NCSU @ Drexel

ajoytoy

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No Rest For Weary Wolfpack

By Tony Haynes

Raleigh, N.C. ? Many thought that NC State was facing the supreme basketball test when it tried to win for the fourth time in as many days when it faced North Carolina in the ACC Championship game on Sunday. The supreme test, in fact, may come Tuesday night when the Wolfpack hits the road for a first-round NIT game (8 p.m.) against Drexel.

While the Pack appreciates the opportunity to continue playing, the NIT selection committee didn?t do coach Sidney Lowe?s team any favors by asking it to play its fifth game in six days away from home.

Following Sunday?s title game at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, NC State?s cramped lockerroom looked more like a mash unit. On one side of the room, senior point guard Engin Atsur?s aching left hamstring was wrapped in ice. In another corner, center Ben McCauley wore an ice pack on one of his knees. Later, forward Brandon Costner, who played brilliantly for four days in Tampa, limped slowly down the hallway on the way to the bus.
The scene only re-enforced the notion that NC State (18-15) had put together one of the gutsiest, courageous runs in the 54-year history of the ACC Tournament. Through four emotional, draining and physical days of basketball, the Wolfpack somehow had enough left to cut a 16-point second half deficit down to one and push the top-seeded Tar Heels to the limit before finally falling short, 89-80.

?I?m so proud of our guys and the way we performed all weekend,? Lowe said. ?I told our guys that you can be hurt, but don?t be disappointed because there?s nothing to be disappointed about. These guys were absolutely amazing. What they did, I don?t think too many people thought they could do.?

Soon after NC State?s charter flight arrived back in Raleigh on Sunday evening, Lowe and his staff learned that their players would have just one night to sleep in their own beds before hitting the road again.

A No. 6 seed in the NIT?s East Regional, the Pack will be facing a well-rested Drexel team that received consideration for an at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament after posting a 23-8 record for coach Bruiser Flint.

Drexel may not be rated as high as North Carolina, but given the fact that the Dragons will be playing on their homecourt against an NC State team that will have virtually no time to rest and catch its breath, the challenge for the Wolfpack may be as great as or more so than it was on Sunday.

Playing in the Colonial Athletic Association, Drexel had won seven of eight games before losing in the league?s tournament semifinals to VCU, 56-53, a week ago.

The Dragons haven?t played a game since.

Drexel, which finished fourth in the final CAA standings, led the league in field goal percentage defense (39.9 percent), blocks (5.28 per game), steals (8.17) and ranked second in scoring defense (60.8).

Frank Elegar, a 6-9 junior, is Drexel?s leading scorer (15.8 ppg.) and No. 2 rebounder (6.7). The Dragons second leading scorer spent one year at NC State before transferring. Guard Dominick Mejia, who left the Wolfpack following the 2003-04 campaign, averages 11.9 points per game.

Tuesday?s match-up could pit strength against strength with Drexel?s tough to penetrate defense trying to slow down NC State?s efficient offensive sets, which were, at times, unstoppable during stretches of the ACC Tournament.

Costner, in particular, was effective in Tampa, setting a new school record by scoring 90 points in four games of the tournament.

?He had a great tournament, and this is a redshirt freshman,? Lowe said. ?He did it all. He played inside for us, he popped out and knocked down some shots, he rebounded and he played defense. Obviously, he?s a very important part of our team. He?s had a great year.?

As has been the case much of the year, the health of Atsur could again be an issue Tuesday night. Tweaking the hamstring that caused him to miss 12 games in Saturday?s semifinal game against Virginia Tech, Atsur admits that he was limited during the Carolina game.

?Obviously, I don?t feel great but I was just out there trying to compete and do whatever I could to slow the tempo down and be a leader out there,? Atsur said. ?Coach told me to just set up some shots for my teammates and that was what I was trying to do. I wasn?t in a position where I could just go out and score, so I was just trying to find my teammates.?

Atsur and his teammates earned a lot of respect and perhaps some new admirers during their inspiring performance in Tampa. Now, with only one day off between tournaments, a similar run through the NIT would be perhaps even more startling.

NC State in the NIT: This will mark the Wolfpack?s 10th appearance in the nation?s longest running postseason tournament. With a record of 13-11 overall, the Pack made its only appearance in the finals when it lost to Texas in 1978. NC State also advanced to the semifinals in New York in 2000 before falling to Wake Forest?.Costner?s father, Tony, played college basketball with Flint and Drexel assistant coach Geoff Arnold at St. Joseph's.

Playing:

Pack +5.5:shrug:
 

TouchdownJesus

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Everything tells me Drexel wins by DD.

State is playing a lot better, but they still are a very mediocre team. Mediocre and tired.

They beat VT on missed FT's. Of course, if UNC misses a few at all, they prob. are in the big dance.

Just think State is too tired, too drained, perfect spot for a letdown.

Drexel is well rested and perhaps has a chip on its shoulder.

I've been wrong plenty of times. I'm playing Drexel pretty big, and no way I'd play state tonight.
 

The Sponge

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how can they be tired. they are 18 and 19 year old kids. we use to play for five hours a night every freaking night with no subsitutions and no refs. when i turned 35 i was tired not 18
 

TouchdownJesus

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I agree with that statement, although I've seen teams get tired before.

