Riley Stockton vs Western Oregon, Jan. 28, 2012
Freshman Riley Stockton leads the Falcons with 22 steals

Falcons Take 2-Game Hoops Trip to Alaska

Third-place SPU men clash Thursday with second-place Anchorage

1/31/2012 5:43:00 PM

      • Complete Release (pdf)
      • VIDEO: David Downs

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 --
Seattle Pacific at (#21) Alaska Anchorage, 8:00 p.m. PST (7:00 AST)
Wells Fargo Sports Complex (1,000) • Anchorage, Alaska
• Webcast: www.pennatlantic.com  
• LiveStats: www.goseawolves.com

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4 --
Seattle Pacific at Alaska Fairbanks, 3:00 p.m. PST (2:00 p.m. AST)
Patty Center (2,000) • Fairbanks, Alaska
• Webcast: www.pennatlantic.com  
• LiveStats: www.sidearmstats.com/uaf/mbball/index.htm

The Seattle Pacific men embark on what has historically been their most difficult basketball road trip, making their annual trek north to Alaska. The third-place Falcons (16-4, 8-3 GNAC) clash with second-place Alaska Anchorage (15-4, 9-2) on Thursday, Feb. 2 at 8 p.m. Pacific Time (7 p.m. Alaska Time). The 21st-ranked Seawolves, who won in each of SPU's last five trips to Anchorage, seek to avenge a 34-point loss (85-51) on Jan. 7 in Seattle. On Saturday, Feb. 4, the Falcons visit Alaska Fairbanks (4-17, 1-10) for a 3 p.m. Pacific Time game. The Nanooks lost eight of their last nine games versus SPU. The Falcons have not won both games on an Alaska road trip in 10 years, since 2002.

Momentous Matchup
Both teams trail first-place Western Washington (9-1) in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference standings. Thursday's encounter will determine if Alaska Anchorage (9-2) can solidify its second-place position with a victory or if Seattle Pacific (8-3) will win and forge a second-place tie with a tiebreaker advantage over the Seawolves by virtue of a season sweep. The second-place position is pivotal as the top-two finishers in the regular-season standings get first-round byes into the six-team GNAC Tournament.



Dynamic Defense
Seattle Pacific's defense ranks No. 3 nationally by surrendering just 57.5 points per game, over four points fewer than the school-record figure of 61.8 points opponents were limited to in 1962-63. Academy of Art lost 63-33 to SPU on Nov. 26, the lowest opponent point total allowed since 1951. The Falcons have a 13-0 record when keeping opponents under 60 points. SPU is holding opponents to 38.1-percent shooting (No. 9 nationally). BYU-Hawaii is the only team to shoot 50 percent against SPU (51% on Dec. 10). The Falcons held five foes under 50 points. Along with scoring and field goal defense, SPU also leads the league in 3-point defense at 30.9 percent (34th NCAA).

Recent Recap
Scott Morse hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with 5.6 seconds on the clock and converted two clinching free throws with 1.2 left to play on Jan. 28 to cap SPU's home sweep with a 61-58 win over Western Oregon. On Jan. 26, Jeff Dorman equaled his career-high game total with 10 first-half points and finished with a team-high 12 to lead a 66-54 victory over Saint Martin's. SPU finished with an 8-1 record in non-conference games, including a 76-65 home win over then third-ranked BYU-Hawaii (Nov. 19).

Notable
David Downs ranks No. 14 nationally in 3-point accuracy at 46.8 percent ... The Falcons outrebounded each of their last 10 opponents (411-261 combined), including a 61-24 margin over Fairbanks (Jan. 5) and 54-19 at Central Washington (Jan. 12) ... SPU has a 15-2 record when outshooting foes and 11-0 when winning the bench-scoring battle.

Next Week
SPU opens a three-game homestand with 7 p.m. Brougham Pavilion games next week against Northwest Nazarene (Feb. 9) and Central Washington (Feb. 11).

Scouting Alaska Anchorage (15-4, 9-2 GNAC)
> You might expect a defensive battle as SPU boasts the GNAC's stingiest defense, yielding just 57.5 points per game while the Seawolves limit foes to 63.2 points to rank No. 2. On the other side of the ledger, UAA is fifth in the league in scoring (78.2 ppg) and the Falcons are ninth (68.3 ppg.)

> The Seawolves lead the all-time series 33-26. SPU won this year's first meeting 84-51 on Jan. 7 in Seattle, its second-largest winning margin ever over UAA.

> The SPU men lost in their last five visits to Anchorage, last winning in 2007.

> In his third season at SPU, Ryan Looney has a 3-3 record against the Seawolves.

Scouting Alaska Fairbanks (4-17, 1-10 GNAC)
> Nanooks senior guard Nico Matthews leads the GNAC with 52 steals (2.7 per game) and is No. 3 with 4.8 assists per game.

> Mick Durham is in his first year as head coach at UAF. The former Montana State head coach spent the last three years as an assistant at New Mexico State.

> The Falcons lead the series 50-15 and won eight of the last nine meetings.

> Third-year SPU coach Ryan Looney has a 4-1 record against Alaska Fairbanks.

GNAC Race
The Falcons are seeking to win the GNAC championship for the fourth time in seven years. They captured the 2010 and 2006 league titles outright and shared the 2007 crown with Seattle University. SPU was projected to finish second in this year's GNAC standings by the annual coaches poll, receiving four of 10 first-place votes. Alaska Anchorage also got four first-place votes and was picked first. Western Washington was selected third, garnering the two remaining first-place votes. SPU is aiming for its fifth GNAC title since the league was formed in 2001-02.

