Box Score
By David Boyce
During
the course of a long basketball season, a team will have a poor performance and
lose a game that causes people across the conference to scratch their heads.
Hopefully,
Northwest Missouri State men's basketball team had its only head-scratching
loss.
On
Wednesday evening at Bearcat Arena, Northwest lost 70-65 to a Lincoln squad
that picked up only its third victory in 17 games and was sitting at the very
bottom of the MIAA.
"If
we haven't hit rock bottom then I don't know what rock bottom feels like,"
Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. "This is as bad as it gets.
"Lincoln
played great. They slowed the tempo. They controlled the game. They played
good. They made free throws down the stretch. You have to credit them, too."
It
was the second loss in a row for Northwest, which fell to 11-4 overall and 4-2
in the MIAA.
The
Bearcats have two days to figure out what has gone wrong the last two games.
Northwest returns to action late Saturday afternoon in its first-ever game at
Central Oklahoma. Northwest must rediscover the formula that saw it win games
at Missouri Southern and Pittsburg State earlier this month.
"We
need to focus and look ourselves in the mirror and get back to the basics,"
senior Alex Sullivan said. "Our coaches stress this a lot that we need to stay
with our identity and work with our strength. We have to guard the ball better."
The
Bearcats never found an offensive rhythm against Lincoln. That was never more
evident than the first six minutes of the second half.
Northwest
trailed by nine at halftime, but held Lincoln scoreless in the opening 5
minutes, 50 seconds of the second half.
In
that period, Northwest scored just two field goals and trimmed four points off
its deficit. The Bearcats had many more opportunities to score, but a few
turnovers and a missed layup contributed to their offensive malaise.
"They
zoned us again," McCollum said. "We got wide open shots from the start. They
weren't even close to contesting them. You miss a couple of shots and you get a
little gun shy and then all of a sudden we can't hit any. On top of that, when
you can't score, your energy depletes and that's kind of the story of the game.
They outplayed us."
When
Lincoln finally scored in the second half for a 37-30 lead, Northwest was in
danger of losing.
Lincoln
regained the hot touch it had in the first half and pushed its advantage to
48-37.
The
Bearcats lacked the offensive firepower to threaten Lincoln until the final 90
seconds when Northwest closed to 60-56 with 51 seconds left. The Blue Tigers
made enough free throws to prevent a miracle comeback by Northwest.
Amazingly,
Northwest had one last chance after a three-pointer by DeAngelo Hailey with 17
seconds left made it 68-65.
Lincoln
quickly turned the ball over, showing why it has won so few games. Northwest
had a chance to tie with 13 seconds left, but Hailey's three-point attempt was
blocked.
The
Blue Tigers got the ball back, was fouled and made two free throws to ice the
game.
"If
we played with as much energy the whole game as we did in the last minute and a
half, we will be fine," Sullivan said.
It
made sense that Lincoln was the first team out at halftime. The Blue Tigers
were anxious to continue playing after putting together perhaps their best
basketball of the season.
Lincoln
went into halftime ahead 35-26. The Blue Tigers made six three-pointers and led
most of the first half.
The
Bearcats held a slim 6-5 lead when Lincoln got hot and built an 18-12 advantage
that grew to 30-18.
Northwest
put together a spurt and closed to 30-25. Usually, that is the breaking point
for Lincoln. But in the first half, the Blue Tigers answered the challenge and
outscored Northwest 5-1 in the closing minutes.
The
one bright spot for Northwest was freshman guard Lyle Harris, who came off the
bench late in the second half and scored 10 points in 3 minutes, making all
four of his field goal attempts.
"He
played great," McCollum said. "He brings a different dynamic. He is a powerful
driver. Maybe that's what we needed."