Big Sky Conference: Season 2024-25

Q.Finals Semis Final 2025 Semis Q.Finals
Idaho80
Portland St.70
Idaho55
Montana78
Montana91
N.Colorado83
Montana St.45
N.Colorado72
Montana St.80
Idaho St.60
Bsky Final: University of Montana - University of Northern Colorado 91-83

Montana (Travis DeCuire): Joe Pridgen 17, Brandon Whitney 18, Malik Moore 15, Kai Johnson 23, Te'Jon Sawyer 6, Money Williams 7, Austin Patterson 5, Amari Jedkins 0
N.Colorado (Steve Smiley): Jaron Rillie 24, Langston Reynolds 18, Isaiah Hawthorne 14, Brock Wisne 15, Quinn Denker 4, Zach Bloch 3, Marcell McCreary 5, Taeshaud Jackson 0

Standings 2024-25
#
Team
W-L
Stats Leaders 2024-25
PPG
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
https://www.eurobasket.com/photos/McLaughlin_Trenton.jpg

NAU
6'6'' G
Avg: 22.2 ppg

3
19.3
5
16.6
7
15.8
10
13.5
Bsky Final
University of Montana won Championship of Bsky
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Travis DeCuire Travis DeCuire gRCuaQR
Brandon Whitney
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Te'Jon Sawyer
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Austin Patterson
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Malik Moore
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Money Williams
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# Name Height Pos Age Nat Cls Former Team
09 * mQijdIj WhaUjRF 8'0'' (063) G USAAQ SlRBijF (bassaIj Halls, CS)
59 * wR'zIj AiTFRQ 8'6'' (915) y USAAQ AilRsaij CIll OQRp (eaZhBIjd, CS)
91 * SusUaj OiUURQsIj 8'5'' (021) G 95 USAAQ mQRTsURQ SZidRBF (WIlfRMIQI, XH)
5 * bilaV bIIQR 8'3'' (028) G USAzQ ChQasUaij HRQaU. HBA (XIQZI, CS)
1 * bIjRF WallaiBs 8'7'' (025) G USAAI PiVlijd-CQiaD (PiVlijd, Xq)
31 zRjsRj mQidUVR 8'01'' (916) y AustraliayQ mS CIq
3 SBiQa zRdVajs 8'4'' (910) y USAAI eiZajR CisR (eiZajR, Wo)
0 Kia zIhjsIj 8'7'' (025) G USAAQ PlFBpai (PlFBpai, WS)
00 zIR OQadDRj 8'3'' (028) G USAAQ GILRQjIQ's SZidRBF (mFfaRld, bS)
97 zRQRBaih giQDij 8'7'' (025) G USAzQ gRviAillR (CIjZIQd, CS)
99 SdiB AhIff 8'0'' (063) G USAAQ qjURQpQasR (eRddajD, CS)
03 zilRj yIF 8'4'' (910) y USAzQ CijFIj ApQajDs (XIQUh vis kRDis, Xk)
07 ciZV giLadsIj 8'6'' (915) y USAyQ biURQ gRa (AijUi Sji, CS)
9 ChisR HRjdRQsIj 8'1'' (065) OG USAAI maQdLallR (XIQUh eaZhlijd Halls, wN)
95 CIjjIQ gaZV 8'5'' (021) G USAAI HRllDiUR (bassIuli, bw)
7 wFlRQ whIBpsIj 8'8'' (026) G USAyQ kijdRj (yiaQfaRld, CS)
Head Coach: wQiLas gRCuaQR
Coach Assistant: ziF ylIQRs
Coach Assistant: eRuMRj WallaiBs
Tournament MVP
Regular Season MVP
Top Scorer
Montana wins Big Sky Tourney for record 12th time to advance to NCAA Tournament-Mar 14, 2025
It was a battle three months in the making. Montana and Northern Colorado, the co-regular season champions, had separated from the rest of the Big Sky Conference over the league's 18-game regular season and arrived in Boise as the heavy favorites.
The two teams rolled into the championship game with blowout semifinal victories, setting the ultimate stage inside Idaho Central Arena. Two of the three best shooting teams in the country put on one of the best offensive displays possible to a national stage on ESPN 2.
In the end, Montana (25-9) soared past Northern Colorado (25-9) 91-83 for a Big Sky record extending 12th tournament title and the first trip to the NCAA Tournament since 2019. It's the third Big Sky Tournament Championship for head coach Travis DeCuire, and the first for Montana since 2019.
"They all feel great," DeCuire said. "Every championship has its own storyline. I love every player I've ever coached, I'll never say I loved any one individual any more than the other because they all were special in my heart. "
This year's team reaches the Big Dance by way of shooting 65.2 percent from the field over the course of 40 minutes and putting up 91 points in a conference championship game. It's the best shooting percentage for Montana against a D-1 opponent since 2011.
Montana opened the game with six straight made field goals, ended the first half with nine straight makes, and carried that into the second half for a grand total of 14 straight shots that found the bottom of the net.
From the time the clock read 9:31 in the first half to the 16:22 minute mark of the second half, Montana was perfect from the floor. They didn't miss a shot for over 13 minutes of game time, which equated to well over a half an hour of real time for those in attendance in Boise or watching at home.
The Grizzlies missed consecutive shots just four times throughout the entire 40 minutes, dominating on the offensive end on their way to a title.
Brandon Whitney (6'1''-G) brought home the Tournament MVP honors behind an 18 points performance on Wednesday night. The 5th year guard returned to Montana after falling short in this game one year prior, and saw his decision pay off all season long.
