Las Vegas Review-Journal

REBELS’ FRESHMAN CLASS IMPRESSIVE

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rim at a high level.

2. More minutes for Diong

Speaking of Diong, this could be a breakout campaign for the 6-foot-11 Senegal native. His production was modest as a freshman (2.1 points, 2.6 rebounds in 9.5 minutes per game), but his potential was easy to see, especially on the defensive end.

Diong was UNLV’S biggest difference-maker on defense, as he registered a block rate of 6.8 percent and a team-best defensive rating of 97.3. There is a good chance the long, agile center could emerge as one of the top rim protectors in the Mountain West this season.

Offensivel­y, Diong is a little further behind, but he’s athletic enough to run the floor and finish above the rim. If he can stay on the court — he averaged a teamhigh 8.6 fouls per 40 minutes last year — he should be a productive frontcourt player.

3. Backcourt length

UNLV’S perimeter defense wasn’t as bad as its interior defense last year, but that doesn’t mean it was good, either. The Rebels struggled to keep opposing ball handlers out of the paint, to the point that head coach Marvin Menzies implemente­d a zone defense toward the end of the season.

Part of the problem was a lack of length in the backcourt. Guards Jordan Johnson (5-foot11) and Jovan Mooring (6-foot-2) were undersized for their positions and struggled to keep driving lanes closed. Just by virtue of starting a pair of able-sized guards this season (6-foot-1 point guard Noah Robotham and 6-foot-4 shooting guard Bryce Hamilton are the favorites to start), UNLV should be in better shape on the outside.

4. A bigger role for Juiston

Senior power forward Shakur Juiston might be saying he doesn’t want to be a go-to scorer, but that’s not really up to him. If the Rebels are best-served by putting the ball in Juiston’s hands, that’s exactly what Menzies will do.

And Menzies probably should do that. Juiston’s offensive efficiency was crazy last season (14.6 points per game, 63.9 percent shooting), though his usage rate was far below that of Mccoy (27.5 percent to 21.7 percent). If the Rebels can increase Juiston’s scoring chances while maintainin­g his efficiency, he’ll be one of the best offensive players in the Mountain West.

5. Experience

Last year was the first time through a Division I schedule for guys like Juiston, Mccoy, Diong, Tervell Beck and Amauri Hardy. They were all rotation players, trying to figure things out on the fly. In retrospect, maybe last year’s 0-5 stretch to end conference play shouldn’t have come as a surprise for such an inexperien­ced crew.

Now, all of those players (except Mccoy) return a year older, wiser and more experience­d in the ways of college basketball. Throw in incoming transfer Noah Robotham — who started 88 games at Akron before moving to UNLV — and suddenly the Rebels have experience at just about every position.

6. Freshman flash

UNLV will attempt to balance all that experience with an incoming freshman class that should rate as one of the best in the Mountain West.

Smooth left-handed scorer Bryce Hamilton is likely to earn the starting nod at shooting guard, and local sharpshoot­er Trey Woodbury will give the Rebels another perimeter scoring option. Joel Ntambwe is all potential on the wing, and big man Jonathan Tchamwa Tchatchoua is already the team’s top athlete.

That group will not only form UNLV’S long-term core going forward, but several of the newbies will play themselves into significan­t roles by the end of the season.

7. Chemistry

Simply put, these Rebels like each other. It sounds trite, but that can go a long way in a sport like basketball, where personalit­ies and interperso­nal relationsh­ips can affect what happens on the court.

At Mountain West media day, both Juiston and Robotham raved about how well the players have been getting along with one another. Earlier in the month, Hardy spoke at length about the family feel of the offseason program. And Menzies takes every opportunit­y to point out how much he likes this team.

It might not show up in the box score, but in the preseason — when optimism reigns — that positive chemistry looks like a big deal.

 ?? STEVE MARCUS ?? UNLV Rebels forwardSha­kur Juiston (10) scores Feb. 21 against the Fresno State Bulldogs at the Thomas & Mack Center. Juiston averaged 14.6 points per game with 63.9 percent shooting last season and could emerge as the Rebels’ go-to scorer in 2018-’19.
STEVE MARCUS UNLV Rebels forwardSha­kur Juiston (10) scores Feb. 21 against the Fresno State Bulldogs at the Thomas & Mack Center. Juiston averaged 14.6 points per game with 63.9 percent shooting last season and could emerge as the Rebels’ go-to scorer in 2018-’19.

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