena. Green, playing for the first time since undergoing arthroscopic surgery answered baskets by Wichita State (2-1) on four occasions inside the final six minutes, including on his left knee on Nov. 1, scored 15 points in the second half as the Huskies (1-1) extended 3-pointers on consecutive UW possessions. He hit 2-of-3 free throws inside the final 2:23 and a 30-28 halftime margin to as many as 12 points. The UW lead was 70-58 with 2:47 left in the also had an assist and steal. Duke Tshomba trimmed the UW lead to 68-66 on a pair of free throws game before the Aggies (1-3) scored five straight points. The Huskies made only 11-of-24 free with 20 seconds remaining. Michael Johnson pushed the UW margin to 69-66 by hitting 1-of- throws over the final 2:12, enabling New Mexico State to draw within 78-77 on a Brandon Mason 2 free throws at 0:19. The Shockers missed three chances at game-tying 3-pointers, including 3-pointer with 8.2 seconds remaining. Michael Johnson hit 1-of-2 free throws with 2.2 seconds one at the buzzer by Terrell Bento who led all scorers with 24 points . Troy Mack added 14 for left and he subsequent in-bounds pass was thrown out of bounds by the Aggies. Perkins posted WSU and Tshomba had 10. Will Perkins scored 16 points to lead the Huskies who also got 15 his second straight double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds. Johnson scored 15 points from Thalo Green and 14 from Johnson. Brown hit 4-of-5 shots from 3-point range while the for UW. Eric Channing paced NMSU with 24 points and James Moore added 13. rest of the Huskies hit only 2-of-16 treys. 2000-01 Box Scores, continued

Gonzaga 86, Washington 74 Washington 63, Florida International 61 Dec. 2, 2000; Martin Centre/The Kennel, Spokane, Wash. 5 Dec. 16, 2000; Golden Panther Arena, Miami, Fla. 7 Washington Gonzaga Washington Florida International FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 7-19 0-0 4-6 11 5 18 34 Stepp 4-15 1-8 8-8 5 10 17 38 Perkins 5-10 0-0 0-0 7 1 10 33 Cuenca 0-1 0-1 0-1 4 2 0 23 Clark 4-5 3-4 0-0 1 2 11 27 Hernandez 4-6 0-1 0-1 3 2 8 21 Clark 3-7 0-3 0-0 2 3 6 25 Rosario 3-8 0-0 0-0 8 0 6 32 Dixon 1-3 0-0 0-0 3 1 2 10 Calvary 11-20 2-4 5-7 6 4 29 36 Shelton 1-1 0-0 1-1 0 0 3 8 Jackson 4-9 1-3 0-0 2 3 9 34 Johnson 6-15 2-7 4-4 3 1 18 33 Tricco 0-1 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 14 Johnson 3-7 0-1 0-0 4 3 6 28 Slavtchev 7-8 3-4 0-0 2 0 17 27 B. Brown 1-9 1-6 0-0 1 2 3 26 Spink 1-3 0-0 0-0 8 4 2 25 B. Brown 5-7 4-6 0-1 2 4 14 32 Arroyo 8-11 3-5 2-2 1 7 21 32 Allen 2-7 0-3 0-0 1 1 4 20 Bankhead 2-2 2-2 2-2 4 1 8 25 Massingale 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Fisher 0-4 0-2 0-0 1 0 0 14 Leep 3-5 0-0 2-2 2 0 8 14 Reason 2-2 0-0 4-4 4 1 8 16 Allen 3-4 0-0 0-0 0 1 6 19 Joseph 0-2 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 7 Leep 0-1 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 3 Carter 1-4 0-0 0-2 3 0 2 22 Green 3-8 0-0 0-0 5 1 6 18 Gourde 6-7 0-0 0-1 2 0 12 17 Coffee 0-2 0-1 1-2 1 1 1 9 Fernandez 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Shelton 2-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 4 18 Violette 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 8 Green 7-11 1-1 0-1 6 2 15 30 Shifferer 2-2 1-1 1-1 0 0 6 7 Totals 29-73 6-20 10-12 36 13 74 200 Totals 31-57 5-15 19-23 39 22 86 200 Dixon 1-1 0-0 0-0 2 1 2 12 Fouls: UW 21(Perkins 5), GU 16. Turnovers: UW 10 (Green 3), GU 13 (Three with 2). Totals 28-51 5-13 2-5 27 16 63 200 Totals 25-49 8-17 3-6 25 12 61 200 Blocks: UW 5 (Shelton 4), GU 5 (Calvary 4). Steals: UW 3, GU 2. Fouls: UW 14, FIU 14. Turnovers: UW 19 (Allen, Brown 4), FIU 18 (Arroyo 7). FG%: Half—.459 (17-37) Final—.397 FG%: Half—.529 (18-34) Final—.544 Blocks: UW 1 (Dixon), FIU 1 (Joseph). Steals: UW 7 (Clark, Green 2), FIU 11 (Jackson 5). 3-FG%: Half—.455 (5-11) Final—.300 3-FG%: Half—.300 (3-10) Final—.333 FG%: Half—.481 (13-27) Final—.549 FG%: Half—.519 (14-27) Final—.510 FT%: Half—1.00 (2-2) Final—.833 FT%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.826 3-FG%: Half—.364 (4-11) Final—.385 3-FG%: Half—.500 (4-8) Final—.471 Halftime Score: UW 41, GU 40 Attendance: 4,000 FT%: Half—.500 (2-4) Final—.400 FT%: Half—.000 (0-0) Final—.500 Halftime Score: UW 32, FIU 32 Attendance: 543 SPOKANE, Wash. -- tallied 21 of his career-high 29 points in the second half, leading Gonzaga to an 86-74 win over Washington at the sold-out Martin Centre also known MIAMI--Greg Clark hit a 17-foot jump shot with 3.2 seconds left in the game, lifting as The Kennel. Calvary fueled an 11-0 Bulldog run, scoring nine points over the opening 4:20 Washington to a 63-61 victory over Florida International at Golden Panther Arena. The Huskies of the second half. Gonzaga (4-1), which trailed 41-40 at halftime, took the lead for good at 51- (4-3) claimed their largest lead of the game at 57-49 on a layin by Clark with 5:39 remaining. 41 on the surge that concluded on Calvary’s layin with 15:40 left in the game. The Huskies (3- Carlos Arroyo scored 10 of his game-high 21 points during the final 5:15, sparking a 12-4 FIU 2) missed their first nine shots of the second half before Will Perkins hit a layin with 15:28 run. Slavcho Slavtchev capped the surge with a 3-pointer at 0:37 that tied the game 61-61 and remaining. Perkins posted his fourth double-double in five games with 18 points and 11 set up Clark’s game-winning basket from the left baseline. Arroyo attempted a game-winning rebounds. Michael Johnson scored 18 points for UW which also got 11 from Greg Clark. shot at the buzzer, but his 25-foot 3-point attempt glanced off the front rim. Slavtchev finished Freshman had 17 points for the Bulldogs despite hitting only 1-of-8 shots from 3- with 17 points on 7-of-8 shooting. Thalo Green scored 10 of his 15 points in the second half point range. Stepp filled the starting point guard position vacated by UW transfer to pace the Huskies. Bryan Brown added 14 points, including four 3-pointers, and Will Perkins who injured his hand at Arizona in the Bulldog’s previous game. Gonzaga shot 54-percent from had 10 points. The Panthers (2-7) led for most of the first half, taking their biggest margin of the field (31-57) while limiting the Huskies to 40 percent accuracy (29-73). 