The decorated veteran of the Grizzly program, starting his Big Sky record 150th career game, made seven of his nine shots from the floor. He connected on two three pointers in the first two minutes of the game to set the tone early.
"Where college basketball is right now, Brandon Whitney five years in one program to hang in there, he could have gone a lot of different directions for a lot of reasons, as much money is being tossed out there," DeCuire said. "He hung in there with us for five years, committed to winning, wanted to get to the NCAA Tournament. His role was decreased in terms of scoring, he knew he had weapons around him, he assumed the role as a silent leader and it makes it extra special that he gets his MVP in the tournament."
Whitney led Montana over the three games, averaging 16.3 points per game on 72.0 percent shooting. He made 18 of his 25 shot attempts in Boise, including 4-of-6 from three-point range.
The Grizzly veteran claimed MVP honors, but he was joined on the All-Tournament team by Kai Johnson (6'4''-G) and Money Williams (6'4''-G).
Johnson, who missed out on any All-Conference honors this season despite being one of the central figures to Montana's championship year, proved his worth in Boise. The transfer guard, who has battled an injury over the final weeks of the season, put the team on his back in the late stretches of the game.
He finished with a team-high 23 points, shooting 70 percent from the field and perfect from three-point range. He scored eight straight Grizzly points over an eight-minute stretch in the second half, and had 14 of his points in the second half to lead the Grizzlies to victory.
Montana had built a 14-point lead early in the second half before Northern Colorado started to climb back into the game. It was at that point that DeCuire put the ball in Johnson's hands, and the rest, as they say, is history.
"We found some things that we thought we could attack defensively, they played us completely different defensively than they've been playing, and it took us a while to kind of get a flow," DeCuire said. "But I knew in my back pocket that I had Kai Johnson."
After leading by double digits for much of the second half, the Grizzlies saw their lead slip to just a single point inside the four-minute mark after two Northern Colorado free throws made it 74-73.
Johnson drove into the lane, hung in the air, and finished off a three-point play on Montana's next offensive possession. The Grizzlies got a stop on the other end, and put the ball in Johnson's hands yet again inside of three minutes.
The Olympia, Wash. product hesitated, stepped back, and drilled a three-pointer that gave Montana an 80-73 lead with 2:24 left on the clock.
"I thought that we needed to turn him loose a little, but to do that some guys are going to have to assume a lesser role than they've had the last couple weeks," DeCuire said. "I thought that was the safest way for us to bring us home because we knew he would draw fouls and wouldn't settle. That step back three was big time."
Johnson, who passed the 1,500 point mark for his career on Wednesday, went 7-of-8 from the free throw line, and Montana shot 85.7 percent from the line as a team. It's the best percentage by the team when attempting at least 20 free throws since the first game of Big Sky play back on Jan. 2 in Cheney, Wash.
Northern Colorado were never able to pull back within a possession following Johnson's three.
Williams, Montana's third All-Tournament team member, had a relatively quiet championship game. It's all the more proof of the depth that this team has that he scored just seven points on four shots and earned a place on the All-Tournament team.
He didn't play in the final five minutes, the type of sacrifice a player of his caliber would rarely show on another team. But this year's Grizzly squad has come together, accepted the roles that the coaching staff has given them, and will leave Boise as champions as a result.
"I've had some teams where some guys were really close, and some guys were acquaintances. I truly believe that every guy in this program loves each other, the way they treat each other, the way they sacrifice for one another, the time they spend when you walk around Boise or when we're on the road, you see different guys with different guys," DeCuire said. "Not just with their roommates or their same friends. I knew when I started seeing that in September that we had a chance."
Montana's perfect 6-for-6 start from the field allowed them to jump out to a 16-10 lead early, but Northern Colorado countered back, largely behind the play of veteran guard Jaron Rillie.
He ended the night with 24 points on 75 percent shooting, adding six assists and four rebounds in a fantastic performance. For as good as Montana shot the ball from the field, the Bears were able to match them.
