University of Washington 2002 Men’s February 15, 2002 MEDIA RELATIONS: (206) 543–2230 FAX: (206) 543–5000 CONTACT: Dan Lepse INTERNET: www.gohuskies.com

Sat., Feb. 16 — UW vs. California; 5:00 p.m. PST (Fox Sports Net TV) Huskies Host 100th Bank of America Arena (10,000); Seattle, Wash. Season Celebration Thurs., Feb. 21 — UW at Oregon State; 7:00 p.m. PST (No TV) Gill Coliseum (10,400); Corvallis, Ore. UW Plays Cal on Saturday & The Washington Huskies (8-16, 2-12) pay tribute to their predecessors Saturday in Honors All-Century Team celebration of their 100th season of men’s basketball. Numerous festivities are scheduled Doug Wrenn’s 20.6-point scoring aver- in conjunction with the Huskies’ Feb. 16 meeting with California (18-5, 9-4), including the age is the highest by a Husky since Chris presentation of Washington’s All-Century Team at halftime. Tip-off is 5 p.m. at Bank of Welp averaged 20.8 points in 1987. America Arena. The Huskies seek to snap a five-game losing streak after falling 91-65 to 12th-ranked Stanford on Thursday. The Golden Bears, who won 77-56 on Thursday at Washington blocked a Pac-10 leading Washington State, are in a five-way tie for second place in the Pac-10 standings. California 116 shots, just two shy of its single- won this year’s first meeting with UW by a 62-50 tally on Jan. 17 in Berkeley. Cal’s current season record of 118 established in 1993. four-game winning streak is the longest in its series with UW since a five-game stretch The Huskies have a 1-11 record in games between 1993-95. Next week, Washington makes its final regular-season road trip with a they scored 70 or fewer points and a 7-5 visit to the state of Oregon. The Huskies play at Oregon State on Thursday, Feb. 21 in a record when totalling more than 70 points. critical clash for the eighth-and-final berth to the March 7-9 Pac-10 Tournament. UW’s schedule was rated the nation’s TV/Radio Coverage: Saturday’s Washington-California game will be televised live second toughest in the Sagarin rankings regionally at 3 p.m. on Fox Sports Net. Barry Tompkins and Dan Belluomini call the action. published Feb. 11 by USA Today. All Husky men’s basketball games are broadcast live on KOMO Radio (AM 1000) and its affiliates by play-by-play announcer Bob Rondeau. The radio broadcasts can be accessed 2002 UW Schedule & Results via the internet at: http://www.audionet.com/schools/washington/ (8–16, 2–12 in Pac-10) Saturday Celebration: Washington commemorates its 100th season of basketball with Nov. 15 ^ at Alaska-Fairbanks W 82–70 a celebration on Saturday, Feb. 16 surrounding the Huskies’ 5 p.m. game against California. Nov. 17 ^ vs. Bowling Green W 81–74 Pre-game activities include interactive games and an autograph zone where numerous Nov. 18 ^ vs. Butler L 64–67 Husky legends will be available, including Bob Houbregs, James Edwards and Chris Welp. Nov. 24 Santa Clara W 69–49 The first 2,500 fans will receive of special-edition bobblehead of legendary Washington Nov. 28 UNLV (ESPN Regional) W 77–64 crew coach Dick Erickson. A limited-edition lithograph commemorating 100 seasons of Dec. 1 at San Diego W 98–94 Husky Basketball is available at the Husky Team Shop or online at www.huskyfever.com Dec. 6 at Texas-El Paso L 62–74 All-Century Team: Fans voted at games and online during January for the Washington Dec. 8 at New Mexico State W 75–74 men’s basketball All Century Team that was announced Wednesday. The voting was part Dec. 11 #25 Gonzaga (FSN) L 47–67 of this year’s “Celebrating 100 Seasons of Husky Hoops.” Members of the All Century Dec. 20 • #19 UCLA (FSN) L 79–85 Team will be honored at halftime of the Huskies’ Feb. 16 home game with California. Dec. 27 • USC L 65–87 Projected Husky Starting Lineup: Dec. 29 at Saint Louis L 70–71 Washington Huskies (8–16, 2–12 in Pacific-10 Conference) *assists Jan. 4 • at #14 UCLA L 62–74 Jan. 6 • at USC (@ The Forum) L 74–94 Pos.-No. Name Hgt. Wgt. Yr. Hometown Points Rebs. Jan. 10 • Arizona State W 81–68 G — 21 Erroll Knight 6-7 205 Fr. Seattle, Wash. 6.7 2.7 Jan. 12 • #20 Arizona (Fox NW) L 69–74 F — 24 Doug Wrenn 6-8 220 So. Seattle, Wash. 20.6 6.4 Jan. 17 • at California L 50–62 C — 50 David Dixon 6-11 270 Sr. Houston, Texas 8.0 7.7 G — 1 C.J. Massingale 6-4 200 So. Tacoma, Wash. 4.7 2.8 Jan. 19 • at #19 Stanford L 60–105 G — 5 Will Conroy 6-1 185 Fr. Seattle, Wash. 2.2 *1.5 Jan. 24 • #19 Oregon W 97–92 Jan. 26 • Oregon State (Fox NW) L 53–68 Scoring Streak: Sophomore forward Doug Wrenn’s 20.6-point scoring average is the Jan. 31 • at Washington State L 79–81 highest for a Husky since Chris Welp averaged 20.8 points in 1996-97. Wrenn led all Feb. 7 • at #11 Arizona (Fox NW) L 81-92 Washington scorers in each of the last 11 games, averaging 26.0 points during that span. He Feb. 9 • at Arizona State (FSN) L 74–86 scored 36 percent of the Huskies’ points (286 of 784) in those 11 games and has nearly 2- Feb. 14 • #12 Stanford L 65–91 1/2 times more points as the next-highest scoring Husky (Curtis Allen has 116 points in the last 11 games). Wrenn topped the 30-point barrier four times in his last six outings with 32 Feb. 16 • California (FSN) 5:00 pm against Oregon (Jan. 24), 34 at Washington State (Jan. 31), 30 at Arizona State (Feb. 9) and Feb. 21 • at Oregon State 7:00 pm a career-high 35 at Arizona (Feb. 7) that marked the highest scoring output by a Husky since Feb. 23 • at Oregon 7:00 pm Todd MacCulloch tallied 38 at James Madison on Dec. 7, 1996. Wrenn reached the 30-point Feb. 27 • Washington State (Fox NW) 7:30 pm plateau in three consecutive games, becoming the third player in UW history to accomplish Mar. 7-9 Pac-10 Tournament TBA that feat. The last Husky with three consecutive 30-point outings was Louie Nelson in 1973 Pacific Times Listed for all games (Feb. 24-March 5). Bob Houbregs strung together three 30-point games in 1953 (Mar. 7-14). ^ Top of the World Classic • Pac-10 Game Wrenn, who has 11 games with at least 20 points, led all Husky scorers on 19 occasions. Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 2

Shuffling Starters: Washington has started eight different lineups this year after implementing 15 unique lineups last season. The lineup of Wrenn/Leep/Dixon/Allen/ Knight started 15 of the Huskies’ 24 games, posting a 6-9 record. The seven other starting units combined for a 2-7 record. After using the same lineup for 15 of the first 19 games, the Huskies have utilized different sets of starters in each of the last five outings. The rotating lineups have seen nine different players drawing at least one starting assignment. Senior David Dixon is the only player to start every game this season. The chart below lists the win/loss record of each UW starting unit with the most recent lineup in bold. Record Forward Forward Center Guard Guard 1–0 Barnard Leep Dixon Allen Massingale The University of Washington began playing bas- 6–9 Wrenn Leep Dixon Allen Knight ketball in 1896, but did not field a team during 1–1 Wrenn Leep Dixon Allen Massingale seven seasons in the late 1800s and early 1900s, 0–1 Wrenn Knight Dixon Conroy Massingale making the 2001-02 campaign the 100th season 0–1 Wrenn Leep Dixon Allen Barnard in school history. 0–1 Wrenn Day Dixon Allen Knight Over 700 athletes have worn UW jerseys in 2,393 0–1 Day Leep Dixon Conroy Wrenn games during parts of three centuries. The Hus- 0–2 Knight Leep Dixon Allen Massingale kies rank 16th among all-time NCAA competitors with 1,431 victories against 962 defeats. Wash- The California Series: ington has produced 21 conference champions, > Washington owns a slim 67-66 lead in the all-time series despite losing the last four 10 NCAA Tournament teams, five National Invita- meetings with California. tion Tournament teams and 15 consensus All- Americans. > Cal won this season’s first meeting by a 62-50 count on Jan. 17 in Berkeley. The one constant for 73 of those seasons was Hec > The Golden Bears’ current four-game winning streak is their longest in its series with Edmundson Pavilion. The Huskies moved into Washington since a five-game stretch between 1993-95. The Pavilion in 1927 and have played there ever > The Bears swept the season series last year for the first time since 1997, winning 79- since, with the exception of the 1999-2000 season 64 on Jan. 27, 2001 in Seattle and 82-66 on Feb. 22, 2001 in Berkeley. during which the building was undergoing reno- vations and a name change to become Bank of > The Huskies own a 43-24 series advantage over California at home despite falling in America Arena at Edmundson Pavilion. The arena the last two meetings in Seattle. The Bears won in their last two visits to Seattle, 75- has been the site of 753 Washington wins, more 64 in 2000 and 79-64 in 2001. than any other school has amassed in its current venue. > Sixth-year California Coach has a 7-4 record against the Huskies. > Ninth-year Washington Coach Bob Bender has a 6-11 record against California. > Ninth-year UW assistant coach Eric Hughes, a 1983 Oakland High School graduate, served on the staff at Cal in 1992 and 1993. He helped the Golden Bears advance to the Sweet 16 his final season as Todd Bozeman’s lone assistant coach. The Last Meeting: California 62, UW 50 (Jan. 17, 2002; Berkeley, Calif.) — Joe Shipp scored 11 of his 18 points in the second half as California rallied from a halftime deficit to defeat Washington 62-50 and remain undefeated at Haas Pavilion. The Golden Bears (12-3, 3-2) won all 11 of their home games. Washington (7-10, 1-6) led by as many as eight points before settling on a 33-31 halftime edge. After UW’s Doug Wrenn opened the second half with a pair of free throws, California staged a 13-4 run to go ahead for good at 44-39 with 13:19 left to play. The Huskies helped the Cal run, committing five of their 21 turnovers during the five-minute span. The Bears scored the final six points of the game to finish with their largest margin of the game at 12 points. UW made only five field goals and scored a season-low 17 points in the second half, shooting 17 percent (5-30) after intermission. Freshman had a double-double with 17 points and 15 rebounds for the Bears. Wrenn notched his second double-double with 12 points and 19 rebounds for the Huskies who also got 11 rebounds from David Dixon. Curtis Allen chipped in 11 points for UW. Why “D.E.”?: The Washington basketball players are wearing a black patch on the front of their jerseys with the initials “D.E.” in remembrance of Dick Erickson, a friend of the basketball program who died in July. Erickson was involved for nearly 50 years with UW athletics. He participated as an athlete then a coach with the Husky rowing team before serving as the Facilities Manager for the athletic department. Erickson was inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame on two occasions, in 1984 as part of the 1958 national championship crew and in 1994 as the head coach of the men’s crew from 1968-82. As a write-in candidate, Erickson won an on-line vote in the fall in which fans were asked who they would like to have portrayed by a bobblehead doll. He received more votes than current Husky head coaches Bob Bender, Rick Neuheisel and June Daugherty did. Bobbleheads bearing his likeness will be distributed to the first 2,500 spectators at the Feb. 16 men’s basketball game against California and his family will be recognized during pre-game. Injury Report: Freshman forward Mike Jensen, who dislocated his left shoulder during practice on Dec. 3, underwent surgery on Dec. 10 and will miss the rest of the season. Jensen suffered a torn labrum. He is the second Husky big man to suffer a season-ending injury, joining 6-10 center Marlon Shelton who had left knee surgery on Oct. 16. Strenuous Schedule: Washington’s schedule was rated the nation’s second most difficult in the Feb. 11 Sagarin Ratings published by USA Today. Nine of the 16 Husky losses came against teams that are currently ranked. Six teams on the UW schedule were listed in this week’s (Feb. 11) Associated Press top-25 poll, including eighth-ranked Gonzaga, Arizona (#9), Stanford (#12), Oregon (#17), UCLA (#20) and USC (#25). Four of the Huskies’ last seven opponents were ranked at the time of the game. Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 3

Dynamic Doug: One of the most eagerly anticipated debuts in Husky history was that *** Honors Candidate *** of sophomore Doug Wrenn, a supremely athletic 6-8 forward who red-shirted last Doug Wrenn season after transferring from Connecticut. Wrenn fulfilled expectations with a 19-point, nine- performance against Bowling Green (Nov. 17) in his inaugural Husky (6-8, 220, Soph., Seattle, Wash.) game. He followed that with a 10-point, six-rebound effort against Butler (Nov. 18) and • Reached the 30-point plateau in four of the was named the Most Valuable Player of the Top of the World Classic. Wrenn leads the last six games, including three straight. team and ranks second among Pac-10 players with an average of 20.6 points per game, including a career-high 35-point performance at Arizona (Feb. 7). He tallied 30 points in • The third player in UW history to record four of his last six games, including a streak of three straight 30-point performances that three consecutive 30-point performances. tied the school record held by Louie Nelson (1973) and Bob Houbregs (1953). Wrenn The other two were Louie Nelson (1973) hit the game-winning shot in a 75-74 win at New Mexico State (Dec. 8), a jumper in the and Bob Houbregs (1953). lane with six seconds left. He topped all Husky scorers on 19 occasions and posted 20 • Needs 27 points to become the 21st player double-figure games, including 11 outings with 20 points. Wrenn has three double in Husky history to score 500 points in a doubles and ranks second on the team with 44 assists. A 1998 Parade All-American and single season. Washington state prep Player of the Year, Wrenn red-shirted last season at UW after • MVP of the 2001 Top of the World Classic transferring from Connecticut. He was projected by Basketball News as the Pac-10’s top in Fairbanks, Alaska. newcomer. Wrenn, who prepped at Seattle’s O’Dea High School, attended two East Coast prep schools in 1998-99 and played at UConn in 1999-2000. A 1998 Parade All-American and the Wash- • Party: ington state prep Player of the Year at Washington rejected 116 shots this season, an average of 4.83 blocks per Seattle’s O’Dea High School. game that leads all Pac-10 teams. The Huskies are within two blocks of the school record of 118 established by the 1993 UW squad that averaged 4.37 blocks per game. The • A transfer from Connecticut who averaged Huskies have blocked five or more shots in 14 games this season after reaching the five- 2.3 points in 24 games as a freshman at block plateau in only five games all last season. Senior David Dixon has 56 blocks to UConn in 1999-2000. ranks second among Pac-10 players with an average of 2.43 per game. He ranks No. 3 Where Wrenn Ranks in the among all-time Husky single-season leaders. Dixon’s 87 career blocks rank No. 3 in the Husky Record Book UW record book. Freshman Jeffrey Day ranks second on the Huskies and seventh in the conference with 28 blocked shots. Nearly one in every four shots Santa Clara attempted Scoring Average — Season on Nov. 24 was rejected as Washington shattered its school single-game record with 14 Name Year Gms Avg. blocked shots. The Huskies bettered their record of 10 blocks established on Dec. 3, 1991 1. Bob Houbregs 1953 33 25.6 2. Louie Nelson 1973 29 23.0 against Chico State. The leading shot blocker was Dixon whose seven blocks broke the 3. Steve Hawes 1971 26 21.8 individual UW record of six blocks accomplished twice by Chris Welp in 1986. Dixon 4. Steve Hawes 1972 26 21.7 matched his single-game record with seven blocks at WSU (Jan. 31). 5. James Edwards 1977 27 20.9 Less is More: Fans will be seeing a lot less of 6-foot-11 senior center David Dixon this 6. Chris Welp 1987 35 20.8 season. He shed 40 pounds from last year and his current 270-pound weight enables him 6t. Bill Hanson 1962 26 20.8 to be more active and average 27.7 minutes per game. Last season, Dixon played 14.7 8. Doug Wrenn 2002 24 20.6 minutes per contest and averaged 4.7 points and 3.2 rebounds. He has been more effective 9. Doug Smart 1958 26 20.3 10. George Irvine 1970 26 20.0 this year, leading the team and ranking fourth among Pac-10 players with 7.7 rebounds 10t. Dave Carr 1968 25 20.0 per game. His 8.0-point scoring average is third best on the team. Dixon tallied double- figure points 10 times and has five double-doubles. Dixon’s 184 rebounds are 87 more 30–Point Games — Season than the 97 he grabbed all last season. Name Year No. Return to Sender: David Dixon has 56 blocked shots after registering 24 all last 1. Bob Houbregs 1953 10 2. Louie Nelson 1973 5 season. His 56 blocks are the third-highest single-season total in Washington history. He 3. Doug Wrenn 2002 4 needs eight blocks to move into the No. 2 spot ahead of Chris Welp who had 63 blocks in 1987. Dixon’s 87 career blocked shots rank No. 3 on the school’s all-time list, trailing Consecutive 30–Point Games only Chris Welp (186) and Todd MacCulloch (142) who each played four seasons to just Name Dates No. three for Dixon. Dixon boasts the top three blocked shot games in Husky history. He 1. Bob Houbregs 3/7 – 3/14, 1953 3 denied a school-record seven shots against Santa Clara (Nov. 24), bettering the single- 1t. Louie Nelson 2/24 – 3/5, 1973 3 game mark of six set by Chris Welp during the 1986 season. Dixon equaled his own 1t. Doug Wrenn 1/31 – 2/9, 2002 3 school record with seven blocks at Washington State (Jan. 31). He had six rejections 30–Point Games — Career against Arizona State (Jan. 10). Dixon ranks second among all Pac-10 players with 56 Name Years No. blocked shots, an average of 2.33 blocks per game. 1. Bob Houbregs 1951-53 13 UW Single-Season Block Leaders UW Career Block Leaders 2. Todd Macculloch 1996-99 8 3. Steve Hawes 1970-72 6 No. Player (Year) Blocks No. Player (Years) Blocks 4. Louie Nelson 1971-73 5 1. Chris Welp (1986) 67 1. Chris Welp (1984-87) 186 5. Doug Wrenn 2002 4 2. Chris Welp (1987) 63 2. Todd MacCulloch (1996-99) 142 5t. Doug Smart 1957-59 4 3. David Dixon (2002) 56 3. David Dixon (2000-02) 87 5t. Bill Hanson 1960-62 4 4. Todd MacCulloch (1999) 47 4. Patrick Femerling (1996-98) 84 5t. Chris Welp 1984-87 4 5. Will Perkins (2000) 39 5. James Woods (1977-80) 80 Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 4 “Washington freshman point guard Curtis Allen is the latest technology in Pac-10 Fast Facts point guards. He’s got a microchip that Earl Watson and Mike McDonald and Jason University of Washington Gardner don’t have. Hit the mouse and see nothing but blur.” Athletic Department, Box 354070 — Greg Hansen, Arizona Daily Star Seattle, WA 98195-4070 Amazing Allen: Arguably the quickest player in the conference, sophomore point Box 354070 guard Curtis Allen is improving upon last season’s performance when he was voted Enrollment: 34,000 (25,000 undergrad) to the Pac-10 All-Freshmen team. He was named the Pac-10 Player of the Week on Dec. Founded: Nov. 4, 1861 3 after averaging 24.0 points and 6.0 assists in a pair of Husky wins. Allen posted career President: Richard McCormick highs with 21 points and eight assists in UW’s 77-64 win over UNLV (Nov. 28). At Director of Athletics: Barbara Hedges San Diego (Dec. 1), Allen increased his single-game scoring best to 27 points and added Colors: Purple & Gold four assists in UW’s 98-94 win. His playmaking skills have improved dramatically. Nickname: Huskies Allen was the Huskies’ team leader in assists during 17 of 24 games with a total of 106, Head Coach: Bob Bender (9th year) an average of 4.4 per game. He is the 21st Husky to post a 100- season. Last year, Career Record (13th year): 173-197 Allen distributed 65 assists, an average of 2.2 per contest. He had 15 assists against UW Record (9th year): 113-140 Arizona State (Jan. 10), the second-highest total in UW history. Allen, who reached his 2001 Record: 10-20 previous career-best of eight by halftime, fell one shy of the school single-game assist 2001 Pac-10 Record: 4-14 (9th, tie) record of 16 established by Rafael Stone at California on Feb. 20, 1970. His 3-point Starters Returning / Lost: 2 / 3 shooting is also vastly better. Allen is shooting 37.6 percent from beyond the arc (35- Lettermen Returning / Lost: 6 / 6 93) after shooting 3-pointers at a 25-percent clip last year. He has 35 treys, 15 more than last season’s total of 20. Last season, Allen had one of the finest campaigns for a Husky Husky Media Relations rookie, ranking third among all-time freshmen in steals (29) and No. 4 in assists (65). Jim Daves, Assistant AD Dan Lepse, Men’s Basketball SID Triple Threat: Washington senior Grant Leep leads all Pac-10 players in 3-point E-mail: [email protected] percentage, having converted 53.6 percent (30-56) of his trey tries. He shot 3-for-5 Main Office Phone: (206) 543-2230 from beyond the arc in both games last week, halting a 2-for-11 slump during his previous five games. Leep leads a Husky team that is shooting 35.0 percent (141-403) Lepse Direct Phone: (206) 685-3120 from 3-point range, an improvement from last season’s 30.6-percent figure. Fax: (206) 543-5000 Notable: UW lost all 12 games when its opponents registered a superior Ticket Office percentage and is 8-4 when out shooting its foes ... Jeffrey Day has 28 blocked shots, (206) 543-2200 tying Chris Welp (1984) for the second-highest total ever for a Washington freshman. Bank of America Arena The UW rookie record is 32 by Todd MacCulloch in 1996 ... Curtis Allen ranks second 3870 Montlake Boulevard N.E. among Pac-10 players (87.6%) in accuracy. He converted 20 consecutive Capacity (built): 10,000 (1927) free throws between Jan. 10-26 ... Allen hit all 12 of his free throws against Oregon Renovated: March 1999 - Nov. 2000 (Jan. 24), tying the school’s single-game percentage record. Six players have been Directions: Located on the southeast sec- perfect on 12 of more throws in all-time UW games led by the 14-for-14 effort of Bill tion of the Washington campus and 40 minutes Hanson against Idaho on March 10, 1961 ... The Huskies are shooting 67.3 percent north of Sea-Tac Airport. From Interstate-5 take from the free throw line (380-565), a drastic improvement from last season’s 57.5- the Hwy. 520 exit toward Bellevue-Kirkland percent figure (355-617) that ranked last in the Pac-10 ... The Huskies’ 97-92 win over (east). Travel 1/4 mile and take the Montlake Oregon (Jan. 24) marked the first time they trailed with 5:00 remaining and won the Boulevard exit. At the end of the off ramp there game. UW has a 1-14 record in games when trailing at the 5:00 mark ... UW players is a stop light at Montlake Boulevard. Turn posted 15 games of 20-or-more points, eclipsing last season’s entire total of eight 20- LEFT. Travel across the Montlake Bridge. Husky point individual outings. Stadium will be visible on the RIGHT with Bank Dynamic Debut: Freshman guard Erroll Knight’s collegiate debut was delayed, but of America Arena visible to the north of the it was worth the wait. Knight amassed a team-high 23 points at Alaska Fairbanks on stadium. To access E-10, E-11 or E-12 parking Nov. 15, the highest point total for a freshman in a debut game at Washington. He losts, turn RIGHT at the stoplight by the stadium eclipsed the record of 22 points set by Deon Luton against Brigham Young on Nov. 26, marquee. To access the Graves Building, con- 1996. Knight underwent arthroscopic surgery in his left knee on Nov. 2. He had tinue through the stoplight and turn RIGHT swelling in his knee during preseason practice and underwent an MRI on Oct. 30 that immediately after the pedestrian overpass bridge. revealed a loose fragment of cartilage. The projected rehabilitation time was approxi- Internet mately three weeks, but Knight returned to practice just 10 days later (Nov. 12). He www.gohuskies.com played 28 minutes in his inaugural collegiate outing, hitting 9-of-16 shots from the field Info Connection 1-800-300-2050 that included 3-of-4 shooting from 3-point range. That was the collegiate debut for Knight who did not play in either of UW’s exhibition games. Knight started 19 of 24 (call 770-399-0096 for Personal ID Number) games this season. He ranks fifth on the team with a 6.7-point scoring average. Knight 3715 — UW release scored 19 points and led the team with eight rebounds against Arizona State (Jan. 10). 3718 — UW latest game boxscore He was named to the Top of the World Classic all-tournament team. Knight was one 1015 — Pac-10 release of the nation’s premier prep shooting guards last year. The athletic 6-7 swingman Weekly Bob Bender Radio Show averaged 19.6 points and 7.0 rebounds per game as a senior at Seattle’s Chief Sealth Mondays at 6 p.m. on KOMO AM 1000 High School. He was a consensus top-100 national prep pick by the recruiting services, including Prep-West Hoops which ranked him as the No. 2 in the West. Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 5