32-24 on a jumper by Arroyo with 2:41to play before halftime. Washington closed the first half with a eight unanswered points, capped by a 3-pointer from Green that tied the score at 32. Saint Louis 69, Washington 61 Washington 67, American-Puerto Rico 47 Dec. 5, 2000; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 6 Dec. 20, 2000; Guerra Sports Complex, San Juan, P.R. 8 Washington Saint Louis Washington American-Puerto Rico FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 5-9 0-0 5-6 6 0 15 22 Baniak 6-11 1-1 3-4 9 0 16 24 Perkins 2-2 0-0 3-6 6 1 7 10 Sotod 0-2 0-0 1-2 0 0 1 10 Clark 5-11 1-4 0-0 2 1 11 27 Jeffers 4-11 0-0 10-11 6 2 18 34 Clark 4-6 1-2 1-3 8 2 10 33 Hernandez 4-15 0-0 3-5 7 0 11 27 Shelton 1-4 0-0 4-7 6 0 6 30 Heinrich 3-4 0-0 6-8 10 0 12 25 Shelton 3-4 0-0 1-4 5 0 7 19 Rodriguez 2-12 0-6 7-8 3 1 11 34 Johnson 3-9 1-3 2-2 2 2 9 32 Perry 4-8 0-0 1-2 4 2 9 34 Johnson 0-3 0-1 2-4 3 2 2 18 Alvarez 2-6 0-0 2-4 2 1 6 31 B. Brown 2-7 0-2 0-1 2 1 4 21 Sloan 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 B. Brown 2-7 2-5 0-0 0 0 6 16 Rios 3-4 0-0 3-6 2 1 9 29 Massingale 2-6 0-1 0-0 2 1 4 11 Fisher 2-3 0-0 1-2 0 2 5 24 S. Brown 0-1 0-0 2-2 0 0 2 2 Gonzalez 2-7 0-2 1-2 6 1 5 23 Allen 2-8 1-7 0-2 2 1 5 19 Tatum 2-5 0-0 1-6 4 1 5 15 Massingale 1-2 0-0 1-4 1 0 3 10 Velez 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 Allen 2-3 1-1 0-0 1 5 5 24 Oquendo 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 2 23 Leep 1-4 0-3 0-0 0 0 2 7 Diener 0-3 0-3 3-4 3 0 3 18 Leep 0-4 0-1 0-0 3 0 0 10 Turner 0-3 0-3 2-2 0 0 2 20 Green 1-5 1-2 0-1 7 0 3 21 Edwin 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 8 Coffee 0-3 0-1 3-4 6 0 3 14 Dixon 1-3 0-0 0-0 4 0 2 10 Braun 0-4 0-1 1-2 5 0 1 15 Green 7-9 1-1 5-6 5 3 20 23 Totals 23-66 4-22 11-19 40 6 61 200 Totals 21-49 1-5 26-39 42 9 69 200 Dixon 1-1 0-0 0-0 3 0 2 21 Fouls: UW 26 (Perkins 5), SLU 24. Turnovers: UW 18 (Dixon, Clark, Brown 3), SLU 19 (Perry 5). Totals 22-45 5-12 18-33 45 13 67 200 Totals 14-51 0-11 19-29 27 6 47 200 Blocks: UW 3 (Shelton 3), SLU 4 (Braun 2). Steals: UW 9 (Clark 4), SLU 5. Fouls: UW 23, AU 23 (Rios, Gonzalez 5). Turnovers: UW 21 (Coffee, Green 5), AU 15 (Rodriguez 4). FG%: Half—.290 (9-31) Final—.348 FG%: Half—.440 (11-25) Final—.429 Blocks: UW 4 (Four with 1), AUPR 1 (Oquendo). Steals: UW 7 (Allen, Clark 2), AU 11 (Alvarez 3). 3-FG%: Half—.222 (2-9) Final—.182 3-FG%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.200 FG%: Half—.478 (11-23) Final—.489 FG%: Half—.318 (7-22) Final—.275 FT%: Half—.500 (2-4) Final—.579 FT%: Half—.636 (7-11) Final—.667 3-FG%: Half—.333 (2-6) Final—.417 3-FG%: Half—.000 (0-5) Final—.000 Halftime Score: SLU 30, UW 22 Attendance: 5,504 FT%: Half—.550 (11-20) Final—.545 FT%: Half—.600 (9-15) Final—.655 Halftime Score: UW 35, American 23 Attendance: 178 SEATTLE -- scored 10 of his 18 points from the free throw line where Saint Louis posted a 15-point advantage in dealing Washington its first loss at newly-renovated Bank SAN JUAN, P.R. -- Bob Bender became the fourth coach to reach the 100-win plateau of America Arean, 69-61. The Billikens (5-1) converted 26-of-39 free throws compared with 11- at Washington which defeated host American-Puerto Rico 67-47 in a first-round Puerto Rico Holiday Classic matchup at the Guerra Sports Complex. Thalo Green scored a career-high 20 of-19 for the Huskies (3-3). Trailing 19-15, Saint Louis closed the first half with a 15-3 run as points for the Huskies, shooting 7-for-9 from the field. Washington (5-3) scored the game’s Washington’s only points over the final seven minutes came on a Thalo Green 3-pointer at 5:41. first nine points en route to a 35-23 halftime advantage. The Huskies opened the second half Jeffers hit four free throws inside the final five minutes as SLU capped the run with nine with nine unanswered points, pushing the margin to 44-23 with 16:47 left in the game. The NCAA unanswered points to claim a 30-33 halftime lead. Jeffers along with starting frontline teammates Division II Pirates rallied to trim the deficit to 48-40 on a free throw by Ivan Rios with 9:48 Matt Baniak (16) and Chris Heinrich (12) accounted for 46 points and 25 rebounds. Will Perkins remaining. Sparking the rally was a full-court press that forced 11 Husky turnovers during a six- scored 13 of his team-high 15 points in the second half after playing only five first-half minutes minute span. Washington responded with a 13-3 run to take a comfortable 60-43 lead. Greg due to foul trouble. The Huskies shot only 35 percent from the field (23-66), including 4-for- Clark finished with 10 points and eight rebounds, all in the second half. He led a 45-27 22 from 3-point range. The Billikens led by as many as 14 points after halftime. Greg Clark added rebounding advantage. Joan Hernandez and Joseph Rodriguez each had 11 points to lead AUPR. 11 points for UW which in the second half never drew closer than the final eight-point margin. American shot just 28-percent (14-51) and missed all 11 of its 3-point attempts. 2000-01 Box Scores, continued

