Texas Tech University Athletics

Red Raider Men's Basketball Notes
June 21, 1999 | Men's Basketball
November 30, 1998
So Far This Season... Texas Tech is 3-1 on the season following last week's disappointing 60-56 loss at Southwestern La. All four of the team's returnees are at the top of the statistical leaders, accounting for 63 percent of the team's scoring and 52 percent of the team's rebounding through the first four games.
Junior forward Cliff Owens' 13.3 points and 9.5 rebounds per game leads the team in both categories. Junior guard Rayford Young is second in scoring with a 12.5 average, followed closely by senior guard Stan Bonewitz' 12.3 per game average. Sophomore center Johnny Phillips averages 8.3 points per game.
The Raiders have shot 54.9 percent on the season and have surpassed the 50 percent mark in three of the first four games. Eight Red Raiders are shooting over .500 on the season. On the flipside, Texas Tech has committed 93 turnovers in the first four games for an average of 23.3 per game, while forcing 14 per game from its opponents.
Last Week - Texas Tech dropped a 60-56 decision at Southwestern Louisiana Saturday in Lafayette. The Raiders shot under 50 percent for the first time this season, making 19-43 field goal attempts for 44.2 percent. Stan Bonewitz led Texas Tech with 13 points and a season-high 10 rebounds, while junior James Ware added a season-high 11 points, including 3-of-5 from the three-point stripe. Forward Reginald Poole led USL to its first win of the season with 27 points.
Head Coach James Dickey - Texas Tech men's basketball coach James Dickey is in his eighth season guiding the Red Raiders on the hardwood. A 1976 graduate of Central Arkansas, he has posted a 135-73 record, a winning percentage of .649. Dickey was named Tech's head coach on April 10, 1991 after serving one year for the Red Raiders as an assistant under longtime coach Gerald Myers. Over the last four-plus seasons, Tech is 85-36 for a .702 winning mark. Dickey has earned district coach of the year honors four times and has been conference coach of the year on three occasions. He has guided Tech to two NCAA Tournaments, including the '96 Sweet 16. Before his arrival at Tech as an assistant coach in 1990-91, Dickey previously worked at Kentucky (1986-89) and Arkansas (1982-85) as an assistant under Eddie Sutton.
About SMU - The Mustangs are 1-1 on the season following a 91-61 win over Florida Atlantic Sunday night in Dallas. Chad Elsey led four SMU players in double figures with 18 points, while DeWayne Floyd added 17 points and a game-high 14 rebounds. SMU lost to nationally-ranked Stanford by a 86-51 margin in its season-opener on Nov. 18 in Palo Alto, Calif. Jeryl Sasser scored 26 points to lead the Mustangs in that one.
Sasser, the younger brother of former Red Raider standout Jason Sasser, leads the Mustangs in scoring with a 21.0 average. Freshmen DeWayne Floyd and Michael Niemi combine to average 15.0 points and 15.5 rebounds per game. The Ponies are shooting just .380 on the season and .250 from the three-point stripe but are outrebounding their opponents by a 46.5-39.0 margin in its first two games.
The Series - Texas Tech leads the long-time series between the former Southwest Conference rivals by a 53-46 margin. The Raiders own a 31-15 series edge in games played in Lubbock, including a 75-54 win in the final season of the SWC. The two teams met for the first time in the 1944-45 season with SMU winning 56-50. In last year's season-opener for both teams, SMU took an 89-82 win behind Stephen Woods' 25 points and seven-of-eight shooting from behind the three-point stripe. Cory Carr led Texas Tech with 26 points and eight rebounds. The loss snapped a seven-game winning streak over SMU for the Red Raiders.
Veterans Carrying the Load - Texas Tech's four returnees this season are carrying the load for the Raiders. The quartet of senior Stan Bonewitz, juniors Cliff Owens and Rayford Young and sophomore Johnny Phillips have accounted for 63 percent of the team's 74.3 points and 52 percent of the team's 41.8 rebounds per game this season. Owens, Young and Bonewitz are each averaging over 30 minutes of playing time per game and are the only Red Raiders in double figures in scoring.
