Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Luis, Red Storm head overseas with momentum and process that could produce Top 10 ranking
Disappointed, but short: GWU narrowly misses upset at Charlotte
USC Upstate handles Southern Wesleyan for second win of season
By Justin Mathis (@J_Math23)
SPARTANBURG, S.C. – After a sluggish first half in Tuesday’s non-conference tilt against Southern Wesleyan, USC Upstate needed a jolt.
Enter Mister Dean.
On a fast break early in the second half, Dean caught a pass from Brit Harris, made one dribble, and took off from near the free throw line for an electrifying dunk over a defender, which drew the Spartan bench and faithful to their feet at the Hodge Center. That proved to be a big spark—and Tuesday's top play on the SportsCenter countdown—as Upstate cruised to a 95-63 victory over the Warriors.
In the first half, Southern Wesleyan capitalized on some Upstate miscues, using 10 points off turnovers to build a two-possession lead with just over six minutes left in the frame. However, Upstate continued to battle, especially on the defensive end of the floor.
A Breylin Garcia jumper and back-to-back threes from Dean and Karmani Gregory put the Spartans ahead, 34-31, with 3:15 left in the half. Following a lead change, a personal 6-0 run by Gregory, along with a Harris three to beat the horn, created a 43-39 Upstate lead at the interval.
“If you don’t guard, you can’t win,” said Upstate head coach Marty Richter. “Our guys don’t understand that (yet) because they don’t understand college basketball really well. This would have turned into a nail-biter if we didn’t start guarding in the second half.”
The Spartans used a 10-2 run out of the break to build an eight-point lead just over two minutes into the second stanza, which featured a Gregory-to-Harris connection on an inbound pass. Over the next 10-plus minutes, Upstate emphatically imposed its will.
Adkins drained a triple, Isaiah Skinner buried a jumper, and Dean went coast-to-coast for a throwdown, while Chico Johnson swished a triple on consecutive trips up the floor, all part of a staggering 31-7 run for Upstate.
“With eight minutes left, they were 5-of-22 (shooting in the half),” recalled Richter. “We have to train them on how to defend. If we can defend, we can get down that floor so fast and get some layups. I was really proud of them for how they started the game and how they flipped the switch to come out in the second half.”
Nic Book also added a basket and two free throws of his own, while Andrew McConnell buried a triple as part of a 7-1 burst to close the game for the Spartans.
Five Spartans finished in double-figures, led by Dean with a game-high 21 points and career-high nine rebounds. Gregory tallied 15 points and three assists, while Harris notched 12 points, six assists, and five rebounds. Adkins and Johnson also tallied 12 points apiece.
“(Karmani) is so quick,” Richter stated. “He can change direction with the best of them and can make really good decisions once he gets into the change-of-direction downhill. His upside at lead guard is really good. (Dean) sparks runs because he will make a dynamic dunk, rebound, or do something on the offensive end. He brings energy with how he scores the basketball. He can score in bunches like he did tonight and does a good job of that within the system.”
As a team, Upstate was 32-for-64 from the floor and outscored SWU 44-26 in the paint, 21-5 in second chance points, and 16-6 on fast breaks.
“If we defend like the way we did in the second half, we are going to have an opportunity to win (Friday and Saturday). In the other road games we played, we didn’t defend. We traded baskets and were right there with all of them at different times in the games, but we can’t just trade baskets.”
The Spartans (2-4) will hit the road for a four-game trip, beginning with a multi-team event this weekend against East Tennessee State Friday and Queens University Saturday. After that, Upstate will travel to Iowa (November 26 and Coastal Carolina (November 30).
Monday, November 18, 2024
Despite loss to Princeton, Merrimack still poses a problem for non-conference and MAAC opponents alike
By Ray Curren (@currenrr)
NORTH ANDOVER, Mass. — Joe Gallo doesn’t mind being called crazy, especially when it pertains to his defense.
As Merrimack’s zone confounded Princeton and the Warriors built a 14-point lead midway through the first half Sunday afternoon, there weren’t too many people at Lawler Arena calling him anything but a genius.
