Short-handed Washington Huskies, USC meet in Big Ten men’s tourney

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Washington men’s coach Danny Sprinkle, right, watches the action in the second half of an early season game. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)

Washington men’s coach Danny Sprinkle, right, watches the action in the second half of an early season game. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)

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Percy Allen
By
Percy Allen

Seattle Times staff reporter

Danny Sprinkle fielded a bunch of questions on Monday before his Washington men’s basketball team boarded a bus that took them to the airport for a flight to Chicago and this week’s Big Ten tournament.

In their past three games, the Huskies have had just as many players sit out (seven) as healthy scholarship players available, and that situation isn’t going to change before No. 12-seed Washington plays No. 13-seed USC in the second round at 11:30 a.m. PT Wednesday at the United Center.

“We’re pretty much the same as we were,” Sprinkle said. “We have a couple guys that are still banged up from the other night … but nothing crazy (and) nothing that’s going to hold anybody out.”

The pertinent concern for the Huskies — and the Trojans for that matter — is do they really want to play more basketball games this season?

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Danny Sprinkle is confident his team can play with anybody on any given night.  The University of San Diego Toreros played the Washington Huskies in NCAA Men’s Basketball Monday, Dec. 22, 2025 at Alaska Airlines Arena, in Seattle, WA. 232076



“A lot of these games, it just comes down to what team wants to play and who’s ready to rock ‘n’ roll,” Sprinkle said. “We should be excited. … This is why you play Division I basketball. It’s March, and for the players, this is when you play.


“And this is where stars are born. It could be Courtland (Muldrew)? It could be Nico (Dzepina)? I don’t know. It could be Zoom (Diallo)? Whoever it is, this is the time when you’ve got to play your best.”

The short-handed Huskies (15-16) are low in numbers because of a slew of injuries — Franck Kepnang (knee), JJ Mandaquit (foot), Jacob Ognacevic (foot), Jasir Rencher (heart condition), Mady Traore (foot) — as well as two players (Desmond Claude and Christian Nitu) who left the team and Bryson Tucker who is away for personal reasons.

Sprinkle attributes the lineup disruptions to Washington’s inconsistency — UW has alternated wins and losses in the past seven games — and why the Huskies have fallen short of preseason expectations that tabbed them as an NCAA tournament team.

“We haven’t had the team that we were expecting for one game,” Sprinkle said. “Not one. That’s not an excuse. That’s a fact.”

Similarly, USC (18-13) has dealt with a rash of injuries and was without its top three players (Chad Baker-Mazara, Rodney Rice and Alijah Arenas) for large swaths of the season.

Still, the Trojans started 12-1 while rising to No. 24 in The Associated Press poll. They were 14-3 in January before imploding and finishing the regular season riding a seven-game losing streak that included the dismissal of leading scorer Baker-Mazara.

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“There was progress this year, even with the injuries,” USC coach Eric Musselman told reporters in Los Angeles last week. “What was the goal coming in? It was to make the NCAA tournament, but that was with a healthy group.

“We’re still trying to figure out the landscape of the Big Ten, as are all the West Coast teams. UCLA has had a great year, but the other West Coast teams, we’re still trying to figure out travel, and we’re behind the schools that have been a part of this league for a long time. … We feel this is an NCAA tournament team if we were healthy. We have no doubt that it was — or would be.”

The Huskies feel the same.

To win its first-ever Big Ten tournament game, Washington needs to something that it’s never done — beat USC for the third time in one season.

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In their first meeting on Dec. 6, the Huskies erased an 18-point halftime deficit and staged the second-largest comeback in program history for an 84-76 win at the Galen Center.

Last week, UW thrashed USC 91-72 on Senior Night thanks to dominant performances from star freshman forward Hannes Steinbach (22 points and 24 rebounds) and Diallo (26 points and nine rebounds).

“Our guys have great respect for USC and their players and their talent,” Sprinkle said. “They know what they’re capable of. We just played better in the second half and time ran out. (In) the first half they kicked our butts in both (games). There’s a lot of things that we have to do much better if we want to continue to be successful on Wednesday against them.”

The UW-USC winner faces No. 5-seed Wisconsin in the third round on Thursday.




Percy Allen: pallen@seattletimes.com. Percy Allen is a sports reporter for The Seattle Times, where he writes about the University of Washington Huskies men’s and women’s basketball teams and the Seattle Storm.
 
Man, what really sticks out to me watching this is here you have 2 true west coast royalty schools, really the only two now that UCLA died of aids. Complete respect on both sides, no blowing Josh Pate or making dumb shit up to prop up your marsh hut. Just old school West Coast royalty.
 
No doubt, USC respects y'all after this barnburner. Kudos. Much better.than my shiity ducks who couldn't beat dreckfest Maryland yesterday. #shame
 
Musselman or whatever his name is was clearly a bad hire.

Another Jen Cohen specialty.
He’s a decent coach. He built both Nevada and Arkansas with transfers before building rosters with transfers was really a thing. It gave him an advantage that many at the time were unwilling to take because it was considered unsavory. That’s really the main reason Cohen passed on him when he was at Nevada and went with Push-ups Hopkins. He was on the West Coast and was using a “cutting edge” tool to take Nevada to the elite 8. Yuck, gross, why would UW want that? Let’s go with the 20 year career assistant.
 
He’s a decent coach. He built both Nevada and Arkansas with transfers before building rosters with transfers was really a thing. It gave him an advantage that many at the time were unwilling to take because it was considered unsavory. That’s really the main reason Cohen passed on him when he was at Nevada and went with Push-ups Hopkins. He was on the West Coast and was using a “cutting edge” tool to take Nevada to the elite 8. Yuck, gross, why would UW want that? Let’s go with the 20 year career assistant.
Cohen hired him at USC because she knew she’d fucked that up at UW. Just like at UW though she was late to the party in terms of who she hired. Hired Hopkins to run a 2-3 zone just as shooting exploded and antiquated his specialty and then hired a guy who excelled at transfer roster building just as the portal leveled the playing field on Musselmans big advantage at both Nevada and Arkansas. She’s so awful.
 
He’s a decent coach. He built both Nevada and Arkansas with transfers before building rosters with transfers was really a thing. It gave him an advantage that many at the time were unwilling to take because it was considered unsavory. That’s really the main reason Cohen passed on him when he was at Nevada and went with Push-ups Hopkins. He was on the West Coast and was using a “cutting edge” tool to take Nevada to the elite 8. Yuck, gross, why would UW want that? Let’s go with the 20 year career assistant.
She went from “Push Ups” Hopkins to “Shirt Off” Musselman…
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