Quick Start - Quick starts have been a trademark of James Dickey-led teams. With the ' 3-0 start this season, the Red Raiders have opened the season with three-straight wins for three of the last four seasons and in four of Dickey's eight years. The only time Dickey has had a losing record in the first three games of the season was last season's 0-3 start.
Raider Schedule - The 1998-99 schedule will require Texas Tech to blend the six newcomers in with the returning players quickly, considering a hefty non-conference schedule is awaiting the Red Raiders. The likes of WAC champion TCU plus improving SMU, Tulsa and Southwestern Louisiana are among the teams Tech will face prior to the 16-game Big 12 Conference slate. The Red Raiders will travel to Hawaii to the BYU-Hawaii Pearl Harbor Classic, where Tech will play Tulsa. The tourney field also includes Alabama, Michigan State, Pepperdine, Oregon State and Weber State. In the third year of the Big 12, Texas Tech will host Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska while visiting Iowa State, Kansas State and Missouri. Texas Tech will play Big 12 South rivals Baylor, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas and Texas A&M home and away.
Hot-Shooting Raiders - Texas Tech shot over .500 in each of the first three games of the season before falling short at Southwestern La. The streak marked the first three-game streak since the George Washington, USL and Southwest Missouri St. games last season. Texas Tech has not surpassed .500 shooting in four-straight games since the 1995-96 season when it accomplished the feat against Montana State, East Tennessee State, TCU and Texas A&M.
On the Tube - With the addition of four appearances on FOX Sports Southwest, the Texas Tech men's basketball team is scheduled to play 12 televised games this season. The Red Raiders will play SMU (Dec. 3), TCU (Dec. 8), and Baylor (Jan. 2, Feb. 10) on Fox Sports Southwest. Tech will play one national televised game on ESPN Feb. 20 against Nebraska at 8:30 p.m. Tech will appear seven times on ESPN Regional via the Big 12 television package.
Texas Tech's Television Games Dec. 3 SMU 7:00 p.m. FOX Sports SW Dec. 8 at TCU 7:00 p.m. FOX Sports SW Jan. 2 BAYLOR 5:00 p.m. FOX Sports SW Jan. 17 OKLAHOMA ST. Noon Big 12 Jan. 23 at Iowa St. 3:00 p.m. Big 12 TV Jan. 30 OKLAHOMA 12:45 p.m. Big 12 Feb. 6 TEXAS 3:00 p.m. Big 12 Feb. 10 at Baylor 6:00 p.m. Big 12 Feb. 13 KANSAS 3:00 p.m. Big 12 Feb. 17 at Texas 8:00 p.m. Big 12 Feb. 20 NEBRASKA 8:30 p.m. ESPN Feb. 27 at Oklahoma St. 12:45 p.m. Big 12
Owens Strong Inside - Sophomore forward Cliff Owens (Santa Fe, Texas) has led the team in scoring in three of the first four games this season. His 23 points in the season-opener against UTSA was a career-high and his double-double against North Texas was his first of the season. He pulled a season-high 16 rebounds against New Mexico State.
Owens recorded a team-high 7.7 rebounds last season to rank in a tie for sixth in the Big 12. He finished third in the league with 5.8 defensive rebounds. In league games, Owens ranked in a tie for second with 8.4 boards and led the league with 6.9 defensive rebounds per game. Owens upped his totals to six double-doubles and eight games with 10 or more rebounds. He notched consecutive double-doubles late in the regular season against Texas A&M and Nebraska.
Seeing Double - Texas Tech has had one player in each of the last three games to record double-doubles. Stan Bonewitz scored 13 points and 10 rebounds at USL. Cliff Owens recorded 18 points and 10 rebounds at North Texas, for his seventh double-double. Rayford Young scored 13 points and dished a career-high 11 assists against New Mexico State for his first-ever double-double.
