SAN DIEGO -- It was business as usual for Indiana and Kent State in the NCAA Tournament. The Hoosiers lost another first-round game and the Golden Flashes said it was no surprise.
Kent State played spoiler with a 77-73 victory over Indiana on Thursday,
sending the Hoosiers to their second straight first-round loss and fifth in
seven years on the same day Bob Knight went job hunting in Texas.
"Extremely disappointing to the point of being sickening," said Kirk
Haston, who led the Hoosiers with 29 points.
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| Coach Mike Davis has a rough day at the office as Indiana goes down early.(AP) | |
A year ago, Indiana was blown out by 20 points against Pepperdine in what
turned out to be Knight's final sideline appearance in a red sweater.
Knight was at Texas Tech on Thursday to interview for the head coaching job,
a position he held for 29 years in Bloomington before being fired in September
for violating Indiana's zero-tolerance behavior policy.
His replacement, Mike Davis, also is seeking job security. Indiana officials
have said they'll decide whether Davis stays after the season.
"I do want this job in the worst way," Davis said. "They said they were going to wait until the season is over. It's over, so we'll see next week."
The Hoosiers (21-13) clearly want the soft-spoken Davis back, but they
couldn't make a case for him by blowing a 12-point second-half lead and
committing 18 turnovers.
"I thought going into halftime (Indiana led 42-34) we had the game under
control," Davis said. "Down the stretch we didn't capitalize on a couple of
plays we should have."
Making its second tournament appearance in three years, Kent State got 24
points from Trevor Huffman, including 11 of its final 15.
"We had a serious mindset coming into this," Huffman said. "I don't think
too many guys on our team were surprised that we beat Indiana.
"We hope we can just keep this business-like attitude going into the next
game and the next game, as far as we go."
The Golden Flashes (24-9), who set a school record for victories, shot 47
percent against an Indiana defense that held opponents to 39.2 percent during
the regular season.
"I told my coach I thought I'd feel better about this after the game, but
it just feels like a regular win," said KSU forward Kyrem Massey, who added 15
points for the Mid-American Conference tournament champions.
Despite what his players said, Kent State coach Gary Waters called the
Flashes' win an upset.
"It was a Big Ten team," he said. "You have to understand players.
Sometimes they say things and they don't know what they're saying."
The Hoosiers' No. 4 seed was their highest since 1993.
The Flashes tied the game at 62 on a tipin by Rashaun Warren, who had three
of Kent State's five blocked shots. After Jared Jeffries made two free throws
for Indiana, Huffman scored to give Kent State its first lead of the second
half, 64-63, with 5:37 left.
Tom Coverdale fouled Warren and then, reminiscent of Knight, was called for
a technical when he complained. Huffman made 1-of-2 free throws on the tech as
Coverdale left the game with his fifth foul with 4:34 remaining. Warren missed
his first free throw to leave the Flashes ahead by two.
Davis said Coverdale hurt his hip diving for a ball in the first half.
"No excuse, but Coverdale is the only point guard we have. Once he went
down, I was just trying to buy time," Davis said. "We were panicking a bit
(without him). He's a big part of our offense."
Indiana took its last lead, 66-65, on a free throw by Haston before Huffman
took over. He scored five straight points as Kent State led 70-66 with 2:30
remaining.
Jeffries, the Big Ten freshman of the year, was called for traveling with
Indiana down by four. Andrew Mitchell and Huffman scored consecutive baskets to
give Kent State a 76-70 lead with 19 seconds left.
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