THE MATCHUPÂ
Teams: Tarleton (11-13, 6-5 WAC) vs. Abilene Christian (16-7, 7-5 WAC)Â
Date: 7 p.m. CT on Saturday, Feb. 12
Location: Wisdom Gym in Stephenville, TexasÂ
TELEVISION: ESPN+Â
John Liddle, Play-by-PlayÂ
Mike Hardge, AnalystÂ
RADIO: Tarleton Sports Network, KTRL 90.5 FMÂ
Byron Anderson, Play-by-PlayÂ
ABOUT THE MATCHUPÂ
-
The Texans and Wildcats are meeting for the first time on the Western Athletic Conference stage. Tarleton concludes the 2021-22 campaign at ACU on March 5.Â
-
Tarleton owns a 46-35 edge in the all-time series over ACU.Â
-
The Texans and Wildcats last met in Stephenville on Dec. 8, 2012 - a 64-50 win for Tarleton. The Texans are 18-2 at home vs. ACU since 1988.Â
-
The rivalry has been lopsided in favor of Tarleton since 1988 when former head coach and current Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics Lonn Reisman took the reins. Tarleton is 33-10 against ACU in that span.Â
-
ACU is the most recent victor in the series, having defeated Tarleton 69-48 in Abilene last season.Â
-
Saturday pits two of the nation's premier pressure defenses opposite one another. ACU leads the nation in turnovers forced per game (21.9) and turnover margin (+9.2). Tarleton is tied for 12th with No. 6 Houston among all D1 teams in turnover margin (+4.5) and ranks third in the WAC in turnovers forced per game (16.7).Â
-
The game bills as a total contrast of styles offensively. ACU leads the WAC in scoring with an average of 78 points per game. The Wildcats attempt 35 percent of their shots from downtown. They take minimal midrange jumpers. Tarleton averages 65.3 points per outing and 80 percent of its made field goals have come inside the arc.Â
-
Tarleton enters the contest riding its second three-game winning streak of the season. The Texans picked up a road sweep of Lamar and UTRGV on Jan. 26-29 and most recently fended off Chicago State 57-54 on Feb. 5 inside Wisdom GymÂ
-
It's been a season of streaks for ACU in the win-loss column. The Wildcats opened the year with consecutive losses at Utah and Texas A&M. ACU then won 11 straight ballgames. The team was victorious in its last nine nonconference outings and picked up a road sweep of Utah Valley and Dixie State on Dec. 30-Jan. 1 to begin WAC play. The Wildcats then proceeded to lose five straight games – which came against teams who currently occupy the top-five spots in the conference standings – from Jan. 8-21 and arrive in Stephenville as winners of five straight over the bottom-four teams in the WAC.Â
-
ACU has netted a combined 48 percent of its 1,794 total points scored this season via 3-pointers and free throws. The Wildcats have knocked down 159 shots from behind the arc and average 16 made free throws per game.Â
GAME COVERAGEÂ
Fans can access a live stream to the game at Plus.ESPN.com. Links to the video broadcast as well as live stats can be found on the men's basketball schedule page at TarletonSports.com. A complete radio broadcast of the game can be heard on the Tarleton Sports Network at TarletonSports.com/Watch and on the flagship station of Tarleton athletics – KTRL 90.5 FM in Stephenville. The pregame show begins 30 minutes before tipoff.Â
ATTENDING THE GAMEÂ
Fans can purchase single-game general admission tickets in one of three ways: online at TarletonSports.com/Tickets, in person at the Tarleton Athletic Ticket Office or by calling 254-968-1832. The Tarleton Athletic Ticket Office is located on the west side of Memorial Stadium and is open Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. A link to purchase tickets to all Tarleton men's basketball home games can be found on the team's schedule page at TarletonSports.com. Doors will open hone hour before tipoff at 6 p.m.Â
INSIDE THE SERIES: ABILENE CHRISTIANÂ
It's been nearly two-and-a-half decades since Tarleton fell to the Wildcats in Stephenville. Tarleton last lost at home to ACU on Feb. 24, 1998 in a 71-68 defeat.Â
Since then, the Texans have rolled to 14 straight home victories over their rivals. Tarleton's average margin of victory in that stretch is 15.1 points.Â
Tarleton is 27-2 in games vs. ACU during the 21st century. The Texans enjoyed a 12-game winning streak vs. the Wildcats from 2000-2007 - their longest in the history of the rivalry.Â
