Photo by: Red Box Pictures
Washington Faces Talent Field at Gulf Coast Showcase This Weekend
November 21, 2018 | Women's Basketball
OPENING TIP
• Washington heads to Ft. Myers, Florida, for the Gulf Coast Showcase on Nov. 23-25, taking on a tough field in the post-Thanksgiving tournament at Hertz Arena. The Huskies open against Duke University on Friday, then take on either Ball State or Fordham in the second round on Saturday. Teams on the other side of the bracket are No. 11 Texas, Missouri, Michigan and Quinnipiac–all of which made it to the NCAA Tournament last season.
Fans can listen to the UW IMG Network broadcast with Gary Hill Jr. on the call on KKNW 1150 AM, on the TuneIn App or online at GoHuskies.com. A live stream of the games provided by the tournament will also be available for a fee with a link on GoHuskies.com.
• Junior Amber Melgoza scored a team-high 13 points and narrowly missed her second-straight double-double with nine rebounds with freshman Haley Van Dyke adding 10 points for the Huskies in a road loss at Tulane on Sunday. The defeat was the first of the season for UW in its first road contest of the year.
Gulf Coast Showcase Preview
The Huskies will face an impressive field at the 2018 Gulf Coast Showcase this weekend at the Hertz Arena in Estero, Florida–just outside Ft. Myers. The field is impressive with seven teams winning 20+ games last year and six making the NCAA Tourney.
Washington has faced four of the other seven teams in the tournament before including holding winning records against three: Duke (2-0), Missouri (1-0) and Michigan (3-2). The Huskies are 3-3 all-time against Texas including meeting the Longhorns in the Las Vegas tournament last season. UW has never faced Ball State, Fordham or Quinnipiac.
Washington is making its first trip to the Sunshine State since playing at UCF and USF in the 2009-10 season and its sixth overall. The Huskies are 7-3 all-time in games played in the state of Florida including a pair of victories in Gainesville during their Elite Eight run in 2000-01.
Below is a quick snapshot of each of the teams on the Huskies' side of the bracket:
Scouting the Blue Devils
Duke comes into the tournament with a 2-1 overall record, winning their last two games (at Maine and vs Elon) after suffering an 84-58 loss in its season-opener at Northwestern. The Blue Devils started the season ranked No. 21, but have since dropped to receiving one vote in the AP poll.
Junior forward Leaonna Odem–a 2019 preseason Wooden Award watch list selection–leads Duke with 17.7 points and 9.7 rebounds per game through the early going. She is shooting 61.5% from the field, hitting 24-of-39. Close behind is junior guard Haley Gorecki, who is averaging 14.3 points, 5.3 assists and 4.7 steals per contest.
Scouting the Cardinals
Ball State has struggled to a 1-2 record through the early going this year, losing 80-38 to Purdue in its season opener before edging Cleveland State at home and losing Saturday by 20 at Missouri State. Ball State has been outscored 72-53 this year and has been out-rebounded 47-34.3 per game as well.
Sophomore forward Oshlynn Brown leads the team with 12.3 points and 7.0 rebounds per game including 16 points and nine rebounds at Missouri State on Saturday. Senior guard is adding 10.3 points and 4.0 rebounds a game, scoring 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting at Cleveland State.
Scouting the Rams
Fordham has split four games to open the 2018-19 season, with wins over Wagner and Charlotte at home and losses at Northeastern and at home against Penn State. The Rams are averaging 54.5 points in their losses and 75.5 points in their wins. They have allowed 63.2 points in all games with opponents shooting 41.5% from the field overall.
Sophomore guard Bre Cavanaugh leads Fordham with 17.3 ppg while senior forward Mary Goulding is averaging a double-double with 13.0 points and 10.0 rebounds per game this year.
Up Next
Washington returns to the Evergreen State next week for its final round game of its five-game road trip, traveling to face cross-town foe Seattle U on Friday, Nov. 30 at 6:00 p.m.
Last Time Out
Amber Melgoza scored 13 points and had nine rebounds with Haley Van Dyke adding 10 points, but poor shooting and turnovers doomed the Huskies in a 63-51 loss at Tulane on Sunday. Washington committed 23 turnovers in the game–the most since turning it over 23 times on Nov. 11, 2015–and shot just 33.3% in the game including going 3-of-20 from three-point range.
