Post-Tribune

Hot-shooting from Cooney dooms ND

Cooney hits nine 3-pointers on his way to 33 points against Notre Dame

- BY JOHN KEKIS

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Trevor Cooney has his shooting touch back — just in the nick of time for topranked Syracuse.

Cooney scored a career-high 33 points, matching a school record with nine 3-pointers, and the Orange beat Notre Dame 61-55 on Monday night in another matchup of former Big East foes.

After struggling to a woeful 25.4 percent (14 of 55) from behind the arc in his first seven Atlantic Coast Conference games, Cooney has hit 11 of 13 in the past two games and was the difference against the Irish as the Orange’s front line faltered.

“It feels good,” Cooney said. “I kind of got going and guys just found me in good spots.”

Syracuse (22-0, 9-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), which moved to No. 1 this week after its scintillat­ing 91-89 overtime victory over Duke on Saturday night and Arizona’s loss to California, extended its school record for most consecutiv­e wins to start a season. Notre Dame (12-11, 3-7) has lost seven of nine.

Two days after one of the most emotional wins in Jim Boeheim’s 38 years as head coach, Syracuse played its first game as the nation’s top team since the 2011-12 season. Two years ago, the Orange were un- beaten and ranked No. 1 when they went to South Bend, and Notre Dame upset them 67-58.

It was the eighth time Notre Dame had beaten a No. 1 team and turned out to be Syracuse’s lone loss of the regular season.

“That was in the back of my mind,” said C.J. Fair, who had a season-low six points on 2-of-13 shooting after scoring a career-high 28 against Duke. “I didn’t want that to happen again.”

Cooney made sure there was no repeat, hitting five 3-pointers in the first half as the Orange gained a 13-point halftime advantage, then barely held the Irish at bay in the second half.

“We put ourselves in position to make it interestin­g,” Notre Dame coach Mike Brey said. “We came into this game, and especially if you watch what they did to Duke, beating them up in the paint. You really try to take stuff away in the paint. I thought overall with the guys that destroy you in the paint we did a good job. But we couldn’t do a good job on Cooney. Seven of the nine I think we challenged. He was just in one of those zones, and you’ve got to take your hat off.”

Cooney, 9 of 12 from long range, matched the record set by Gerry McNamara in the 2004 NCAA tournament and equaled by Andy Rautins in 2008 and James South- erland in 2012.

Jerami Grant and Fair, who combined for 54 points against Duke, combined for just 15, while Tyler Ennis found little room in the lane to penetrate and finished with six points and eight assists.

Garrick Sherman led Notre Dame with 16 points, Steve Vas- turia had 13, and Pat Connaughto­n 11, while Eric Atkins had nine on 3-of-10 shooting.

Notre Dame closed within 38-32 on a 3-pointer from Atkins with 14:19 to play, but Syracuse responded with seven straight points. Grant slammed home a dunk after his block on Sherman and Fair fol- lowed with a slam off a Grant miss. Cooney completed the run with his seventh 3-pointer, which tied his personal best.

Two 3-pointers by Atkins, Vasturia’s three-point play and a slam dunk by Tom Knight moved the Irish back within 43-40 with 8:41 to go.

 ??  ??
 ?? | GETTY IMAGES ?? Eric Atkins dribbles away with a loose ball as C.J. Fair of Syracuse tries to keep up on Monday.
| GETTY IMAGES Eric Atkins dribbles away with a loose ball as C.J. Fair of Syracuse tries to keep up on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States