Jermaine Marshall scored 25 points and Penn
State upset No. 4 Michigan 84-78 on Wednesday night for its first Big Ten
victory in more than a year.
The Nittany Lions (9-18, 1-14) had lost 18
straight regular-season conference games dating to last season, but they roared
back from a 15-point deficit with 10:39 left behind the energetic play of
Marshall. The junior guard scored 19 in the second half, including four 3s that
whipped Jordan Center fans into a frenzy.
D.J. Newbill added 17 points for Penn
State, which hit a season-high 10 3-pointers. Marshall's twisting drive to the
basket gave the Nittany Lions a three-point lead before Michigan's Glenn
Robinson III misfired on a 3 with 17 seconds left.
Sasa Borovnjak had a memorable Senior
Night, hitting two foul shots with 15 seconds left to seal the win. Moments
later, Penn State fans rushed the court in delight.
Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 19 points for the
Wolverines (23-5, 10-5).
It was Penn State's first win over a top 5
team since defeating No. 5 North Carolina 82-74 in the second round of the 2001
NCAA tournament.
Penn State also got its first conference
win since beating Iowa 69-64 on Feb. 16, 2012.
The loss is likely to hurt Michigan as it
jockeys for seeding in the NCAA tournament. The Wolverines squandered a chance
to pull into a second-place tie in the Big Ten with Michigan State and
Wisconsin.
Trey Burke had 18 points and six assists
for Michigan, but also committed six turnovers. The Wolverines had 15 turnovers
in the game, six more than their season average.
Still, two 3s by Hardaway during a 15-4 run
midway through the second half gave his team a 66-51 lead. But it was Penn
State that made clutch plays down the stretch.
Marshall led the way, while Ross Travis
provided the muscle up front with 15 points and 12 rebounds.
Penn State coach Patrick Chambers has been
saying all conference season long that his rebuilding team was "so
close" to getting a league win.
The Nittany Lions finally got one against
one of the toughest foes they'll face all year.
Two foul shots by Marshall gave Penn State
its first lead since the first half, 76-74, with 3:55 left. The Jordan Center
rocked as if it were a Michigan-Penn State football game across the street at
Beaver Stadium.
Burke hit two foul shots with 1:21 left to
get Michigan within one before Marshall's layup that teetered on the rim before
dropping in.
It was all Penn State from there.
Midway through the second half, Michigan
controlled the lane with dunks and cuts to the bucket. Long-range shooting gave
the Wolverines breathing room after Nik Stauskus (12 points, eight rebounds)
and Hardaway hit 3s on back-to-back possessions to help build the short-lived
15-point lead after Penn State had drawn within 49-45.
The first half was a sign of things to
come. After struggling from long range much of the year, Penn state went 5 of
10 from behind the arc and forced 10 turnovers to stay within 39-36 at
halftime.
All five of Michigan's losses have come on
the road in the Big Ten — none worse than Wednesday night's defeat. Michigan
finished February with a 3-4 record, heading into a showdown Sunday with No. 9
Michigan State.
No comments:
Post a Comment