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

Steve Bergum

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

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Sports

Cougars, Bulldogs Reload For Tonight’s Nit Encounter

It's hard to imagine they have to do this again. It wasn't like Gonzaga and Washington State didn't get it right the first time, treating an Arena crowd of 8,479 to a predictably ragged, but fiercely intense and wildly entertaining, men's basketball game back in late November.

Sports

Leaf Suspended For Dui; Cougs Lose Tackle

The turmoil on Washington State's football team continued to grow Tuesday when coach Mike Price confirmed that Leon Bender, a projected starter at defensive tackle, has disenrolled from school and starting quarterback Ryan Leaf has been suspended for the first week of spring practice because of a driving-under-the-influence citation. The latest developments come on the heels of backup QB Chad Davis' recent decision to quit school and pursue a professional football career and the announcement late last month that four others players - all potential starters - have decided to quit the team. Bender, a 6-foot-5, 275-pounder from Santee, Calif., came to WSU as a Prop 48 casualty in 1993 and has been in academic limbo ever since. He sat out his freshman season and played sparingly as a sophomore on the Cougars' 1994 Alamo Bowl title team. He missed the 1995 season becaue of academic problems and then, according to Price, disenrolled last semester because of various problems ranging from academic to disciplinary. Price said Bender is currently enrolled at Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston. He said there is still a chance Bender could be reinstated at WSU by next fall. "But don't hold your breath," he added. Leaf, who took over the starting job from Davis late last fall, was stopped by Pullman police late Saturday night and charged with driving under the influence. Price said he was not certain of all the details surrounding Leaf's arrest, but added that the charges were complicated by the fact that Leaf, a 19-year-old redshirt freshman, is underage. In a statement released through the university's sports information department, Price called Leaf's citation "a very unfortunate incident. "But it is fortunate there was no accident and no injuries," he added.
Sports

Coaches Debate Ncaa Berths

The nine members of the NCAA's tournament selection committee are due to arrive in Kansas City, Mo., Thursday morning. They will take care of some administrative business and then lock themselves in a hotel room and begin picking the nation's best 34 at-large teams for this year's 64-team field. And anyone who doesn't appreciate the difficulty of that task should have listened in on Tuesday's conference call with Pacific-10 Conference coaches and heard their varied opinions on such a simple question as how many Pac-10 teams - out of a mere 10, mind you - deserve a spot in this year's tournament.
Sports

Cougars Treat Seniors To Rout Of Arizona State

As good-byes go, this one was rather half-hearted. That's half, as in 20 minutes worth - which was all of the heart Washington State needed Saturday afternoon in sending its three seniors off with a 103-78 win over Arizona State. WSU, in treating a Friel Court crowd of 6,624 to perhaps its finest single half of basketball this season, piled up a 59-29 halftime lead and then survived a predictable lull right after intermission to make winners out of Mark Hendrickson, Shamon Antrum and former walk-on Ryan Topper in their final regular-season home game.
Sports

Fourth Down For Cougars Mickelbart Follows 3 Teammates In Quitting The WSU Football Team

Coach Mike Price confirmed Tuesday that a fourth player, offensive lineman Paul Mickelbart, has quit Washington State's football team. Mickelbart, a promising 6-foot-4, 283-pound transfer from Notre Dame, said his decision was based on his dislike for the academic requirements that come with playing college football. "Basically, I'm just not a school-oriented person," said the former all-state player from Everett's Cascade High School. "I don't like school, never have, and it just got to the point where football wasn't enough to keep me going to school anymore."
Sports

Daniel Does In Dawgs Sophomore Forward’s Big Outing Helps WSU Avenge Loss In Seattle

1. Isaac Fontaine, whose eight straight foul shots helped WSU wrap up the win, takes a forearm to the head from Washington's Mark Sanford. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Washington State's Mark Hendrickson battles for the rebound against Washington's Bryant Boston. Photo by Associated Press (This photo appeared in the Regional edition only)
Sports

Cougars Give Vandals The Boot But UI Coach Cravens Returns Favor With Punt After Frustrating Loss

