St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion

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Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #20 on: November 17, 2009, 11:22:02 PM »
I'm far from a member of the Norm Roberts fan club.  However, with these early season games,a win is a win.  Every school i've seen in action so far has not looked good at all. Put it in the win column and move on.   A gift maybe, but a win nonetheless.
  Plus its hard to judge anything via John Minko or sport-tracker.

Absolutely could not agree more...still early but we need to finish games stronger. I will take the W.

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #21 on: November 17, 2009, 11:24:23 PM »
I'm far from a member of the Norm Roberts fan club.  However, with these early season games,a win is a win.  Every school i've seen in action so far has not looked good at all. Put it in the win column and move on.   A gift maybe, but a win nonetheless.
  Plus its hard to judge anything via John Minko or sport-tracker.

Absolutely could not agree more...still early but we need to finish games stronger. I will take the W.

1 thing I disagreed with was putting Coker in at the end

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #22 on: November 17, 2009, 11:29:58 PM »
I'm far from a member of the Norm Roberts fan club.  However, with these early season games,a win is a win.  Every school i've seen in action so far has not looked good at all. Put it in the win column and move on.   A gift maybe, but a win nonetheless.
  Plus its hard to judge anything via John Minko or sport-tracker.

Absolutely could not agree more...still early but we need to finish games stronger. I will take the W.

1 thing I disagreed with was putting Coker in at the end

Nothing we did against Nicholson appeared to work tonight.
When you're a kid from New York and you do it in New York, that lasts forever!

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #23 on: November 18, 2009, 10:14:26 AM »
I'm far from a member of the Norm Roberts fan club.  However, with these early season games,a win is a win.  Every school i've seen in action so far has not looked good at all. Put it in the win column and move on.   A gift maybe, but a win nonetheless.
  Plus its hard to judge anything via John Minko or sport-tracker.

Absolutely could not agree more...still early but we need to finish games stronger. I will take the W.

1 thing I disagreed with was putting Coker in at the end

Burrell had just fouled out and he wanted to put a big body on him.

I can live with the decision. Coker just needs to be smart. This is a situation we can learn from that did not hurt us in the end.

Great Road win. Any road win is a great road win.

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #24 on: November 18, 2009, 10:18:46 AM »
Looking at the box score, this is what catches my eye the most. Stith only played 10 minutes, probably because he's coming off an ankle sprain. But 4 pts, 3  assists and 1 turnover seem good to me. If he stays healthy, we just might be pleasantly surprised. That goes for Omari too. They look like very solid 4 year players. Of course, this is only a snapshot but so far so good. we lose this game last year. Boothe deserves credit for clutch free throws at the end. A good road win.

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #25 on: November 18, 2009, 10:19:40 AM »
http://rocnow.com/article/college-sports/200991117040

Malik Boothe made two free throws with 6.2 seconds left, lifting St. John’s past St. Bonaventure 69-68 tonight in a non-conference men’s basketball game played before 4,181 at Blue Cross Arena.

It was the first Division I game in Rochester since West Virginia beat St. Bonaventure in 2005.

The Bonnies raced down the court following Booth’s free throws. Jonathan Hall fired a pass to Michael Davenport, whose NBA 3-pointer at the buzzer bounced off the back of the rim.

D.J. Kennedy led St. John’s (2-0) with 18 points, and Paris Horne added 15. Andrew Nicholson paced St. Bonaventure (1-1) with 26 points.

Nicholson scored nine of St. Bonaventure’s first 15 points, but the 6-foot-9 sophomore sensation sat on the bench the final 9:28 of the first half with two fouls.
The Bonnies held their own, however, and trailed just 36-34 at halftime.

Nicholson wowed the crowd with a one-handed jumper from about 10 feet to tie it at 44, but St. John’s scored the next seven points before Nicholson converted a three-point play.

The Bonnies stayed within striking distance, and when Nicholson banked in a shot on a hook from the right side with 5:00 left, the Red Storm’s lead was down to 65-60 and the Bonnies faithful roared their approval.

But St. Bonaventure quickly committed two turnovers, and a slam dunk from St. John’s forward Sean Evans gave the Red Storm a seven-point advantage with 3:18 left.

The Bonnies made their first 3-pointer of the night when Chris Matthews drilled a shot from the left corner with 3:06 remaining, cutting the lead to four. It was only their sixth 3-point attempt.

St. John’s turned the ball over, and Bonnies guard Jonathan Hall raced down the court on a breakaway, but the 6-5 senior misjudged his layup and his shot was blocked by the rim.

St. John’s worked the clock but couldn’t score, and the Bonnies took over with 1:10 left. Malcolm Eleby fed Nicholson inside, and the sweet-shooting sophomore canned a hook to cut it to 67-65 with 49.3 seconds left.

