Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Done in from long range

Woodson leads from behind arc

- MICHAEL COHEN

In the booming transfer market of college basketball, players who earn their degrees at prior institutio­ns often look for upward mobility. As graduate transfers, they seek the best opportunit­y to reach an NCAA Tournament for their final year of eligibilit­y.

For shooting guard Avery Woodson, whose two seasons at Memphis ended without an invitation to the big dance, the decision of where to play came down to Butler and Virginia Commonweal­th. Woodson chose the Bulldogs, and Thursday afternoon at the BMO Harris Bradley Center he put on quite a show. The very skill that made him a coveted asset in the first place — dead-eye threepoint shooting — bombarded 13th-seeded Winthrop from the opening minute of the game. Woodson, who shot 42% from beyond the arc this season, splashed 5 three-pointers in the first half alone as fourth-seeded Butler built a 19-point lead. With crisp offense and intelligen­t pressure on Winthrop wunderkind Keon Johnson, the Bulldogs moved comfortabl­y into the Round of 32 with a 76-64 victory.

Butler (24-8) will play No. 12 Middle Tennessee State on Saturday at the Bradley Center.

“We got lost a couple times in rotation,” Winthrop coach Pat Kelsey said. “It let the Woodson kid get a couple open looks, and he’s already a very, very good threepoint shooter. When you give him three, four steps where he can kind of lick his fingers and measure the wind and shoot it, he’s going to make 80% of those.”

But the Bulldogs had a challenge of their own, and beginning Wednesday, when coach Chris Holtmann held his first news conference in Milwaukee, the reverence for Winthrop’s pint-sized phenom was abundantly clear. Johnson, who stands 5 feet 7 inches tall, averaged 22.5 points per game this season, and after the game, Holtmann admitted the amount of unrest he endured while devising what he hoped was a legitimate solution.

“My staff just told me that I looked terrible and looked like I hadn’t slept in a week,” Holtmann said. “The reason was that kid. I mean, he is a load to guard.”

But in applicatio­n the plan was essentiall­y flawless. Holtmann unleashed freshman guard Kamar Baldwin as the primary defender on Johnson and asked his big men to hedge aggressive­ly on pick and rolls for another layer of fortificat­ion.

Such protrusion forced Johnson toward the sideline as he searched for crevices through which to drive. But penetratio­n was thwarted, and Johnson settled for contested three-point shots. He missed seven of 10 attempts from beyond the arc and finished with 17 points.

“I think they got physical with Keon,” Kelsey said. “Bigger, longer, stronger defenders, try to limit his touches, you know. They ran at him off ball screens and tried to get the ball out of his hands, and, you know, it worked out for them.

“I think they’re going to really make a dent in this tournament moving forward.”

Woodson finished with 6 three-pointers and 18 points to lead Butler. Winthrop’s Xavier Cooks had a game-high 23 points.

“When you give him three, four steps where he can kind of lick his fingers and measure the wind and shoot it, he’s going to make 80% of those.” PAT KELSEY, WINTHROP COACH, ON AVERY WOODSON

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Winthrop forward Joshua Davenport fouls Butler forward Kelan Martin in their first-round NCAA Tournament game Thursday at the BMO Harris Bradley Center in Milwaukee.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Winthrop forward Joshua Davenport fouls Butler forward Kelan Martin in their first-round NCAA Tournament game Thursday at the BMO Harris Bradley Center in Milwaukee.
 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Winthrop guard Keon Johnson goes up to score while Butler guard Kamar Baldwin defends on Thursday.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Winthrop guard Keon Johnson goes up to score while Butler guard Kamar Baldwin defends on Thursday.
 ??  ?? Woodson
Woodson

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