Alas, Princeton is not the heavy Ivy League favorite for nothing, and the Tigers stormed back for a 68-57 victory. But in an age where you can count the Division I teams playing exclusively zone on one hand (two hands tops, you certainly wouldn’t need your toes), Gallo isn’t changing any time soon.
“Nobody zones Princeton, they think you’re crazy,” Gallo said. “We had to dig back like three years to find any 2-3 zone possessions against them. Why would anyone zone a team that’s as good at shooting threes as Princeton is? But those are the teams we usually do a great job against.”
The proof is in the analytics, of course. Merrimack led the NEC in defensive efficiency in three of its five seasons there (as you likely know, the Warriors have moved to the MAAC) and finished second once as well. The last two seasons weren’t even close, the Warriors led the league by .066 and .075 points per possession, respectively. Although last season ended with a heartbreaking loss to Wagner in the NEC championship game, Merrimack was 79th in defensive efficiency nationally, fifth in forcing turnovers, and 10th in shooting percentage.
Will a step up to the MAAC make things tougher? Maybe, but the MAAC probably won’t throw any shooting teams like Princeton at them.
“We’ve played some teams over the years that we could break down a little, but then overwhelm them with a late closeout, they rush it and they miss it,” Gallo said. “This was if you slide one foot the wrong way, they were going to hit a shot. (Princeton) wins our league, to be perfectly honest with you. They’re a Top 75 team in college basketball, and we weren’t too far off. It wasn’t like we couldn’t play with these guys.”
Gallo’s zone has fairly simple rotations, but they are unorthodox. Merrimack essentially leaves the high post open and then matches up everywhere else, trusting its center (mostly junior Bryan Etumnu with a little of senior David Murray) to take the high poster 1-on-1. If the high poster shoots it, it’s a long two-point jumper. Many of the Warriors’ steals are passes coming out of the high post or on late help when that person gets indecisive on drives.
“We told our guys let’s make (Princeton star) Caden Pierce get 50 if they were going to play him at the high post,” Gallo said. “When we did that, we were effective. I give them credit, they adjusted in the second half, they dribbled it out of the high post and they can all shoot it.”
Any pass with air under it is also ripe to get picked off, and Merrimack does a fantastic job contesting shots. The Achilles heel is rebounding, as it is with many zones. Even last season, the Warriors were 351st nationally on the defensive glass (65.5 percent), but the overall data says the risks are worth it.
While Merrimack’s defense gets most of the attention, its offense has held it back from being even stronger since the move to Division I, never finishing above 325th in offensive efficiency, which was last season. The Warriors finished fourth in the NEC in that category in 2023-24, highest in program history.
Merrimack shoots lots of threes, and looks great when it makes them, as it did in the first half against Princeton when Matt Becht and freshman Tye Dorset each hit a pair of threes and the Warriors led, 29-15. But the team hit only two more threes the rest of the way and finished 7-for-30 from behind the arc after going 1-for-19 in a lopsided loss to a very good VCU squad earlier in the week.
“I thought we had some pretty good looks,” Gallo said. “We even passed up some good looks. I went back and watched our 1-for-19 against VCU, me and Budd (Clark) watched it yesterday, two of them got blocked and we took five or six bad ones. I don’t remember saying, ‘I can’t believe we took those shots.’”
It was a surprise to some that Budd Clark was not among the mid-major players that took their talents to a bigger school after an outstanding freshman year (teammate Jordan Derkack did, he is at Rutgers, who just happens to be Merrimack’s next opponent Wednesday night). Clark led all scorers with 24 points, and is amazing at getting his shot off against really good defenders. He worked really hard on his outside game after shooting 6-for-41 (14.6 percent) from behind the arc last season, but was 0-for-3 Sunday.
Merrimack took 38 threes (making 10) and just 19 twos in the 54-47 loss to Wagner last March. But just like on the defensive end, Gallo isn’t apologetic for what the Warriors do.