Magical Melgoza
Washington junior Amber Melgoza has picked up right where she left off last year, averaging 17.0 points through the first three games of the season. She recorded her first career double-double against Northern Arizona on Nov. 11, recording 20 points and 10 rebounds in the game. She just missed being the third player in program history to record a triple-double, recording eight assists in the contest. Her assist total was a career-high.
Melgoza is coming off an impressive sophomore campaign where she earned All-Pac-12 honors after finishing second in the conference in scoring at 19.0 points per game. But she did her real damage in Pac-12 play, leading the conference with 20.6 ppg in Pac-12 games. She finished the season with 570 points–11th most in program history and just five points shy of the Top 10. In addition, Melgoza closed out the season with 120 points over her final four games including pouring in 40 against Stanford–the most by a Pac-12 player on the season–to become one of just three players in program history to score 40 or more points in a game (Kelsey Plum 6x, Giuliana Mendiola).
Melgoza on Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List
Amber Melgoza was one of 20 players from across the country to be named to the 2019 Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List as announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association on Oct. 23. The winner will be revealed on ESPN during the 2019 Women's Final Four in Tampa, Florida.
Johnson Double-Double
Hannah Johnson opened the 2018-19 campaign with a 16-point, 10-rebound double-double, hitting 7-of-15 form the field with three offensive rebounds, two assists and a steal. The double-double was the fifth of her career. Johnson followed that up with 12 points and six rebounds on 5-of-8 shooting, adding six rebounds and a steal.
Strength of Schedule
The Huskies once again are not shying away from playing tough teams in the 2018-19 season as UW plays a total of 17 games against 10 teams currently ranked in the AP Top 25 or receiving votes. The Pac-12 conference is the main reason the Huskies' schedule is so tough as the conference boasts five teams in the AP top 25 including three in the top 10 (#3 Oregon, #8 Stanford, #9 Oregon State, #18 California and #19 Arizona State with UCLA and USC receiving votes). Besides their Pac-12 foes, the Huskies are slated to face #6 Mississippi State over the course of the season.
Last season, the Huskies played the 35th most difficult overall schedule among the 349 NCAA DI WBB programs with UW's opponents posting an overall winning percentage of .595. Eleven of the Huskies' 22 opponents in 2017-18 reached the NCAA Tournament with UW recording wins against two: Seattle U and Creighton.
Van Dyke and Watkins Making a Splash
Husky freshmen Haley Van Dyke and T.T. Watkins have seen quite a bit of action in Washington's first three games of the season. Van Dyke has scored in double figures in two of her first three games, scoring 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting vs Cal State Fullerton, and had 10 points and a team-high three steals on Sunday at Tulane. Her 12 points vs CSUF were the most points in a freshman debut since Mai-Loni Henson had 12 in her debut two years ago. In Sunday's game against Northern Arizona, guard Watkins scored 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting and is averaging 7.0 points per game.
Home, Non-Conference Success
The Huskies have an impressive record in home, non-conference games. After wins in its first two games this season, Washington is 16-1 in non-conference home games since the start of the 2016-17 season, having won six-straight. Going back a bit further, the Huskies are 32-3 in such games since the 2013-14 season.
Huskies in the Rankings
While still early in the season, Washington ranks among the Pac-12 leaders in a number of categories. The Huskies are currently ranked second in steals per game, recording 10.0 through three games this year. UW is also third in the conference in free throw percentage, missing just 10 this season in 48 attempts for a 79.2% mark, fourth in offensive rebounds (15.0/game) and sixth in rebounding margin (+11).
Washington finished last season ranked among the top teams in the conference in a number of categories. Key among them was turnovers forced where the Huskies' high-pressure defense led the Pac-12 by forcing 17.9 turnovers per game. Washington was fourth in the conference in turnover margin at +3.07. The Huskies also finished second in the conference and 29th in the country in three-point field goals made per game with 8.5 and second in the Pac-12 in three-pointers made at 254.
