Tuesday, February 07, 2006

"Local ballers dream of playing abroad" -- Feb. 7, 2006

By C. Jennings Breakey
The Western Front

Bellingham Slam forward and former Western basketball player Craig Roosendaal sank 80 three-pointers in his final season with the Vikings last year, some of them far beyond the arc.

But none of his treys compare with his next move — Roosendaal might shoot beyond American borders next year.

The 6-foot-7-inch sharp-shooter might play overseas in 2007. International hoops isn’t like U.S. basketball, he said.

From salaries to players’ styles on the court, basketball outside of the United States is a different ball game, Roosendaal said.

“You could go over there and have one great year, and that will set you up for the rest of your career,” Roosendaal said. “Or you could go there and they could send you home after a week, and then you have to start all over.”

Most basketball divisions in foreign countries permit only two American players per team, said Western men’s assistant basketball coach Tony Dominguez.

“If you’re an American, you better score, or you’re gone,” he said. “A European team needs to get a better player than their local guy, or it doesn’t make any sense.”

American players’ athleticism used to impress basketball fans overseas because teams in foreign countries primarily focus on teaching players fundamentals such as shooting and basic ball handling, Dominguez said.

International basketball leagues are about finesse more than scoring, he said. Players shoot more threes, not much action occurs in the paint and referees don’t call many fouls.

“They just don’t want to go down there and get beat up,” Dominguez said. “Its like a blood-fest (overseas).”

However, international basketball changed when Argentina beat the United States 89-81 in a semi-final game of the 2004 Olympics in Athens.

Dominguez said now that international teams can beat NBA teams, the glamour and glitz of American hoops is wearing off. U.S. players now have to score more to play overseas because international teams could perform equally well with players from their respective countries, Dominguez said.

Chris Morrison, who played point guard for Western from 1995 to 1996, averaged 15 points and eight assists per game overseas en route to a Division II championship, Dominguez said.

He was cut after the season because his team wasn’t satisfied with his statistics, he said.

“They won the whole thing and they cut him because he didn’t score 25,” Dominguez said. “They were loving him, but then said, ‘We want more.’ ”

Foreign countries typically have three to four divisions of basketball, Dominguez said. Division I is similar to the NBA, except games aren’t televised regularly, he said.

Fans and officials oversees treat Division I players the same as Americans treat NBA players, Dominguez said.

“If you’re Lebron (James), people bow down to you,” he said. “If you’re not, people don’t care.”

Roosendaal’s teammate and Bellingham Slam point guard Caleb Gervin, 25, played in a Germany Division II league in 2005. This year, he had the opportunity to play overseas in Division I, but turned it down to play with the Slam.

He said he had more free time playing international ball but couldn’t pursue a college degree overseas. The stress of leading his team in scoring every night is draining, he said.

“We knew that we had to perform every night and if we didn’t, that we would hear about it,” Gervin said. “I put a lot of pressure on myself and had a pretty good year.”

Gervin pulled in 22 points per game, averaging five rebounds and four assists while playing in Germany. Despite working hard for his numbers, Gervin said the difficult part of playing international basketball was adapting culturally, adjusting to language, food and climate — things most Americans overlook.

Western’s men’s basketball head coach Brad Jackson said a player’s ability to adapt to different cultures is often harder than playing basketball.

“Guys that have gone, and maybe struggled a little bit, often times it has to do with other stuff, not the basketball,” he said. “Language, living, customs, food — just depending on how persnickety you are.”

Only the top two divisions in international basketball pay their players considerable wages but players can make a living suiting up for any of the international leagues, Jackson said.

Some players make the transition to international basketball just because they’ve never been abroad.

“For a young guy just getting out of college and wanting to play ball for a while, it’s a great outlet,” he said.

Jackson said it helps to have overseas connections when a player wants to play international basketball. Sometimes it comes down to networking just like any other sport, he said.

“There’s a lot of politics and who you know games at any level in every sport,” Jackson said. “But most often, if guys are diligent and keep working at it and are a good enough player, there are opportunities that pop up.”

Vikings senior forward Tyler Amaya, Roosendaal’s roommate and teammate last year, is also considering international basketball next year.
Amaya said most of the players he knows overseas make a decent living with free room, board, vehicle and some money allowance from their respective teams.

“I kind of want to try the overseas thing and see a different part of the world, and if I’m lucky enough to break my way into a career with it. That would be great,” he said. “Basketball doesn’t last forever, so I just want to milk it for what it’s worth.”

Story image 1

C. Jennings Breakey / The Western Front

Bellingham Slam forward Craig Roosendaal checks the scoreboard after a timeout in their game against the Bellevue Blackhawks on Jan. 10.

Monday, February 06, 2006

"Viking women topple Lumberjacks" -- Feb. 3, 2006

By C. Jennings Breakey
The Western Front (Online Exclusive)

Western senior forward Tina Donahue and sophomore guard Elyse Hartman’s keen three-point shooting wore out more than Humboldt State players Thursday night.

Atop the balcony overlooking Carver Gym, Western senior student Sean Howe mounted signs imprinted with a ‘3’ every time the Vikings scored beyond the arc. Western players sunk 15 treys, so Howe had his work cut out for him.

“They were putting them up there pretty quick,” he said. “Donahue had like three in five minutes.”

Donahue had a team-high 18 points in Western’s 80-50 thumping of the Lumberjacks, while Hartman contributed 14.

Both players sunk four threes apiece and combined with five other Vikings players to tie Western’s record of most threes in a game set Jan. 7 against Humboldt State, when the Vikings edged the Lumberjacks by two points.

“We just try to take what they give us,” Hartman said. “They were taking away our post play tonight, so that means our threes are wide-open.”

Western, 9-0 in GNAC and 18-1 overall, knew its three-point shooting could be the difference between a win or loss, said Western coach Carmen Dolfo.

Like their first contest against the Lumberjacks, who are 6-3 in GNAC and 11-7 overall, Western struggled to score inside.

“They were going to make us beat them from the outside tonight,” Hartman said. “The coaches looked at me and said, ‘Shoot the ball.’ ”

After Donahue and Hartman carried Western through the first half, the rest of the Vikings came alive.

Fans cheered seven minutes after halftime when a Hartman pass was tipped under the basket into the hands of Western freshman Claire Pallansch, who forced in a lay-up. Fifteen seconds later, Pallansch swiped the ball away from a Luberjack defender.

She finished the game with 12 points and a game-high 12 rebounds.

Freshman center Willow Cabe and sophomore forward Liz McCarrell contributed two treys each to Western’s three-point attack in the second half.

“They took away our post and they took away our driving,” Dolfo said. “So it wasgreat to see everybody step-up.”

Story image 1

Chris Joseph Taylor / The Western Front

Western junior guard Mollie Stelmack hangs on to the ball while driving to the hole against Humboldt State University guard Laura Berreth Thursday evening at Sam Carver Gymnasium. Western beat the Lumberjacks 80-50.