It’s time to write a new chapter in the Hawaii hoops history book. After 33 years in the only home it has ever known — the Western Athletic Conference — UH turns the page to a Big West Conference both rich in coaching tradition and hungry for a return to glory on the national stage.
Each member of the 10-team, California-centric league opens up play Saturday against its travel partner. The Rainbow Warriors (6-5) get the team with the best nonconference record, Cal State Northridge (9-3), at 7:30 p.m., or a half hour after UH women’s hoops finishes.
"We’re excited about going in and seeing what we can do," UH coach Gib Arnold said. "It is going to be different from what we’re used to. We’re going to be a little bit behind in that we don’t know the other teams like the other coaches do. But they don’t know us, either."
UH, picked fourth in the BWC preseason media poll, will contend with some of the old guard in trying to create a new tradition. The league boasts longtime coaches in Pacific’s Bob Thomason (25 years), CSUN’s Bobby Braswell (17), and UC Santa Barbara’s Bob Williams (16).
The 44-year Big West has one men’s basketball national title to its name. Jerry Tarkanian’s Runnin’ Rebels of UNLV were in the league when they thumped Duke by 30 for the 1990 championship.
The Dean of the Big West, Thomason, is ready to admit a few more pupils before he retires after this season and Pacific moves on to the West Coast Conference. San Diego State and Boise State are scheduled to join the BWC starting next season.
"When we started, with Vegas, Fresno State and New Mexico State, we had a great conference," said Thomason, the BWC career leader in wins. "There were three or four teams going to the NCAAs. Had two teams sometimes in the top 20. We were at the top in the West. And then people started leaving the conference, it became more of a California conference, a lot of Division II teams went Division I, came in and it kind of got watered down. And then there’s been the transition of Long Beach, not being very good, and it’s always been one of the better teams in our league. So it’s had its ups and downs. But now, I think with Hawaii coming in, and San Diego State and Boise coming in, I really think it has the chance to get back to those days."
Long Beach State, the longest-tenured member at 42 years, has been the banner-carrier in more recent years, along with UCSB. The 49ers have won two straight championships under Dan Monson, and are favored again this season. Other teams have received attention too, like Cal Poly when it upset then-No. 11 UCLA at Pauley Pavilion on Nov. 25.
Some BWC coaches feel the race is wide open for seeding in the eight-team BWC tournament in Anaheim, Calif., in March.
"The difference between the top third and the bottom third is really about five or six points a night," said fourth-year Cal Poly coach Joe Callero. "Whoever ends up being in the top three of four of conference standings at the end of the year, has likely won maybe two or three last-second games at the buzzer."
It will be an ongoing adjustment for the ‘Bows, even with relatively easy road trips compared to the far-flung WAC.
The Big West has a reputation for smallball. Plenty of zones and traps, more so than in the WAC.
Also, after Utah State and Idaho left the BWC in 2005, the BWC was confined entirely in California. In other words, no grueling road trips once conference play starts up.
"This is really strange territory for us," said CSUN’s Braswell upon arrival in the islands on Thursday. "It’s been a pretty comfortable situation (in recent years), no one’s spending time on planes flying cross-country the last few years. We’ve had to do that this year.
"But I think it’s a good thing for our league having a Hawaii in there. It adds a different dimension to our conference, a little flair. A uniqueness to what we do as a conference. Hawaii’s always been a quality basketball program. It’s going to help them, recruiting-wise, it’s going to help us, recruiting-wise."
BIG WEST CONFERENCE OUTLOOK
Cal Poly (4-6) Coach: Joe Callero (fourth year)
Preseason pick: 7th
Key players: Jr. F Chris Eversley (16.4 ppg, 7.7 rpg); Fr. F Brian Bennett (10.2 ppg, .560 FG%)
Notes: Poly’s 70-68 defeat of then-No. 11 UCLA on Nov. 25 was first win over ranked foe in 19 years as a Division I team … Mustangs are second-best in country at fewest turnovers per game at 9.3 and third in A/T ratio at 1.58.
Cal St. Fullerton (6-5)
Coach: Andy Newman (first year)
Preseason pick: 2nd
Key players: Sr. G D.J. Seeley (18.8 ppg, 4.1 apg); Sr. G Kwame Vaughn (18.3 ppg, 5.1 rpg)
Notes: Fullerton has the top two scorers in BWC in preseason all-league picks Seeley and Vaughn … Newman, the interim head coach, was associate head coach the last five seasons for Bob Burton and took over when Burton stepped down in May. … Titans average 83.5 ppg, fourth in the country.
