Analyzing an Orange Comeback
12/9/2018 1:58:00 PM | Men's Basketball
The fact that Syracuse and Georgetown no longer belong to the same conference didn't seem to bother anyone in the Carrier Dome on Saturday. Not the 24,000-plus fans, not the players, not the coaches. The game between the Orange and Hoyas added to the lore of the series between the two schools.
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Georgetown led virtually the entire first half and took a 35-22 advantage into the locker room at halftime. Syracuse's 22 points tied for its lowest first-half output of the season. The Orange shot just 25 percent from the field in the first 20 minutes, including a 1-for-14 performance from 3-point range.
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Trey Mourning scored the first basket after intermission to give the Hoyas their largest lead of the game of 15, 37-22. Tyus Battle responded with a 3-pointer, his first of the day. It didn't seem a like a big play at the time, but it was the start of what would be a very memorable day for the junior from Edison, N.J.
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Battle's field goal sparked Syracuse on a 17-4 scoring run that cut Georgetown's lead to two, 41-39, at the 15:19 mark. He had 10 points during the offensive outburst, which was capped by a 3-pointer by sophomore Oshae Brissett.
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Georgetown regrouped and extended its lead back to seven, 48-41, but Syracuse wouldn't go away. The Orange tallied the next nine points and redshirt sophomore Elijah Hughes' 3-pointer with 11:11 on the clock gave Syracuse its first lead since the first four minutes of the game.
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The Orange built a six-point advantage but it was the Hoyas' turn to mount a comeback as a free throw by Josh LeBlanc evened the score at 60-60 with 5:51 remaining. The teams swapped baskets in the final five minutes. Trailing by one, 68-67, Syracuse was hoping that Battle's 3-pointer with 1:30 on the clock would give the Orange the lead for good, but Jessie Govan answered with his first field goal from behind the arc to give Georgetown a 70-71 lead with just 1:05 remaining.
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Syracuse couldn't convert on its next possession, but got the ball back after the Hoyas were called for a charge, giving the Orange one last chance to win the game.
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Battle brought the ball into the frontcourt, went one-on-one with his defender and buried his jumper with less than three seconds left to put Syracuse on top, 72-71. Georgetown's halfcourt shot went off the back of the rim and the Orange held on for the victory, their fifth in a row.
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 Battle finished with 26 points, which ties his season high. After a tough first half, he scored 21 of those points in the second half when he was 7-for-10 from the field, including 2-for-4 from 3-point range. He also had two assists and two steals after intermission.
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"I challenged Tyus at halftime and said 'You cannot play like this' and he just stepped it up," said head coach Jim Boeheim. "He had a monster second half. Tyus made a couple big plays there. He just took it over. He had a phenomenal second half against a really good defensive team. He made some really, really tough shots. He was spectacular."
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Georgetown led virtually the entire first half and took a 35-22 advantage into the locker room at halftime. Syracuse's 22 points tied for its lowest first-half output of the season. The Orange shot just 25 percent from the field in the first 20 minutes, including a 1-for-14 performance from 3-point range.
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Trey Mourning scored the first basket after intermission to give the Hoyas their largest lead of the game of 15, 37-22. Tyus Battle responded with a 3-pointer, his first of the day. It didn't seem a like a big play at the time, but it was the start of what would be a very memorable day for the junior from Edison, N.J.
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Battle's field goal sparked Syracuse on a 17-4 scoring run that cut Georgetown's lead to two, 41-39, at the 15:19 mark. He had 10 points during the offensive outburst, which was capped by a 3-pointer by sophomore Oshae Brissett.
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Georgetown regrouped and extended its lead back to seven, 48-41, but Syracuse wouldn't go away. The Orange tallied the next nine points and redshirt sophomore Elijah Hughes' 3-pointer with 11:11 on the clock gave Syracuse its first lead since the first four minutes of the game.
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The Orange built a six-point advantage but it was the Hoyas' turn to mount a comeback as a free throw by Josh LeBlanc evened the score at 60-60 with 5:51 remaining. The teams swapped baskets in the final five minutes. Trailing by one, 68-67, Syracuse was hoping that Battle's 3-pointer with 1:30 on the clock would give the Orange the lead for good, but Jessie Govan answered with his first field goal from behind the arc to give Georgetown a 70-71 lead with just 1:05 remaining.
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Syracuse couldn't convert on its next possession, but got the ball back after the Hoyas were called for a charge, giving the Orange one last chance to win the game.
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Battle brought the ball into the frontcourt, went one-on-one with his defender and buried his jumper with less than three seconds left to put Syracuse on top, 72-71. Georgetown's halfcourt shot went off the back of the rim and the Orange held on for the victory, their fifth in a row.
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 Battle finished with 26 points, which ties his season high. After a tough first half, he scored 21 of those points in the second half when he was 7-for-10 from the field, including 2-for-4 from 3-point range. He also had two assists and two steals after intermission.
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"I challenged Tyus at halftime and said 'You cannot play like this' and he just stepped it up," said head coach Jim Boeheim. "He had a monster second half. Tyus made a couple big plays there. He just took it over. He had a phenomenal second half against a really good defensive team. He made some really, really tough shots. He was spectacular."
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