The Register-Herald, Beckley, West Virginia

College Sports

January 26, 2012

St. John's stuns WVU

NEW YORK — There can’t be a younger starting five than St. John’s had Wednesday night against West Virginia.

Five freshmen were introduced as the starting lineup for the Red Storm, and when the game was over they snapped a four-game losing streak with a 78-62 victory.

“We don’t look at it like that,” said Moe Harkless, who led the freshmen with 23 points and 13 rebounds, “we just go out there, play and try to have fun in the game.”

They had a blast in this one.

The Red Storm (9-11, 3-6 Big East) used runs of 8-0 and 9-0 to take a 36-20 halftime lead, and they led by as many as 21 points in the second half.

It was believed to be the first time St. John’s started five freshmen since the 1927-28 season with the team that went on to be known as “The Wonder Five.” Freshmen were not eligible for varsity competition from the early 1950s until 1972.

It wasn’t the first time West Virginia coach Bob Huggins went against an all-freshmen starting lineup.

“Unfortunately in 1992 I saw the Fab Five,” he said of Michigan’s famed freshmen class that beat his Cincinnati team 76-72 in the national semifinals. “I didn’t like that much. I didn’t like this a whole lot more. They’re talented.”

St. John’s looked nothing like the team that entered the game last in the 16-team conference in field goal percentage (42.2), finishing at 48.4 percent (31 of 64). They even improved their last-place 3-point percentage (24.4), making 4 of 12.

“We’re getting better every game,” Harkless said. “You can see it the way we played. Everybody did their job. It was a great collective effort.”

West Virginia (15-6, 5-3), which had won three straight and five of six, struggled offensively all game. The Mountaineers came in fourth in the Big East with a 46.6 shooting percentage but they finished at 35.4 percent (23 of 65).

Kevin Jones, who leads the Big East in scoring (20.7) and rebounding (11.5), finished with 26 points and 14 rebounds, but it wasn’t close to being enough.

“I asked our guys who think they’re so good, where would be without Number 5? What would our record be?” Huggins said, referring to Jones. “He’s been the most valuable player in the country.”

Jones said Huggins told the team he was disappointed with the effort.

“We know we can play better than that, but the better team won,” he said. “Now we can’t let one loss turn into two.”

Freshman D’Angelo Harrison, coming off a season-high 28 points against Villanova, had 19 points for the Red Storm, who had won just one of their first six games this season at Madison Square Garden.

“We did some things we haven’t done before,” said St. John’s assistant coach Mike Dunlap, who has been in charge of the team as head coach Steve Lavin continues to recover from prostate cancer surgery on Oct. 6. “We rebounded against a very physical team and we took care of the ball. We ran. We ran in the beginning, the middle and the end.”

Darryl “Truck” Bryant had 16 points for the Mountaineers but he was 0 for 6 from the field in the first half, including missing three 3-point attempts as West Virginia went 2 of 10 from beyond the arc in the opening 20 minutes.

Any thoughts of a second-half rally for West Virginia dimmed quickly as the Red Storm opened the half on a 10-5 run that included 3s by Phil Green and Harkless. A drive by Sir’Dominic Pointer capped the spurt and made it 46-25.

West Virginia closed within 68-59 on a basket by Bryant with 2:46 to go, but that was as close as the Mountaineers would get.

“This was a learning experience. We closed it out,” Harkless said. “They went from down 20 to 10 but we closed it out.”

This was the Red Storm’s second straight win over West Virginia after losing 10 in a row in the series. The Mountaineers had won five straight at St. John’s.

ST. JOHN’S 78, WEST VIRGINIA 62

WEST VIRGINIA (15-6)

Jones 10-21 6-9 26, Miles 1-3 0-0 2, Kilicli 2-4 0-0 4,  Hinds 3-12 0-0 8, Bryant 4-13 5-6 16, Rutledge 3-5 0-0 6,  Brown 0-4 0-0 0, Browne 0-0 0-4 0, McCune 0-1 0-0 0,  Williamson 0-2 0-0 0, Noreen 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 23-65 11-19 62.

