Fairleigh Dickinson stuns Purdue, becomes second No. 16 to top No. 1
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[March 18, 2023]
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- For just the second time in 152 tries, a
No. 16 wore the slipper perfectly against a No. 1 seed in the NCAA
Tournament.
Sean Moore scored 19 and Grant Singleton added eight points, six
rebounds, five assists and three steals as No. 16 Fairleigh
Dickinson shocked No. 1 Purdue 63-58 on Friday night in an East
Region first-round game.
Despite sporting the smallest team in Division I basketball, FDU
managed to overcome 21 points and 15 rebounds from 7-foot-4
All-America center Zach Edey.
Fairleigh Dickinson coach Tobin Anderson said, "What a night.
Incredible win for us. Incredible win for our program, our school.
Hard to put it in words right now. Honestly, it's really hard to
even -- it just happened, right?"
Moore's steal and coast-to-coast layup with 1:36 put FDU ahead
58-53, before Purdue's Fletcher Loyer hit a 3-pointer 12 seconds
later. But a 3-pointer from Moore with 65 seconds left restored the
lead to five, 61-56.
With the Knights up 61-58, Purdue's Braden Smith drove the lane but
Moore came from behind and blocked the shot. Loyer's corner 3-point
attempt was off the mark, and Demetre Roberts sealed it with two
free throws.
"Our job was just to come into the game and ... throw a punch,"
Roberts said. "We knew they would throw multiple punches. Just throw
a punch back. We knew what type of game this was.
"And, man, it was a game of runs. And we showed why we belong here.
Credit to Purdue, but we do what we have to do and now we on to the
next one."
The Boilermakers joined Virginia from 2018 as the only No. 1 seeds
in the 64-team era to lose to a No. 16. With all other top seeds
advancing this year, No. 1 seeds are now 150-2 against No. 16 draws.
Fairleigh Dickinson will oppose either ninth-seeded Florida Atlantic
in the second round on Sunday after the Owls defeated eighth-seeded
Memphis 66-65.
Moore, a Columbus, Ohio, native, said of the Knights' win, "I'm
shocked right now. I can't believe it. It's crazy. But it feels
amazing."
Fairleigh Dickinson, which became the first "play-in" No. 16 seed to
advance, took advantage of four Purdue turnovers in a five-minute
span to seize early control. The Knights, who start four guards and
a forward as the shortest team in Division I, gave Purdue fits all
night with full-court pressure.
[to top of second column] |
Mar 17, 2023; Columbus, OH, USA;
Fairleigh Dickinson Knights forward Cameron Tweedy (21) shoots the
ball defended by Purdue Boilermakers forward Trey Kaufman-Renn (4)
in the first half at Nationwide Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick
Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports
Purdue scored 11 straight points during the first
half but FDU quickly regained its footing and answered with a 13-5
run, highlighted by a double-team trap of Smith on an inbound pass.
Singleton stole the ball and fed Heru Bligen for 32-29 lead. Purdue
converted a pair of free throws before halftime and FDU settled for
a 32-31 halftime edge.
Mason Gillis put Purdue on top with a 3-pointer just 30 seconds into
the second half before Sean Moore answered seconds later with a
triple and a 35-34 FDU lead. Cameron Tweedy's jumper with 14:35 left
put the Knights up 41-36 before Edey responded with a conventional
three-point play and a short jumper that tied the game at the 13:44
mark.
Purdue sustained the run to make it a 12-0 spurt for a 47-41 lead.
But the Boilermakers couldn't handle prosperity or the FDU press.
The Knights rallied for the next eight points and a 49-47 lead.
Moore's jumper put the Knights ahead 54-50 with 7:30 remaining
before Loyer's trey drew that Purdue within one with 7:10 left. That
would remain the score for the next four minutes as FDU couldn't
convert on Purdue turnovers and the Boilermakers failed to take
advantage of missed shots from Fairleigh Dickinson.
Moore's two free throws with 2:50 remaining put FDU ahead 56-53.
Purdue coach Matt Painter said, "Obviously it hurts. It hurts bad.
But with that being said, I don't want to take anything away from
(the Knights). They earned it. They played better than we did. They
coached better than we did. And we have to sit in it. We gotta to
face it. We've got to deal with it. And we've got to come back
stronger. But that will take some time."
--By Mike Petraglia, Field Level Media
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