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Tag: Men's college basketball

  • Simpson leads Colorado to 78-66 upset of No. 11 Tennessee

    Simpson leads Colorado to 78-66 upset of No. 11 Tennessee

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    NASHVILLE, Tenn. — KJ Simpson had 23 points and 10 rebounds to lead Colorado to an 78-66 upset victory over No. 11 Tennessee on Sunday.

    Tristan de Silva added 14 points for the Buffaloes, who shot 25.4% from the field, compared with the Volunteers’ 43.5%.

    Josiah-Jordan James and Tyreke Key led Tennessee with 15 points apiece.

    The Vols (1-1) could not overcome a poor shooting performance to rally and come from behind after giving up the lead early in the second half. The Buffaloes (2-1) led by as many as 14 down the stretch as part of a dominant second half in which they outscored Tennessee 46-32.

    Simpson had 15 second-half points.

    Tennessee held a 34-32 lead at halftime after shooting just 23.1% from the field. The Buffaloes trailed by as many as eight points before halftime.

    Key paced the Vols in the first half with 12 points, with all but three points coming from the free-throw line.

    Colorado’s bench outscored Tennessee’s 52-34.

    The victory was the Buffaloes’ first over the Vols after dropping the previous four matchups between the schools.

    POLL IMPLICATIONS

    Tennessee likely will drop dramatically when the next poll is released, as the 10 teams ahead of it all have wins in their first two games.

    BIG PICTURE

    Colorado: After a disappointing loss Friday to Grambling State, the Buffaloes held the Vols to 66 points after surrendering an average of 74.5 points per game while splitting their first two of the season.

    Tennessee: The Vols need to find their shooting touch from the field as the season progresses. They shot 40% in their season-opening win over Tennessee Tech but struggled against Colorado.

    UP NEXT

    Colorado: Faces UMass on Thursday at the Myrtle Beach Invitational.

    Tennessee: Hosts Florida Gulf Coast on Wednesday before heading to the Bahamas for the Battle 4 Atlantis the following week.

    ———

    AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • Kelly’s drive gives Ga Tech 59-57 win at new Ga State arena

    Kelly’s drive gives Ga Tech 59-57 win at new Ga State arena

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    ATLANTA — Miles Kelly scored on a drive with 4.1 seconds left and Georgia Tech defeated Georgia State 59-57 on Saturday night to ruin the christening of their city rival’s new arena.

    The Panthers (1-1) began the season with a 17-point win over NAIA school Coastal Georgia, but this was the de facto opening game of the new 7,500-seat Georgia State Convocation Center.

    It was certainly the contest that first-year coach Jonas Hayes and his rebuilding squad had been pointing to throughout the offseason.

    But Kelly and the Yellow Jackets (2-0) spoiled the occasion.

    Georgia State wiped out an eight-point deficit with under 3 minutes left, tying the game on Brenden Tucker’s three-point play with 26 seconds remaining.

    After a timeout, Georgia Tech put the ball in Kelly’s hands. Isolating at the top of the key as the clock wound down, he burst toward the hoop and banked in a shot that won it for the Yellow Jackets.

    Georgia State failed to get off a shot on its final possession, fumbling the ball away in a fitting end to a sloppy performance by both teams, filled with turnovers, air balls and erratic passes.

    Kelly finished with 15 points, also knocking down a couple of big 3-pointers in a 19-5 run that seemed to put Georgia Tech in control. Dallan Coleman led the Yellow Jackets with 16 points.

    Ja’Heim Hudson paced Georgia State with 23 points.

    The Atlanta schools, located less than three miles apart, split a pair of overtime games the last two years at Georgia Tech’s McCamish Pavilion, just up the Downtown Connector.

    Despite their proximity, the Yellow Jackets were playing at Georgia State for only the third time in 22 meetings between the teams.

    One of those road games came in 1973, when Georgia Tech helped break in a then-new GSU Sports Arena, the Panthers’ previous home.

    Georgia Tech has dominated the series, improving to 19-3 against the Panthers.

    ———

    AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • Vanover scores 19, Oral Roberts knocks off John Brown 95-62

    Vanover scores 19, Oral Roberts knocks off John Brown 95-62

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    TULSA, Okla. — Connor Vanover’s 19 points helped Oral Roberts defeat John Brown 95-62 on Friday night.

    Vanover had eight rebounds and eight blocks for the Golden Eagles (1-1). Issac McBride scored 19 points while going 8 of 12 (3 for 5 from distance). Max Abmas recorded 18 points, which included four 3-pointers.