“We can try to get Budd into the paint a little more, but really that’s what the game has become, that’s what our personnel is,” Gallo said. “Get (Franklin Pierce transfer Sean) Trumper a little in the post, but if they’re out there thinking too much, we just have to let them fly if they’re open and shoot them with confidence. It would be different if I was watching in practice and we couldn’t shoot at all.”
A vicious non-conference slate still awaits, with visits to Rutgers, Butler, UMass Lowell, Troy, Stanford, and Saint Mary’s to come. Merrimack was picked sixth in the MAAC preseason poll, but currently sits second in KenPom, largely on an eye-opening dismantling of Vermont in its opener. Despite what the record will say when conference play starts in earnest, it would not be a shock to see Merrimack go deep in the MAAC Tournament in its first trip to Atlantic City.
“What we can’t do is look at the overall record this time of year,” Gallo said. “Maybe they just don’t update our record on the website because I’m just looking at, ‘Did we get better today?’ We have to understand if we lose three in a row to some really good teams, it’s not the end of the world. We have to keep things in perspective. We don’t have many 50-50 games on our schedule until league play.”
And the Gallo trademark zone is coming to a MAAC arena near you. Your team may think it’s ready, but it’s probably not.
Sunday, November 17, 2024
Winthrop places five in double figures, fights off NC Central in Rock Hill Classic
Winthrop forward Kelton Talford’s comment Sunday about
Saturday afternoon’s loss to Georgia Southern explained some things. It
explained the edge with which his Eagles played Sunday. It explained the
double-double Talford logged Sunday – the 14th of his career. It
also likely explained the urgency Winthrop showed in closing out the Rock Hill
Classic.
Talford’s 22 points and 10 boards led five Eagles in double
figures, helping Winthrop to a hard-fought, 77-75 victory over North Carolina
Central at the Rock Hill Sports & Event Center Sunday afternoon.
“The guys stuck with it,” Winthrop coach Mark Prosser said. “It
was a game of runs. They’re good. They’re well-coached. For us to have the
resiliency to go down five – again – and stay with it to come back and have a
chance to come back and win that game … we feel good about that.”
NC Central (1-5) knocked home the game’s first two shots and
started a see-saw first half. After a Diontae Johnson three and Po’Boigh King
bucket made it 5-0, Winthrop (4-2) countered with a 12-2 run that compelled a
timeout from LeVelle Moton. K.J. Doucet scored six of the 12 points in the run.
Central then answered with a 12-0 run of its own over the next two-and-a-half
minutes to take a 19-12 advantage.
After another stoppage, Winthrop launched the next salvo. The
Eagles tore off a 12-0 run to jump ahead 24-19 – only for NC Central to respond
with an 11-0 run of its own to retake a 30-24 lead. Winthrop then punched back
with a 12-3 burst to seize a 36-33 margin. NC Central responded with a Keishon
Porter three to take a 40-39 halftime lead.
Neither side held a lead greater than a single possession
until the 8:37 mark of the second half. After a Jaqai Murray three gave Central
a three-point lead, Timmy Adedire hit a pair of free throws to put the visiting
Eagles ahead by five with 8:15 remaining. Central’s lead expanded as far as six
following the second of two Johnson free throws with 5:10 to play.
The final run on a day full of them belonged to Winthrop. Nick
Johnson tallied back-to-back buckets to slice that six-point lead to just two.
Kasen Harrison then crashed the paint for an equalizer layup at the 3:18 mark.
Talford essentially put the game away one minute later, putting home a bucket
in traffic to give Winthrop a 73-71 lead, then knocking down two free throws
another minute later.
“We’re taught that if you’re a glass guy, go to the glass,”
Talford said. “Doucet went, tipped it first and couldn’t get it to fall, then
Paul Jones followed it up and couldn’t get it to fall, so it was just my turn
to go up there. I just so happened to get the foul call and go to the line and
knock down free throws.”
Porter then converted a layup with 55 seconds left to bring
Central within two and draw the Winthrop faithful to the edge of their seats. Nick
Johnson would send those fans home happy just a half-minute later. Harrison
again crashed the lane and sprayed to Johnson in the right corner. Johnson
stuck a jumper to put Winthrop ahead, 77-73. The Eagles clamped down on defense
on the final possession, forcing an errant, last-second three-pointer that was
tipped home as time had almost entirely elapsed.
