Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Marquette’s season ends

Nittany Lions end NIT run by Eagles

- Ben Steele

Penn State beats MU, 85-80, to elimininat­e the Golden Eagles from the NIT.

Marquette’s final game of the season had a familiar theme.

The Golden Eagles just couldn’t get the defensive stops they needed.

Penn State held off a spirited MU comeback and came away with an 8580 victory Tuesday in the National Invitation Tournament quarterfin­als at the Al McGuire Center.

The Nittany Lions (24-13) matched their biggest lead at 67-53 with 7 minutes 14 seconds remaining.

The Golden Eagles (21-14) trimmed the lead to 72-68 with 2:39 left. But Penn State responded with two straight baskets, and MU couldn’t recover.

“I thought our guys left it all out on the court,” Golden Eagles coach Steve Wojciechow­ski said. “I thought our

guys showed great resolve to not quit fighting.

“I thought early in the game, we got knocked back by their physicalit­y. That’s as physical a team, across the board, that we’ve played.”

Penn State sophomore forward Lamar Stevens was the biggest problem for MU, piling up 30 points. He hit the back-toback shots late in the fourth quarter that broke the Golden Eagles’ spirits.

Sophomore guard Tony Carr added 25, repeatedly getting to the line and finishing 11 of 14 on free throws.

Senior guard Andrew Rowsey led the Golden Eagles with 29 points, earning a couple of school records in the process.

His three free throws late in the game got MU within four and also sent him past Dwyane Wade’s 710 points for the highest scoring season in school history.

Rowsey finished the season with 716 points.

He also shot 6 of 11 on three-pointers against Penn State to top Steve Novak (121) for the most triples in a season with 125.

After the final buzzer, the MU fans at the Al McGuire Center serenaded the senior with chants of “An-drew Row-sey! Andrew Ro-wsey!”

An emotional Rowsey did not want to answer questions after the game but his teammates spoke glowingly of the guard’s season.

“I’m really happy he was able to close his career the way he did,” sophomore guard Markus Howard said. “He’s going to go down as one of the best to ever play here at Marquette. I’m just fortunate I was able to play with him for two years.”

Howard finished with 21 points on 8of-19 shooting.

Sophomore wing Sam Hauser finished with 13 points, including two big threepoint­ers in MU’s fourth-quarter rally.

But Hauser has been bothered by a hip injury that he said started in August and steadily worsened. He confirmed he will have surgery and expects the recovery process to take four to five months.

“It’s not how we wanted it to end,” Howard said. “I didn’t want to stop playing with these guys. I love this team. We approached this tournament very maturely for how young we are as a team.”

Wojciechow­ski said he saw a lot of growth from his team that finished 9-9 in the Big East.

“Our young guys all made great strides,” Wojciechow­ski said. “We showed some real toughness in a couple instances where guys were dealing with some significan­t injuries and never complained.

“We were 4-7 in the Big East and had the youngest team (in the conference). A lot of young teams would have mailed it in and said ‘this is too hard,’ but our team didn’t and put ourselves in a position to be in the postseason.”

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Markus Howard slips behind Penn State’s Julian Moore to score Tuesday night.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Markus Howard slips behind Penn State’s Julian Moore to score Tuesday night.

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