Tarleton has enjoyed similar success against the Wildcats when making the 90-mile bus ride west along Interstate 20 to Abilene. The Texans are 15-7 in road games vs. ACU since 1988.Â
Last season's 69-48 loss at ACU was an anomaly for Tarleton in the recent  history of the rivalry. The 21-point margin of defeat marked Tarleton's worst loss to the Wildcats since 1994. The Texans have lost by 20-plus points to ACU just three times over the last 34 years.Â
The Wildcats transformed 28 Texan turnovers - their most in a game as a D1 program - into 30 points in the contest. Montre Gipson finished with 10 points while Shakur Daniel snagged a career-high eight rebounds in the game.Â
ACU then went on to win the Southland Conference regular season and tournament championships and advance to the Round of 32 of the NCAA Tournament. Though ineligible for Calibri (Body) the postseason, Tarleton also closed the 2020-21 campaign by playing its best basketball. The Texans won seven of their final nine games to finish with a 10-10 overall record. Five of the victories came against conference foes. Tarleton men's basketball was one of three programs to finish at-or-above .500 in the first year of the athletic department's NCAA-mandated four-year transition phase.Â
A WIN OVER THE WILDCATS WOULD...Â
-
Extend Tarleton's winning streak to four gamesÂ
-
Match Tarleton's longest winning streak of its D1 era and be its longest against WAC opponentsÂ
-
Move the Texans' conference record two games over .500 for the second time this season at 7-5Â
-
Boost the Texans' home record to 9-3 this season, 15-6 under Gillispie, and 208-38 over the last 15 yearsÂ
-
Be Tarleton's 47th all-time victory over ACUÂ
-
Give Tarleton its 14th consecutive win over the Wildcats in Stephenville and 19th under Reisman or Gillispie
-
Increase the Texans' edge in the all-time series against ACU to 47-35Â
-
Be the Texans' 14th true D1 winÂ
-
Improve the Texans' all-time WAC record to 12-12Â
-
Spike Tarleton's record in February games to 6-2 in its D1 and WAC eraÂ
-
Make Tarleton 11-3 in games played inside the state of Texas this seasonÂ
-
Improve Tarleton's record vs. teams from Texas to 15-2 overall and 7-0 in WAC play as a D1 programÂ
-
Increase the Texans' WAC home record to 4-5 all-timeÂ
-
Be Tarleton's 11th victory in its last 16 gamesÂ
-
Give Gillispie his 170th career D1 win.Â
TEXAN NOTABLESÂ
-
Tarleton is 12-1 when leading at halftime in home games under Gillispie. The team has notched 18 wins in the Gillispie Era when leading at the half.Â
-
The Texans forced 13 turnovers in their 57-54 win over Chicago State and gave the ball away 11 times. Tarleton has now finished with a positive turnover differential in 10-of-11 conference games this season.Â
-
Tarleton scored six of the game's final eight points in its victory over Chicago State. All six points came at the charity stripe with less than a minute to go.Â
-
The Texans have trailed for a combined 6:43 during its three-game winning streak.Â
-
Tarleton has forced 45 more turnovers combined than its WAC opponents at the midpoint of conference play.Â
-
Tarleton is 14-2 in games against teams from the Lone Star State in its D1 era following its win at UTRGV on Jan. 29 . Its lone losses came against Texas A&M and ACU during the 2020-21 campaign.Â
-
The Texans rank second in the WAC in free throw percentage (74.4 percent). Tarleton has drained 15-or-more foul shots on 10 occasions this season and went 17-24 at the line in their win over UTRGV on Saturday.Â
-
Tarleton's current three-game winning streak is the program's third in its D1 era. The Texans won four straight ballgames in February 2021, then closed the 2020-21 campaign by winning three straight conference games.Â
-
Tarleton limited Chicago State to a 33 percent shooting clip (18-54) - its worst mark in conference play - in last week's victory. The Cougars attempted half of their shots from long range.Â
INDIVIDUAL NOTABLESÂ
-
Statistically, Freddy Hicks has been Tarleton's best player versus WAC foes. He leads the team in scoring (16.5 ppg) and rebounding (6.3 ppg) in WAC play. Hicks has registered four 20-point outings and scored in double figures in all-but-two of Tarleton's conference games.Â