Bender Bio: Bob Bender has participated in the NCAA Tournament at every school 2002 Pacific-10 Conference Standings with which he has been affiliated, including back-to-back berths with Washington in 1998 and 1999. He has a nine-year record of 113–140 with the Huskies. The UW tied (As of Feb. 15) Pac-10 Pct. Overall for ninth place in the Pac-10 with a 4-14 record in 2001 and had a 10-20 overall record. 1. Arizona 10–4 .714 17–7 In 2000, the Huskies tied for eighth in the Pac-10 with a 5-13 record in 2000 and had a 2. California 9–4 .692 18–5 10-20 overall record that snapped a string of four consecutive winning seasons. In 1999, USC 9–4 .692 17–6 Washington was 17-12, capped by an NCAA Tournament appearance. The 1998 Huskies Stanford 9–4 .692 16–6 posted a 20-10 record that marked the school’s finest winning percentage since 1985. Oregon 9–4 .692 17–7 Among the 1998 Husky highlights were their first 20-win season since 1987, their first UCLA 9–4 .692 17–7 NCAA berth since 1986 and their first Sweet 16 appearance since 1984. The 1997 UW 7. Arizona State 6–8 .429 13–10 team posted a 17–11 record, capped by the Huskies’ second straight National Invitation 8. Oregon State 3–10 .231 10–13 Tournament appearance. Washington’s record improved four straight seasons under 9. Washington 2–12 .143 8–16 Bender, including a 16-12 mark in 1996 after which he was voted the Pac-10 Coach of 10. Washington State 1–13 .071 5–17 the Year. The UW was 5-22 in 1994 and 10-17 in 1995. His 113 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 13-year career record of 173–197. 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 point guard at Duke from 1977-80, including an appearance in the 1978 title game against Kentucky. Century Mark: Ninth-year coach Bob Bender posted his 100th win at Washington on Dec. 20, 2000 with a 67-47 decision at American-Puerto Rico. He has led the Huskies to 113 victories. Only (488), (246) and (156) have won more games as the head coach at Washington. Bender is Back: Men’s basketball coach Bob Bender returned to the Washington bench Nov. 17 against Bowling Green and has been patrolling the sidelines ever since then. He missed the Nov. 15 regular-season opener at Alaska Fairbanks due to a bruised rib that kept him in Seattle. Bender arrived in Fairbanks on Nov. 16, during an off-day for the Huskies. Bender was scheduled to fly to Fairbanks with the team on Nov. 14 morning, but was at University of Washington Medical Center instead undergoing tests. He slipped and fell outside his house on Nov. 12 and developed severe back pain. Bender was diagnosed with a bruised rib on Nov. 14 and released that afternoon, while the team was arriving in Fairbanks. Bender spoke to the team via speakerphone on the afternoon of the opener (Nov. 15) and expressed his regrets about missing the game. 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 seventh season on the staff, his third as the associate. Hughes has been with Bender during his entire eight-year tenure at UW. Hairston, a former Seattle Sonic and legendary prep coach at Seattle’s Garfield High School, is in his second season. 2001-02 Washington Basketball Roster (* Used red-shirt season, # walk-on) No Name Pos Hgt Wgt Yr Exp Hometown (High School/Junior College) 1 C.J. Massingale G 6-4 200 So. 1V Tacoma, Wash. (Mount Tahoma HS) 3 Sterling Brown # G 6-4 200 So. 1V Woodinville, Wash. (Woodinville HS) 4 Jeffrey Day F 6-9 220 Fr. HS Seattle, Wash. (Seattle Prep HS) 5 Will Conroy G 6-1 185 Fr. HS Seattle, Wash. (Garfield HS) 10 Charles Frederick G 5-11 180 Fr. HS Boca Raton, Fla. (Pope John Paul II HS) 12 Ian Gibbs # F 6-4 215 So. HS Bellingham, Wash. (Sehome HS) 20 Curtis Allen G 6-0 170 So. 1V Tacoma, Wash. (Wilson HS) 21 Erroll Knight G 6-7 205 Fr. HS Seattle, Wash. (Chief Sealth HS) 23 Josh Barnard G 6-5 205 Jr. TR Tacoma, Wash. (Bethel HS / Tacoma CC) 24 Doug Wrenn F 6-8 220 So. * TR Seattle, Wash. (O’Dea HS / Connecticut) 31 Grant Leep F 6-7 230 Sr. 3V Mount Vernon, Wash. (Mount Vernon HS) 42 Mike Jensen F 6-9 220 Fr. HS Covington, Wash. (Kentwood HS) 44 Marlon Shelton C 6-10 280 Sr. 3V Rochester, Mich. (Rochester HS) 50 David Dixon C 6-11 270 Sr. 2V Houston, Texas (Westbury Christian HS / Tyler JC) 52 David Hudson # G 5-11 185 Fr. * RS Seattle, Wash. (Rainier Beach HS) 55 Ben Devoe C 6-10 265 Fr. HS Olympia, Wash. (Olympia HS) Head Coach: Bob Bender, ninth year (Duke, 1980) Record: Overall (13 years): 173-197 (.468) Record at Washington (nine years): 113-140 (.447) Associate Head Coach: Byron Boudreaux, seventh year (Tulsa, 1987) Assistant Coaches: Eric Hughes, ninth year (Cal State Hayward, 1989), Al Hairston, second year (Washington, 1972) Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 6 2002 UW Victory / Defeat Margins: Last Year’s Record after 24 games: 9–15 Last Year’s Record after 25 games: 9–16 Margins 12345678910111213141516171819202122252645 UW Wins 1111 12 1 ------UW Losses 111 11 1 4 1 2 1 1 1