    John Brown (0-1) was led in scoring by Payton Guiot, who finished with 18 points and eight rebounds. DJ Ellis added 15 points and Tyren Collins had 10 points and six rebounds.

    Oral Roberts visits Houston on Monday.

    ———

    The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

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  • Unusual venues make nonconference games more memorable

    Unusual venues make nonconference games more memorable

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    MILWAUKEE — Two of the more notable games on Friday’s college basketball schedule are taking place on an aircraft carrier and in a baseball stadium.

    No. 2 Gonzaga will face Michigan State on the flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln in the San Diego harbo r to celebrate Veterans Day. Wisconsin is playing Stanford at American Family Field, the retractable-roof park that is home to the Milwaukee Brewers.

    Staging neutral-site games in non-traditional venues isn’t new. Michigan State coach Tom Izzo has scheduled games at many different sites over the past two decades.

    “We’ve been ‘Outside the Box U’ for 20 years and other people are catching up,” Izzo said. “That’s good, and that’s why I didn’t want to pass up this game.”

    Izzo’s penchant for this began in 2003, when Michigan State lost to Kentucky in front of 78,129 fans at Ford Field, the home of the NFL’s Detroit Lions. Soon enough, plenty of late-round NCAA Tournament games started taking place in football stadiums.

    This won’t be the first time Izzo has coached a game on an aircraft carrier.

    Michigan State lost to top-ranked North Carolina in November 2011 on the flight deck of the USS Carl Vinson as President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama watched from courtside.

    Stanford coach Jerod Haase was a North Carolina assistant coach for that 2011 game. Now, he’s preparing his team to play the first basketball game at a baseball-only stadium since San Diego faced San Diego State in 2015 at Petco Park, home of the Padres.

    “It’s an experience for our guys to talk about when they’re old like me, about how they played in a baseball stadium,” Haase said.

    The offbeat settings come with potential obstacles, particularly when they’re outdoors. The roof will be closed for the American Family Field doubleheader that includes a women’s game between Wisconsin and Kansas State.

    The 2011 North Carolina-Michigan State game on a carrier finished less than an hour before rain fell.

    A year later, condensation on the respective courts wiped out an Ohio State-Marquette game aboard the decommissioned USS Yorktown in Charleston, South Carolina, and a Georgetown-Florida game aboard the USS Bataan at Naval Station Mayport around Jacksonville, Florida. Florida and Georgetown did play the first half before the game was scrapped.

    During that 2012-13 season, a Syracuse-San Diego State game aboard the flight deck of the USS Midway Museum was delayed two days due to rain. And, windy conditions affected 3-point shooting when it was played.

    The teams involved believe the opportunity is worth the potential drawbacks.

    Gonzaga coach Mark Few jumped at the chance when the idea of playing on a carrier was proposed.

    “Tom Izzo told me it was the coolest thing he’s ever done,” Few said. “I said, ‘OK, I’m in.’”

    Wisconsin coach Greg Gard says his hopes of having the Badgers play a game at American Family Field started about 15 years ago, when he was an assistant coach and the stadium was known as Miller Park.

    Various plans were discussed over the years.

    “We were going to do a doubleheader basketball-hockey and set up ice in the outfield,” Gard said. “Everything was on the table at one point in time.”

    Gard is about to realize that dream — minus an ice rink.

    Wisconsin and Stanford practiced Thursday on a court that encompasses much of the ballpark’s infield, with baskets in the vicinity of first base and third base.

    The pitcher’s mound was removed, and fans will sit in temporary stands courtside, as well as in some of the stadium’s permanent seats.

    “Listening to our players as we walked up out of the dugout, what their reactions were, I think it turned out really, really good,” Gard said.

    Wisconsin forward Tyler Wahl, who has attended just one Brewers home game, tried to envision just what to expect on Friday.

    “I’m excited to see what it looks like with basketball, bringing a whole different crew of fans,” Wahl said. “Hopefully it will be cool.”

    It might not be a one-time deal.

    Brewers president of business operations Rick Schlesinger said he was hopeful that the contest was the first of many chances to host hoop games at the ballpark.

    Gard says he’d love to see an NCAA regional at American Family Field, though it could be tough to host that kind of event in late March while still having the ballpark’s grass surface ready in time for baseball season.

    For now, Wisconsin and Stanford are looking forward to a unique experience in an atypical early season game. Michigan State and Gonzaga feel the same.

