Texarkana Gazette

Monmouth still battling after surprising 0-11 start

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WEST LONG BRANCH, N.J.—Coach King Rice and four end-of-the bench Monmouth basketball players stood off to the side drinking water and slapping hands while the starters ran timed full-court sprints.

Again. And again. And again.

Rice dished out the penalty to his top players for losing two practice drills to five players anchored by their 50-year-old head coach. He was driving home the point of not letting a weaker opponent gain confidence. That’s happened a few times this season during a surprising 0-11 start.

“Any time you lose this many, everybody’s confidence is shaken,” Rice said. “You lose, lose, lose, and you keep losing. If we can get one, maybe we get on the road to others.”

Monmouth joins LaSalle, Coppin State and Alabama A&M as the final four winless teams of the 351 in NCAA Division I.

The Hawks are trying to win again after backto-back Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference titles and earning NIT appearance­s during the 2015-16 and 2016-17 seasons. They lost junior Micah Seaborn when he entered the NBA Draft.

“Some people are looking at it like, ‘Monmouth is done. They’ll never win a game,’” redshirt junior forward Mustapha Traore said. “I don’t pay attention. I’m very confident right now. We haven’t started conference play, and we haven’t gone as hard as we possibly can in practice.”

Traore, Louie Pillari and Diago Quinn—all fourthyear players—were true freshman when Monmouth garnered national attention for its Bench Mob. The choreograp­hed celebratio­ns orchestrat­ed by reserves came to symbolize the fun of college basketball at a mid-major level.

The hard realizatio­n is that first taste might be as good as it gets for the upperclass­men.

“It’s been tough so far, but it’s a learning experience,” Pillari said. “Sometimes you try to look back and see what they did differentl­y than what we’ve done, just trying to apply those winning principles.”

Monmouth’s final two nonconfere­nce games are Thursday at home against Yale (which has wins against Miami and California) and Dec. 31 against Penn (which last beat defending national champion Villanova).

“Everything we do from here on is a lesson,” Traore said. “We just want to keep everything positive right now. Everybody wants to keep their head up going forward to the next game.”

Of the 11 losses, which included a visit to No. 19 Kentucky, the most haunting was a 75-73 defeat to Hofstra, which converted the go-ahead three-point play with 16 seconds to go.

“They’re all hard,” Pillari said. “With how well we played, you are supposed to win that one. I don’t want to say it hurts the most, but that’s the one it feels like we deserved.”

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