(#17) Alabama 69, Washington 60 UC-Irvine 56, Washington 55 Dec. 21, 2000; Guerra Sports Complex, San Juan, P.R. 9 Dec. 28, 2000; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 11 Washington Alabama Washington UC-Irvine FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Clark 3-7 3-7 1-2 2 3 10 27 Dudley 6-13 0-0 2-2 8 1 14 28 Green 7-13 0-0 1-2 5 1 15 37 Walker 1-2 0-0 1-2 5 0 3 22 Perkins 6-10 0-0 5-10 5 1 17 32 Jones 4-8 2-4 0-0 6 0 10 25 Shelton 5-12 0-0 3-3 7 1 13 26 London 1-1 0-0 0-0 2 4 2 27 Green 3-4 0-0 2-2 4 1 8 31 Parada 3-9 0-0 2-2 8 1 8 24 Johnson 3-9 0-1 0-0 5 4 6 33 Meade 2-6 1-3 4-4 3 1 9 25 Shelton 3-8 0-0 5-7 13 0 11 26 Green 1-8 0-0 1-2 2 2 3 26 B. Brown 2-10 1-6 0-1 5 4 5 34 Grizzard 6-15 3-7 11-13 8 1 26 37 Johnson 1-5 0-1 1-2 3 4 3 30 Miller 3-8 1-4 0-0 4 1 7 22 Allen 1-7 1-5 0-0 0 2 3 19 Wallace 4-6 0-0 1-3 7 1 9 27 B. Brown 3-11 0-4 1-3 2 4 7 33 Jackson 2-7 1-5 1-2 3 0 6 36 Leep 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 Martin 2-2 1-1 0-0 2 0 5 18 Massingale 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 3 Christ 2-6 0-0 0-0 4 0 4 13 Coffee 1-3 0-1 0-0 2 0 2 7 Smith 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Allen 1-4 0-3 0-0 2 0 2 14 Edmond 5-9 2-3 2-2 1 1 14 25 Dixon 3-6 0-0 0-0 4 1 6 14 Moss 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Leep 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 7 Zuzak 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 1 2 10 Pettway 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 2 1 13 Coffee 0-0 0-0 3-4 2 1 3 10 Baskauskas 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 8 Totals 25-67 5-20 5-8 17 16 60 200 Totals 22-45 5-11 20-26 37 10 69 200 Dixon 2-2 0-0 0-1 1 0 4 14 Korfman 0-2 0-0 0-0 2 1 0 11 Fouls: UW 18, UA 13. Turnovers: UW 19 (Dixon, Johnson 4), UA 24 (Walker 5). Totals 19-44 0-8 17-29 35 11 55 200 Totals 22-61 6-16 6-8 34 7 56 200 Blocks: UW 2 (Shelton 2), UA 1 (Grizzard). Steals: UW 7 (Clark, Green 2), UA 5 (Wallace 2). Fouls: UW 12, UCI 22. Turnovers: UW 23 (Green 7), UCI 19 (Edmond 4). FG%: Half—..382 (13-34) Final—.373 FG%: Half—.435 (10-23) Final—.489 Blocks: UW 4 (Shelton 3), UCI 2 (Parada 2). Steals: UW 6 (Brown 3), UCI 11 (Edmond, Miller 3). 3-FG%: Half—.375 (3-8) Final—.250 3-FG%: Half—.400 (2-5) Final—.455 FG%: Half—.318 (7-22) Final—.432 FG%: Half—.481 (13-27) Final—.361 FT%: Half—.500 (2-4) Final—.625 FT%: Half—.900 (9-10) Final—.769 Halftime Score: Alabama 31, UW 31 Attendance: 200 3-FG%: Half—.000 (0-5) Final—.000 3-FG%: Half—.333 (2-6) Final—.375 FT%: Half—.667 (6-9) Final—.586 FT%: Half—.667 (4-6) Final—.750 SAN JUAN, P.R.-- scored 26 points and led a 15-point free throw advantage Halftime Score: UCI 32, UW 20 Attendance: 5,166 with 11-of-13 shooting from the line in 17th-ranked Alabama’s 69-60 semifinal victory over Washington in the Puerto Rico Holiday Classic at the Guerra Sports Complex. The Crimson Tide SEATTLE-- Sean Jackson hit a 3-pointer with 1:02 left in the game and UC Irvine held on (9-0) hit 20-of-26 free throws to only 5-of-8 for Washington (5-4). The Huskies led for much for a 56-55 win over Washington at Bank of America Arena. The Huskies (6-5) had two chances of the first half before Alabama closed with a 10-4 run to forge a 31-31 halftime tie. The Tide to win in the final 2.4 seconds. Bryan Brown was fouled on a 3-point attempt and made the first led 49-42 before Curtis Allen capped an 11-3 run with a 3-pointer with 4:59 left in the game that free throw before missing the last two. Will Perkins rebounded the final miss, but missed his gave UW its final lead at 53-52. Alabama responded with 11 unanswered points, taking a desperation put back at the buzzer. Perkins led UW with 17 points while Marlon Shelton posted commanding 63-53 advantage. Grizzard capped the surge on a three-point play with 1:25 his first double-double with 11 points and 13 rebounds. The Anteaters (7-2) were led by the remaining, helping the Tide rally from its first deficit all season. Thalo Green scored 15 points 14 points of Malachi Edmond and 10 from Ben Jones. Irvine staked a 32-20 halftime advantage to lead the Huskies who also got a career-high 13 from Marlon Shelton. Greg Clark added 10 on the strength of a 17-4 run late in the half during which the Huskies hit only 1 of 13 shots from for UW before leaving the game with 7:46 to play after spraining his right ankle. Another injured the field. Washington opened the second half with a 15-2 surge to claim a 35-34 edge. The lead Husky, senior forward Will Perkins, missed the game due to a virus. Erwin Dudley added 14 changed hands seven more times and UW took a 54-53 lead on a layin by Shelton with 1:17 points for Alabama. remaining. Jackson’s decisive 3-pointer came on the next possession. Washington 77, Clemson 76 ot San Diego 72, Washington 54 Dec. 22, 2000; Guerra Sports Complex, San Juan, P.R.10 Dec. 30, 2000; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 12 Washington Clemson Washington San Diego FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Coffee 3-7 0-3 1-4 2 3 7 27 Henderson 3-5 0-0 0-2 4 0 6 19 Perkins 6-9 0-0 3-6 4 0 15 22 Rigby 3-4 0-1 1-1 1 2 7 20 Green 6-8 3-4 3-4 4 3 18 32 Allenspach 5-12 0-0 7-9 4 1 17 25 Green 2-5 0-1 1-1 7 3 5 20 Lippold 2-6 0-0 2-2 2 1 6 21 Shelton 1-6 0-0 1-2 6 0 3 18 Solomon 9-17 5-10 3-3 3 4 26 41 Shelton 1-6 0-0 0-0 4 1 2 28 Field 3-4 0-0 2-2 7 4 8 27 Johnson 4-7 1-3 3-3 2 3 12 37 Scott 2-7 1-3 0-0 2 2 4 36 Johnson 5-14 0-3 1-2 6 0 11 31 White 4-9 1-3 0-0 4 1 9 24 B. Brown 3-10 2-7 0-0 4 0 8 36 Bains 1-4 1-3 0-0 1 0 3 8 Perkins 8-14 0-0 4-7 10 1 20 32 Stockman 3-9 1-4 0-0 1 1 7 23 B. Brown 0-3 0-1 0-0 0 3 0 24 Morris 3-5 0-0 1-2 4 2 7 13 Massingale 1-2 0-1 0-0 1 0 2 10 Braddick 3-3 0-0 0-2 10 5 6 40 S. Brown 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 3 Laws 4-10 2-6 1-2 2 6 11 26 Allen 3-7 1-5 0-0 1 3 7 19 Nagys 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 1 Massingale 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 6 Delzell 3-6 1-3 0-0 2 3 7 16 Leep 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 Clifton 2-5 0-1 2-3 12 0 6 27 Allen 1-6 0-3 0-0 1 3 2 18 Boardman 0-2 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 3 Dixon 0-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 10 Hobbs 