“There’s nothing negative you can say about Nick Johnson,”
Talford said. “He’s one of the hardest working players I know. He’s ready for
the big moments. He’s going to do all the small things that you may not see. He’s
so selfless when it comes to that.”
“Man, did he make a big shot over there in the corner,”
Prosser said. “It was an unbelievable find by Kasen Harrison, who played an
exemplary floor game.”
Talford’s 22 paced all Eagle scorers. Johnson added 17,
hitting 5-of-7 from the floor and 5-of-8 from the stripe. Harrison booked 13,
with Doucet adding 10. Freshman guard Paul Jones III notched 11 in his first
start, drawing praise from his coach.
“I walked in here today for shootaround and Paul Jones was
out here on this court in a full sweat,” Prosser said. “When you have that much
of a care level, when you know what your potential is and maybe you don’t feel
like – he shoots the basketball at an extraordinarily high level. He didn’t
feel like he was shooting well, so he was in the gym. If things aren’t going
well, he’s willing to do something about it.
It would have been easy to stay in bed, but he was here, to his credit. It’s
the dudes that invest and work that good things happen to. Those are the types
of kids you hang banners with.”
Winthrop shot 48.1 percent (25-for-54), hitting 6-of-21
(28.6 percent) from distance. The Eagles made 19-of-26 tries (73.1 percent)
from the charity stripe.
King led NC Central with 18 points on 6-for-13 shooting.
King drained five triples on the day. Johnson added 15 in hitting 6-of-12
tries, while Floyd Rideau added 10 in reserve duty. Central hit 44.8 percent of
its tries (26-for-58), sinking 11 threes in 22 tries in the process. The Eagles
hit 12-of-15 from the line in the contest.
Both teams are off until Friday. NC Central will take on
Georgia State at the GSU Convocation Center in Atlanta in a 7:00 start that
will be streamed over ESPN+. Winthrop will visit the Yum! Center in Louisville
to take on the Cardinals. That game will also tip at 7:00, with coverage over
ACCNX.
WINTHROP 77, NC CENTRAL 75
NC CENTRAL (1-5)
Porter 2-5 0-0 5, Johnson 6-12 2-2 15, Adedire 2-7 4-4 9,
Smith 0-3 0-0 0, King 6-13 1-2 18, Smart 0-1 2-2 2, Parson 2-6 0-0 4, Rideau
3-4 2-3 10, Murray 5-7 1-2 12. Totals 26-58 12-15 75.
WINTHROP (4-2)
Jones 3-8 2-3 11, Talford 8-13 6-8 22, Harrison 5-8 2-3 13,
Doucet 3-6 4-4 10, Baker 0-5 0-0 0, Wilson 0-1 0-0 0, Jolly 0-0 0-0 0, Diallo
0-1 0-0 0, Johnson 5-7 5-8 17, Van Bibber 0-2 0-0 0, Kamarad 1-2 0-0 2,
Hamilton 0-0 0-0 0, Duncomb 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 26-54 19-26 77.
Halftime: NC Central 40-39. 3-Point
goals: NC Central 11-22 (Porter 1-1, Johnson 1-4, Adedire 1-3, Smith
0-1, King 5-8, Parson 0-1, Rideau 2-3, Murray 1-1), Winthrop 6-21 (Jones 3-7,
Harrison 1-2, Doucet 0-1, Baker 0-3, Wilson 0-1, Diallo 0-1, Johnson 2-3, Van
Bibber 0-2, Kamarad 0-1). Fouled out: NA Rebounds: Winthrop
37 (Talford 10), NC Central 27 (Murray 6). Total fouls: NC Central
22, Winthrop 17. Technicals: Parson (NCCU), Doucet (WU), Moton
(NCCU), Talford (WU).