Last Husky Game: #12 Stanford 91, UW 65 (Feb. 14, 2002; Seattle) — tallied 31 points and contributed 15 points, 16 rebounds and five blocked shots as 12th-ranked Stanford cruised to a 91-65 win over Washington. The Cardinal (16-6, 9-4) posted its 10th straight win over Washington (8-16, 2-12), the longest streak in the series. Stanford led 42- 33 at halftime and opened the second half with a 3-pointer by Tony Giovacchini. The Huskies reeled off eight straight points to draw within 45-41 with 16:05 left to play. The Cardinal responded with a 9-0 surge to push the margin to 54-41 and had another nine-point run near the end of the game. Doug Wrenn, the Pac-10’s second-leading scorer behind Jacobsen, was the only Husky to reach double- figures. He netted 24 points and completed his third double-double with 11 rebounds. The Cardinal out-rebounded UW 48-32. Revolving Roster: The youthful Huskies have a roster that includes seven freshmen, five sophomores, one junior and three seniors. Ten of 16 UW athletes had never played a game at Washington before this season. The predominantly local list of athletes includes 13 of 16 players from high schools in the state of Washington. Two-Sport Player: Freshman Charles Frederick, who began practicing with the basketball team on Dec. 31, suited up for the first time on Jan. 4 at UCLA. He saw his first game action on Jan. 6 at USC, an eight-minute stint during which he had two points, two assists and one . He has played five games. Frederick is a scholarship receiver on the Husky football team that concluded its season Dec. 28 with a 47-43 loss to Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Frederick was the leading punt returner for the Huskies with a 14.6-yard average, including an 87-yard TD return against Idaho (Sept. 22). He was a Sporting News Freshman All-America pick. Frederick was a top-50 national recruit in football and basketball. He averaged 19 points and eight steals from his point guard position as a senior in 2001 at Pope John Paul II High School in Boca Raton, Fla. Husky Highlights: Doug Wrenn tallied a career-high 35 points at Arizona (Feb. 7), the highest scoring output by a Husky since Todd MacCulloch scored 38 at James Madison on Dec. 7, 1996 ... Wrenn’s four 30-point outings are the third-best single-season total by a Husky and are the most since Louie Nelson had five during the 1972-73 campaign ... Curtis Allen converted 20 consecutive free throws between Jan. 10-26 ... Allen distributed 15 assists against Arizona State (Jan. 10), just one shy of the school single-game record of 16 set by Rafael Stone in 1970 ... The Huskies won their home opener on Nov. 24, defeating Santa Clara 69-49. That improved their all-time record in home openers to 81-18. It was the 99th all-time home opener for UW which did not play any home games during the 1905 season ... Four Huskies received all-tournament honors at the Top of the World Classic: Curtis Allen, David Dixon, Erroll Knight and tournament MVP Doug Wrenn ... On Nov. 15 Erroll Knight scored a UW freshman debut record 23 points. He topped the mark of 22 points set by Deon Luton on Nov. 26, 1996 in his collegiate debut against BYU ... The Huskies blocked a school single-game record 14 shots against Santa Clara (Nov. 24), bettering by four the UW record of 10 blocks established on Dec. 3, 1991 ... Curtis Allen was named Pac-10 Player of the Week on Dec. 3, the first time a Washington player received the conference award since Deon Luton on Feb. 8, 1999 ... Ten of the 16 players on the roster The Pac-10 will resurrect its Conference Tourna- had never played a game at Washington prior to this season ... Washington played the ment for the 2001-02 season. The top eight teams season opener without the services of head coach Bob Bender who was in Seattle nursing in the regular-season standings will compete in a bruised rib ... UW’s Dec. 11 home game against Gonzaga was a sellout, the second Los Angeles, Calif. for the conference champion- sellout since Bank of America Arena re-opened in November 2000 with a new 10,000- ship and an automatic NCAA Tournament berth. seat configuration. The first sellout was on Jan. 13, 2001 against Arizona. The Pac-10 Tournament, which was previously held for four seasons from 1987-90, is scheduled Home Sweet Home: For the first time in two years, the Huskies will play all of their for March 7-9 at the Staples Center. home games on campus, in newly renovated Bank of America Arena at Edmundson For the first time since that 1989-90 season, the Pavilion. The pavilion underwent a 19-month renovation from March of 1999 to Huskies played conference games before January November of 2000. The interior was completely redesigned while the building’s exterior to accommodate the Pac-10 Tournament. went unchanged. Despite an increased seating capacity from 7,900 to approximately “This is new territory for all of us who have been 10,000, the arena has a more intimate, basketball-only configuration. The Huskies won in the league a while. Before coming to the Pac- 755 games in the Pavilion since it opened on Dec. 27, 1927, more victories than any other 10 I’ve been involved with postseason conference school in its current arena. UW played two exhibitions and the season opener last year tournaments,” says UW Coach Bob Bender. “It at different venues before playing the remaining games in The Pavilion. does require some adjustments, the biggest one being that we open the Pac-10 season before Tacoma Trio: The Husky roster features three players from Tacoma, Washington. Christmas. Traditionally we’ve always begun after Junior guard Josh Barnard (Bethel HS), a transfer from Tacoma Community College, January 1. You have to be ready to play. You are joins sophomore guards Curtis Allen (Wilson HS) and C.J. Massingale (Mount Tahoma going to be put in a position where you have to HS). Having three players from Tacoma is remarkable considering UW went 21 years elevate everything so that come December you are without a Tacoma native on the men’s basketball roster. The last Tacoma native to play playing closer to what you normally would play in January.” at UW was Steve Matzen (Lincoln HS) who lettered from 1977-80. Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 7 Frosh Phenoms: Freshmen Jeffrey Day and Will Conroy have already made their 2002 UW Record When mark on the Washington record book. Both are climbing the charts among all-time At Home 4–6 Husky freshmen. Day has 28 blocked shots, tying Chris Welp (1984) for the second- On the Road 3–9 highest single-season total ever for a UW freshman. He is within striking distance of the At a Neutral Site 1–1 school’s frosh record of 32 established in 1996 by Todd MacCulloch. Day needs four Scoring First 3–8 blocks to tie MacCulloch and five to claim sole possession of the record. Conroy Opponent Scores First 5–8 distributed 44 assists to tie for seventh with Thalo Green (1998) among all-time Husky Ahead with 5:00 left 6–2 rookie playmakers. Conroy needs 15 assists to move into the No. 6 spot ahead of Mark Tied with 5:00 left 1–0 Pope who had 58 assists in 1992. Trailing with 5:00 left 1–14 UW Freshmen Assist Leaders UW Freshmen Block Leaders Ahead at Halftime 7–4 No. Player (Year) Assists No. Player (Years) Blocks Tied at Halftime 0–1 1. Eldridge Recasner (1987) 103 1. Todd MacCulloch (1996) 32 Behind at Halftime 1–11 2. Senque Carey (1999) 94 2. Jeffrey Day (2002) 28 Overtime Games 0–0 3. James French (1991) 88 2t. Chris Welp (1984) 28 Three-Point or less Final Margin 1–3 4. Curtis Allen (2001) 65 4. Petur Gudmundson (1978) 24 5 Huskies Score in Double Figures 0–0 5. Mike Hayward (1988) 59 5. Reggie Rogers (1983) 21 4 Huskies Score in Double Figures 3–3 6. Mark Pope (1992) 58 3 Huskies Score in Double Figures 5–6 7. Will Conroy (2002) 44 2 Huskies Score in Double Figures 0–5 7t. Thalo Green (1998) 44 1 Husky Scores in Double Figures 0–1 0 Huskies Score in Double Figures 0–1 “We have the most athletic team that we’ve ever had at Washington. It’s an athletic team FG % is above 50 % 3–1 that is more than capable of competing in the Pac-10 where athleticism has always been a necessity.” — Bob Bender, Washington head coach FG % is exactly 50 % 0–2 FG % is below 50 % 5–13 A young team represents an old basketball program during the current 2001-02 season. Opponent FG % is above 50% 0–5 The Washington Huskies celebrate their 100th season of men’s basketball competition Opponent FG % is exactly 50% 0–1 this year with a collection of players the majority of which have never before worn a UW Opponent FG % is below 50% 8–10 jersey. Ten new players fill the Husky roster, including a recruiting class that was ranked Outshooting Opponent (%) 8–4 among the best in the nation. Only five athletes will play who were on last year’s team Outshot by Opponent (%) 0–12 that finished with a 10-20 record for the second straight season. The Huskies tied for Outrebounding Opponent 5–7 ninth place in the Pac-10 Conference standings with a 4-14 record. Rebounds equal Opponent 0–2 “No school did a more thorough job of addressing its overall weakness and building for Outrebounded by Opponent 3–7 the future.” — Mike DeCourcy, The Sporting News Fewer Turnovers than Opponent 2–2 Newcomers: Washington’s 2001 recruiting class was ranked among the nation’s best. Turnovers equal Opponent 0–0 Mike DeCourcy of The Sporting News ranked the Husky class as the nation’s best More Turnovers than Opponent 6–14 recruiting haul with one of his primary criteria being “which teams got the players they Bench outscores Opponent 5–6 needed.” The celebrated class features three players who were among the 100 national Bench scoring equals Opponent 1–0 finalists for the 2001 McDonald’s All-American Game -- Charles Frederick, Mike Bench outscored by Opponent 2–10 Jensen and Erroll Knight. The signing class also includes junior college sharpshooter UW Scores 40–49 Points 0–1 Josh Barnard (Tacoma CC) and 6-9 forward Jeffrey Day from 2000 state champion UW Scores 50–59 Points 0–2 Seattle Prep. Jensen was rated the top power forward in the West by Pac-West Hoops UW Scores 60–69 Points 1–7 which selected Knight as the No. 2 shooting guard. “We accomplished what we wanted UW Scores 70–79 Points 2–5 to do in a very big way,” said Coach Bob Bender. “We are very proud of the fact they UW Scores 80–89 Points 3–1 are all from right here in state. Every single player is a Washington player and that is UW Scores 90-99 Points 2–0 our priority. We really emphasized how they could be the greatest class that we have ever Opponent Scores 40–49 Points 1–0 had the opportunity to recruit and that coming in together would put them in position to Opponent Scores 50–59 Points 0–0 be one of the top classes in the nation. They all are very, very talented, but collectively Opponent Scores 60–69 Points 2–4 they’re very special.” A consensus top-50 prep basketball player, Frederick signed a Opponent Scores 70–79 Points 3–4 football scholarship and will join the basketball team after football season. He returns Opponent Scores 80–89 Points 0–4 punts, including an 87-yard return for a touchdown against Michigan. Also joining the Opponent Scores 90–99 Points 2–3 team is freshman point guard Will Conroy, a product of Seattle’s Garfield High School. Opponent Scores Over 100 Points 0–1 Conroy intended to walk-on, but was awarded a scholarship when one became available on Oct. 1. Rounding out the roster is sophomore walk-on Ian Gibbs (Sehome HS). Husky Tickets: Good seats are available for all Washington home games. The Pepsi “Fun for Four” Family Pack offers four general admission game tickets, four Pepsi drinks and four hot dogs for only $25. Reserved seats for individual Husky games are $16 while general admission seats are $6 and $3 for current UW students. Visit the Husky Ticket Office, located in the Graves Building, or call (206-543-2200) for information. Individual game reserved tickets will also be available on-line via the athletic department website: www.gohuskies.com Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 8 Big Ben: Washington’s inside corps was bolstered by the addition of 6-10 walk-on 2002 Individual Superlatives center Ben Devoe who began practicing with the team on Dec. 31. Devoe, who has not Double–Doubles (points & rebounds) participated in a game, gives UW a much-needed big body after the season-ending David Dixon ...... 5 injuries of Marlon Shelton (left knee) and Mike Jensen (left shoulder). He suited up for Doug Wrenn ...... 3 the first time Thursday (Jan. 10) against Arizona State, but has not played. He will likely Double–Figure Points red-shirt this season, preserving four seasons of eligibility. Devoe averaged 14 points Doug Wrenn ...... 20 and eight rebounds per game as a senior in 2000 at Olympia (Wash.) High School. He Curtis Allen ...... 14 attended the Air Force Prepatory Academy in Colorado Springs for one semester before David Dixon ...... 11 beginning a Mormon mission in Pennsylvania. His mission was cut short by a back Grant Leep ...... 8 injury that forced Devoe to return to Olympia this fall. His availability was made known Erroll Knight ...... 6 to the Husky coaching staff in December and late in the month he was accepted into UW Josh Barnard ...... 5 for the winter quarter that began January 7. C.J. Massingale...... 4 Non-Conference Conquests: Washington completed its non-conference schedule 30–Point Game with a 6-4 record, its first winning record since the 1998-99 team posted a 7-3 record. Doug Wrenn ...... 4 UW had a 5-7 non-conference record in 1999-2000 and was 6-6 last season. 20–Point Game Jensen Jolted: Freshman forward Mike Jensen, who dislocated his left shoulder Doug Wrenn ...... 11 Dec. 3, underwent surgery on Dec. 10 and will miss the rest of the season. Jensen was Curtis Allen ...... 2 injured during practice and a shoulder specialist using an MRI discovered a torn labrum Erroll Knight ...... 1 that required surgery. “Having him continue to play is not worth the risk of re-injuring Josh Barnard ...... 1 his shoulder or having it pop out again,” Coach Bob Bender said soon after the injury Double–Figure Rebounds occurred. “Having surgery right now is in Mike’s best interest and really, there was no David Dixon ...... 6 other option. The most important thing is for Mike to get healthy.” Jensen participated Doug Wrenn ...... 3 in five of the first six games for the Huskies and will likely be granted a medical red-shirt Double–Figure Assists season after the UW coaching and medical staffs request one from the NCAA. That Curtis Allen ...... 1 should enable him to have four more seasons of eligibility. Jensen averaged 2.0 points 5-or More Assists and 1.8 rebounds in 8.4 minutes per game. A product of Kentwood (Wash.) High School, Curtis Allen ...... 8 Jensen was rated the No. 1 power forward in the West last year by Pac-West Hoops. He Doug Wrenn ...... 1 was the nation’s 66th-ranked high school prospect by The Sporting News and was one Will Conroy ...... 1 of 100 national finalists for the 2001 McDonald’s All-American Game. He is the second Husky big man to suffer a season-ending injury, joining 6-10 senior center Marlon 5-or More Blocked Shots Shelton who re-injured his left knee and will miss the entire 2001-02 season David Dixon ...... 4 UW Leading Scorer (ties included) Conroy Declared Eligible: Freshman guard Will Conroy was ruled eligible to play Doug Wrenn ...... 19 on Nov. 14, one day before the season opener. He participated in all 23 games, averaging Curtis Allen ...... 3 11.1 minutes per contest while backing up starting point guard Curtis Allen. Conroy Erroll Knight ...... 2 drew his first collegiate start on Feb. 9 at Arizona State. He ranks second on the team with David Dixon ...... 1 44 assists, an average of 1.9 assists per game. His 44 assists are the seventh-highest total Grant Leep ...... 1 ever for a Husky freshman. The school received written confirmation from the NCAA Josh Barnard ...... 1 Clearinghouse on Nov. 14 that his transcript had been approved. Conroy had been ruled ineligible on Nov. 1 by the NCAA Clearinghouse that was examining his high school UW Top Rebounder (ties included) transcript. He was unable to practice David Dixon ...... 12 with the team until the Clearinghouse Doug Wrenn ...... 9 determined that a course he took at Washington’s Largest in 2002 Jeffrey Day ...... 2 Seattle’s Garfield High School quali- Grant Leep ...... 2 Lead ...... 22, vs. Santa Clara fied under the “core course” criteria. C.J. Massingale...... 2 Deficit ...... 48, at Stanford Will Conroy ...... 1 Margin of Victory ...... 20, vs. Santa Clara Curtis Allen ...... 1 Erroll Knight ...... 1 Margin of Defeat ...... 45, at Stanford UW Top Assister (ties included) Halftime Lead ...... 14 (42-28) vs. Butler Curtis Allen ...... 17 Halftime Deficit ...... 21 (30-51) at USC Doug Wrenn ...... 4 Josh Barnard ...... 2 Deficit in Win ...... 7, vs. Santa Clara Will Conroy ...... 2 Halftime Deficit in Win ...... 2, vs. Santa Clara Erroll Knight ...... 1 Lead in a Loss...... 17 vs. Butler Halftime Lead in Loss ..... 14 (42-28) vs. Butler UW Scoring Run ...... 14 vs. Butler Opponent Run ...... 15, Arizona Washington Basketball (Feb. 15, 2002) Page 9 The Oregon State Series: Where the Huskies Rank in > Washington has a 138-132 lead in the all-time series that began in 1904. the Pac-10 Statistics > Oregon State won the last five meetings, sweeping the last two season series in (As of February 15 Pac-10 release) the process. OSU’s current five-game winning streak is the longest in its series with Washington since a similar five-game skein from 1991-93. Oregon State INDIVIDUAL hasn’t won six straight versus UW since an 11-game streak between 1978 and 1983. Scoring The Beavers boast a 92-42 advantage over Washington in Corvallis, including Doug Wrenn 20.6 ...... 2nd > victories in the Huskies’ last two visits to Gill Coliseum. Rebounds > Second-year Oregon State Coach Ritchie McKay is the only former assistant to David Dixon 7.7 ...... 4th coach against Bob Bender. He has a 3-1 all-time record against Washington. Doug Wrenn 6.4 ...... 13th McKay’s Portland State team lost to the Huskies 83-70 on Nov. 30, 1996 in Assists Seattle before his OSU team won his last three meetings with the Huskies. Curtis Allen 4.42 ...... 6th > McKay was a graduate assistant coach at Washington during the 1988-89 season under and returned to serve as an assistant during Bender’s first two Blocked Shots years at UW, the 1993-94 and 1994-95 seasons. McKay left Washington to David Dixon 2.33 ...... 2nd become the head coach at Portland State. He then went to Colorado State before Jeffrey Day 1.22 ...... 7th his arrival at Oregon State. Free Throw Percentage > Ninth-year Washington Coach Bob Bender has a 10-7 record against Oregon Curtis Allen 87.6 % ...... 2nd State and is 1-3 against McKay. 3-Point Percentage The Last Meeting: Oregon State 68, UW 53 (Jan. 26, 2002; Seattle) — Philip Ricci scored seven of his 21 points during the final 5:35 of the first half when Oregon Grant Leep 53.6 % ...... 1st State took control en route to its fifth straight win over Washington, a 68-53 decision at Bank of America Arena. The Huskies (8-12, 2-8) got a 3-pointer by Erroll Knight at TEAM 7:16 and then missed their final seven shots in the first half. UW led 20-18 before Ricci (per game averages listed) fueled a 14-4 Beaver run to take a 32-24 halftime advantage. Oregon State (10-9, 3-6) Scoring 71.5 ...... 8th opened the second half with a 12-5 surge behind seven more Ricci points, taking a commanding 44-29 lead with 15:17 left to play. Jimmie Haywood added 11 points for Scoring Margin - 6.1 ...... 9th Oregon State which shot 51 percent from the field (25-49) while limiting the Huskies Field Goal Percent 43.3 ...... 9th to 38-percent accuracy (17-45). Doug Wrenn led UW in scoring for the seventh straight 3-Point Percent 35.0 ...... 7th game with 19 points. David Dixon registered his fifth double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds. Rebounding 36.3 ...... 6th Scoring Defense 77.6 ...... 8th Husky Talk: Tune in to KOMO (1000 AM) every Monday night at 6 p.m. for “Husky Talk,” a half-hour call-in and interview show featuring head coach Bob Bender and Free Throw Percent 67.3 ...... 8th KOMO Radio’s Bob Rondeau who does play-by-play for all UW games. Opponent Field Goal % 44.5 ...... 8th Meet the Press: Bob Bender conducts weekly press meetings every Tuesday at 10 Opponent 3-Point % 35.5 ...... 10th a.m. in the Press Room located in the southwest corner of Bank of America Arena. Opponent Rebounds 37.8 ...... 9th Signed, Sealed, Delivered: Washington received commitments during the early Rebound Margin - 1.5 ...... 8th signing period (Nov. 14-21) from two prep standouts, both from Seattle’s Garfield Assists 13.1 ...... 9th High School. , a 6-5 wing player, is one of the premier prep players in the nation and Anthony Washington is a 6-9 rising power forward prospect who Turnover Margin - 3.67 ...... 10th initially signed last year with the Huskies, but returned to Garfield to complete some Offensive Rebounds 12.5 ...... 5th coursework. Those two will join the team in the fall of 2002 and be reunited with former 3-Pointers Made 5.88 ...... 9th prep teammate Will Conroy who is currently a freshman point guard at UW. The Blocked Shots 4.83 ...... 1st Huskies have one scholarship to offer during the late letter of intent period that begins April 15. Steals 5.42 ...... 8th Brandon Roy—6-5, 195, guard/forward, Seattle, Wash. (Garfield HS) Assist/Turnover Ratio 0.76 ...... 9th The No. 2-ranked small forward in the West by Prep-West Hoops ... Rated No. 47 Defensive Rebounds 23.8 ...... 6th nationally among all positions by CNN/SI ... Averaged 18.7 points and 5.5 rebounds last year at Garfield High School ... A first-team 2001 All-Washington state selection in the 4A classification ... The 2001 KingCo Conference MVP. Anthony Washington—6-9, 220, forward, Seattle, Wash. (Garfield HS) The ninth-rated power forward in the West last year by Prep-West Hoops ... Listed as the No. 100 player nationally by The Sporting News last year... Emerged on the recruiting scene with stellar performances during the spring and summer camp sessions of 2000 ... Averaged 8.5 points and 6.5 rebounds per game as senior at Garfield High in 2001 ... Blocked 21 shots in four games to set a new state tournament record ... Had more blocks than the previous tournament team record of 20. # 20 Curtis Allen High Games Career Season Guard, 6-0, 170, So., Tacoma, Wash. (Wilson HS) Points 27 Same • The 2000 Washington state Class 4A Player of the Year after averaging 25.2 points per game. Rebounds 66 • A first-team All-Pac-10 Freshman Team selection last year. Assists 15 Same • The Dec. 3, 2001 Pac-10 Player of the Week after a career-high 27 points at San Diego (Dec. 1). Blocks 11 • Has 106 assists, the 21st player in UW history to reach the 100-assists plateau in a season. Steals 4 Same • Distributed 15 assists vs. Arizona State (Jan. 10), just one shy of the school record of 16. Minutes 37 Same

# 23 Josh Barnard High Games Career Season Guard, 6-5, 205, Jr., Tacoma, Wash. (Bethel HS/Tacoma Community College) Points 22 Same • Transfer from Tacoma (Wash.) Community College where he led the league with 99 treys in 2001. Rebounds 5 Same • A two-time All-Northwest Athletic Association of Community Colleges (NWAACC) selection. Assists 4 Same • Converted a Tacoma C.C.-record 49-percent of his 3-point shots during the 2000 season. Blocks 1 Same • Played all 24 games this season, starting at Alaska-Fairbanks (Nov. 15) and vs. USC (Dec. 27). Steals 3 Same • Scored career-high 22 points at UCLA (Jan. 4), including six 3-pointers. Minutes 30 Same

# 3 Sterling Brown High Games Career Season Guard, 6-4, 200, So., Woodinville, Wash. (Woodinville HS) Points 7 Same • Walk-on who was an honorable mention all-state prep selection in 2000. Rebounds 3 Same • Averaged 20.2 points, eight rebounds and four assists per game as a senior at Woodinville High. Assists 2 Same • Father, Dave Brown, played 15 NFL seasons and was on the 1975 Super Bowl champion Steelers. Blocks 00 • Played 13 games this season, including 10 of the last 11 Pac-10 contests. Steals 1 Same • Had 7 points, 1 rebound, 1 assist and 1 steal in an 8-minute stint at USC (Jan. 6). Minutes 15 13

# 5 Will Conroy High Games Career Season Guard, 6-1, 185, Fr., Seattle, Wash. (Garfield HS) Points 7 Same • Planned to walk-on, but was awarded a scholarship when one became available on Oct. 1. Rebounds 6 Same • Rated the No. 15 high school point guard in the West last year by Prep West Hoops. Assists 8 Same • Prep teammate of Brandon Roy and Anthony Washington who signed with UW for next year. Blocks 1 Same • Played all 24 games this season. Started the last 2 games, vs. ASU (Feb. 9) and Stanford (Feb. 14). Steals 2 Same • Had career-highs at Arizona (Feb. 7) in points (7), assists (8), blocks (1), steals (2) and minutes (28). Minutes 28 Same

# 4 Jeffrey Day High Games Career Season Forward, 6-9, 220, Fr., Seattle, Wash. (Seattle Prep HS) Points 8 Same • Helped lead Seattle Prep to the 2000 Washington Class AAA state championship. Rebounds 8 Same • Played all but 1 game, at Cal (Jan. 17). Started twice, at USC (Jan. 6) and at Arizona State (Feb. 9). Assists 3 Same • Tallied 7 points and 7 rebounds with three blocks in his collegiate debut at Alaska-Fairbanks. Blocks 4 Same • Had season-high 8 points and 3 assists against Oregon (Jan. 24). Also had 8 points at WSU (Jan. 31). Steals 2 Same • Ranks 2nd on the team with 28 blocked shots, including season-high 4 vs. Gonzaga (Dec. 11). Minutes 27 Same

# 50 David Dixon High Games Career Season Center, 6-11, 270, Sr., Houston, Texas (Westbury Christian HS / Tyler JC) Points 16 16 • A 1999 junior college All-American. Rebounds 15 Same • Hails from Tyler (Texas) JC that produced NBA players Robert Pack, Sam Mack and David Benoit. Assists 3 Same • Blocked a school single-game record 7 shots twice, vs. Santa Clara (Nov. 24) and at WSU (Jan. 31). Blocks 7 Same • Ranks No. 3 on the school’s single-season blocked shots list with Pac-10 leading 56 this year. Steals 2 Same • Registered 5 double-doubles. Has 6 double-digit rebound games and led UW 12 times in rebounds. Minutes 38 Same

# 10 Charles Frederick High Games Career Season Guard, 5-11, 180, Fr., Boca Raton, Fla. (Pope John Paul II HS) Points 2 Same • Attending Washington on a football scholarship. A consensus national top-50 recruit in both sports. Rebounds 1 Same • Ran his second collegiate punt return for an 87-yard touchdown against Idaho (Sept. 22). Assists 2 Same • Led UW with a 14.6-yard average on 13 punt returns and was 2nd with 16.5 yards on 13 kick returns. Blocks 0 Same • Named to The Sporting News Freshman All-America Team as a special teams performer. Steals 1 Same • Played 5 games. 1st practice was Dec. 31. Had 2 points and 2 assists in 8 minutes at USC (Jan. 6). Minutes 12 Same # 12 Ian Gibbs High Games Career Season Forward, 6-5, 215, So., Bellingham, Wash. (Sehome HS) Points 0 Same • Joined the team Oct. 16 after earning a roster spot during the annual walk-on tryouts on Oct. 15. Rebounds 1 Same • Sehome High School squad placed fifth at the 2000 state tournament his senior season. Assists 0 Same • Attended Washington last year, but did not play on the basketball team. Blocks 1 Same • Played 3 minutes in an exhibition game vs. Brisbane (Australia) and had one rebound and one assist. Steals 0 Same • Played 5 games. Blocked 1 shot at USC (Jan. 6). Grabbed 1 rebound vs. Stanford (Feb. 14). Minutes 3 Same

# 52 David Hudson High Games Career Season Guard, 5-11, 185, RS-Fr., Seattle, Wash. (Rainier Beach HS) Points 9 Same • Walk-on who joined the team last season, but sat out while utilizing a red-shirt year. Rebounds 0 Same • Prep teammate of Chicago Bulls’ 2000 first-round draft pick Jamal Crawford. Assists 1 Same • Played 6 regular-season games. Blocks 0 Same • Converted all four of his free throw attempts in the critical final minute at San Diego (Dec. 1). Steals 0 Same • Scored career-high 9 points on 3-of-4 shooting from 3-point range in a 3 minutes vs. USC (Dec. 27). Minutes 8 Same

# 42 Mike Jensen High Games Career Season Forward, 6-9, 220, Fr., Covington, Wash. (Kentwood HS) Points 6 Same • Rated the No. 1 power forward in the West last year by Pac-West Hoops. Rebounds 4 Same • Dunked over 7-foot Tyson Chandler, the second pick in the 2001 NBA Draft, in the Nike Hoopfest. Assists 0 Same • Ranked No. 66 nationally in The Sporting News list of the top 2001 high school prospects. Blocks 0 Same • Played 5 games. Had season-best six points in his collegiate debut vs. Bowling Green (Nov. 17). Steals 1 Same • Out for the season after dislocating left shoulder in practice on Dec. 3. Had surgery on Dec. 10. Minutes 13 Same

# 21 Erroll Knight High Games Career Season Guard, 6-7, 205, Fr., Seattle, Wash. (Chief Sealth HS) Points 23 Same • Voted the 2001 “Mr. Basketball” for the state of Washington by the coaches’ association. Rebounds 8 Same • Rated the No. 2 shooting guard in the West last year by Pac-West Hoops. Assists 4 Same • One of 100 national finalists for the 2001 McDonald’s All-American Game. Blocks 2 Same • Had left knee surgery Nov. 2 and returned for the No. 15 season opener, 1 week earlier than expected. Steals 2 Same • Set a Husky freshman debut record with 23 points in his first game at Alaska-Fairbanks (Nov. 15). Minutes 32 Same

# 31 Grant Leep High Games Career Season Forward, 6-7, 230, Sr., Mount Vernon, Wash. (Mount Vernon HS) Points 18 Same • Two-time all-state performer who led Mount Vernon High to the state semifinals his final two years. Rebounds 8 Same • Missed the final 19 games in 2000 with a torn medial collateral ligament in his right knee. Assists 22 • Tallied career-high 18 points at UTEP (Dec. 6) in a career-high 39 minutes. Blocks 11 • Started 22 of 24 games this season. Has 7 double-figure scoring games after having 3 before this year. Steals 2 Same • Shooting 53.6% from 3-point range, hitting 30 of 56 treys, to lead all Pac-10 players. Minutes 39 Same

# 1 C.J. Massingale High Games Career Season Guard, 6-4, 200, So., Tacoma, Wash. (Mount Tahoma HS) Points 25 17 • Two-time MVP of the Narrows League Bridge Division in 1999 and 2000. Rebounds 7 Same • Averaged 22 points, eight rebounds and six assists as a senior in 2000 for Mount Tahoma High. Assists 53 • Posted 6 double-figure scoring performances last year, all in conference contests. Blocks 1 Same • Scored 25 points at UCLA (Jan. 4, 2001), the second-highest point total for a Husky last season. Steals 4 Same • Played all 24 games with 6 starts. Tallied season-high 17 points at San Diego (Dec. 1). Minutes 28 28

# 24 Doug Wrenn High Games Career Season Forward, 6-8, 220, So., Seattle, Wash. (O’Dea HS/Connecticut) Points 35 Same • A 1998 Parade All-American and the Washington state Prep Player of the Year. Rebounds 13 Same • Rated the nation’s No. 4 small forward in 1998 by Recruiting USA after averaging 22.4 points. Assists 5 Same • Sat out as a red-shirt last season after transferring from Connecticut where he played 24 games. Blocks 2 Same • Registered 11 20-point games and four 30-point games, including career-high 35 at Arizona (Feb 7). Steals 2 Same • Hit the game-winning shot at New Mexico State (Dec. 8), a jumper in the lane with 0:06 left. Minutes 40 Same 2002 Washington Men’s Basketball Results