Young under Ray-Ted - Point guard Rayford Young, a starter in all 27 games last season, was named to the All-Underrated squad, selected by a panel of sports writers who regularly cover the Big 12. The 5-11 Pampa, Texas, junior joined Baylor's Patrick Hunter, Texas A&M's Shanne Jones, Oklahoma State's Adrian Peterson and Kansas' Ryan Robertson. He is Texas Tech's top returning scorer (15.4) and led the club last season in assists (116) and steals (46). Young averaged 3.7 rebounds, grabbed three or more boards in 21 games and was third on the team with 11 blocks.
Just Call Him "Bomb-A-Witz" - Stan Bonewitz, who hit a team-high 84 three-pointers last season, has made at least three treys in the last 21 of 27 games. He now ranks third all-time at Tech with 185 career 3's. Bonewitz tied the single-game school mark of seven last season against Texas A&M on Feb. 21 in College Station. For the year, Bonewitz ranked second in the Big 12 with a 41.8 three-point percentage and 3.1 3's a game. He led the Big 12 in three-point percentage as a sophomore with a 46.3 mark.
Career Three-Pointers 1. Cory Carr, '95-98 262 2. Koy Smith, '93-96 237 3. Stan Bonewitz, '96-present 185 4. Lance Hughes, '92-95 160 5. Todd Duncan, '87-89 132Season three-Pointers 1. Cory Carr, '96-97 94 2. Cory Carr, '95-96 92 3. Stan Bonewitz, '97-98 84 4. Koy Smith, '95-96 77 5. Lance Hughes, '94-95 76 6. Todd Duncan, '87-88 67 6. Cory Carr, '97-98 67
HOME TROUBLES - Against Texas-San Antonio Texas Tech broke a three-game home losing streak with its 87-78 win at the Lubbock Municipal Coliseum. The Red Raiders dropped their last three home games of 1997-98 to Texas, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. The three-game losing streak was Tech's first at home since early in the 1993-94 season. The three-game skid was also Tech's first in conference action since the 1990-91 campaign. Texas Tech has won 54 of its last 63 games in Lubbock Municipal Coliseum for an .857 winning percentage. From 1993-94 (against Texas A&M) until the Colorado game in 1996-97, Texas Tech won a school-record 35 consecutive games at home. All-time, Texas Tech is 389-153 in the "Bubble." The Red Raiders own a 70-21 mark under James Dickey at home for a .769 winning percentage.
Youth Movement - Texas Tech utilized four different starting combinations last season, any of which would be among the youngest quintet in James Dickey's seven seasons as head coach. For the first time since the 1993-94 season, Texas Tech started only two upperclassmen. The Red Raiders have started at least two seniors for the majority of the season in all but three of James Dickey's previous seven years as head coach, 1992-93, 1993-94 and 1997-98.
Lineup Breakdown in the Dickey Era 1991-92 2 seniors, 1 junior, 1 sophomore, 1 freshman 1992-93 1 senior, 1 junior, 2 sophomores, 1 freshman 1993-94 2 juniors, 3 sophomores 1994-95 2 seniors, 3 juniors 1995-96 4 seniors, 1 sophomore 1996-97 2 seniors, 2 juniors, 1 sophomore 1997-98 1 senior, 1 junior, 2 sophomores, 1 freshman 1998-99 1 senior, 3 juniors, 1 sophomore
Rookie Help - A total of nine true freshmen have started at least one game for Texas Tech during head coach James Dickey's seven previous years. Johnny Phillips started the last 15 games of 1997-98 - the most by a true freshman since Jason Sasser started 19 in 1992-93. Lance Hughes also started 19 during his freshman year in 1991-92.
