Buckley, Purdue cool off red-hot LSU
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| Team Stat Comparison |
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PURDUE |
LSU |
| Points |
80 |
56 |
| FG Made-Attempted |
27-52 (.519) |
20-60 (.333) |
| 3P Made-Attempted |
9-16 (.563) |
6-26 (.231) |
| FT Made-Attempted |
17-19 (.895) |
10-17 (.588) |
| Fouls (Tech/Flagrant) |
18 (0/0) |
13 (1/0) |
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- With the game tied at halftime, Gene
Keady dangled a prize in front of his Purdue players.
"It was like, 'You do want to play Texas, don't you?'" he
said.
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Dick Vitale: So far in this tournament a number of freshman have really stepped up and performed, the latest being Melvin Buckley of Purdue. Here is a guy who scored 20 points combined in the last six games coming into the tournament, then goes crazy in the second half against LSU. More |
The ninth-seeded Boilermakers answered their coach with an
inspired performance. They scored the first 13 points of the second
half to begin a 28-8 tear for an 80-56 victory over No. 8 seed LSU
on Friday in the first round of the South Regional.
The Boilermakers (19-10) meet No. 1 Texas, an 82-61 winner over
North Carolina Asheville, on Sunday. Keady was uncharacteristically
looking ahead at halftime.
"I don't know why I did that," Keady said. "It's not like
me."
Even Purdue's blunders looked brilliant coming out of the locker
room.
Nobody went up to catch
Willie Deane's alley-oop pass, but it
bounced off the glass and right into
Chris Booker's arms. Booker
hit a bank shot and the ensuing free throw, then freshman Melvin
Buckley drained two 3-pointers for a 48-34 lead.
The game was tied at 32 at halftime, but was one-sided after
that.
"We never really could make a play or two," said LSU coach
John Brady, who got his head coaching start a few miles away at
Samford. "It always seemed like the ball wasn't bouncing our way
or we couldn't get our hands on it."
Buckley finished with a career-high 20 points, matching his
combined total from the last six games and nine more than his
previous best. With LSU focused on stopping Booker and Deane,
Buckley went 5-of-6 from 3-point range and made all three in the
second half.
"He just knocked down 3s,'' LSU's
Ronald Dupree said. "We had
hands in his face. Their supporting cast played a great game, and
that was the main difference."
Buckley's teammates weren't surprised.
"He said he was going to come out today and do what he had to
do to get us through this game," said
Kenneth Lowe, who scored all
14 of his points in the first half despite a lingering shoulder
injury.
Deane finished with only 11 points, but did have the creative
assist.
LSU (21-11) opened the half with cold shooting (2-of-13) and hot
tempers. Brady was whistled for a technical foul with 11:59 left
after coming onto the court arguing that Purdue had committed a
10-second violation before calling a timeout.
It was probably LSU's liveliest moment of the half.
"We never really threw some solid punches back," Dupree said.
"We never countered them."
Deane hit both free throws after the technical, and a few
minutes later
David Teague's 3-pointer made it 58-40.
Behind Kentucky, LSU had been the Southeastern Conference's
hottest team with seven wins in its previous eight games, including
two in the league tournament.
But the Tigers went just 6-of-26 from 3-point range, and leading
scorer Dupree was largely a nonfactor with eight points.
"I'm pretty shocked," Dupree said of the loss. "We had
expected ourselves to do better."
Jaime Lloreda carried the Tigers with 21 points and 14 rebounds
but hit just 5-of-11 free throws.
Torris Bright finished with 10
points.
Purdue wasn't burdened with a slow start this time, needing just
seven minutes to match its 12 first-half points against Michigan
State in the Big Ten tournament.
Lowe opened with a 3-pointer and hit all three free throws after
being fouled on another attempt in the first 54 seconds.
The Big Ten's defensive player of the year had played only 14
minutes in the Boilermakers' last four games after dislocating the
shoulder Feb. 22.