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Notre Dame at Georgetown

Hot-shooting Hibbert pushes Hoyas to blowout over Irish
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WASHINGTON -- Block. Steal. Fast break. Alley-oop. Dunk.

The sequence that gave Georgetown a 20-point lead in the first half against No. 17 Notre Dame was such a thrill that even mid-mannered Jeff Green puffed his chest and did a bit of a strut when it was done.

The Hoyas won their sixth straight by smothering the Fighting Irish from the opening whistle Saturday for a 66-48 victory.

Georgetown (11-3, 1-0 Big East) took an 18-2 lead in the opening minutes and never looked back, Roy Hibbert scored 18 points on 8-for-9 shooting, and the Hoyas held Notre Dame (13-2, 1-1) to 31 percent shooting.

The loss ended Notre Dame's 12-game winning streak, its longest since 1973-74. The Irish had been averaging 88 points, but they were held below 50 in a Big East game for the first time since joining the conference in 1995.

"Everything came together -- on offense and defense," Hibbert said. "It was our best game so far."

For the first 15 minutes, the Hoyas played like a team that deserved to be ranked in the Top 10 -- which they were, before losing at home to Old Dominion and Oregon in November. The transition game was working, the 3-pointers were falling, coach John Thompson III's Princeton offense was producing its usual share of backdoor layups, and the defense seemed to have a hand in the way of every pass or shot attempt.

The performance was epitomized by the sequence that began when Green leaped to block a 3-point attempt by Russell Carter. Carter got the ball back, but had it stolen by Jessie Sapp near the basket. Sapp then raced down court and fed Green for a fast-break, alley-oop dunk to make it 29-9.

Notre Dame called time out while Green was celebrating.

"I try to be a laid-back kind of guy," said Green, breaking into a smile. "But after that kind of play, you've got to let out some emotions."

Carter scored 12 points to lead the Irish, but he was only 5-for-15 from the field. Colin Falls shot 1-for-7 -- all 3-point attempts. Notre Dame, shooting 41 percent from 3-point range entering the game, was 4-of-22 behind the arc.

"They did a great job taking away Falls and Carter, and that's something that both of them have to understand," Notre Dame coach Mike Brey said. "They're not sneaking up on anybody."

Notre Dame, playing its first road game of the season after 11 at home and three on neutral courts, shot 1-for-10 with six turnovers over the first 8½ minutes, but the Irish tried to make a game of it by cutting a 20-point lead to 11 at halftime.

The Hoyas, however, erased any doubts of a comeback by going 5-for-6 from the field to open the second half, including two 3-pointers from Jonathan Wallace.

Then the game turned into the Hibbert show; the 7-foot-2 center had fans on their feet after scoring 10 points on inside moves in a 14-0 run that pushed the lead to 29.

"I'm glad we play them once," Brey said. "Their size really bothers you."

Georgetown shot better from the field (57 percent) and from 3-point range (50 percent) than it did from the free throw line (46 percent).

The Hoyas played their first game without role-playing forward Marc Egerson, who left school this week for personal reasons. Notre Dame played its third game without point guard Kyle McAlarney, who was suspended indefinitely after being arrested on a marijuana possession charge. Freshman Tory Jackson, making his third start, shot 2-for-8 and scored five points.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, who this week became the first female speaker of the House of Representatives, was treated to a standing ovation and received a "We Are Georgetown" T-shirt from the school's mascot during a second-half timeout. Pelosi received an honorary degree from the school in 2002.

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.
 
 
Roy Hibbert helps the Hoyas start strong against the Irish, pushing them to an 11-point halftime lead. (AP)
Roy Hibbert helps the Hoyas start strong against the Irish, pushing them to an 11-point halftime lead. (AP)

 
Scoreboard
Notre Dame #17 (13-2)252348
Georgetown (11-3) «363066
ND:R. Carter 12 Pts
ND:Z. Hillesland 7 Reb
ND:T. Jackson 3 Ast
GTOWN:R. Hibbert 18 Pts
GTOWN:J. Green 6 Reb
GTOWN:J. Wallace 6 Ast
 
PLAYERS OF THE GAME
GeorgetownNotre Dame
GTOWN
R. Hibbert
ND
R. Carter
PtsRebsAstPtsRebsAst
18601222
Notre Dame Fighting Irish
C. Falls, G351-70-01223
T. Jackson, G342-80-04335
R. Carter, G275-151-122212
R. Kurz, F250-46-65146
L. Zeller, F-C191-31-22023
Z. Hillesland, F223-51-27027
L. Harangody, F141-43-43045
J. Peoples, G112-40-01015
R. Ayers, G-F100-10-00000
J. Harden, G31-10-00002
K. McAlarney, GDid Not Play
T. Andree, FDid Not Play
K. Piller, GDid Not Play
Totals 16-5212-152581548
 30.8%80.0% 
Georgetown Hoyas
J. Wallace, G364-83-546113
J. Green, F306-110-063315
J. Sapp, G293-41-253310
R. Hibbert, C238-92-560318
D. Summers, F202-50-12205
J. Rivers, G150-20-02000
V. Macklin, F141-10-01022
T. Crawford, G-F131-20-02213
P. Ewing Jr., F120-10-02130
O. Spann, F40-00-00010
S. Dizdarevic, F30-10-00000
K. Izzo, F10-00-00000
J. Thornton, GDid Not Play
M. Egerson, FDid Not Play
Totals 25-446-1330171566
 56.8%46.2% 
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
 
Other games
VATECH 69 Final
DUKE 67
Georgia 51 Final
Florida 67
Ohio St 62 Final
Illinois 44
Wright St 42 Final
Butler 73
Alabama 61 Final
Arkansas 88
UCLA 66 Final
Oregon 68
UNLV 50 Final
AF 56
GATECH 74 Final
CLEM 75
St John's 46 Final
W Virg 73
Minn 45 Final
Wisc 68
Baylor 77 Final
Okla St 81
Ariz St 53 Final
Wash 64
K-State 65 Final
Tx A&M 69
UConn 49 Final
LSU 66
Arizona 73 Final
Wash St 77
Idaho 55 Final
Nevada 81