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 5 Clark 0-3 0-2 0-0 2 1 0 6 Adamo 4-7 2-3 0-0 2 0 10 16 Totals 29-63 7-23 12-20 35 13 77 225 Totals 28-64 8-21 12-19 44 15 76 225 Leep 2-5 2-4 0-0 3 2 6 11 Greene 2-5 0-0 1-3 7 0 5 18 Fouls: UW 18, CU 19 (Henderson 5). Turnovers: UW 19 (Perkins 6), CU 23 (Solomon 8). Blocks: UW Coffee 0-4 0-2 1-2 2 1 1 19 Hanson 1-1 0-0 0-0 6 0 2 13 4 (Perkins, Shelton 2), CU 2 (Henderson, Allenspach). Steals: UW 9 (Broown 4), CU 8 (Three with 3). Dixon 6-8 0-0 0-2 5 0 12 12 Borrego 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 FG%: Half—.455 (15-33) Final—.460 FG%: Half—.481 (13-27) Final—.438 Totals 23-64 2-16 6-13 39 14 54 200 Totals 29-60 6-17 8-12 37 19 72 200 3-FG%: Half—.333 (4-12) Final—.304 3-FG%: Half—.500 (5-10) Final—.381 Fouls: UW 14, USD 20. Turnovers: UW 17 (B.Brown 4), USD 14 (Laws 4). Blocks: UW 5 (Green, FT%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.600 FT%: Half—1.000 (1-1) Final—.632 Shelton 2), USD 2 (Field 2). Steals: UW 3 (Perkins, Johnson, Allen 1), USD 7 (Laws, Delzell 2). Halftime Score: UW 35, Clemson 32 Attendance: 275 FG%: Half—.382 (13-34) Final—.359 FG%: Half—.500 (17-34) Final—.483 SAN JUAN, P.R.--Michael Johnson hit an eight-foot jump shot in the lane as the 3-FG%: Half—.000 (0-8) Final—.125 3-FG%: Half—.364 (4-11) Final—.353 overtime buzzer sounded, helping Washington clinch third place in the Puerto Rico Holiday FT%: Half—.400 (2-5) Final—.462 FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.667 Classic with a 77-76 victory over Clemson at the Guerra Sports Complex. Johnson finished with Halftime Score: USD 43, UW 28 Attendance: 4,287 12 points, including a 3-pointer with 52 seconds left in regulation that put UW (6-4) ahead 69- 68. answered with a layin at 0:29 that gave Clemson (7-4) a 70-69 lead. UW’s SEATTLE -- Reserves Andre Laws and Sam Adamo led San Diego with 11 and 10 points Ben Coffee was fouled on the ensuing possession and converted the second of two free throws respectively, leading the Toreros to a 72-54 victory over Washington at Bank of America Arena. to forge a 70-70 tie and force overtime. Adam Allenspach accounted for Clemson’s final four The Huskies closed out their non-conference schedule with a 6-6 record. They suffered back- points, the last coming with 2:03 left that put the Tigers ahead 76-73. Thalo Green scored at to-back non-conference home losses for the first time since December of 1992. San Diego (8- 1:39 and Will Perkins gathered the rebound after three Tiger misses to set up Johnson’s game- 3) never trailed, scoring the game’s first four points en route to a 43-28 halftime lead. The margin winner. Green earned all-tournament honors, scoring 18 points on 6-for-8 shooting. grew to as many as 24 points in the second half. The Toreros shot 48 percent (29-60) while Allenspach finished with 17 points. Perkins collected 20 points and 10 rebounds despite capitalizing on 36-percent UW shooting (23-64). The Huskies hit only 2 of 16 shots from 3- suffering from a virus. The Huskies scored the game’s first eight points and led for most of the point range, including misses in their first 13 tries. Grant Leep’s 3-pointer with 2:50 left in the half, settling on a 35-32 halftime edge. The lead grew to as many as 13 points in the second game was the first trey for UW in three games since their Dec. 21 game against Clemson, half, a margin that was erased by a 20-6 Tiger run. Solomon scored 15 of his 26 points during snapping a string of 24 consecutive misses. Will Perkins tallied 15 points to lead the Huskies the seven-minute surge that resulted in a 63-62 Clemson lead with 4:45 left in regulation. who also got 12 points from David Dixon and 11 from Michael Johnson. 2000-01 Box Scores, continued

UCLA 86, Washington 64 Washington 70, Arizona State 68 ot Jan. 4, 2001; , Los Angeles, Calif. 13 Jan. 11, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 15 Washington UCLA Washington Arizona State FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 6-11 0-0 6-10 5 2 18 30 Barnes 3-9 0-0 0-1 11 2 6 30 Perkins 6-11 0-0 1-3 10 1 13 38 Knight 5-16 0-2 5-8 13 1 15 42 Green 1-2 0-1 0-2 3 1 2 19 Kapono 6-12 4-7 2-2 2 2 18 33 Green 2-6 0-1 4-6 3 1 8 32 Storey 5-12 0-0 0-2 15 2 10 30 Shelton 0-3 0-0 0-0 3 1 0 20 Gadzuric 8-10 0-0 3-8 16 0 19 24 Shelton 1-4 0-0 3-4 2 1 5 15 Redhage 2-7 0-1 2-2 2 0 6 26 Johnson 0-6 0-3 0-0 3 0 0 17 Flowers 1-3 0-0 0-0 5 2 2 22 Massingale 4-7 3-4 2-4 2 2 13 24 Johnston 3-5 0-0 0-2 5 1 6 28 B. Brown 0-5 0-3 0-0 1 3 0 21 Watson 7-13 0-1 1-2 3 7 15 30 B. Brown 3-10 2-7 4-4 2 5 12 39 Mason 4-12 1-4 3-3 5 5 12 44 Dixon 2-5 0-0 1-1 5 0 5 14 Knight 4-6 0-2 0-1 1 1 8 15 S. Brown 0-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 4 Dodd 3-9 0-4 3-5 4 2 9 37 Coffee 2-4 0-1 0-2 4 0 4 13 Cummings 6-8 0-0 1-2 5 1 13 23 Allen 0-6 0-3 0-0 1 3 0 20 Smith 3-5 0-0 2-4 4 0 8 15 Johnson 2-5 2-4 0-0 4 3 6 23 Nahra 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 3 Clark 1-5 1-3 0-0 1 0 3 10 Bailey 1-3 1-1 0-0 1 2 3 16 Leep 3-4 3-3 0-0 2 1 9 17 Allen 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 14 Ramasar 0-3 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 4 Coffee 1-3 1-2 1-2 1 0 4 8 Leep 2-6 1-3 0-1 1 1 5 10 Rubin 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 1 Dixon 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 0 0 5 Massingale 7-12 4-6 7-9 2 0 25 25 Mollins 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Totals 22-5811-2415-25 31 17 70 225 Totals 26-67 1-11 15-26 55 11 68 225 S. Brown 1-2 0-1 0-0 1 1 2 7 Nelson 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Fouls: UW 18, ASU 23. Turnovers: UW 17 , ASU 24. Totals 22-62 6-22 14-25 34 9 64 200 Totals 37-69 5-13 7-16 50 18 86 200 Blocks: UW 4 (Perkins 3), ASU 4 (Johnston 4). Steals: UW (Perkins 3), ASU 7 (Mason 4). Fouls: UW 15, UCLA 21 (Knight 5). Turnovers: UW 23 (B.Brown 4), UCLA 23 (Watson 5). FG%: Half—.321 (9-28) Final—.379 FG%: Half—.333 (11-33) Final—.388 Blocks: UW 2 (Perkins, Shelton),UCLA 5 (Gadzuric 4). Steals: UW 5 (Johnson 2),UCLA 13 (Barnes, Watson 3). 