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This post was written by Hatchet Reporter Noah Cohen.

With such an inexperienced roster this season, GW men’s basketball head coach Karl Hobbs knows that his team will have to compensate for a lack of seasoning with energy. Saturday’s 78-44 preseason victory over West Georgia displayed this point, showing that the Colonials’ liveliness will go a long way in determining their fate.

“I think with a young basketball team we’re gonna make mistakes and the way to make up for those mistakes is with work and with enthusiasm and energy,” head coach Karl Hobbs said. “And I thought that we accomplished that in the second half.”

Unfortunately for GW, the energy from the players was lacking before that point, which led to a meager 34-23 halftime lead over their Division II opponent.

But the team shot nearly 46 percent in the second half and improved their energy on defense.  The Colonials forced their opponent into 14 second-half turnovers, leading to 14 points.  The squad had been outscored in points off turnovers category in the first half.

“I saw some energy. I saw the potential of what they can become,” Hobbs said, referring to the team’s freshmen in particular. “I thought all of them at times did good things and I thought there were times when they really looked like freshmen.”

The style of play that Hobbs implemented for the Colonials opening exhibition game probably helped to lead to the jolt of energy.  Throughout the contest, GW was constantly looking for the outlet pass or pushing the ball down the court, showing flashes of the signature up-tempo style of Hobbs’s most successful GW teams.  This type of offense allowed the Colonials to put up 44 second-half points.

“We’re just trying to play with energy,” Hobbs said. “I want the guys to play fast. We want to play a fast-paced game and when you play a fast-paced game you’re gonna tend to have some turnovers. That’s part of it. But for us, we have to put points on the board.”

The Colonials committed 18 turnovers throughout the contest.  Hobbs said the squad will have to learn from its lackluster opening half in order to build a more energetic and successful atmosphere.

“I think my only real disappointment was our lack of energy and enthusiasm in that first half because that’s the one thing that doesn’t require any skill,” Hobbs said. “We have to be an energy basketball team because we’re not very skilled and we’re gonna make mistakes. The only way we’re gonna make up for those mistakes is to play with a great of enthusiasm and with a great deal of energy.”

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Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009 4:54 p.m.

Men’s basketball cruises in exhibition

With the GW men’s basketball team already leading its Division II visitors, West Georgia, by 33 points as the clock ticked away toward the end of Saturday’s preseason exhibition, redshirt junior Travis King lobbed a pass to leaping redshirt sophomore Jabari Edwards in the paint that Edwards failed to handle and dropped.

On the other end, Edwards rectified his miscue, stuffing a West Georgia layup attempt before breaking back down the court for another offensive possession. The ball again found King’s hands, who in turn again found a leaping Edwards, who this time caught the ball in midair and slammed it down with enough authority and flair to earn a whistle for a technical foul.

It was a visually remarkable play at an unremarkable point in a game that doesn’t count in the standings, but the sight had to be reassuring considering the two players’ physical baggage. Both missed the 2007-08 season due to injury and neither appeared to be operating at full capacity last season, but in Saturday’s 78-44 win, the two logged a half-hour of cumulative court time and contributed to a lopsided victory.

“I thought he raised his level of intensity,” head coach Karl Hobbs said of Edwards. “I thought he made a couple of terrific blocks and he altered several shots, particularly in penetration.”

Five of the Colonials’ six freshmen played 14 minutes or more – injured center Daymon Warren was the lone exception – and newcomer Bryan Bynes led all GW players with 26 minutes of action. The Florida native had eight points and six rebounds to go with two assists and only one turnover, all while often running the offense from the point guard position.

“I thought he was the most composed guy,” Hobbs said. “I thought he played with a little bit more maturity throughout the game.”

Fellow freshman Lasan Kromah led all players with 14 points in the game, hitting two of his five three-point attempts and also chipping in four rebounds.

“Obviously Lasan has a terrific and high basketball IQ,” Hobbs said. “He really has a great feel for the game; he understands the moments and he’s gonna be a terrific scorer for us. I really think he’s gonna be a guy that’s gonna be consistent at putting points on the board.”

With Saturday’s exhibition in the books, GW will now turn its attention to UNC-Wilmington, whom they visit Nov. 15 for their first regular season game. Opening tip is scheduled for 4:30 p.m.

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3:45 p.m. Sorry I didn’t put up the final score: GW wins 78-44. Check www.gwhatchet.com for a full update later and Monday’s issue for even more.