Rillie led a personal 8-0 run for UNC near the midway point of the first half that gave Northern Colorado a 24-18 lead. The teams had split the lead evenly at five minutes each through the first 10 minutes of the game.
After an early Griz lead, Northern Colorado strung together runs of six and eight points to regain the edge.
"We knew they would make some runs," DeCuire said. "When we played them at their place, we had a larger lead before they made their run. We knew there would be fight in that dog. They are a good team, they are an explosive offense."
Montana retook the lead with eight minutes remaining in the first half, and didn't relinquish it the rest of the way. They usded a 7-0 run to take back the momentum, and closed the half on a 25-13 run.
Malik Moore hit a pair of first half threes and ended the night with 15 points on 5-of-7 shooting. The junior's play was critical for Montana as he hit timely shots all night long in his best performance of the week in Boise.
Montana's unprecedented hot streak to end the half – nine straight made field goals - allowed them to take a 48-39 lead into the locker rooms at halftime. They pushed the lead to as many as 14 points in the opening four minutes of the second half before Northern Colorado started to climb back into the game.
Johnson kept Montana ahead with his play on the offensive end, but the Bears were responding with points in bunches on the other end of the floor. They cut the lead down to one possession with five minutes to play at 71-69.
On Montana's next possession, Joe Pridgen was fouled going to the rim. He made the first free throw, but missed the second. Austin Patterson tracked down the rebound to give Montana another possession.
Tuesday night belonged to Patterson offensively as he scored a game-high 20 points. On Wednesday, he attempted just a single shot. His impact was felt in a massive way as the offensive rebound was one of a team-high six boards for the guard on the night.
Pridgen put it to great use, soaring through the sky for a slam that put Montana back up ahead by five. He ended the night with 17 points and five rebounds.
"The teams that we had that made it (to the NCAA Tournament), we had some tough guys. We had talent, we had skill, but we had some guys that were tough. Physically, mentally tough, and not afraid to fail," DeCuire said. "We were short of that the last few years coming out of COVID. It was hard to evaluate guys, and along came Joe Pridgen to set the tone for us and make us the toughest team in the conference."
The final dagger came, fittingly, from Johnson. He stepped back into a three-pointer with two minutes left to give Montana an 80-73 lead. The Grizzlies made their free throws down the stretch to hold on for the win and punch their ticket to March Madness.
It caps off a 25-9 year season for Montana. The Grizzlies tested themselves in the non-conference schedule, playing one of the 10 hardest schedules in the NCAA through the first week of league play, and it paid dividends down the stretch.
They battled adversity off the court as a collective unit, and faced injuries on the court as well. But when February and March rolled around, Montana was ready. They ended the season winning 14 of 15 games with the only loss coming on the road in overtime to a team that was perfect in 2025 on its home floor.
"The most important thing for us was to get healthy, and when we got healthy I was going to start defining roles. It's hard when you have to define roles in December or January," DeCuire said. "We were in the second half of conference and we were finally figuring out who we are as a team. It led to to that streak."
Montana won its 51st Big Sky Tournament game on Wednesday night, the most in conference history. They extended their own record by claiming a 12th Big Sky Tournament title, and did it for the third time under DeCuire, which matches Wayne Tinkle's program record.
The Grizzlies scored 90 points for the fifth time this season, one off the program record set by the 1990-91 team. They shot over 50 percent for the 21st time in 34 games, which is a program record and the most in the NCAA this season.
The run that has dated back to the middle of January will continue next week as the Grizzlies return to the NCAA Tournament seeking the first win for the Big Sky Conference since the 2006 Grizzlies upset Nevada.
"Now we can bask in it. I'll enjoy it now. We don't know who we play, so there's not a lot of film for me to watch. I'm going to enjoy my family," DeCuire said. "It's hard for my wife and daughter to travel because my daughter dances competitively so she can only miss so many times. I figured with the luck of the draw and with permission I can pull her out of dance next week to get her to the tournament. I'm going to go to my room, call my family, and then enjoy the family that I've got in town."

