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Penn State at Illinois

 

Penn State at Illinois

 
38-33?!? Penn State rallies to upend No. 18 Illinois in brickfest

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- As the Assembly Hall emptied out, one hoarse fan shouted he wanted his money back.

Penn State coach Ed DeChellis seemed to understand, saying the game between his Nittany Lions and 18th-ranked Illinois might have set basketball back a few years to the days of founder James Naismith.

Come to think of it, "Naismith probably rolled over several times," DeChellis said after Penn State's 38-33 victory against No. 18 Illinois on Wednesday night.

Naismith might have liked the score, which looked like something from a long-gone, pre-shot clock era.

But the game?

Probably not.

The teams' combined 71 points was the lowest total in Division I men's basketball since Monmouth beat Princeton 41-21 in 2005.

The Nittany Lions (19-8, 8-6 Big Ten) made 28 percent of their shots (13 of 46). During one 20-minute stretch, Penn State was 3-for-26.

The Illini (21-6, 9-5) were no better, shooting 30 percent (15-for-50) and committing 15 turnovers.

"I think we thought we'd get it going and it never got going," Illinois guard Trent Meacham said. "We couldn't finish anything. It was just a long night, from beginning to end."

The end for Illinois came in the game's final 16 seconds, when Talor Battle made four free throws to seal the victory.

Minutes earlier, it appeared the Illini would get the victory.

Illinois used a 13-4 run that spanned 11 minutes around halftime to take a 19-17 lead about three minutes into the second half. The run was fueled, as much as anything, by Penn State's eight turnovers during that stretch.

The Illini then opened the gap to 29-20 with a little more than 10 minutes left on back-to-back 3-pointers by Meacham and sophomore Demetri McCamey.

Both brought an orange-clad crowd starved for points to their feet. Illinois was only 3-for-16 from 3-point range. But just as quickly as the Illini found their shooting touch, they lost it and their edge.

Illinois made one of its next six shots and turned the ball over three times in six minutes.

As a result, the Nittany Lions clawed back, taking the lead for good at 32-31 on a layup by Stanley Pringle with a little more than four minutes left.

"There weren't many clean looks. It was a great effort by us and we gave ourselves a chance," DeChellis said. "We haven't been scoring well so I told our kids to keep defending. I'm proud of our guys."

Penn State closed with a 14-2 run.

Battle, the game's leading scorer with 11 and the only player the score in double figures Wednesday, had six points during the run.

Chester Frazier and Meacham had seven points each to lead Illinois, which did not shoot any free throws -- the first time a team didn't have an attempt in a game at the 46-year-old Assembly Hall.

Illinois coach Bruce Weber blamed his team's failure to find inside shots.

"You can't settle for jump shots and have to make them guard you," he said. "I didn't think we're going to get a lot of free throws because we're a jump shooting team."

Aside from Illinois' free-throw drought, the list of lows was long.

Neither team scored until Illinois forward Mike Davis' jumper more than four minutes into the game.

About 10 minutes in, both teams were still in single digits while shooting a combined 5-for-26 from the field. Shots fell short, sailed long and found enough rim to roll and bounce harmlessly -- and frustratingly -- away.

Illinois' point total was its lowest since a 33-31 loss to Minnesota in 1947.

"I told the other coaches the other day I wasn't sure how well we would play," Weber said. "But I could have never anticipated this."

The victory was Penn State's third straight at the Assembly Hall, and kept the Nittany Lions in the chase for an NCAA tournament bid.

"No one is in the NCAA tournament yet," DeChellis said. "We have four games left to do something. We're all fighting for our lives."

Copyright 2012 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 
Illinois guard Trent Meacham and Penn State's Andrew Jones can't do anything right near the basket.  (AP)
Illinois guard Trent Meacham and Penn State's Andrew Jones can't do anything right near the basket. (AP)

 
Scoreboard
Penn State (19-8) «172138
Illinois #18 (21-6)151833
PSU:Talor Battle 11 Pts
PSU:Andrew Jones III 8 Reb
PSU:Jamelle Cornley 2 Ast
IL:C. Frazier 7 Pts
IL:M. Tisdale 10 Reb
IL:C. Frazier 4 Ast
 
PLAYERS OF THE GAME
IllinoisPenn State
IL
C. Frazier
PSU
T. Battle
PtsRebsAstPtsRebsAst
7541141
Penn State Nittany Lions
T. Battle, G403-114-441011
J. Cornley, F362-81-27215
A. Jones III, F282-53-38027
S. Pringle, G271-90-02112
D. Jackson, F120-10-02000
C. Babb, G202-51-21207
A. Ott, F122-30-04024
D. Morrissey, G110-20-00010
C. Woodyard, G81-10-01002
J. Brooks, F60-10-01010
J. Suotamo, FDid Not Play
W. Leiner, GDid Not Play
A. Highberger, GDid Not Play
S. Kirkpatrick, FDid Not Play
B. Oliver, FDid Not Play
Totals 13-469-11306838
 28.3%81.8% 
Illinois Fighting Illini
M. Davis, F382-60-09244
C. Frazier, G373-70-05417
T. Meacham, G353-70-00117
M. Tisdale, C343-90-010016
D. McCamey, G272-110-00235
C. Brock, G120-30-03000
J. Jordan, G71-20-00102
D. Keller, F71-20-01032
A. Legion, G30-30-00000
C. Jackson, FDid Not Play
R. Semrau, CDid Not Play
B. Cole, FDid Not Play
B. Chisholm, UDid Not Play
S. Simpson, CDid Not Play
Totals 15-500-028101333
 30.0%0.0% 
Big Ten
TeamConf. W-LTot. W-L
Ohio St.9-321-4
Michigan St.9-320-5
Wisconsin8-419-6
Michigan8-418-7
Indiana7-619-6
Illinois5-616-8
Northwestern5-615-8
Purdue5-615-9
Minnesota5-717-8
Iowa5-713-12
Nebraska3-1011-13
Penn St.3-1011-15
 
Other games
PROV 76 Final
LVILLE 94
GATECH 69 Final
WAKE 87
SMU 47 Final
MEMPHIS 90
IOWAST 55 Final
KANSAS 72
NCST 80 Final
UNC 89
BUTLER 60 Final
MILW 63
LSU 72 Final
ARK 69