North Carolina State University Athletics

Tony Haynes: A Road First for Pack
12/7/2007 12:00:00 AM | Men's Basketball
BY TONY HAYNES
Seventeen times the Wolfpack and Pirates have faced off and all 17 times, the Pack has prevailed. But all 17 of those previous games were played in
In game number 18 of the series on Saturday night, ECU will have home court advantage for a change when it hosts the Wolfpack at Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum. Tip off is set for 7 p.m.
The enthusiasm for
Of course, an historic visit by NC State will be more than enough to awaken ECU’s home arena and turn it into a real hornets nest.
“We’ve talked about it,” said Wolfpack coach Sidney Lowe. “It’s going to be loud and hostile. I hope it’s a nice experience for us. We have to go in and concentrate on our game and really try to take the fans out of it by controlling the tempo of the ballgame.”
This truly has been a unique week for
Lowe and the Pack figure to get ECU’s best shot, just as George Mason did last Sunday. Posting one of their most impressive victories in recent years, the Pirates traveled up to
“This is a big game for them and a good game for them,” Lowe said. “It’s a big game for us. We expect that they’re going to be fired up and ready to go. Obviously, this is the first time we’re going down there to play them. They can certainly put a notch under their belts by playing an ACC team. They’ve got some very talented players, some experienced players. We’re looking forward to the challenge.”
Lowe isn’t sure how he earned the distinction of becoming the first NC State coach to take his team to
One thing Lowe can expect is a fresher, more rested NC State team than the one that got blasted at
Saturday’s contest will be NC State’s first outing since then.
“Coming off the three games in four days, then coming here to practice one day before going up there and playing, it was a tough time,” said Lowe. “I don’t think it was something where we weren’t competing; we had guys that were trying to compete. But if you don’t have your legs, there’s not much there.”
If Lowe could jot down an early Christmas wish list right now, he’d like to see the Wolfpack shoot the ball better from the perimeter and do a better job on the defensive boards. With teams playing packed in defenses to prevent NC State’s big men from dominating inside, open looks have been available from the perimeter. But thus far, the Pack is shooting 45.7 percent from the floor and just 31.3 percent from 3-point range.
NC State’s inability to control the defensive boards or to force a lot of turnovers on defense have made it difficult to get easy baskets in transition. Those two factors have also allowed the Wolfpack’s opponents to get a staggering number of extra shots at the basket. Through six games, the Pack has 111 fewer shot attempts (400 to 289) than its opponents.
“At times we haven’t shot as well as we would like,” Lowe said. “We’ve been hurt on the offensive boards, so we haven’t been able to get those rebounds and get out and run. I think that’s part of the problem there.”
Center J.J. Hickson certainly hasn’t been a problem. The freshman big man ranks fourth in the ACC in scoring (18.5 ppg.), seventh in rebounding (8.3), first in field goal percentage (.729) and third in blocked shots (15).
First-year point guard Farnold Degand has also been a pleasant surprise with a 2:1 assist-to-turnover ratio and an average of eight points per game.
Hickson and Degand have been good, but they’re also new to the program and their styles are different. Through the early stages of the season, the Wolfpack’s veteran players have continued to acclimate themselves to the new additions.
“I’m looking for progress,” Lowe said. “I said from the beginning that this is a new team. This is not the team that we had last year. You have different players that are being inserted into the line-up; you have different roles that are being played by guys this year that were different last year. I think we’re still learning each other. I know what we have; now it’s just a matter of getting it all together.
In East Carolina, NC State will be facing a smaller-quicker club, the type of team that has already given the Wolfpack match-up problems on the defensive end of the floor this season. The Pirates generally start three guards, a swingman and a 6-8 pivot man in Gabe Blair. Blair, a 6-8, 201 sophomore, averages 10.4 points and 8.3 rebounds to lead the Pirates in both categories. Guard Darrell Jenkins is Conference USA’s assist leader after dishing out 10 assists to go along with 11 points in last week’s upset of George Mason.
While the Pirates are in the midst of a six-game homestand, NC State will be playing its fifth consecutive game outside of
“I think it’s good to play on the road,” Lowe said. “That
More Pack-Pirates: NC State’s average victory margin in 17 games against East Carolina is 22.2 points, although ECU certainly had the Wolfpack on the ropes last season in