    “I’m a little bit old school and I believe the college education is much more than just what you learn on the classroom and the games themselves,” Haase said. “It’s all the experiences around them. I think this provides that.”

    ———

    AP Writer Nicholas K. Geranios and AP Sports Writers Larry Lage and Bernie Wilson contributed to this report.

    ———

    AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/Collegebasketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • Little Rock turns back NAIA-member Arkansas Baptist 71-60

    Little Rock turns back NAIA-member Arkansas Baptist 71-60

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    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Nigel John had 16 points, DeAntoni Gordon scored 14 and Myron Gardner added a double-double as Little Rock turned back NAIA-member Arkansas Baptist 71-60 on Thursday.

    Gardner finished with 11 points and 13 rebounds for the Trojans (1-1). Freshman Chris Walker came off the bench to score 12.

    Kendric Robinson paced the Buffaloes with 16 points and eight rebounds. Brandon Williams and Joshua Williams both scored 10.

    Little Rock had a 52-39 edge in rebounds and made seven more foul shots than the Buffaloes.

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    More AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • Penn State makes 16 3s, rolls past Loyola Maryland 90-65

    Penn State makes 16 3s, rolls past Loyola Maryland 90-65

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    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Camren Wynter scored 18 points and Penn State made 16 3-pointers in a 90-65 victory over Loyola Maryland on Thursday night.

    Myles Dread made four 3s and Wynter three as Penn State shot 16 of 30 from long range. The Nittany Lions hit a program-best 18 3-pointers in their season-opening 93-68 win against Winthrop on Monday night.

    Dread and Kebba Njie scored 12 points apiece for Penn State (2-0). Seth Lundy added 10 points and Jalen Pickett had 11 assists, two shy of his career high.

    Wynter, a grad transfer from Drexel, was 7-of-9 shooting and grabbed four rebounds to reach 500 for his career. He joins Pickett with at least 1,500 points, 500 rebounds and 500 assists.

    The Nittany Lions opened the second half with a 13-5 surge to stretch their lead to 53-34. Caleb Dorsey and Lundy each scored five points with a 3-pointer during the stretch. The Greyhounds cut the deficit to 16 with about five minutes left, but Njie answered with a dunk on an assist from Pickett, and they didn’t get closer.

    Jaylin Andrews scored 23 points to lead Loyola Maryland (0-2), which has lost five straight in the series.

    ———

    AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • New C-USA TV deal to shift October games to weeknights

    New C-USA TV deal to shift October games to weeknights

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    DALLAS — Conference USA’s new media rights deal with ESPN and CBS steals a page from the Mid-American Conference’s playbook, with the new-look league agreeing to play midweek games throughout October to try to increase visibility and build its brand.

    “We obviously had an example to look at and ratings from how the MAC has done,” C-USA Commissioner Judy MacLeod told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Really, this is a membership decision. And if they’re not going to buy in and commit to it, then we would not have done it. I can’t give enough credit to the coaches, who understood the importance of exposure.”

    The five-year deal starts next season as Conference USA goes through extensive membership turnover.

    Six current C-USA members are leaving after this season to join the American Athletic Conference. Liberty, Jacksonville State, New Mexico State and Sam Houston State are joining C-USA next year and Kennesaw State is scheduled to join in 2024.

    C-USA will eventually be a 10-school conference, keeping UTEP, Florida International, Middle Tennessee, Louisiana Tech and Western Kentucky.

    “It’s almost like a brand-new entity,” MacLeod said. “And that did absolutely play into the exposure piece. Plus, sometimes our programs are better than maybe the perception is out there because not enough people are seeing them.”

    Financial terms were not announced.

    The new deal keeps CBS Sports Network as the primary home for C-USA’s top football and men’s basketball games.

    CBS Sports Network will also air the C-USA football championship, the men’s basketball tournament semifinals and championship game, the women’s basketball championship game and conference title games for baseball and softball.

    The new agreement guarantees C-USA football games will be on ESPN cable networks, something the soon-to-be expiring contracts did not. C-USA’s last deal often sent fans scrambling to figure out where to watch their teams — including Facebook streams and the NFL Network.

    “We listened to our fans, quite honestly,” MacLeod said.

    All October conference games will be played midweek. ESPN networks will carry eight of those games a year.