3-FG%: Half—.300 (3-10) Final—.458 3-FG%: Half—.125 (1-8) Final—.091 FG%: Half—.172 (5-29) Final—.355 FG%: Half—.595 (22-37) Final—.536 FT%: Half—.600 (6-10) Final—.600 FT%: Half—.750 (9-12) Final—.577 3-FG%: Half—.222 (2-9) Final—.273 3-FG%: Half—.250 (2-8) Final—.385 Halftime Score: ASU 32, UW 27 Attendance: 5,597 FT%: Half—.364 (4-11) Final—.560 FT%: Half—.600 (3-5) Final—.438 SEATTLE--Will Perkins and C.J. Massingale each tallied 13 points, helping Washington Halftime Score: UCLA 49, UW 16 Attendance: 7,354 snap a four-game losing streak with a 70-68 overtime win over Arizona State at Bank of America LOS ANGELES--Center amassed 19 points and 16 rebounds as UCLA Arena. The Huskies (7-8, 1-2) hit 11-of-24 shots from 3-point range, including a string of six led the entire game in an 86-64 win over Washington in the Pac-10 opener for both teams. UCLA straight treys in the second half that helped erase a nine-point deficit. Arizona State (8-6, 0-3) (6-4, 1-0) beat the Huskies (6-7, 0-1) at Pauley Pavilion for the 15th straight time. Gadzuric extended a 32-27 halftime lead to 43-34. The margin was 46-38 before reserve Grant Leep began scored seven points during an 11-0 game-opening run. The Bruins did not surrender a point a 20-8 UW run on a 3-pointer with 10:31 left in regulation. Leep made another trey while for 6:05 en route to an 18-2 run. Washington hit only 5 of 29 first-half shots, none by a starter, Massingale and Michael Johnson each hit two during the run that ended at 2:55 with the Huskies to fall behind 49-16 at halftime. The Bruin lead grew to as many as 35 points in the second half ahead 58-54. ASU scored four straight points, including a put-back by Donnell Knight with before UW rallied to within 70-50 on a 3-pointer by C.J. Massingale with 5:43 remaining. The seven seconds left, to force overtime. UW converted 9-of-15 free throws during overtime, taking Huskies would draw no closer. Massingle finished with 25 points, the highest scoring output the lead for good at 69-66 on a pair by Thalo Green with 42 seconds to play. For the game, Leep by a Husky freshman since Mark Sanford had a 26-point outing in 1995. tallied hit all three of his 3-points attempts and Massingale was 3-of-4. Bryan Brown had two treys and 18 points for the Bruins who also got 15 from and 13 from T.J. Cummings. UW’s 12 points. Knight finished with 15 points and 13 rebounds and Alton Mason scored 12 points Will Perkins scored 15 of his 18 points in the second half. UCLA posted a 50-34 rebounding for ASU. Awvee Storey had 10 points and led a 55-31 Sun Devil rebounding advantage with 15 advantage, including 11 from . boards. Perkins had 10 rebounds for his sixth double-double. (#20) USC 87, Washington 61 (#21) Arizona 89, Washington 64 Jan. 6, 2001; Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles, Calif. 14 Jan. 13, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 16 Washington USC Washington Arizona FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 6-13 0-1 0-0 9 1 12 33 Turner 1-2 0-0 0-0 3 0 2 14 Perkins 9-19 0-0 3-5 13 3 21 34 Wright 9-16 0-0 8-9 10 0 26 32 Green 3-7 0-1 2-2 1 1 8 16 Bluthenthal 10-13 5-7 0-0 7 3 25 34 Green 3-8 1-3 2-3 5 1 9 19 Jefferson 2-5 0-1 4-6 5 1 8 18 Shelton 3-7 0-0 2-2 5 1 8 23 Charissis 2-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 4 12 Shelton 2-9 0-0 2-4 9 0 6 15 Woods 4-6 0-0 5-6 10 1 13 35 Massingale 4-10 2-3 0-0 2 5 10 28 Hutchinson 1-3 0-2 0-0 0 1 2 19 Massingale 1-6 0-3 1-2 3 3 3 17 Arenas 6-12 1-5 5-10 4 0 18 31 B. Brown 2-6 2-6 0-0 3 3 6 27 Farmer 3-6 1-3 2-4 4 4 9 28 B. Brown 1-6 0-2 0-0 1 2 2 27 Gardner 2-10 0-5 3-4 4 7 7 31 S. Brown 2-8 1-2 1-4 1 0 6 15 Granville 4-7 3-4 2-2 1 6 13 21 S. Brown 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 0 1 2 Walton 2-4 0-1 2-5 6 2 6 22 Allen 1-2 0-1 0-0 0 0 2 8 Scalabrine 5-10 1-4 4-5 3 4 15 26 Allen 3-14 0-4 3-4 3 2 9 26 Hanour 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 2 Clark 0-1 0-1 1-2 1 1 1 16 Murphy 1-4 0-2 0-0 3 3 2 14 Duty 0-3 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 1 Ash 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 1 Leep 1-3 0-2 0-0 2 0 2 7 Minor 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 4 Johnson 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 2 11 Frazier 2-4 0-0 0-1 4 3 0 14 Coffee 0-1 0-0 0-2 2 1 0 9 Clancy 6-10 0-0 3-4 4 0 15 28 Leep 1-6 0-4 0-0 1 0 2 15 Wessel 1-2 0-0 3-6 2 0 5 14 Dixon 3-4 0-0 0-0 1 0 6 18 Coffee 1-4 1-1 1-4 5 0 4 11 Totals 25-62 5-17 6-12 30 13 61 200 Totals 33-5810-2211-15 31 21 87 200 Dixon 2-7 0-0 1-2 4 0 5 22 Fouls: UW 16, USC 15. Turnovers: UW 17 (B.Brown 6), USC 15 (Six with 2). Totals 24-84 2-17 14-26 54 12 64 200 Totals 29-61 1-12 30-47 49 16 89 200 Blocks: UW 2 (Shelton 2), USC 4 (Clancy 3). Steals: UW 8 (B.Brown 2), USC 7 (Bluthenthal 3). Fouls: UW 33 (Green 5), UA 21(Wright, Jefferson 4) . Turnovers: UW 16 (Perkins 4) , UA 15 FG%: Half—.500 (14-28) Final—.403 FG%: Half—.750 (24-32) Final—.569 (Arenas 4. Blocks: UW 4, UA 11 (Woods 10). Steals: UW 4(B. Brown 2), UA 8 (Gardner 5). 