2:57 p.m. Edwards is whistled for a technical foul after throwing down a hard alley-oop from King in transition. They had gone for the same connection on the preceding possession but Edwards had fumbled the ball during the catch. On the defensive possession in between, he blocked a shot. GW leads 76-42 and Edwards suddenly has eight points.

2:54 p.m. And the foul shot rattles in and out. GW is now 10 of 21 from the line.

2:52 p.m. Edwards has caught a little hot streak inside, scoring from close range now on consecutive possessions, first on a pass from Bynes caught with his back to the basket and then after collecting a loose ball in the paint. He was fouled on the second one and will head to the line after a break in the action with his team leading 73-36 and 3:15 on the clock.

2:47 p.m. Hobbs signals for a timeout with 5:48 to play after Johnson goes baseline to score and put GW ahead 67-33. Kromah hit a three a few possessions back and the Colonials’ defensive pressure is creating a fair amount of turnovers and miscues from West Georgia in the last few minutes.

2:39 p.m. The Colonials lead 61-32 with less than nine to play, their last basket coming after redshirt sophomore Jabari Edwards grabbed an offensive rebound and put it back up for two. Ware had a nice drive a few minutes ago, pushing it toward the basket from the left of the key and kissing a left-handed runner off the glass while being fouled. He missed the free throw.

2:33 p.m. Katuka gets his own rebound and scores and then Bynes gets a steal, pushes it solo against two defenders, and pulls up at the free-throw line to drain a jumper. The Colonials lead 57-30 now, with Kromah leading all scorers with 11 points. The Wolves have made just eight of 38 shots from the field and have been outscored 23-7 since the break.

2:28 p.m. More impressive plays by the freshmen: Bynes just completely blew past a defender and through the defense to score on a contested layup and Kromah got a steal in the backcourt and took it to the hoop for a breakaway dunk. GW leads 50-28 with a dozen minutes left.

2:23 p.m. Pellom just absolutely stuffed a layup attempt and then stole the ball in transition on consecutive possessions. King found him in the paint on the second offensive possession, but Pellom seemed caught off guard and rushed an awkward attempt from close range that missed.

2:19 p.m. We’ve got an official timeout (and Pita Pit dance contest!) with GW leading 41-25 with 15:49 to play. Pellom just stole the ball near midcourt with one of the loudest-sounding slaps of the day and then pushed the ball to the other end, only to lose his handle as he went up for the layup and have the ball float out of bounds.

Also, to nobody’s surprise, a little kid won the dance contest.

2:13 p.m. Katuka gets fed the ball inside for his third basket of the game and GW leads 38-25 just inside of the 18-minute mark. Johnson had a particularly spirited last few possessions, flying in for an offensive rebound and then getting fouled on a shooting attempt and hitting both shots. On the other end, he swatted a West Georgia layup attempt off the backboard after it had hit the glass and was called for goaltending.

2:01 p.m. After one half of play, GW leads West Georgia 34-23, with Hollis leading the charge with nine points and seven rebounds. Kromah is second among all scorers with seven points and Bynes, who has been running the point at times even with King on the floor, has four rebounds. Three Colonials – Bynes, Hollis and Johnson – have two assists apiece.

Hobbs has talked at multiple points in recent months about the excitement surrounding this year’s team and the type of up-tempo, energetic style of play he wants to utilize, much like that employed by his most successful GW teams. While West Georgia likely does not offer the same level of opposition that the Colonials will encounter during the regular season, GW looks good for its part and is definitely exhibiting the kind of style and energy that Hobbs has said he is seeking.

The freshmen, aside from the injured Warren, have all gotten fairly extended looks on the floor. Kromah has shown no hesitation to shoot the ball and has also created numerous opportunities for himself to score. Bynes has gotten off to a fairly good start running the point, turning and pushing the ball in transition when he’s gotten the chance. He also only has one turnover; King leads the team with three thus far.

1:52 p.m. The teams are heading into the locker room at the half with the Colonials leading 34-23.

1:46 p.m. Our little press table just got a visit from Big George, which is as unnerving as it sounds.

1:43 p.m. A little over three minutes left in the half and GW leads 29-16. Kromah had a nice take to the basket a few possessions back, but his layup rolled off the rim. He slapped his hands together and smiled as he made his way back down the court to play defense. He really doesn’t seem deterred by any of his misses thus far.