FRESHMEN STARTERS Player (Season) Starts Jason Sasser (1992-93) 19 Lance Hughes (1991-92) 19 Johnny Phillips (1997-98) 15 Lenny Holly (1992-93) 14 Chad Collins (1991-92) 5 Rayford Young (1996-97) 4 Tony Battie (1994-95) 3 Cory Carr (1994-95) 1 Koy Smith (1992-93) 1
YOUNG FROM THE LINE - Last season Rayford Young tied for second behind teammate Cory Carr in the Big 12 in free throw percentage with an 84.3 clip. Twice last season he provided late-game heroics from the stripe to help Tech win. He made four free throws in the final 10 seconds against Kansas State, each time going to the line with Tech up one point. Young sank two free throws - his first attempts of the game - with four seconds remaining to send the game at Nevada into overtime. He made all eight of his free throw attempts at Nevada, six in the overtime period.
Stan the Rebounder - Known for his long-range shooting and uncanny passing ability, Stan Bonewitz added another facet to his game last season - rebounding. And, with his 10-rebound effort at USL, it appears as though he will continue to crash the boards this season.
The San Antonio junior came into the year with a career rebounding average of 2.1. He doubled that mark last year with a 4.9 average and led the team on the boards five games. He helped his average in the Big 12 Tournament against Texas with 10 boards for his first career double-double in the points and rebounds variety. Twice against Iowa State and Prairie View A&M, Bonewitz grabbed a career-high 11 rebounds. For the year, Bonewitz had five or more rebounds in 15 games.
Second Half Comebacks - Texas Tech's comeback from a 17-point halftime deficit at Nevada last season was the largest Texas Tech has overcome in James Dickey's seven years as head coach. The largest previous comeback from a halftime deficit came at New Mexico in Dickey's first season on Dec. 27, 1991. The Red Raiders erased a 10-point intermission deficit to win that game, 58-56. Following are the largest halftime deficits Tech has erased and went on to win during Dickey's tenure as head coach:
Date Deficit Final Game 12/27/97 17 99-94 ot at Nevada 2/4/98 14 70-68 at Oklahoma 2/1/98 11 80-71 at Baylor 11/27/91 10 58-56 at New Mexico 2/21/98 9 86-83 at Texas A&M 1/21/98 9 79-76 Kansas State 12/9/97 9 79-71 at Southwest Missouri St. 12/28/95 9 62-58 LaSalle (El Paso) 2/21/98 8 49-41 at Texas A&M 3/1/95 8 84-71 Oral Roberts 2/27/97 7 84-73 at Missouri 3/9/94 6 75-73 Texas (SWC)
RECORD SETTING NIGHT - The Texas Tech Red Raiders set an NCAA record with 27 points in one overtime period with their performance at Nevada on Dec. 27, 1997 in the 99-94 win. Combined, the two teams also set a mark with 49 points in the extra period. The previous record of 25 points in one overtime period was held by Texas A&M, Wisconsin-Green Bay and Old Dominion. The previous record for most points in an overtime period for both teams was 40, set by Old Dominion against William & Mary in 1992.
RED RAIDERS VERSUS AP RANKED OPPONENTS SINCE 1991-92 Date Opponent Rank W/L Score 1-24-98 at Kansas 3 L 88-49 12-20-97 at New Mexico 14 L 81-62 3-7-97 at Iowa State 16 L 72-70 1-29-97 Kansas 1 L 86-77 1-25-97 Iowa State 14 L 64-61 12-21-96 Fresno State 21 W 111-101 12-4-96 New Mexico 11 W 77-68 11-30-96 George Washington 25 W 84-75 3-21-96 Georgetown t4 L 98-90 3-17-96 North Carolina 25 W 92-73 12-30-94 at Arizona 10 L 88-82 12-17-94 Kentucky 6 L 83-68 12-3-94 Wisconsin 13 L 70-65 12-11-93 Wisconsin 18 L 91-88 1-26-93 Houston 10 W 78-74 1-18-92 Tulane 19 W 101-98 12-27-91 Indiana 10 L 86-69
TEXAS TECH CAREER SCORERS 1. Rick Bullock, '73-76 2,118 2. Jason Sasser, '93-96 2,102 3. Cory Carr, '95-98 1,904 4. Lance Hughes, '92-95 1,762 5. Bubba Jennings, '81-85 1,760 6. Jim Reed, '54-56 1,689 7. Will Flemons, '90-93 1,604 8. Sean Gay, '86-89 1,597 9. Mike Russell, '76-78 1,545 10. Greg Lowery, '70-72 1,476 11. Jeff Taylor, '79-82 1,424 12. Dub Malaise, '64-66 1,420 13. Del Ray Mounts, '60-62 1,346 14. Paul Nolen, '51-53 1,306 15. Koy Smith, '93-96 1,299 16. Kent Williams, '77-80 1,172 17. Norman Reuther, '64-66 1,109 18. Harold Denney, '63-65 1,108 19. Gene Knolle, '70-71 1,073 20. William Johnson, '73-75 1,065 21. Leon Hill, '57-59 1,058 22. Eugene Carpenter,'54-56 1,035 23. Don Grove, '44, '48-49 1,009
Moving Up the List
Stan Bonewitz, '95-99 826
Rayford Young, '96-99 675
IRON MEN - Last season Stan Bonewitz and Rayford Young were among the top 10 in the Big 12 Conference in average minutes played. Teammate Cory Carr led the league, playing an average of 37.6 minutes per game. Only three of the top 10 players on the list below are return this season, including Bonewitz and Young.
