Head Coach Ken McDonald said he constantly tells the Toppers that they shouldn’t settle for a good shot when they could instead take a great shot.
The 2009-2010 season was expected to be one great shot, but instead Western (21-13) fell to Troy 54-48 in the Sun Belt Conference Tournament’s semifinals.
The Toppers missed out on invitations to the NCAA and National Invitational tournaments as a result, coming up short of McDonald’s expectations to build on a tournament experience in his first year as coach.
“We have a good basketball team, and we had certain expectations from the start of the season,” McDonald said. “We put that out there and on ourselves, and honestly, things didn’t go exactly as you script it. But you have to make it go your way. There were times this year that we didn’t make it go our way.”
Senior guard A.J. Slaughter said unfortunate situations such as Western’s all happen for a reason.
Slaughter said he won’t remember the disappointments, the letdowns and the losses as much as he’ll remember how the Toppers handled all of them.
“That’s what I’m going to look back most on — that we stuck together, and it was a brotherhood,” Slaughter said. “When our backs were against the wall, we just fought.”
Falling short of expectations started with an early loss to Louisiana State, forcing the Toppers to miss the NIT Tip-off in New York City. Then Western lost to Indiana State, breaking its home-win streak that ran through all of last season.
Also, junior forward Sergio Kerusch went down with a broken foot before the Toppers’ loss to Louisville in December.
From there, Western’s at-large fate in the NCAA tournament was sealed. But the Toppers weren’t done, finishing with a 9-3 record upon Kerusch’s return.
“We really turned it around,” McDonald said. “I think it’s a true testament of the character and the work ethics of the players and the coaching staff that we turned it around. We hit some tough stretches for WKU basketball, and I think everyone knows that.”
Throughout a five-game losing streak in February, McDonald repeatedly said his team just wasn’t playing hard enough.
Kerusch echoed that, saying the effort sometimes wasn’t there.
But by the time Western eventually took its final blow to Troy on March 8, Kerusch said the Toppers were no longer disappointed in themselves — just satisfied with the effort.
“You saw a team just lay it all out there,” Kerusch said. “The end result was that we just couldn’t pull it out that time.”



