NEVADA WOLF PACK (12-7, 4-2 WAC) vs. FRESNO ST. BULLDOGS (10-10, 3-3 WAC)

GAME #20
Sat., Jan. 23, 2010 - 7:37 p.m. PT - Save Mart Center (15,596) - Boise, Idaho

TELEVISION: KAME-TV 21, ESPN Full Court & ESPN360.com
 Bob Akamian (play-by-play) & Dave Bollwinkel (color)
RADIO:  University of Nevada Sports Network (ESPN Radio 630 AM, Reno;
 KELK 1240 AM, Elko; KHWG 750 AM, Fallon & KSVL 92.3 FM, Yerington)
 Ryan Radtke (play-by-play), pregame show starts at 7 p.m. PT
SERIES HISTORY: Nevada leads the series with Fresno State 44-35
LAST MEETING: Fresno State won the last meeting between the two teams, turning in a 68-66 victory over Nevada on Feb. 26, 2009 in Fresno.

Coming off an 88-82 win at Boise State on Wednesday night, the Nevada Wolf Pack (12-7, 4-2 WAC) completes its two-game conference road swing, traveling to Fresno State (10-10, 3-3) on Saturday night. Saturday's game at the Bulldogs' Save Mart Center will tip off at 7:37 p.m. Pacific Time and will be televised locally by KAME-TV 21 and nationally as part of the ESPN Full Court package. Comcast Sports Net California will also air the game on tape delay at 1 p.m. on Jan. 24. It can also be heard live on Nevada's flagship radio station, ESPN 630 AM, with Ryan Radtke calling the action. Nevada has won four of its last five games and 10 of its last 13 contests overall. The Wolf Pack also heads to Fresno on a two-game road winning streak after WAC victories at New Mexico State and Boise State. Following Saturday's game, the Wolf Pack returns home on Saturday, Jan. 30 to take on the Hawai'i Warriors in a nationally televised contest on ESPNU.
 Under the direction of first-year head coach David Carter, the Wolf Pack returned three starters and a total of eight letterwinners from last year's 21-13 team, including the preseason WAC Player of the Year in sophomore forward Luke Babbitt who led the team in scoring and rebounding last season as a true freshman and preseason first-team All-WAC selection junior guard Armon Johnson who was second on the team in scoring and paced the Wolf Pack in assists last year. This season's team also features three seniors in guards Brandon Fields and Ray Kraemer and forward Joey Shaw as well as five new faces. Last season, Nevada turned in its sixth consecutive year with at least 20 wins and earned the team's seventh consecutive postseason appearance with an invitation to the College Basketball Invitational.

ON THE ROAD
Nevada has won 38 of its last 64 games away from the friendly confines of Lawlor Events Center, including 32 road wins and six neutral-site victories (dating back to midway through the 2005-06 season). In 2006-07, the team turned in a 14-4 record away from home, including a 10-2 road mark and a 4-2 record in neutral-site games.
 The Wolf Pack has won 20 of its last 39 regular-season road contests and 31 of its last 50. Nevada turned in an 8-5 road mark last season (6-2 in WAC play) and is 2-5 on the road (2-1 in WAC play) and 1-1 in neutral-site games so far this season, picking up its first win away from home with a 99-68 rout of Tulsa on Dec. 23 on a neutral court at the Las Vegas Classic. Since dropping its first five games away from home, the Wolf Pak has now won three of its last four, including its last two WAC road games. Earlier this season, the team played three consecutive road games and four of five away from the friendly confines of Lawlor Events Center. The stretch also included tough losses at UNLV on Nov. 18, VCU on Nov. 27 and No. 11/12 North Carolina on Nov. 29. During that three-game road stretch, Nevada racked up 5,731 travel miles.
 In the last six seasons since the start of the 2004-05 campaign, the Wolf Pack has tallied a 48-26 record in road contests (.649 winning percentage). That includes a 34-11 record in WAC road games (.756). In 2006-07, the Wolf Pack saw an 11-game regular-season road winning streak snapped with a Jan. 20, 2007 loss at New Mexico State. Prior to that, the team had not dropped a road contest since falling at Fresno State on Jan. 18, 2006.

