West Coast Conference: Season 2023-24

Q.Finals Semis Final 2024 Semis Q.Finals
Portland51
USF72
USF77
Gonzaga89
Gonzaga60
SMC69
Santa Clara65
SMC79
San Diego79
Santa Clara104
Standings 2023-24
#
Team
W-L
Stats Leaders 2023-24
PPG
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
Robertson_Tyler1_1

Portland
6'6'' G/F 24y
Avg: 16.9 ppg

2
16.8
3
16.5
4
16.3
5
15.5
8
14.4
10
14.3
West Coast Conference Final
Saint Mary's College of California -West Coast Conference Champions
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Augustas Marciulionis
biQZaulaIjas
Aidan Mahaney
bihijRF
Joshua Jefferson
zRffRQsIj
Mitchell Saxen
AixRj
Luke Barrett
miQQRUU
# Name Height Pos Age Nat Cls Former Team
5 * SuDusUis biQZaulaIjas 8'7'' (025) G 90 LithuaniazQ eFUis
91 * Sadij bihijRF 8'5'' (021) G USAAI CiBpIlajdI (bIQiDi, CS)
3 * zIshui zRffRQsIj 8'6'' (915) y USAAI vaMRQUF (HRjdRQsIj, Xk)
00 * baUZhRll AixRj 8'01'' (916) C USAAQ ojDQihiB (ARiUUlR, WS)
55 * vuVR miQQRUU 8'8'' (026) G/y USAzQ OaRdBIjU (OaRdBIjU, CS)
0 HiQQF WRssRls 4'0'' (908) C 90 AustraliaAI mS CIq
77 SlRx guZis 8'4'' (910) G/y 95 AustraliaAQ mS CIq
93 bisIj yIQMRs 8'2'' (918) y USAAQ yIlsIB (yIlsIB, CS)
07 eIQF HiTVR 8'3'' (028) G 02 AustraliayQ mS CIq
31 zRjsRj mQidUVR 8'01'' (916) y 02 AustraliayQ mS CIq
97 KRLaj Gid 8'8'' (026) y USAyQ GQijidi (vaLRQBIQR, CS)
73 SjdQRT bZKRRLRQ 4'0'' (908) C USAyQ
03 ChQas HITRll 8'8'' (026) G USAAI wIQQRF OajRs (Aij gaRDI, CS)
99 CidR mRjjRUU 8'1'' (065) OG USAyQ CiBpIlajdI (bIQiDi, CS)
9 zIQdij eIss 8'5'' (021) G USAyQ Sc CIBpiss OQRp (ChijdlRQ, Sc)

