Just over 48 hours after an emotional home loss to No. 6
Villanova, the 19th-ranked Bulldogs trailed the Bluejays 54-48 with
3:13 remaining in front of a boisterous crowd of 17,971.
Bulldogs forward Roosevelt Jones sank the winning layup with three
seconds to play. Bluejays guard Austin Chatman missed a 3-point
attempt with one second left.
Jones was happy to let a few of the more blustery Bluejays boosters
know how much making that shot meant to him. The 6-foot-4 junior
from O'Fallon, Ill., ran toward the tables opposite the bench side
of the court and showed the fans this Bulldog had grown weary of
their barking.
"I was just telling them to have a good trip back," Jones said.
"They were talking to me throughout the whole game, so I was just
telling them to have a good trip back home."
Jones was one of three Butler players who finished in double
figures. Guard Kellen Dunham finished with a game-high 19 points,
and Jones added 18 points. Butler forward Kameron Woods contributed
10 points and 10 rebounds.
Chatman turned up the defensive pressure on Dunham in the second
half, limiting him to six points.
"He started pushing off a little bit, and it was getting a little
chippier," Chatman said. "That's just the game of basketball, but he
was getting a little frustrated."
Chatman and guard Devin Brooks each scored 17 points for the
Bluejays (12-15, 3-11 Big East). No other Creighton player finished
in double figures.
"I looked at our offensive numbers, and they're not nearly as bad as
I thought they were," Bulldogs coach Chris Holtmann said. "I just
thought they showed great grit to pull this one out down the
stretch."
Butler (19-7, 9-4 Big East) was lethargic through much of the second
half, but it got an offensive spark when it counted most.
Two layups -- one by Dunham and another by guard Alex Barlow after
he stole the ball on Creighton's ensuing possession -- sparked the
comeback. Barlow's basket started a three-point play, and
Creighton's lead was down to one.
Now trailing by one with 2:39 to go, the Bulldogs took advantage of
Creighton missing the front end of a one-and-one. A three-point play
by Jones put Butler ahead 56-54 with 1:52 remaining.
Brooks answered with a layup, tying the game with 1:29 to go.
With 30 seconds left, Dunham missed a shot, Barlow grabbed the
offensive rebound, and the Bulldogs brought the ball out top to run
the clock down for the winning layup by Jones.
[to top of second column] |
"It was a huge play by Alex," Dunham said. "He makes them all the
time in practice and makes them all the time in the game. That's
what makes him a special player.
"Obviously, Roosevelt he's got ice in his veins. It was great to see
him attacking aggressively. It was a great win."
Butler outshot Creighton from the floor, 49.1 percent to 43.8
percent. Each team grabbed 29 rebounds.
"We were tough about 95 percent of the time," Creighton coach Greg
McDermott said. "The 5 percent that we weren't got us beat. You have
to out-will the other team. Butler played great down the stretch. We
had a hard time stopping them."
The Bulldogs won despite playing without Andrew Chrabascz. The
sophomore forward sustained a broken bone in his right hand in the
second half of the loss to Villanova, and he is expected to be out
two to four weeks.
Butler jumped to a 14-8 lead in the opening seven minutes with a
blend of inside and outside shots.
The Bluejays grabbed their first lead of the game on a 3-pointer by
Brooks 4:34 before halftime. Creighton led by as many as seven
points in the half and took a 29-25 lead to the locker room.
NOTES: Among those attending Monday's game were former Nebraska
basketball coach and current Butler AD Barry Collier, Chicago Bulls
rookie and former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott, and Boston
Celtics coach and former Butler head coach Brad Stevens. ...
Creighton is still looking for its first losing streak since early
December. The Bluejays altered losses and wins the past seven games.
... Creighton is 21-124 all-time against teams ranked in AP poll,
13-34 at home, and 4-5 at CenturyLink Center.
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|