ABOUT THE FRESNO STATE BULLDOGS
Under the direction of fifth-year head coach Steve Cleveland (73-72 record in four-plus years at Fresno State), the Fresno State Bulldogs returned three starters and a total of six letterwinners from last year's 13-21 team. The Bulldogs finished ninth in the WAC last season with a 3-13 conference mark. Fresno State holds a 10-9 overall mark and is tied for fourth in the WAC with a 3-2 league mark this season. The Bulldogs have dropped their last three games, most recently falling to Utah State 69-43 on Thursday night in Fresno.
 Sophomore guard/forward Paul George (6-8, 210) leads Fresno State and ranks sixth in the WAC in scoring at 17.0 points per game but suffered an ankle sprain and played just seven minutes Thursday vs. Utah State. He is also the Bulldogs' top rebounder at 7.3 boards per game (ninth in the WAC). Senior forward Sylvester Seay (6-9, 225) is second on the team and eighth in the WAC at 15.9 points per game, while freshman center Greg Smith (6-10, 250) is adding 11.5 points and 6.5 rebounds (11th in the WAC) per contest. Fresno State has been one of the best defensive squads in the WAC this season, pacing the league in blocks (4.65 per game), steals (7.95) and field goal percentage defense (41.1 percent). The Bulldogs have also held their opponents to just 66.1 points per game, which is good for second in the WAC.

IN THE SERIES
Nevada holds a 44-35 advantage in the series with Fresno State and has won seven of the last eight games between the two teams and 13 of the last 17. The teams split last year's meetings with each squad winning at home. Nevada turned in a 65-60 victory over Fresno State on Jan. 17, 2009 in Reno, while Fresno State snapped Nevada's seven-game winning streak in the series with a 68-66 victory on Feb. 26, 2009 in Fresno. The Bulldogs hold a slim 20-19 advantage in games played in Fresno, while Nevada has won four of the last six road contests in the series.

LAST TIME OUT
Sophomore Luke Babbitt had 29 points and 10 rebounds to lead Nevada to an 88-82 victory at Boise State on Wednesday night.
 Senior Brandon Fields added 21 points for Nevada, which has won four of its last five games. The loss was the seventh in a row for Boise State.
 After Daequon Montreal's basket with 8:24 left pulled the Broncos to within 63-61, the Wolf Pack scored the next eight points. Four came on free throws after Boise State's Kurt Cunningham was called for a foul and an ensuing technical foul for slamming the basketball to the court.
 Nevada led 76-64 before Boise State trimmed the lead to five. Babbitt then scored five straight points to push the lead back to 81-69 with 2:08 left.
 Robert Arnold led Boise State with 21 points, Anthony Thomas added 19 and Ike Okoye had 16 and 13 rebounds.

LIGHTING UP THE SCOREBOARD
Nevada leads the WAC in scoring offense and ranks 18th in the NCAA this season at 82.0 points per game, up from its average of 70.6 ppg last year. Four Wolf Pack players are averaging in double figures for scoring this season, and three are ranked in the WAC's top 15. Sophomore Luke Babbitt is leading the team and ranked third in the WAC at 21.1 points per game (16th in the NCAA), while junior Armon Johnson is seventh in the WAC at 16.3 points per game and senior Brandon Fields ranks 10th at 14.8 points per contest. Senior Joey Shaw is just out of the WAC's top 15 at 10.7 points per game.
 Nevada has turned in three of its top four scoring efforts of the season recently with 104 points in its Dec. 22 loss to BYU, 99 points in the following day's victory over Tulsa and 96 in Saturday's 96-67 win over San Jose State. The team has averaged 84.6 points per game in its last nine games (761) and 83.8 ppg in its last 13 contests (1089). This season marks the first time since 1997-98 that the team has topped the century mark twice in the same year, while its two 100-point efforts are the top two scoring efforts in the WAC so far this season. The Pack's 96 points Jan. 9 vs. San Jose State were also the most for Nevada in a WAC game since the team's 98-85 win over New Mexico State on Feb. 28, 2008 in Reno.
 Nevada's season-high 112 points in its Nov. 21 win over Houston marked the most for the Wolf Pack since the team turned in a 117-88 win over Northwestern State on Dec. 19, 1991. The team's 61 points in the first half also mark the most points in a half since Nevada scored what is believed to be a school-record 71 points in the second half of a 117-88 win over Northwestern State on Dec. 19, 1991.
 The Wolf Pack has had four different players lead the team in scoring this year. Sophomore Luke Babbitt has paced the Wolf Pack in scoring a team-best 11 times this year, including the last two games and nine of the last 11. Most recently, he turned in 26 Jan. 4 at New Mexico State and Jan. 13 vs. Utah State, 19 Jan. 16 vs. Idaho and a season high-tying 29 Wednesday at Boise State. Babbitt also scored a season-best 29 points to pace the team Dec. 17 vs. Eastern Washington. Junior Armon Johnson has led the team in scoring five times, including a season-high 30 points Dec. 22 vs. BYU (also a team season high) and 23 in the Jan. 9 win over San Jose State. Johnson also paced the Pack in three straight games with 20 points Nov. 29 at then No. 11/12 North Carolina, 18 Dec. 5 at Pacific and 19 Dec. 8 vs. Fresno Pacific. Senior Brandon Fields had 22 in a Nov. 18 loss at UNLV and 20 Dec. 12 vs. South Dakota State, while senior Joey Shaw turned in his career-best 26 in the Nov. 14 win over Houston.
 Nevada has had at least four players in double figures for scoring in 15 of its 19 games this year, including two with five (Houston and BYU). The Wolf Pack had three players reach the 20-point plateau in each of those contests.
 
