1982–83 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team

1982–83 Idaho Vandals men's basketball
Far West Classic Champions
ConferenceBig Sky Conference
Record20–9 (9–5 Big Sky)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
Home arenaKibbie Dome
Seasons
1982–83 Big Sky men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Nevada 10 4   .714 18 11   .621
Weber State 10 4   .714 23 8   .742
Montana 9 5   .643 21 8   .724
Idaho 9 5   .643 20 9   .690
Idaho State 7 7   .500 10 17   .370
Boise State 5 9   .357 10 17   .370
Montana State 3 11   .214 10 17   .370
Northern Arizona 3 11   .214 10 16   .385
Conference tournament winner

The 1982–83 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team represented the University of Idaho during the 1982–83 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The two-time defending champions of the Big Sky Conference, Vandals were led by fifth-year head coach Don Monson and played their home games on campus at the Kibbie Dome in Moscow, Idaho.

With expanded student seating, the Vandals set basketball attendance records at the Kibbie Dome with 11,000 against Washington State on December 4,[1] and eight hundred more on February 12 against Montana for a conference record.[2] The former was an overtime victory, the third straight over the Cougars in the Battle of the Palouse,[1] on the same night that the resurgent Vandal football team narrowly lost a I-AA playoff game on the road, televised on cable by WTBS of Atlanta.[3] The latter with Montana was a deflating nineteen-point defeat to snap the 43-game home winning streak, begun over three years earlier in 1980.[2] Idaho won its final three home games, but attendance fell; the highest was 8,000 for the finale against Boise State, Monson's hundredth and final win at the helm.[4] Consecutive road losses the week prior at Idaho State and Weber State had eliminated any chance of another regular season title and the opportunity to host the conference tourney.[5]

The Vandals successfully defended their title in the Far West Classic at Portland in late December,[6] and had a 12–1 record in mid-January, and appeared capable of a third consecutive conference title. Four road defeats in conference and the home loss to Montana resulted in a tie for third place in the regular season with the Grizzlies, who swept their two-game series. With an opportunity to three-peat, the Vandals were the low seed in the four-team Big Sky tourney in Reno. They lost by five points to host Nevada-Reno in the semifinals, and neither was selected for the 52-team NCAA tournament; Weber State won the final and advanced.[7]

Idaho became the first Big Sky team to earn an invitation to the NIT,[8][9][10][11] but lost in the first round at Oregon State;[12] they led by three at the half at Gill Coliseum, but lost by eighteen.[13][14] the Beavers had also ended UI's season the previous year, in the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament. In both seasons, Idaho defeated OSU in the Far West Classic in late December, but lost the rematch in March.[8]

Between semesters on December 20, the Vandals played a home game at Columbia High School in Richland, Washington, where senior guard Brian Kellerman had starred, and 4,100 packed the Art Dawald Gym for the homecoming. The popular Monson had coached at nearby Pasco High School for nine years (1967–76), and senior center Kelvin Smith was a PHS graduate.[15] Idaho made a lengthy trip to South Carolina in January for a nationally televised game on CBS.[16][17]

Aftermath

[edit]

Several days after the NIT loss in Corvallis, Monson expectedly left his alma mater for the University of Oregon in Eugene;[18][19][20] he led the Ducks for nine seasons in the Pac-10, with three NIT appearances. Assistant coach Barry Collier applied for the Idaho vacancy, but athletic Bill Belknap hired Bill Trumbo, a junior college head coach from northern California;[21][22] the Vandals returned to the cellar of the conference in each of the next three seasons and attendance plummeted.[23][24] In March 1986, Trumbo was succeeded by Tim Floyd, an assistant under hall of fame head coach Don Haskins at Texas-El Paso.[25][26]

With Monson for all five seasons at Idaho, Collier joined him at Oregon for three more, then was at Stanford for three seasons under Mike Montgomery. He became a head coach at his alma mater Butler in 1989, led the Bulldogs for eleven years, then went to Nebraska for six seasons.

