After having a 19-10 record last winter, the college’s best in 23 years, the Chadron State men’s basketball team is expected to be strong again this season. Coach Shane Paben said he hopes it will be even better than last year.
The Eagles, who began their preseason practice last weekend, return four mainstays and two more letterwinners from last season, when the Eagles advanced to the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference playoffs for the second time in three years, but also just the second time since 2011.
Paben has added 10 transfers to the roster, nearly all of them from community colleges. He said several of them are expected to challenge the returnees for playing time and could crash the starting lineup.
“We’ll be taller everywhere, longer and taller,” the coach said. “I have high expectations. I believe we have a chance to be special, but we’ll have to prove it on the court.”
He believes that depth should be one of the team’s strengths.
The returnees include first-team all-RMAC choice Josh Robinson and second-team selection Bryce Latimer, both seniors.
Robinson, a smooth 6-6 forward, shot 60.2% from the field, averaged 13.9 points and 8.3 rebounds. Latimer, a lightning-quick 5-10 guard, averaged 15.2 points, shot 47.3% from the field and drew enough fouls to go 110-129 at the free throw line. Latimer tallied 43 points in a game last season.
The Eagles also return 6-7 center Porter Anderson, who averaged 8.4 points and 4.6 rebounds while often blocking out the rival’s big guy, and Jarrett Taylor, a returning starter who hit 36.7% from 3-point range and Paben describes as a good team player.
A glimpse of several of the promising recruits in alphabetical order follows:
–Trey Ballard, 6-3, was the leading scorer at 16.7 points a game at Southwestern Christian College in Texas in 2022-23. He was all-conference and made 70 treys while shooting 36.3% from behind the arc.
–John Jensen, 6-9, is a slender post player who averaged 8.7 points and 4.7 rebounds as a part-time starter at Nevada Southern College last season. He drew lots of fouls and was 80-102 at the free throw line.
—Raul Nunez, 6-4, averaged 10 points and shot 44.6%, including 36.6% (44-113) from behind the arc at Northwest Oklahoma, which had a 22-10 record.
—Jalen Patterson, 6-1, is a leading candidate to replace Marcus Jefferson, the Eagles’ starting point guard the last three seasons. Patterson averaged 14.9 points and 7 assists while earning all-conference at Las Positas College last season. The latter was second among all California juco players.
—Dalton Peterson, 6-3, averaged 13.7 points, shot 47.7% from the field and 40.8% from 3-point range (91-223) at Casper College last season, while earning Region 9 all-star honors. He’s a 4.0 student and gave the college’s commencement address last spring.
—Julio Phipps, 6-5, is native of New York City and averaged 9.0 points and 6.9 rebounds while shooting 57.6% from the field at Portersville College in California a year ago. He was first-team all-conference last season after being first-team
all-defensive choice as a freshman.
Other newcomers also could earn playing time if they show enough during workouts before the season begins. A couple are apt to redshirt, the coach said.
Jefferson and MJ Foust, a valuable alternate who joined the Eagles last year, were the only team members who saw more than token action to conclude their eligibility.
Another stalwart, Isaiah Wyatt, who averaged 15.2 points and 5.3 rebounds while leading the RMAC in 3-point shooting, entered the transfer portal. He said he enjoyed his year at CSC, but wanted to see if he could play Division I basketball. He’s now on the roster at Texas-San Antonio.
Wyatt will be missed, but it appears the Eagles have numerous promising players available to help take up the slack. They’ll open their season Friday and Saturday, Nov. 10-11 by hosting Texas A&M International and Texas A&M-Kingsville. They’ll also play at home six more dates before New Year’s.
Cannot wait for B ball to start. These young men performed with FIRE AND ATTITUDE. I was left hoarse at the end of every game I went to. BRING IT RMAC!
So excited for the direction this team has taken. I hope this team will get more support in the community. The team last year was so exciting and fun to watch, and I am sure they will continue their success from last year. We should be filling up the Chicoine Center, we should feel privileged to have such high quality college basketball in our small town.