Points off turnovers: NC Central 23, Winthrop 15. Points
in the paint: Winthrop 38, NC Central 24. Second-chance
points: Winthrop 17, NC Central 7. Fast-break
points: Winthrop 11, NC Central 4. Bench
points: NC Central 28, Winthrop 21.
Sacred Heart shows signs of life, upside in decisive win over UNH
By Ray Curren (@currenrr)
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — From the outside, it might have been a big surprise that Sacred Heart was leaving the Northeast Conference, where it had resided and seemed to fit in quite well since moving to Division I in 1999.
But if you had been to the campus in the last few years, let’s just say there’s some money going into things, most notably new buildings everywhere, including a new $70 million hockey arena that opened last year.
And so into the MAAC Sacred Heart goes, whether its men’s basketball program is ready or not. While they won’t get a new arena, the antiquated Pitt Center has undergone a massive renovation, and (much like the Hynes Center) will be largely unrecognizable from its old self when it reopens Thursday as the Pioneers take on, ironically, old NEC pal Central Connecticut.
While Sacred Heart was picked dead last in the MAAC preseason poll and began the year 0-4, it showed plenty of life Saturday night in the second of three games at the Brown College Hill Classic, rolling past New Hampshire, 80-63, despite playing without injured starters Anquan Hill and Tanner Thomas.
Head coach Anthony Latina was also not in attendance due to a family emergency, so longtime assistant Kyle Steinway—who has been with the program for a decade—took the reins and the team recognized him by chanting his name as the final buzzer sounded.
“Obviously we’ve been struggling,” Steinway said. “We challenged them (Friday) night after the game. We had a long film session. I thought the effort was a losing effort from too many guys, so we challenged them to raise it up. They answered, and we need to do that every night.”
One look at the data shows where the Pioneers (1-4) will need to improve to be competitive in the MAAC, and it’s on the defensive end. Sacred Heart has not finished higher than 227th nationally in defensive efficiency during Latina’s tenure (he’s now in his 12th season), and it’s perhaps the biggest reason Sacred Heart has never gone to the NCAA Tournament.
Last season was a prime example. The Pioneers led the NEC in offense by a wide margin and even being sixth on defense, were able to go 12-6, but lost in the quarterfinals of the conference tournament to eventual winner Wagner.
Steinway and his staff are obviously aware of the issue, and after what they thought was another flat defensive effort in an 82-75 loss to Holy Cross, which put up 1.32 points per possession Friday night, worked hard overnight to make adjustments.
The result was an energetic (even in an empty gym) defense that held an opponent under 80 for the first time all season. Per KenPom, New Hampshire has one of the worst offenses in the country (355th currently), but it’s a start, with another tough test against host Brown to finish the College Hill Classic on Sunday.
“The biggest thing that is different about this year is I think we have a team that can defend,” Steinway said. “We’ve always had super talented guards and offensive guys, but there are pros and cons there, we’ve had smaller guards. We haven’t always had the personnel to be a great defensive team, but I can say we are going to be a good defensive team. We have athleticism, length, we can do this.”
As always at this level these days, there are plenty of new faces for Sacred Heart, but—also as always—the Pioneers should be able to score. Hill was the 2021-22 NEC Rookie of the Year at FDU before transferring to St. Bonaventure. Two separate injuries have kept him out, but he is 8-for-9 from the field and 4-of-5 from three in limited action. Hofstra transfer Griffin Barrouk is a pure shooter who hit a couple of big long-range bombs Saturday night. And three returners (other than Thomas who has been injured) that should play a huge role are: Siena castoff Aidan Carpenter (who leads the team in minutes), Bryce Johnson (who spent last season at Northeastern before returning), and Raymond Espinal-Guzman (who is from Rhode Island). All three of those players come with the aforementioned size the Pioneers have often lacked.
They also got some big minutes Saturday from freshman guard Nyle Ralph-Beyer, who played just 10 minutes in their first three games.
“When we had that meeting yesterday, we said everything is on the table, the lineup, everything,” Steinway said. “We’ll play anyone if they can get the job done. We even had a couple guys we didn’t get to today that I feel comfortable with.”
