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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

BYU, San Diego State build friendly rivalry

Jimmer Fredette scored 43 points the first time BYU met San Diego State this year. (Associated Press)
Bernie Wilson Associated Press

SAN DIEGO – This sounds almost too nice to be a rivalry.

Fans shouldn’t expect any trash talking on the court when Jimmer Fredette and the No. 7 BYU Cougars visit D.J. Gay and the No. 6 San Diego State Aztecs on Saturday in a nationally televised game.

Viejas Arena is expected to be amped up for one of the most eagerly anticipated games in San Diego sports history. It’s been sold out for nearly two months and tickets are going for hundreds of dollars on various websites. A long line of students snaked around the 12,414-seat arena on Thursday afternoon, and their allotment won’t be distributed until this afternoon.

The student section, known as “The Show,” will no doubt push the bounds of decency.

But there’s no animosity between the players, even after Fredette went off for 43 points in a 71-58 win against SDSU in Provo, Utah, a month ago.

“I think since we’re both in the Top 10 and have been playing very well and always have great battles against each other that there’s a level of respect,” Fredette said Wednesday night after scoring 34 points in BYU’s 84-76 win against Colorado State. “Both teams have very talented players and we go out and compete. There’s no trash talking or anything like that. We both just want to win the Mountain West Conference and that’s what this game is all about. I think both teams have great respect for each other.”

The feeling is mutual, SDSU senior forward Billy White said. Jawing at Fredette won’t be in SDSU’s playbook.

“D.J., Tim (Shelton) and I have been in the league for four years, so we kind of grew up with each other, playing against each other all the time,” White said. “We just have respect for each other. He is a great player and I respect him a lot for what he’s doing.”

White went so far as to call Fredette “a great guy. He always says, ‘Good job.’ He’s not a trash-talker at all.”

The Aztecs (27-1, 12-1 Mountain West) haven’t been doing a good job against Fredette and BYU (26-2, 12-1) in recent games. The Cougars have won three straight in the series, including 71-69 at San Diego last year. Fredette, recovering from strep throat and mononucleosis, scored 33 points in that game.

A month ago, Fredette highlighted the first Top 10 showdown in Mountain West history by scoring BYU’s final 15 points of the first half and 24 of 27 in one stretch.

“The key thing that we’re going to try to do this time is keep fresh bodies on him,” Gay said on Thursday. “It may not seem like it, but he is a human. He has to get tired sometime. I think if we have the ability to keep fresh bodies and put a little bit more length on him, like we did the first game, you know, have Billy, have him shoot over the top, which is difficult, I think that might play to our benefit. Just keeping fresh bodies and length to help tire him out and kind of slow him down.”