NEVADA'S 1,000-POINT SCORERS

With his 19 points on Jan. 9 vs. San Jose State, senior Brandon Fields became the 20th player in school history to reach 1,000 career points. Fields now has 1,060 points in 117 career games (tied for 17th) and joined junior Armon Johnson in that exclusive club. Johnson scored his 1,000th career point Dec. 5 at Pacific and currently ranks 13th all time at Nevada with 1,215 points in 85 career games.
 With Fields and Johnson reaching that milestone, it marks the first time since 2006-07 that Nevada's roster features two active members of the 1,000-point club (Nick Fazekas and Marcelus Kemp). Sophomore Luke Babbitt has a chance to reach the mark this season (974 points in 53 career games) and if he does, that would mark the first time in school history that Nevada would have three members of the 1,000-point club on its roster in the same season.

BABBITT PICKING UP WHERE HE LEFT OFF LAST YEAR
Sophomore forward Luke Babbitt has just picked up where he left off last season, leading the Wolf Pack again in scoring and rebounding this year. He ranks third in the WAC with 21.1 points per game (16th in the NCAA) and second in the conference at 9.9 boards per contest (26th in the nation in rebounding). He also ranks first in the WAC in rebounding and second in scoring in conference games only, turning in 24.0 points and 10.8 boards per league tilt. 
 The Nevada southpaw turned in a season-high 29 points in a Dec. 17 victory over Eastern Washington, just one point shy of his career best, including 19 points on 7-of-11 shooting in the first half. He pulled down nine rebounds in the game to lead the Pack but saw his stretch of seven consecutive double-doubles snapped. He also matched that season high on Wednesday at Boise State, turning in 29 points on 8-of-10 shooting from the field (including 2-of-2 from three-point land) and 11-of-11 shooting from the free throw line.
 Babbitt ranks third in the nation with 13 double-doubles and has had nine or more rebounds in all but four games this season. Babbitt has turned in a double-double in five of the last six games, including 24 points and 13 rebounds Jan. 2 at La Tech, 26 points and 11 boards Jan. 4 at New Mexico State, 20 points and 10 rebounds Jan. 9 vs. San Jose State, 26 points and 11 boards Jan. 13 vs. Utah State and 29 points and 10 rebounds Jan. 20 at Boise State.
 Babbitt has had 22 career games with at least 20 points (including 11 this year and eight of the last nine games) and has led the team in scoring 26 times in his young career (15 times last year and 11 this season). He has scored in double figures in 50 of 53 career games at Nevada, including all 19 contests this year. In the last nine games, Babbitt is averaging 23.3 points per contest (210). The preseason WAC Player of the Year, Babbitt was named to the preseason watch lists for the 2009-10 John R. Wooden Award and Naismith Trophy. Both awards are annually presented to the top player in college basketball.
 Babbitt turned in 27 points to go along with 13 rebounds Nov. 27 at VCU, scoring 23 of his 27 points on 10-of-14 shooting in the second half in Nevada's near comeback. He also had 14 points and a career-best 17 rebounds Nov. 21 vs. Houston and opened the year with 26 points on 11-of-17 shooting in the team's Nov. 14 win over Montana State.
 Babbitt, a 6-9, 225-pound forward from Reno, Nev., was named the 2009 WAC Freshman of the Year last season after leading the team in scoring and rebounding with 16.9 points and 7.4 boards per game. An all-district selection by the National Association of Basketball Coaches and  the United States Basketball Writers Association, he ranked second among the nation's freshmen in scoring behind just Liberty's Seth Curry who averaged 20.2 points per game last year. Babbitt finished third in the WAC in scoring and rebounding and led the league in free throw shooting. Babbitt also set nearly every Wolf Pack freshman single-season record, including scoring with 573 total points.

