Georgetown looms again for WVU's Butler

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Da'Sean Butler doesn't like to look back at the occasion.

It is apropos, because had he looked over his shoulder last year and seen Patrick Ewing Jr. timing his leap, Butler might have scored at the buzzer and beaten Georgetown at the WVU Coliseum.

As it was, Ewing swatted Butler's layup as time expired and let the Hoyas escape with a 58-57 Big East Conference victory over West Virginia. The majority of the 14,048 in the stands erupted in disbelief thinking Ewing was guilty of goaltending. Coach Bob Huggins hounded official Ed Hightower.

"I honestly felt it was goaltending," Butler said that day. "I got it off in time and I thought it was coming down when he got the ball. I looked at the ref and thought he was going to call goaltending, but he said, 'No goaltending.'"

Nearly a year later, Butler is somewhat reluctant to relive that moment, but admits he sometimes thinks what might have been.

"Of course -- that's a layup," he said. "And now that you've brought it up, I'll probably have it in the back of my head when I'm driving to the basket."

Butler and the Mountaineers (13-4, 2-2) meet the 12th-ranked Hoyas (12-4, 3-2) for the second time since the block when they play at 7 p.m. Thursday (ESPN telecast) at the MCI Center.

Georgetown eliminated WVU in the Big East Conference tournament last season.

The Hoyas have won three in a row in the series and Alex Ruoff is the only player who has beaten Georgetown. He played one minute in a 69-56 victory in 2006.

"The last couple of times we've played, things didn't go too well," Butler said.

Nothing is more haunting, though, than the deciding play at home last year, which is one of the two games WVU hast lost under Huggins while leading by 10 points.

Once up 37-27, the Mountaineers led 54-49 with 2:16 remaining, but gave up two baskets on offensive rebounds and a 3-pointer by Jessie Sapp with 6.2 seconds to go.

On the inbound, Darris Nichols passed to Butler, who was alone in the left corner. He drove inside of Sapp to the basket while Ewing made several long strides to catch up with the play.

"If I could go back, I'm not going to lie to you, I'd probably lay it up again," Butler said. "I'd hurt my hand in the Marshall game (three days earlier) when I punched the (basket support).

"I couldn't really shoot the ball, so I probably would have laid it up. If I had two healthy hands, I would have definitely tried to dunk it."

Butler figures he's dunked five times in college, maybe 10, but most have been this season, which is no coincidence. He's made it a point to finish plays and understands the importance of points in the Big East, especially late in the game.

WVU lost games at the buzzer against Pitt and Georgetown and needed overtime to get by St. John's last year. Already this season, the Mountaineers squandered chances late against UConn and survived South Florida's late rally.

"We're happy just to be in that situation as good as these teams are," Huggins said. "We run some specials and have some things we run (late in the game). For instance, the UConn game, we had decent shots. We just didn't make them.

"You can run what you want to run. You have to finish the play."

It's doubly important for the Mountaineers, who are smaller than just about everyone they will play, but also struggle with 3-point shooting (33 percent, No. 10 in the 16-team Big East) and rely on scoring around the basket.

That responsibility generally goes to Butler, who averages 16.4 points per game, but didn't score in the final six minutes against the Bulls.

"On another team, I'd probably play the perimeter," the 6-foot-7 junior said. "On this team, I have to play down low. Sometimes straight-up doesn't work and you have to have a series of things you can do and ways to score. It doesn't matter how as long as you put the ball in the hole."

Butler is extremely confident in his ability to score and uses a number of go-to moves to create opportunities. He has favorites, but is aware few secrets remain about the way he prefers to play.

"I work on my bank shot a lot and I work on my spin move a lot," he said. "I have a bunch of other moves I like, like step-backs, but if I had to do something and get my feet set, I'd definitely be spinning to get my feet set and put the ball up.

"I like to go left and if they don't stop me, I'm going to keep going. If they do stop me or double-team me, I have other things I can do, but if they're going to leave Truck (Bryant) and Alex (Ruoff) open, be my guest. I'll kick it out to them."
 

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Hoya freshman making big mark in the middle


In the past two seasons, Georgetown has arguably graduated or otherwise lost as much talent as anyone in the Big East.

Jeff Green, the league's 2007 player of the year, was the fifth overall pick in that year's NBA draft.Roy Hibbert, a two-time first-team all-league center and second-team All-America, was a first-round draft choice last summer.