Head Coach: Bob Bender (Duke ’80) UW Record: 113–140 (9 years) Career Record: 173–197 (13 years) Associate Head Coach: Byron Boudreaux (Tulsa, ’87) Assistant Coaches: Al Hairston (Washington, ’72) Eric Hughes (Cal State Hayward, ’89) Records: 8–16 overall (4–6 home, 3–9 away, 1–1 neutral) 2–12 Pac-10 (2–5 home, 0–7 away) Record Date Opponent (UW Ranking) W/L Site Attendance Score Overall Pac-10 Nov. 2 + Brisbana, Australia (exhibition) Bank of America Arena 87–43 Nov. 8 + Western Washington (exhibition) Bank of America Arena 81–76 Nov. 15 ^ at Alaska-Fairbanks W Fairbanks, Ak. 3,362 82–70 1–0 Nov. 17 ^ vs. Bowling Green W Fairbanks, Ak. 3,333 81–74 2–0 Nov. 18 ^ vs. Butler L Fairbanks, Ak. 3,159 64–67 2–1 Nov. 24 Santa Clara W Bank of America Arena 4,204 69–49 3–1 Nov. 28 UNLV W Bank of America Arena 5,194 77–64 4–1 Dec. 1 at San Diego W San Diego, Calif. 2,416 98–94 5–1 Dec. 6 at Texas-El Paso L El Paso, Texas 6,803 62–74 5–2 Dec. 8 at New Mexico State W Las Cruces, N.M. 7,661 75–74 6–2 Dec. 11 #25 Gonzaga L Bank of America Arena 10,000 47–67 6–3 Dec. 20 • #19 UCLA L Bank of America Arena 7,215 79–85 6–4 0–1 Dec. 27 • USC L Bank of America Arena 6,318 64–87 6–5 0–2 Dec. 29 at Saint Louis L St. Louis, Mo. 11,359 70–71 6–6 Jan. 4 • at #14 UCLA L Los Angeles, Calif. 7,567 62–74 6–7 0–3 Jan. 6 • at USC L Los Angeles, Calif. 3,597 74–94 6–8 0–4 Jan. 10 • Arizona State W Bank of America Arena 5,448 81–68 7–8 1–4 Jan. 12 • #20 Arizona L Bank of America Arena 8,260 69–74 7–9 1–5 Jan. 17 • at California L Berkeley, Calif. 9,612 50–62 7–10 1–6 Jan. 19 • at #19 Stanford L Palo Alto, Calif. 5,986 60–105 7–11 1–7 Jan. 24 • #19 Oregon W Bank of America Arena 7,009 97–92 8–11 2–7 Jan. 26 • Oregon State L Bank of America Arena 6,416 53–68 8–12 2–8 Jan. 31 • at Washington State L Pullman, Wash. 3,310 79–81 8–13 2–9 Feb. 7 • at #11 Arizona L Tucson, Ariz. 14,574 82-91 8–14 2–10 Feb. 9 • at Arizona State L Tempe, Ariz. 6,338 74–86 8–15 2–11 Feb. 14 • #12 Stanford L Bank of America Arena 6,562 65–91 8–16 2–12 Feb. 16 • California Feb. 21 • at Oregon State Feb. 23 • at Oregon Feb. 27 • Washington State + Exhibition game (not counted in record) • Pacific-10 Conference game ^ Top of the World Classic; Fairbanks, Ak. # Opponent's AP ranking listed is at date of game Total Attendance: 155,703 ( 24 game average: 6,487 ) Home Game Attendance: 66,526 ( 10 game average: 6,653 ) Home Game Attendance (Pac–10 Only): 47,228 ( 7 game average: 6,746 ) Away Game Attendance: 82,585 ( 12 game average: 6,882 ) Neutral Site Attendance: 6,492 ( 2 game average: 3,246 ) 2002 Washington Game-By-Game Points & Rebounds (• starters)

Opponent Allen Barnard Brown Conroy Day Dixon Fredrick Gibbs Hudson Jensen Knight Leep Massngle Wrenn at Alaska-Fairbanks •9–2 •10–3 0–0 6–2 7–7 •16–7 DNP DNP DNP INJ 23–4 •3–4 •8–4 DNP vs. Bowling Green •18–1 7–5 DNP 6–2 4–3 •10–8 DNP DNP DNP 6–1 •19–9 •5–2 0–1 •19–9 vs. Butler •12–2 2–1 DNP 5–1 4–1 •15–13 DNP DNP DNP 2–4 •10–3 •2–3 2–0 •10–6 Santa Clara •6–6 2–2 DNP 0–6 0–2 •4–5 DNP DNP DNP 2–3 •12–4 •6–5 15–4 •22–4 UNLV •21–3 5–3 0–0 0–1 2–8 •6–8 DNP 0–0 0–0 0–1 •9–4 •10–4 3–2 •21–6 at San Diego •27–2 9–1 DNP 0–2 6–6 •14–9 DNP DNP 4–0 0–0 •0–1 •7–1 17–2 •14–3 at Texas-El Paso •2–1 13–2 DNP 0–0 2–2 •4–7 DNP DNP DNP INJ •2–4 •18–8 2–4 •19–13 at New Mexico State •14–5 8–1 DNP 5–0 0–3 •12–15 DNP DNP DNP INJ •5–4 •12–2 0–2 •19–4 Gonzaga •8–1 8–3 DNP 3–1 2–2 •2–6 DNP DNP DNP INJ •2–4 •9–8 4–2 •9–5 * UCLA •13–5 14–2 DNP 0–0 1–3 •4–2 DNP DNP DNP INJ •9–6 •10–6 •5–4 23–7 * USC •6–1 •10–2 0–2 4–2 0–4 •8–8 DNP 0–0 9–0 INJ 13–1 •2–4 5–2 •8–6 at Saint Louis •17–2 8–2 DNP 0–1 0–4 •2–8 DNP DNP DNP INJ •11–4 •12–4 2–1 •17–8 * at UCLA •15–2 22–2 DNP 0–0 0–5 •0–3 DNP DNP DNP INJ •2–4 •12–6 5–2 •6–4 * at USC •10–1 4–2 7–1 0–0 •0–2 •11–8 2–0 0–0 0–0 INJ •3–4 8–4 0–2 •29–3 * Arizona State •7–4 5–3 6–3 0–0 2–2 •2–1 0–1 DNP DNP INJ •19–8 •17–5 0–1 •23–4 * Arizona •16–2 2–4 0–1 0–1 0–2 •11–14 DNP DNP DNP INJ •5–0 •8–2 2–4 •25–4 * at California •11–0 2–1 0–0 1–2 DNP •6–11 DNP DNP INJ INJ •2–3 •3–6 6–4 •19–12 * at Stanford •13–1 3–2 4–1 0–3 4–2 •13–16 1–0 DNP 0–0 INJ •3–2 •3–3 0–1 •16–5 * Oregon •18–0 7–4 DNP 6–2 8–5 •4–1 DNP DNP DNP INJ 0–1 •11–6 •11–7 •32–7 * Oregon State •7–3 0–2 2–0 0–0 3–1 •10–10 0–0 0–0 INJ INJ 6–0 •0–0 •4–5 •19–8 * at Washington State •18–3 0–1 0–0 1–0 8–4 •8–9 INJ DNP INJ INJ •5–0 •5–5 0–2 •34–3 * at Arizona •4–2 0–1 5–1 7–4 2–5 •11–7 DNP DNP DNP INJ •3–0 •9–2 •6–2 35–9 * at Arizona State 3–1 3–0 3–1 •2–1 •0–0 •11–4 DNP DNP DNP INJ 2–0 •9–4 11–7 •30–7 * Stanford 9–1 0–0 0–1 •6–1 4–3 •6–4 2–1 0–1 0–0 INJ •9–3 0–3 •5–2 •24–11 * California * at Oregon State * at Oregon * Washington State * — Pac-10 Game + — Exhibition dnp — Did not play inj — Injured and did not play 2002 Washington Game-By-Game Leaders Game High Scorer High Rebounder High Assists at Alaska-Fairbanks (W 82–70) Erroll Knight...... 23 Jeffrey Day & David Dixon ...... 7 Curtis Allen ...... 4 vs. Bowling Green (W 81–74) Doug Wrenn...... 19 Doug Wrenn ...... 9 Curtis Allen ...... 5 vs. Butler (L 64–67) David Dixon ...... 15 David Dixon ...... 13 Curtis Allen ...... 3 Santa Clara (W 69–49) Doug Wrenn...... 22 Curtis Allen & Will Conroy...... 6 Curtis Allen ...... 6 UNLV (W 77–64) Doug Wrenn & Curtis Allen...... 21 David Dixon & Jeffrey Day ...... 8 Curtis Allen ...... 8 at San Diego (W 98–94) Curtis Allen ...... 27 David Dixon ...... 9 Curtis Allen ...... 4 at Texas-El Paso (L 62–74) Doug Wrenn...... 19 Doug Wrenn ...... 13 Doug Wrenn ...... 5 at New Mexico State (W 75–74) Doug Wrenn...... 19 David Dixon ...... 15 Curtis Allen ...... 5 Gonzaga (L 47–67) Grant Leep & Doug Wrenn ...... 9 Grant Leep ...... 8 Doug Wrenn ...... 4 * UCLA (L 79–85) Doug Wrenn...... 23 Doug Wrenn ...... 7 Curtis Allen ...... 5 * USC (L 65–87) Erroll Knight...... 13 David Dixon ...... 8 Curtis Allen ...... 4 at Saint Louis (L 70–71) Curtis Allen & Doug Wrenn...... 17 David Dixon & Doug Wrenn ...... 8 Curtis Allen ...... 4 * at UCLA (L 62–74) Josh Barnard...... 22 Grant Leep ...... 6 Curtis Allen ...... 8 * at USC (L 74–94) Doug Wrenn...... 29 David Dixon ...... 8 Josh Barnard ...... 4 * Arizona State (L 81–68) Doug Wrenn...... 23 Erroll Knight ...... 8 Curtis Allen ...... 15 * Arizona (L 69–74) Doug Wrenn...... 25 David Dixon ...... 14 Curtis Allen ...... 4 * at California (L 50–62) Doug Wrenn...... 19 Doug Wrenn ...... 12 Curtis Allen ...... 4 * at Stanford (L 60–105) Doug Wrenn...... 16 David Dixon ...... 16 Curtis Allen ...... 3 * Oregon (W 97–92) Doug Wrenn...... 32 Doug Wrenn & C.J. Massingale ...... 7 Will Conroy ...... 4 * Oregon State (L 53–68) Doug Wrenn...... 19 David Dixon ...... 10 Doug Wrenn ...... 4 * at Washington State (L 79–81) Doug Wrenn...... 34 David Dixon ...... 9 Allen, Barnard & Wrenn ...... 4 * at Arizona (L 82–91) Doug Wrenn...... 35 Doug Wrenn ...... 9 Will Conroy ...... 8 * at Arizona State (L 74–86) Doug Wrenn...... 30 Doug Wrenn & C.J. Massingale ...... 7 Curtis Allen ...... 5 * Stanford (L 65–91) Doug Wrenn...... 24 Doug Wrenn ...... 11 Erroll Knight ...... 2 * California * at Oregon State * at Oregon * Washington State 2001-02 Washington Men’s Basketball Cumulative Statistics - as of February 15 ** PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE GAMES ONLY **

RECORD: OVERALL HOME AWAY NEUTRAL CONFERENCE...... (2-12) (2-5) (0-7) (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 ------24 Wrenn, Doug 14 12 474 33.9 122 261 .467 10 40 .250 69 116 .595 30 60 90 6.4 38 1 25 34 7 9 323 23.1 20 Allen, Curtis 14 12 390 27.9 45 110 .409 18 55 .327 42 49 .857 5 19 24 1.7 29 1 63 57 1 18 150 10.7 50 Dixon, David 14 14 365 26.1 41 73 .562 0 0 .000 23 39 .590 27 71 98 7.0 53 5 15 22 34 6 105 7.5 31 Leep, Grant 14 12 340 24.3 34 71 .479 16 35 .457 13 16 .813 16 40 56 4.0 30 1 3 19 2 9 97 6.9 21 Knight, Erroll 14 10 263 18.8 30 73 .411 10 30 .333 11 29 .379 11 21 32 2.3 38 1 14 26 4 3 81 5.8 23 Barnard, Josh 14 1 266 19.0 27 79 .342 16 61 .262 2 6 .333 6 20 26 1.9 23 0 22 20 1 9 72 5.1 01 Massingale, C.J. 14 5 219 15.6 18 64 .281 1 10 .100 23 31 .742 24 21 45 3.2 16 0 9 15 1 11 60 4.3 04 Day, Jeffrey 13 2 211 16.2 12 33 .364 0 1 .000 8 12 .667 14 24 38 2.9 47 5 9 14 10 8 32 2.5 03 Brown, Sterling 11 0 59 5.4 10 19 .526 3 9 .333 4 6 .667 5 6 11 1.0 16 0 7 3 0 4 27 2.5 52 Hudson, David 4 0 16 4.0 3 11 .273 3 9 .333 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 2 0 1 0 0 0 9 2.3 05 Conroy, Will 14 2 161 11.5 6 24 .250 3 9 .333 12 19 .632 6 10 16 1.1 13 0 24 30 1 9 27 1.9 10 Frederick, Charles 5 0 30 6.0 2 5 .400 0 2 .000 1 2 .500 0 2 2 0.4 1 0 2 3 0 2 5 1.0 12 Gibbs, Ian 4 0 6 1.5 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 1 1 0.3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0.0 TEAM REBOUNDS...... 23 21 44 2 ------Washington 14 2800 350 823 .425 80 261 .307 208 325 .640 167 316 483 34.5 306 14 194 243 62 88 990 70.7 ------Opponents 14 2800 404 861 .469 85 212 .401 265 389 .681 192 350 542 38.7 287 3 224 189 41 108 1158 82.7 ------

SCORE BY HALVES(and OTs): 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Opponents 547 611 0 0 0 0 1158 Washington 475 515 0 0 0 0 990

DEADBALL REBOUNDS: OFF DEF TOTAL Opponents 59 16 75 Washington 57 14 71 2002 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. 15 at Alaska-Fairbanks (82–70) 29–50 .580 6–10 .600 18–27 .667 10–30 40 23–1 14–17 82 5–3 Nov. 17 vs. Bowling Green (81–74) 27–58 .466 7–16 .438 20–28 .714 14–22 36 14–0 11–20 81 5–6 Nov. 18 vs. Butler (64–67) 21–41 .512 4–10 .400 18–23 .783 7–30 37 17–0 7–22 64 5–4 Nov. 24 Santa Clara (69–49) 23–57 .404 6–18 .333 17–21 .810 15–29 44 18–0 14–13 69 14–4 Nov. 28 UNLV (77–64) 24–57 .421 7–18 .389 22–33 .667 18–27 45 19–0 17–17 77 6–8 Dec. 1 at San Diego (98–94) 27–49 .551 7–10 .700 37–43 .860 7–20 27 31–1 10–15 98 6–2 Dec. 6 at Texas-El Paso (62–74) 23–64 .359 9–19 .474 7–15 .467 21–27 48 20–1 13–15 62 1–1 Dec. 8 at New Mexico State (75–74) 25–57 .439 5–9 .556 20–28 .714 12–29 41 24–0 13–21 75 1–3 Dec. 11 Gonzaga (47–67) 18–64 .281 6–25 .240 5–8 .625 17–18 35 19–0 10–16 47 8–3 Dec. 20 UCLA (79–85) 29–66 .439 8–19 .421 13–21 .619 17–19 36 23–3 15–18 79 1–0 Dec. 27 USC (65–87) 20–50 .400 6–17 .353 19–27 .704 10–24 34 16–0 15–25 65 5–4 Dec. 29 at Saint Louis (70–71) 29–58 .500 4–7 .571 8–14 .571 11–24 35 22–0 11–15 70 3–8 Jan. 4 at UCLA (62–74) 21–55 .382 10–29 .345 10–18 .556 10–19 29 20–1 14–12 62 1–4 Jan. 6 at USC (74–94) 25–53 .472 3–13 .231 21–27 .778 8–23 31 22–1 14–26 74 6–6 Jan. 10 Arizona State (81–68) 30–50 .600 4–10 .400 17–24 .708 5–28 33 23–1 22–25 81 10–9 Jan. 12 Arizona (69–74) 27–67 .435 6–22 .273 9–14 .643 12–25 37 20–0 13–14 69 7–7 Jan. 17 at California (50–62) 19–60 .317 5–20 .250 7–14 .500 14–30 44 21–1 10–21 50 5–3 Jan. 19 at Stanford (60–105) 23–74 .311 4–23 .174 10–21 .476 21–21 42 23–1 8–12 60 5–4 Jan. 24 Oregon (97–92) 32–67 .478 7–15 .467 26–33 .788 15–23 38 22–1 17–13 97 4–11 Jan. 26 Oregon State (53–68) 17–45 .378 5–18 .278 14–20 .700 9–20 29 14–0 9–15 53 3–5 Jan. 31 at Washington State (79–81) 31–64 .484 7–20 .350 10–20 .500 11–24 35 25–1 16–17 79 7–6 Feb. 7 at Arizona (82–91) 34–68 .500 6–19 .316 8–21 .381 16–21 37 25–1 17–21 82 2–8 Feb. 9 at Arizona State (74–86) 23–52 .442 6–20 .300 22–31 .710 11–15 26 26–3 18–15 74 4–6 Feb. 14 Stanford (65–91) 20–58 .345 3–16 .188 22–34 .647 8–24 32 26–0 6–9 65 2–8 High Marks (listed by individual category) 34–74 .600 10–29 .700 37–43 .860 21–30 48 31–3 22–26 98 14–11 Low Marks (listed by individual category) 17–41 .281 3–7 .174 7–8 .381 5–15 26 14–0 6–9 47 1–0 2002 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. 15 at Alaska-Fairbanks 22–60 .367 6–19 .316 20–30 .667 15–17 32 22–1 6–12 70 2–5 Nov. 17 vs. Bowling Green 25–56 .446 7–15 .467 17–20 .850 9–19 28 23–1 9–19 74 4–10 Nov. 18 vs. Butler 22–59 .373 9–29 .310 14–16 .875 8–15 23 18–1 13–10 67 1–9 Nov. 24 Santa Clara 20–63 .317 3–18 .167 6–13 .462 17–20 37 20–0 10–10 49 3–5 Nov. 28 UNLV 24–62 .387 4–11 .364 12–19 .632 17–21 38 23–0 11–20 64 2–2 Dec. 1 at San Diego 34–71 .479 6–18 .333 20–34 .588 26–18 44 34–2 13–14 94 1–6 Dec. 6 at Texas-El Paso 28–59 .475 4–15 .267 14–25 .560 11–25 36 15–0 21–7 74 9–9 Dec. 8 at New Mexico State 26–65 .400 1–12 .083 21–31 .677 16–26 42 25–1 7–16 74 6–9 Dec. 11 Gonzaga 25–60 .417 5–14 .357 12–20 .600 20–30 50 16–0 11–15 67 4–6 Dec. 20 UCLA 30–56 .536 6–17 .353 19–29 .655 10–23 33 23–1 16–15 85 2–7 Dec. 27 USC 36–66 .545 6–13 .462 9–15 .600 8–23 31 22–0 22–10 87 0–10 Dec. 29 at Saint Louis 25–56 .446 4–14 .286 17–24 .708 13–22 35 15–0 15–14 71 1–6 Jan. 4 at UCLA 29–62 .468 3–13 .231 13–21 .619 18–28 46 15–0 17–11 74 1–4 Jan. 6 at USC 33–73 .452 4–11 .364 24–32 .750 19–20 39 21–0 20–12 94 3–21 Jan. 10 Arizona State 23–71 .324 5–18 .278 17–32 .531 23–18 41 25–0 12–19 68 0–8 Jan. 10 Arizona 24–53 .453 6–13 462 20–30 .667 10–25 35 15–0 17–13 74 2–9 Jan. 17 at California 20–59 .339 4–17 .235 18–28 .643 13–31 44 16–0 11–12 62 6–5 Jan. 19 at Stanford 38–68 .559 8–13 .615 21–34 .618 16–35 51 23–0 17–10 105 4–3 Jan. 24 Oregon 28–63 .444 9–21 .429 27–32 .844 12–23 35 19–0 14–17 92 4–8 Jan. 26 Oregon State 25–49 .510 9–14 .643 9–13 .692 6–20 26 16–0 12–9 68 1–6 Jan. 31 at Washington State 25–56 .446 9–20 .450 22–29 .759 12–28 40 21–0 9–18 81 4–3 Feb. 7 at Arizona 33–61 .541 6–16 .375 19–34 .559 13–20 33 21–0 15–18 91 3–13 Feb. 9 at Arizona State 32–60 .533 2–8 .250 20–27 .741 16–24 40 25–1 19–14 86 5–7 Feb. 14 vs. Stanford 28–64 .438 8–18 .444 27–33 .818 16–32 48 25–1 23–11 91 6–4 High Marks (listed by individual category) 38–73 .559 9–29 .643 27–34 .875 26–35 51 34–2 23–20 105 9–21 Low Marks (listed by individual category) 20–49 .317 1–8 .083 6–13 .462 6–15 23 15–0 6–7 49 0–3 •Washington’s Last Meeting with California • OFFICIAL BASKETBALL BOX SCORE -- G A M E T O T A L S Washington vs California 01/17/02 7:30pm at Haas Pavilion, Berkeley, Calif. ------VISITORS: Washington 7-10, 1-6 TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS No. N A M E FG FGA FG FGA FT FTA OF DE TOT PF TP A TO BLK S MIN 24 Wrenn, Doug f 6 18 2 5 5 7 3 9 12 4 19 1 7 0 0 37 31 Leep, Grant f 1 4 0 1 1 2 1 5 6 4 3 1 1 0 1 35 50 Dixon, David c 3 8 0 0 0 0 4 7 11 5 6 2 0 3 0 29 20 Allen, Curtis g 4 11 3 7 0 0 0 0 0 1 11 4 6 1 2 34 21 Knight, Erroll g 1 7 0 3 0 2 1 2 3 2 2 0 2 1 0 21 01 Massingale, C.J. 3 8 0 1 0 1 4 0 4 1 6 1 2 0 0 19 03 Brown, Sterling 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 2 05 Conroy, Will 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 2 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 11 23 Barnard, Josh 1 3 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 12 TEAM ...... 1 4 5 TOTALS 19 60 5 20 7 14 14 30 44 21 50 10 21 5 3 200