1997-98 BIG 12 MINUTES PLAYED 1. Cory Carr Texas Tech 37.6 2. Stan Bonewitz Texas Tech 35.9 2. Tyronn Lue Nebraska 35.9 4. Brian Skinner Baylor 35.8 5. Corey Brewer Oklahoma 35.4 6. Adrian Peterson Oklahoma St. 35.3 7. Patrick Hunter Baylor 35.0 8. Rayford Young Texas Tech 34.7 9. Brett Robisch Oklahoma St. 33.4 10. Roddrick Miller Baylor 33.3
TEXAS TECH UNDER JAMES DICKEY Under James Dickey 208 games '98-'99 Overall 135-73 3-1 Home 69-21 2-0 Road 43-40 1-1 Netural 23-12 0-0 Conference 63-37 0-0 Big 12 Conference 17-15 0-0 Home 9-7 0-0 Road 8-8 0-0 Non-Conference 60-30 3-1 Home 32-7 2-0 Road 17-17 1-1 Neutral 11-6 0-0 Conference Tournament 11-4 0-0 Big 12 Tournament 1-2 0-0 Southwest Conference Tournament 10-3 0-0 NCAA Tournament 2-2 0-0 Overtime 4-9 0-0 Games Decided by 5 points or less 28-28 0-1 Games Decided by 3 points or less 17-22 0-0 When Scoring 100 points or more 17-4 0-0 When holding opponents under 80 points 106-21 3-1 When shooting better FG% than opponent 111-16 3-1 When shooting worse FG% than opponent 22-54 0-0 When shooting better than 50% FG 66-8 3-0 When outrebounding opponent 94-30 3-1 When leading at the half 105-17 3-1 When trailing at the half 26-52 0-0 When tied at the half 4-4 0-0
JAMES DICKEY AS HEAD COACH Season Overall Conference/Finish 1991-92 15-14 6-8/5th 1992-93 18-12 (NCAA) 6-8/5th 1993-94 17-11 10-4/t2nd 1994-95 20-10 (NIT) 11-3/t1st 1995-96 30-2 (NCAA) 14-0/1st 1996-97 19-9 10-6/t3rd (12th)* 1997-98 13-14 7-9/t7th 1998-99 3-1 Seventh Year 135-73 (.649) 64-38 (.627)
Overall Conference Season H A N W-L H A 1991-92 8-5 5-7 2-2 6-8 4-3 2-5 1992-93 8-4 4-7 6-1 6-8 4-3 2-5 1993-94 8-4 6-5 3-2 10-4 6-1 4-3 1994-95 13-0 4-8 3-2 11-3 7-0 4-3 1995-96 13-0 11-0 6-2 14-0 7-0 7-0 1996-97 9-3 8-4 2-2 10-6 5-3 5-3 1997-98 8-5 5-8 0-1 7-9 4-4 3-5 1998-99 2-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
TECH BEFORE COACH JAMES DICKEY 1987-88 9-19 1988-89 13-15 1989-90 5-22 1990-91 8-23 Total 35-79 (.307)
TECH SINCE COACH JAMES DICKEY 1991-92 15-14 1992-93 18-12 (NCAA) 1993-94 17-11 1994-95 20-10 (NIT) 1995-96 30-2 (NCAA) 1996-97 19-9 1997-98 13-14 1998-99 3-1 Total 135-73 (.649)
TEXAS TECH 1998-99 REVIEW Overall: 3-1 Home: 2-0 Road: 1-1 Neutral: 0-0 Overtime: 0-0
Non-Conference: 3-0 Big 12: 0-0 Big 12 Tournament: 0-0Current Streak: Lost 1 Home Streak: Won 2 Road Streak: Lost 1 Neutral Streak: Lost 2
Monday: 0-0 Tuesday: 0-0 Wednesday: 1-0 Thursday: 1-0 Friday: 0-0 Saturday: 1-1 Sunday: 0-0November: 3-1 December: 0-0 January: 0-0 February: 0-0 March: 0-0
White Uniforms: 2-0 Red Uniforms: 0-2 Black Uniforms: 0-0
TEXAS TECH VERSUS THE BIG 12 Baylor 65-37 Colorado 3-11 Iowa State 1-4 Kansas 0-9 Kansas State 3-7 Missouri 3-2 Nebraska 4-8 Oklahoma 10-11 Oklahoma State 6-11 Texas 50-49 Texas A&M 51-45
1998-99 GAME LEADERS
Leading Scorer: Cliff Owens 2, Rayford Young 1, Stan Bonewitz 1
Leading Rebounder: Cliff Owens 3, Stan Bonewitz 1
Leading Scorer/Rebounder: Cliff Owens 2, Stan Bonewitz 1
Leading Scorer/Assists: Rayford Young 1, Stan Bonewitz 1