This ended the best four-year stretch in the history of the program; the freshmen that entered in the fall of 1979 (Brian Kellerman, Phil Hopson, and reserve Ben Ross)[27] and Monson led the Vandals to an overall record of 89–26 (.774) and three national postseason appearances. (In each of the previous five seasons of the late 1970s, Idaho had finished last in the Big Sky.) A four-year starter, Kellerman was first-team all-conference for three years (honorable mention as a freshman),[28][29] and was the Big Sky player of the year as a sophomore,[30] the second of three consecutive years in which that honor went to a Vandal guard. (From the Tri-Cities, Kellerman was the player of the year in Washington as high school senior in 1979, but was passed on by the Pac-10 schools.)

For the four seasons, Idaho had a home record of 51–2 (.962) with a 43-game winning streak. With only two home games, they went 10–5 overall against the four Northwest schools of the Pac-10, the strongest at the time was Oregon State; the Beavers won three of the five. Oregon dropped all three, the Cougars lost the last three, and Washington the last two. The Vandals also swept all four games from Gonzaga, (with hall of fame point guard John Stockton for the last three),[31][32][33] and won consecutive Far West Classics in Portland.[6]

All-conference

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In addition to Kellerman, senior center Kelvin Smith was also named to the All-Big Sky team; he was honorable mention the previous season. Senior forward Phil Hopson was on the second team for a third consecutive year, and junior point guard Stan Arnold was honored as the conference's newcomer of the year.[28][29]

Roster

[edit]
1982–83 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team
Players Coaches
Pos. # Name Height Weight Year Previous school Hometown
G 10 Stan Arnold 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 185 lb (84 kg) Jr San Jose City College San Jose, CA
G 12 Brian Kellerman 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 190 lb (86 kg) Sr Richland HS Richland, WA
G 14 Joe Sweeney 5 ft 11 in (1.8 m)
Jr Skyline College San Bruno, CA
F 24 Pete Prigge 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 190 lb (86 kg) Jr Fort Vancouver HS Vancouver, WA
F 30 Zane Frazier 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 205 lb (93 kg) RS So Fairfax HS Los Angeles, CA
F 31 Antwine Murchison Current redshirt 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 190 lb (86 kg) So St. Mary's HS Stockton, CA
G 32 Ben Ross 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Sr Coeur d'Alene HS Coeur d'Alene, ID
F 33 E.C. Morgan 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
Fr Jesuit HS Portland, OR
G 34 Matt Haskins Current redshirt 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 170 lb (77 kg) So Columbia HS Richland, WA
C 40 Kelvin Smith 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 195 lb (88 kg) Sr Taft (CA), Pasco HS Pasco, WA
G 42 Freeman Watkins 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 187 lb (85 kg) Jr Eisenhower HS Utica, MI
F 44 Phil Hopson 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 190 lb (86 kg) Sr Jefferson HS Portland, OR
F 52 Pete Reitz 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 210 lb (95 kg) Fr Placer HS Auburn, CA
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • (W) Walk-on