Coach Assistant: wQRF wIuZhRU
Coach Assistant: gij AhRRUs
Coach Assistant: zIR eihIj
Tournament & League MVP
Top Scorer
Saint Mary's Takes Down Gonzaga For The Title-Mar 13, 2024
The low point came on Dec. 1 at Idaho Falls, Idaho. Saint Mary’s had just lost to Boise State by 17 points and was mired at 3-5 after the first month of the season.
No one then could possibly have imagined what the Gaels did on Tuesday night, posting a 69-60 victory over rival Gonzaga — a team that beat them 10 days earlier — to capture the Credit Union I West Coast Conference Men’s Basketball Championship at Orleans Arena.
Except, the Gaels imagined it.
“It was dark when we were 3-5, but I always believed I came back for a reason,” said fifth-year senior Alex Ducas (6'7''-G/F-2000). “I came back to lead these guys to a championship. I always envisioned it. It’s not a surprise to me, but man, it feels good.”
The 21st-ranked Gaels (26-7) have won 23 of 25 games since then, capturing the WCC regular-season title outright and now coupling that with the conference tournament crown, a pairing Saint Mary’s hadn’t achieved since 2012. Tuesday night’s win got them a 2-1 edge in the season series after No. 17 Gonzaga (25-7) beat them in Moraga, preventing the Gaels from completing a perfect WCC run.
Head coach Randy Bennett, whose program most recently won the WCC championship five years ago and will now take his 10th team into the NCAA Tournament, said he and his staff had to believe before they could convince their players it was possible.
“The sky wasn’t falling. We had good players, that’s why we were picked to win the league,” he said. “But our good players weren’t good yet. We told ‘em, `You’ve got to have hope, fellas. You can still do this.’ “
Reflecting back on that post-game experience at Idaho Falls, junior point guard Augustas Marciulionis (6'4''-G-2002) said of Tuesday’s triumph, “It means a lot. To win with this group of guys when we had some struggles early in the season, it’s an amazing thing. It makes it even sweeter, just the fact that we remember that locker room early in the year and how it is now.”
Bennett said he’s never had a player make the year-to-year improvement Marciulionis achieved, going from primarily a backup player who averaged 5.9 points in 2023 to 204 WCC Player of the Year and now the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player. The only other Saint Mary’s player to win both of those awards was Matthew Dellavedova (6'4''-G-1990, college: SMC) in 2012.
The son of Sarunas Marciulionus, the NBA pioneer from Lithuania, Augustas delivered 13 points, eight assists, two steals, two blocked shots and no turnovers in 40 minutes against the Zags.
The Gaels also got a huge lift from sophomore guard Aidan Mahaney (6'3''-G), who has gone through ups and downs after a splendid freshman season a year ago. He scored 23 points and Few called one of his five 3-pointers the key play in the game.
Three minutes after Gonzaga had taken its only lead of the game, the Gaels were up 55-52 when Luke Bennett missed a 3-point shot. The Zags nearly corralled the loose ball the lane but Mason Forbes (6'9''-F) ripped it away and delivered it to Mahaney, who drilled the 3-pointer from the left corner for a six-point lead with 4:57 to play.
“The ball went through our hands and they grabbed it. Mahaney got that 3 — that was a big,” Few said.
Mahaney gave all the credit to Forbes, who had four of the Gaels’ 12 offensive rebounds and scored eight points before taking a hard fall in the final minutes and leaving the game. “The ball’s in my hands and that (shot)
was nothing,” Mahaney said. “For him to get us the ball was bigger than the shot itself.”
The Zags never got closer than four points the rest of the way.
The game promised to be physical, and the Gaels won that battle, outrebounding the Zags 39-22 and allowing them just five offensive rebounds. Senior big man Mitchell Saxen (6'10''-C) survived foul trouble to produce 19 points and 15 rebounds.
Praising Saxen, Gonzaga head coach Mark Few called it “a sumo wrestling match down there tonight. If that’s the case, he’s probably going to win — he’s the biggest, strongest, heaviest guy.”
Senior forward Anton Watson (6'8''-F-2000) scored 18 points to lead Gonzaga, which is considered a sure thing to join Saint Mary’s in the NCAA Tournament. Point guard Ryan Nembhard (6'0''-PG-2003) added 13 points and 11 assists, while playing all 40 minutes. But All-WCC big man Graham Ike was on the floor for just 20 minutes due to foul trouble and had a quiet game with 10 points and five rebounds.
“Forbes and Saxen are great rebounders. We got pounded on the glass,” Watson said.
Above all else, the Gaels played the game on their terms. They rank second nationally in scoring defense and they held Gonzaga — which puts up nearly 86 points per game — to its lowest point total of the season.
“They slow the game down and make us really defend. Offensively, we couldn’t finish around the rim,” Watson said.
The Gaels also avoided the spate of turnovers that allowed Gonzaga to score 14 fastbreak points in their win last month. In this one, the Zags managed just four points in transition all night.
Both coaches sent compliments to the other side. “Tons and tons of respect for Saint Mary’s,” Few said. “They’re a tough, tough out, and physical and smart.”
As he has done before, Bennett said the Gaels are better because of Few’s program, which played in its 27th consecutive WCC tournament championship game.
“We beat a good team, a program we have a ton of respect for,” Bennett said. “Honestly, they’ve helped us become the program that we are because we were punching up for a long time, just trying to do what they were doing and be as good as they are, and it’s made us good.”