1:37 p.m. A bit of a scoring burst from West Georgia has the score at 23-16 now, with the lone GW point since the last update coming on a free throw by Smith. On the last possession, Taylor called for the Colonials’ patented wheel play and Opoku got the ball on the perimeter, bouncing a pass inside to where it looked like he expected Bynes to cut, only no one was there and the Wolves nabbed it for a turnover.

1:31 p.m. It’s 22-9 now at a pay stoppage at the 7:59 mark in the first half. The Colonials have hit seven of their last nine shots, with Kromah leading all scorers with seven points. No Colonial has grabbed more rebounds than Hollis and Ware’s two, with the Wolves actually winning the battle on the boards at this point, 12 to seven.

The team is playing at a very fast but relatively controlled pace thus far. Hobbs has said he wants to bring back the up-tempo, athletic style of years past and that would certainly seem to be the way to describe the team’s play thus far in this exhibition contest.

1:26 p.m. Kromah allows a three on the defensive end, then immediately takes it to the hoop on not one but two consecutive possessions to make it 16-9 with 10:11 to play in the half.

1:24 p.m. Pellom’s free throw misses.

1:22 p.m. Bynes and David Pellom just announced their presence to the GW basketball world. Bynes hit a three from the wing, followed by Pellom pressuring the inbound passer, slapping the ball with his left hand, then grabbing it and taking it to the hoop for a contested layup to 12-6. Pellom was fouled on the play and will take his shot after this official timeout is done.

1:19 p.m. After missing his first shot attempt, a three from the corner, freshman Lasan Kromah takes a second attempt a few possessions later with no hesitation and drains it to put GW up 7-6. His next attempt misses again. “The shooter” is at work.

Also, this is completely irrelevant to anyone that may be reading this, but I must say I’m enjoying the new press table vantage point in the overhang seating. You can really see the floor better and pick up on how each team is running their sets.

1:13 p.m. King takes it to the hoop from the perimeter and finally nets GW’s second basket of the game. On the preceding possession the Colonials missed consecutive put-back opportunities with the crowd ooh-ing and ahh-ing as each one rolled around the rim and out.

Aesthetic notes: Taylor is wearing a white headband, which I don’t remember from last year. Opoku and freshman Bryan Bynes are wearing them as well. Opoku, formerly no. 21, is also wearing jersey no. 44.

1:11 p.m. The Colonials trail the Wolves 4-2 thus far, shooting just 1-of-6 from the floor this far. Their lone basket came when Johnson fed it inside to Katuka.

1:03 p.m. Starters, in 0rder of introduction: senior Damian Hollis, junior Joseph Katuka, freshman Tim Johnson, freshman Dwayne Smith, sophomore Tony Taylor. Also, the players had their arms wrapped around one another during the national anthem. Everyone talks about this team’s chemistry, so there would seem to be a small example of sorts.

12:59 p.m. Head coach Karl Hobbs and his staff just took the floor for the first time to the usual remix of P.O.D.’s “Boom,” yet the traditional bowing toward Hobbs was no where to be seen. The staff, aside from Hobbs, is wearing matching khaki-colored long-sleeve collared shirts and black pants.

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Good afternoon and welcome to the first live blog of the fall, as the GW men’s basketball team hosts West Georgia in a preseason exhibition contest. Today’s contest offers the first in-game glimpse at this year’s Colonials, a chance made all the more interesting by the fact that six of this year’s players are freshmen. One would expect that all five healthy newcomers – center Daymon Warren is still sidelined with a finger injury – should see the floor today.

Also of interest will be the new roles some of the returning players will be asked to fulfill. Junior Joseph Katuka, a 6-foot-11 center from Nigeria, will likely be asked to fill the void left in the post by the graduation of Rob Diggs, while senior standout Damian Hollis will be leaned on more than ever. Sophomore Aaron Ware, an athletic 6-foot-5 slasher, is someone to keep an eye on as well in his second season. Sophomore Tony Taylor and redshirt junior Travis King will likely man the backcourt once again, though they may share duties with freshman Bryan Bynes at times.

Fans are still filtering in as we approach two minutes until tipoff. We’ll have starting lineups and in-game updates for you along the way.

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Women’s soccer senior Brittany Eger was honored by ESPN the Magazine with a spot on its Academic All-District 2 First Team, GW’s athletic department announced today.

Eger is tied for the team lead with four goals this season, most recently scoring the team’s lone goal on Senior Day in a 1-0 win over Duquesne Sunday. According to the announcement, the accounting major also maintains a 3.89 GPA and will be working for accounting firm KPMG after she graduates.