Assists Leader: Stan Bonewitz 3, Rayford Young 1, James Ware 1
Double Figures Scoring: Cliff Owens 2, Stan Bonewitz 4, Johnny Phillips 2, Rayford Young 2, Brodney Kennard 1, James Ware 1
30-Point Games: none
20-Point Games: Cliff Owens 1
Double Figures Rebounds: Cliff Owens 1, Stan Bonewitz 1
Double Figures Points/Rebounds: Cliff Owens 1, Stan Bonewitz 1
Double Figures Points/Assists: Rayford Young 1
Dunks: Cliff Owens 6, Brodney Kennard 4, Johnny Phillips 4, Mario Layne 1. Opponents: 9
Charges Taken: Jayson Mitchell 2
First Sub Off The Bench: Jason Mitchell 2, Jevon Banks 1, James Ware 1
Won Opening Tip-off: 4; Opponents: 0
1998-99 TEXAS TECH TRENDS
Overall H R N When outrebounding opponents 3-1 2-0 1-1 0-0 When tied or outrebounded 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0When ahead at halftime 3-1 2-0 1-1 0-0 When behind at halftime 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 When tied at halftime 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
When shooting 50% or higher 3-0 2-0 1-0 0-0 When shooting less than 50% 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0
When shooting better than opp. 3-1 2-0 1-1 0-0 When shooting worse than opp. 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
When committing same or less to's 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 When committing more to's 3-1 2-0 1-1 0-0
When scoring less than 70 points 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 When scoring between 70-79 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 When scoring between 80-89 2-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 When scoring between 90-99 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 When scoring over 100 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
Games decided by 5 points or less 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 Games decided by 6-10 points 2-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 Games decided by 11-19 points 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Games decided by + 19 points 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0
Quick Facts -
Institution Texas Tech University
Location Lubbock, Texas
Chartered 1923
Nickname Red Raiders
Colors Scarlet & Black (PMS 185)
Stadium Jones Stadium (50,500)
Mascot Raider Red, Masked Rider
Chancellor John T. Montford
President Dr. Donald Haragan
Faculty Representative Dr. Robert Sweazy
Athletic Director Gerald Myers
Texas Tech Basketball Radio Network
Amarillo KGNC-AM (710)
Andrews KACT-AM / FM (1360 / 105.5)
Clovis KICA-FM (102.3)
Haskell KVRP-AM (1400)
Hereford KPAN-AM/FM (860 / 106.3)
Houston KSEV-AM / KJOJ AM (700)
Lamesa KPET-AM (690)
Lubbock KCRM-FM / KKAM-AM (99.5 / 1340)
Midland KCRS-AM/FM (550)
Plainview KKYN-AM (1090)
Post KPOS-AM/FM (1370 / 107.3)
All Texas Tech football, men's and women's basketball and baseball games and coaches shows can be heard on the Internet through a link at www.texastech.com.