ST. JOHN’S (9-11)

Harkless 11-20 1-2 23, Pointer 4-7 0-1 8, Garrett 3-6 5-6 11,  Greene 5-11 0-0 11, Harrison 6-15 4-5 19, Achiuwa 1-2 0-0 2,  Stith 1-3 2-2 4. Totals 31-64 12-16 78.

Halftime—St. John’s 36-20. 3-Point Goals—West Virginia 5-22 (Bryant  3-8, Hinds 2-6, McCune 0-1, Williamson 0-2, Brown 0-2, Jones 0-3), St.  John’s 4-12 (Harrison 3-6, Greene 1-2, Garrett 0-1, Harkless 0-3).  Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—West Virginia 44 (Jones 14), St. John’s 40  (Harkless 13). Assists—West Virginia 14 (Bryant, Jones 3), St. John’s 17  (Greene 8). Total Fouls—West Virginia 16, St. John’s 16. Technical—St.  John’s Bench.

 

 

Text Only
College Sports
  • Six Concord baseball players selected for honors

    Six Concord University baseballplayers were recently honored with All-Atlantic Region accolades by either the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) or the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA).

    May 23, 2013

  • WVU baseball changes up pitching lineup for Big 12 Championship

    Randy Mazey’s attention has been on everything but baseball in recent days, as the West Virginia University coach has been out in front of his team’s effort to help the tornado victims in Oklahoma, where his team has been this week preparing for the Big 12 Baseball Championships, which begin today at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Okla.

    May 22, 2013

  • 1MUSGRAVE1.jpg Musgrave, WVU teammates see tornado devastation up close

    West Virginia University pitcher Harrison Musgrave has spent his entire life in the hills of West Virginia. He didn’t know what a tornado siren was — let alone the damage that can be done by swirling winds.
    “I didn’t even know that they were going off,” Musgrave said. “I didn’t even know that they had sirens. I know I feel like a total idiot, but I heard them go off and I just thought it was an alarm going off.”

    May 22, 2013 1 Photo 6 Stories

  • WVU’s Musgrave wins Pitcher of the Year honors

    Six months ago, West Virginia University sophomore left-hander Harrison Musgrave was questioning his future with the WVU baseball program and first-year head coach Randy Mazey.

    May 21, 2013

  • Big 12 shifts tourney format

    The Big 12 Conference will still play the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship this week at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Okla., but in the wake of the devastating storm that blew through the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore on Monday, there will be some major changes to the format.

    May 21, 2013

  • WVU baseball team helps tornado victims

    West Virginia University head baseball coach Randy Mazey was having lunch at an Oklahoma City restaurant Monday afternoon, keeping a close watch on the television set.
    With every passing minute, the tornado that devastated the Oklahoma town of Moore, was moving closer and closer to his location and its path was being documented by a local television station. At one point, the coach even looked out the window to see if he could see the approaching funnel.

    May 21, 2013

  • College Roundup

    May 21, 2013

  • WVU should reinstate men’s track — not golf

    West Virginia University has not had a men’s golf team since 1982.
    But Oliver Luck, who’s been the school’s athletic director going on three years, reportedly is talking about bringing back that sport “because it’s cheap.”

    May 21, 2013

  • Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship Format Changed

    In the wake of this week’s devastating storm in the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, the Big 12 Conference is postponing the start of the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship. No. 3 seeded WVU scheduled to take on Kansas at 4 p.m. (Central) on Thursday.

    May 21, 2013

  • Misled West Virginia students deprived of Big 12 baseball games

    It now appears to be a fact that West Virginia University athletic officials misled students and the general public in not playing any Big 12 Conference baseball games at Hawley Field in Morgantown this season.

    May 21, 2013