San Diego Union-Tribune

AZTECS OUT

No. 6 SDSU falls to No. 11 Syracuse 78-62 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

- BY MARK ZEIGLER

You can lose nine games, you can give up 67 points in a half at Pitt and get beat by 20, you can finish eighth in your conference, you can squeak into the NCAA Tournament. And then you can suddenly make a few shots and get confidence and see all that fuzzy potential suddenly come into glorious, resplenden­t focus. You can dream.

Or you can win 14 straight games and trail in the second half of only one of them, you can win 53 of your last 59 games, you can win regularsea­son and conference tournament titles, you can receive praise from the NCAA Tournament selection committee and be rewarded with a high seed. And then you can suddenly miss a few shots and lose confidence and see that memorable season fading, fading, fading away. Just like that, you can be on a bus heading to the airport.

The beauty, and the beast, of March.

That was Syracuse and that was San Diego State on Friday night at Hinkle Fieldhouse in their opening game of the NCAA Tournament.

Eleventh-seeded Syracuse had a disappoint­ing season and advances. Sixthseede­d (and 16th ranked) SDSU had a wonderous season and goes home. It wasn’t close: 78-62.

Poof. It’s over.

“We had a lot of great memories over the years, and this is not how we wanted to end it,” said an emotional Jordan Schakel, pausing several times to collect himself. “In a couple days, I’ll be able to look back and be grateful. But right now, you know, this one doesn’t feel good.”

Actually, it took slightly longer than a blink of an eye to end. It took exactly 9 minutes, 39 seconds, which is how long the Aztecs went without a point to close the first half and saw an 18-14 lead become a 32-18 deficit.

That was your ballgame.

In many ways, it was reminiscen­t of the last time the Aztecs were a 6 seed. That was in 2012, also following a 30-win season. They also were nationally ranked and drew an 11 seed from the Atlantic Coast Conference that had largely underachie­ved but won enough games down the stretch to sneak into the tournament.

And also were manhandled, 79-65.

The fear for the Aztecs against Syracuse was twofold: that they would be flummoxed by Jim Boeheim’s funky 2-3 zone, and that his son, Buddy, would shoot over smaller defenders.

Both happened.

The Aztecs were lulled into settling for 3s that weren’t as open as they might have seemed once the long, athletic Syracuse wings

came flying at them on closeouts. They finished 11 of 40 behind the arc, and that was only after a barrage of late 3s went in. They were 3 of 20 (15 percent) in the decisive first half after entering the game at 37.5 percent (and 38.6 percent over the 14game win streak).

Matt Mitchell was 1 of 9. Terrell Gomez was 1 of 7 (and oh-fer until the final minutes). Jordan Schakel was 5 of 13. Adam Seiko and Lamont Butler were both 0 of 3.

If it looked like the Aztecs hadn’t faced a 2-3 zone all year, well, they hadn’t. The only zone they faced was a 3-2 matchup by an Air Force team that finished 5-20 and doesn’t have anything approachin­g the size and athleticis­m of the Orange.

“They have great length,” coach Brian Dutcher said. “You don’t realize that until you get out there on them. Some of the looks were clean. But some where a little deeper than normal. Obviously, we knew we had to make 3s in order to compete in this game. The ones we got we didn’t make, not all of them were great but some of them were good looks.

“When you’re missing them, the defense starts shrinking in and it gets harder to drive. We tried to attack a little more off the dribble in the second half, but we were too far gone in the score to seriously affect the game.”

Added Schakel: “My shots didn’t fall, nobody’s shots fell. … We could have been more aggressive. But they played to some of our tendencies. They’re very good in the zone.”

And Buddy Boeheim? He scored 16 straight Syracuse points in the first half and had 25 midway through the second half, finishing with 30 after a 7 of 10 performanc­e behind the arc. Nearly all his shots were contested. But he’s 6-foot-6, has a high release point and had a couple inches on his defender.

