Weary Cougars look to close out

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Washington State knew it would have to rely on multiple contributors to beat Pittsburgh on Monday.

Charlie Enquist could feel it. Literally.

?I was really tired coming down the stretch,? said Enquist, a senior center who matched his season high by playing 27 minutes in WSU?s 67-66 win. ?And Coach was calling a few timeouts at the end to give me a breather.?

There?s no rest for the weary. Or for the winners. Enquist and the rest of the Cougars spent Tuesday morning on a flight to Pittsburgh, where they?ll face the Panthers in the second game of the College Basketball Invitational?s best-of-3 championship series.

WSU (19-16), which clinched its sixth consecutive winning season, can take home the CBI championship by beating Pitt . Pitt (20-17) must win to force a decisive third game, which would be played in Pittsburgh Friday.

Cougars coach Ken Bone said after Monday?s win that leading scorer Brock Motum again has only a ?slim chance? of playing in today?s game. Motum sprained his right ankle early in last week?s semifinal win over Oregon State, and watched from the sideline as the rest of his teammates held on to beat Pittsburgh on Monday.

D.J. Shelton blocked a layup attempt in the final seconds. Enquist started in Motum?s place and chipped in eight points. Abe Lodwick led with 16 points. Reggie Moore added 14. DaVonte Lacy scored 10.

The Panthers are notoriously tough at home, but hold a modest 13-7 record there this season.

The Cougars might be in trouble if they don?t guard better in the first half. Pitt made 7 of its 13 3-point attempts before halftime on Monday, buoyed by Tray Woodall?s 3-of-4 performance. He finished 4 of 6 and with 16 points.

?We didn?t expect him to shoot that way in the first half,? senior guard Marcus Capers said.

But after WSU shot 51.2 percent from the field without its star player, it was Pittsburgh vowing to be better in Game 2.

?We had good stretches,? Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said. ?But ultimately, our defense is what we need to improve on.?
 

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Pitt men get final chance to extend season





After traveling cross country and losing by one point, the Pitt basketball team will try to regroup Wednesday night at home for Game 2 of the best-of-three College Basketball Invitational finals.

Pitt (20-17) fell behind in the championship series by dropping a 67-66 decision at Washington State (19-16) late Monday night. The Panthers returned to Pittsburgh on Tuesday in anticipation of tonight's game that could end the Panthers' season ? or extend it to Friday night for a decisive Game 3.

"It's been a long trip, but we'll get home and get ready for it and hopefully play better," Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said after his team shot 33 percent from the field in the second half Monday. "We had good stretches, but ultimately our defense was the thing we have to improve on, and that's been our challenge all year."

Pitt led 8-2, fell behind 17-12 and then went on a 13-0 run to take a 25-17 lead in the first half. But the Panthers went cold in the second half, going seven minutes without a basket and trailed, 60-48, with eight minutes left. Despite a late flourish and two chances to win it in the final 3.5 seconds, the Panthers came up short against the Cougars.

"We need to guard better," Dixon said. "We need to defend better. Hopefully, we'll be better Wednesday. I do believe we will."

Tray Woodall led Pitt with 16 points and seven assists. J.J. Moore also scored 16 points.
 
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