NCAA: Minnesota big men in foul trouble early vs. Xavier; Gophers switch to smaller lineup

By Dave Skretta, AP
Friday, March 19, 2010

NCAA: Minnesota big men in foul trouble early

Minnesota has gone with a small lineup with its big guys riding the bench with two fouls each, and it seems to be working out. Blake Hoffarber knocked down a 3, and the quicker Gophers are hitting the offensive glass late in the first half.

There’s something about those big guys today. Xavier’s Jason Love also headed to the bench after picking up his second foul.

Xavier has turned the ball over only once in the first half, but only leads 22-19 with 2½ minutes to go in the first half. The Gophers have turned it over five times, and all three of their big men are in foul trouble. Uh-oh.

Tubby Smith finally put 6-foot-10 Colton Iverson and 6-11 Ralph Sampson III in the game together, something Gopher fans have been clamoring for all season. It didn’t last long, though, with Iverson taking a seat after picking up his second foul.

Sampson also has two fouls, which could spell trouble in the second half.

Cornell, the best 3-point shooting team in the country, missed its first four shots from behind the arc against Temple. Both teams have been good from the field overall, though.

The Big Red led 27-18 with 5½ minutes left on the strength of 10 of 15 shooting, and did not miss a shot from inside the arc for 16 minutes. Temple, meanwhile, is 8 of 16 from the floor.

Da’Sean Butler is just 1 for 6 in the first half for West Virginia, one of the reasons that Morgan State hasn’t been blown out by halftime. The Mountaineers lead 38-27 at the break, with Kevin Jones and Devin Ebanks going 9 of 12 from the field for 23 points.

Lawrence Westbrook scored seven points as Minnesota rattled off a 9-0 run, giving the Gophers a 17-15 lead with 7:48 left in first half.

Westbrook is the cousin of former Philadelphia Eagles running back Brian Westbrook, who is probably watching the game somewhere. A few teams have expressed interest in the free agent, but he’s yet to sign anywhere.

Kevin Jones is still perfect from the field, 5 for 5 for 11 points, and also has pulled down four first-half rebounds for West Virginia. Morgan State scored the first 10 points, but has been outscored 26-11 since then.

Cornell has opened by hitting 9 of 11 shots from the field, while Temple has nearly as many turnovers (four) as field goals (five). The Big Red had a 22-11 lead before Juan Fernandez — the only guy shooting for Temple — knocked down a 3.

The Gophers have gone the last 5 minutes without a field goal since Ralph Sampson’s reverse hook at 16:43. And in case you were wondering, yes, it’s that Ralph Sampson. His father was the first overall pick in the 1983 NBA Draft and a four-time All-Star.

There are a couple of streaks to keep an eye on in the Temple-Cornell game. Owls coach Fran Dunphy’s teams have lost 10 straight NCAA games and are 1-11 overall, while Cornell is 0-5 with quick exits the past two seasons under Steve Donahue.

Ryan Wittman is the star for Cornell, and has the Big Red out to a 19-11 lead at the second media timeout.

Kevin Jones is keeping the Mountaineers in the game against Morgan State. He’s 4 for 4 from the field and has nine of their 14 points. Jones averages only 13.5 per game.

Xavier is off to a rocky start. With 4 minutes gone, the Musketeers are 2 of 8 from the field and leading scorer Jordan Crawford has missed his first two shots.

Crawford is the guy who became an internet sensation when his YouTube dunk over LeBron James went viral.

Royce White was dismissed from the team, Trevor Mbakwe is sitting out during a criminal investigation, and Al Nolen is out because of academics. And yet Minnesota still reached the NCAA tournament against No. 6 seed Xavier in the West Regional.

The Gophers have an early 8-6 lead over the A-10 heavyweight.

Among the intriguing plot lines in the Temple-Cornell game is the matchup between the Owls’ Fran Dunphy, a candidate for national coach of the year, and Cornell’s Steve Donahue — Dunphy’s former pupil.

Devin Ebanks finally hits West Virginia’s first field goal after 11 straight misses, just before the second media timeout. Morgan State still leads 14-5.

This game could come down to who can make jump shots. The Bears are in a 2-3 zone to cover the court against better athletes, while West Virginia coach Bob Huggins will stick with his vaunted 1-3-1 zone.

Leave it to Da’Sean Butler to finally get West Virginia on the board with one of two free throws at 14:36 of the first half. Still, the Mountaineers are 0 for 10 from the field.

Most of the West Virginia lineup is back from last year’s team that lost to Dayton in the first round of the NCAA tournament. That could begin to weigh on their minds if the game remains close in the second half.

Morgan State has scored the first 10 points against the Mountaineers, bringing up the question: Can the Big East really lose another first-round game?

West Virginia can’t afford to get behind by too much, either. It shoots only 43.7 percent from the field, making it difficult to fight back into a game.

Todd Bozeman finally gets the feeling of the NCAA tournament again, now that Morgan State has tipped off against second-seeded West Virginia. He was banned by the NCAA for eight years after he admitted to paying a recruit while coaching at California, where he led those Bears to three tournament appearances.

Already Reggie Holmes has knocked down a 3 for the Bears’ first basket. He’s the school’s all-time leading scorer, surpassing Marvin Webster earlier this season.

Minnesota came out for its shootaround before playing sixth-seeded Xavier in Milwaukee wearing shirts that say “RESPECT” on the back.

The Gophers have won seven of their last 10 games to play their way into the first round, but lost to Ohio State by 29 in the Big Ten tournament finals.

Cornell forward Alex Tyler has his right calf heavily taped for the Temple game in the East Regional. He practiced Thursday for the first time in two weeks, then said, “They’ll have to kill me to keep me off the court.”

The opening day of the NCAA tournament shocked the Big East — three teams lost and another won in overtime. It thrilled double-digit seeds — three of them won. And it wore out fans with three games going overtime, including BYU’s 99-92 double-overtime win against Florida.

Can the second day live up to the madness?

Things get started with Morgan State and West Virginia in the East Regional, followed by Minnesota-Xavier in the West and the game a lot of folks are keeping an eye on: fifth-seeded Temple against No. 12 seed Cornell, two teams that most people consider under-seeded.

Let the games begin.

YOUR VIEW POINT
NAME : (REQUIRED)
MAIL : (REQUIRED)
will not be displayed
WEBSITE : (OPTIONAL)
YOUR
COMMENT :