TOTAL FG% 1st Half: 14-30 .467 2nd Half: 5-30 .167 Game: .317 DEADBALL 3-Pt. FG% 1st Half: 4-11 .364 2nd Half: 1- 9 .111 Game: .250 REBOUNDS F Throw % 1st Half: 1- 5 .200 2nd Half: 6- 9 .667 Game: .500 3, 2

------HOME TEAM: California 12-3, 3-2 TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS No. N A M E FG FGA FG FGA FT FTA OF DE TOT PF TP A TO BLK S MIN 24 Tamir, Amit f 1 10 1 4 0 0 0 2 2 2 3 1 2 0 0 26 34 Shipp, Joe f 6 16 1 4 5 5 1 5 6 1 18 1 3 1 0 37 31 Sampson, Jamal c 4 6 0 0 7 11 5 12 17 1 15 3 3 5 0 33 02 Diggs, A.J. g 1 3 0 0 1 4 2 1 3 2 3 2 1 0 0 21 51 Gates, Dennis g 1 4 0 2 1 2 1 2 3 2 3 2 0 0 2 23 12 Legans, Shantay 2 5 2 5 0 0 0 1 1 2 6 2 1 0 0 24 14 Hughes, Solomon 2 6 0 0 1 2 1 3 4 2 5 0 0 0 1 8 25 Wethers, Brian 3 7 0 0 3 4 1 2 3 4 9 0 1 0 1 10 42 Forehan-Kelly, Ryan 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 18 TEAM ...... 2 1 3 1 TOTALS 20 59 4 17 18 28 13 31 44 16 62 11 12 6 5 200

TOTAL FG% 1st Half: 12-32 .375 2nd Half: 8-27 .296 Game: .339 DEADBALL 3-Pt. FG% 1st Half: 3-11 .273 2nd Half: 1- 6 .167 Game: .235 REBOUNDS F Throw % 1st Half: 4- 5 .800 2nd Half: 14-23 .609 Game: .643 4

------OFFICIALS: Bill Kennedy, Mark Ayotte, Kenneth Greenleaf TECHNICAL FOULS: none

ATTENDANCE: 9,612 SCORE BY PERIODS: 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Washington 33 17 50 California 31 31 62 2001-02 Husky Box Scores

Washington 82, Alaska-Fairbanks 70 Butler 67, Washington 64 (Championship Game) Nov. 15, 2001; Carlson Center, Fairbanks, Ak. 1 Nov. 18, 2001; Carlson Center, Fairbanks, Ak. 3 Washington Alaska-Fairbanks Washington Butler 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 Leep 0-2 0-0 3-4 4 1 3 27 Agmata 0-3 0-1 0-0 2 2 0 26 Wrenn 4-9 0-3 2-5 6 1 10 29 Robisch 0-5 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 13 Dixon 6-10 0-0 4-5 7 1 16 27 J. Jones 5-14 2-3 3-5 5 0 15 34 Leep 1-4 0-1 0-0 3 1 2 21 Cornette 4-9 0-0 1-1 5 1 9 34 Massingale 3-4 0-0 2-2 4 0 8 14 Early 6-13 0-0 12-15 6 1 24 35 Dixon 4-7 0-0 7-8 13 0 15 34 Hainje 4-10 1-5 7-8 2 5 16 32 Allen 1-3 1-2 6-6 2 4 9 27 Endicott 0-0 0-0 0-0 4 2 0 16 Allen 5-7 2-4 0-0 2 3 12 25 Miller 3-9 2-7 4-4 4 2 12 34 Barnard 4-7 2-4 0-1 3 3 10 29 Towne 5-14 3-8 3-5 2 0 16 24 Knight 3-5 2-2 2-2 3 0 10 30 Jackson 7-15 3-7 2-3 5 3 19 37 Brown 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 8 Whitaker 0-3 0-1 2-3 3 0 2 16 Massingale 0-1 0-0 2-2 0 0 2 6 Archey 3-6 3-6 0-0 0 0 9 17 Day 3-5 0-0 1-4 7 1 7 27 R. Jones 1-2 1-2 0-0 1 0 3 8 Day 2-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 4 10 Monserez 0-4 0-4 0-0 3 2 0 15 Conroy 3-3 0-0 0-0 2 2 6 13 Cromer 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 13 Conroy 1-4 0-0 3-4 1 2 5 16 Walls 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 5 Knight 9-16 3-4 2-5 4 2 23 28 Williams 2-2 0-0 0-2 5 0 4 15 Barnard 0-0 0-0 2-2 1 0 2 19 Curry 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 8 Watts 2-7 0-4 0-0 0 1 4 13 Jensen 1-2 0-0 0-0 4 0 2 10 Moore 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 5 Totals 29-50 6-10 18-27 38 14 82 200 Totals 22-60 6-19 20-30 32 6 70 200 Totals 21-41 4-10 18-23 37 7 64 200 Totals 22-59 9-29 14-16 23 13 67 200 Fouls: UW 23 (Leep 5), UAF 22 (Endicott 5). Turnovers: UW 17 (Allen 7), UAF 12 (Towne 4). Fouls: UW 17, BU 18 (Cornette 5). Turnovers: UW 22 (Allen 8), BU 10 (Miller, Jackson 3). Blocks: UW 5 (Day 3), UAF 2 (Whitaker, Williams 1). Steals: UW 3, UAF 5 (Towne, Early 2). Blocks: UW 5 (Dixon 3), BU 1 (Cornette). Steals: UW 4 (Allen 2), BU 9 (Jackson 5). FG%: Half—.615 (16-26) Final—.580 FG%: Half—.355 (11-31) Final—.367 FG%: Half—.700 (14-20) Final—.512 FG%: Half—.290 (9-31) Final—.373 3-FG%: Half—.667 (4-6) Final—.600 3-FG%: Half—.500 (4-8) Final—.316 3-FG%: Half—.750 (3-4) Final—.400 3-FG%: Half—.143 (2-14) Final—.310 FT%: Half—.556 (5-9) Final—.667 FT%: Half—.846 (11-13) Final—.714 FT%: Half—.786 (11-14) Final—.783 FT%: Half—.889 (8-9) Final—.875 Halftime Score: UW 41, UAF 37. Attendance: 3,362. Halftime Score: UW 42, BU 28. Attendance: 3,159. FAIRBANKS, Ak.-- Erroll Knight recorded the highest-scoring debut by a freshman in UW FAIRBANKS, Ak.-- David Archey hit a 3-pointer with 1:02 remaining to cap a furious second- history as the Huskies opened the season with an 82-70 victory over Alaska Fairbanks at the Carlson half rally as Butler defeated Washington 67-64 in the championship game of the Top of the World Center in the Top of the World Classic. Coach Bob Bender, who suffered a bruised rib in a fall three Classic at the Carlson Center. Butler (3-0) had all but one player returning from last season’s team that days earlier, was not in Fairbanks for the opener. The Huskies were also without the services of Doug advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth time in five years. David Dixon hit a pair of free throws Wrenn who was serving a one-game suspension by the NCAA for his participation in an unsanctioned with 14:47 left to play, giving the Huskies (2-1) a 55-38 lead. Butler outscored UW 29-9 the rest of game in May. Knight scored 16 first-half points to help UW build a 41-37 margin. Knight’s 23-point the way, capitalizing on nine turnovers. For the game, the Bulldogs converted 22 UW turnovers into output was the best debut by a Husky freshman, eclipsing the 22-point effort of Deon Leon against BYU 26 points. Brandon Miller tied the game 62-62 on a 3-pointer with 1:37 left. Dixon rebounded a missed on Nov. 26, 1996. Knight underwent surgery in his left knee on Nov. 2 and did not play in either shot and put it back to give the Huskies their final lead of 64-62 at 1:10. Archey answered with a 3- exhibition game. He returned to practice on Monday (Nov. 12). Trailing 5-2, Washington staged a pointer at 1:01 that put Butler ahead 65-64 with its first lead since the second minute of the game. The 15-3 run to take the lead for good at 17-8 with 11:38 left in the first half. Knight had six points during Bulldogs gained possession after a missed shot and Rylan Hainje converted two free throws at 0:15 the run and David Dixon had four. After trailing by as many as 15 points, UAF trimmed the deficit to to push the margin to 67-64. Doug Wrenn missed a potential game-tying 3-pointer with five seconds 69-61. The Nanooks turned the ball over and Josh Barnard hit a 3-pointer on the subsequent UW left and Will Conroy fired an errant 35-foot heave at the buzzer. Dixon finished with 15 points and had possession to push the margin back into double digits. Dixon finished with 16 points for UW which 13 rebounds for the Huskies. Curtis Allen scored 10 of his 12 points and Wrenn, the tournament’s MVP, also got 10 from Barnard. John Early paced the Nanooks with 24 points while Steve Towne had 16. totalled all 10 of his points in the first half. Allen, Dixon and Knight were also all-tournament picks. Washington 81, Bowling Green 74 Washington 69, Santa Clara 49 Nov. 17, 2001; Carlson Center, Fairbanks, Ak. 2 Nov. 24, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 4 Washington Bowling Green Washington Santa Clara 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 Wrenn 6-12 0-2 7-10 9 1 19 31 Matela 4-13 0-0- 7-7 8 2 15 32 Wrenn 7-16 1-4 7-9 4 2 22 26 Holbrook 4-12 1-5 0-0 2 2 9 16 Leep 2-7 0-1 1-2 2 2 5 23 Crawford 2-3 1-2 0-0 3 0 5 30 Leep 2-5 2-3 0-0 5 1 6 33 Legge 3-4 0-0 0-0 7 0 6 25 Dixon 4-8 0-0 2-4 8 1 10 36 Klassen 3-6 0-0 1-2 1 0 7 12 Dixon 1-2 0-0 2-2 5 0 4 19 Emslie 2-6 0-0 1-3 6 0 5 22 Allen 4-6 3-5 7-8 1 5 18 28 McLeod 10-18 5-8 3-5 3 3 28 34 Allen 2-6 0-3 2-2 6 6 6 26 Vaka 2-5 0-0 0-0 3 1 4 22 Knight 2-4 2-3 0-0 0 0 6 26 Pardon 1-6 1-3 0-0 6 4 3 37 Knight 4-9 1-2 3-4 4 1 12 30 Bailey 3-10 0-4 3-4 2 2 9 30 Massingale 0-2 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 8 Fitch 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 Massingale 5-9 2-3 3-4 4 1 15 16 Altheimer 0-6 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 13 Day 2-5 0-0 0-1 3 0 4 12 Almanson 3-4 0-1 4-4 3 0 10 21 Day 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 14 Ross 3-9 2-6 1-2 3 1 9 23 Conroy 2-5 1-1 1-1 2 1 6 10 Mattox 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 4 Conroy 0-1 0-1 0-0 6 3 0 15 Morrissette 2-8 0-0 1-3 5 0 5 15 Barnard 2-6 1-3 2-2 5 1 7 17 Ryan 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 4 Barnard 1-5 0-2 0-0 2 0 2 8 Westphal 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 1 0 6 Jensen 3-3 0-0 0-0 1 0 6 9 Eyink 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 5 Jensen 1-4 0-0 0-0 3 0 2 13 Anderson 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Netter 2-4 0-0 2-2 1 0 6 17 Rohde 0-1 0-1 0-0 4 1 0 10 Totals 27-58 7-16 20-28 36 11 81 200 Totals 25-56 7-15 17-20 28 9 74 200 Anderson 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Fouls: UW 14, BGSU 23 (Crawford 5). Turnovers: UW 20 (Wrenn 5), BGSU 19 (Matela 5). Howell 1-2 0-0 0-1 0 1 2 16 Blocks: UW 5 (Day 3), BGSU 4 (Almanson 2). Steals: UW 6 (Wrenn 2), BGSU 10 (McLeod 4). Totals 23-57 6-18 17-21 44 14 69 200 Totals 20-63 3-18 6-13 37 10 49 200 FG%: Half—.400 (12-30) Final—.466 FG%: Half—.435 (10-23) Final—.446 Fouls: UW 18, SCU 20. Turnovers: UW 13 (Dixon 5), SCU 10 (Bailey 6). 3-FG%: Half—.400 (4-10) Final—.438 3-FG%: Half—.400 (2-5) Final—.467 Blocks: UW 14 (Dixon 7), SCU 3 (Three with 1). Steals: UW 4 (Knight 2), SCU 5 (Bailey 3). FT%: Half—.500 (3-6) Final—.536 FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.850 FG%: Half—.375 (9-24) Final—.404 FG%: Half—.314 (11-35) Final—.317 Halftime Score: UW 31, BGSU 27. Attendance: 3,333. 3-FG%: Half—.500 (3-6) Final—.333 3-FG%: Half—.222 (2-9) Final—.167 FAIRBANKS, Ak.-- Sophomore Doug Wrenn amassed 19 points and nine rebounds in his FT%: Half—.714 (5-7) Final—.810 FT%: Half—.667 (4-6) Final—.462 UW debut, helping the Huskies advance to the championship game of the Top of the World Classic Halftime Score: SCU 28, UW 26. Attendance: 4,204. with an 81-74 semifinal victory over Bowling Green at the Carlson Center. A Connecticut transfer, SEATTLE-- Reserve guard C.J. Massinagle scored 12 of his 15 points during a 5:28 second- Wrenn made 6-of-12 shots from the field and hit 7-of-10 free throws. He was held out of the season half span when Washington took control en route to a 69-49 win over Santa Clara in the home opener opener while serving a one-game suspension due to a minor NCAA violation. The game marked the at Bank of America Arena. The Huskies led 42-39 with 10:19 left to play when Massingale entered to return to the bench of head coach Bob Bender who remained in Seattle during the opener while nursing shoot free throws for the injured Doug Wrenn. He hit 1-of-2 free throws to begin a 16-5 run that netted a bruised rib that he suffered Nov. 12. The Huskies (2-0) scored the final five points of the first half, a 58-44 margin for UW (3-1) with 4:51 remaining. The Broncos (0-3) led 28-26 at halftime led by Kyle including a steal and layup at the buzzer by Curtis Allen that put them ahead 31-27. The score was Bailey who scored seven of his nine points before halftime. Justin Holbrook and Steve Ross also had tied 55-55 with 9:12 left to play when UW took the lead for good with an 8-2 run that included a steal nine points for Santa Clara. David Dixon blocked a school single-game record seven shots for and layup by Mike Jensen followed by an Allen trey. The Falcons (1-1) drew within 73-70 with 1:56 Washington which shattered its single-game team standard with 14 rejections. The previous records remaining, but UW converted 6-of-8 free throws to secure the win. David Dixon had 10 points and were six blocks by Chris Welp in 1986 and 10 blocks by the 1991-92 Husky squad. Wrenn returned eight boards for the Huskies. Keith McLeod scored 22 of his 28 points in the second half to pace BGSU. from the brief injury and led the Huskies with 22 points while Erroll Knight added 12. 2001-02 Box Scores, continued

Washington 77, Nevada-Las Vegas 64 Texas-El Paso 74, Washington 62 Nov. 28, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 5 Dec. 6, 2001; Don Haskins Center, El Paso, Texas 7 Washington UNLV Washington UTEP 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 Wrenn 9-21 0-2 3-4 6 4 21 35 D. Johnson 9-22 1-2 4-4 5 0 23 36 Wrenn 7-18 2-2 3-8 13 5 19 30 Owens 3-6 0-0 1-2 2 5 7 25 Leep 3-7 3-5 1-2 4 0 10 20 Pearson 3-5 0-0 1-3 2 0 7 24 Leep 6-8 4-5 2-2 8 1 18 39 Smallwood 7-15 0-1 1-3 10 1 15 31 Dixon 2-4 0-0 2-5 8 1 6 31 Richardson 5-9 1-1 0-0 8 1 11 30 Dixon 1-8 0-0 2-5 7 1 4 21 Stewart 5-8 0-0 3-4 7 2 13 21 Allen 6-8 3-5 6-6 3 8 21 28 Banks 3-10 0-1 2-5 3 3 8 27 Allen 1-5 0-1 0-0 1 2 2 29 Neal 3-6 1-3 1-2 2 3 8 27 Knight 3-6 1-4 2-4 4 0 9 23 Booker 1-5 1-3 0-0 4 2 3 22 Knight 1-4 0-1 0-0 4 1 2 20 Costello 3-8 1-5 5-9 5 5 12 38 Massingale 0-2 0-1 3-4 2 1 3 8 L. Johnson 0-2 0-2 0-1 2 2 0 23 Massingale 1-6 0-2 0-0 4 2 2 12 Jarrell 0-2 0-2 0-0 1 4 0 15 Brown 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Kelly 2-5 1-2 3-4 6 2 8 21 Day 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 2 16 Luces 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 Day 1-4 0-0 0-1 8 1 2 24 Amundson 1-3 0-0 2-2 5 0 4 11 Conroy 0-4 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 11 Enzweiler 3-8 2-4 0-0 3 1 8 23 Conroy 0-3 0-0 0-1 1 1 0 10 Turner 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 6 Barnard 5-9 3-7 0-0 2 0 13 22 Victoriano 4-6 0-0 3-5 6 0 11 17 Gibbs 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Totals 23-64 9-19 7-15 48 13 62 200 Totals 28-59 4-15 14-25 36 21 74 200 Barnard 0-1 0-1 5-6 3 1 5 13 Fouls: UW 20 (Allen 5), UTEP 15. Turnovers: UW 15 (Wrenn 6), UTEP 7 (Costello 3). Jensen 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 5 Blocks: UW 1 (Wrenn), UTEP 9 (Owens, Smallwood 3). Steals: UW 1 (Barnard), UTEP 9 (Owens 3). Hudson 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 FG%: Half—.500 (13-26) Final—.359 FG%: Half—.444 (16-36) Final—.475 Totals 24-57 7-18 22-33 45 17 77 200 Totals 24-62 4-11 12-19 38 11 64 200 3-FG%: Half—.700 (7-10) Final—.474 3-FG%: Half—.222 (2-9) Final—.267 Fouls: UW 19, UNLV 23. Turnovers: UW 17 (Wrenn 5), UNLV 20 (D. Johnson 5). FT%: Half—.750 (3-4) Final—.467 FT%: Half—.500 (2-4) Final—.560 Blocks: UW 6 (Dixon 4), UNLV 2 (D.Johnson, Amundson 1). Steals: UW 8 (3 with 2), UNLV 2 (Booker 2). Halftime Score: UW 36, UTEP 36. Attendance: 6,803. FG%: Half—.412 (14-34) Final—.421 FG%: Half—.448 (13-29) Final—.387 EL PASO, Texas-- Eugene Costello scored 10 of his 12 points in the second half, including 3-FG%: Half—.333 (3-9) Final—.389 3-FG%: Half—.400 (2-5) Final—.364 a 3-pointer during the decisive run as Texas-El Paso defeated Washington 74-62 at the Don Haskins FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.667 FT%: Half—.556 (5-9) Final—.632 Center. Each team held six point leads in the first half before UW’s Josh Barnard hit a 3-pointer at the Halftime Score: UW 36, UNLV 33. Attendance: 5,194. buzzer to tie the halftime score at 36-36. The Miners (3-4) broke a 41-41 tie with an 11-2 run during SEATTLE-- Curtis Allen registered career highs with 21 points and eight assists, leading a 2:50 span. Costello had a trey and capped the surge with an assist on Nick Enzweiler’s 3-pointer that Washington to a 77-64 win over UNLV at Bank of America Arena. Allen hit four of his first five shots put UTEP ahead for good 52-43 with 14:23 left to play. Washington (5-2) never drew closer than six and had 12 first-half points as UW (4-1) claimed a 36-33 halftime edge. The Runnin’ Rebels (2-2) led points after that point. Roy Smallwood led the Miners with 15 points while Brian Stewart had 13 and 50-47 before Doug Wrenn scored seven of his 21 points during a seven-minute stretch that put a halt Justino Victoriano 11. Doug Wrenn registered his first collegiate double-double with 19 points and to 21 lead changes and went ahead for good. The 20-4 surge resulted in a 67-54 UW advantage with 13 boards for UW which outrebounded UTEP 48-36. The Huskies shot 50 percent in the first half, 4:25 left to play. Grant Leep scored all 10 of his points highlighted by a trio of 3-pointers. Dalron including 7-of-10 shooting from 3-point range. They cooled off considerably after halftime, shooting Johnson scored 23 points to lead the Rebels, including nine of their first 11 points of the second half, just 26 percent and 2-for-9 on treys. For the game UW shot 36 percent and UTEP 48%. UTEP parlayed but did not score in the final 14:45 of the game. Chris Richardson added 11 for UNLV which was limited 15 UW turnovers directly into 22 points. UW’s Grant Leep and Josh Barnard each tallied career-highs to 39 percent shooting from the field (24-62). The Huskies blocked six shots, four of them by David with 18 and 13 points, respectively. Dixon who also grabbed eight rebounds. Washington outrebounded the Rebels 45-38.