Jonathan Wallace, the school's all-time leader in 3-point field goals, was second-team All-Big East last winter.

And Patrick Ewing Jr., the conference's sixth man of the year in 2008, went in the second round of the NBA draft.

Yet the Hoya team that plays host to West Virginia Thursday night at the Verizon Center in Washington hasn't missed a beat. Georgetown is 12-4, owns wins over No. 3 Connecticut and No. 8 Syracuse and is ranked No. 12 this week.

Replacing so many great players? Hey, it's no big deal.

"I don't think it was an issue at all. I say this every year, but each team is unique and you start anew, even if you have a lot of guys coming back,'' said John Thompson III, Georgetown's fifth-year coach. "Just one person added to or taken away from the mix makes the chemistry totally different, just as it does if you have many pieces added or taken away. We just start all over again.''

It helps, of course, to recruit players just as talented as those lost. And in the case of Greg Monroe, Thompson may have even one-upped the previous talent.

Monroe is a 6-foot-11, 255-pound freshman from New Orleans who plays unlike either a freshman or a big man. Through Georgetown's first 16 games, he is averaging 13.2 points and 6.3 rebounds, but also leads the Hoyas in steals and blocked shots and is second on the team in assists.

Perhaps even more significantly, Monroe seems to have raised his game a notch since the start of Big East play. In Georgetown's five league games so far, both his scoring (15.0) and rebounding (7.8) averages are up, he's averaging 4.6 assists and is tied with teammate Jessie Sapp for second in the Big East in steals (2.2 per game).

"Greg has clearly played an important role for us,'' Thompson said. "He's picked up and adjusted and adapted and understands what we're trying to accomplish. He's done it very fast. And now we're getting to the point where some of our other freshmen are getting to the same level in terms of their understanding.

"Just walking in the door, his feel for the game and his intelligence and his willingness have made the transition from high school to college easier for him. It's a difficult jump for everyone, but it's been easier for him.''

Monroe isn't alone, of course. DaJuan Summers, a 6-8 junior, averages 15.5 points and is shooting 45 percent from 3-point range, 6-4 sophomore guard Austin Freeman averages 13.4 points and 6-1 sophomore point guard Chris Wright averages 12 points and is among the Big East leaders in assist-to-turnover ratio.

Still, Georgetown has hit some bumps in the road, having lost three of its last five games. But in a league where everyone has the same sort of nightmarish scheduling stretches, the Hoyas have had it harder than most. Five of Georgetown's last six games have come against Connecticut, Pitt, Notre Dame, Syracuse and Duke.

The Hoyas shot better than 50 percent from the floor at Duke Saturday, yet still lost 76-67, in part because Monroe spent much of the afternoon in foul trouble.

Thompson, though, isn't worrying about wins and losses right now because, like all his colleagues in the Big East, that will drive one crazy.

"In this league this year, after key wins you can't get too excited, and after disappointing losses you can't feel too down and think the sky is caving in,'' Thompson said. "I think the team that remains the most even-keeled, the team that just focuses on improving and trying to get better [has the best chance of success]. And that's what we're trying to do - focusing on improving and trying to get better without getting too excited if we have a win or getting too down if they've lost. Everyone's going to see both.''
 

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Big East Basketball 2009

It?s starting to hit home. I?m talking about the brutal nature of the Big East Conference basketball schedule.

Did you know the Mountaineers won?t play an unranked conference opponent on the road until February 22nd at Rutgers? That?s more than a month from now. Beginning with its Big East road opener at Seton Hall on January 3rd, the Mountaineers? league road schedule is a head-scratching combination of trips to Marquette, Georgetown, Louisville, Syracuse, and Pitt.

Thank you very much, may I have another?

There is no time for self pity or sympathy, because there?s just no one who?s going to feel sorry for you. Just how tough and respected is this league? Consider the fact that Georgetown has lost three of its last five games and is currently ranked 12th, and don?t forget that Notre Dame is rated 19th with five losses.

Forget about the old adage that teams are going to beat each other up. In the Big East, teams punish other teams physically and mentally. Sometimes they even bring their older brother on the floor to help. It?s rough man.

Thursday?s date with Georgetown will be the only regular season encounter for the Mountaineers. The teams played twice last season - a controversial non-goaltending call in Morgantown and then later in the semifinals of the Big East tournament. Roy Hibbert is gone, but a new star has taken over at center in 6-foot-11-inch freshman Greg Monroe, who is much more skilled than Hibbert. Like all freshmen, Monroe?s productivity fluctuates, but junior DaJuan Summers is rock solid.