Famous Uncle
SPU freshman Riley Stockton is the nephew of NBA Hall of Fame point guard John Stockton, who distributed a record 15,806 assists during his 19-season career with the Utah Jazz (1984-2003). Riley Stockton prepped at Ferris High School in Spokane, Wash.

Big Men on Campus
In their second season at SPU, Division I transfers Andy Poling (6-11, Gonzaga) and Modou Niang (6-10, Utah State) are the tallest tandem in SPU history. Poling is a Sporting News honorable mention preseason All-American.

Terrific Transfer
The Falcons frontline is bolstered by the addition of transfer Jobi Wall, a 6-foot-6 junior who led all scorers with 24 points in the win at Arizona (Oct. 27). He averaged 16.6 points and 7.7 rebounds and shot 44 percent on 3-pointers in 2010 at Colorado Christian. Wall used an injury red-shirt season last year at CCU. SPU got a first-hand look at Wall on Dec. 30, 2009 at Brougham Pavilion. He amassed 28 points and 13 rebounds, hitting 5 of 9 treys in a 73-69 Colorado Christian win over the Falcons. As a prep pitcher at Faith Christian High School, Wall tossed a perfect game and hit for the cycle in a five-inning contest during the 2008 Colorado state Class 3A playoffs.

2012 Preview
Third-year coach Ryan Looney returns three starters from last year's 20-10 squad that made its seventh straight playoff appearance. Heading the list of returnees is 6-foot-11 junior post Andy Poling, a Sporting News honorable mention All-American. The Gonzaga transfer averaged 14.5 points and 7.0 rebounds per game in his first year as a Falcon. Also returning is 2010 GNAC Freshman of the Year David Downs. He assumed the starting point guard duties midway through the season, after an injury sidelined All-American Chris Banchero, and averaged 6.9 points and 4.3 assists per game. The impressive list of newcomers features Jobi Wall, a 6-6 transfer who averaged 16.6 points and 7.7 rebounds in 2010 at Colorado Christian. Freshman Riley Stockton is the nephew of Hall of Famer John Stockton, the NBA's all-time assist leader. The SPU men were ranked No. 22 nationally among NCAA Division II teams in preseason coaches poll.

Exhibition Recap
Jobi Wall scored 24 points, including the go-ahead basket on a layup with 2:20 left in SPU's 69-68 upset at No. 16 Arizona on Oct. 27 in Tucson. The Falcons led 37-29 at halftime. The Wildcats staged an 18-6 run and led by two before SPU scored six straight to take the lead for good. A potential game-winning trey by UA's Nick Johnson missed at the buzzer. On Nov. 4, C.J. Wilcox led four double-figure scorers for Washington with 19 points in a 77-60 win over SPU. Andy Poling's 12 points and seven rebounds paced the Falcons, who made just 10 of 23 free throws.

Tropical Tour
The Seattle Pacific men got an early jump on the basketball season with a six-day trip to Nassau, Bahamas from Sept. 10-16. The Falcons swept three professional teams from the New Providence Basketball Association (NPBA). They won 96-63 over the two-time defending league champion Commonwealth Giants, defeated the league runner-up Real Deal Shockers 75-52 and beat the Mailboat Cybots 93-51. Andy Poling averaged a double-double on the trip, with 19.3 points and 11.3 rebounds.

Looney's Ledger
Ryan Looney is in his third season after directing Seattle Pacific to postseason berths in each of his first two campaigns. His SPU record is 58-20 (.744). The Falcons were 20-10 last year and upset fifth-ranked Central Washington in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Looney led SPU to a 22-6 record in 2010 and became the first coach to direct the Falcons to a league title in his inaugural season. He was voted the 2010 GNAC Coach of the Year. Looney, who led alma mater Eastern Oregon University to the quarterfinals of the 2009 NAIA Division II Tournament, was hired May 26, 2009 as the coach at SPU. He won his opening nine games on the SPU sidelines, the first coach to win more than his first three for the Falcons. Looney, 36, has a 153-75 (.671) career record, including a 95-55 record in five seasons with Eastern Oregon. He directed EOU to back-to-back NAIA Tournament appearances in 2008 and 2009.

Giant Killers
Seattle Pacific is an NCAA Division II competitor that won three of its last four games against Division I opponents, all of them road exhibitions. The Falcons, who were 69-68 victors at Arizona on Oct. 27, defeated Eastern Washington (87-82) and Nevada (84-81) on the road in last season's exhibition contests. SPU lost 77-60 at Washington on Nov. 4. This year's two encounters increase to 18 the number of Division I foes the Falcons have faced during the last eight seasons.

Seven-Year Surge
The Falcons posted a 146-59 record over the previous seven seasons, 12 more victories than any Great Northwest Athletic Conference team during that span. SPU compiled a 20-9 record in 2005, 26-6 in 2006, 18-10 in 2007, 21-8 in 2008, 19-10 in 2009, 22-6 in 2010 and 20-10 last season. The 146 combined wins are the second-highest seven-year total in school history, topped only by a 154-win run from 1996 to 2002. The Falcons competed in seven straight NCAA Division II Tournaments (2005-10), advancing to the national semifinals in 2006.

2011 Review
Seattle Pacific compiled a 20-10 record in 2011 en route to its seventh straight NCAA Division II Tournament berth. The Falcons placed third in the GNAC (12-6) and were the league's last team standing in the 2011 playoffs after upsetting fifth-ranked Central Washington 76-63 during a first-round game in Ellensburg. The Falcons will look to replace two starters, leading 3-point shooter Jeff Downs (95 treys) and top rebounder Ryan Sweet (7.2 rpg). Also departed is Chris Banchero, the 2010 West Region Player of the Year who missed the final 19 games last season due to a knee injury. He amassed 22.4 points and 5.6 assists per game before being sidelined.


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