Washington 98, San Diego 94 Washington 75, New Mexico State 74 Dec. 1, 2001; Jenny Craig Pavilion, San Diego, Calif. 6 Dec. 8, 2001; Pan American Center, Las Cruces, N.M. 8 Washington San Diego Washington New Mexico 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 Wrenn 5-9 1-1 3-7 3 0 14 28 Lippold 3-8 0-1 2-4 3 0 8 23 Wrenn 8-19 0-1 3-4 4 1 19 34 Jackson 2-4 0-0 2-6 8 0 6 16 Leep 2-3 1-1 2-2 1 1 7 20 Adamo 5-7 3-4 6-6 5 4 19 27 Leep 3-5 3-3 3-4 2 1 12 28 Fontenet 1-4 0-0 8-8 1 4 10 27 Dixon 4-5 0-0 6-7 9 0 14 33 Hanson 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 1 2 15 Dixon 6-9 0-0 0-0 15 2 12 25 Morris 8-15 1-4 0-0 3 0 17 26 Allen 6-11 4-6 11-12 2 4 27 34 Laws 14-25 2-5 6-13 4 3 36 35 Allen 3-10 2-3 6-7 5 5 14 33 Channing 3-11 0-2 5-6 4 0 11 27 Knight 0-2 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 9 McGrain 0-1 0-0 2-2 1 1 2 18 Knight 0-4 0-0 5-8 4 0 5 24 Moore 6-12 0-0 5-7 10 0 17 28 Massingale 4-7 0-0 9-9 2 2 17 23 Morris 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 5 Massingale 0-2 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 9 Dildy 2-5 0-3 0-1 0 0 4 12 Day 3-5 0-0 0-0 6 1 6 20 Delzell 1-2 0-0 0-0 4 2 2 12 Day 0-2 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 12 Mason 0-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 14 Conroy 0-1 0-0 0-0 2 1 0 9 Boardman 1-3 0-2 0-0 2 0 2 11 Conroy 2-2 0-0 1-2 0 1 5 7 Trammell 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 6 Barnard 3-5 1-1 2-2 1 1 9 18 Belser 3-5 1-1 1-3 3 0 8 11 Barnard 3-4 0-1 2-3 1 3 8 18 Felder 3-8 0-0 1-3 8 0 7 24 Jensen 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 5 Blair 3-10 0-3 0-2 6 0 6 20 Crooks 1-3 0-2 0-0 5 3 2 20 Hudson 0-0 0-0 4-4 0 0 4 1 Lewis 0-3 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 2 Totals 25-57 5-9 20-28 41 13 75 200 Totals 26-65 1-12 21-31 42 7 74 200 Hegarty 3-5 0-0 3-4 8 1 9 21 Fouls: UW 24, NMSU 25 (Moore 5). Turnovers: UW 21 (Four with 4), NMSU 16 (Fontenet 4). Totals 27-49 7-10 37-43 27 10 98 200 Totals 34-71 6-18 20-34 44 13 94 200 Blocks: UW 1 (Wrenn), NMSU 6 (Felder, Crooks 2). Steals: UW 3 (Three with 1), NMSU 9 (Two with 2). Fouls: UW 31 (Day 5), USD 34 (Lippold, Delzell 5). Turnovers: UW 15 (Wrenn 3), USD 14 (Adamo 4). FG%: Half—.375 (12-32) Final—.439 FG%: Half—.333 (13-39) Final—.400 Blocks: UW 6 (Day 3), USD 1 (Hegarty). Steals: UW 2 (Allen, Massingale 1), USD 6 (Laws, Boardman 2). 3-FG%: Half—.500 (2-4) Final—.556 3-FG%: Half—.100 (1-10) Final—.083 FG%: Half—.625 (15-24) Final—.551 FG%: Half—.432 (11-26) Final—.479 FT%: Half—.733 (11-15) Final—.714 FT%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.677 3-FG%: Half—.857 (6-7) Final—.700 3-FG%: Half—.429 (3-7) Final—.333 Halftime Score: UW 37, NMSU 32. Attendance: 7,661. FT%: Half—.833 (10-12) Final—.860 FT%: Half—.833 (15-18) Final—.588 LAS CRUCES, N.M.-- Doug Wrenn scored 19 points and hit the game-winning basket with Halftime Score: UW 46, USD 40. Attendance: 2,416 six seconds left in Washington's 75-74 victory over New Mexico State at the Pan American Center. SAN DIEGO-- Curtis Allen tallied a career-high 27 points, including 4-of-6 shooting from 3- Eric Channing put the Aggies (4-3) ahead 74-73 on a jump shot with 0:13 left to play. Washington point range, to lead Washington to a 98-94 win over San Diego at the Jenny Craig Pavilion. Allen hit (6-2) responded with a shot in the lane by Wrenn with 0:06 remaining. New Mexico State had a chance a long trey at the halftime buzzer to cap an 8-2 run and put UW (5-1) ahead 46-40. The lead grew to to win, but Wrenn disrupted a Channing shot which went out of bounds. The subsequent UW inbounds 90-76 with 1:13 left to play before the Toreros (2-3) reeled off 18 points over the next 1:06. San Diego, pass was stolen by Chris Jackson near halfcourt, but his shot fell short as time expired. David Dixon down 94-85 with 34.5 seconds remaining, got two baskets by Andre Laws and a three-point play by registered his second double-double, contributing 12 points and a career-high 15 rebounds for the Corey Belser to draw within 94-92 with 12 seconds to play. C.J. Massingale, who hit all nine of his Huskies. Curtis Allen scored 14 points for Washington and Grant Leep had 12, including 3-for-3 free throws, converted four in the final 0:11 to seal the victory. UW sank 37-of-43 free throws, including shooting from 3-point range. James Moore and Will Morris tied for team-high scoring honors with 27-of-31 in the second half. A total of 65 fouls were whistled as the Toreros made 20 of 34 free throws. 17 points for the Aggies who also got 11 from Channing and 10 from Jason Fontenet. The Huskies Massingale scored 17 points off the bench while starters David Dixon and Doug Wrenn each had 14. led 37-32 at halftime before New Mexico State tallied the first eight points of the second half to take Laws led USD with 36 points and Sam Adamo added 19. The Huskies shots 55 percent from the field a 40-37 edge. Neither team led by more than five points in the game that saw 21 lead changes. (27-49) to offset a 44-27 San Diego rebounding advantage. 2001-02 Box Scores, continued

#25 Gonzaga 67, UW 47 USC 87, Washington 65 Dec. 11, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 9 Dec. 27, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 11 Washington Gonzaga Washington USC 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 Wrenn 4-19 1-3 0-0 5 4 9 26 Reason 2-3 0-0 2-4 10 0 6 28 Wrenn 2-9 0-1 4-6 6 2 8 34 Bluthenthal 6-12 2-3 0-0 9 2 14 37 Leep 4-7 1-2 0-0 8 0 9 30 Gourde 4-13 0-0 5-10 8 1 13 33 Leep 1-2 0-1 4-6 6 0 2 16 Clancy 11-17 0-0 3-7 5 3 25 37 Dixon 1-3 1-2 0-0 6 2 2 33 Violette 8-18 0-2 2-2 13 2 18 28 Dixon 3-5 0-0 2-4 8 0 8 28 Charissis 0-2 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 10 Allen 3-10 1-6 1-3 1 2 8 32 Stepp 5-7 3-4 2-2 8 4 15 34 Allen 2-5 0-1 2-2 1 4 6 23 Granville 9-15 4-6 5-6 1 4 27 33 Knight 1-6 0-4 0-0 4 0 2 17 Dickau 3-11 2-7 0-0 1 2 8 25 Barnard 4-8 2-6 0-0 2 2 10 23 Craven 6-10 0-3 0-0 4 3 12 21 Massingale 1-4 0-1 2-2 2 2 4 15 Brooks 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 18 Massingale 1-4 0-0 3-4 2 0 5 11 Curtis 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 3 Day 0-3 0-0 2-3 2 0 2 17 Forbes 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 1 Brown 0-1 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 3 Hutchinson 1-3 0-1 0-0 2 5 2 24 Conroy 1-2 1-1 0-0 1 0 2 8 Hernandez 1-3 0-0 0-0 3 1 2 11 Day 0-2 0-0 0-0 4 1 4 20 Busterna 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 1 Barnard 3-10 2-8 0-0 3 0 8 22 Bankhead 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 Conroy 0-4 0-0 4-4 2 3 4 17 O’Neill 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 7 Sherrell 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 7 Gibbs 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 1 Dupree 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 7 Turiaf 2-2 0-0 1-2 5 0 5 13 Knight 4-6 1-3 4-7 1 3 13 21 Farmer 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 20 Totals 18-64 6-25 5-8 35 10 47 200 Totals 25-60 5-14 12-20 50 11 67 200 Hudson 3-4 3-4 0-0 0 0 9 3 Fouls: UW 29, GU 16. Turnovers: UW 16 (Wrenn 4), GU 15. Totals 20-50 6-17 19-27 34 15 65 200 Totals 36-66 6-13 9-15 31 22 87 200 Blocks: UW 8 (Dixon 3), GU 4 (Gourde 2). Steals: UW 3 (Leep 2), GU 6 (Brooks 2). Fouls: UW 16 (Allen, Dixon 4) USC 22 (Craven 4). Turnovers: UW 25 (Conroy 6) USC 10 (Clancy 4). FG%: Half—.263 (10-38) Final—.281 FG%: Half—.467 (14-30) Final—.417 Blocks: UW 5 (Day 3) USC 0. Steals: UW 4 (Four with 1), USC 10 (Granville 4). 3-FG%: Half—.231 (3-13) Final—.240 3-FG%: Half—.500 (1-2) Final—.357 FG%: Half—.480 (12-25) Final—.400 FG%: Half—.556 (20-36) Final—.545 FT%: Half—.750 (3-4) Final—.625 FT%: Half—.600 (6-10) Final—.600 3-FG%: Half—.333 (2-6) Final—.353 3-FG%: Half—.500 (5-10) Final—.462 Halftime Score: GU 35, UW 26. Attendance: 10,000 (sellout) FT%: Half—.667 (6-9) Final—.704 FT%: Half—.750 (3-4) Final—.600 SEATTLE-- Cory Violette scored a career-high 18 points and grabbed 13 rebounds, leading Halftime Score: USC 48, UW 32. Attendance: 6,318 25th-ranked Gonzaga to its fourth consecutive victory over Washington with a 67-47 decision at Bank SEATTLE-- Brandon Granville scored 20 of his career-high 27 points in the first half as USC of America Arena. Anthony Reason added 10 rebounds for Gonzaga (8-2) which outrebounded the took control early en route to an 87-65 victory over Washington at Bank of America Arena. The win Huskies (6-3) by a 50-35 margin. Zach Gourde sparked a 12-4 Bulldog run over the final 7:13 of the was USC’s sixth straight over the Huskies, matching its longest streak in the series. The Trojans also first half by scoring six of his 13 points. The surge extended a 23-22 GU margin to 35-26 by halftime. registered six consecutive wins against UW between 1967-69. Granville scored seven early points, The Huskies trimmed the margin to 47-39 on a layin by Josh Barnard with 9:40 remaining, but Gonzaga sparking a 13-4 Trojan surge during the opening 3:09. USC (9-2, 1-0) extended the lead to as many responded with six straight points, including a 3-pointer by Blake Stepp who finished with 15 points. as 19 points before settling on a 48-32 halftime advantage. The Trojans, whose biggest lead of the game Washington was limited to 28 percent shooting (18-64) from the field and did not have a double-figure was 26 points, converted 25 Washington turnovers into 28 points. Sam Clancy scored 25 points for scorer. UW entered the game shooting 46 percent from 3-point range, but missed 12 straight during USC which also got 14 from David Bluthenthal and 12 from Errick Craven. Washington (6-5, 0-2) was one stretch and went 6-of-25 on treys. Doug Wrenn and Grant Leep paced the Huskies with nine points led by the 13 points of Erroll Knight who didn’t start due to an injured ankle that limited him to 21 apiece. Senior , who transferred from UW , was held 10 below his average with eight points. minutes. Josh Barnard started in place of Knight and tallied 10 points.

#19 UCLA 85, Washington 79 Saint Louis 71, Washington 70 Dec. 20, 2001; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 10 Dec. 29, 2001; Savvis Center; St. Louis, Mo. 12 Washington UCLA Washington Saint Louis 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 Leep 3-6 2-4 2-2 6 0 10 32 Barnes 4-6 1-2 3-5 4 4 12 29 Wrenn 8-16 0-0 1-4 8 1 17 27 Sloan 0-0 0-0 1-4 6 1 1 25 Dixon 2-5 0-0 0-2 2 0 4 12 Kapono 6-14 4-10 3-4 4 3 19 39 Leep 6-7 0-0 0-0 4 0 12 31 Brown 2-8 0-0 0-1 7 0 4 19 Massingale 0-3 0-1 5-6 4 0 5 16 Gadzuric 9-13 0-0 5-8 13 1 23 35 Dixon 1-4 0-0 1-2 8 3 3 30 Fisher 1-3 0-2 0-0 3 3 2 21 Allen 5-13 1-4 2-2 5 5 13 32 Knight 5-9 1-4 6-8 4 3 17 28 Allen 6-12 1-3 4-4 2 4 17 31 Perry 6-15 0-3 8-10 2 4 20 36 Knight 4-10 1-2 0-1 6 4 9 30 Hines 1-1 0-0 0-2 2 3 2 28 Knight 4-8 1-1 2-4 4 0 11 25 Diener 2-5 1-3 1-1 0 1 6 23 Day 0-2 0-0 1-2 3 0 1 12 Thompson 1-4 0-0 0-0 1 2 2 19 Massingale 1-4 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 15 Pulley 2-4 0-0 2-2 1 2 6 16 Conroy 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 3 0 10 Walcott 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 6 Day 0-0 0-0 0-0 4 0 0 10 Varner 5-6 1-2 1-1 3 1 12 17 Barnard 5-8 4-7 0-0 2 3 14 23 Cummings 4-8 0-0 2-2 2 0 10 16 Conroy 0-2 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 9 Edwin 3-5 2-3 2-2 7 1 10 23 Wrenn 10-17 0-1 3-6 7 0 23 33 Barnard 3-5 2-3 0-0 2 2 8 22 Braun 4-10 0-1 2-3 3 2 10 20 Totals 29-66 8-19 13-21 36 15 79 200 Totals 30-56 6-17 19-29 33 16 85 200 Totals 29-58 4-7 8-14 35 11 70 200 Totals 25-56 4-14 17-24 35 15 71 200 Fouls: UW 23 (Dixon, Day, Knight 5), UCLA 23 (Knight 5). Turnovers: UW 18 (Allen 4), UCLA 15 (Barnes 4). Fouls: UW 22, SLU 15. Turnovers: UW 15 (Allen 6), SLU 14 (Perry 5). Blocks: UW 1 (Wrenn), UCLA 2 (Gadzuric, Thompson). Steals: UW 7 (Allen, Leep 2), UCLA 7 (Kapono 2). Blocks: UW 3 (Day 2), SLU 1 (Diener). Steals: UW 8 (Wrenn, Knight 2), SLU 6 (Sloan 3). FG%: Half—.432 (16-37) Final—.439 FG%: Half—.478 (11-23) Final—.536 FG%: Half—.429 (12-28) Final—.500 FG%: Half—.464 (13-28) Final—.446 3-FG%: Half—.400 (4-10) Final—.421 3-FG%: Half—.167 (1-6) Final—.353 3-FG%: Half—.500 (1-2) Final—.571 3-FG%: Half—.500 (1-2) Final—.286 FT%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.619 FT%: Half—.636 (7-11) Final—.655 FT%: Half—.556 (5-9) Final—.571 FT%: Half—.700 (7-10) Final—.708 Halftime Score: UW 37, UCLA 30. Attendance: 7,215 Halftime Score: SLU 34, UW 30. Attendance: 11,359 SEATTLE-- tallied 15 of his career-high 23 points in the second half as 19th- ST. LOUIS-- Reserve Ross Varner scored all 12 of his points in the second half, including the ranked UCLA rallied from a seven-point halftime deficit to defeat Washington 85-79 at Bank of America game-winning 3-pointer with 15.6 seconds left in a 71-70 Saint Louis victory over Washington at the Arena. The Bruins (6-2, 1-0) won in Seattle for the first time since 1997, halting a four-game road losing Savvis Center. The Huskies (6-6) finished their non-conference season with a 6-4 record. The Billikens streak at Washington. Gadzuric also finished with 13 rebounds, dominating the inside while Husky (6-6) held a 34-30 halftime lead before Washington opened the second half with 12 unanswered points. centers David Dixon and Jeffrey Day each fouled out after each playing 12 minutes. The Huskies (6- The UW lead grew to as many as 13 points at 61-48 on a 3-pointer by Josh Barnard with 7:51 left to 4, 0-1) scored eight straight points before Dijon Thompson made a jumper at the buzzer to draw UCLA play. Saint Louis utilized a full-court press to fuel a 17-2 surge over the next 3:51 that netted a 65- within 37-30 at halftime. The Bruins opened the second half with a 13-4 run fueled by six Gadzuric 63 lead. Doug Wrenn gave the Huskies their final lead at 70-68 on a jumper with 25 seconds remaining points. Jason Kapono scored 14 of his 19 points in the second half, including a 10-footer with 14:27 and Varner netted the decisive trey from the right baseline on the next SLU possession. UW had three left in the game that put UCLA ahead for good at 49-47. The Bruins extended the lead to as many as chances at a game winner, but Curtis Allen’s jumper was errant and Erroll Knight and David Dixon 11 points. Doug Wrenn came off the bench to score a career-high 23 points for UW. He was held out missed tip-ins. Wrenn and Allen had 17 points apiece for UW which also got 12 from Grant Leep and of the starting lineup due to a violation of team policy. Josh Barnard scored 14 points for the Huskies 11 from Knight. Marque Perry scored 20 points for SLU while Jason Edwin and Chris Braun each had who also got 13 from Curtis Allen and 10 from Grant Leep. Billy Knight contributed 17 points for UCLA 10. while had 12 and T.J. Cummings 10. The Bruins shot 54 percent (30-56) from the field. 2001-02 Box Scores, continued