KRAEMER LIGHTS IT UP FROM BEYOND THE ARC
Senior Ray Kraemer leads the WAC and ranks tied for third in the nation in three-point percentage, knocking down 52.1 percent of his long-range attempts (37-71). He has shot 57.9 percent in the last nine games (22-38), including a 4-of-4 outing Jan. 13 vs. Utah State to match his career best for three-pointers made. He has drained a career-best four trey three times this season with 4-of-6 efforts Nov. 21 vs. Houston and Dec. 22 vs. BYU and the 4-of-4 showing vs. the Aggies.
 Kraemer has made at least one three-pointer in 16 of 19 games this season, including 10 contests with more than one. He has already made 37 three-pointers this season, surpassing the 23 he had in his first two seasons combined.
 At 45.1 percent for his career (60-133), he ranks first in career three-point percentage at Nevada, just ahead of Byron Strachan who made 45.0 percent (68-151) from 1986-88.

SHOOTING TOUCH
Nevada leads the WAC and ranks 20th in the nation in field goal percentage, knocking down 49.1 percent of its field goal attempts, compared to just 42.7 percent from the field last season. The Wolf Pack has shot 50.6 percent from the field in its last nine games (305-603), including a 58.8-percent effort Dec. 22 vs. BYU and a 56.3-percent showing Dec. 23 vs. Tulsa.
 The Wolf Pack has shot over 50 percent in 10 of its 19 games this season (including three of the last five) and holds a 9-1 record in those games. Nevada shot a sizzling season-high 60.9 percent in its Nov. 21 victory over Houston. That marked the team's first 60-percent effort since a 62.3-percent shooting night at San Jose State on Feb. 12, 2009.
 Nevada's roster features two players ranked in the WAC's top 15 for field goal percentage. Sophomore Luke Babbitt is ranked 11th at 52.4 percent, while junior Armon Johnson checks in at 12th at 52.0 percent.
 Nevada has also checked in at 41.9 percent from three-point land in the last nine games (65-155), including a season-high 53.8 percent Wednesday at Boise State (7-13). The team had shot just 20.5 percent from three-point land in its three previous games (9-44) before the recent effort. Nevada has also made 50 percent of its three-point attempts four times this year (6-of-12 at UNLV, 11-of-22 vs. Houston, 9-of-18 vs. Tulsa, 9-of-18 Jan. 13 vs. Utah State) and made nine in its Jan. 4 win at New Mexico State (45.0 percent, 9-20). The 11 three-pointers made vs. Houston marked the most for Nevada since it made 11 in a Feb. 9, 2008 win over Hawai'i.
 
ASSISTS MACHINE
Junior guard Armon Johnson ranks second in the WAC and ranks 43rd in the nation this year with 5.16 assists per game this year. The leftie dished out a career-best 12 assists Nov. 21 vs. Houston for his second career double-double, had eight assists in a Dec. 17 victory over Eastern Washington and turned in nine assists Jan. 13 vs. Utah State. He is also leading the WAC with 5.83 assists per game in league play. Last year, Johnson turned in 11 points and 11 assists in a win over Oregon State, which marked Nevada's first points-assists double-double since Ramon Sessions had his lone career double-double in 2004-05 vs. Boise State (11 points and 10 assists). Johnson's 12 assists win over Houston are still the most by a WAC player so far this season.
 With his seven assists in the Dec. 8 win over Fresno Pacific, Johnson entered the Nevada career chart for assists and currently ranks eighth with 353 career assists. He has also become just the sixth player in Wolf Pack history to turn in 1,000 points and 250 assists in his career. Only Nevada standouts Marcelus Kemp, Pete Padgett, Darryl Owens Kevin Soares and Matt Williams have previously scored at least 1,000 points and dished out 250 or more assists as members of the Wolf Pack. Johnson was on the preseason watch list for the 2010 Bob Cousy Award, which is annually presented to the top collegiate point guard in the country.
 A 2009 first-team All-WAC selection, Johnson has led the Pack in scoring five times this year and checks in at eighth in the WAC in scoring with 16.3 points per game this season. He scored a season-high 30 points in the Dec. 22 game with BYU, his second career 30-point game and just three points shy of his career best of 33 last year vs. California. He has also turned two other 20-point games this year, including 22 points in the Nov. 21 win over Houston and a game-high 23 Jan. 9 vs. San Jose State.