James Dickey Call-In Show -
James Dickey conducts a weekly fan call-in radio show each Wednesday (Begins Dec. 2) from 7-8 p.m. live from Jazz Louisiana Kitchen in Lubbock. The flagship station for the show is KKAM-AM (1340) and the host is Jack Dale. Affiliates (beginning in Jan.) include:
Amarillo KGNC-AM (710)
Lamesa KPET-AM (690)
Lubbock KKAM-AM (1340)
Midland KCRS-AM (550)
Plainview KKYN-AM (1090)
James Dickey Television Show - The James Dickey television show airs each Sunday at 10:30 p.m. on KCBD-TV in Lubbock. The host of the show is Bryan Mudd, KCBD-TV sports director.
NEXT ON THE SLATE
Teams: Southern Methodist (1-1) at Texas Tech (3-1)
Date: Thursday, Dec. 3, 1998
Site: Lubbock Municipal Coliseum (8,174)
Series: Texas Tech leads 53-46
Last Meeting: SMU 89, Texas Tech 82, Nov. 22, 1997 in Dallas
Coaches: Texas Tech - James Dickey (Central Arkansas, '76), 135-73 (Eighth Season & Overall); SMU -Mike Dement (East Carolina '76), 43-43 (Fourth Season), 165-166 (13th Season Overall)
Texas Tech Radio: All Sports Radio Network [KCRM-FM (99.5) & KKAM-AM (1340) locally]. Jack Dale, play-by-play
Television: Fox Sports Southwest
SOUTHERN METHODIST ROSTER No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl-Ex. Hometown (High School/Transfer) 3 Renoldo Bratton G 6-0 165 So-Tr. Simsboro, La. (Arcadia) 4 Damon Hancock G 6-3 190 Fr-HS Lancaster, Texas (Lancaster) 5 Jeryl Sassero G 6-6 200 So-1L Dallas, Texas (Kimball) 12 Anthony Anderson G 6-3 190 Jr-2L Compton, Calif. (Centennial) 20 Tom Nabity G 5-10 175 Jr-1L Grand Island, Neb. (Grand Island) 23 Stephen Woods G 6-0 192 Jr-2L Bay City, Texas (Bay City) 30 Chad Elseyo G 6-7 205 So-1L Flower Mound, Texas (Marcus) 34 Willie Davis G/F 6-6 219 So-1L Dallas, Texas (Lincoln) 40 Josh Ihde F 6-8 232 Sr-1L Flower Mound, Texas (Marcus) 43 DeWayne Floydo F 6-8 205 Fr-HS Orange, Texas (West Orange-Stark) 45 Copley Broer F 6-7 215 Jr-1L Memphis, Tenn. (University) 50 Nigel Smitho C 6-10 240 Fr-HS Arlington, Texas (Kennedale) 54 Jon Forinash C 6-11 260 Fr-HS Carrollton, Texas (Newman Smith) 55 Michael Niemio F 6-8 250 Fr-HS Katy, Texas (Katy) o Possible Starters Head Coach: Mike Dement. Assistant Coaches: Jimmy Tubbs, Robert Lineburg, Simon Cote, Rock Pillsbury