#14 UCLA 74, Washington 62 Washington 81, Arizona State 68 Jan. 4, 2002; Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles, Calif. 13 Jan. 10, 2002; 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 Wrenn 2-10 0-3 2-7 4 2 6 33 Barnes 4-7 1-2 3-6 6 8 12 36 Wrenn 9-14 0-0 5-8 4 2 23 29 Smith 2-11 0-0 0-6 8 2 4 24 Leep 5-7 2-4 0-0 6 0 12 34 Knight 3-10 1-3 0-0 7 1 7 33 Leep 7-10 2-3 1-1 5 0 17 36 Prewitt 8-15 1-3 7-9 8 2 24 36 Dixon 0-2 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 17 Gadzuric 1-5 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 6 Dixon 0-1 0-0 2-2 1 0 2 16 Braxton 1-4 0-0 1-3 1 3 3 17 Allen 5-12 2-5 3-5 2 8 15 37 Hines 1-1 0-0 0-0 5 2 2 22 Allen 1-4 0-2 5-6 2 15 7 32 Crandall 2-6 2-6 0-0 2 3 6 28 Knight 1-4 0-2 0-0 4 0 2 14 Kapono 4-12 1-8 4-4 5 1 13 39 Knight 8-10 1-1 2-3 8 0 19 24 Millage 5-11 1-4 0-0 3 3 15 29 Massingale 1-2 0-0 3-4 2 0 5 19 Cummings 8-15 0-0 6-10 11 1 22 31 Massingale 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 6 Knight 0-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 3 Day 0-2 0-0 0-0 5 1 0 14 Thompson 2-4 0-0 00 2 0 4 15 Brown 2-3 0-0 2-3 3 0 6 7 Dodd 3-7 1-2 3-8 2 1 10 22 Conroy 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 3 Bozeman 3-5 0-0 0-1 2 1 6 7 Day 1-2 0-0 0-1 2 2 2 16 Storey 1-6 0-0 0-0 9 0 2 16 Barnard 7-16 6-15 2-2 2 2 22 29 Patterson 3-3 0-0 0-0 4 3 6 11 Conroy 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 7 Nahra 0-3 0-3 2-2 0 0 2 10 Totals 21-5510-2910-18 29 14 62 200 Totals 29-62 3-13 13-21 46 17 74 200 Frederick 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 2 Allen 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 4 Barnard 2-4 1-3 0-0 3 1 5 25 Redhage 1-5 0-0 0-0 3 0 2 11 Fouls: UW 20 (Dixon 5), UCLA 15. Turnovers: UW 12 (Wrenn, Allen 5), UCLA 11 (Four with 2). Totals 30-50 4-10 17-24 33 22 81 200 Totals 23-71 5-18 17-32 41 12 68 200 Blocks: UW 1 (Wrenn), UCLA 1 (Cummings). Steals: UW 4 (Dixon 2), UCLA 4 (Thompson 2). FG%: Half—.393 (11-28) Final—.382 FG%: Half—.400 (14-35) Final—.468 Fouls: UW 23 (Wrenn 5), ASU 25. Turnovers: UW 25 (Allen 9), ASU 19 (Three with 4). 3-FG%: Half—.333 (4-12) Final—.345 3-FG%: Half—.111 (1-9) Final—.231 Blocks: UW 10 (Dixon 6), ASU 0. Steals: UW 9 (Allen 4), ASU 8 (Smith, Dodd 2). FT%: Half—.556 (5-9) Final—.556 FT%: Half—.833 (5-6) Final—.619 FG%: Half—.607 (17-28) Final—.600 FG%: Half—.367 (11-30) Final—.324 Halftime Score: UCLA 34, UW 31. Attendance: 7,567. 3-FG%: Half—.571 (4-7) Final—.400 3-FG%: Half—.375 (3-8) Final—.278 LOS ANGELES-- T.J. Cummings scored six of his 22 points in the decisive game-ending FT%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.708 FT%: Half—.467 (7-15) Final—.531 run as 14th-ranked UCLA defeated Washington 74-62 at Pauley Pavilion. The Bruins (10-2, 3-0) won Halftime Score: UW 39, ASU 32. Attendance: 5,448. their 16th straight game against UW at Pauley Pavilion and completed a season sweep of the Huskies. SEATTLE-- Doug Wrenn tallied 12 of his 23 points inside the opening six minutes, helping Cummings sparked a 14-3 game-closing run for UCLA over the final 6:17. Josh Barnard’s 3-pointer Washington claim an early lead en route to an 81-68 victory over Arizona State at Bank of America with 6:36 remaining drew Washington (6-7, 0-3) within 60-59. The Bruins scored 10 straight points Arena. Curtis Allen distributed 15 assists for UW, just one shy of Rafael Stone’s school record. The while holding UW scoreless for 5:46. The Huskies scored only one more time, a 3-pointer by Bardard Huskies (7-8, 1-4) stopped a six-game losing streak on the strength of 60 percent shooting from the with 50 seconds left to play. Barnard tallied a career-high 22 points with six 3-pointers. He was the field (30-of-50) that was their best shooting effort in 83 games. ASU (9-5, 2-3) struggled offensively, only Husky to score in the final 9:45, tallying the team’s final nine points during that span. Curtis Allen turning the ball over 19 times while shooting 32 percent from the field and hitting only 17 of 32 free had 15 points and eight assists for UW and Grant Leep added 12 points. Jason Kapono scored 13 throws. Wrenn netted the first two, and four of the first five, baskets for the Huskies who raced out to points and Matt Barnes added 12, including the first nine points of the game for UCLA. Cummings a 13-2 lead and never trailed. The Sun Devils drew within 69-65 on a 3-pointer by Chad Prewitt, but led a 46-29 Bruin rebound advantage with 11 boards. The game started 20 minutes late due to a bent they couldn’t get any closer. Erroll Knight scored 19 points for UW and Grant Leep added 17. Prewitt rim that needed to be replaced. UCLA center Dan Gadzuric, who tallied 23 points in the first meeting, paced ASU with 24 points while Curtis Millage had 15 and Kyle Dodd 10. The Sun Devils lost despite scored two points while being limited to six minutes due to foul trouble. attempting 21 more shots (71-50), posting a 41-33 rebound advantage and forcing 25 turnovers.

USC 94, Washington 74 #20 Arizona 74, Washington 69 Jan. 6, 2002; The Forum, Los Angeles, Calif. 14 Jan. 12, 2002; 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 Day 0-1 0-0 0-0 2 1 0 13 Bluthenthal 7-11 2-2 2-2 5 4 18 36 Wrenn 10-18 1-5 4-6 4 3 25 34 Walton 3-9 0-1 0-2 6 4 6 30 Wrenn 12-22 2-5 3-3 3 1 29 35 Clancy 7-15 0-0 3-8 6 3 17 30 Leep 3-4 2-2 0-0 2 0 8 28 Anderson 4-7 0-1 6-6 11 3 14 33 Dixon 4-6 0-0 3-4 8 2 11 36 Charissis 0-1 0-0 2-2 5 0 2 12 Dixon 5-10 0-0 1-3 14 1 11 37 Frye 5-5 0-0 1-2 5 3 11 30 Allen 2-4 0-1 6-6 1 3 10 26 Granville 4-9 0-2 9-10 3 10 17 28 Allen 6-12 2-6 2-2 2 4 16 36 Stoudamire 4-9 2-3 6-6 0 0 16 34 Knight 0-2 0-0 3-8 4 0 3 21 E. Craven 7-14 1-3 2-2 1 3 17 33 Kinght 2-4 1-2 0-1 0 2 5 19 Gardner 6-15 4-7 5-8 3 6 21 38 Massingale 0-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 4 Curtis 0-1 0-0 2-2 2 0 2 4 Massingale 0-5 0-1 2-2 4 1 2 14 Bynum 0-3 0-1 0-0 1 1 0 9 Brown 2-3 1-2 2-2 1 1 7 8 Hutchinson 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 5 Brown 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 3 Latimore 0-0 0-0 0-0 4 0 0 13 Conroy 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 6 Guenther 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 2 Day 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 7 Fox 2-5 0-0 2-6 1 0 6 13 Frederick 1-2 0-1 0-0 0 2 2 8 O’Neil 1-3 0-0 0-0 2 0 2 9 Conroy 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 4 Gibbs 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 D. Craven 0-3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 Barnard 2-5 0-3 0-0 2 4 4 16 Dupree 1-6 0-0 2-2 3 0 4 13 Barnard 1-8 0-6 0-0 4 1 2 18 Leep 2-5 0-0 4-4 4 0 8 21 Farmer 6-9 1-3 2-4 7 0 15 25 Totals 27-62 6-22 9-14 37 13 69 200 Totals 24-53 6-13 20-30 35 17 74 200 Hudson 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 3 Fouls: UW 20, UA 15. Turnovers: UW 14 (Knight 4), UA 13 (Walton 3). Totals 25-53 3-13 21-27 31 14 74 200 Totals 33-73 4-11 24-32 39 20 94 200 Blocks: UW 7 (Dixon 3), UA 2. Steals: UW 7 (Leep, Barnard 2), UA 9 (Anderson, Frye 3). Fouls: UW 22 (Day 5), USC 21. Turnovers: UW 26 (Allen 7), USC 12 (Granville 4). FG%: Half—.419 (13-31) Final—.435 FG%: Half—.483 (14-29) Final—.453 Blocks: UW 6 (Dixon 2), USC 3 (Three with 1). Steals: UW 6 (Allen 2), USC 21 (Granville 6). 3-FG%: Half—.308 (4-13) Final—.273 3-FG%: Half—.200 (1-5) Final—.462 FG%: Half—.364 (8-22) Final—.472 FG%: Half—.475 (19-40) Final—.452 FT%: Half—.500 (2-4) Final—.643 FT%: Half—.750 (6-8) Final—.667 3-FG%: Half—.000 (0-4) Final—.231 3-FG%: Half—.500 (3-6) Final—.364 Halftime Score: UA 35, UW 32. Attendance: 8,260. FT%: Half—.824 (14-17) Final—.778 FT%: Half—.714 (10-14) Final—.750 Halftime Score: USC 51, UW 30. Attendance: 3,597. SEATTLE-- Jason Gardner netted 16 of his 21 points in the second half and distributed six assists as 20th-ranked Arizona held off Washington 74-69 at Bank of America Arena. The Wildcats (11- LOS ANGELES-- David Bluthenthal led five double-figure scorers with 18 points, leading 4, 4-2) scored 15 unanswered points early in the first half to claim an 18-8 lead. The margin was 33- USC to a 94-74 victory over Washington at The Forum. The Trojans (12-2, 4-0), who swept UW for 21 before Washington (7-9, 1-5) closed out the half with an 11-2 run to draw within 35-32. The lead the third straight season, recorded their record seventh straight win in the series. USC used 21 steals changed hands six times after intermission before Arizona took a 59-57 margin it would not relinquish to force 26 Husky turnovers and outscored UW 32-12 off the miscues. Washington (6-8, 0-4) held on a put-back by Rick Anderson with 8:31 left to play. Grant Leep cut the UW deficit to 71-69 on a 3- a slim 5-4 lead at two minutes into the game when the Trojans staged a 25-5 run over the next 6:36 pointer with 30.7 seconds remaining and Gardner then hit 1-of-2 free throws. UW’s Curtis Allen missed to claim a commanding 29-10 advantage. The margin was 51-30 at halftime and later grew to as many a trey that would have tied the game before Salim Stoudamire converted two free throws to secure the as 32 points. Sam Clancy scored 11 straight USC points in the second half and finished with 17, win. Stoudamire finished with 16 points while Anderson had 14 points and 11 rebounds. Doug Wrenn matching the totals for Brandon Granville and Errick Craven. Granville also had 10 assists and six had his third straight 20-point outing with a game-high 25. David Dixon had his third double-double steals. Desmon Farmer had 15 points for USC. Doug Wrenn tallied 23 of his career-high 29 points with 11 points and 14 rebounds, including nine points and 11 rebounds in the second half. in the second half for the Huskies who also got 11 points from David Dixon and 10 from Curtis Allen. 2001-02 Box Scores, continued

California 62, Washington 50 Washington 97, #19 Oregon 92 Jan. 17, 2002; Haas Pavilion, Berkeley, Calif. 17 Jan. 24, 2002; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 19 Washington California Washington Oregon 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 Wrenn 6-18 2-5 5-7 12 1 19 37 Tamir 1-10 1-4 0-0 2 1 3 26 Wrenn 11-24 1-2 9-15 7 1 32 36 Johnson 2-6 0-0 0-0 11 0 4 29 Leep 1-4 0-1 1-2 6 1 3 35 Shipp 6-16 1-4 5-5 6 1 18 37 Leep 4-6 1-2 2-2 6 0 11 28 Christoffrsn 0-4 0-0 3-4 4 0 3 13 Dixon 3-8 0-0 0-0 11 2 6 29 Sampson 4-6 0-0 7-11 17 3 15 33 Dixon 2-2 0-0 0-0 1 2 4 11 Jackson 6-15 2-5 4-6 6 0 18 35 Allen 4-11 3-7 0-0 0 4 11 34 Diggs 1-3 0-0 1-4 3 2 3 21 Massingale 4-7 0-1 3-4 7 0 11 25 Ridnour 7-14 4-9 5-6 3 7 23 37 Knight 1-7 0-3 0-2 3 0 2 21 Gates 1-4 0-2 1-2 3 2 3 23 Allen 2-6 2-3 12-12 0 3 18 22 Jones 7-12 2-4 11-12 5 5 27 39 Massingale 3-8 0-1 0-1 4 1 6 19 Legans 2-5 2-5 0-0 1 2 6 24 Day 4-8 0-0 0-0 5 3 8 24 Davis 3-5 1-2 0-0 1 1 7 20 Brown 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 2 Hughes 2-6 0-0 1-2 4 0 5 8 Conroy 2-6 2-3 0-0 2 4 6 17 Lever 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 11 Conroy 0-1 0-1 1-2 2 0 1 11 Wethers 3-7 0-0 3-4 3 0 9 10 Knight 0-1 0-1 0-0 1 1 0 7 Helquist 3-6 0-0 4-4 3 0 10 16 Barnard 1-3 0-2 0-0 1 0 2 12 For.-Kelly 0-2 0-2 0-0 2 0 0 18 Barnard 3-7 1-3 0-0 4 3 7 30 Totals 19-60 5-20 7-14 44 10 50 200 Totals 20-59 4-17 18-28 44 11 62 200 Totals 32-67 7-15 26-33 38 17 97 200 Totals 28-63 9-21 27-32 35 14 92 200 Fouls: UW 21 (Dixon 5), CAL 16. Turnovers: UW 21 (Wrenn 7), CAL 12 (Shipp, Sampson 3). Fouls: UW 22 (Dixon 5), UO 19 (Three with 4). Turnovers: UW 13 (Knight 3), UO 17 (Jackson 7). Blocks: UW 5 (Dixon 3), CAL 6 (Sampson 5). Steals: UW 3 (Allen 2), CAL 5 (Gates 2). Blocks: UW 4, UO 4 (Johnson 2). Steals: UW 11 (Barnard 3), UO 8 (Jones 3). FG%: Half—.467 (14-30) Final—.317 FG%: Half—.375 (12-32) Final—.339 FG%: Half—.541 (20-37) Final—.478 FG%: Half—.467 (14-30) Final—.444 3-FG%: Half—.364 (4-11) Final—.250 3-FG%: Half—.273 (3-11) Final—.235 3-FG%: Half—.500 (5-10) Final—.467 3-FG%: Half—.625 (5-8) Final—.429 FT%: Half—.200 (1-5) Final—.500 FT%: Half—.800 (4-5) Final—.643 FT%: Half—.778 (7-9) Final—.788 FT%: Half—1.00 (11-11) Final—.844 Halftime Score: UW 33, California 31. Attendance: 9,612. Halftime Score: UW 52, UO 44. Attendance: 7,009 BERKELEY, Calif.-- Joe Shipp scored 11 of his 18 points in the second half as California SEATTLE-- Doug Wrenn scored six of his career-high 32 points in the final 1:22 to lift rallied from a halftime deficit to defeat Washington 62-50 and remain undefeated at Haas Pavilion. The Washington to its first win over a ranked opponent in six tries, a 97-92 upset of No. 19 Oregon at Bank Golden Bears (12-3, 3-2) won all 11 of their home games. Washington (7-10, 1-6) led by as many of America Arena. Washington (8-11, 2-7) stopped a three-game losing skid and halted a streak in its as eight points before settling on a 33-31 halftime edge. After UW’s Doug Wrenn opened the second series with the Ducks in which the visiting won the previous four meetings. Oregon (14-5, 6-2) had half with a pair of free throws, California staged a 13-4 run to go ahead for good at 44-39 with 13:19 its four-game winning streak snapped despite the 27 points of Frederick Jones and 23 from Luke left to play. The Huskies helped the Cal run, committing five of their 21 turnovers during the five-minute Ridnour. Wrenn tallied 18 first-half points and the Huskies shot 54 percent en route to a 52-44 halftime span. The Bears scored the final six points of the game to finish with their largest margin of the game lead. Oregon outscored UW 18-7 inside the opening four minutes of the second half to edge ahead at 12 points. UW made only five field goals and scored a season-low 17 points in the second half, 62-59. UO led 81-80 before Washington took the lead for good an a jumper by Josh Barnard with 2:50 shooting 17 percent (5-30) after intermission. Freshman Jamal Sampson had a double-double with left to play. Following a pair of Wrenn baskets, the Huskies converted 11 of 12 free throws during the 17 points and 15 rebounds for the Bears. Wrenn notched his second double-double with 12 points final 41 seconds to secure the win. Curtis Allen made all 12 of his free throws, six of the in the final and 19 rebounds for the Huskies who also got 11 rebounds from David Dixon. Curtis Allen chipped 0:32, and finished with 18 points for UW. Huskies Grant Leep and C.J. Massingale each contributed in 11 points for UW. 11 points. Luke Jackson netted 18 points for the Ducks who also got 10 from Brian Helquist.

#19 Stanford 105, Washington 60 Oregon State 68, Washington 53 Jan. 19, 2002; Maples Pavilion, Palo Alto, Calif. 18 Jan. 26, 2002; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 20 Washington Stanford Washington Oregon 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 Wrenn 7-19 0-1 2-5 5 0 16 26 Davis 0-0 0-0 0-4 5 0 0 16 Wrenn 6-19 2-6 5-5 8 4 19 34 Jackson 3-5 1-1 1-2 3 1 8 26 Leep 0-6 0-3 3-5 3 0 3 24 Jacobsen 9-15 2-4 1-3 6 3 21 24 Leep 0-3 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 12 Ricci 7-15 1-1 6-7 9 3 21 30 Dixon 6-10 0-0 1-3 16 1 13 34 Borchardt 7-11 1-1 4-6 6 0 19 23 Dixon 3-5 0-0 4-6 10 2 10 32 Haywood 4-10 2-4 1-2 3 3 11 33 Allen 5-10 2-6 1-1 1 3 13 25 Barnes 4-7 1-1 6-6 2 5 15 21 Massingale 1-2 0-0 2-2 5 0 4 22 Nash 2-4 0-1 0-0 1 1 4 21 Knight 1-4 1-3 0-0 2 0 3 19 Giovacchini 1-5 1-1 0-0 3 2 3 18 Allen 2-6 1-5 2-4 3 2 7 29 Masten 3-6 2-4 0-0 1 1 8 34 Massingale 0-5 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 8 Kirchofer 0-3 0-0 0-0 3 1 0 11 Brown 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 2 1 North III 2-3 0-0 0-0 5 0 4 16 Brown 2-5 0-2 0-0 1 1 4 10 Childress 5-10 0-2 0-0 8 0 10 18 Day 1-2 0-0 1-1 1 0 3 18 Payton 1-1 1-1 0-0 0 0 3 3 Day 1-3 0-0 2-3 2 0 4 18 Johnson 3-3 1-1 4-5 5 1 11 11 Conroy 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 10 See 2-3 2-2 1-2 2 3 7 21 Conroy 0-2 0-1 0-0 3 2 0 8 Hernandez 2-3 0-0 2-2 0 2 6 22 Frederick 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Cokley 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Frederick 0-1 0-1 1-2 0 0 1 12 Besecker 1-2 1-1 0-0 2 1 3 4 Gibbs 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Elseth 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Barnard 1-5 1-3 0-2 2 0 3 8 Robinson 2-2 1-1 1-2 2 0 6 6 Knight 2-4 2-4 0-2 0 0 6 19 Potter 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 4 Hudson 0-4 0-2 0-0 0 1 0 8 Lottich 1-3 0-1 3-4 3 2 5 10 Barnard 0-1 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 21 Sample 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 10 Little 3-4 0-0 0-2 5 0 6 16 Team 2 Totals 23-74 4-23 10-21 42 8 60 200 Totals 38-68 8-13 21-34 51 17 105 200 Totals 17-45 5-18 14-20 29 9 53 200 Totals 25-49 9-14 9-13 26 12 68 200 Fouls: UW 23 (Day 5), SU 23. Turnovers: UW 12 (Allen, Knight, Day 2), SU 10 (Barnes, Little 3). Fouls: UW 14, OSU 16. Turnovers: UW 15 (Massingale 3), OSU 9 (Ricci 3). Blocks: UW 5 (Dixon 5), SU 4 (Borchardt 2). Steals: UW 4 (Wrenn 2), SU 3 (Three with 1). Blocks: UW 3 (Dixon 3), OSU 1 (Ricci). Steals: UW 5, OSU 6 (Ricci 4). FG%: Half—.375 (12-32) Final—.311 FG%: Half—.528 (19-36) Final—.559 FG%: Half—.333 (6-18) Final—.378 FG%: Half—.429 (12-28) Final—.510 3-FG%: Half—.333 (3-9) Final—.174 3-FG%: Half—.500 (3-6) Final—.615 3-FG%: Half—.143 (1-7) Final—.278 3-FG%: Half—.667 (4-6) Final—.643 FT%: Half—.333 (2-6) Final—.476 FT%: Half—.667 (8-12) Final—.618 FT%: Half—.688 (11-16) Final—.700 FT%: Half—.800 (4-5) Final—.692 Halftime Score: Stanford 49, UW 29. Attendance: 5,986. Halftime Score: OSU 32, UW 24. Attendance: 6,416. PALO ALTO, Calif.-- Casey Jacobsen scored 21 points and Curtis Borchardt added 19 as SEATTLE-- Philip Ricci scored seven of his 21 points during the final 5:35 of the first half when 19th-ranked Stanford dealt Washington its third-worst defeat ever, a 105-60 decision at Maples Oregon State took control en route to its fifth straight win over Washington, a 68-53 decision at Bank Pavilion. The Cardinal (11-4, 4-2) extended their winning streak over Washington (7-11, 1-7) to nine of America Arena. The Huskies (8-12, 2-8) got a 3-pointer by Erroll Knight at 7:16 and then missed straight, the longest in the series. David Dixon blocked five shots for the Huskies and had his fourth their final seven shots in the first half. UW led 20-18 before Ricci fueled a 14-4 Beaver run to take a double-double with 13 points and 16 rebounds. Doug Wrenn and Curtis Allen each had 13 points for 32-24 halftime advantage. Oregon State (10-9, 3-6) opened the second half with a 12-5 surge behind UW which allowed 100 points for the first time since Feb. 5, 1998. The Huskies led 10-8 five minutes seven more Ricci points, taking a commanding 44-29 lead with 15:17 left to play. Jimmie Haywood into the game before Stanford took control with a 25-12 run. Julius Barnes scored 11 of his 15 points added 11 points for Oregon State which shot 51 percent from the field (25-49) while limiting the in the first half as Stanford opened a 49-29 halftime margin. The Cardinal went on a 27-7 run in the Huskies to 38-percent accuracy (17-45). Doug Wrenn led UW in scoring for the seventh straight game opening eight minutes of the second half and led by as many as 48 points. with 19 points. David Dixon registered his fifth double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds. 2001-02 Box Scores, continued

