MILWAUKEE (AP) -The Georgia Tech players earned themselves some
extra credit the next time coach Paul Hewitt holds one of his little
free throw games.
Gani Lawal scored 14 points, Derrick Favors came within a rebound of
a double-double and the free throw-challenged Yellow Jackets scored
their last 13 points at the line Friday night to hold off
seventh-seeded Oklahoma State 64-59 in the first round of the NCAA
tournament.
The Yellow Jackets (23-12) didn't make a field goal the last 8:19 of
the game. But they finished 24 of 25 from the line - pretty good
numbers for a team that came in shooting less than 65 percent.
``We've had some tough nights this year, but we had a good night
tonight,'' Lawal said. ``When we're in the NCAA tournament, it's huge.
It's huge. We're practicing all the time. We want to keep playing.''
The 10th-seeded Yellow Jackets were the eighth double-digit seed to
win a game, and the third to do it Friday. They will now play the
winner of UC Santa Barbara-Ohio State on Sunday, and they have to like
their chances. With Friday's victory, Georgia Tech improved to 5-0 in
NCAA tournament games at the Bradley Center.
James Anderson and Oklahoma State (22-11), meanwhile, head home
knowing the timing couldn't have been worse for one of their poorest
games.
Anderson, the nation's third-leading scorer, was just 3 of 12 for 11
points, only the fifth time this season he's failed to score at least
15 points. Obi Muonelo, Oklahoma State's second-best scorer, wasn't any
better with 10 points on 4-of-11 shooting.
And the 3-pointers that have carried the Cowboys all season
disappeared. They were just 6 of 22 from long range, including 0 of 6
for Anderson, well below their 35 percent average.
``They were a much more physical team than I had seen on tape. Very
physical, very aggressive,'' coach Travis Ford said. ``They were able
to take us out of some of our offensive things being aggressive.''
Made the Cowboys cough up the ball, too. After just three turnovers
in the first half, Oklahoma State had eight in the second, including
one by Anderson with 20 seconds left.
``I tried to get to the basket and get a foul,'' he said. ``Obviously I didn't get it.''
That Georgia Tech put up a stingy defense is hardly a surprise. Neither was the play of Favors and Lawal. But free throws?
Hewitt has even come up with games to try and improve his teams
Shaq-like shooting. The current one requires players to make three in a
row before they get any credit.
``You'd have eight,'' Hewitt said, laughing, when asked how many his
team gets for Friday's performance. ``Our guys can make free throws, we
just don't happen to make them sometimes in the game.''
Brian Oliver's banked jumper with 8:19 left was Georgia Tech's last
basket of the game. Anderson tied the game at 54 with a steal and a
slam with 3:32 left, but the Yellow Jackets just kept knocking down
their free throws. Favors gave Georgia Tech the lead for good with two
of them with 2:27 left, and Iman Shumpert and Maurice Miller finished
it off, going 6 for 6.
``That was our last shot? All of them were free throws? I can't
believe that,'' Lawal said when told of the Yellow Jackets' field goal
drought. ``I'm just glad we got the W. We can win by 1 point, by half a
point, just as long as we keep winning.''
Keiton Page gave Oklahoma State a 34-27 lead - the largest of the
game - late in the first half when he stole the ball just past
halfcourt and sprinted toward the basket. The tiny guard - he's listed
at 5-foot-9 - looked as if he was considering dunking, but he settled
for the sure thing instead, laying it up.
But Favors, the ACC freshman of the year and a projected lottery
pick in this year's NBA draft, and Lawal made consecutive baskets to
spark a 12-5 run that spanned halftime and tied the game at 39.
After tying the game at 43 with a slam, Favors got the ball right
back for Georgia Tech. He swatted away a shot by Anderson, and Zachery
Peacock's layup gave the Yellow Jackets a 45-43 lead, their first since
13:20 was left in the first half. They never trailed again.