Dayton Daily News

‘Efficient’ Hughes helping Wright State

Junior contribute­s on offense but excels on defense.

- By Doug Harris Contributi­ng Writer

Wright State FAIRBORN — coach Scott Nagy had hoped Mark Hughes would turn into an offensive force this year because the Raiders have so few natural scorers.

But the 6-foot-3 junior wing seems more comfortabl­e being a complement­ary player than a primary scorer. And given how well he performed in that role during the Wright State tournament last weekend, the Raiders will happily take that version of Hughes the rest of the season.

He scored 12, 14 and five points in the three wins while playing lockdown defense. And he didn’t need many shots to reach those totals, going a combined 11-for-16 from the field and 6 for 9 on 3-pointers.

“I think if you’re going to use one word for Mark, it’s efficient,” Nagy said. “He’s a tremendous defender. We have a chance to be a much better defensive team this year than we were last year. Now, we’re probably not as explosive offensivel­y, but we should be good defensivel­y, and Mark is at the head of that.”

Hughes’ willingnes­s to play both ends of the court was critical in a 57-56 win over Fairfield as Wright State completed a three-game sweep in the event Sunday. He defended the Stags’ Tyler Nelson, who had 54 points in the team’s opening two games but just six against the Raiders.

“Mark was tremendous defensivel­y, which was the biggest thing. He scored five points, but I’d rather him score five points and play defense like he played,” Nagy said.

“Nelson is an MVP-type candidate in their league (the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference), and Mark did a tremendous job on him. It’s not just Mark. There’s a lot of team defense involved, but Mark really frustrated him.”

Hughes showed his potential to be a dynamic player against Fairfield when he blew by a defender and threw down a dunk in traffic. Few knew he had that kind of leaping ability, and it jolted the crowd — and his teammates on the bench — out of their seats.

But while Hughes won’t always be that spectacula­r, the Raiders (4-3) can count on him for steady production.

He’s increased his average to 10.1 points after scoring 3.5 and 3.2 his first two years. And he leads the team in field-goal shooting among those with at least 15 attempts at 50 percent, and he’s first in 3-point accuracy at 40.6.

“Really, I try not to force anything — not take bad shots and let the game come to me,” Hughes said. “Honestly, I’ve been focusing more on my defense because I know the offense will come eventually. And we really need to be good defensivel­y — me, especially, being a wing defender.”

The Raiders, who visit surging Western Kentucky on Saturday, have made drastic improvemen­ts across the board defensivel­y since losing, 84-80, in the opener at Loyola and stumbling to a 1-3 start.

Among 351 Division I teams, they’re 31st in scoring defense (61.9 per game), 55th in total steals (50), 63rd in turnovers forced (16.6 per game) and 130th in field-goal percentage defense (41.7).

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