Western Carolina Catamounts
November 30th, 2024 at Fiserv Forum
Head Coach: Tim Craft (188-166 overall, 0-0 at Western Carolina)
Three-Year NET Average: 214.0
Three-Year kenpom Average: 209.0
Projected 2023-24 T-Rank: 280
Photo from Western Carolina Athletics
State of the Program
The past three years under Justin Gray the Catamounts was a constant elevation. They finished last in the SoCon his first year, but thanks to triple-double machine Vonterius Woolbright they climbed to fourth in the league and went from #296 in kenpom in 2022 up to #110 last year. Unfortunately for Catamount fans, Gray and Woolbright are both gone, as is every other starter. Replacing Gray at the helm is Tim Craft, who spent the last 11 years at Gardner-Webb, taking over from Chris Holtmann. He sustained Holtmann's success, never had a losing Big South season, is responsible for the four highest kenpom rankings in program history, and led the Bulldogs to their only NCAA Tournament appearance in 2019. WCU will be a complete overhaul, however. He returns just one player that logged 2023-24 minutes for the Catamounts in Bernard Pelote, and bolsters his roster with a mix of D1 transfers, JUCO transfers, and freshmen.
Rotation
It's hard to project what this team will be when nearly everyone from the head coach to the last man off the bench is new, but the strategy seems to be clear. Brandon Morgan was a stud at the JUCO level, putting up big numbers for Caldwell Tech. He can create for himself, find the open man, make threes, and protect the ball. He's joined by Neenah, WI native Chevalier "Ice" Emery, another JUCO transfer who led Dodge City CC in scoring. Emery was also a state champion at Neenah who is dangerous beyond the arc. The third guard is Cord Stansberry, who joins from Pepperdine. While he played limited minutes, he could score at all three levels, hitting 38.8% from three, 55.2% in midrange, and 68.4% at the rim. He played sparingly, so it remains to be seen if he can do that with a heavier minute load. Bernard Pelote is the lone returnee. He will step up from the sixth man role and has proven himself to be a high-efficiency inside-out scorer who is an asset on the glass and rarely turns the ball over. Brandon White is a bit of a mystery. He spent his redshirt freshman season with Buzz Williams at Texas A&M before transferring closer to home. White is a big, physical shot-blocker who had a number of high major offers including Creighton, Houston, and Purdue. The bench will likely be anchored by another JUCO sniper in Jamar Livingston and Princeton transfer big Vernon Collins.
Style of Play
Tim Craft will be adjusting to a new team, but as we note above, the strategy looks clear. His Gardner-Webb teams love to attack the paint, and when he has shooters, take a heavy volume of threes. They rarely get forced into mid-range shots. Looking at this roster, he will regularly be able to put four players who are capable shooters around a productive space-eater inside. Expect Morgan, Emery, Stansberry, and Livingston to move the ball, drive to collapse the defense, then either finish at the rim or dish back out to the open shooter. White, Collins, and Pelote are both capable at the rim finishers who can also do work on the offensive glass. Pelote has the ability to step out to the arc as well, which gives the Catamounts true four-out ability. Craft added the wrinkle of pushing transition last year, something his teams didn't typically do. They don't force a ton of turnovers, but were in the 96th percentile in creating transition opportunities. Aside from an offensive rebound, it was their highest points per possession play (1.17 ppp) so even though they were not efficient relative to the rest of the country, GW still recognized the effectiveness of catching teams napping, so don't be surprised to see Western Carolina attack quickly when the opportunity presents itself.
Craft had to adjust his defense last year. Typically, he likes to have a pair of rim protectors in the middle to shut down drivers. It's been effective, as Gardner-Webb was top-50 in three of the past four years at forcing teams into midrange shots. Last year, his shot blockers all left at the same time, so they shifted their focus to chasing teams off the three point line. Despite not having shot-blockers, they still were 26th at forcing midrange, so the philosophy was effective even with different personnel. I expect White to be the hub of the defense. The guards will try to take away open threes and either funnel to White or cut off the drive to force midrange attempts.
2024-25 Outlook
T-Rank is pessimistic on the Catamounts. Their #280 preseason ranking is 8th out of 10 teams in the SoCon. I'll go out on a limb and say this is one I think Torvik's model misses on. While they weren't at the D1 level, this team is full of accurate three-point shooters. If you take the roster as a whole, they shot 236/598 (39.5%) combined at the D1 and JUCO D1 levels. That would've been top-5 in the nation last year. They have a high-major recruit in the middle of those shooters who was a target of elite programs. And Craft is an overachiever, finishing higher than his preseason kenpom rank in 8/11 seasons at Gardner-Webb. This is a well-coached team with solid offensive weapons all over the floor. Craft's defense was in the top-half of the SoCon in 10/11 seasons, including finishing in the top-3 each of the past three years. This roster is heavy with JUCO players and has 4 scholarship players that redshirted last year. That's not easy for a computer model to accurately evaluate. Expect Western Carolina to contend for the top half of the SoCon, blow their computer projection out of the water, and possibly be a Q3 game by the time Selection Sunday rolls around.
Marquette Connection
The Golden Eagles are 4-0 all-time against the Catamounts, but it wasn't always easy. The teams opened the season against each other in 2004-05 and Western Carolina could smell the upset. It was a homecoming game for big man David Berghoefer, who played his high school ball at Middleton and paced the Catamounts with 20 points. Western Carolina surged out early, establishing a 38-33 lead at halftime and putting a scare into Marquette. It was Dameon Mason who finally clawed back the lead at 46-44 in the second half, but it wasn't until Steve Novak's hit jumpers on consecutive possessions to push the lead to 58-52 that Marquette started to get some breathing room. Travis Diener led the way with 27 points while Novak added 22. Ultimately, Marquette held on for a 75-64 victory in the Bradley Center.
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