Home Bodies
After spending a bulk of the 2017-18 pre-conference schedule on the road, the Huskies will spend the majority of the non-conference slate at home. Washington plays seven of its 12 non-conference games at home this year with one LONG road trip breaking up two home stands. The Huskies first road game comes in two weeks at Tulane followed by a tournament in Florida after Thanksgiving. Washington then returns to the Evergreen State for its closest possible road game, battling cross-town rival Seattle U on Nov. 30. The Huskies don't play another road game after that until heading to Oregon to open its Pac-12 road slate on Jan. 4.
2017-18 Recap
Washington's first season under new head coach Jody Wynn proved to be a tough one with the Huskies' new coach inheriting a team with just five returning players and one who had started a college game. Despite the inexperience and the fact that no Husky on the active roster stood taller than 6-1, Washington proved to be a gritty, gutty team which gave many of its opponents as much as they could handle. The Huskies finished the 2017-18 season with a 7-23 overall record.
One Bad Quarter
The story of the 2017-18 Washington season may have been "One Bad Quarter." The Huskies were plagued by one bad quarter in 10 of their 15 Pac-12 losses; a quarter which turned a close game into a big loss. In those bad quarters (which quarter differs in each game), UW was outscored by an average of 16.0 points. However, in the other three quarters of those games, the Huskies outscored their opponents by an average of 3.6 points.
Wynn Adds Talented Trio on Signing Day
UW coach Jody Wynn announced the signing of a talented trio to National Letters of Intent during the November early signing period: JaQuaya Miller (Renton, WA/Kentridge HS), Ali Bamberger (Concord, CA/Carondelet HS), and Nia Lowery (Sacramento, CA/McClatchy HS).
Miller is a local product and one of the top post recruits in the country. The 6-3 post from Renton is a 4.5-star rated recruit by Prospects Nation, ranked No. 41 overall (sixth-best post in the country) and the top overall prospect out of Washington state.
Bamberger, a 6-3 post, is ranked as the No. 8 player out of California (No. 2 post player) and No. 81 overall in the Class of 2019 by Prospects Nation heading into her final season at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif.
Lowery, a 5-11 wing from Sacramento, is rated as a four-star recruit by Prospects Nation from McClatchy High School. As a senior, she helped guide the Lions to a NorCal Division I Title, an appearance in the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section championship and a berth in the state tournament.
Radio Show
Washington Head Coach Jody Wynn joins Elise Woodward for the UW Coaches Show throughout the season at Chinook's at Fisherman's Terminal. The show is carried live on KOMO AM 1000 in Seattle at 6:00 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 3, Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Jan. 2, Jan. 8, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, March 4 and March 11. The show can be streamed online at gohuskies.com or by using the TuneIn Mobile App.
Medical Retirements
Jody Wynn announced a pair of roster changes heading into the 2018-19 season, as Deja Strother and Natalie Romeo will be medically retired, ending their UW careers. Strother, a redshirt-junior center, suffered a leg injury prior to the start of the 2017-18 season. Despite rehabbing over the last season, she has not been able to return from the injury. Romeo, a senior guard, has battled an undisclosed medical issue which kept her off the court last season. She attempted to make a comeback this season, joining the team for summer workouts, but the condition kept her from returning.
Moser's Incredible Journey Continues
Senior Jenna Moser announced last spring that she would return to the team for the 2018-19 season, using her fourth year of eligibility while pursuing a master's degree in Intercollegiate Athletic Administration. (She is in the same program as fellow senior Hannah Johnson.) Moser started as a practice player, not earning a roster spot until her second year at UW. Over the next two seasons she appeared in just 14 games, playing 30 total minutes and scoring four points. But last season, she was awarded a scholarship and has provided leadership to the young team. She started all 30 games and averaging 8.7 points, 3.2 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 2.6 assists per game.
For Openers...
Washington improved to 27-17 all-time in season-openers, winning three of their last four including its 83-74 victory over Cal State Fullerton on Thursday. The Huskies also improved to 34-11 in home openers having won four of its last five. The victory over Cal State Fullerton also marked the earliest home opener for the Huskies in program history and matched the earliest season-opener. Prior to Thursday, the earliest counting game Washington played was on Nov. 8, 2013, a 91-81 loss to St. Mary's.