Cal St. Northridge (9-3)
Coach: Bobby Braswell (17th year)
Preseason pick: 8th
Key players: So. G/F Stephan Hicks (17.8 ppg, 8.5 rpg); Jr. G Josh Greene (12.8 ppg, .929 FT%); So. F/C Stephen Maxwell (12.1 ppg, 6.9 rpg)
Notes: CSUN’s rally from a 21-point halftime deficit for a win at Utah on Dec. 21 was the biggest comeback in Braswell’s tenure, and marked the fastest Matadors ever reached nine wins in program’s 55-year history. … No seniors and three juniors on team; average years of college experience (0.65) makes CSUN youngest team in country.
Hawaii (6-5)
Coach: Gib Arnold (third year)
Preseason pick: 4th
Key players: Sr. C Vander Joaquim (15.6 ppg, 8.1 rpg); Jr. F Christian Standhardinger (15.5 ppg, 7.8 rpg); Jr. G Brandon Spearman (11.2 ppg, 1.2 spg)
Notes: Combined record of teams to beat UH: 47-12 (.796). Combined record of teams UH beat: 15-54, (.217). .. ‘Bows lead BWC in rebounding margin (+8.9), but are worst in turnover margin (-4.45). … Senior point guard Jace Tavita leads the BWC in total assists (62) and assists per game (5.6).
Long Beach St. (4-7)
Coach: Dan Monson (sixth year)
Preseason pick: 1st
Key players: Sr. F James Ennis (16.9 ppg, 7.7 rpg); Jr. F Dan Jennings (11.0 ppg, 6.9 rpg); So. G Mike Caffey (10.5 ppg, 4.5 apg).
Notes: The Beach was the preseason pick to win a third straight BWC title. Monson scheduled brutally tough again this year. Among 49ers’ losses are (ranks at time of game), vs. No. 11 North Carolina (78-63), at No. 10 Arizona (94-72), at No. 4 Syracuse (84-53), at No. 7 Ohio State (89-55).
Pacific (6-6)
Coach: Bob Thomason (25th year)
Preseason pick: 6th
Key players: Sr. G Lorenzo McCloud (12.3 ppg, 3.8 apg); G Ross Rivera (9.9 ppg, .522 FG%)
Notes: Thomason, the school and Big West career leader in wins entering the season (414), announced this will be his last at the helm of his alma mater just as the Tigers prepare to move into the West Coast Conference. … All five starters return from last season’s 11-19 team in which UH split two home-and-home games.
UC Davis (4-7)
Coach: Jim Les (second year)
Preseason pick: 9th
Key players: So. G Corey Hawkins (17.5 ppg, .912 FT%); Jr. G Ryan Sypkens (16.2 ppg, .517 FG%); Sr. G Ryan Howley (6.9 ppg, 10.5 rpg).
Notes: Aggies have won three of four … Sypkens is fourth in the country in 3-pointers made (47) and 23rd in average (.522). Howley is the league’s only double-figure rebounder.
UC Irvine (6-7)
Coach: Russell Turner (third year)
Preseason pick: 3rd
Key players: Sr. G Daman Starring (13.3 ppg, 4.6 rpg), Sr. G/F Michael Wilder (8.5 ppg, 5.5 rpg).
Notes: UCI is the stingiest team in the league; its .356 field-goal percentage defense is 11th in the nation, and they give up a league-low 62.8 points per game. … All five starters return from last season’s 12-20 team.
UC Riverside (3-9)
Coach: Jim Woolridge (fifth year)
Preseason pick: 10th
Key players: Jr. F Chris Harriel (10.4 ppg, 4.4 rpg); Fr. F Josh Fox (9.3 ppg, 6.4 rpg)
Notes: UCR has a self-imposed postseason ban this year due to APR … Highlanders have 11 newcomers, and had to replace 82.8 percent of 2011-12 scoring. UCR twice this season has set a program low in points in the shot-clock era, 30 vs. Fresno State on Nov. 14 and only 26 points in a 44-point loss at USC on Dec. 15.
UC Santa Barbara (4-7)
Coach: Bob Williams (16th year)
Preseason pick: 5th
Key players: So. C Alan Williams (16.3 ppg, 9.7 rpg); Fr. F Taran Brown (12.7 ppg, 5.5 rpg)
Notes: The Gauchos are the third-youngest team in the country, and had the nation’s top-ranked strength of schedule as of this week. … They lost their top two scorers from the 20-11 team that finished runner-up to LBSU.