By David BoyceMARYVILLE, Mo. - Something special is brewing inside Bearcat Arena.
Â
The season is still very early, but Northwest Missouri State men's basketball team looked in postseason form Tuesday evening when it knocked off No. 4 ranked Drury 60-47 to improve to 4-1.
Â
Sure, it is a bit of hyperbole to say the Bearcats, who have four new starters, are playing at that level.
Â
After the game, senior guard
Matt Wallace brought reason to the thought of the Bearcats are ready for postseason before playing a conference game.
Â
"No," Wallace said with a grin. "This is a big win, but we still have a long ways to go, a lot of improving to do."
Â
The manner in which Northwest pulled away in the second half against a high-quality team was cause to get giddy.
Â
Certainly, Northwest head coach
Ben McCollum will find some fault. He doesn't want this young to think they already belong in elite company.
Â
McCollum, though, will need a microscope to find the miscues. The Bearcats got after it on defense and shared the basketball on offense.
Â
The combination allowed Drury to only one lead in the second half at 38-37 and only 19 points. Northwest went right back in front 39-38 on an inside field goal by freshman forward
Brett Dougherty, who played like a beast in the paint. He came off the bench and finished with 13 points and six rebounds.
Â
"I think I am getting a little more comfortable," Dougherty said. "Previously, I wasn't finishing as well. I think I sped up sometimes because this is my first year. But tonight I finished a lot better. I feel like I am settling down a little bit."
Â
Freshman
Justin Pitts followed Dougherty's field goal with a basket, giving the Bearcats a three-point lead.
Â
The daggers came with 9:20 left when Pitts hit a three-pointer, making it 44-39. A minute later, sophomore
Zach Schneider hit a three-pointer, increasing the Bearcats lead to 47-39.
Â
The Panthers never threatened again after the enormous plays by two freshmen and a sophomore.
Â
The two seniors did their part. With just over 5 minutes left, Wallace stole the ball, raced down the court and made a layup. He was fouled on the play. He converted the free throw, putting Northwest up 52-41.
Â
"I think Matt's and-1 layup was kind of a turning point," Dougherty said. "We kind of kept rolling and finished it out."
Â
After a basket by Drury, Conzad nailed two free throws, putting Northwest back up by double digits for good. Cozad finished with nine points and Wallace added six.
Â
The scoring stars for Northwest was Pitts with 17 and Dougherty with 13. They both were 6-for-10 from the field.
Â
The first half was close throughout. The lead changed six times. The last one was by Northwest, which carried a narrow 31-28 lead into halftime.
Â
Drury scored the first basket of the game on a three-pointer. The Bearcats responded with a three-pointer by Schneider, and the stage was set for a classic battle between two well-coached teams.
Â
Northwest took its first lead on another three-pointer by Schneider, making it 6-5. The Panthers answered with their best run of the first half, building a 12-6 lead.
Â
The Bearcats quickly fought back and scored the next seven points for a 13-12 lead. Drury managed a couple of more leads until Northwest went ahead 22-21 and slowly expanded it to 28-23 late in the first half.
Â
Drury battled back and scored the next five points to tie the game at 28-28. The back-and-forth between the two teams made for an exciting 20 minutes of basketball.
Â
"Being young, well I'm not young, but the rest of the team is young," Wallace said. "If you face adversity early in the year and beat a good team and close out a game that is going to be big for us in postseason. It felt good to win."
Â