Courtesy of gogriz.com

Big Sky Conf. Final:
N.Colorado - Montana 83-91
Big Sky Conf. Semifinals:
N.Colorado - Montana St 72-45
Montana - Idaho 78-55
Big Sky Conf. Third Round:
Porltand St - Idaho 70-80
Idaho State - Montana St 60-80
Big Sky Conf. Second Round:
N.Colorado - Weber St 76-52
Montana - N.Arizona 74-65
Big Sky Conf. First Round:
N.Arizona - E.Washington 66-53
Weber St - Sacramento St 83-70
All-Big Sky Conf. Awards 2025-Mar 14, 2025
Dylan Darling, point guard from the Idaho State University, was voted the Player of the Year at the NCAA Division I. He received multiple other awards, was selected as the Newcomer of the Year and was chosen to the First Team. Darling averaged over 19 points and almost 6 assists per game in the league. He has totalled 13 games of 20 or more points on the year and recorded 30 or more points in 2 games. Darling registered double-doubles in 2 games during the event. His 34 points against the Northern Arizona University were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Darling's team was the regular season runner-up in the Pac-12 in 2024.
Langston Reynolds, guard from the University of Northern Colorado, was named to the First Team of NCAA Division I. He was previously honored as the Regular Season Co-Runner-Up last year. Reynolds had 16 points and almost 6 rebounds per game that season in the league. He has totalled 9 games of 20 or more points and recorded double-doubles in 3 games on the year. Reynolds' 31 points against the PVAMU were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Among many awards Reynolds' team was the regular season runner-up in the Big Sky Conference in 2024. He was selected as the Grind Selection All-Star Game back in 2022.
Trenton McLaughlin, guard from the Northern Arizona University, earned a spot in the First Team at the NCAA Division I. He previously earned the Tournament Winner back in 2023 and voted to the First Team last year. McLaughlin's court vision was unparalleled as he secured the second spot in points per game, delivering an average of over 22. He also logged over 3 rebounds per game over the season in the league. McLaughlin has totalled 24 games of 20 or more points on the year and registered 30 or more points in 6 games. His 35 points against the Weber State University were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Among many awards McLaughlin's team won the Big Sky Conference Tournament in 2023. He was selected to the Arizona Class 6A Premier All-Region First Team back in 2021.
Blaise Threatt, guard from the Weber State University, was selected to the First Team of NCAA Division I. He averaged almost 20 points and 6 rebounds per game in the league. Threatt has totalled 13 games of 20 or more points on the year and notched 30 or more points in 2 games. He recorded double-doubles in 2 games at the event. Threatt's 34 points against the Northern Arizona University were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Among many awards Threatt's team made it to the RMAC Tournament Semifinals for two years in a row (2022 and 2023). He was selected to the NABC Division II All-South Central District First Team in 2023. Threatt was also selected to the All-RMAC Second Team back in 2022. He was selected to the RMAC All-Tournament Team between 2022 and 2023.
Joe Pridgen, guard from the University of Montana, was chosen to the First Team at the NCAA Division I. He registered over 11 points and 7 rebounds per game that season in the league. Pridgen has totalled 5 games of 20 or more points and had double-doubles in 5 games on the year. His 23 points against Denver were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Among many awards he was selected to the All-WACBA First Team as well as the All-Patriot League Third Team and the All-Rookie Team back in 2020.
Isaiah Hawthorne, forward from the University of Northern Colorado, was named to the First Team of NCAA Division I. He also earned a spot in the Tournament Team. Hawthorne recorded over 17 points and 5 rebounds per game over the season in the league. He has totalled 9 games of 20 or more points and logged double-doubles in 3 games on the year. Hawthorne's 32 points against the Eastern Washington University were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Among many awards Hawthorne's team made it to the WCC Tournament Semifinals for three years in a row ( between 2022 and 2024).
Jaron Rillie, Australian guard from the University of Northern Colorado, was voted to the First Team at the NCAA Division I. He was also selected to the Tournament Team. Rillie was previously named to Honorable Mention selection and Regular Season Co-Runner-Up last year. He averaged almost 12 points and 6 rebounds per game in the league. Rillie has totalled 5 games of 20 or more points and registered double-doubles in 2 games on the year. His 24 points against the Weber State University were the most he scored in the 24 25 season. Among many awards Rillie's team was the regular season runner-up in the Big Sky Conference in 2024. He was selected as the All-Big Sky Conference Honorable Mention in 2024.
All-Tournament MVP: USA Brandon Whitney (6'1''-G) of Montana
Player of the Year: USA Dylan Darling (6'2''-PG) of Idaho St.
Defensive Player of the Year: Canada Tre-Vaughn Minott (6'9''-C-2001) of Portland St.
Freshman of the Year: USA Evan Otten (6'11''-F) of Idaho St.
Newcomer of the Year: USA Dylan Darling (6'2''-PG) of Idaho St.
Sixth Player of the Year: USA Money Williams (6'4''-G) of Montana
Coach of the Year: Travis DeCuire of Montana