Not much the nation’s 10th-ranked defense could do about that. The Orange shot 55.3 percent, best by anybody this season against SDSU.

“Buddy got it going for them,” Mitchell said. “He got on a hot streak and he never looked back. It was tough to stop him after that. The basket looked like the ocean to him, and it seemingly looked like that for the entire team.”

On a broader scale, the other fear was what would happen against an East Coast team in a year where the nonconfere­nce season was truncated and most teams stayed close to home, eliminatin­g the usual crosscount­ry matchups that make it easier to gauge the relative strength of each region.

Or put it this way: It was a rough day for the Mountain West. A few hours earlier, Utah State was bullied off the court by Texas Tech by double figures as well.

It amounts to a bitter end of the careers of Mitchell and Schakel, four-year players who technicall­y could accept the NCAA’s offer of an extra year of eligibilit­y and return next season but are not expected to.

They were parts of teams that won 96 games but suffered their most convincing loss in pursuit of No. 97.

Mitchell and Schakel both finished with 17 points, but that included a barrage of points after the outcome was no longer in doubt. In the first half, they were a combined 3 of 16.

“This loss hurts,” Mitchell said, “but my career as an Aztec has been amazing. I think I chose the right school. I think coming back for my senior year was the right decision. I wouldn’t trade it for the world.”

About the only thing the Aztecs won was the opening tip. They walked up court to face the 2-3 for the first time and ran one of their favorite zone plays, sending Schakel cutting behind it from the left wing to the right corner while players at the top distracted defenders with passing and screening. It worked to perfection. Schakel got the ball wide open and fired. Clank.

Gomez got an open 3 on their next possession. Clank.

Then Mitchell tried one. Clank.

Even so, they still managed to lead 18-14 on a threepoint play by Keshad Johnson after a Butler steal started the break.

There was 9:39 left in the half.

They scored zero points in that 9:39.

The carnage: 0-12 shooting, three turnovers, an 18-0 Orange run.

Marek Dolejaz had Syracuse’s first three points, then Boeheim got campfire hot and scored its next 16 to retake the lead at 19-18. Then Joseph Girard III got hot, and the Aztecs were in trouble. The Orange was 7 of 17 from deep by halftime and had a pair of four-point plays, one each by Boeheim and Girard.

It didn’t get much better in the second half. Syracuse pushed the margin to 27.

Boeheim fired a turnaround, fallaway 3 at the shot clock buzzer. It went in. On its next possession, Dolejaz had his layup at the rim blocked by Mitchell. It went in, too.

Boeheim the coach finally subbed out Boeheim the player. And the Orange promptly hit two more treys to give them 15 on the night. They entered the game averaging eight. Freshman Kadary Richmond had made four 3s all season and none since January; he went 2 of 2 Friday.

“Obviously, we’re disappoint­ed that we didn’t make a deeper run in March,” Dutcher said. “That’s our goal. But I also told them, ‘There’s only one team that walks out of this (tournament) undefeated. I was hoping our loss would come a little later, but it happened tonight.”

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 ?? ANDY LYONS GETTY IMAGES ?? Aztecs senior guard Terrell Gomez reacts during the loss to Syracuse on Friday night. SDSU couldn’t get anything going offensivel­y and the Orange got hot.
ANDY LYONS GETTY IMAGES Aztecs senior guard Terrell Gomez reacts during the loss to Syracuse on Friday night. SDSU couldn’t get anything going offensivel­y and the Orange got hot.
 ?? AJ MAST AP ?? Syracuse guard Buddy Boeheim shoots over San Diego State guard Lamont Butler on Friday night. Boeheim scored 30 points, making seven 3s in 10 attempts.
AJ MAST AP Syracuse guard Buddy Boeheim shoots over San Diego State guard Lamont Butler on Friday night. Boeheim scored 30 points, making seven 3s in 10 attempts.

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