"We've played so many overtime games in our
league and we just said when we go to overtime, we're going to
find a way because that's what we've done all year,"
Northwestern coach Chris Collins said. "And it's a credit to
these guys for their toughness and their will just to dig down
and win the game."
Langborg scored Northwestern's first seven points in overtime
and finished with 27 points overall for the Wildcats, who
outscored Florida Atlantic 19-7 in the extra session. Boo Buie
had 22 points, including 19 after halftime, while Barnhizer
added 13 points and 10 rebounds.
Vladislav Goldin scored 19 points for Florida Atlantic (25-9),
which returned every player who had remaining eligibility from
last year's Final Four team. Johnell Davis had 18 points while
Brandon Weatherspoon finished with 10 points.
Neither team led by more than four during a grinding first half.
Davis' baseline floater just before the buzzer gave Florida
Atlantic a 20-19 lead at halftime.
Northwestern led for 16-plus consecutive minutes in the second
half and opened a trio of nine-point leads, the last at 54-45 on
a layup by Langborg with 6:43 left. Goldin hit a layup to begin
a 13-2 run for the Owls, who took the lead on Davis' floater
with 1:04 left.
Florida Atlantic forced a turnover on Northwestern's next
possession and Davis missed a layup but the Owls retained
possession after an inadvertent whistle. Goldin was fouled on
the in-bounds and missed the front end of a one-and-one before
Barnhizer hit the game-tying shot. Davis missed a desperation
3-pointer at the buzzer.
Weatherspoon missed a jumper to open overtime and Langborg
scored on three straight trips to give Northwestern a 65-59
lead. Alijah Martin missed a 3-pointer for Florida Atlantic and
Buie followed with a jumper. The Owls missed two 3-pointers on
their next trip and Langborg delivered the dagger with a
3-pointer at the shot-clock buzzer to put the Wildcats up 70-59
with 1:38 left.
Florida Atlantic coach Dusty May had nostalgia for the team with
which he'd spent so much time and built so many memories.
"Like to express gratitude to this group for taking so many
people on a great ride. We had a lot of great moments," May
said. "Today, credit Northwestern. They were statistically
better in almost every facet of the game and we just weren't at
our best.
"We just looked like we were a little bit, I guess, out of gas
in overtime and emotionally spent. But definitely proud of our
effort to claw back in and make a game out of it."
--Jerry Beach, Field Level Media
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