Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Size matters in March

Boilermake­rs wear down Catamounts

- MICHAEL COHEN MARK HOFFMAN MARK HOFFMAN

There are times in college basketball when the most obvious difference between mid-majors and teams from power conference­s is exactly what you might think — size. The larger schools and bluebloods tend to have it, and everyone else generally does not.

Such was the case in the first-round NCAA Tournament matchup between No. 4 Purdue and No. 13 Vermont at the BMO Harris Bradley Center on Thursday. It was, from an aesthetic standpoint, like pitting a high school team against elementary students in terms of height and weight.

And ultimately it was Purdue’s physical advantages — 6-foot-9, 250pound Caleb Swanigan; 7foot-2, 290-pound Isaac Haas; 6-foot-8, 225-pound Vincent Edwards — that eroded the undersized Catamounts in piecemeal fashion. It was far from domination, but the accumulati­on of body blows allowed girth and athleticis­m to ultimately win out. The Boilermake­rs survived a stern test, 8070, to reach the Round of 32.

Purdue (26-7) will play No. 5 Iowa State, which beat No. 12 Nevada, 84-73, in the nightcap.

“Our guys, you know, answered every one of their runs,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “They were a good team. One of the best teams we’ve faced all year . ... This was a huge win for us.”

Yet it was the plucky, feisty and fearless Vermonters who led for the majority of the first half. Purveyors of a 21-game winning streak, the Catamounts (29-6) unnerved Purdue with ball movement and unselfishn­ess that produced 10 assists on their first 13 field goals. As point guard Trae Bell-Haynes (15 points, 7 rebounds, 6 assists) sliced inside among the trees, his teammates slid to open spots on the floor for unobstruct­ed shots and layups.

By halftime, the ninepoint underdogs were alive and well: Purdue 37, Vermont 36.

“I couldn’t be more proud of this team, the way they battled tonight, you know, and just gave everything they had against a really good Purdue team,” Vermont coach John Becker said.

If the Catamounts were to be undone, their lack of size was always the likeliest cause. Their unraveling took place in fits and starts as Purdue began to assert itself in spurts.

The initial burst came from Edwards, whose primary defender, Vermont swingman Kurt Steidl, left the game with a knee injury in the first half and did not return. Edwards chipped in eight points in the first three minutes of the second half to nudge the Boilermake­rs in front, 45-38. Without Steidl, the Catamounts were forced to use “smaller” and “slower” players to guard Edwards, as Bell-Haynes described it, and none of them did the job.

Defensivel­y, the Boilermake­rs exploited the offensive inability of Vermont guard Dre Wills. Purdue, quite simply, did not guard him and instead left a fifth defender on the interior to clog the paint.

Finally, the Big Ten player of the year shut the door in the waning moments. Swaningan, who had 16 points and 14 rebounds, blocked three shots in the final three minutes to push Purdue into the next round.

 ?? / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Vermont forward Darren Payen (right) battles for a rebound with Purdue forward Caleb Swanigan (center) on Thursday.
/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Vermont forward Darren Payen (right) battles for a rebound with Purdue forward Caleb Swanigan (center) on Thursday.
 ?? / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Purdue center Isaac Haas scores over Vermont guard Dre Wills in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
/ MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Purdue center Isaac Haas scores over Vermont guard Dre Wills in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

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