But the biggest key may be at the point guard position, which has been turned over to true freshman Mekhi Conner, who dominated Connecticut high school basketball and the staff has very high hopes for, especially on the defensive end. Saturday, Conner had four steals as the Pioneers forced 14 turnovers and dominated on the glass, 44-22, getting 17 offensive rebounds.
One game does not a season make, and the MAAC (although won last season by Saint Peter’s, which finished 305th in offensive efficiency) is sure to pose problems that Sacred Heart did not see in the NEC. But they think they can do a lot better than last.
Saturday, November 16, 2024
Georgia Southern fends off late Winthrop flurry in Rock Hill Classic
ROCK HILL, S.C. – There are few more frustrating
words in the dictionary than “almost”. For Winthrop, though, it was the word of
the day Saturday in the Rock Hill Classic.
Not even 24 hours after the Eagles scored a wild comeback
victory on a Bryce Baker corner three, Winthrop found itself in a spot to pull
out another. Lightning would not strike twice, though, leaving Winthrop one
bucket shy in an 89-87 Georgia Southern victory at the Rock Hill Sports &
Event Center.
“(This was) really disappointing,” Winthrop coach Mark
Prosser said. “We were poor in assist-to-turnover ratio yesterday and awful
today. We didn’t shoot the ball well yesterday and didn’t shoot well again
today. You can’t continue to play with fire and hope that you can get a random
bounce here and there. That’s just not reality in Division I basketball. We put
ourselves in that situation.”
Winthrop (3-2) enjoyed a strong defensive sequence to start
the game. The Eagles held Georgia Southern without a bucket for the first five
minutes of the contest, though they could only claim a 6-0 lead through that
sequence. Georgia Southern (4-1) used an 11-4 run over the next 2:20 to take an
11-10 advantage. The rest of the first half proved to be a back-and-forth
affair that saw neither side claim a lead larger than five points. Georgia
Southern took one of those five-point advantages to the interval, holding a
39-34 halftime lead.
The predatory bird battle gained steam in the second 20.
Georgia Southern scored nine of the first 13 points of the second half,
stretching its lead to 10. Winthrop continued to battle and make shots, but
struggled to draw closer than eight points. The homestanding Eagles used a 9-4
surge capped by a K.J. Doucet three to snip the Georgia Southern lead to five.
Doucet was assessed a technical, however, for making a gesture toward the
Georgia Southern bench.
“Every play matters,” Prosser said. “We talk about it all
the time. You lose the game by two in a game where you get a technical foul and
you give them two points. Every play matters.”
The Georgia Southern lead again swelled to 13 with six
minutes remaining before Winthrop went on a somewhat glacial burst in which it
scored 12 of the next 17 to narrow the Georgia Southern margin to six with 2:15
remaining. As Winthrop ratcheted the pressure, star guard Kasen Harrison guided
the Eagle comeback. Harrison was responsible for 11 of 14 Winthrop points in a
late stretch that helped fuel the frenetic pace.
“He’s an elite paint toucher,” Prosser said of Harrison. “He’s
unselfish to a fault. He’s just such a team-first kid. He was really good today
and very good defensively. Especially at the defensive end of the floor, we
need more to join him.”
The agonizing drain of Georgia Southern’s lead continued.
Following two Harrison free throws, Winthrop forward Yoro Diallo pilfered an
inbounds pass and threw home a dunk, cutting the Georgia Southern lead to just
three. Nate Brafford hit two free throws for Georgia Southern with 40 seconds
to play, followed by two Doucet free throws for Winthrop that again reduced the
lead to just three.
Harrison would then convert a layup that would bring
Winthrop within a point. After Adante’ Holiman made a free throw, there was a
contested play under the Winthrop basket that looked as if it would give the
Eagles back the ball with 1.7 seconds remaining. After review, the initial call
on the floor awarding the ball to Winthrop was reversed. Georgia Southern then
ran off the remaining time.
