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Cougar fans are still shaking themselves awake from the dream
that was the 2006-07 basketball season.
The sweet reverie set in early this winter during a game against
Gonzaga at Friel Court. For the first time in years, a scrappy
bunch of mostly juniors and sophomores showed us that channeled
energy, resiliency, and strategic coaching could add up to victory.
The Washington State University win shattered a seven-game losing
streak against the Zags and started a season loaded with ending
streaks and broken records.
Sports analysts who predicted we’d finish at the back of the
Pac-10 were forced to take a second look at Tony Bennett, the young
head coach in his first year in charge. In 2003, his father, Dick
Bennett, came out of retirement to rebuild WSU’s basketball
program. He brought along Tony, a former NBA player, to work as his
assistant. Each year the Bennetts pushed the program forward,
preparing us for a series of thrilling second halves and
nail-biting overtimes. Now with Tony as coach, WSU has had its
first winning season in more than a decade. With 26 wins, the team
tied the school record set in 1941.
When they started, there were no stars, just a bunch of really
solid players. When one was guarded, another stepped in to shoot
the three-pointer or get the rebound. Derrick Low, Ivory Clark,
Daven Harmeling, Taylor Rochestie, Kyle Weaver, Robbie Cowgill,
Aaron Baynes, and others. They were regular guys on campus who in a
few short weeks this winter became heroes of the Palouse. They
believed the Bennett dream, and it took them all the way to the No.
2 spot in the Pac-10. Then it carried them to Sacramento, where
they played the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, extending
the magic into mid-March.
The Cougars became the talk of every sports show and the sleeper
team on every bracket. The sportscasters couldn’t help but notice
how the players used what they learned in the first half of the
game to win in the second.
The team didn’t disappoint. They pounded Oral Roberts in the
first round of the tournament. In the second round, they stuck with
Vanderbilt into double overtime. It was a hard game to watch. In
the end, they lost. And just like that, the best basketball season
in a long, long time was over.
A few hours later, the players were home in Pullman asleep in
their own beds. And the rest of us were wondering what to do with
our Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights.
A few things are certain, though: First, after what we’ve seen
this winter, it won’t be so easy for the Cougars to sneak up on
their opponents anymore. Second, since most of the players are
sophomores and juniors, the same team will be back on Friel Court
in October. And, third, we’re all counting the days until next
season.
—Hannelore Sudermann
Washington State Magazine Home
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WSU had much to cheer about this basketball season. The Cougars
ended 26-8, tying the record for the most wins in school history.
And it gets better—all players except senior Ivory Clark return
next year.
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