Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Walker good with UALR’s additions

- TRENTON DAESCHNER Walker

University of Arkansas at Little Rock men’s basketball Coach Darrell Walker said he likes the makeup of his team this year, and that isn’t just a blanket statement.

The Trojans were limited with underwhelm­ing size and had to rely heavily on multiple freshmen in Walker’s first season as head coach, which saw UALR finish 10-21 and 5-13 in the Sun Belt, tied for last in the league.

Since then, Walker has engineered a substantia­l overhaul of the roster, adding four transfers in the offseason as well as multiple players with greater size and length on the perimeter.

“I do like that the skill level is higher with our guys,” Walker said. “They’re longer, they’re more athletic, and they all can kind of handle the ball, initiate the offense. We don’t have a team that’s gonna be dominated by one guy handling the ball.”

UALR returns eight players from last season’s roster,

including six with starting experience and two of their top three leading scorers. But there are also nine newcomers, among them a mix of freshmen, transfers and even one ex-team manager.

Junior guard Alsean Evans, junior forward Ruot Monyyong and junior center Admir Besovic all transferre­d in from junior colleges, and redshirt junior guard Ben Coupet Jr. was a late addition to the program in August, transferri­ng from UNLV. UALR first-year assistant coach Preston Laird was on UNLV’s staff the past three seasons while Coupet was there.

Coupet is immediatel­y eligible this season after being granted a waiver Monday, according to a team spokesman. He saw very limited action at UNLV and redshirted his true sophomore season in 2017-18.

The Trojans will have much better interior size, too. UALR had one player on the 2018-19 active roster listed above 6-8. This season, the Trojans have four, including returning soph- omore forward Nikola Maric (6-10), Monyyong (6-10), redshirt senior center Sam Dunkum (6-11) and Besovic (7-0).

Walker also is hoping a second

year of his system and culture will pay dividends.

“Everybody was learning on the fly,” Walker said of his first season. “This year, you got

a few guys that have returned that’s been in the system and know what we’re gonna do offensivel­y and defensivel­y, so that’s helped me and my staff coaching wise.”

Said sophomore guard Markquis Nowell: “All the guys know [the system], so it’s like a review. The system works … if you do it with some pace, if you do it hard, you’re gonna get good looks.”

Replacing guard Rayjon Tucker, who led UALR in scoring last year averaging 20.3 points per game, poses a challenge. Walker believes filling his production will have to come through multiple players.

“I think overall, the guys that we have, if Rayjon averaged 20, I think that 20 points will be a [combinatio­n of] other players getting those points,” Walker said.

And then there’s the issue of turnovers, which was one of the biggest downfalls of the Trojans last season. UALR averaged 16.3 of them per game, which was the most in the Sun Belt. Walker said “there’s no doubt in my mind we should’ve won 16 games” last season if not for the turnovers.

The Trojans, who’ve experience­d three consecutiv­e losing seasons, open the 2019-20 regular season Nov. 5 against Missouri State in Springfiel­d, Mo.

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