3-FG%: Half—.375 (3-8) Final—.294 3-FG%: Half—.500 (6-12) Final—.455 FG%: Half—.318 (14-44) Final—.286 FG%: Half—.441 (15-34) Final—.475 FT%: Half—.500 (3-6) Final—.500 FT%: Half—1.000 (1-1) Final—.733 3-FG%: Half—.000 (0-7) Final—.118 3-FG%: Half—.167 (1-6) Final—.083 Halftime Score: USC 55, UW 34 Attendance: 4,418 FT%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.538 FT%: Half—.556 (10-18) Final—.638 LOS ANGELES--David Bluthenthal scored 21 of his 25 points in the first half when 20th- Halftime Score: UA 41, UW 29 Attendance: 10,000 ranked USC took control en route to an 87-61 win over Washington at the Sports Arena. The SEATTLE--Loren Woods registered the 13th triple-double in Pac-10 history with 13 Trojans (12-2, 2-0) hit their first seven and 17 of their first 18 shots from the field. They took points, 10 rebounds and 10 blocked shots to lead 21st-ranked Arizona to an 89-64 win at Bank a 55-34 halftime lead on the strength of 75-percent shooting (24-32). Bluthenthal hit his first of America Arena. The triple-double was the second in Woods’ career and the first ever against eight shots, including five 3-pointers, before a 40-foot heave missed at the halftime buzzer. Washington (7-9, 1-3). His 10 blocks were three more than any other opponent ever had against Washington (6-8, 0-2) lost its fourth straight game. The Huskies trailed by 21 points at halftime the Huskies. Arizona (10-5, 3-1) also got a double-double from Michael Wright who had 26 despite shooting 50 percent in the first half (14-28) and reeling off 12 unanswered points near points and 10 rebounds. The Wildcats were playing their fifth game under interim coach Jim the end of the period. Will Perkins tallied 12 points and nine rebounds for UW which also got Rosborough during Coach Lute Olson’s leave of absence. Will Perkins posted a double-double 10 points and five assists from C.J. Massingale. and Sam Clancy each scored for UW with a career-high 21 points and 13 rebounds. The Huskies out-rebounded Arizona 54- 15 points for the Trojans and Brandon Granville added 13. Those three did not make their usual 49, including 30 offensive rebounds. The Wildcats’ 41-29 halftime advantage was trimmed to starts as a disciplinary measure for breaking a team rule. USC cooled off in the second half, 42-34 with 17:28 left to play. The UA lead was 75-62 with 5:04 remaining before a 14-2 game- shooting 35 percent to finish the game at a 57-percent clip (33-58). Bluthenthal finished 10- closing run by the Wildcats. Neither team shot well from outside. Arizona hit 1-of-12 treys and of-13 from the field, including 5-of-7 treys. USC hit 10 of 22 shots from beyond the arc. UW was 2-of-17 from 3-point range. The Huskies shot just 29 percent (24-84) from the field. 2000-01 Box Scores, continued

Washington 72, Oregon 71 ot (#1) Stanford 94, Washington 63 Jan. 18, 2001; McArthur Court, Eugene, Ore. 17 Jan. 25, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 19 Washington Oregon Washington Stanford FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Coffee 0-3 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 14 Jones 3-11 1-6 3-4 5 3 10 44 Perkins 5-8 0-0 2-2 11 3 12 24 Jar. Collins 4-7 0-0 2-3 1 0 10 26 Green 8-14 2-2 4-4 7 0 22 38 Bracey 6-13 0-1 11-14 10 0 23 35 Green 5-8 1-2 1-2 1 0 12 19 Mendez 5-7 2-4 2-2 1 0 14 21 Perkins 4-10 0-0 3-3 2 4 11 29 Hicks 1-2 0-0 3-4 6 0 5 26 Dixon 3-5 0-0 0-4 4 1 4 23 Jas. Collins 2-4 1-2 2-4 5 2 7 22 Johnson 2-6 1-5 4-6 4 3 9 41 Ridnour 3-9 1-5 1-2 1 0 8 26 Johnson 2-5 1-2 1-2 0 0 6 17 McDonald 5-6 4-5 0-0 5 9 14 23 B. Brown 2-5 1-2 0-0 2 3 5 24 Norwood 2-7 1-5 3-4 4 1 8 35 B. Brown 1-3 1-2 0-0 1 0 3 18 Jacobsen 6-14 2-9 2-3 4 2 16 29 Massingale 2-3 0-0 0-5 0 2 4 12 Davis 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 S. Brown 0-1 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 4 Logan 3-4 0-0 0-0 3 3 6 12 Allen 4-7 0-1 4-4 6 1 12 19 Lindquist 0-5 0-3 2-2 4 0 2 19 Massingale 1-7 0-2 2-3 2 1 4 22 Johnson 3-4 0-1 0-0 4 0 6 8 Clark 1-6 0-4 0-0 7 1 2 28 Christoffersen 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Allen 3-8 0-2 4-4 1 2 10 25 Borchardt 4-4 0-0 1-2 5 1 9 13 Leep 1-2 1-2 0-0 0 0 3 8 Jackson 4-8 0-2 7-10 6 2 15 24 Clark 2-5 2-3 1-2 1 0 7 14 Davis 3-5 0-0 0-1 3 1 6 11 Shelton 1-4 0-0 0-2 4 0 2 10 Hartenstein 0-0 0-0 0-2 3 0 0 9 Leep 1-5 0-2 0-1 3 0 2 12 Barnes 1-5 1-2 0-0 4 1 3 15 Dixon 1-2 0-0 0-1 1 0 2 2 Anderson 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 5 Coffee 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 7 Giovacchini 0-3 0-1 0-0 0 3 0 14 Totals 26-62 5-17 15-25 38 15 72 225 Totals 19-55 3-22 30-42 44 6 71 225 Shelton 0-3 0-0 1-4 6 0 1 15 Lottich 1-2 1-2 0-0 1 0 3 6 Fouls: UW 30 (Perkins, Coffee 5), UO 24 (Norwood 5). Turnovers: UW 20 (Allen, Johnson 4), UO Totals 23-59 5-16 12-24 34 7 63 200 Totals 37-6511-26 9-15 38 22 94 200 23 (Jones 7). Blocks: UW 3 (Shelton 2), UO 4 (Hicks 2). Steals: UW 9 (Coffee 3), UO 11 (Bracey 5). Fouls: UW 17, SU 18. Turnovers: UW 12 (Perkins, Dixon, Allen 2), SU 8 (Johnson, Borchardt 2). Blocks: UW 1 (Shelton), SU 2 (Jas. Collins, Borchardt). Steals: UW 4, SU 5. FG%: Half—.438 (14-32) Final—.419 FG%: Half—.292 (7-24) Final—.345 3-FG%: Half—.167 (1-6) Final—.294 3-FG%: Half—.000 (0-7) Final—.136 FG%: Half—.345 (10-29) Final—.390 FG%: Half—.559 (19-34) Final—.569 FT%: Half—.833 (5-6) Final—.600 FT%: Half—.7-6 (12-17) Final—.714 3-FG%: Half—.250 (1-4) Final—.313 3-FG%: Half—.471 (8-17) Final—.423 Halftime Score: UW 34, Oregon 26 Attendance: 8,786 FT%: Half—.462 (6-13) Final—.500 FT%: Half—.700 (7-10) Final—.600 Halftime Score: Stanford 53, UW 27 Attendance: 9,705 EUGENE, Ore.