Chattanooga Times Free Press

ORANGE CRUSH

Syracuse shows it belongs in tourney, torches Dayton

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ST. LOUIS — After routing Dayton in their NCAA tournament opener, Syracuse guards Mike Gbinije and Trevor Cooney were asked whether they had heard all the naysayers who claimed they didn’t belong.

Orange coach Jim Boeheim didn’t give them a chance to answer.

“Anybody that said we didn’t deserve to be in obviously doesn’t know anything about basketball,” he said flatly. “They were just doing it to be cute and that’s — we don’t need to react to those things.”

Not when they play like they did Friday.

Malachi Richardson scored 21 points and Tyler Roberson added 10 points and 18 rebounds as the 10th-seeded Orange clamped down with their trademark zone in a 70-51 win against the seventh-seeded Flyers.

Up next will be No. 15 seed Middle Tennessee State on Sunday.

“We think we can play with anybody,” said Boeheim, whose Orange ( 20-13) are back in the tournament after a one-year ban for academic misconduct and improper benefits. “We don’t look at it as we’re an underdog or whatever. We just think if we can play and play the way we are capable, we can beat anybody.”

Charles Cooke led the Flyers (258) with 14 points, but he was 2-of-9 from beyond the arc. Scoochie Smith added 12 points as the regular- season Atlantic 10 champions shot just 32 percent from the field in the Midwest Region first-round game.

“We tried to hang in there the best we could. We just didn’t have enough juice on offense,” Dayton coach Archie Miller said. “We need to make some shots against that zone.”

The day began with tournament organizers scrambling to find nets when those sent to the site weren’t regulation size. They ultimately poached a couple from Fontbonne University an hour before the tip.

Perhaps they should have checked the circumfere­nce of the rims, too.

Syracuse missed eight of its first nine shots. Dayton wasn’t much better. Two teams that pride themselves on defense set offense back a couple decades with air- balls and missed dunks.

Richardson finally got on track for the Orange, pushing them to a 30-28 halftime lead.

Their vaunted zone continued to bewilder Dayton in the second half, but the Flyers weren’t any better when left all alone. One of the poorest foul-shooting teams in the tournament missed four free throws in quick succession, allowing Syracuse to extend its lead to 39-29 with 15 minutes left.

No number of timeouts called by Miller could turn the momentum.

The advantage reached 53-33 on Cooney’s 3-pointer midway through the second half. The way Dayton was shooting it — 2-for-14 in the second half at that point — it felt as if the game was done.

“We wanted to make sure we did a good job getting out to their shooters and take away that baseline pass when they had the two-guard front,” Richardson said. “We did a great job of that.”

The Orange coasted the rest of the way to give Boeheim a winning tournament return.

Their longtime coach was at the center of the NCAA investigat­ion, which resulted in the loss of more than 100 of his victories. The school was also docked eight scholarshi­ps and Boeheim was forced to sit out nine games.

Slipping into the field, they showed they belonged.

“Everyone just showed up,” Syracuse forward Tyler Lydon said, “and when everyone does that, it shows what type of a team we can be.”

Wisconsin 47, Pittsburgh 43

ST. LOUIS — Ethan Happ had 15 points and nine rebounds, none bigger than one he pulled down in the closing seconds, as the seventh-seeded Badgers beat the No. 10 seed Panthers in an East Region first- round game.

Nigel Hayes had 12 points and Vitto Brown scored 11 for Wisconsin ( 21-12), which advanced despite an awful shooting night. Hayes was just 3-for-17 from the field, and Bronson Koenig failed to hit a 3 for the first time in 44 games as the Badgers finished 4-of-19 from beyond the arc.

It still was enough to knock off the equally cold-shooting Panthers.

Jamel Artis had 13 points to lead Pittsburgh (21-12), which started the season 14-1 before struggling when it hit ACC play. Leading scorer Michael Young was held to six points and five rebounds.

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Malachi Richardson is fouled by Dayton’s Dyshawn Pierre as Syracuse’s
Tyler Roberson, left, and Dayton’s Scoochie Smith (11) watch during the second half of a Midwest
Region first-round game Friday in St. Louis. Richardson had 21 points...
Syracuse’s Malachi Richardson is fouled by Dayton’s Dyshawn Pierre as Syracuse’s Tyler Roberson, left, and Dayton’s Scoochie Smith (11) watch during the second half of a Midwest Region first-round game Friday in St. Louis. Richardson had 21 points...

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