• Washington heads to Ft. Myers, Florida, for the Gulf Coast Showcase on Nov. 23-25, taking on a tough field in the post-Thanksgiving tournament at Hertz Arena. The Huskies open against Duke University on Friday, then take on either Ball State or Fordham in the second round on Saturday. Teams on the other side of the bracket are No. 11 Texas, Missouri, Michigan and Quinnipiac–all of which made it to the NCAA Tournament last season.
Fans can listen to the UW IMG Network broadcast with Gary Hill Jr. on the call on KKNW 1150 AM, on the TuneIn App or online at GoHuskies.com. A live stream of the games provided by the tournament will also be available for a fee with a link on GoHuskies.com.
• Junior Amber Melgoza scored a team-high 13 points and narrowly missed her second-straight double-double with nine rebounds with freshman Haley Van Dyke adding 10 points for the Huskies in a road loss at Tulane on Sunday. The defeat was the first of the season for UW in its first road contest of the year.
Gulf Coast Showcase Preview
The Huskies will face an impressive field at the 2018 Gulf Coast Showcase this weekend at the Hertz Arena in Estero, Florida–just outside Ft. Myers. The field is impressive with seven teams winning 20+ games last year and six making the NCAA Tourney.
Washington has faced four of the other seven teams in the tournament before including holding winning records against three: Duke (2-0), Missouri (1-0) and Michigan (3-2). The Huskies are 3-3 all-time against Texas including meeting the Longhorns in the Las Vegas tournament last season. UW has never faced Ball State, Fordham or Quinnipiac.
Washington is making its first trip to the Sunshine State since playing at UCF and USF in the 2009-10 season and its sixth overall. The Huskies are 7-3 all-time in games played in the state of Florida including a pair of victories in Gainesville during their Elite Eight run in 2000-01.
Below is a quick snapshot of each of the teams on the Huskies' side of the bracket:
Scouting the Blue Devils
Duke comes into the tournament with a 2-1 overall record, winning their last two games (at Maine and vs Elon) after suffering an 84-58 loss in its season-opener at Northwestern. The Blue Devils started the season ranked No. 21, but have since dropped to receiving one vote in the AP poll.
Junior forward Leaonna Odem–a 2019 preseason Wooden Award watch list selection–leads Duke with 17.7 points and 9.7 rebounds per game through the early going. She is shooting 61.5% from the field, hitting 24-of-39. Close behind is junior guard Haley Gorecki, who is averaging 14.3 points, 5.3 assists and 4.7 steals per contest.
Scouting the Cardinals
Ball State has struggled to a 1-2 record through the early going this year, losing 80-38 to Purdue in its season opener before edging Cleveland State at home and losing Saturday by 20 at Missouri State. Ball State has been outscored 72-53 this year and has been out-rebounded 47-34.3 per game as well.
Sophomore forward Oshlynn Brown leads the team with 12.3 points and 7.0 rebounds per game including 16 points and nine rebounds at Missouri State on Saturday. Senior guard is adding 10.3 points and 4.0 rebounds a game, scoring 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting at Cleveland State.
Scouting the Rams
Fordham has split four games to open the 2018-19 season, with wins over Wagner and Charlotte at home and losses at Northeastern and at home against Penn State. The Rams are averaging 54.5 points in their losses and 75.5 points in their wins. They have allowed 63.2 points in all games with opponents shooting 41.5% from the field overall.
Sophomore guard Bre Cavanaugh leads Fordham with 17.3 ppg while senior forward Mary Goulding is averaging a double-double with 13.0 points and 10.0 rebounds per game this year.
Up Next
Washington returns to the Evergreen State next week for its final round game of its five-game road trip, traveling to face cross-town foe Seattle U on Friday, Nov. 30 at 6:00 p.m.
Last Time Out
Amber Melgoza scored 13 points and had nine rebounds with Haley Van Dyke adding 10 points, but poor shooting and turnovers doomed the Huskies in a 63-51 loss at Tulane on Sunday. Washington committed 23 turnovers in the game–the most since turning it over 23 times on Nov. 11, 2015–and shot just 33.3% in the game including going 3-of-20 from three-point range.