-
Hicks has increased his scoring average (12.1 ppg) by 3.4 points since WAC play began.Â
-
Montre Gipson hardly takes a breath once he steps onto the court. The senior leads the nation in total minutes (844) and has played at least 38 minutes on 17 occasions this season.Â
-
Gipson, 5-11, ranks in the top-15 in the WAC in five major statistical categories: minutes played (1st, 844), points per game (9th, 15.1 ppg), free throw percentage (11th, .780), steals per game (T-11th, 1.3 spg), and assists per game (13th, 2.8 apg).Â
-
Gipson has scored in double figures in 21 times this season and on 34 occasions in his two-year Texan career.Â
-
Shamir Bogues is second in the WAC and tied for 26th nationally in total steals with 47.Â
-
Bogues played the full 40 minutes in Tarleton's win over Chicago State. He finished with nine points, five rebounds and two stealsÂ
-
Tahj Small leads Tarleton on the glass (5.8 rpg) and ranks second on the team in scoring (14.6 ppg). He tallied a game-high 14 points in the Texans victory over Chicago State.Â
-
Noah McDavid became the first player in Tarleton basketball history to receive multiple sets of WAC weekly accolades on Jan. 31. McDavid was named the WAC Freshman of the Week for the second time in four weeks after averaging 9.5 points and 3.5 rebounds per game in Tarleton's triumphs over Lamar and UTRGV.Â
-
McDavid has quietly been one of the top foul shooters in the WAC. The freshman has knocked down 35-39 (.897) of his attempts at the charity stripeÂ
'THE HARDEST SCHEDULE IN THE COUNTRY'Â
The words spoken by Billy Gillispie on Tarleton's Preseason WAC Media Day on Oct. 19 have never been more true.Â
Tarleton was ranked first in the nation in strength of schedule in the Pomeroy College Basketball Ratings following its game at Gonzaga on Nov. 29.Â
Six of their first seven games - all of which were on the road - came against teams ranked in the top-150 of the rankings. Three of the contests were against teams ranked in the top-10 at tipoff time. Gonzaga occupied the top spot when the teams squared off on Nov. 29, Kansas ranked No. 2 when the teams met at Allen Fieldhouse on Nov. 12 and Michigan was eighth prior to the teams' game on Nov. 24.Â
In total, 14 of the Texans' games are opposite teams currently ranked inside the top-150 while the team will play eight top- 130 programs and draw five foes listed in the top-100. Tarleton has already squared off with No. 79 Wichita State and No. 90 Stanford along with five conference foes in New Mexico State (No. 88), Grand Canyon (No. 107), Utah Valley (No. 112), Stephen F. Austin (No. 121) and Seattle U (No. 124). North Dakota State was ranked 146th at tipoff time on Nov. 22. Â
This season, Tarleton will play three teams ranked in the top-10 of the Preseason Associated Press Top 25 poll, draw six opponents who made NCAA Tournament appearances in 2021 and face 14 opponents who posted winning records last season. Abilene Christian, Gonzaga, Grand Canyon and Michigan earned automatic berths to the Big Dance in March as conference regular season and tournament champions while Kansas and Wichita State secured at-large invitations.Â
ACROSS THE RANKINGSÂ
NCAA NET Rankings Â
Tarleton sits at No. 191 ahead of Saturday's ballgame vs. Abilene Christian. The Wildcats rank No. 158 - sixth out of 13 teams in the WAC.Â
The Texans have faced off with six teams currently ranked inside the top-100 of the rankings in No. 1 Gonzaga, No. 8 Kansas, No. 47 Michigan, No. 77 New Mexico State, No. 75 Wichita State and No. 88 Stanford.Â
South Alabama was ranked 79th when Tarleton defeated the Jaguars 65-52 inside Wisdom Gym for its first win over a top-100 team.Â
NET Rankings are used by the NCAA Tournament selection committee to help set the 64-team field. The NET utilizes two factors in ranking teams: Team Value Index (factors in results, quality of opponent and location) and the team's NET efficiency (metrics scaled for quality of opponent and location). The rankings do not include games played against non-Division I opponents.Â
Pomeroy College Basketball RatingsÂ
The Texans sit at No. 185 in the rankings as of Feb. 10.Â