Roster

Schedule and results

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Date
time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (attendance)
city, state
Fri, Nov 12*
8:00 pm
Athletes in Action (Canada)
(Exhibition)
W 78–73 
Kibbie Dome (5,000)
Moscow, Idaho
Fri, Nov 26*
7:00 pm
vs. Loyola Marymount
Sun Met Classic
W 67–60  1–0
Selland Arena (6,530)
Fresno, California
Sat, Nov 27*
9:00 pm
at Fresno State
Sun Met Classic (final)
L 34–38  1–1
Selland Arena (6,530)
Fresno, California
Wed, Dec 1*
8:00 pm
Washington W 51–46  2–1
Kibbie Dome (6,100)
Moscow, Idaho
Sat, Dec 4*
8:00 pm
Washington State
Battle of the Palouse
W 62–58 OT 3–1
Kibbie Dome (11,000)
Moscow, Idaho
Tue, Dec 7*
8:00 pm
Eastern Washington W 67–56  4–1
Kibbie Dome (5,000)
Moscow, Idaho
Thu, Dec 9*
8:00 pm
St. Martin's W 65–44  5–1
Kibbie Dome (4,800)
Moscow, Idaho
Sat, Dec 18*
8:00 pm
UC Irvine W 84–73  6–1
Kibbie Dome (6,500)
Moscow, Idaho
Mon, Dec 20*
8:00 pm
vs. Midwestern State (TX) W 87–59  7–1
Art Dawald Gym (4,100)
Richland, Washington
Sun, Dec 26*
9:00 pm
vs. Portland
Far West Classic
W 63–57  8–1
Memorial Coliseum (5,511)
Portland, Oregon
Tue, Dec 28*
7:00 pm
vs. Oregon
Far West Classic (semifinal)
W 56–53  9–1
Memorial Coliseum (9,506)
Portland, Oregon
Wed, Dec 29*
9:00 pm
vs. Oregon State
Far West Classic (final)
W 42–41 2OT 10–1
Memorial Coliseum (12,117)
Portland, Oregon
Sat, Jan 8*
7:30 pm
at Gonzaga
Rivalry
W 65–57  11–0
Kennedy Pavilion (4,477)
Spokane, Washington
Thu, Jan 13
6:30 pm
at Northern Arizona W 58–55  12–1
(1–0)
Walkup Skydome (4,135)
Flagstaff, Arizona
Sat, Jan 15
7:30 pm
at Nevada-Reno L 69–73 OT 12–2
(1–1)
Centennial Coliseum (5,048)
Reno, Nevada
Thu, Jan 20
8:00 pm
Weber State W 59–49  13–2
(2–1)
Kibbie Dome (7,700)
Moscow, Idaho
Sat, Jan 22*
2:00 pm, CBS
at South Carolina L 54–56  13–3
Carolina Coliseum (9,673)
Columbia, South Carolina
Thu, Jan 27
6:30 pm
at Montana L 49–59  13–4
(2–2)
Dahlberg Arena (9,310)
Missoula, Montana
Sat, Jan 29
7:00 pm
at Montana State W 66–38  14–4
(3–2)
Brick Breeden Fieldhouse (3,304)
Bozeman, Montana
Tue, Feb 1
8:00 pm
Idaho State W 87–70  15–4
(4–2)
Kibbie Dome (8,500)
Moscow, Idaho
Sat, Feb 5
6:30 pm
at Boise State W 67–56  16–4
(5–2)
BSU Pavilion (10,145)
Boise, Idaho
Thu, Feb 10
8:00 pm
Montana State W 73–69  17–4
(6–2)
Kibbie Dome (6,000)
Moscow, Idaho
Sat, Feb 12
8:00 pm
Montana L 61–80  17–5
(6–3)
Kibbie Dome (11,800)
Moscow, Idaho
Thu, Feb 17
8:00 pm
Nevada-Reno W 88–78  18–5
(7–3)
Kibbie Dome (6,500)
Moscow, Idaho
Sat, Feb 19
8:00 pm
Northern Arizona W 75–48  19–5
(8–3)
Kibbie Dome (6,500)
Moscow, Idaho
Thu, Feb 24
6:30 pm
at Idaho State L 69–77  19–6
(8–4)
ISU Minidome (5,273)
Pocatello, Idaho
Sat, Feb 26
6:30 pm
at Weber State L 47–53 OT 19–7
(8–5)
Dee Events Center (11,454)
Ogden, Utah
Sat, Mar 5
8:00 pm
Boise State W 86–70  20–7
(9–5)
Kibbie Dome (8,000)
Moscow, Idaho
Big Sky tournament
Fri, Mar 11
7:00 pm
(4) at (1) Nevada-Reno
Semifinal
L 73–78  20–8
Centennial Coliseum (5,100)
Reno, Nevada
National Invitation Tournament
Wed, Mar 16*
7:30 pm
at Oregon State
First round
L 59–77  20–9
Gill Coliseum (7,800)
Corvallis, Oregon
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Pacific Time.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Killen, John (December 5, 1982). "Vandals nip Cougars in OT, 62-58". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1B.
  2. ^ a b Killen, John (February 13, 1983). "SNAP! Montana breaks it all to stop Idaho". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1B.
  3. ^ Ramsdell, Paul (December 5, 1982). "Controversial EKU interception ends Idaho hopes". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1B.
  4. ^ Bull, Andy (March 6, 1983). "Idaho warms up for Big Sky tourney with rocket performance over BSU". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1C.
