While senior Jay-R Strowbridge may be new to the Civil War rivalry, few players on the Oregon men’s basketball team have made a bigger impact in the Ducks’ wins over in-state foe Oregon State this season.
In Oregon’s 82-63 blowout victory at Matthew Knight Arena, Strowbridge, who celebrated his 23rd birthday on Saturday, came off the bench to score a career-high 26 points on 10-for-16 shooting.
The Huntsville, Ala., native led Oregon in scoring for the first time this season and was one of three Duck players to finish in double figures. He became the only player other than fellow senior Joevan Catron to surpass the 20-point mark this year.
“My teammates made plays for me,” Strowbridge said, who finished the game 6 for 9 from behind the three-point line. “They found me open, whether it was in the corner or transition, but we couldn’t do that without defensive rebounding.”
Oregon was outrebounded in the game, 35-28, but forced 19 Oregon State turnovers to complete the sweep of the annual Civil War series for the first time since the 2007-08 season.
“It’s real big to me,” Strowbridge said. “Definitely now, knowing the meaning of Civil War, any type of rivalry game, I know this was a big game.
“Of course me being a senior, I want to play it out and hopefully have some postseason.”
For the season, Strowbridge ranks third on the team in scoring, averaging 10 points in fewer than 25 minutes per night. He’s reached double-figures in six of Oregon’s last eight games.
Strowbridge, along with juniors Malcolm Armstead and Teondre Williams, continued to give the Ducks big minutes in reserve action. Oregon had a 42-39 advantage bench points en route to its seventh Pacific-10 Conference win of the season.
Oregon and USC now sit in fourth place in the league standings, trailing Arizona, UCLA and Washington heading into next weekend’s home series against Stanford and Cal.
“I’m really happy for the guys, in particular Jay-R,” First-year Oregon coach Dana Altman said. “That was really a special performance by him.”
Altman was pleased with the Ducks 19 assists on 25 made field goals, which led to a 46.3-percent shooting performance. Behind Strowbridge’s six made three-pointers, Oregon connected on 13 of its 26 shots from beyond the arc to finish with a season-high 50 percent mark.
Oregon State wasn’t nearly as explosive offensively, finishing the night 4 for 21 from distance, with redshirt senior Lathen Wallace coming off the bench to sink all four of the Beavers’ three-pointers.
Third-year Oregon State coach Craig Robinson said the loss was a simple matter of not making shots when the Beavers needed them most, while the Ducks seemed to make everything they put up on the other end.
“They were very well prepared,” Robinson said, “and they made shots when they had to make shots.”
Offensively, Armstead distributed extremely well, finishing the game with nine points and a season-high 13 assists. Catron and sophomore E.J. Singler chipped in 13 points each, while grabbing six and seven rebounds, respectively.
Singler, however, was quick to defer the attention to his senior leader.
“Jay-R was on fire today and everyone knew it,” Singler said. “That’s what good teams do, they recognize it and they get the ball to the person with the hot hand and he definitely had it today and he pretty much knocked all his shots down.”
For Altman, putting in the extra work before after practice is starting to pay off, not only for Strowbridge, but the team as a whole.
“There’s no replacing hard work,” Altman said. “If you don’t put time on your shot, I’ve had really good shooters in the past and it’s amazing, the really good shooters put a lot of time in. I’ve never had a really good shooter who doesn’t put a lot of time in — it’s that simple.”
[email protected]
Strowbridge carries Ducks over Beavers with career day
Daily Emerald
February 20, 2011
0
More to Discover