St. John’s again tried to drain the clock, but Eleby stole the ball and then was fouled hard by Justin Burrell with 16.4 seconds left. An intentional foul was called, and Eleby made only the first of two shots, cutting the deficit to one.

The Bonnies took possession, and Nicholson was fouled by Dele Coker. Nicholson made both free throws.

But then it was St. John’s turn. Boothe was fouled by Matthews and calmly sank the tying and winning free throws.
When you're a kid from New York and you do it in New York, that lasts forever!

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #26 on: November 18, 2009, 10:21:35 AM »
http://www.democratandchronicle.com/article/20091118/SPORTS09/911180344/1007/SPORTS/St.-John-s-holds-off-upstart-Bonnies

As the clock ticked down on St. John's University Tuesday night, Malik Boothe saw the foul lane part like the Red Sea.

"I'm just thinking, 'We need a basket, so make a play,'" the 5-foot-9 junior said.

Instead, he settled for two free throws with 6.1 seconds left and they proved to be the difference as the Red Storm slipped past St. Bonaventure 69-68 in a non-conference Division I basketball game before 4,181 fans at Blue Cross Arena.

Booth swished the tying and go-ahead free throws after a foul by Chris Matthews. The Bonnies raced down the court and sophomore Michael Davenport fired a 3-point attempt from 25 feet that clanked off the back of the rim.

"I thought it was going in," St. John's coach Norm Roberts said. "I'm glad it didn't."

D.J. Kennedy led St. John's (2-0) with 18 points and Paris Horne added 15. Super sophomore Andrew Nicholson paced the Bonnies (1-1) with 26 points on 11-for-15 shooting despite missing the final 9:28 of the first half with foul trouble.

"He's a terrific player," Roberts said of the 2008-09 Atlantic 10 Rookie of the Year, a 6-foot-9 forward who has the touch of a surgeon. "When he gets the ball he actually slows down. The key is to make sure he doesn't get it."

It was the first meeting between the teams since 1985, and the first Division I game in Rochester since West Virginia beat the Bonnies in 2005.

St. John's used full-court pressure to build an early 11-4 lead, but Nicholson scored nine of the Bonnies' first 15 points and guided the crowd favorite in front. St. John's, a rising power in the Big East, led 36-34 at the half.

Nicholson wowed the crowd twice early in the second half — first on a junior skyhook and then on a one-handed jumper from 10 feet. That tied the game at 44, but St. John's reeled off seven points.

The Bonnies stayed within striking distance and made their only 3-pointer of the night (in eight attempts) when Matthews drilled a shot from the left corner with 3:06 remaining, cutting the lead to four.

St. John's worked the clock but couldn't score, and the Bonnies took over with 1:10 left. Malcolm Eleby fed Nicholson, and his hook cut it to 67-65 with 49.3 seconds left.

St. John's again tried to drain the clock, but Eleby stole the ball and then was fouled hard by Justin Burrell with 16.4 seconds left. An intentional foul was called, and Eleby made only the first of two shots, cutting the deficit to one.

The Bonnies inbounded the ball, and St. John's reserve Dele Coker fouled Nicholson, who sank both free throws to put the Bonnies up 68-67 with 11 seconds left. St. John's took possession and Kennedy fed Boothe, who was fouled by Matthews as he tried to drive the lane.

"It came down to them making a play and us unable to keep Boothe in front of us," Bonnies coach Mark Schmidt said. "We showed we could go toe-to-toe with these guys, but not many people have second-place trophies on their mantle."

Schmidt said the pro-Bonnies crowd was "terrific," while Roberts said Blue Cross Arena felt Division I all the way.

"I was hoping it wouldn't be such a great atmosphere, but it was," he said.
When you're a kid from New York and you do it in New York, that lasts forever!


Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #28 on: November 18, 2009, 01:59:57 PM »
Funny thing about the Coker foul is that if he didn't foul at that point, it is likely they would have scored a bucket and been up by 2.  Them missing one of the free throws is what allowed us to win by 1 rather than possibly send the came into overtime.  You can't ever really predict how these things will play out but, in this case, I think Coker's foul was a benefit.
« Last Edit: November 18, 2009, 02:01:08 PM by simplyred »

Re: St Bonaventure Post Game Discussion
« Reply #29 on: November 18, 2009, 02:04:07 PM »
I don't question the move of putting Dele in when Justin fouled out. Originally I wanted both Evans and Brownlee but Dele is truly the best defender of the bunch and we needed a stop.

I do think Justin's early season foul trouble is alarming and hopefully its just bad luck and not a trend.
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