Magical Melgoza
Washington junior Amber Melgoza has picked up right where she left off last year, averaging 17.0 points through the first three games of the season. She recorded her first career double-double against Northern Arizona on Nov. 11, recording 20 points and 10 rebounds in the game. She just missed being the third player in program history to record a triple-double, recording eight assists in the contest. Her assist total was a career-high.
Melgoza is coming off an impressive sophomore campaign where she earned All-Pac-12 honors after finishing second in the conference in scoring at 19.0 points per game. But she did her real damage in Pac-12 play, leading the conference with 20.6 ppg in Pac-12 games. She finished the season with 570 points–11th most in program history and just five points shy of the Top 10. In addition, Melgoza closed out the season with 120 points over her final four games including pouring in 40 against Stanford–the most by a Pac-12 player on the season–to become one of just three players in program history to score 40 or more points in a game (Kelsey Plum 6x, Giuliana Mendiola).
Melgoza on Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List
Amber Melgoza was one of 20 players from across the country to be named to the 2019 Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List as announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association on Oct. 23. The winner will be revealed on ESPN during the 2019 Women's Final Four in Tampa, Florida.
Johnson Double-Double
Hannah Johnson opened the 2018-19 campaign with a 16-point, 10-rebound double-double, hitting 7-of-15 form the field with three offensive rebounds, two assists and a steal. The double-double was the fifth of her career. Johnson followed that up with 12 points and six rebounds on 5-of-8 shooting, adding six rebounds and a steal.
Strength of Schedule
The Huskies once again are not shying away from playing tough teams in the 2018-19 season as UW plays a total of 17 games against 10 teams currently ranked in the AP Top 25 or receiving votes. The Pac-12 conference is the main reason the Huskies' schedule is so tough as the conference boasts five teams in the AP top 25 including three in the top 10 (#3 Oregon, #8 Stanford, #9 Oregon State, #18 California and #19 Arizona State with UCLA and USC receiving votes). Besides their Pac-12 foes, the Huskies are slated to face #6 Mississippi State over the course of the season.
Last season, the Huskies played the 35th most difficult overall schedule among the 349 NCAA DI WBB programs with UW's opponents posting an overall winning percentage of .595. Eleven of the Huskies' 22 opponents in 2017-18 reached the NCAA Tournament with UW recording wins against two: Seattle U and Creighton.
Van Dyke and Watkins Making a Splash
Husky freshmen Haley Van Dyke and T.T. Watkins have seen quite a bit of action in Washington's first three games of the season. Van Dyke has scored in double figures in two of her first three games, scoring 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting vs Cal State Fullerton, and had 10 points and a team-high three steals on Sunday at Tulane. Her 12 points vs CSUF were the most points in a freshman debut since Mai-Loni Henson had 12 in her debut two years ago. In Sunday's game against Northern Arizona, guard Watkins scored 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting and is averaging 7.0 points per game.
Home, Non-Conference Success
The Huskies have an impressive record in home, non-conference games. After wins in its first two games this season, Washington is 16-1 in non-conference home games since the start of the 2016-17 season, having won six-straight. Going back a bit further, the Huskies are 32-3 in such games since the 2013-14 season.
Huskies in the Rankings
While still early in the season, Washington ranks among the Pac-12 leaders in a number of categories. The Huskies are currently ranked second in steals per game, recording 10.0 through three games this year. UW is also third in the conference in free throw percentage, missing just 10 this season in 48 attempts for a 79.2% mark, fourth in offensive rebounds (15.0/game) and sixth in rebounding margin (+11).
Washington finished last season ranked among the top teams in the conference in a number of categories. Key among them was turnovers forced where the Huskies' high-pressure defense led the Pac-12 by forcing 17.9 turnovers per game. Washington was fourth in the conference in turnover margin at +3.07. The Huskies also finished second in the conference and 29th in the country in three-point field goals made per game with 8.5 and second in the Pac-12 in three-pointers made at 254.