HUNT COMING INTO HIS OWN
Sophomore forward Dario Hunt has continued to improve and is averaging 6.8 points and 7.3 rebounds per game (eighth in the WAC) this season, up from 3.6 points and 4.4 boards per game last season. He had the best weekend of his young Wolf Pack career, averaging 11.0 points and 11.0 rebounds in Nevada's East Coast swing to VCU and North Carolina. He turned in his first career double-double with 10 points and 13 rebounds Nov. 27 at VCU (both career highs). Two nights later, he set another career high for scoring with 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting and nearly missed his second career double-double with nine rebounds Nov. 29 at No. 11/12 North Carolina. Hunt has since broken his career scoring high, turning in 21 points on 7-of-10 shooting from the field and 7-of-8 free throw shooting Dec. 22 vs. BYU. He also pulled down nine boards in the game against the Cougars. He had 11 rebounds in Jan. 2 at Louisiana Tech and added 12 points Jan. 4 at New Mexico State.

CARTER WINS HIS HEAD COACHING DEBUT
Nevada's Nov. 14 win over Montana State gave Nevada head coach David Carter his first career victory, and he is now 12-7 in his first year as the Wolf Pack's mentor. He became the eighth head coach in school history to win his first game, joining recent head coaches Trent Johnson and Mark Fox who also won their Wolf Pack coaching debuts.
 After spending 10 years as an assistant on the Wolf Pack bench, including the last five as Nevada's associate head coach, Carter was named the 17th head coach in the history of the Nevada men's basketball program on April 3, 2009, just one day after fifth-year head coach Mark Fox announced that he was leaving Nevada after five seasons for the University of Georgia. Carter has been an integral part of Nevada's five WAC regular-season championships and seven postseason appearances, including four straight NCAA Tournament appearances from 2004-07. Carter was also recognized as one of the top assistant coaches in the nation, making FOXSports.com's list of the top 10 Mid-Major Assistant Coaches in 2007-08 and being named the best assistant coach in the Western Athletic Conference in Street's & Smith's 2004-05 College Basketball National Preview.

WOLF PACK NOTES

- Nevada has shot just 61.4 percent from the free throw line in the last three games (51-83), including a season-low 50.0 percent (9-18) in its Jan. 13 overtime loss to Utah State.

- Sophomore Luke Babbitt ranks second in the WAC and 23rd in the nation at 90.1 percent from the line this year (100-111), including a 10-of-10 effort Nov. 18 at UNLV and 11-of-11 showings Jan. 9 vs. San Jose State and Jan. 20 at Boise State. In the last eight games, Babbitt has made 53-of-58 free throw attempts (91.4 percent), while his miss in the second half Jan. 4 at New Mexico State snapped a stretch of 22 straight made free throws for him. Last year, Babbitt led the WAC in free throw percentage and ranked 24th in the country last year as a freshman at 86.4 percent.

- Senior Brandon Fields ranks second on the team with 47 assists and has the Wolf Pack's best assist-to-turnover ratio at 1.68 (47 assists and just 28 turnovers). He tied his career best with five assists and no turnovers Jan. 4 at New Mexico State.

- Fields is turning in 14.6 points per game this season (third on the team and 10th in the WAC), up 5.2 ppg from his average of 9.4 last year.

- Nevada was outrebounded for the third consecutive game Wednesday at Boise State (39-36) after outrebounding its previous 11 opponents. Nevada has still outrebounded 13 of its last 17 foes and is now 9-4 when outrebounding its opponent this season.

- Nevada continues to lead the WAC in rebounding with 38.7 boards per contest and has two players ranked in the WAC's top 10. Sophomore Luke Babbitt is second in the WAC and 26th in the nation with 9.9 rebounds per game, while sophomore Dario Hunt checks in at eighth in the WAC at 7.3 boards per contest. Four Wolf Pack players set or tied career bests for rebounding in the season-high 57-rebound performance vs. Houston, including a career-high 17 by Babbitt,  a career best-tying nine by senior Joey Shaw and Hunt (since broken) and a career high-matching seven by junior Armon Johnson. Senior Brandon Fields also matched his career best with nine rebounds Nov. 27 at VCU.

