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Elaine Thompson / AP

Elaine Thompson / AP

Click here for our full game story from last night’s 63-59 victory over Montana.

Here’s some further thoughts and observations from the game:

I like the move to start Tyreese Breshers. Having his rebounding and scoring on the floor more often will only be good for the Dawgs. The shame of it for Darnell Gant is that he’s losing his starting spot after being no less productive than last season. But, with Matthew Bryan-Amaning playing inconsistently (he had a quiet eight points, and eight rebounds last night), Coach needs more out of his frontcourt.

6’11″ center Brian Qvale had his way with the Dawgs last night. If not for four fouls limiting him to 26 minutes, this one could’ve gone differently. He finished with 13 points, 14 rebounds, and made me very concerned about how the Huskies will handle playing against even better big men (read: Georgetown’s Greg Monroe).

Abdul Gaddy is shooting 8-29 from the field this season. His play has been up and down — not surprising for a freshman. He’ll be a major factor as he continues to develop, but what’s clear at this point is that he shouldn’t be counted on as the third scorer the Huskies are looking for behind Quincy and Isaiah.

Gaddy looks better on defense every game. He forced Montana point guard Will Cherry into turnovers on the first two possessions last night during Gaddy’s best stretch of the game.

We’re going to see nights when Elston Turner scores 20 and nights when he scores four. Turner had 11 points last night, but it took him 26 minutes to do it. Coach Romar won’t always be that patient with his streaky shooting guard.

For those of you who enjoy the Vegas side of things. The Huskies are now 1-4 against the point spread this season. The 56-point victory over Portland State was the only spread (18.5) the Huskies have covered. Last night, the Dawgs were favored by 19.5 against Montana.

I know I write about this all the time, but Scott Suggs managed one three-pointer and one rebound in 16 minutes. He missed another four shots and played unremarkable defense. I’m still of the mind that he should be the last man off the bench once the rotation is firmed up.

It shouldn’t be missed after they only won by four, and had but one blocked shot, that the Huskies played very good defense last night. They forced 19 turnovers and held Montana under 40% shooting in the second half.

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Ryan Petitt / UDubSports.com

Ryan Petitt / UDubSports.com

The Washington Huskies defeated the Montana Grizzlies, 63-59 Sunday night at Hec Edmundson Pavilion, raising their record to 5-0 in advance of their first road trip of the season.

The least you should know:

The Huskies never got going offensively against Montana’s matchup zone defense, shooting 24.2% in the first half, and 30.8% for the game.

Elston Turner was the closest thing the Huskies had to an offensive star tonight, scoring 11 points on 4-8 shooting, but only hit 2-6 from beyond-the arc.

To read the rest of the game post (for free, of course), please click here to go over to UDubSports.com.

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UW Montana preview copyThe Huskies (4-0) will play the Montana Grizzlies (4-1) on Sunday night at Hec Edmundson Pavilion at 6:00 PM.

The game will be broadcast on Fox Sports Northwest and KJR-950 in Seattle, or your local Husky radio affiliate elsewhere (click here to find yours). Tickets are still available through GoHuskies.com and start at $20 each.

What you need to know about the Huskies:

The Huskies come into the game at a perfect 4-0, having defeated San Jose State, 80-70, in their last game on Friday, November 20. While the final result of the game was rarely in doubt, the Huskies didn’t play their best against the Spartans, who employed a zone defense.

The Huskies are ranked #14 in the nation in both the AP poll and the Coaches’ poll.

Quincy Pondexter has put together a start for the ages, averaging 24 points and 12 rebounds so far.

Freshman Abdul Gaddy is coming off his best game yet (seven assists, four points, zero turnovers), and looks more confident with each passing day. His 3.5/1 assist-to-turnover rate is tops among Huskies averaging 15+ minutes per game.

This will be the 51st meeting between the Huskies and Grizzlies, with UW winning 41 of the first 50 games in the series. They last played last season, with the Huskies winning, 75-53.

Projected lineup: G – Venoy Overton, G – Isaiah Thomas, F – Quincy Pondexter, F – Darnell Gant, F – Matthew Bryan-Amaning

Husky to watch:

Freshman forward, Clarence Trent: After not playing on opening night, Trent played eight minutes in the second game, and 13 in each of the last two. As Coach Romar has said several times, Trent “makes things happen” when he’s in the game. If Clarence continues to make so much impact with every appearance, he’ll move himself up the depth chart, and will need to be considered for a regular rotation spot as the season progresses. He’s averaging four points and almost four rebounds in 11.3 minutes per game.