  5. ^ "Vandals: Free throws help Weber beat Idaho in overtime". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. February 27, 1983. p. 1C.
  6. ^ a b Henkel, Cathy (December 30, 1982). "Idaho, in a classic, 42-41". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 1B.
  7. ^ "Wildcats stop Nevada-Reno to win title". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. March 13, 1983. p. 1B.
  8. ^ a b Blanchette, John (March 14, 1983). "NIT picks – surprise – Idaho". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. p. 13.
  9. ^ Killen, John (March 16, 1983). "Idaho-OSU rematch has plenty riding on it for Vandals". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1C.
  10. ^ Henkel, Cathy (March 14, 1983). "Beavers at home but not for NCAA". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 1C.
  11. ^ Henkel, Cathy (March 16, 1983). "NIT game ends season for one of them tonight". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 2B.
  12. ^ Blanchette, John (March 17, 1983). "Beavers pelt Vandals out of tourney". Spokesman-Review. Washington. p. 25.
  13. ^ Henkel, Cathy (March 17, 1983). "Beavers win first NIT". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 1C.
  14. ^ Killen, John (March 17, 1983). "OSU's strong second half stymies UI". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1B.
  15. ^ Smith, Bruce (December 21, 1982). "Idaho wins 'Homecoming' date". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. p. 25.
  16. ^ "Vandals, Cougars await national attention". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. January 22, 1983. p. 1C.
  17. ^ "Late steal, bucket help Gamecocks ruin Idaho's television appearance". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. January 23, 1983. p. 1C.
  18. ^ "Monson accepts Duck job". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). March 22, 1983. p. 19.
  19. ^ Killen, John (March 22, 1983). "Monson chooses challenge at Oregon: Bids farewell to Idaho after five seasons". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). p. 1C.
  20. ^ Kayfes, Dave (March 22, 1983). "Monson brightens a dark day". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 1C.
  21. ^ Devlin, Vince (April 2, 1983). "JC coach handed the Vandal reins". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). p. 13.
  22. ^ Ramsdell, Paul (November 25, 1983). "Trumbo to continue Vandal excitement". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). p. 1C.
  23. ^ Devlin, Vince (March 11, 1986). "Close shaves cut Trumbo from UI". Spokane Chronicle. Washington. p. B1.
  24. ^ McCanlies, Kathy (March 18, 1986). "28-59 spells doom for Trumbo". Argonaut. (Moscow, Idaho). (University of Idaho). p. 11.
  25. ^ "Idaho selects Floyd for basketball coach". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. Associated Press. March 23, 1986. p. 7B.
  26. ^ Devlin, Vince (March 24, 1986). "Vandals feel landing 'finest assistant' was a real steal". Spokane Chronicle. (Washington). p. C2.
  27. ^ Killen, John (March 10, 1983). "Doing his part". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). p. 1B.
  28. ^ a b "Kellerman honored". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. March 16, 1983. p. C2.
  29. ^ a b "Big Sky: Kellerman, Smith, Hopson, and Arnold honored". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). March 16, 1983. p. 2C.
  30. ^ "Kellerman honored". Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). March 12, 1981. p. 52.
  31. ^ Blanchette, John (January 8, 1983). "DePaul can wait: Idaho a tougher test for Bulldogs". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). p. 16.
  32. ^ Blanchette, John (January 9, 1983). "UI's Zane zaps Zags". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). p. C1.
  33. ^ "Vandals: UI holds on to beat Zags". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). January 9, 1983. p. 1B.
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