-- Curtis Allen made a spinning shot in the lane with six seconds left in overtime, lifting Washington to a 72-71 triumph over Oregon at McArthur Court. The Huskies SEATTLE-- Four different players hit 3-pointers during a 17-point run as top-ranked (8-9, 2-3), who won 67-58 last year, posted back-to-back road wins at Oregon for the first time Stanford took control early en route to a 94-63 victory over Washington at Bank of America Arena. Stanford (18-0, 6-0) tied school records for winning streak and best start to a season with its since 1981-82. Washington led by as many as 13 points in the first half en route to a 34-26 seventh straight over UW. The Huskies (8-11, 2-5) made five of their first six shots and led 12- halftime margin. A 15-4 Oregon run ended with 9:09 remaining, forging the first of five second- 11 with 15:39 in the first half. They shot 5-of-23 the rest of the half. ’ three-point half ties. The Ducks (10-4, 1-3) claimed their first lead at 62-61 on two free throws play ignited a 17-0 run that included 3-pointers from brother , Ryan Mendez, Casey with 0:47 left in regulation. Bracey added another free throw at 0:18 before Allen forced overtime Jacobsen and Michael McDonald. Stanford held UW scoreless for over four minutes while taking with a driving layup with 0:11 remaining. Bracey hit a layup at 0:50 of overtime, putting UO ahead a 28-12 lead at 11:39 of the first half. Mendez and McDonald each scored 12 of their 14 points 71-70. Thalo Green stole the ball on Oregon’s next possession, setting up Allen’s game-winner. in the first half. UW’s Bryan Brown drained a trey at the buzzer to cut the deficit to 53-27 at made a potential winning jumper, but it was ruled to be after the buzzer by the halftime. McDonald hit 4-of-5 shots from 3-point range and the Cardinal shot 11-for-26 as a officials. Bracey scored 19 of his 23 points after halftime for Oregon which also got 15 points team. Jacobsen finished with 16 points and Jarron Collins had 10. Washington’s Will Perkins from Luke Jackson and 10 from Frederick Jones. Bracey (11) and Jackson (7) combined for 18 registered a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds. Thalo Green chipped in 12 points free throws, leading a 30-15 Duck scoring advantage from the charity stripe. Thalo Green tallied for UW which also got 10 from Curtis Allen. The Cardinal shot 57 percent (37-65) from the field a career-high 22 points for the Huskies and Allen had a career-high 12. compared to 39 percent (23-59) for the Huskies. Oregon State 63, Washington 56 California 79, Washington 64 Jan. 20, 2001; , Corvallis, Ore. 18 Jan. 27, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 20 Washington Oregon State Washington California FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Coffee 1-1 0-0 1-2 2 1 3 15 Jackson 2-6 0-2 0-0 4 4 4 24 Perkins 2-7 0-0 0-0 4 1 4 19 Lampley 6-13 0-0 9-12 11 3 21 37 Green 2-7 0-2 2-3 4 1 6 31 Masten 2-3 0-1 2-3 5 1 6 34 Green 1-5 0-3 6-6 7 0 8 27 Wethers 4-5 0-0 0-0 2 1 8 21 Perkins 5-9 0-0 2-2 5 1 12 28 Haywood 6-9 2-4 2-2 6 2 16 39 Dixon 5-7 0-0 2-4 4 1 12 22 Vander Laan 2-5 0-0 2-2 5 0 6 24 Allen 2-4 1-3 0-1 1 0 5 15 Jernigan 3-11 2-9 4-4 4 1 12 30 Allen 2-8 2-6 0-0 3 4 6 27 Legans 1-8 0-4 4-4 4 3 6 29 Johnson 2-3 1-2 0-0 0 1 5 23 Tanner 2-6 1-3 6-8 10 6 11 39 B. Brown 4-9 3-7 0-0 0 6 11 26 Forehan-Kelly2-3 1-1 4-6 1 3 9 19 Massingale 3-7 0-1 0-0 6 0 6 15 Cokley 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 S. Brown 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 1 Diggs 1-1 0-0 2-3 1 0 4 8 Massingale 1-3 0-1 1-2 2 2 3 12 Smith 0-2 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 3 Clark 5-13 3-10 0-0 3 3 13 25 Steinthal 1-4 1-3 1-2 1 0 4 11 Clark 0-4 0-3 0-0 0 0 0 13 S. Hughes 3-3 0-0 2-2 3 1 8 18 Leep 1-1 0-0 0-0 3 0 2 6 Heide 5-8 0-0 0-1 1 1 10 20 Johnson 5-7 2-4 2-2 2 2 14 25 Gates 3-4 2-2 2-4 2 1 10 16 B. Brown 2-7 0-3 0-0 1 5 4 23 Manker 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Leep 0-3 0-3 2-2 0 1 2 8 Shipp 3-7 0-2 1-2 5 2 7 25 Shelton 0-3 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 17 Coffee 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 5 Dixon 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Shelton 2-3 0-0 0-0 1 0 4 15 Totals 23-55 5-21 5-8 31 12 56 200 Totals 21-47 6-22 15-20 34 15 63 200 Totals 22-56 7-27 13-16 28 17 64 200 Totals 25-51 3-11 26-35 37 14 79 200 Fouls: UW 16 (Green, Perkins 5), OSU 15. Turnovers: UW 16 (Perkins 4), OSU 18 (Jackson 5). Fouls: UW 24 (Green 5), UC 17. Turnovers: UW 21(Green, Johnson 4), UC 15 (Lampley 7). Blocks: Blocks: UW 3 (Perkins 2), OSU 0. Steals: UW 8 (Perkins 4), OSU 7 (Masten, Tanner 2). UW 2 (Clark, Shelton), UC 3 (Hughes, Kelly, Lampley). Steals: UW 9 (Green 3), UC 11 (Gates, Kelly 3). FG%: Half—.520 (13-25) Final—.418 FG%: Half—.481 (13-27) Final—.447 FG%: Half—.367 (11-30) Final—.393 FG%: Half—.462 (12-26) Final—.490 3-FG%: Half—.143 (1-7) Final—.238 3-FG%: Half—.357 (5-14) Final—.273 3-FG%: Half—.286 (4-14) Final—.259 3-FG%: Half—.400 (2-5) Final—.273 FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.625 FT%: Half—.750 (3-4) Final—.750 FT%: Half—.818 (9-11) Final—.813 FT%: Half—.875 (14-16) Final—.743 Halftime Score: OSU 34, UW 32 Attendance: 5,820 Halftime Score: Cal 40, UW 35 Attendance: 6,709 CORVALLIS, Ore.--Jimmie Haywood scored a career-high 16 points to lead four SEATTLE-- scored 21 points, including the tying free throw that started double-figure scorers for Oregon State which defeated Washington 63-56 at Gill Coliseum. The California on a decisive 11-point run en route to a 79-64 win over Washington at Bank of America Beavers (8-9, 2-3) were led by first-year coach Ritchie McKay, a former assistant under Bob Arena. The Golden Bears (14-5, 5-2) won for the 13th time in 15 games. Washington (8-12, Bender at UW. Oregon State extended a 34-32 halftime margin to as many as 10 points before 2-6) rallied from a quick 11-point deficit to tie the game, before falling behind again by as many Washington (8-10, 2-4) tied the score 48-48 on a C.J. Massingale layup with 6:58 left in the as 13 points. Cal extended a 40-35 halftime margin to 50-43 before UW ran off eight straight game. The Beavers reclaimed the lead for good with eight unanswered points, including four points to take a 51-50 lead on a Michael Johnson layup with 14:07 to play. The Bears then held by Deaundra Tanner who finished with 11. The Huskies, who missed nine shots during the OSU UW scoreless for nearly eight minutes, running off 11 unanswered points in that span to take run, drew within 60-56 on a 3-pointer by Michael Johnson with 0:31 left. The Beavers hit 3- control. By the time UW scored again, on David Dixon’s free throw with 6:18 remaining, of-4 free throws inside the final 25 seconds to preserve the victory. Emonte Jernigan tallied 12 California led 61-52. Lampley also contributed 11 rebounds for Cal which had a 37-28 points for OSU and Jason Heide added 10. Reserve Greg Clark scored 11 of his team-high 13 advantage on the boards. Johnson finished with 14 points to lead the Huskies who also got 12 points in the second half for the Huskies who also got 12 from Will Perkins. Washington did from David Dixon and 11 from Bryan Brown. Dennis Gates added 10 points for Cal which scored not attempt a free throw in the second half and was outscored 15-5 from the charity stripe. 49 percent from the field (25-51) while limiting the Huskies to 39-percent shooting (22-56). 2000-01 Box Scores, continued