“Nope,” Prosser said when asked after the game whether or
not he received an explanation for the long review delay and reversal. “My
understanding is that, if it’s not obvious, you don’t change the call on the
court. If you spent 45 minutes over there looking at it, then apparently, it’s
not that obvious. At the end of the day, you have no recourse. They just make a
decision, and there’s literally nothing you can do.”
“We need more complete efforts,” Prosser continued. “You can’t
win games with five assists and 20 turnovers. You can’t. You can’t win games
going 3-for-16 from the three-point line. You can’t. We’ve either got to step
up and make plays, or we’re going to have to change how we play. We need some
dudes to start ringing the bell when the opportunity presents itself.”
Holiman led Georgia Southern’s scorers with 23 points on a
5-for-12 effort from the floor and 10-for-11 from the line. Three Eagles joined
Holiman in doubles, led by Nakavieon White’s 15 on 6-for-11 from the deck.
Dontae Horne added 11, while Eren Banks contributed 10. The visiting Eagles
shot 44.1 percent (30-for-68) from the field and 71.4 percent (20-for-28) from
the line. Georgia Southern made just 30 percent (9-for-30) from distance. The
Eagles recorded 46 bench points and 42 points in the paint.
Harrison paced Winthrop’s offensive effort with 24 on 6-of-8
shooting and 12-for-13 from the stripe. Doucet and Kelton Talford each added
18, both key components of the Eagles’ 42 paint points. Doucet tallied a
double-double with 10 boards, while Talford added six. Winthrop shot 47.1
percent (24-for-51) from the floor, including 61.5 percent (16-for-26) in the
second half. The Eagles shot just 18.8 percent (3-for-16) from beyond the arc.
Winthrop tied its all-time record for free throws attempted in a game with 49,
a mark it last equaled against Methodist University in November of 1986.
Winthrop made 36 of its tries (73.5 percent) from the line.
Winthrop and Georgia Southern both return to action Sunday
afternoon in the finale of the Rock Hill Classic. Georgia Southern opens play
at noon against William & Mary, while Winthrop battles NC Central after the
conclusion of the first game. Both games will be streamed via ESPN+.
GEORGIA SOUTHERN 89, WINTHROP 87
GEORGIA SOUTHERN (4-1)
Douglas 3-10 1-2 8, Brown III 3-7 1-2 8, White 6-11 2-2 15,
Banks 4-7 0-0 10, Brown 1-4 0-0 2, Horne 3-10 4-6 11, Holiman 5-12 10-11 23,
Smith 1-1 2, Brafford 0-1 2-4 2, Parker 4-5 0-1 8. Totals 30-68 20-28 89.
WINTHROP (3-2)
Talford 5-9 8-9 18, Harrison 6-8 12-13 24, Doucet 6-11 4-9
18, Kamarad 0-1 0-0 0, Baker 2-6 0-2 5, Jolly 1-2 0-0 2, Jones 2-5 2-2 6,
Diallo 1-2 1-2 3, Johnson 1-6 4-6 6, Hamilton 0-0 2-2 2, Duncomb 0-1 3-4 3.
Totals 24-51 36-49 87.
Halftime: Georgia Southern 39-34. 3-Point
goals: Georgia Southern 9-30 (Douglas 1-4, Brown III 1-4, White 1-4,
Banks 2-3, Horne 1-5, Holiman 3-9, Brafford 0-1), Winthrop 3-16 (Talford 0-1,
Doucet 2-4, Kamarad 0-1, Baker 1-5, Jolly 0-1, Jones 0-2, Johnson 0-2). Fouled
out: White (GASO), Banks (GASO), Brown (GASO), Parker (GASO),
Talford (WU) Rebounds: Winthrop 41 (Doucet 10), Georgia
Southern 38 (Brown III 8). Total fouls: Georgia Southern 34,
Winthrop 21. Technicals: Doucet (WU).
Points off turnovers: Georgia Southern 23, Winthrop
16. Points in the paint: Georgia Southern 42, Winthrop
42. Second-chance points: Georgia Southern 8, Winthrop 4. Fast-break
points: Winthrop 24, Georgia Southern 4. Bench
points: Georgia Southern 46, Winthrop 22.