All-Big Sky Conf. First Team 2025
Darling
Reynolds
McLaughlin
Threatt
Pridgen
Hawthorne
Rillie
First Team

USA Dylan Darling (6'2''-PG) of Idaho St.
USA Langston Reynolds (6'4''-G) of N.Colorado
USA Trenton McLaughlin (6'6''-G) of NAU
USA Blaise Threatt (6'3''-G) of Weber St.
USA Joe Pridgen (6'5''-G) of Montana
USA Isaiah Hawthorne (6'8''-F-2001) of N.Colorado
Australia Jaron Rillie (6'3''-G) of N.Colorado

All-Big Sky Conf. Second Team 2025
Moore
Towt
Miller Jr.
Holt
Williams
Whitney
Second Team

USA Malik Moore (6'5''-G) of Montana
USA Carson Towt (6'8''-F) of NAU
USA Terri Miller Jr. (6'8''-F) of Portland St.
Canada Jacob Holt (6'9''-F) of Sacramento St.
USA Money Williams (6'4''-G) of Montana
USA Brandon Whitney (6'1''-G) of Montana

All-Big Sky Conf. Honorable Mention 2025
Henderson
Myers
O'Neil
Walker
Payne
Honorable Mention

USA Jaylin Henderson (6'3''-G) of Portland St.
USA Qiant Myers (6'5''-G) of Portland St.
USA Jake O'Neil (6'4''-G) of Idaho St.
USA Brandon Walker (6'7''-F-2004) of Montana St.
USA Jack Payne (6'6''-G) of Idaho

Big Sky Conf. All-Defensive Team 2025
Minott
Towt
Whitney
O'Neil
Bloch
All-Defensive Team

Canada Tre-Vaughn Minott (6'9''-C-2001) of Portland St.
USA Carson Towt (6'8''-F) of NAU
USA Brandon Whitney (6'1''-G) of Montana
USA Jake O'Neil (6'4''-G) of Idaho St.
USA Zach Bloch (6'2''-G) of N.Colorado

Big Sky Conf. All-Tournament Team 2025
Whitney
Johnson
Williams
Rillie
Hawthorne
Payne
All-Tournament Team

USA Brandon Whitney (6'1''-G) of Montana
USA Kai Johnson (6'4''-G) of Montana
USA Money Williams (6'4''-G) of Montana
Australia Jaron Rillie (6'3''-G) of N.Colorado
USA Isaiah Hawthorne (6'8''-F-2001) of N.Colorado
USA Jack Payne (6'6''-G) of Idaho