Home Bodies
After spending a bulk of the 2017-18 pre-conference schedule on the road, the Huskies will spend the majority of the non-conference slate at home. Washington plays seven of its 12 non-conference games at home this year with one LONG road trip breaking up two home stands. The Huskies first road game comes in two weeks at Tulane followed by a tournament in Florida after Thanksgiving. Washington then returns to the Evergreen State for its closest possible road game, battling cross-town rival Seattle U on Nov. 30. The Huskies don't play another road game after that until heading to Oregon to open its Pac-12 road slate on Jan. 4.
2017-18 Recap
Washington's first season under new head coach Jody Wynn proved to be a tough one with the Huskies' new coach inheriting a team with just five returning players and one who had started a college game. Despite the inexperience and the fact that no Husky on the active roster stood taller than 6-1, Washington proved to be a gritty, gutty team which gave many of its opponents as much as they could handle. The Huskies finished the 2017-18 season with a 7-23 overall record.
One Bad Quarter
The story of the 2017-18 Washington season may have been "One Bad Quarter." The Huskies were plagued by one bad quarter in 10 of their 15 Pac-12 losses; a quarter which turned a close game into a big loss. In those bad quarters (which quarter differs in each game), UW was outscored by an average of 16.0 points. However, in the other three quarters of those games, the Huskies outscored their opponents by an average of 3.6 points.
Wynn Adds Talented Trio on Signing Day
UW coach Jody Wynn announced the signing of a talented trio to National Letters of Intent during the November early signing period: JaQuaya Miller (Renton, WA/Kentridge HS), Ali Bamberger (Concord, CA/Carondelet HS), and Nia Lowery (Sacramento, CA/McClatchy HS).
Miller is a local product and one of the top post recruits in the country. The 6-3 post from Renton is a 4.5-star rated recruit by Prospects Nation, ranked No. 41 overall (sixth-best post in the country) and the top overall prospect out of Washington state.
Bamberger, a 6-3 post, is ranked as the No. 8 player out of California (No. 2 post player) and No. 81 overall in the Class of 2019 by Prospects Nation heading into her final season at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif.
Lowery, a 5-11 wing from Sacramento, is rated as a four-star recruit by Prospects Nation from McClatchy High School. As a senior, she helped guide the Lions to a NorCal Division I Title, an appearance in the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section championship and a berth in the state tournament.
Radio Show
Washington Head Coach Jody Wynn joins Elise Woodward for the UW Coaches Show throughout the season at Chinook's at Fisherman's Terminal. The show is carried live on KOMO AM 1000 in Seattle at 6:00 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 3, Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Jan. 2, Jan. 8, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, March 4 and March 11. The show can be streamed online at gohuskies.com or by using the TuneIn Mobile App.
Medical Retirements
Jody Wynn announced a pair of roster changes heading into the 2018-19 season, as Deja Strother and Natalie Romeo will be medically retired, ending their UW careers. Strother, a redshirt-junior center, suffered a leg injury prior to the start of the 2017-18 season. Despite rehabbing over the last season, she has not been able to return from the injury. Romeo, a senior guard, has battled an undisclosed medical issue which kept her off the court last season. She attempted to make a comeback this season, joining the team for summer workouts, but the condition kept her from returning.
Moser's Incredible Journey Continues
Senior Jenna Moser announced last spring that she would return to the team for the 2018-19 season, using her fourth year of eligibility while pursuing a master's degree in Intercollegiate Athletic Administration. (She is in the same program as fellow senior Hannah Johnson.) Moser started as a practice player, not earning a roster spot until her second year at UW. Over the next two seasons she appeared in just 14 games, playing 30 total minutes and scoring four points. But last season, she was awarded a scholarship and has provided leadership to the young team. She started all 30 games and averaging 8.7 points, 3.2 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 2.6 assists per game.
For Openers...
Washington improved to 27-17 all-time in season-openers, winning three of their last four including its 83-74 victory over Cal State Fullerton on Thursday. The Huskies also improved to 34-11 in home openers having won four of its last five. The victory over Cal State Fullerton also marked the earliest home opener for the Huskies in program history and matched the earliest season-opener. Prior to Thursday, the earliest counting game Washington played was on Nov. 8, 2013, a 91-81 loss to St. Mary's.
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