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WINSTON-SALEM,
N.C. - - Belmont Basketball had a Cinderella slipper fit and ready for
wear at the ‘Big Dance.’ But after riding a sizzling, three-point
bonanza to its second consecutive Atlantic Sun Championship, the Bruins’
clock struck midnight. Icy long range shooting and a talented, disciplined
foe spelled an 80-55 defeat at the hands of second-seeded Georgetown in
the first round of the 2007 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.
Belmont got off to an encouraging start, as sophomore point guard Henry
Harris (Nashville, Tenn.) flew in for a tip-in basket off a missed three-pointer
from sophomore Andy Wicke (Hendersonville, Tenn.) for the game’s
first points one minute in.
After two free throws from Georgetown’s 7-2 center Roy Hibbert,
the Bruins answered with two free throws from senior Andrew Preston (Winchester,
Ky.) and a gorgeous hesitation dribble drive basket in transition from
Harris for a 6-2 lead two and a half minutes in.
A backdoor slam from Dajuan Summers cut the lead in half, but a banked
three-pointer from sophomore Matthew Dotson (Centerville, Tenn.) extended
the Bruin edge to five, 9-4, with 16:26 in the half. Belmont, after playing
almost exclusively halfcourt man-to-man defense this season, threw a wrinkle
at the Big East Champion Hoyas with a variety of zone defenses.
Georgetown struggled early to find an offensive rhythm against the Bruin
defense, and after a bank shot from senior Boomer Herndon (Nashville,
Tenn.) dropped, Belmont had an 11-4 lead less than five minutes in. The
stout Belmont following, as well as the vast majority of Lawrence Joel
Veterans Memorial Coliseum fans were cheering on the Atlantic Sun Champions.
But the Hoya defense stiffened and Georgetown went on a systematic 11-0
run over the next five plus minutes to take the lead. Big East Player
of the Year Jeff Green scored eight of the points as Georgetown went ahead
15-11. A free throw from sophomore Will Peeples (Little Rock, Ark.) ended
the scoring drought, before Jessie Sapp and reserve Tyler Crawford knocked
down two straight three-pointers to give the Hoyas a 21-12 advantage.
Junior Justin Hare (Cleveland, Tenn.) got on the board moments later
with a triple off a nice feed from Preston, but three more Georgetown
treys – five straight Hoya baskets were from long distance at one
juncture late in the half - followed as the lead swelled to 12, 30-18.
Preston’s diligence down low did draw a second foul on Hibbert,
who had been controlling the paint. A baseline three-pointer from Harris
and consecutive putbacks from Dotson and sophomore Shane Dansby (Pegram,
Tenn.) sliced the margin to seven, 32-25, with 3:14 in the half. The Bruins
proceeded to have four possessions to cut further into the deficit, but
were unable to do so.
Georgetown scored the final six points of the half - a Summers three-point
play and a Jonathan Wallace three-pointer – to go to the locker
room up 13, 38-25.
Belmont had its chances in the opening 20 minutes – but 4-for-9
free throw shooting and a 21-10 rebounding hole inhibited the cause.
Preston opened the second half in fine fashion with a baseline reverse
past Hibbert to cut the margin to 11, 38-27. But the BU center picked
up his third foul moments later and was forced to the Belmont bench. Georgetown
proceeded to score the next eight points, four each from its two frontcourt
stars Hibbert and Green to push the score to 46-27, with 17:30 left.
Preston was reinserted, and he scored again on a nice post move, but
another Jessie Sapp three-pointer upped the Hoya lead to 20, 49-29, nearly
five minutes into the second half. Sapp – who was 2-for-27 from
three-point range in Georgetown’s previous seven games – found
his touch, making four of his six long range attempts.
Hibbert, whose immense size kept possessions alive and clogged the Belmont
lane, scored twice more in close to make it 53-30 with under 12 minutes
to go.
After torching the nets in the Atlantic Sun Championship to the tune
of 12 first half three-point field goals, BU was simply unable to order
an encore performance. Wicke, in particular, so integral to Belmont’s
success and the Atlantic Sun leader in three-point shooting at 46 percent,
had an usually rough shooting night. The gutsy sophomore missed his first
eight three-point attempts before sinking a long triple in front of the
Bruin bench to make the score 64-41 with just over four minutes remaining.
Hare followed with a left wing three-pointer and Preston added a lefty
hook to trim the margin to 20, 66-46, with 3:27 remaining. The Bruins
fought hard irrespective of the score, getting several second and third
shot opportunities. Belmont earned the respect of its opposition and the
knowledgeable basketball fans of North Carolina.
But the overall size and versatility of Georgetown was the difference.
Bruin fan favorite Andrew House (Nashville, Tenn.) scored in the final
minute as every active player on the two teams saw action.
Belmont shot 36 percent from the floor – including 6-for-26 from
three-point territory. Preston acquitted himself well in his final collegiate
game, scoring a team-high 14 points on 5-for-8 shooting. Hare added 10
points.
The Bruins also outrebounded Georgetown in the second half, 20-18.
Sapp scored a career-high 20 points for the Hoyas. Green scored 15, and
Hibbert chipped in 10 points and 13 rebounds.
Belmont finishes the season 23-10.
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