    The MAC began using a midweek-heavy football schedule about 10 years ago and now plays all of its games before Saturday throughout November. MACtion has become a popular brand, though playing Tuesday and Wednesday nights is not always easy for players and coaches and fans who want to attend the games.

    “All of those concerns are legitimate,” MacLeod said. “It’s a little bit of a disruption to campus to have a midweek football game. So it was a lengthy process. But the group was together and ready to go.”

    ———

    More AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25. Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://bit.ly/3pqZVaF

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  • Clark leads No. 8 UCLA to 76-50 victory over Sacramento St

    Clark leads No. 8 UCLA to 76-50 victory over Sacramento St

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    LOS ANGELES — Jaylen Clark turned in an all-around performance for UCLA in its opener, both good and bad.

    Clark scored 17 points, grabbed eight rebounds and had a career-high seven steals in the eighth-ranked Bruins 76-50 victory over Sacramento State. The one area coach Mick Cronin was ready to point out though was Clark’s five turnovers.

    “He’s just got to eliminate the turnovers. There’s no point in stealing it if you’re going to give it right back,” Cronin said. “He’s awesome defensively. He’s got to be an elite defensive player for us to be great.”

    But it also doesn’t hurt when Clark can make all seven of his shots from the floor. The 6-foot-5 junior guard had mainly come off the bench the past two seasons, but has cracked the starting lineup this season due to his defense.

    “I was getting my teammates involved with rebounds and assists to get on the break in the first half,” said Clark, who had 14 points in the second half. “In the second half they were collapsing on my teammates. I felt like I had opportunities to go and score. Like coach said, I have to eliminate the turnovers, but other than that I was pretty happy with how I performed.”

    Jaime Jaquez and Tyger Campbell scored 14 apiece and David Singleton added 13 points for the Bruins, who shot 53.1% from the field (34 of 64).

    Cameron Wilbon and Zach Chappell scored 10 apiece for Sacramento State.

    Jaquez did most of his scoring in the first half with 12 points as the Bruins built a 39-25 lead at halftime.

    Campbell scored seven points as UCLA took control with a 20-0 run midway through the first half.

    The Hornets went on an 8-0 spurt to grab a 16-12 advantage with 9:15 remaining before the Bruins scored 20 straight points over the next six minutes. Seven players had baskets during the run.

    UCLA started 6 of 16 from the field before making 12 of its next 16 shots to end the first half.

    “They made us play, which is what we need. They made us compete, make adjustments and work to get away from them which is what you want from a game like this,” Cronin said.

    Sacramento State shot 34.5% from the field, going 19 of 55, and committed 21 turnovers. The one positive was that the Hornets did outrebound the Bruins 37-33.

    “We’ve got some guys that can shoot, but with the first road game against a Top 10 opponent, that pressure is hard to produce in practice,” Sacramento State coach David Patrick said.

    THE TAKEAWAY

    Sacramento State: The Hornets were 2 of 18 on 3s and missed 13 straight during one stretch.

    UCLA: It ended up being a fun night for the Jaquez family. Jaime’s younger sister, Gabriela, had 10 points and six rebounds as the Bruins women’s team opened with a victory over Cal Poly. Gabriela Jaquez is part of the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class.

    DEBUT DELAYED

    UCLA freshman Adem Bona did not play in order to serve a one-game penalty from the NCAA related to an amateurism issue. The center is expected to play in UCLA’s next game.

    UP NEXT

    Sacramento State: Plays at UC San Diego on Saturday.

    UCLA: Will host Long Beach State on Friday.

    ———

    AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • No. 9 Creighton overcomes cold shooting, beats St. Thomas

    No. 9 Creighton overcomes cold shooting, beats St. Thomas

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    OMAHA, Neb. — As St. Thomas threatened to pull the biggest upset of college basketball’s opening day, Creighton’s Baylor Scheierman didn’t sweat it.

    “There was never any panic,” Scheierman said. “I don’t ever really panic on the floor. I’m pretty calm.”

    Anxiety surely was building Monday night among the 17,098 fans at CHI Health Center before Scheierman made back-to-back 3-pointers midway through the second half to give No. 9 Creighton the lead for good in a 72-60 victory.

    St. Thomas, a Summit League member beginning its second season in Division I, started three holdovers from its Division III era and gave the Bluejays all they could handle.

    “Coming into it, we got nothing to lose,” Tommies guard Riley Miller said. “We should get killed here on the road against a top team in the country, especially being our second year in Division I. So we said let’s give them all we have, and if it works out, it works out.”