What you need to know about Montana:

Montana comes into the game at 4-1, most recently picking up an impressive road win over Oregon, 68-55, on Monday night.

The Grizzlies went 17-12 last season overall, and 11-5 in conference play, finishing in a second-place tie in the Big Sky Conference. Montana was picked to finish second in the Big Sky coaches’ poll, and third in the media poll.

Head coach Wayne Tinkle enters his fourth season at Montana and returns four of his top six performers, including his two best players, from last season.

The most dangerous Grizzly is last season’s Big Sky newcomer of the year (and all-conference selection), guard Anthony Johnson. Considered by many to be the best player in the conference, Johnson was named last week’s Big Sky player-of-the-week, and is averaging 22 points, 4 assists and 3.4 rebounds per game.

Kirkland native, senior guard Ryan Staudacher, led the Big Sky in three-point percentage in 2008/2009, and averages more than five long-range attempts per game. 6’11″ center, Brian Qvale averages 11.6 points, 7.6 boards, and two blocks.

Projected lineup: G – Anthony Johnson, G – Ryan Staudacher, G – Will Cherry, F – Jack McGillis, C – Brian Qvale

Grizzly to watch:

Senior guard, Anthony Johnson: Johnson is adept at penetrating and drawing fouls, getting to the line 15 times during the upset at Oregon. When defenses collapse on him, he can dish to backcourt-mate Staudacher in the corner. In last year’s meeting, the Huskies held Johnson to 11 points on 4-13 shooting, and only sent him to the line four times. The Dawgs will need to throw a mix of defenders (Overton, Holiday, and Pondexter) at him and hope for a similar result this time around.

A QUICK word from the opposition:

Montana head coach Wayne Tinkle was pressed for time when I got in touch but was able to fire off some quick-hit responses to a few questions. Here’s what we discussed:

Montlake Madness: Please give me the capsule scouting report on your team as you see it at this point — style of play, strengths, weaknesses, etc.

Coach Tinkle: We are a balanced team inside and out and play multiple defenses.

MM: What’s your strategy for beating Washington?

CT: We need to play at our pace and take good care of the ball.

MM: You were an assistant coach when Montana shocked Nevada in the 2006 NCAA Tournament. How much extra meaning do your regular season games against bigger conference schools take on, knowing there are so few opportunities before tournament time to test yourselves against those schools likely to get the high seeds come tournament time?

CT: It’s important to gain confidence.

MM: Can you give me your brief scouting report on the Huskies?

CT: The Huskies are very deep and dangerous.  We must find a way to slow them down.

MM: You’ve got a few players from the Puget Sound area on your roster. Describe what it means for a local player to come compete in a game close to home.

CT: It’s important to bring players back to their homes and play in areas that we recruit.

MM: What’s your coaching philosophy? How do you approach being a basketball coach and also being a role model to your players?

CT: My focus offensively is solid, balanced scoring inside and out.  I’ll change tempo’s depending on our opponents strengths and weaknesses.  Defensively I like to mix things up to keep our opponent from getting into a rhythm.

The path to victory:

Pressure defense: The Grizzlies turned the ball over 19 times against the Ducks pressure on Monday and still won by 13 points. If Montana thought Oregon’s defense was annoying, the Dawgs have the capability to be downright stifling. If young point guards Will Cherry (freshman) and Shawn Stockton (sophomore; John Stockton’s nephew) leave Hec Ed wondering what in the world just hit them, the Huskies should be in good shape.

Beating the zone: We wrote a longer post on this Wednesday. Montana shut down Oregon’s offense, holding them to 33% shooting, using a matchup zone. While the Huskies didn’t look good against San Jose State’s zone, they managed to grind the game out and win. Montana is a better team than San Jose State, and this will be a good opportunity for the Huskies, especially Isaiah Thomas, to gain more experience. Some day soon, an opponent will be too good for the Huskies to beat without playing their best, and facing the zone cannot be an excuse for mediocre execution.

What I expect:

I  expect a confident Montana team will show up, fresh off the victory at Oregon. Coach Tinkle has scheduled two tough road games each year for his team since taking over, and many of these Grizzlies are veterans of games at Duke, Gonzaga, and UW. They won’t be in awe of the #14 Huskies.

I expect Abdul Gaddy to see as many minutes as Venoy Overton as the freshman’s play continues to improve. I also expect Tyreese Breshers to continue eating into Darnell Gant’s time on the floor.

I expect the Huskies to come out swinging after the so-so performance last time out. I’m picking the Dawgs by 20, 86-66.

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