Washington State 81, Washington 79 Arizona State 86, Washington 74 Jan. 31, 2002; Friel Court, Pullman, Wash. 21 Feb. 9, 2002; Wells Fargo Arena, Tempe, Ariz. 23 Washington Washington State 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 Wrenn 15-29 1-5 3-8 3 4 34 36 Gill 3-5 0-0 2-5 3 0 8 27 Day 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 8 Smith 6-10 0-0 2-2 6 2 14 21 Leep 2-6 1-3 0-0 5 0 5 20 Locklier 1-6 0-0 5-6 9 0 7 36 Leep 3-5 3-5 0-0 4 1 9 26 Storey 2-4 0-0 0-0 5 1 4 13 Dixon 4-7 0-0 0-0 9 1 8 38 Moore 7-17 3-7 11-13 8 4 28 40 Dixon 4-4 0-0 3-4 4 2 11 21 Prewitt 13-20 1-4 6-10 9 0 33 38 Allen 5-11 4-7 4-5 3 4 18 30 McNair 7-9 2-4 4-4 3 2 20 33 Conroy 0-0 0-0 2-2 1 2 2 16 Braxton 0-2 0-0 0-2 1 1 0 16 Knight 2-3 1-2 0-1 0 0 5 12 Bush 3-9 2-4 0-0 6 3 8 25 Wrenn 8-16 1-4 13-17 7 4 30 40 Millage 5-12 1-4 6-6 5 2 17 40 Massingale 0-1 0-1 0-0 2 2 0 13 Harris 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 Massingale 4-12 0-2 3-4 7 3 11 28 Knight 3-5 0-0 4-4 4 4 10 16 Brown 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Lyman 2-4 2-4 0-0 1 0 6 10 Brown 1-1 1-1 0-0 1 0 3 5 Dodd 1-3 0-0 0-0 3 5 2 24 Day 3-4 0-0 2-3 4 1 8 20 Kelati 0-1 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 4 Allen 1-4 0-2 1-2 1 5 3 24 Nahra 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 6 Conroy 0-0 0-0 1-3 0 0 1 10 Hughey 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 4 Knight 1-5 0-2 0-0 0 0 2 15 Allen 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 2 Barnard 0-3 0-2 0-0 1 4 0 21 Stasiak 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 0 2 3 Barnard 1-4 1-4 0-2 0 1 3 17 Redhage 2-4 0-0 2-2 6 2 6 24 Riley 0-2 0-0 0-1 1 0 0 14 Totals 23-52 6-20 22-31 26 18 74 200 Totals 32-60 2-8 20-27 40 19 86 200 Totals 31-64 7-20 10-20 35 16 79 200 Totals 25-56 9-20 22-29 40 9 82 200 Fouls: UW 26 (Leep, Dixon, Day), ASU 25 (Knight). Turnovers: UW 15 (Allen 5), ASU 14 (Millage 7). Fouls: UW 25 (Allen 5), WSU 21. Turnovers: UW 17 (Allen 7), WSU 18 (Moore 4). Blocks: UW 4 (Dixon 4), ASU 5 (Redhage 2). Steals: UW 6 (Massingale 4), ASU 7 (Millage 3). Blocks: UW 7 (Dixon 7), WSU 4 (Riley 3). Steals: UW 6 (Allen, Barnard 2), WSU 3 (Three with 1). FG%: Half—.400 (10-25) Final—.442 FG%: Half—.500 (15-30) Final—.533 FG%: Half—.441 (15-34) Final—.484 FG%: Half—.393 (11-28) Final—.446 3-FG%: Half—.222 (2-9) Final—.300 3-FG%: Half—.250 (1-4) Final—.250 3-FG%: Half—.300 (3-10) Final—.350 3-FG%: Half—.538 (7-13) Final—.450 FT%: Half—.643 (9-14) Final—.710 FT%: Half—.615 (8-13) Final—.741 FT%: Half—.500 (5-10) Final—.500 FT%: Half—.800 (8-10) Final—.759 Halftime Score: ASU 39, UW 31. Attendance: 6,338. Halftime Score: UW 38, WSU 37. Attendance: 3,310. TEMPE, Ariz.-- Chad Prewitt scored 21 of his career-high 33 points in the second half, leading PULLMAN, Wash.-- Marcus Moore scored 18 of his 28 points inside the final 10 minutes, Arizona State to an 86-74 win over Washington at Wells Fargo Arena. The Huskies (8-15, 2-11) lost helping Washington State snap a 12-game losing streak with an 81-79 win over Washington at Friel despite the 30 points of Doug Wrenn who became the third player in school history to register three Court. Moore tallied nine of the final 11 points for the Cougars (5-14, 1-10) who won their first Pac- consecutive 30-point performances. Arizona State (13-9, 6-7) reeled off 14 unanswered points to take 10 game. The Huskies (8-13, 2-9) lost despite the career-high 34 points of Doug Wrenn who scored a 25-13 lead midway through the first half. UW responded with nine straight points to close within 25- 22 in the second half, including 11 straight UW points during one five-minute stretch. The Huskies 22 with 6:31 before halftime. The Sun Devils extended the lead to 39-31 at halftime, a margin the scored 11 unanswered points to take a nine-point lead before WSU closed within 38-37 at halftime. Huskies trimmed to 55-52 with 12:47 left to play. Prewitt scored twice, Shawn Redhage added a basket Curtis Allen had 18 points and gave UW its final lead at 76-74 on a 3-pointer with 2:31 left to play. and Kyle Dodd capped the run with a 19-footer to give ASU a commanding 63-52 advantage with 9:55 remaining. The Huskies never got closer than seven points en route to their fifth consecutive loss in Moore answered with a layup and Mike Bush gave WSU the lead for good on a dunk with 1:40 Tempe. Prewitt grabbed nine boards to lead a 40-26 ASU rebounding advantage. Curtis Millage scored remaining. Washington had a chance to send the game into overtime when Will Conroy was fouled 17 points for the Sun Devils who also got 14 from Tommy Smith and 10 from Donnell Knight. David while attempting a 3-pointer with 0:01 left. He made the first, but missed the second and third free Dixon and C.J. Massingale each had 11 points for the Huskies. throws. Jerry McNair scored 15 of his 20 points in the second half for the Cougars. David Dixon tied his own UW single-game record with seven blocked shots. #11 Arizona 91, Washington 82 #12 Stanford 91, Washington 65 Feb. 7, 2002; McKale Center, Tucson, Ariz. 22 Feb. 14, 2002; Bank of America Arena, Seattle, Wash. 24 Washington Arizona 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 Knight 1-3 1-2 0-0 0 2 3 9 Walton 8-11 1-2 4-8 6 4 21 36 Wrenn 9-23 0-1 6-12 11 0 24 33 Johnson 3-10 2-3 1-2 7 5 9 25 Leep 3-7 3-5 0-0 2 0 9 19 Anderson 5-9 1-2 0-5 7 0 11 31 Dixon 1-1 0-0 4-4 4 0 6 22 Borchardt 4-7 0-0 7-8 16 5 15 31 Dixon 4-7 0-0 3-7 7 2 11 32 Frye 6-9 0-0 4-5 10 2 16 28 Massingale 1-6 1-2 2-4 2 1 5 22 Jacobsen 9-19 4-8 9-10 3 2 31 35 Massingale 3-6 0-0 0-0 2 0 6 12 Bynum 0-5 0-4 1-3 1 0 1 16 Conroy 1-1 0-0 4-6 1 0 6 14 Barnes 3-9 1-3 2-4 3 3 9 26 Allen 2-6 0-3 0-0 2 2 4 20 Gardner 3-12 2-5 5-6 3 7 13 38 Knight 3-10 1-3 2-4 3 2 9 32 Giovacchini 1-3 1-2 0-0 1 0 3 15 Brown 2-4 1-3 0-1 1 2 5 13 Stoudamire 5-9 2-3 5-6 2 1 17 26 Brown 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 6 Kirchofer 0-0 0-0 4-4 1 0 4 5 Day 1-3 0-0 0-0 5 0 2 22 Schwertley 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 4 Day 1-3 0-1 2-2 3 0 4 19 Childress 4-6 0-2 0-0 5 1 8 20 Conroy 3-6 1-3 0-2 4 8 7 28 Latimore 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 2 9 Frederick 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 2 7 Hernandez 1-1 0-0 4-4 3 7 6 23 Barnard 0-3 0-2 0-0 1 0 0 11 Fox 4-4 0-0 0-1 2 0 8 12 Gibbs 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 1 Besecker 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 Wrenn 15-23 0-1 5-11 9 1 35 34 Allen 3-6 1-3 2-2 1 1 9 21 Robinson 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 4 Totals 34-68 6-19 8-21 37 17 82 200 Totals 33-61 6-16 19-34 33 15 91 200 Barnard 0-4 0-4 0-0 0 1 0 12 Davis 3-5 0-0 0-1 4 0 6 9 Fouls: UW 25 (Day 5), UA 21. Turnovers: UW 21 (Conroy 7), UA 18 (Walton, Gardner 5). Leep 0-0 0-0 0-0 3 1 0 9 Lottich 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 2 Blocks: UW 2 (Day, Conroy 1), UA 3 (Frye 2). Steals: UW 8 (Dixon, Conroy, Wrenn 2), UA 13 (Walton 4). Hudson 0-2 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 2 Little 0-2 0-0 0-0 3 0 0 4 Totals 20-58 3-16 22-34 32 6 65 200 Totals 28-64 8-18 27-33 48 23 91 200 FG%: Half—.471 (16-34) Final—.500 FG%: Half—.462 (18-39) Final—.541 3-FG%: Half—.125 (1-8) Final—.316 3-FG%: Half—.200 (2-10) Final—.375 Fouls: UW 26, SU 25 (Davis 5). Turnovers: UW 9 (Wrenn, Massingale 2), SU 11 (Three with 2). FT%: Half—.333 (1-3) Final—.381 FT%: Half—.833 (5-6) Final—.559 Blocks: UW 2 (Day, Knight), SU 6 (Borchardt 5). Steals: UW 8 (Massingale 3), SU 4 (Fourth with 1). Halftime Score: Arizona 43, UW 34. Attendance: 14,574. FG%: Half—.367 (11-30) Final—.345 FG%: Half—.457 (16-35) Final—.438 TUCSON, Ariz.-- Doug Wrenn came off the bench to score 35 points for Washington, his 3-FG%: Half—.200 (2-10) Final—.188 3-FG%: Half—.364 (4-11) Final—.444 second straight 30-point outing, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Arizona’s balanced attack in a 91- FT%: Half—.818 (9-11) Final—.647 FT%: Half—.667 (6-9) Final—.818 82 loss to the No. 20 Wildcats. Arizona led from wire-to-wire as the Huskies were only able to pull within Halftime Score: SU 42, UW 33. Attendance: 6,562. seven points midway through the second half. Luke Walton went 8-for-11 from the field and scored SEATTLE -- Casey Jacobsen tallied 31 points and Curtis Borchardt contributed 15 points, 16 21 points to lead the Wildcats while freshman center Channing Frye posted a double-double with 16 rebounds and five blocked shots as 12th-ranked Stanford cruised to a 91-65 win over Washington. points and 10 rebounds. Arizona also got double-figure points from Salim Stoudamire (17), Jason The Cardinal (16-6, 9-4) posted its 10th straight win over Washington (8-16, 2-12), the longest streak Gardner (13) and Rick Anderson (11). Washington shot a solid 50-percent from the field (led by in the series. Stanford led 42-33 at halftime and opened the second half with a 3-pointer by Tony Wrenn’s 15-for-23 shooting), but the ‘Cats bettered that mark, firing for a 54.1-percent rate. David Giovacchini. The Huskies reeled off eight straight points to draw within 45-41 with 16:05 left to play. Dixon was the only other Husky in double figures, scoring 11 while pulling down seven rebounds. The Cardinal responded with a 9-0 surge to push the margin to 54-41 and had another nine-point run Grant Leep’s nine points all came from behind the ark as the senior forward went 3-for-5 from three- near the end of the game. Doug Wrenn, the Pac-10’s second-leading scorer behind Jacobsen, was the point range. Washington shot only 8-for-21 from the free-throw line, more than accounting for the final only Husky to reach double-figures. He netted 24 points and completed his third double-double with nine-point deficit. 11 rebounds. The Cardinal out-rebounded UW 48-32. •Washington’s Last Game Boxscore • OFFICIAL BASKETBALL BOX SCORE -- G A M E T O T A L S Stanford vs Washington 02/14/02 7:00 p.m. at Bank of America Arena; Seattle, Wash. ------VISITORS: Stanford 16-6, 9-4 TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS No. N A M E FG FGA FG FGA FT FTA OF DE TOT PF TP A TO BLK S MIN 05 Johnson, Teyo f 3 10 2 3 1 2 2 5 7 4 9 5 1 1 0 25 02 Borchardt, Curtis c 4 7 0 0 7 8 5 11 16 4 15 5 2 5 0 31 23 Jacobsen, Casey g 9 19 4 8 9 10 2 1 3 2 31 2 2 0 1 35 24 Barnes, Julius g 3 9 1 3 2 4 1 2 3 1 9 3 1 0 1 26 25 Giovacchini, Tony g 1 3 1 2 0 0 0 1 1 4 3 0 2 0 1 15 00 Kirchofer, Joe 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 0 5 01 Childress, Josh 4 6 0 2 0 0 1 4 5 2 8 1 0 0 1 20 11 Hernandez, Chris 1 1 0 0 4 4 1 2 3 2 6 7 1 0 0 23 14 Besecker, Tyler 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 21 Robinson, Nick 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 22 Davis, Justin 3 5 0 0 0 1 1 3 4 5 6 0 0 0 0 9 33 Lottich, Matt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 42 Little, Rob 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 4 TEAM ...... 1 0 1 TOTALS 28 64 8 18 27 33 16 32 48 25 91 23 11 6 4 200 TOTAL FG% 1st Half: 16-35 .457 2nd Half: 12-29 .414 Game: .438 DEADBALL 3-Pt. FG% 1st Half: 4-11 .364 2nd Half: 4- 7 .571 Game: .444 REBOUNDS F Throw % 1st Half: 6- 9 .667 2nd Half: 21-24 .875 Game: .818 2, 2 ------HOME TEAM: Washington 8-16, 2-12 TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS No. N A M E FG FGA FG FGA FT FTA OF DE TOT PF TP A TO BLK S MIN 24 Wrenn, Doug f 9 23 0 1 6 12 4 7 11 3 24 0 2 0 1 33 50 Dixon, David c 1 1 0 0 4 4 0 4 4 2 6 0 1 0 0 22 01 Massingale, C.J. g 1 6 1 2 2 4 0 2 2 2 5 1 2 0 3 22 05 Conroy, Will g 1 1 0 0 4 6 0 1 1 2 6 0 1 0 2 14 21 Knight, Erroll g 3 10 1 3 2 4 2 1 3 4 9 2 0 1 0 32 03 Brown, Sterling 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 6 04 Day, Jeffrey 1 3 0 1 2 2 1 2 3 4 4 0 1 1 1 19 10 Frederick, Charles 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 7 12 Gibbs, Ian 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 20 Allen, Curtis 3 6 1 3 2 2 0 1 1 1 9 1 0 0 0 21 23 Barnard, Josh 0 4 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 12 31 Leep, Grant 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 9 52 Hudson, David 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 TEAM ...... 0 1 1 TOTALS 20 58 3 16 22 34 8 24 32 26 65 6 9 2 8 200 TOTAL FG% 1st Half: 11-30 .367 2nd Half: 9-28 .321 Game: .345 DEADBALL 3-Pt. FG% 1st Half: 2-10 .200 2nd Half: 1- 6 .167 Game: .188 REBOUNDS F Throw % 1st Half: 9-11 .818 2nd Half: 13-23 .565 Game: .647 8 ------OFFICIALS: Tom Wood, Milt Stowe, Craig Grismore TECHNICAL FOULS: none ATTENDANCE: 6,562 SCORE BY PERIODS: 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Stanford 42 49 91 Washington 33 32 65 2001-02 Washington Men’s Basketball Cumulative Statistics - as of February 15 ** ALL GAMES **

RECORD: OVERALL HOME AWAY NEUTRAL ALL GAMES...... (8-16) (4-6) (3-9) (1-1) CONFERENCE...... (2-12) (2-5) (0-7) (0-0) NON-CONFERENCE...... (6-4) (2-1) (3-2) (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 ------24 Wrenn, Doug 23 21 740 32.2 180 400 .450 15 58 .259 98 167 .587 53 95 148 6.4 66 1 44 63 14 14 473 20.6 20 Allen, Curtis 24 22 683 28.5 82 188 .436 35 93 .376 85 97 .876 10 39 49 2.0 49 2 106 94 4 24 284 11.8 50 Dixon, David 24 24 664 27.7 71 133 .534 0 0 .000 49 77 .636 50 134 184 7.7 88 5 26 52 56 10 191 8.0 31 Leep, Grant 24 22 612 25.5 63 126 .500 30 56 .536 25 32 .781 34 63 97 4.0 60 2 11 25 3 12 181 7.5 21 Knight, Erroll 24 19 495 20.6 57 137 .416 20 52 .385 27 56 .482 19 45 64 2.7 60 1 18 40 6 11 161 6.7 23 Barnard, Josh 24 2 454 18.9 51 131 .389 27 91 .297 15 22 .682 14 35 49 2.0 40 0 33 31 1 12 144 6.0 01 Massingale, C.J. 24 6 345 14.4 33 105 .314 3 19 .158 44 54 .815 35 32 67 2.8 29 0 17 27 2 17 113 4.7 04 Day, Jeffrey 23 2 373 16.2 24 61 .393 0 1 .000 11 21 .524 25 51 76 3.3 67 6 12 26 28 8 59 2.6 05 Conroy, Will 24 2 269 11.2 15 51 .294 5 13 .385 17 27 .630 12 20 32 1.3 31 0 37 45 1 15 52 2.2 52 Hudson, David 6 0 18 3.0 3 12 .250 3 9 .333 4 4 1.00 0 0 0 0.0 2 0 1 1 0 0 13 2.2 03 Brown, Sterling 13 0 68 5.2 10 19 .526 3 9 .333 4 6 .667 5 6 11 0.8 16 0 7 3 0 4 27 2.1 42 Jensen, Mike 5 0 42 8.4 5 10 .500 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 4 5 9 1.8 4 0 0 3 0 1 10 2.0 10 Frederick, Charles 5 0 30 6.0 2 5 .400 0 2 .000 1 2 .500 0 2 2 0.4 1 0 2 3 0 2 5 1.0 12 Gibbs, Ian 5 0 7 1.4 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 1 1 0.2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0.0 TEAM REBOUNDS...... 38 44 82 1 2 ------Washington 24 4800 596 1378 .433 141 403 .350 380 565 .673 299 572 871 36.3 513 17 314 414 116 130 1715 71.5 ------Opponents 24 4800 655 1472 .445 134 377 .355 418 621 .673 344 563 907 37.8 498 9 340 326 74 175 1862 77.6 ------

SCORE BY HALVES(and OTs): 1st 2nd OT1 OT2 OT3 OT4 TOTAL Opponents 877 985 0 0 0 0 1862 Washington 826 889 0 0 0 0 1715

DEADBALL REBOUNDS: OFF DEF TOTAL Opponents 86 21 107 Washington 84 18 102