Tarleton is rated eighth among its conference peers. New Mexico State, UVU, GCU, Seattle U, SFA, Sam Houston (No. 160) and ACU (No. 163) are ahead of the Texans.Â
The Texans are slotted in front of California Baptist (No. 228), UTRGV (No. 277), Dixie State (No. 290), Chicago State (No. 334) and Lamar (No. 341).Â
WHAT THEY'RE SAYINGÂ
"That was tough. Billy did a great job. We saw that - how they played Michigan. Even their KU game was tough deep into the second half. On short prep, we tried to get the guys ready for that and it was harder than it looked on film. We just did a great job of surviving it. Intense, pressure on the basketball, and they front, they rake you in the lane, and they reach, and poke, and grab, and they do a good job with it."Â - Mark Few, Gonzaga head coachÂ
"You've got a chance to have a good team. A really good team. You've got interchangeable parts, everybody's about the same size, and as you get into the season, that will become much harder to score against because you guys are tough. You won't let bigs be bigs because you're tough." - Bill Self, Kansas head coachÂ
"Coach told us going in it was going to be a tough game, and they were going to pressure us a lot. That's something we didn't see against Michigan State, it was pretty much the opposite. Coach told us it was going to be a dog fight the whole time." - Christian Braun, Kansas guardÂ
"Tarleton is very good at getting into passing lanes, being active with their hands, feet, and their energy." - Juwan Howard, Michigan head coachÂ
"We got what we signed up for. They're scrappy. They play incredibly hard. They're arguably one of the hardest-playing teams in the country. They're really well-coached. Coach Gillispie is a great coach. I'm from Kentucky. I remember when he coached at Kentucky, Texas A&M and UTEP. He's done this for a long time. He's got a scrappy group. We saw it when they went to Gonzaga, we saw it when they went to Michigan, we've seen it every game they've played. They made us uncomfortable." - Richie Riley, South Alabama head coachÂ
"Billy Gillispie's teams really get after you defensively." - Isaac Brown, Wichita State head coachÂ
"The pressure certainly bothered us. Their game plan was really, really good, and they executed it very, very well." - Jerod Haase, Stanford head coachÂ
TAHJ SMALL, NOAH MCDAVID SWEEP WAC WEEKLY AWARDSÂ
Tahj Small was named the TicketSmarter WAC Player of the Week for Jan. 3-9 after leading Tarleton to home victories over Sam Houston and Stephen F. Austin on Jan. 6-8. Additionally, Noah McDavid was chosen as the WAC Freshman of the Week for his efforts in helping the Texans secure the wins. Â
A 6-4 guard, Small becomes the second player in program history to receive WAC Player of the Week honors. He joins position-mate Montre Gipson, who received the recognition on March 8 at the conclusion of the 2020-21 campaign. Â
Small averaged 23 points per game in Tarleton's home sweep of its east Texas rivals. The Durham, North Carolina native delivered the best all-around performance of his two-year Texan career in Tarleton's wire-to-wire 75-64 defeat of the Bearkats on Jan. 6. The senior racked up a game and career high 28 points on 11-14 shooting in the Texans' win.Â
His 28 points scored were an individual game high in true Division I games for Tarleton this season. Small was as efficient and aggressive as he's been offensively in the first half. He scored 16 of Tarleton's first 25 points behind a 4-4 mark from downtown and ended the half with 18 points scored to stake the Texans to a 42-31 lead. Â
Defensively, recorded a game, season and career high four steals. He played the full 40 minutes and did so despite missing Tarleton's previous two games due to COVID-19 protocols. Â
Small followed up his career night with an 18-point, five rebound effort in a come-from-behind 77-71 overtime victory over SFA two days later. He scored on two of Tarleton's first three possessions in overtime to give the Texans a 68-66 lead they never relinquished. Small was 6-6 from the foul line in the victory. Â
McDavid's accolade is equally significant. He is the first player in Tarleton basketball history to receive WAC Freshman of the Week honors. Â
