Play 23 different addictive eWoss Games. It's FREE! Win money!
eWoss Sports
Home|News|Sports|Games
   
Home|NFL|MLB|NBA|NHL|College FB|College BK|Auto Racing
July 4, 2008 - 3:32 PM

Blue Devils

Duke Home
Duke Schedule
Duke Statistics

College Hoops
NCAA Basketball Home
Scores & Schedules
Division I Leaders
AP Top 25
Coach's Poll
Teams

Conferences
ACC Scores
America East Scores
Atlantic 10 Scores
Atlantic Sun Scores
Big 12 Scores
Big East Scores
Big Sky Scores
Big Ten Scores
Big West Scores
Colonial Athletic Scores
Conference USA Scores
Horizon Scores
Independents Scores
Ivy League Scores
MAC Scores
Metro Atlantic Scores
Mid-Continent Scores
Mid-Eastern Scores
Missouri Valley Scores
Mountain West Scores
Northeast Scores
Ohio Valley Scores
Pac 10 Scores
Patriot League Scores
SEC Scores
Southern Scores
Southland Scores
Southwestern Ath. Scores
Sun Belt Scores
WAC Scores
West Coast Scores

eWoss Sports
eWoss Sports Home
NFL
NBA
NCAA Football
College Hoops
Womens College Hoops
NHL
MLB
Auto Racing

eWoss News
Breaking News Headlines
Top News Stories
U.S. National News
World News
Sports News
Business News
Entertainment News
Tech Industry News
Political News
Science News
Health News
Weird News

NCAA Basketball Post-Game Coverage

West Virginia 73, No. 9 Duke 67

3/22/2008 3:09 PM
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Sports Writer
Sponsored Listings
Duke Basketball - Browse a huge selection now. Find exactly what you want today.
www.ebay.com
duke bbasketball items - Compare Prices And Find duke bbasketball items At Low Prices.
shopping.yahoo.com

WASHINGTON (AP) - For Duke, there was no escaping this: Coach Bob Huggins has West Virginia playing tough man-to-man defense and hustling after every rebound.

Joe Alexander had 22 points and 11 rebounds, and No. 7-seeded West Virginia reached the NCAA tournament's round of 16 in Huggins' first season at his alma mater by beating second-seeded Duke 73-67 in the West Regional on Saturday.

West Virginia (26-10) limited Duke to 38 percent shooting and held a 47-27 edge on the boards. The Mountaineers also got 17 points from Alex Ruoff, and 13 points and 11 rebounds from reserve guard Joe Mazzulla, and advanced to face No. 3 Xavier or No. 6 Purdue in Phoenix on Thursday.

It represents quite a quick comeback for Huggins, who was out of work two years ago.

He got fired at Cincinnati - a school he led to the 1992 Final Four - after a drunken driving arrest, then sat out a season before surfacing at Kansas State in 2007. He took that team to the NIT, losing in the second round.

Now he's back home in West Virginia, at the school he played for, and back among basketball's elite.

His Duke counterpart, Mike Krzyzewski, is heading in the opposite direction.

Every year from 1997 through 2006, Duke was a participant in the round of 16. Every single year. It's a stretch that featured three trips to the Final Four and the 2001 national championship. But now Krzyzewski's team is on a two-year drought, having bowed out in the first round in 2007.

After eking out a one-point victory over No. 15-seed Belmont in the first round, three-time national champion Duke (28-6) looked much better en route to a 34-29 halftime lead against West Virginia.

And the Blue Devils went up 37-29 early in the second half.

Then things changed completely.

After missing all six 3-pointers it took in the first half, West Virginia made its first three in the second, part of an 18-3 run that put the Mountaineers in front.

When Alexander made a layup off the glass while getting fouled and then completed the three-point play with 14:38 left in the game, he put West Virginia ahead 40-38, its first lead since 4-3.

Mazzulla's drive down the lane made it 47-40 with under 12 minutes left, capping that big spurt. Duke called timeout, and Mazzulla screamed and pounded his chest, first with one fist, then the other.

At the other end, the Blue Devils simply could not seem to make a shot. At one point, point guard Greg Paulus was 2-for-7 on 3s - and his teammates were a combined 0-for-11. There were stretches of the second half when Duke's offense pretty much amounted to going down court, calling out a play, then hoisting an off-the-mark jumper.

Heck, even free throws began bedeviling the Blue Devils, who went 12-for-20 at the line in the second half after a 12-for-12 first half.

Everyone got in on the act for the Mountaineers, meanwhile, with Huggins glowering and stomping and yelling all the while.

Cam Thoroughman, a 6-foot-7 freshman who had 16 rebounds all season, grabbed two consecutive boards to keep one possession alive, then eventually made a layup for a 62-51 lead with 3 1/2 minutes left. Duke finally made some desperation shots down the stretch, but the outcome was decided.

Huggins was his usual loud presence on the sideline. He drew a technical foul during a 14-0 run by Duke in the first half, arguing about a call against one of his players.

Later in the game, he kept working the officials.

After West Virginia's Wellington Smith was called for his fourth personal with 11 minutes still to go, Huggins turned to one of the men in stripes and said sarcastically of Duke's defenders, ``They don't foul. They don't foul. I know that.''


   

Using eWoss | Terms | About Us | Privacy Policy
© 2008 eWoss.com. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.
STATS LLC © 2008 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution of the Licensed Materials without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.
© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.