No. 3
Kansas rides frantic finish to OT win over No. 9 WVU
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[February 14, 2017]
LAWRENCE, Kan. -- The Kansas
basketball team was apprised before its game Monday that the
Jayhawks had not lost back-to-back games in Allen Fieldhouse since,
oh, before any of them were born.
With less than three minutes remaining in the second half, the
message finally sunk in.
The No. 3 Jayhawks trailed by 14 points with 2:58 remaining before
waging a furious rally to tie No. 9 West Virginia and then top the
Mountaineers 84-80 in overtime.
"Everybody stepped up and made big-time plays," Kansas junior guard
Devonte' Graham said. "It was just that confidence we have in each
other and the coaches have in us. We just know what we're capable
of, and we believe in each other."
Iowa State rallied from a 14-point halftime deficit to win in Allen
Fieldhouse on Feb. 4, and Kansas seemed on the brink of
disappointing a sellout crowd at home for the second straight time
Monday. The Jayhawks not only have not lost two straight games under
Bill Self, who is in his 14th season as coach, but the last time it
happened was in 1988-89 in the first of 15 seasons Roy Williams
coached Kansas.
"All we did tonight," Self said, "in a very unique way, was do what
we were supposed to do."
Unique indeed, especially after Kansas had to press to gain the
possessions needed down the stretch in regulation to mount the
comeback. The Jayhawks eventually forced 21 turnovers, which was key
considering they shot a season-worst 34.4 percent from the field.
They also made 33 of 44 free throws.
"If you asked any of our players the last time we practiced a press,
it was maybe a month ago," Self said. "We actually worked on
trapping the other day, but not like this."
Senior guard Frank Mason made just 3 of 13 shot attempts, his second
straight off night from the field, but he canned 16 of 18 free
throws as part of his game-high 24 points. Mason capped the
regulation comeback by making both ends of a two-shot foul with 21.6
seconds remaining to tie the game at 71.
The Mountaineers (20-6, 8-5 Big 12) could not score on the last
possession, pushing the game into OT.
After failing to lead the entire second half, the Jayhawks (23-3,
11-2) scored first in overtime as Graham drained a 3-pointer with
4:10 left for a 74-71 lead. Freshman guard Josh Jackson made a layup
with 3:03 left, and Graham canned another 3-pointer at the 2:11
mark.
Meanwhile, West Virginia did not score until 1:06 remained in
overtime, committing three turnovers and missing three shots before
a dunk by sophomore forward Esa Ahmad.
"We were trying to keep things together," said Ahmad, "but we turned
the ball over 21 times.
"We handle the press every day in practice, but we didn't tonight,"
added West Virginia senior forward Nathan Adrian, who added 10
points, seven rebounds and six assists.
The Mountaineers swiped an errant pass by Jackson on an inbounds
play and converted it into a follow shot by Adrian with 10 seconds
left in OT to make it 82-80.
Still, the 8-0 blitz the Jayhawks used to begin the OT was enough
cushion as Mason sealed the win by sinking two free throws with four
seconds remaining.
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Kansas Jayhawks head coach Bill Self reacts to play during the first
half against the West Virginia Mountaineers at Allen Fieldhouse.
Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports
The victory enabled Kansas to gain a two-game lead in the Big 12
after second-place Baylor lost Monday at Texas Tech. The Jayhawks
are bidding for a 13th consecutive conference crown, which would tie
UCLA (1967-79) for the longest such streak in Division I basketball.
Ahmad scored 20 points and senior guard Tarik Phillip added 18 for
West Virginia.
Graham chipped in 18 for Kansas, while Jackson logged his fifth
double-double in six games with 14 points and 11 rebounds. Lagerald
Vick added 14 points, and Landen Lucas snagged 13 boards for the
Jayhawks.
"They shot 34 percent and won," West Virginia coach Bob Huggins
said. "Graham killed us last year in the conference tournament and
made some big shots. Obviously, you can't let Mason shoot 18 free
throws."
West Virginia rolled to an early 16-5 cushion, coupling a hot start
from the floor with defense that held Kansas to 1-of-11 shooting
from the field.
The Jayhawks roared back with 16 unanswered points to go up 26-21
but could not hold on to the advantage.
An 8-0 run by the Mountaineers to close the half gave them a 39-32
margin at the break. Jevon Carter capped the late spurt by netting a
contested 3-pointer with two seconds remaining. Ahmad added 10
first-half points as West Virginia had two 16-5 flurries.
Vick came off the bench to boost the Jayhawks with 10 first-half
points. Vick shot 4 of 4 before intermission while the rest of his
teammates were 6 of 26. Each of the Kansas starters made just one
first-half field goal on 23 collective attempts.
NOTES: Trae Young, a guard from Norman, Okla., who is considering
Kansas, was presented his McDonald's All-America jersey on Monday at
his high school, Norman North. Young, who averages 43 points, five
assists and five rebounds, will announce his college intentions
Thursday. Oklahoma and Oklahoma State are also finalists. One Kansas
signee, F Billy Preston, was named to the McDonald's All-American
Game when teams were announced last month. Preston plays for Oak
Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, Va. ... Allen Fieldhouse is the
only Big 12 facility in which West Virginia is winless since joining
the league in 2012. ... Bob Huggins was 0-4 against Kansas while
coaching at Cincinnati and Kansas State, but he is 4-7 against the
Jayhawks as the West Virginia coach. ... Mountaineers football coach
Dana Holgorsen accompanied the basketball team on its trip to
Kansas.
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