The Register-Herald, Beckley, West Virginia

Sports

February 17, 2010

WVU holds off Friars

<b>Ebanks’ 21 points lead Mountaineers' 88-74 win</b>

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — West Virginia was determined not to blow a double-digit lead the way it did in a triple-overtime loss just five days earlier.

So the eighth-ranked Mountaineers started aggressively, withstood a rally early in the second half and used their big height advantage to dominate inside and beat Providence 88-74 on Wednesday night.

“We haven’t been as good as we need to be in closing games,” West Virginia coach Bob Huggins said. “You keep doing that, sooner or later it jumps up and bites you. It jumped up and bit us last Friday.”

That’s when Pittsburgh overcame a five-point deficit in the last 35 seconds of regulation and handed the Mountaineers their second straight loss, 98-95 in triple overtime.

“It set us back, tremendously,” Da’Sean Butler said. “You can’t really sulk and complain about stuff. We were really hungry for the win. We wanted to come out aggressive.”

The Mountaineers took a 25-4 lead by scoring 23 straight points, but Providence cut that to 46-28 at halftime and 48-42 with a 14-2 rally to open the second half. West Virginia recovered by scoring the next nine points and stayed in front by at least 10 the rest of the way.

West Virginia (20-5, 9-4 Big East) was led by Devin Ebanks with 21 points. It had dropped from the No. 5 ranking with losses to Villanova and Pittsburgh.

Providence (12-14, 4-10) lost its sixth straight. The Friars were led by Jamine Peterson, their tallest starter at 6-foot-6, with 20 points and 15 rebounds. Four starters for the Mountaineers were taller.

“They just outphysicaled us, outsized us and definitely outrebounded us,” Friars coach Keno Davis said.

The challenge doesn’t get any easier for Providence, which will face its fourth consecutive Top 10 opponent when it hosts No. 5 Syracuse Tuesday night.

Davis must find a way to keep his players from getting discouraged.

“I’m open for suggestion,” he said. “I’m worried about how to keep the coach from not being discouraged.”

Brian McKenzie, Vincent Council and Marshon Brooks each scored 13 for the Friars. For the Mountaineers, Wellington Smith finished with 16 points and 10 rebounds. Butler also scored 16.

West Virginia’s win broke a tie for third place in the Big East with Pittsburgh. Villanova and Syracuse lead the conference at 11-2.

The Mountaineers were much better inside from start to finish. Of their 64 points from the field, 50 were in the paint. They allowed just 10 offensive rebounds to a Providence team that was averaging 17.2 this season. And they outscored the Friars 24-9 on second-chance points.

Providence led 4-2 before Smith began the 23-0 run when he converted an offensive rebound. Butler scored seven points in the surge, including two three-point plays, as the Mountaineers rolled to a 25-4 lead with 11:04 left in the half. Six of their nine baskets in that spurt were layups.

The Friars finally scored on two free throws by Brooks with 10:40 remaining as they outscored the Mountaineers 24-21 after the 23-point outburst.

Providence kept rolling in the second half when Peterson and Duke Mondy hit 3-pointers and Mondy converted an offensive rebound, forcing Huggins to call a time out.

“I didn’t think we were very assertive against their pressure,” Huggins said. “I just think we were ... lethargic. I think they’re not used to me coming in (at halftime) and talking to them in a real calm voice, maybe.”

Peterson made a layup when play resumed before Smith ended the 10-0 run with a tip-in. Then, Sharaud Curry hit two free throws and Council sank a layup. Suddenly, the Mountaineers’ lead was down to 48-42 and there was still 16:37 remaining.

That’s when the they resumed playing like the highly ranked — and much taller — team they are.

Ebanks, Kevin Jones and Smith made consecutive layups, and Smith tacked on a free throw. Butler’s basket made it 57-42 with 13:09 to go and the Mountaineers were rolling.

“They’re going to pose a lot of mismatches and a lot of trouble for whoever they get to meet in the NCAA tournament,” Davis said. “With the right pairing, I think they could go pretty far.”



WEST VIRGINIA 88, PROVIDENCE 74

No. 8 WEST VIRGINIA (20-5)

Butler 5-10 5-7 16, Ebanks 9-15 3-4 21, Jones 3-9 2-2 9, Smith 7-10 2-4 16, Bryant 2-4 10-10 14, Mazzulla 1-5 2-2 4, Pepper 0-1 0-0 0, Mitchell 1-1 0-0 2, Flowers 0-4 0-0 0, Kilicli 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 31-64 24-29 88.

PROVIDENCE (12-14)

Peterson 8-17 2-8 20, Mondy 2-3 0-0 5, Curry 0-10 8-8 8, McKenzie 4-8 1-2 13, Council 3-8 7-9 13, Brooks 3-7 4-4 13, Wright 0-0 0-0 0, Dixon 1-3 0-0 2, Permenter 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-56 22-31 74.

Halftime—West Virginia 46-28. 3-Point Goals—West Virginia 2-12 (Jones 1-2, Butler 1-3, Mazzulla 0-1, Bryant 0-1, Flowers 0-2, Smith 0-3), Providence 10-25 (McKenzie 4-7, Brooks 3-6, Peterson 2-7, Mondy 1-1, Council 0-1, Curry 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—West Virginia 43 (Smith 10), Providence 28 (Peterson 15). Assists—West Virginia 12 (Butler, Mazzulla 3), Providence 13 (Council 7). Total Fouls—West Virginia 23, Providence 22. Technical—Permenter. A—8,553.

Text Only
Sports
  • Woodrow holds off Huntington

     It took Woodrow Wilson’s boys basketball team nearly three quarters to figure out that the backside lob was open in Huntington High’s zone.

    January 10, 2012

  • MSU hosts Rio Grande

    For the first time since 1995, Mountain State stands a little past the half-way point at the season with five losses.

    January 10, 2012

  • OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE - WVU to join Big 12 Conference

    The Big 12 Conference Board of Directors have voted unanimously to accept West Virginia University as a full conference member effective July 1, 2012.  The Mountaineers will begin competing in the Big 12 beginning with the 2012-13 athletic season.

    October 28, 2011

  • Friday update: Big East notified WVU leaving for Big 12

    The Big East says it has been notified that West Virginia is leaving the conference and joining the Big 12.

    October 28, 2011

  • Cardinals force Game 7 in World Series

    After one of the greatest games in baseball history, a 10-9, 11-inning victory over Texas in Game 6 in which the Cardinals were twice within one strike of elimination.

    October 28, 2011

  • Schiano sings WVU’s praises

    It hasn’t been the year that Rutgers coach Greg Schiano envisioned.
    Not close.

    December 1, 2010

  • BNI will usher in mat season

    This time around, the Beckley Newspapers Invitational will have a decidedly more local flavor.

    December 1, 2010

  • Huggs likes looks of young Noreen

    Perhaps it was the season. Whatever it was, West Virginia coach Bob Huggins went straight to the pie.
    Well, the figurative pie.
    Huggins had just watched his team beat Virginia Military Institute 82-66 in front of 12,367 fans at the Charleston Civic Center Saturday.

    December 1, 2010

  • Oak Hill places 3 on AA

    Whether it was opposing defenses or illness, nothing stopped Charleston Catholic’s Tom Trupo for long.

    December 1, 2010

  • Spartans open with victory

    Turnovers produce points and the Greenbrier East girls basketball team collected plenty of each en route to an 81-43 season-opening victory against Bluefield on Tuesday night.

    December 1, 2010