The 6-5 guard was instrumental in helping Tarleton upset the Lumberjacks on Saturday. McDavid played 40 minutes for the first time in his career, finishing with six points along with career-highs in rebounds (five) and steals (three). Â
His lone field goal of the night was one of the biggest buckets of the evening. With Tarleton nursing a 68-67 lead with under 3:00 to play in overtime, McDavid attempted a 3-pointer from the left baseline. The shot clanged off the front iron, but McDavid curled right around two Lumberjack defenders, secured his own rebound and converted a contested second-chance layup to keep Tarleton in front 70-67 with 2:20 to play. Â
The Texans closed the game on a 9-4 run beginning with McDavid's layup. Â
Two days prior, McDavid scored nine points on the strength of three makes from downtown in 37 minutes of action in the Texans' win over the Bearkats. McDavid was a part of Tarleton's best shooting night of the season. The Texans shot a season-high 59 percent (30-51) from the field and were 8-13 from long range in the first half.Â
MCDAVID EARNS SECOND SET OF WAC FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK HONORSÂ
The 6-5 guard was named the TicketSmarter WAC Freshman of the Week for Jan. 24-30 after helping Tarleton notch consecutive road victories over Lamar and UTRGV. Â
McDavid started in both contests and averaged 9.5 points and 3.5 rebounds per game. He also connected on 5-12 attempts from long range.  Â
Three of his makes from behind the arc came in the Texans' 62-57 win over the Cardinals on Wednesday as a part of an 11-point, four-rebound and three-assist performance. McDavid played the full 40 minutes in the victory. Â
McDavid's points vs. UTRGV came at key junctures of the Texans' 79-64 victory on Saturday. He connected on his first of two 3-pointers with 13:33 remaining in the first half to give Tarleton its first double-digit lead of the evening at 17-7 and force the Vaqueros to burn a timeout. McDavid then scored five straight points behind a pair of free throws and 3-pointer from the right key to increase the Texans' edge to 72-53 with 4:40 remaining and effectively ice the game. Â
He is the first athlete in Tarleton basketball history to receive multiple sets of WAC weekly accolades.Â
BOTHERSOME BOGUESÂ
Few players have been as big of a thorn in the side of opponents defensively than sophomore Shamir Bogues.Â
The 6-5 guard ranks second in the WAC and is tied for 26th in the nation in total steals with 47 as of Feb. 10. He is tied for second amongst his conference peers in steals per game (2.0).Â
His two-swipe effort vs. Chicago State on Jan. 20 was his 23rd multi-steal game in his two-year Texan career and 11th this season. Bogues' seven steals at South Alabama were a conference single-game high. Â
For his career, Bogues has recorded four-or-more steals on six occasions and reached three steals in 16 of his 43 games in Purple and White.Â
He is Tarleton's active leader in career steals with 85.Â
Bogues averaged four steals per contest as a senior at Killeen Ellison High School.Â
GIPSON RACKING UP THE ALL-WAC ACCOLADESÂ
On Oct. 19, the 5-11 senior made history when he became the first basketball player in Tarleton's WAC and D1 era to receive Preseason All-WAC first team honors as voted on by the conference media. Gipson was one of just eight players to receive the distinction. He was also named to the Preseason Coaches' All-WAC Second Team.Â
The accolade continued Gipson's inceptive two-year run at Tarleton. In April 2020, he became the first-ever Division I basketball signee in Tarleton sports history when he followed Gillispie from Ranger College to Stephenville. Following a standout 2020-21 campaign, Gipson was named to the All-WAC Newcomer and Honorable mention teams. He was also the first men's or women's player in school history to receive TicketSmarter WAC Player of the Week recognition after picking up the honor for March 1-7.Â
Gipson earned his quartet of credentials on the strength of one of the best individual offensive seasons in the WAC last winter. He led Tarleton in points per game (15.3), assists per game (3.0) and free throw percentage (85.2) and his 50 percent mark on 3-pointers ranked first in the WAC. The 5-11 guard accounted for exactly 20 percent of Tarleton's field goals made with 106. His 290 points scored were tops on the team and represented 19.7 percent of the Texans' cumulative scoring.Â