Look at NBA...professional athetes. Its their JOB to stay in shape. After a few games back to back, they have tired legs.
 

Morris

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Sure teams get tired but they get hungry too. if they have something to prove they run in a different mode. The pros get tired sure but they live a different life style. The college atheletes have something to prove. they want to play their best whether it be in front of the the crowd or the pro scout.
 

TouchdownJesus

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True. But look at Syracuse last year, winning big east tourney and losing 1st round.

Plus, I really thought State would have a letdown after almost making big dance.

Drexel ran out to 10-1 lead and State came back from early deficits.

Nice job State, nice job everyone on State.
 

Morris

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True. But look at Syracuse last year, winning big east tourney and losing 1st round.

Plus, I really thought State would have a letdown after almost making big dance.

Drexel ran out to 10-1 lead and State came back from early deficits.

Nice job State, nice job everyone on State.

I agree with everything said. That's why it so hard to handicap the tired legs or letdown theory. You don't know what kind of motivation these teams are bring with them. I think deeper in the NIT tourny the teams are bring more.
 

ajoytoy

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Pack definitely did not pack it in (no pun intended) when Drexel came out of the gate so fast...I think the slower pace helped the Pack...if Drexel was a run a gun team like carolina, then they proabably would have won and covered with the "fatigue" of the number of games the Pack have played in less than a week...luckily for the Pack, they were able to work their way back into the game and they get rewarded by getting a game at home tomorrow night...it also helped that Marist beat Ok State or it would have been there...maybe the Pack can make a run again?:shrug:
 

ajoytoy

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Wolfpack claws past Dragons in NIT
Just two days after its four-day run to the ACC Tournament final, N.C. State rallies to defeat host Drexel in its NIT opener

Chip Alexander, Staff Writer
PHILADELPHIA - Sidney Lowe's first season as N.C. State's coach will be remembered for the Wolfpack's emotionally stirring run in the ACC Tournament that fell just short of a championship.
Then again, there was much to celebrate in the Pack's 63-56 win over Drexel on Tuesday night in the opening round of the National Invitation Tournament.

The Wolfpack (19-15) shook off an indifferent start that left it 11 points behind. State, seeded sixth in its NIT region, rallied again in the second half just when the third-seeded Dragons (23-9) seemed poised to make a winning late-game surge in the small, stuffy Daskalakis Athletic Center.

And why shouldn't the Pack wilt in the heat? Five games in six days -- plus travel -- will do that to team, won't it?

"Playing four games in a row wears on you, but we weren't going to make any excuses," State center Ben McCauley said after a 16-point, 12-rebound game. "We realized what we have in front of us: a great opportunity to come out and play in the NIT.

"This is a new season. A new tournament. It's a new beginning."

The Pack will face Marist (25-8) in the second round at 9:30 p.m. Friday. The site had not been determined Tuesday night.

Getting out of the first round, out of a claustrophobic 2,500-seat, on-campus arena teeming with energy, was impressive.

The Dragons believed they were slighted by the NCAA Tournament selection committee. Their intent was to make the Pack pay for what they felt was a snub.

"We knew they'd come out with a lot of energy," Lowe said. "I told our guys they were coming at us right away and they did. But our guys did a good job of keeping their composure.

"It's not a surprise to me. These kids have been unbelievable this year in their ability to focus in and execute down the stretch in big games and tough situations. They make big shots, big plays, make big stops."

The game was decided on big plays by the Pack and a few bricks by the Dragons at the foul line. Drexel center Frank Elegar, a quick leaper at 6 feet 9 and hard to handle down low, had a game-high 24 points but also missed eight of 12 free throws.

After a free throw by McCauley gave the Pack a 55-54 lead, Brandon Costner supplied perhaps the biggest basket of a hard-fought game, driving the right baseline to muscle in a shot and drawing a foul on Elegar. His three-point play pushed State ahead 58-54 with 1:10 remaining.

"We did a decent job on Brandon," Drexel coach Bruiser Flint said. "He only got nine points, but three were big ones."

A basket by Elegar made it 58-56. But Elegar missed the free throw and McCauley scored with 37.4 seconds remaining.

"If we make some foul shots, we win the game," Flint said.

The Dragons, hitting seven of their first nine shots, bolted to leads of 10-1 and 15-4. But the Pack slowed Drexel's offensive momentum with a 2-3 zone and clawed back to within 28-26 at the half.

Costner, an offensive force in the ACC Tournament with 90 points, was playing with a sore ankle he injured in Sunday's ACC title game against North Carolina. But the Pack got solid games from McCauley, Engin Atsur (18 points) Gavin Grant (10) and Courtney Fells (10) -- and that big shot from Costner.

There were interesting sub-plots. Drexel senior Dominick Mejia signed with NCSU but transferred after his freshman year. State's Grant and Elegar played high school ball at St. Raymond in the Bronx, N.Y.

Costner's father, Tony, was a college teammate of Flint.

But the biggest storyline this game was the Pack down the stretch -- again.

"At a five-minute timeout, we said, 'We've got a five-minute ball game and right now it's all mental,'" Lowe said. "It was 'Are you going to rebound, are you going to block out, are you going to execute?' We said for five minutes, let's focus in and let's play tough. And they went out and did that."

And the Pack still has basketball to play.
 
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