- The Wolf Pack is now 5-6 in games decided by 10 points or less and has lost its seven games this year by an average of just 7.3 points per contest (51).

- The Wolf Pack ranks second in the WAC with 4.21 blocked shots per game after leading the conference in the category with 4.79 per tilt last season. The WAC's leader last year, sophomore Dario Hunt is second in the league in blocked shots this year with 2.11 per game (58th in the NCAA), including a career-high matching six Jan. 13 vs. Utah State, five in the season opener vs. Montana State and three in five other games. He has blocked at least one shot in 46 of 53 career games (18 of 19 contests this season) and has turned in 31 career games with more than one block, including five with five or more. Hunt has 107 blocks in his career (in 53 games, 2.02 per game), which already ranks tied for fifth on the Nevada career list. Hunt's 67 blocks last season set the school freshman record and ranked third in the Nevada single-season record book.

- Nevada blocked a season-high 11 shots Jan. 13 vs. Utah State with sophomore Dario Hunt matching his career best with six rejections and sophomore Luke Babbitt setting a career high with four blocks.

- In addition to its 9-1 home mark, Nevada has put up some gaudy offensive numbers at Lawlor Events Center this season. The Wolf Pack is averaging 83.7 points per game and shooting 51.6 percent from the field in its nine home games. Sophomore Luke Babbitt is averaging 20.5 points per home game, while junior Armon Johnson is adding 16.4 ppg. Johnson is shooting the ball particularly well at home, making 57.4 percent of his shots at Lawlor (70-122). He has also dished out 6.2 assists per home game. Senior Ray Kraemer is knocking down 52.5 percent of his three-point attempts at home (21-40), including a perfect 4-of-4 outing Jan. 13 vs. Utah State.

- Sophomore Keith Olson saw the first action of his Wolf Pack career Dec. 19 vs. Wagner, turning in five points on 2-of-4 shooting and pulling down four rebounds in 11 minutes. The Gardnerville, Nev., native and Douglas High School graduate transferred to Nevada from Northern Arizona and sat out the first semester due to NCAA rules.

- Sophomore London Giles turned in a career-high six assists in 10 minutes of action in the Dec. 17 Wagner game, while senior Brandon Fields matched his career high with five. The pair accounted for 11 of Nevada's 19 assists in the contest.

- The contest-cinching three-pointer that senior Brandon Fields hit to with 4.3 seconds left in its Dec. 17 victory over Eastern Washington marked the first game-winning field goal for Fields in his Nevada career. He had been 0-of-5 from three-point land in the game before nailing the shot.

- All 11 of the Wolf Pack players who saw action in the Dec. 12 win over South Dakota State scored at least two points, including freshman Keith Fuetsch who scored the first four points of his career. Ten of 11 players scored in the Dec. 8 win over Fresno Pacific. The Wolf Pack got two of its three highest bench scoring outputs recently, including a season-high 26 bench points in the Dec. 8 win over Fresno Pacific and 22 in the Dec. 12 victory over South Dakota State. Nevada also got 23 bench points in its Nov. 21 victory over Houston. Senior Ray Kraemer is Nevada's leading scorer off the bench, turning in 7.0 points per game.

- Freshman Marko Cukic turned in season highs with six points on 3-of-3 shooting and five rebounds Dec. 5 at Pacific and bested those marks in the Dec. 8 win over Fresno Pacific with seven points and six boards.

- Sophomore Luke Babbitt was on the preseason watch list for the Wooden Award, marking the fourth time in five seasons that Nevada has had a player considered for that prestigious award with Marcelus Kemp making the preseason list in 2007-08 and Nick Fazekas in 2005-06 and 2006-07. Fazekas was named to the final ballot for the Wooden Award in each of those years and in 2006-07, he was named one of 10 Wooden Award All-Americans and finished eighth in the final voting for the award.

UP NEXT
Following Saturday's game at Fresno State, Nevada will return home to Lawlor Events Center on Saturday, Jan. 30 to play host to Hawai'i in a game which will be televised nationally by ESPNU. That is Nevada's only home game in a stretch of four of the five on the road with the team heading to Utah State (Feb. 6) and Idaho (Feb. 10) after that.

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