Summers has led the Hoyas in scoring in four of the last six games. He scored a team-high 21 points at Duke on Saturday. Summers is the only junior on the Hoyas roster, and Jesse Sapp is the only senior who plays. Georgetown is actually a young team with five sophomores and three freshmen. The future is very bright for Georgetown basketball.

So what?s it going to take for a Mountaineer victory? Well, the only loss Georgetown has suffered at home came against Pitt. The Panthers held the Hoyas to 54 points, their only sub-60 point outing of the season. The Panthers crushed Georgetown on the glass by an amazing 25 rebounds on their way to a 70-54 victory.

In four Big East games, West Virginia is holding teams to 65 points per game. They?ll need a similar type of effort against Georgetown, but must do a better job on the glass where they?re currently getting outrebounded by three boards per game.

As Jim Boeheim explained following his team?s loss at Pitt on Monday, "In this league you have to have tremendous effort every night, you have to stay out of foul trouble and you have to hit your free throws. And if you do all of that - you're in the game - you aren't winning the game, but you're in it."

No margin for error and no sympathy for the sad. It?s Big East basketball 2009.
 

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Georgetown Basketball: Pre-Game Report



Preview

After five games against Top 25 programs, the schedule takes a step back...but only a slight one. A game versus West Virginia counts just the same as a game versus Syracuse, and it may be just as challenging.

For while Pitt and UConn and five other Big East grab national headlines, some fans might be surprised to see the #1 defensive team in the Big East on Thursday, and it's not Georgetown. West Virginia leads the conference in fewest points allowed, in three point shooting defense, and in offensive rebounds. It's a young team, but one which can give Georgetown trouble.

Bob Huggins' latest team in Morgantown is a youth oriented one. Freshman Darryl Bryant won the starting job from Joe Mazzulla but his shooting (38.8%) has struggled in conference play. Bryant was 0-6 against South Florida but is second on the team in three point shooting at 39.6%. While Bryant is not counted on for threes, 6-6 Alex Ruoff is. Averaging a team high 16.5 ppg, half of Ruoff's field goals come from three point range, but he is shooting only 33% in his last three games. A career 80% free throw shooter, he has scored in double figures in all but one game this season, and is a vital ingredient for a WVU upset Thursday.

WVU's front line is all about DaSean Butler, one of the Big East's more underrated players. Butler scored 27 in the South Florida game, is the team's best shooter at 46 percent, a solid free throw shooter, and capable rebounder. Butler scored 16 against the Hoyas in the Big East tournament game last season and 12 in the road game at Morgantown, and he can be a handful in WVU's offensive sets. Freshman Devin Ebanks (7.7 ppg, 6.3 rpg) and junior Wellington Smith (6.2 ppg, 4.0 rpg) provide options up front, but may not be as strong inside as some of Georgetown's more recent opponents.

West Virginia's biggest issue right now is scoring. Outside of Butler and Ruoff, the Mountaineers have been inconsistent--in the USF game, Butler and Ruoff were a combined 14-30, the rest of the team 6-22. As a team, the Mountaineers are shooting 34% over its last three games and have struggled in the second half. Starting just one player taller than 6-7, WVU will have to step up its defensive intensity on Dejuan Summers and Greg Monroe without opening up the middle for dribble drives by Georgetown's guards.

Some keys to the game:

1. Rebounds: WVU is the #1 team in the conference in offensive rebounds, but last in defensive rebounds. Georgetown must make both a priority, especially in eliminating WVU's second chance opportunities.

2. The Two Guard: The days of Jessie Sapp as a starter may be numbered without a big turnaround from one of the more visible slumps by a GU guard since Anthony Perry. John Thompson III needs Sapp defensively, but his 22% shooting (3-14 from two point range) and 5.0 per game average in Big East play won't cut it much longer. One hopeful note: Sapp averaged 14.0 ppg in two games versus WVU last season.

3. Austin Freeman: Freeman has been playing some of his best basketball of the season in the last two weeks. Look for him to test the three point waters for the Hoyas and help get Georgetown up early.

For WVU to win, Butler has a big game and successfully sends Summers to the bench in foul trouble, while Ruoff scores 18 or more and Georgetown has five or fewer threes. Georgetown's keys lie in a better guard effort, keeping Greg Monroe active in sets down low, and to open up the Mountaineer defense with timely outside shooting.
 
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