Saluki Men’s Basketball opens regular season at Winthrop on Friday

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS (0-0) at WINTHROP (0-0)
Nov. 10, 2017 • 6 p.m. CT
Rock Hill, S.C. • Winthrop Coliseum (6,100)
First Meeting (H: 0-0, A: 0-0, N: 0-0)

Series vs. Winthrop/Big South
Friday marks the first meeting between the Salukis and Eagles. SIU is 2-0 all-time against current members of the Big South Conference with wins over Charleston Southern in 2010 and Radford in 1992.

Hinson vs. Winthrop
Salukis head coach Barry Hinson is 1-1 lifetime against Winthrop, having played the Eagles as part of the BracketBusters tournament while coaching at Missouri State.

Salukis in season openers
The Salukis won their season opener 11-straight years from 1999 to 2009. Since then, they are 2-5 in season openers, with victories coming at New Orleans on Nov. 12, 2012 and versus Air Force on Nov. 13, 2016.

Division I starting experience
The Salukis have seven players who have a combined 178 games of starting experience at the Division I level. Tyler Smithpeters (63), Thik Bol (33), Armon Fletcher (30), Sean Lloyd (20) and Jonathan Wiley (1) have all made starts at SIU. Transfer Marcus Bartley made 18 starts at Saint Louis and Eric McGill started 13 times at SEMO.

Veteran roster
• Ten of the 12 players are upperclassmen.
• Half of the roster (six players) are in either their fourth or fifth year of eligibility.
• Nine of the 12 players are at least 21-years-old. A 10th player turns 21 in December.
• The team enters the season with 498 games of Division I playing experience combined.

Thik Bol named Preseason 
Second-Team MVC Team

Thik Bol (6-8, 202, Sr.) was named preseason Second-Team MVC Team. In his first season at SIU last year, he blocked 76 shots, which ranked third-best in a single-season in school history. That mark also put him 11th all-time at SIU. Bol started every game last year, averaged 9.1 points and shot a team-best .533 from the field.

Fletcher on Most Improved Team
Armon Fletcher (6-5, 207, Jr.) was named to the MVC’s Most Improved Team last year. He was third on the team in scoring (11.1 points) and reached double figures 19 times. He was second on the team in 3-pointers made (47) and ranked seventh in the conference in steals (1.3). Fletcher missed three games in early January with a foot injury.

Tyler Smithpeters returns
Tyler Smithpeters (6-4, 203, Sr.) Injured his knee in the season opener against Wright State last year and was granted a medical redshirt. He led the team in 3-point shooting percentage (.405) as a junior in 2015-16 and ranks sixth all-time at SIU in career 3-point shooting percentage (.395).

Sean Lloyd settles in as starter
G Sean Lloyd (6-5, 210, Jr.) made 20 starts last season with his first start coming on Dec. 14 versus Saint Louis. He averaged 7.6 points and 2.8 rebounds off the bench, but improved those numbers to 8.7 points and 3.3 rebounds as a starter, while shooting 19-of-47 (.404) from 3-point.

Dawg Bites
•G Marcus Bartley (6-5, 193, Jr.) was diagnosed with a broken bone in his right wrist on Oct. 25 and is expected to miss six weeks.
•F Thik Bol (6-8, 202, Sr.) had knee surgery on Nov. 3 and is expected to miss approximately six weeks.
•F Austin Weiher (6-8, 206, Jr.) missed all of preseason with a foot injury.
•Of Thik Bol‘s 129 field goals last season, 57 (44 percent) were dunks.
•In SIU’s wins last year, it averaged 77.6 points and was +3.9 on the boards. In its losses, it averaged 58.8 points and was -7.3 on the boards.
Tyler Smithpeters has made two or more 3-pointers 29 times in his career.
•SIU has gone 82-consecutive games with at least one 3-point field goal and 990-consecutive games with at least one free throw (dating back to 1986).
•Hinson is 14-16 overall in non-conference road games at SIU.

Coach Hinson Press Conference Transcript
What is it, in A Few Good Men, when Tom Cruise said ‘the hits keep coming’? Armon Fletcher dislocated a knee at Tuesday’s practice. The initial response was that he’ll be out for up to two weeks. Thinking back to that now, we hope to make a game time decision. We will travel with him this weekend, but we don’t know if he’ll be able to participate in our first two games. We’ll make that decision literally right before game time based on our medical staff.

There was no damage in the xrays?
This is a non-surgical injury but it’s a re-occurring injury that he has had in the past. He is not going to be practicing this week. I would like to have a presser next week that we won’t talk about injuries, so hopefully that’s the case. I’m sorry to start off with that again this week. But right now we know we have eight guys we can take to Winthrop, maybe nine.

How did the injury happen?
All these injuries have been freakish. It was during a block-out drill. If you were watching film and you had a six year-old daughter, you would’ve thought that she could’ve hit you harder than how he got hit. It was just a freak deal.

