College men’s basketball: Bounced
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Barry Faulkner
PROVO, Utah - UC Irvine men’s basketball coach Pat Douglass said
playing in the National Invitation Tournament can be tougher than playing
in the other tournament that occupied the national consciousness
Thursday.
But BYU Coach and UCI alumnus Steve Cleveland actually credited the
flurry of televised NCAA Tournament action for inspiring his team’s 78-55
victory in the first round of the NIT Thursday night, before 6,288 at the
mildly mad Marriott Center.
“I think of the big things that helped us tonight, was that our kids
watched all those games on TV today,” Cleveland said, after the Cougars
extended the nation’s longest home winning streak to 36 games. “Our kids
showed up tonight with a bounce in their step.”
UCI (21-11) had a bounce of its own early, muffling the home faithful
by pounding the ball inside and crashing the offensive glass to build
leads of 19-11 and 25-20.
But an 18-3 BYU run to end the first half, 20 second-half points from
Cougar junior Travis Hansen, and a scoring contribution from all 12
players on the roster, helped bounce the Anteaters from their fourth NIT.
It was the second straight first-round NIT exit for UCI, which also
said goodbye to senior career scoring leader, the two-time Big West
Conference Player of the Year.
“If we could have quit after the first 10 minutes, we would have been
fine,” Douglass said with a smile. “Jerry got in foul trouble (benched
for the final 8:09 of the first half with two fouls) and Steve’s kids did
a better job of being aggressive than we did.
“We talked at halftime (trailing 38-28) about coming out and really
getting after it the first five minutes of the second half. But we didn’t
do that either.”
Douglass said the first-round road date that has accompanied all four
of the Anteaters’ NIT berths, didn’t help either.
The same was largely true about Green’s lackluster finale. The
honorable mention All-American scored six points in each half, was 6 of
11 from the field and 0 of 1 from the free-throw line in 27 minutes. The
subject of frequent double teams, Green didn’t reach double figures until
7:25 remained.
That bucket, a 19-foot jumper that capped a 10-2 Anteater run, drew
the visitors within 60-51.
But 7-foot BYU center Dan Howard then made his first basket of the
game while being fouled with 6:29 left. Hansen then drilled a
three-pointer from the left corner 52 seconds later, after a three-shot
UCI possession seemed to sum up the visitors’ frustrating finish. And it
wasn’t long before both coaches emptied the benches.
“BYU canned some threes (six in all supported by four traditional
three-point plays) and that was crucial,” Douglass said.
“And (Green) never really got going. When he’s not going well, it
really affects us. There were times when we had four sophomores out
there. They shouldn’t be playing like sophomores at this point, but they
did tonight.
“I thought about bringing Jerry back in (as the lead vanished before
halftime), but if he’d gotten a third foul we’d have really been up
against it.”
Asked to put his reaction to the loss in emotional terms, Douglass
delivered the same no-nonsense approach that has led to 60 UCI victories
the last three seasons, including the program’s first consecutive 20-win
campaigns and a share of the last two regular-season conference crowns.
“I’m not emotional about it,” Douglass said. “There’s nothing I can do
about it now. The season’s over. I know people don’t drink too much beer
in Provo, but I’m going to have a couple beers tonight.”
Douglass might also have pondered a group of talented returners,
including 7-foot sophomore Adam Parada and 6-5 junior forward Jordan
Harris. They both posted a team-high 13 points.
But Hansen (23 points) and plenty of help, allowed the Cougars (18-11)
to advance to the second round Monday at Memphis.
“We haven’t had that many players contribute since early in the year,”
said Cleveland, who played six players most of the 14-game Mountain West
Conference schedule.
“We were elated to be in the NIT,” Douglass said of the school’s
back-to-back postseason appearance. “We would have gone to Timbuktu if we
had to.”
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