District 2 consists of D.C., Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and West Virginia. The teams are voted on by the College Sports Information Directors of America.

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The GW men’s basketball team was predicted to finish 13th in the 14-team Atlantic 10 by the conference’s coaches and members of the media in a poll released today.

The Colonials have finished 13th the past two seasons after winning the A-10’s regular or postseason championship in each of the previous three years. The team went 4-12 in the conference and 10-18 overall last year after finishing 9-17 overall with a 5-11 A-10 record in 2007-08. Because only twelve teams qualify for the A-10 tournament, GW has been on the outside looking in for the past two postseasons.

Senior Damian Hollis, who tied for the team lead with 13.4 points per game last year while adding 6.1 rebounds per contest, will be the team’s top returning scorer and rebounder. This year’s roster will also feature six freshmen.

Dayton was picked to win the conference, garnering 33 of 57 first-place votes. Xavier, which received 18 first-place votes, was picked second, followed by Richmond. Fordham was picked to finish 14th.

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The GW women’s basketball team is expected to finish eighth in the 14-team Atlantic 10 conference, according to a poll of the conference’s head coaches released today.

The Colonials went 17-14 overall and 9-5 in the A-10 last year during head coach Mike Bozeman’s first year at the helm of the program. Entering as the league’s fifth seed, they were upset in the first round of the conference postseason tournament by Rhode Island. GW then lost in double-overtime at Florida Gulf Coast in the first round of the WNIT.

This year’s team will feature one of the youngest rosters in the nation, with the team’s lone upperclassman – redshirt junior Ivy Abiona – expected to be sidelined until at least January after undergoing knee surgery this July. Sophomores Tiana Myers and Tara Booker are the team’s top returning scorers and will be joined by a freshman class that ESPN ranked as the best in the A-10 and 42nd-best in the country.

Xavier was tabbed as the favorite to win the conference, garnering 12 of 14 first-place votes. Dayton and Richmond, which were tied for third in the poll, also each received a first-place vote. Charlotte was predicted to finish second.

The Colonials’ opening tip will come Nov. 17 at North Texas. Their first home game will be Nov. 19 against Coppin State at 7 p.m.

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Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2009 11:21 p.m.

Women’s basketball players write for GW site

Earlier this month the GW basketball blogosphere gained a new member: Buff and Blog, featuring posts from members of the GW women’s basketball team.

Updates have been sparse thus far (hey, they’re busy), but sophomore Tiana Myers and redshirt junior Ivy Abiona have each written posts, with Myers adding a second yesterday. The blog also mentions that freshman Megan Nipe will be participating.

It should be interesting to read more from them as the year progresses.

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Erik Copes, a 6-foot-8 junior at Philadelphia’s Imhotep Institute Charter High School and nephew of GW men’s basketball assistant Roland Houston, has committed to play for GW, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

As the Inquirer notes, Copes’s team won the PIAA Class AA state championship last season while he averaged 2.5 points, eight rebounds and three blocks per game as a sophomore. In the championship game, he collected 11 rebounds and seven blocks.

According to the Northstar Basketball Blog, Copes was also recruited by UConn, Wake Forest, West Virginia, Temple and Niagara. They list GW and Temple as being the two schools to have offered him a scholarship at that time.

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Daymon Warren, a 6-foot-9 freshman center on the men’s basketball team, is expected to be out of action for the next 12 weeks after fracturing his middle finger, Sports Information Director Brad Bower said today.

Warren’s expected recovery time extends into mid-December and would include the Colonials’ first seven or eight games. The Richmond, Calif. native played for Worcester Academy in Massachusetts last season, where he averaged 12 points and eight rebounds per game.

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Thursday, Sept. 17, 2009 5:03 p.m.

Women’s basketball schedule released

The women’s basketball schedule for this upcoming season was released by the athletic department this afternoon.

In addition to the previously reported games at Tennessee and Auburn and against Rutgers at home, GW will host nonconference games against Western Kentucky, Rice, Marshall, Coppin State and – perhaps most intriguingly – Mount St. Mary’s. Former Colonial Lisa Steele, who graduated last year, was recently named an assistant coach for the Mount.

The Coppin State game will serve as the team’s home opener Nov. 19.

The Colonials will also travel to the Bahamas for the Junkanoo Jam tournament, where they will play Michigan State and either Marist or Oklahoma State, and play at George Mason, Villanova, North Texas and Ohio.

The full schedule, including conference games, can be viewed here.

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