Washington 78, Washington State 72 Washington at Arizona State Feb. 3, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 21 Feb. 10, 2001; Wells Fargo Arena, Tempe, Ariz. 23 Washington Washington State FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN FG 3-FG FT RB A TP MIN Perkins 6-15 0-0 1-2 7 1 13 34 Little 4–8 0-0 8-11 7 1 16 38 Green 8-14 2-5 3-4 7 2 21 32 Riley 3-4 0-0 1-1 2 0 7 18 Dixon 7-7 0-0 2-5 6 2 16 20 Locklier 2-7 0-0 2-2 5 0 6 32 Allen 5-9 1-2 7-8 4 5 18 27 Moore 5-11 0-1 3-7 8 4 13 37 Johnson 1-4 0-1 0-0 5 2 2 21 Bush 4-14 1-4 5-6 2 1 14 40 Massingale 1-5 0-0 0-0 1 3 2 12 McNair 5-9 3-5 1-1 1 0 14 15 Clark 1-2 0-1 0-0 1 1 2 21 Minor 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 3 Leep 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 Clark 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 B. Brown 2-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 4 19 Adams 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 1 2 12 Coffee 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 4 Murray 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Shelton 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 7 Totals 31-60 3-9 13-19 36 17 78 200 Totals 24-56 4-11 20-28 29 7 72 200 Fouls: UW 22 (Shelton, Dixon 4), WSU 20 (Riley 5). Turnovers: UW 15 (Allen 5), WSU 13 (Bush 4). Blocks: UW 8 (Dixon 5), WSU 2 (Riley, Moore). Steals: UW 7 (B. Brown 2), WSU 9 (Moore 4). FG%: Half—.469 (15-32) Final—.517 FG%: Half—.360 (9-25) Final—.429 3-FG%: Half—.333 (2-6) Final—.333 3-FG%: Half—.200 (1-5) Final—.364 FT%: Half—.667 (6-9) Final—.684 FT%: Half—.500 (6-12) Final—.714 Halftime Score: UW 38, WSU 25 Attendance: 7,138 SEATTLE-- Curtis Allen scored 12 of his career-high 18 points in the second half, including a 3-pointer that turned back a late Washington State rally in Washington’s 78-72 victory at Bank of America Arena. The Huskies (9-12, 3-6) won for the eighth time in their last nine meetings with WSU (8-11, 1-8) which lost its 30th straight Pac-10 road game. UW led the entire game, taking a season-best 13-point halftime lead at 38-25. Allen opened the second half with a pair of free throws following a WSU bench technical. The Cougars steadily trimmed the margin, drawing within 54-53 on a 3-pointer by Jerry McNair with 9:57 left to play. Mike Bush’s 3-pointer with 2:12 remaining drew WSU within 70-68. Allen responded with a trey on the ensuing possession and Bryan Brown had a steal and layin to secure the win. Thalo Green scored 21 points for Washington and Will Perkins tallied all 13 of his points in the second half. UW’s David Dixon had 16 points, hitting all seven of his shots from the field, and blocked a career- high five shots. Framecio Little paced WSU with 16 points while Bush and McNair each had 14. The Huskies shot 52 percent (31-60) from the field, their first 50-percent outing in 14 games dating back to Dec. 16 at Florida International. Washington at Arizona Oregon State at Washington Feb. 8, 2001; McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz. 22 Feb. 15, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 24 2000-01 Washington Men’s Basketball Cumulative Statistics - as of Feb. 4 PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE GAMES

RECORD: OVERALL HOME AWAY NEUTRAL CONFERENCE...... (3-6) (2-3) (1-3) (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 - AVG ------01 Perkins, Will 9 9 269 29.9 49 103 .476 0 1 .000 18 27 .667 23 43 66 7.3 32 3 17 23 9 10 116 12.9 42 Green, Thalo 9 9 233 25.9 33 71 .465 6 20 .300 24 32 .750 15 23 38 4.2 31 3 7 17 3 7 96 10.7 10 Massingale, C.J. 9 3 167 18.6 24 60 .400 9 20 .450 13 25 .520 10 10 20 2.2 14 0 18 13 0 6 70 7.8 20 Allen, Curtis 9 3 181 20.1 20 59 .339 4 23 .174 18 21 .857 2 17 19 2.1 11 0 17 21 0 6 62 6.9 50 Dixon, David 9 3 128 14.2 23 37 .622 0 0 .000 6 19 .316 14 11 25 2.8 25 0 4 13 6 2 52 5.8 23 Johnson, Michael 8 5 178 22.3 15 38 .395 7 21 .333 7 10 .700 3 15 18 2.3 9 0 12 14 0 6 44 5.5 32 Brown, Bryan 9 7 224 24.9 17 53 .321 9 32 .281 4 4 1.00 3 8 11 1.2 12 0 28 20 1 10 47 5.2 21 Clark, Greg 7 0 127 18.1 10 36 .278 6 25 .240 2 4 .500 4 10 14 2.0 10 0 6 9 1 5 28 4.0 31 Leep, Grant 9 0 86 9.6 10 30 .333 5 19 .263 2 4 .500 4 8 12 1.3 8 0 3 2 0 1 27 3.0 44 Shelton, Marlon 9 4 137 15.2 9 37 .243 0 0 .000 8 16 .500 16 17 33 3.7 27 0 3 11 9 4 26 2.9 34 Coffee, Ben 9 2 86 9.6 5 18 .278 2 5 .400 3 12 .250 4 12 16 1.8 11 1 3 10 0 6 15 1.7 03 Brown, Sterling 6 0 33 5.5 3 13 .231 1 4 .250 2 6 .333 4 3 7 1.2 1 0 1 2 0 0 9 1.5 22 Duty, Travis 1 0 1 1.0 0 3 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 2 0 2 2.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM REBOUNDS...... 22 13 35 2 ------Washington 9 1850 218 558 .391 49 170 .288 107 180 .594 126 190 316 35.1 191 7 119 157 29 63 592 65.8 ------Opponents 9 1850 251 529 .474 44 150 .293 163 244 .668 128 239 367 40.8 174 5 130 154 35 78 709 78.8 ------

SCORE BY HALVES(and OTs): 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Opponents 355 336 18 0 0 0 709 Washington 272 299 21 0 0 0 592

DEADBALL REBOUNDS: OFF DEF TOTAL Opponents 31 12 43 Washington 36 10 46