    The Tommies’ defensive plan was to pack the inside where Creighton’s Ryan Kalkbrenner patrols and take their chances with the Bluejays shooting 3s.

    It worked. The Bluejays were just 8 for 34 from distance.

    “When you’ve got a 7-foot-1 guy down there, you’ve got to muck up the paint, so we were willing to live with some late-contested 3s,” Miller said.

    Brooks Allen hit consecutive 3s to put the Tommies up 57-56 with 10 minutes left.

    Creighton finally took control at that point, with Scheierman’s back-to-back 3s and dunks by Kalkbrenner and Arthur Kaluma starting a 14-0 run. Meanwhile, the Tommies got mired in a seven-minute scoring drought.

    “There’s going to be a time where we’re playing a team somewhere in Big East play or later in this nonconference where we’re not making shots, and you have to figure out a way to win,” Creighton coach Greg McDermott said. “I hope we’ll be able to look back on tonight.”

    Creighton led by 15 points 10 minutes into the game, but the Bluejays missed five straight 3s and 13 of their next 17 shots overall, and that allowed the Tommies to pull within 37-35.

    Ryan Nembhard’s 3 with one second left sent the Bluejays to the locker room with a 40-35 lead, but the Tommies tied it in the first two minutes of the second half and McDermott was forced to leave some of his starters in until the end.

    “Obviously, it’s tough losing,” Miller said. “I think coming in here against a top team in the country, in this atmosphere with a lot of young guys, we showed we can play with anyone in the country. Even though it stinks that we lost, and we thought we had a chance to win, it was a success.”

    BIG PICTURE

    St. Thomas: The Tommies represented themselves well in what should be, by far, their toughest nonconference game. The showing against a top-10 team on the road could foretell a better season than expected for the team picked eighth in the 10-team Summit League.

    Creighton: Expectations are extremely high for one of the most talent-rich teams in the country, and now McDermott has to figure out his combinations. They were able to get away with poor shooting against St. Thomas. That won’t work against most opponents they face.

    STAT PACK

    Arthur Kaluma scored 17 points, Trey Alexander had 12 and Scheierman added 11 points and 10 rebounds for the Bluejays. … Andrew Rohde had 15 points, Allen 14 and Miller 13 for the Tommies. … Alexander had three of Creighton’s six blocked shots. … Creighton won its 25th opener in 26 years.

    UP NEXT

    St. Thomas plays back-to-back home games, against Chicago State on Friday and St. Francis Brooklyn on Sunday.

    Creighton plays the second of four straight home games against North Dakota on Thursday.

    ———

    AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • Mordecai’s 9 passing TDs send SMU past Houston 77-63

    Mordecai’s 9 passing TDs send SMU past Houston 77-63

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    DALLAS — Tanner Mordecai set school and American Athletic Conference records with nine touchdown passes — an NCAA-record tying seven coming in the first half — and SMU’s offense exploded for a 77-63 win over Houston on Saturday.

    As a point of reference, Houston’s men’s basketball team beat SMU’s 75-61 on Feb. 27.

    On the gridiron, their combined 140 points set the NCAA single-game scoring record for two teams in regulation. The previous record of 137 points was set when Pitt beat Syracuse 76-61 on November 26, 2016.

    SMU reached school records with 77 points in a game (which tied the AAC record), 11-total touchdowns, nine passing scored and 433 total yards in the first half.

    The Mustangs (5-4, 3-2 American Athletic Conference) scored touchdowns on their first nine drives of the game and didn’t punt until their 10th drive with 5:30 left before the end of the third quarter. Mordecai also had a 2-yard touchdown run with 8:43 before halftime for a 35-21 lead and his 10 total TDs set new single-game program and conference records.

    The Mustangs needed to keep their foot on the pedal because Houston quarterback Clayton Tune did his best to keep the Cougars (5-4, 3-2) in it, throwing for seven touchdowns and running for another.

    Tune joined David Klingler, Jimmy Klinger and Andre Ware in Houston’s seven-touchdowns-thrown-in-game club. David Klingler reached the mark on three occasions in the 1990 season and holds the all-time school record of 11 also in 1990.

    Tune missed touchdown number eight when he threw an interception in the end zone down 77-63 with 1:43 left. SMU secured three picks on Tune.

    Tyler Lavine’s 15-yard touchdown run with with 5:13 left made it 77-56 and he rushed for a career-high 146 yards.

    ———

    More AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25. Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://apnews.com/cfbtop25

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