But you’re still traveling with him? 
I don’t play possum with you on injuries. I don’t do that. I’m not one of those coaches. If we can play him Friday then we’re going to play him Friday. My gut is right now that probably won’t take place, but we’re going to do everything we can. It will be a decision made by our training staff, but more importantly by Armon himself. It’s not like we have to have an NFL Injury Report on Monday. We don’t need to start that.

Does he have crutches? 
No, he doesn’t have crutches. He’s walking around, but he looks like Herman Munster. I’ve got two of those right now, Thik (Bol) and Armon.

How’s the endurance looking for the season opener? 
I think there’s a lot of different things in here that will give us a challenge as a coaching staff and as a team. We look at play, at rotation, changes that we can make offensively and defensively. You know, how the game’s being called early on. It’ll be tight and lots of fouls. We’ve got to be able to handle that. We’ve looked at a lot of different scenarios over the last couple of days. We don’t feel like we’ll go into this unprepared. But you can’t prepare for the unknown. I think that’s the scary thing right now. There’s 351 programs right now in college basketball. I don’t think any of them that would enter their first game of the year without three starters. I think we probably win that race. Hopefully we’ll get this down here pretty quick.

Will Tyler Smithpeters start if Fletcher can’t go?
I think Tyler would start because he deserves to start. I always look at what’s the next best addition for us. A lot of that has to do with that he has experience. He’s played in games like this, he is a senior. I tend to always lean towards guys that have experience. Tyler’s done that, he’s played in big games and season openers. I think that has a lot to do with it as well.

How’s Austin (Weiher) looked? 
I think he’s looked okay. I don’t think he’ll play. I think it’s not fair for us to have a kid who was cleared on the 6th to play on the 10th. I think that’s awful hard to ask that. When I say we’ll be down to eight guys, that’s because I don’t anticipate Austin playing.

How have the injured players helped support their teammates?
The one thing about leadership is when these guys are out, they’re not gone. It’s not like  they’re going somewhere. Marcus has been on the bench over there and every day and getting after our guys telling them this and that. You know Thik is not a vocal leader. He just leads by example. Those guys are still around. Sean Lloyd is going to lead this team. If you ask all the guys right now who they’re going to listen to and a majority of them are going to tell you Sean.

Talk about the new signees, Darius Beane and Sam Shafer.
When you look at the following year, we have seven seniors. When you have a seven-senior team, you want to make sure you get a mixture of high school (freshmen) coming in that these guys can mentor for an entire year. We really wanted to make that prevalent, so we have have four scholarships and we really wanted to see if there was a point when we could sign some high school kids if we could. We have two young men signed. In those two, we felt like we needed to sign specifically a guard to play the point. I have always told you the more we can play point guards on the floor, it does not matter with height. Marcus is 6’4 and Darius comes in at 6’2. Darius is a different player than Anthony. He is more of a point guard and comes out of a very tradition-rich program at Carbondale

High. He plays for a guy that I think is a phenomenal coach so we are getting a well-coached kid. I know I am getting a kid that has been raised right because I know the parents personally, so I am excited about that. So this is a basketball family. The father played at the highest level possible. Oldest boy is the third all-time leading scorer in our program’s history. Then we have the youngest one coming in as the fourth-best player in Illinois. I think you will see Darius make changes in strength and conditioning. I think he has the chance to be one hell of a player.

Over the years in this program, we have seen guys like Carlton Fay, Matt Shaw and Sean O’Brien have all had unbelievable success. We have wanted to find what fits that hybrid position that can pass, dribble, shoot and has a high basketball IQ. One of the things that we did was that we went out and got a guy like Sam. Sam fits that mold of those three guys and I think that is really important for our program. I know I have been giddy about this season, but I am giddy about the two guys that signed with us today.

Will you consider redshirting either player?
We do not ever talk about red-shirt publicly. We always talk about that with the family. Red-shirting has always been part of our DNA since I have been here. Times have changed. I do not red-shirt kids anymore. If the NCAA rules do not change regarding transfers, if they go where I think they are headed, I think it is going to be very difficult to red-shirt individuals. I think the NCAA rule is going to go to where guys can transfer and be automatically eligible and not have to sit out a year. If they come to this deal, you can shut mid-major basketball down.

Was it his shooting that most impressed you about Shafer?
I do not want to say shooting. I think his basketball IQ. The first time I saw Sam he reminded me of Sean O’Brien. It was a cross between Sean and Matt Shaw. He shot the ball a little bit like Matt. Matt was a better shooter than Sean. Sean had a little bit higher basketball IQ on the floor for us than probably what Matt had. I just saw those three guys in Sam and thought “that’s what we want”. That position as we all know has been very prevalent and very, very precocious in The Valley. We have signed a point guard and a hybrid and we hope to sign a couple of bigs if we can. If we do that, we are adding to a good class.

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