Courtesy of wccsports.com

WCC Tournament Final:
Saint Mary's - Gonzaga 69-60

WCC Tournament Semifinals:
Saint Mary's - Santa Clara 79-65
Gonzaga - San Francisco 89-77

WCC Tournament Quarterfinals:

San Francisco - Portland 72-51
Santa Clara - San Diego 104-79

WCC Tournament Second Round:

San Diego - Pepperdine 57-52
Portland - LMU 78-70

WCC Tournament First Round:

Pepperdine - Pacific 102-43
All-WCC Awards 2024-Mar 13, 2024
All-Tournament MVP: Lithuania Augustas Marciulionis (6'4''-G-2002) of SMC
Player of the Year: Lithuania Augustas Marciulionis (6'4''-G-2002) of SMC
Defensive Player of the Year: USA Mitchell Saxen (6'10''-C) of SMC
Freshman of the Year: USA Ryan Beasley (5'11''-PG) of USF
Newcomer of the Year: USA Jonathan Mogbo (6'8''-F) of USF
Sixth Man of the Year: USA Deuce Turner (6'2''-G) of San Diego
Coach of the Year: Randy Bennett of SMC

All-WCC First Team 2024
Ajayi
Ajayi
Bal
Bal
Ike
Ike
Mahaney
Mahaney
Marciulionis
Marciulionis
Mogbo
Mogbo

First Team

USA Michael Ajayi (6'7''-G/F) of Pepperdine
France Adama-Alpha Bal (6'5''-G-2003) of Santa Clara
USA Graham Ike (6'9''-F) of Gonzaga
USA Aidan Mahaney (6'3''-G) of SMC
Lithuania Augustas Marciulionis (6'4''-G-2002) of SMC
USA Jonathan Mogbo (6'8''-F) of USF
Canada Ryan Nembhard (6'0''-PG-2003) of Gonzaga
USA Mitchell Saxen (6'10''-C) of SMC
USA Anton Watson (6'8''-F-2000) of Gonzaga
USA Marcus Williams (6'2''-G-2002) of USF

All-WCC Second Team 2024
Ducas
Ducas
Hickman
Hickman
McKinney III
McKinney III
Robertson
Robertson
Turner
Turner

Second Team

Australia Alex Ducas (6'7''-G/F-2000) of SMC
USA Nolan Hickman (6'2''-PG-2003) of Gonzaga
USA Wayne McKinney III (6'0''-PG) of San Diego
Australia Tyler Robertson (6'6''-G/F-2000) of Portland
USA Deuce Turner (6'2''-G) of San Diego

All-WCC Honorable Mention 2024
Jefferson
Jefferson
Mallette
Mallette
Marshall Jr.
Marshall Jr.
Merkviladze
Merkviladze
Porter
Porter
Newbury
Newbury

Honorable Mention

USA Joshua Jefferson (6'8''-F) of SMC
USA Houston Mallette (6'5''-G) of Pepperdine
USA Carlos Marshall Jr. (6'6''-G-1999) of Santa Clara
Georgia Aleksandre Merkviladze (6'8''-F-2002) of LMU
USA Jevon Porter (6'11''-F) of Pepperdine
United Kingdom Ndewedo Newbury (6'7''-F) of USF
USA Malik Thomas (6'5''-G) of USF
Germany Christoph Tilly (7'0''-C-2003) of Santa Clara

WCC All-Freshman Team 2024
Beasley
Beasley
Ensminger
Ensminger
Harris
Harris
Huff
Huff
Patton
Patton

All-Freshman Team

USA Ryan Beasley (5'11''-PG) of USF
Germany Jacob Ensminger (6'9''-G-2004) of Santa Clara
USA Tyler Harris (6'8''-G-2005) of Portland
USA Braden Huff (6'10''-F) of Gonzaga
USA Kevin Patton (6'8''-G) of San Diego

WCC All-Academic Team 2024
Barrett
Barrett
Bieker
Bieker
Graham
Graham
Howell
Howell
Leaupepe
Leaupepe
Markovetskyy
Markovetskyy

All-Academic Team

USA Luke Barrett (6'6''-G/F) of SMC
USA Justin Bieker (6'5''-G) of USF
USA Michael Graham (6'8''-F-2000) of LMU
USA Chris Howell (6'6''-G) of SMC
Australia Keli Leaupepe (6'6''-F-2000) of LMU
Ukraine Volodymyr Markovetskyy (7'2''-C-2000) of USF
USA Carlos Marshall Jr. (6'6''-G-1999) of Santa Clara
USA Dominic Muncey (6'0''-PG) of San Diego
Australia Tyler Robertson (6'6''-G/F-2000) of Portland