It was obvious throughout Tuesday night's 68-59 loss to Washington State that Idaho coach Joe Cravens was much more appalled than enthralled with the officiating. But lest anyone in the Kibbie Dome crowd of 3,884 had failed to notice his series of sideline tantrums, Cravens punctuated his frustration by grabbing the basketball away from WSU point guard Donminic Ellison immediately following the final buzzer and punting it toward the cheap seats. The shanked kick fell short of the stands however, prompting Cravens to lament, "I thought I'd get more distance out of that ball than I did." It was one of the few light-hearted moments in an otherwise somber postgame interview area as Cravens and his players struggled to come to grips with a fifth-consecutive defeat and their first home loss to WSU since 1987. "We competed hard and I'm pleased with that," Cravens said of his 9-12 Vandals. "I'm through being disappointed, I'm through being down. I don't really care about what streak this breaks or any of that stuff. "I'm through putting pressure on myself and my family worrying about this streak or that streak. Our kids were upbeat after the game because I was upbeat after the game and that's the way we're going to play it out." Cravens refused to say what prompted his post-game explosion, but it was apparent that he felt WSU senior center Mark Hendrickson was allowed to be more physical on the low blocks than the rules allow. "I don't really know what I was reacting to," he told reporters, who asked about his postgame punt. "You guys will have to fill in the blanks on that one. "We played hard, we just had trouble scoring. Our inability to attack their zone cost us the game - that and trying to guard Mark Hendrickson with him hanging onto to everybody who tried to guard him." Granted, Cravens and his Vandals ended up on the short end of a few calls and no-calls. But when everything sorted out, the best team probably won and, as Cravens said, it won with defense. The Cougars, after stumbling to a 33-31 halftime lead, turned up the defensive heat after intermission and stifled the Vandals with an aggressive zone defense. "It seemed like we shot the ball better tonight," WSU coach Kevin Eastman said, after watching his team win its third in a row and raise its overall record to 12-8 with the non-conference win. "But our defense is what got us going. "We really recognized their shooters extremely well and contested those perimeter shots." It helped, too, that the Cougars rediscovered their collective shooting touch. Despite Carlos Daniels' sub-par 1-for-8 effort, WSU shot almost 47 percent from the field. Hendrickson finished with 23 points, nine of which came from the free-throw line, and guards Isaac Fontaine and Shamon Antrum combined for 33 more. Antrum's 16 points came on 5-for-6 shooting from 3-point range and might have signalled an end to his recent shooting slump. Overshadowed by WSU's solid second-half performance and Cravens' postgame histrionics was the splendid play of Idaho's Harry Harrison, who scored 12 points and corralled 19 rebounds. It was the best rebounding effort by a WSU opponent since Southern California's Ron Riley burned the Cougars with 25 boards in 1972. The Vandals will take another stab at snapping their skid Saturday night when they entertain Big Sky Conference foe Eastern Washington at 7:05. WSU will play host to Washington at Friel Court Saturday afternoon at 3. Washington St. 68, Idaho 59 Washington St. (12-8) - Daniel 1-8 1-1 3, Fontaine 7-11 1-2 17, Hendrickson 7-12 9-9 23, Ellison 1-4 1-2 3, Antrum 5-8 1-2 16, Jackson 0-3 0-0 0, Mack 2-3 2-3 6. Totals 23-49 15-19 68. Idaho (9-12) - Turner 2-10 2-2 6, Harrison 5-9 2-2 12, Gardner 4-6 0-0 8, Rose 4-15 4-4 13, Dirden 4-10 1-1 12, Baumann 0-3 0-0 0, Thomas 1-2 0-0 2, Jackman 3-6 0-0 6. Totals 23-61 9-9 59. Halftime-Washington St. 33, Idaho 31. 3-Point goals- Washington St. 7-12 (Fontaine 2-3, Hendrickson 0-1, Antrum 5-6, Jackson 0-2), Idaho 4-17 (Turner 0-2, Rose 1-7, Dirden 3-6, Baumann 0-2). Fouled out-None. Rebounds-Washington St. 30 (Hendrickson 11), Idaho 37 (Harrison 19). Assists-Washington St. 15 (Ellison 7), Idaho 6 (Harrison 2). Total fouls-Washington St. 15, Idaho 19. A-3,884.
Sports

Beavers Snooze, Lose To Cougs WSU Wins 61-42 Yawner Before 4,500 At Friel

Sometimes, having to watch 40 minutes of boring basketball is the price one pays to sneak in out of the rain for a couple of hours. Slightly more than 4,500 Friel Court fans found that out Thursday night after braving heavy rains, slick roads and scattered flooding to watch Washington State dust off Oregon State 61-42.
Sports

Price Lauds Recruiting Class As Among His Best At WSU

Coach Mike Price readily admitted Wednesday afternoon that his latest Washington State football recruiting class might look a bit unorthodox on paper. But he warned against translating "unorthodox" into "can't play." "We've had the worst weather we've had in the seven years I've been here and we're coming off one of our worst records (3-8)," Price explained, "but this is one of the best recruiting classes we've ever had.
Sports

Cougars Trip Asu To Snap Losing Ways

For the time being, Mark Hendrickson is calling Thursday night's 72-58 win over Arizona State one small step for a struggling Washington State men's basketball team. But if Hendrickson and his teammates can hold the confidence charge generated by their lopsided victory, it could prove to be a giant leap for Cougarkind come March.
Sports

Hendrickson Isn’t Enough Senior’s Solid Return For Cougars Still Can’t Overcome No. 25 Cal

Freshman sensation Shareef Abdur-Rahim scored 32 points and pulled down 18 rebounds Thursday night at Friel Court, helping 25th-ranked California spoil the return of Washington State's Mark Hendrickson with an 87-79 men's basketball win over the Cougars. A crowd of nearly 6,500 turned out to cheer WSU and Hendrickson, who played for the first time since breaking his left hand a month ago.
Sports

Stellar Matchup Highlights Cal At UW Game

University of Washington fans are in for a treat Saturday when their Huskies entertain California in what should be one of the most entertaining games of the Pacific-10 Conference season. Cal is tied with UCLA for the league lead at 5-1 and UW is just 1-1/2 games behind at 3-2. But the most intriguing aspect of the game is the expected one-on-one matchup between UW's Mark Sanford and the Golden Bears' Tremaine Fowlkes, two of the country's most talented sophomore forwards. Sanford, it seems has a bit of revenge on his mind after being edged out by Fowlkes for the Pac-10 freshman-of-the-year award last season.