GIPSON STARS IN BIGGEST GAMES IN SCHOOL HISTORYÂ
The national stage and high-profile matchups have elevated the play of the Preseason All-WAC first team honoree. Â
Gipson scored in double figures 11 times during nonconference play and led Tarleton in scoring five times. His 15 points vs. Stanford were a team high as were his 16 at Wichita State and 17 in Ann Arbor.Â
Despite his listed height of 5-11, Gipson has been one of the Texans' most consistent rebounders in primetime. He tied for the game-high on the glass with seven boards at No. 20 Michigan, finished with six rebounds at North Dakota State and No. 3 Kansas. Gipson leads Tarleton in offensive rebounds with 31 and is third on the team in rebounds per game (5.1). Â
Gipson was a pest at No. 3 Gonzaga. He led Tarleton with five assists and swiped the ball away a game-high three times. He then scored a season-high 29 points vs. SAGU on Dec. 8 and led all scorers with 27 points in Tarleton's 65- 52 victory over South Alabama on Dec. 17.Â
SMALL PICKS UP WHERE HE LEFT OFFÂ
Small delivered one of the finest performances of Tarleton's D1 era against arguably the best team in the country, tallying a game-high 25 points at Gonzaga on Nov. 29. Small led all scorers, knocked down a game and career-high five attempts from long range and led Tarleton in rebounding with seven boards. Â
He followed up the performance with a 24-point effort on 9-16 shooting to lead all scorers in Tarleton's first of two games against South Alabama on Dec. 14. Small then netted a game and career-high 28 points on 11-14 shooting to pace Tarleton to a 75-64 win over SHSU on Jan. 6. Â
The Troy transfer has recorded two double-doubles this season. He scored 13 points and snagged 10 boards vs. Southwestern Assemblies of God on Dec. 8 and delivered a 16-point, 12-rebound performance vs. South Alabama on Dec. 17.Â
The 6-5 guard has increased his scoring and rebounding averages considerably from 2020-21. He is tallying 14.6 points per game compared to 9.2 in his first year in Stephenville. Â
FOUR ALL-WAC HONOREES IN FIRST OF FOUR D1 TRANSITION YEARSÂ
Hicks headlined Tarleton's list of award winners last season when he was named the conference's Freshman of the Year on March 9. The award was voted on by conference head coaches, who could not vote for their own players. Â
No freshman in the conference enjoyed as strong a second half as the Searcy, Arkansas native. The 6-6 swingman led all WAC first-year players in scoring (8.2 ppg) and elevated his game as the schedule shifted to conference play, averaging 8.6 points and a team-high 6.4 rebounds per game. Hicks led Tarleton with three double-doubles, all of which came on the road vs. conference opponents. He posted seven double-digit scoring games, including three in Tarleton's final five WAC games.Â
Shakur Daniel and Small joined Gipson and Hicks atop the All-WAC pedestal, as they each were named to the All-Conference honorable mention team in March. Daniel was Tarleton's 'glue guy (7 ppg, 3.2 rpg, 2.7 apg, 1.6 apg) while Small was Tarleton's leading rebounder (5.8 rpg) and ranked third in the WAC in 3-point field goal percentage (45.7).Â
NO PLACE LIKE HOMEÂ
Since 2007, Wisdom Gym has arguably been the toughest venue to play in over the state of Texas at any classification. Tarleton is 207-38 (.845) in home games over the last 15 years. Â
The Texans were 6-3 at home in 2020-21. From 2007-2017, the Texans lost just 17 times at home. Tarleton posted a perfect 15-0 home record during the 2010-11 season. The program's 18 home victories against one defeat marked its most home wins in a single season. Â
Under legendary head coach and current Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics, Lonn Reisman, Tarleton went an astounding 171-22 (.886) at home from 2007 through the 2017-18 season, when he stepped down as head coach and transitioned into a full-time Athletic Director role. Tarleton eclipsed two home losses just once in Reisman's fin