Houston Chronicle Sunday

Iowa St.’s ‘Comeback Kids’ do it again, deny Kansas

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — During a break early in the second half of the Big 12 Tournament title game, Iowa State coach Fred Hoiberg gathered his players in front of the bench and asked them a simple question.

“How much do you have left?”

The answer turned out to be just enough.

After digging a 17-point hole against ninth-ranked Kansas, the Cyclones put together another of their trademark comebacks. Georges Niang led the way with 19 points, Abdel Nader made the go-ahead foul shots with 48 seconds left, and No. 13 Iowa State beat the Jayhawks 70-66 to win its second consecutiv­e tournament championsh­ip.

“We got down 17, and they were still talking and positive in the huddle,” Hoiberg said later, “and that’s a great sign, when your guys can stick together through adversity.”

They’re getting quite accustomed to it.

It was the fifth straight game — including all three in the tournament — that the Cyclones rallied from a double-digit deficit, prompting Niang to dub his teammates the “Comeback Kids.”

“We don’t want to come back every time, but it just seems to keep happening to us,” Niang said. “If that’s our emergency button, if that’s what we have to do, we’ll do it.”

Nader finished with 13 points for the Cyclones (25-8), who also knocked off Kansas on their way to winning the title a year ago.

As the final seconds ticked off the clock, the Cyclones streamed onto the floor and chants of “I-S-U” echoed through the Sprint Center, which was evenly split between the red-clad fans from the north and the blue-clad Kansas fans from the west.

“We knew it’s a long game, no matter what team you’re playing,” said the Jayhawks’ Wayne Selden Jr., who had a career-high 25 points. “Whether you’re up or down, it’s a long game.”

Frank Mason III also had 13 points for the Jayhawks (26-8), who still had their chances after Nader’s two foul shots made it 6563 with 48 seconds left.

Freshman guard Devonte’ Graham went to the basket but was out of control, turning the ball over, and Kansas quickly fouled. Morris made the second of two free throws with 23.8 seconds left.

Kansas, which had led 37-23 at halftime, still had a chance to tie the game with a 3, but coach Bill Self opted to drive to the rim. Mason missed a spinning layup, Dustin Hogue gathered in the rebound, and Iowa State began to celebrate its second consecutiv­e championsh­ip and third overall.

“Coach always talks to us about fighting through adversity, staying together as a team,” Nader said. “That’s what we did again tonight.”

With their athletic director, Jamie Pollard, recovering in the hospital from a heart attack, the Cyclones went on a 12-0 finishing run with a buzzer-beater from Morris to knock off Texas in the quarterfin­als. Then they rallied from an 11-point hole in the semifinals, a game that ended when Oklahoma’s Ryan Spangler missed a tying layup at the horn.

Their comeback Saturday night may have been the most impressive yet.

 ??  ?? Iowa State players show off their hardware after defeating top-seeded Kansas 70-66 in the Big 12 championsh­ip game Saturday at Kansas City, Mo. It was the Cyclones’ second consecutiv­e conference tournament title.
Iowa State players show off their hardware after defeating top-seeded Kansas 70-66 in the Big 12 championsh­ip game Saturday at Kansas City, Mo. It was the Cyclones’ second consecutiv­e conference tournament title.
 ?? Rick Yeatts / Southland Conference ?? Houston Baptist, which upset Stephen F. Austin in the Southland semifinals, hopes there is more to celebrate after today’s final against Northweste­rn State.
Rick Yeatts / Southland Conference Houston Baptist, which upset Stephen F. Austin in the Southland semifinals, hopes there is more to celebrate after today’s final against Northweste­rn State.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States