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Georgetown at Savannah State

Georgetown at Savannah State

 
Georgetown dominates Savannah State behind balanced attack

SAVANNAH, Ga. -- Sophomore guard Jason Clark scored a career-high 14 points in Georgetown's easy win over Savannah State on Saturday. Hoyas coach John Thompson III called it "irrelevant."

That's because Thompson figures this is really just the beginning for Clark. If he's right, this could be a very successful season for the No. 19 Hoyas, who rolled to a 63-44 win.

"The number of points Jason scores is irrelevant," Thompson said. "He plays great defense and he's a very unselfish player. He's at the core of what we're doing this year. He's going to have a lot more than 14 as we go along."

Greg Monroe added 13 points for Georgetown (3-0). Austin Freeman had 12 and Chris Wright added 11 in a game that gave the Hoyas a much-needed breather after they squeaked past Temple 46-45 on Tuesday.

Darius Baugh scored 10 points to lead Savannah State (2-2), which hit only 13 of 48 field goal attempts.

The highlight for Savannah State came when the Tigers shocked the crowd and the Hoyas by jumping out to a 7-0 lead. That prompted Georgetown to call a timeout, and it was all Hoyas the rest of the way.

The first of Clark's four 3-pointers started a burst that quickly tied the game. A few minutes later, Wright scored seven consecutive points to help open a 10-point lead and the Hoyas led 34-20 at the half.

"That was a good timeout for us," Thompson said. "Chris had a very good stretch. We settled down after that."

The second half was more of the same. Monroe, a 6-foot-11 sophomore who was rookie of the year in the Big East last season, scored all seven points in a run that produced the game's biggest lead, 50-29, with 9:47 left to play.

Still, it was better than last season, when Georgetown hosted the Tigers at the Verizon Center and cruised to a 100-38 victory.

This is the time of year when major programs beef up on opponents that are willing but overmatched. Savannah State is happy to face the Hoyas because coach Horace Broadnax played for the 1984 Georgetown team that won the NCAA championship. That team was coached by John Thompson, father of the Hoyas' current coach.

"For us to come down here was for Horace as much as anything else," Thompson said. "He's Georgetown to us as much as Savannah State."

Savannah State was the joke of the college basketball world a few years ago, losing all 28 games in 2004-05. Broadnax came on board the following season.

The Tigers, with one of the smallest athletic budgets in the country, have shown steady improvement under Broadnax, compiling a 15-14 record last season.

"This program is going to grow," Broadnax said. "If we're going to compete with the Georgetowns of the world, then we've got to step it up."

Savannah State became a Division I program in 2002, playing as an independent with no conference affiliation.

Broadnax took over one of the country's worst programs, a school that went 9-102 from 2001-05 and once shot 1-for-23 in a half against Kansas.

This was a rare opportunity for Savannah State to host a Top 25 team at 6,000-seat Tiger Arena, which appeared about half full on an afternoon when many college football rivalry games were on TV. The announced attendance was 3,176.

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.
 
 
Jason Clark is one of four Hoyas in double figures with a career-high 14 points.  (AP)
Jason Clark is one of four Hoyas in double figures with a career-high 14 points. (AP)

 
Scoreboard
Georgetown #19 (3-0) «342963
Savannah State (2-2)202444
GTOWN:Jason Clark 14 Pts
GTOWN:Greg Monroe 7 Reb
GTOWN:Chris Wright 4 Ast
SAV:Darius Baugh 10 Pts
SAV:Rashad Hassan 4 Reb
SAV:Patrick Hardy 3 Ast
 
PLAYERS OF THE GAME
Savannah StateGeorgetown
SAV
Darius Baugh
GTOWN
Jason Clark
PtsRebsAstPtsRebsAst
10101462
Georgetown Hoyas
J. Clark, G375-90-062314
A. Freeman, G314-92-230112
C. Wright, G315-70-044111
G. Monroe, C246-101-472313
J. Vaughn, F222-60-25304
H. Thompson, F201-20-24312
N. Mescheriakov, G-F130-21-20121
V. Sanford, G111-20-02222
H. Sims, C112-20-02024
J. Benimon, FDid Not Play
R. Dougherty, GDid Not Play
S. Stepka, GDid Not Play
Totals 26-494-1233171563
 53.1%33.3% 
Savannah State Tigers
T. Rankins, G343-102-23009
R. Hassan, F290-64-44014
A. Louis, F291-71-24053
P. Hardy, G242-52-32336
D. Baugh, G194-80-010210
P. Blackmon, G202-53-30217
C. Smith, G191-32-41014
R. Mitchell, F110-10-02000
G. Izevbigie, C90-20-01020
D. Stowers, F30-00-00000
A. Anderson, G20-11-20001
D. Jones, G10-00-00000
M. Chawa, GDid Not Play
A. Jones, GDid Not Play
J. Shuler, G-FDid Not Play
M. St. Fort, FDid Not Play
Totals 13-4815-201851544
 27.1%75.0% 
Big East
TeamConf. W-LTot. W-L
Syracuse17-134-3
Marquette14-427-8
Notre Dame13-522-12
Georgetown12-624-9
Cincinnati12-626-11
South Florida12-622-14
Louisville10-830-10
West Virginia9-919-14
Seton Hall8-1021-13
Connecticut8-1020-14
Rutgers6-1214-18
St. Johns (N.Y.)6-1213-19
Pittsburgh5-1322-17
Villanova5-1313-19
Providence4-1415-17
DePaul3-1512-19

MEAC
TeamConf. W-LTot. W-L
Savannah St.14-221-12
Norfolk St.13-326-10
Delaware St.12-415-14
Bethune-Cookman11-518-17
N.C. Central10-616-15
Coppin St.9-714-16
N.C. A&T7-912-20
Hampton6-1012-21
Howard6-1010-21
Morgan St.6-109-20
Florida A&M6-1010-23
Md.-East. Shore4-127-23
S.C. State0-165-26
 
Other games
RIDER 63 Final
Kentucky 92
RADFRD 67 Final
DUKE 104
ETNST 56 Final
Louisville 69
Oklahoma 69 Final
VCU 82
PRESBY 48 Final
Illinois 94
Butler 64 Final
EVAN 60