BUFFALO, N.Y. —
The way West Virginia was missing one shot after another, the thought actually crossed forward Kevin Jones’ mind whether the Mountaineers would ever hit a basket.
After missing their first 11 attempts, the second-seeded Mountaineers eventually found their range Friday — and have Jones to thank for leading the way.
The sophomore forward scored 13 of his game-high 17 points in the first half in helping West Virginia (28-6) roll to a 77-50 win over No. 15 seed Morgan State and avoid another Big East flameout in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
“We always let teams get off to those huge leads and let them get confidence and that’s where it hurts us,” Jones said. “I’m just glad we could come out and stomp on them and not let them back into the game.”
Stomp they did.
Jones went 4-for-4 for nine points during a decisive 21-4 run over a 6-minute stretch in the first half.
Devin Ebanks scored 16 and added 13 rebounds for the Mountaineers, who found another dimension to their offense after the Bears contained star guard Da’Sean Butler.
Reggie Holmes scored 12 points for Morgan State (27-10), the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference champ, which followed up its first tournament appearance last year with another bid this season. Kevin Thompson had eight rebounds and three blocks to go with nine points for the Bears.
The Big East champions advanced to the second round of the East Regional on Sunday, when West Virginia will face No. 10 seed Missouri after its 86-78 win over Clemson.
Despite the early scare, it proved to be a far better start to the day for the Big East, after the conference’s teams struggled Thursday. Georgetown, Marquette and Notre Dame were all upset, while No. 2 seed Villanova survived a major challenge, needing overtime to beat Robert Morris 73-70.
“We’re our own team,” Butler said, when asked to reflect on the conference’s sudden tournament troubles. “I just think we came out and didn’t want to leave early. We wanted to take care of our own business.”
The Bears were left to wonder how their solid start got away.
“Those damn 40-minute games,” coach Todd Bozeman said, with a sly grin. “If we had 12 minutes, we would have won the game.”
The Bears opened by hitting four of their first six attempts to build a 10-0 lead before the game was 5 minutes old. And their swarming defense did its part by shutting down Butler, who finished with nine points.
West Virginia trailed 12-3 before scoring its first field goal with 12:15 left, when Ebanks hit a hook shot from the paint. The basket sparked the Mountaineers back into the game, as they hit eight of their next 11 attempts and took the lead with 5:42 remaining in the half.
That’s when Joe Mazzulla went coast-to-coast following Troy Smith’s turnover and was fouled while scoring on a layup. Mazzulla completed the three-point play to put West Virginia ahead 22-21, a lead the Mountaineers never relinquished.
West Virginia didn’t let up after halftime, eventually building a 70-36 lead with 6 minutes left in the game.
Butler is the Mountaineers’ go-to player, having scored six game-winning baskets this season, including a running jumper with 4 seconds left that sealed a 60-58 win over Georgetown in the Big East title game last Saturday. What impressed Butler is how his teammates were able to pick up the slack Friday.
That’s something that didn’t happen last year, when the Mountaineers were bounced from the tournament in the first round in a 68-60 overtime loss to 11th-seeded Dayton.
“We had a good team last year, but everybody was so young. I kind of felt I had to do a lot more,” Butler said. “But this year I have a team. Everybody’s mature. ... It’s a lot easier for me to go out there and play.”
The Bears’ shooting fizzled, and they finished the game 18-of-61.
“We weren’t frustrated,” said Smith, who scored nine points for the Bears before fouling out. “The ball wasn’t going in as much as it usually goes in for us. ... We just weren’t hitting our shots.”
WEST VIRGINIA 77, MORGAN ST. 50
MORGAN ST. (27-10)
Thompson 3-9 3-5 9, Stokes 1-3 0-1 2, Holmes 4-17 2-2 12, Thomas 0-2 0-0 0, T.Smith 3-8 3-4 9, Braswell 0-0 0-0 0, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, D.Smith 0-0 2-2 2, Davis 3-8 0-2 7, Jackson 3-12 1-4 7, Long 1-2 0-0 2, Foote 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 18-61 11-20 50.
WEST VIRGINIA (28-6)
Ebanks 4-11 8-8 16, Jones 8-10 0-1 17, Smith 1-4 0-0 2, Butler 4-11 1-2 9, Bryant 1-4 2-2 4, Thoroughman 0-0 0-0 0, West 1-1 0-0 3, Payne 0-0 0-0 0, Mazzulla 1-2 3-3 5, Jennings 0-1 3-4 3, Pepper 0-4 3-4 3, Mitchell 2-5 0-0 6, Flowers 2-3 3-5 7, Kilicli 0-2 2-2 2. Totals 24-58 25-31 77.
Halftime—West Virginia 38-27. 3-Point Goals—Morgan St. 3-19 (Holmes 2-9, Davis 1-2, T.Smith 0-2, Jackson 0-6), West Virginia 4-15 (Mitchell 2-5, Jones 1-1, West 1-1, Bryant 0-1, Smith 0-2, Butler 0-2, Pepper 0-3). Fouled Out—Jackson, T.Smith. Rebounds—Morgan St. 38 (Thompson 8), West Virginia 49 (Ebanks 13). Assists—Morgan St. 3 (Davis, D.Smith, Thomas 1), West Virginia 20 (Mazzulla 6). Total Fouls—Morgan St. 22, West Virginia 16.
Today's Sports Front
Mountaineers overcome slow start
WVU rolls past Morgan St. 77-50
- Today's Sports Front
-
-
Watson makes a statement
Rondale Watson wanted to make a statement in his return to the Oak Hill lineup.
He delivered emphatically. -
Greenbrier Classic ‘shaping up perfectly’
The Greenbrier Classic will be played July 2 -8 this year instead of the last week of July.
A small change on a calendar from past events perhaps, but a significant switch on the PGA TOUR FedExCup schedule. -
Woodrow swim team has momentum
Woodrow Wilson hopes to build off a solid regular season in the regional swim tournament at noon today at W.Va. Wesleyan College in Buckhannon.
-
Summers to battle Skyhawks
Summers County vs. Scott, Part 2.
-
Cougars escape with win
When the going got tough, Mountain State’s Devon Peterson got going.
-
MSAC votes to let Greenbrier East leave league
Greenbrier East is officially leaving the Mountain State Athletic Conference.
-
Bobcats get back on track
In their past few meetings, the PikeView Lady Panthers have nearly pulled off their goal of defeating their rival Summers County.
-
WVU Tech baseball team opens season this weekend
To help their teams get better, coaches often consider a demanding schedule an ally.
-
Eagles rout Red Dragons
Ron Kidd may have just invented a new offense, or at least employed one you don’t see every day.
-
O’Brien hosts final Woodrow game
Everything was going well until the parade of players started.
- More Today's Sports Front Headlines
-






