|
Miami
Surges Past Wisc.-Green Bay
Hurricanes
shoot 53 percent from the floor
Box
Score
SEATTLE –
Robert Hite returned from crumpling to the floor with an injured
left leg midway through the first half to score all 17 of his points
over the final 21:45 as Miami ran away from Wisconsin-Green Bay
80-54 Tuesday night in the third-place game of the season-opening
Black Coaches Association Classic.
|
 |
|
Miami's
Anthony King reaches for a rebound in front of Wisconsin-Green
Bay's Aswan Minatee. |
|
|
Guillermo Diaz,
selected for the preseason all-Atlantic Coast Conference team, also
had 17 points for the Hurricanes on 3-for-5 shooting from three-point
range.
Miami (2-1)
expected to play in the championship game late Tuesday against host
Washington. But Air Force upset the Hurricanes, 57-53, in the semifinals
late Monday night.
Reserve Aswan
Minatee led Wisconsin-Green Bay with 16 points. The Phoenix (1-2)
return home after getting routed on consecutive nights of the tournament.
In the other semifinal Monday, Washington raced past them 87-54.
Miami showed
far more energy - especially defensively - Tuesday than it did in
Air Force's first-ever win over an Atlantic Coast Conference team
the previous night. The Hurricanes also shot better (53 percent,
after 42 percent Monday).
They never trailed,
jumping to a 14-3 lead 7:29 into the game. The remainder of the
half saw Miami three-pointers repel the Phoenix closing to within
five, six and then eight points. Hite, an honorable mention all-ACC
guard last season, turned Wisconsin-Green Bay back twice from long
range in the final 1:45 of the opening period. That gave Miami a
34-23 halftime lead.
The Hurricanes
then began the second half using a half-court, zone-trap defense
for the first time. That took the Phoenix out of their deliberate
offensive sets and created Hurricanes fast breaks the other way.
The result was
Miami rolling to a 51-26 five minutes into the second half. Hite
scored seven straight points during the span.
Only two of
the first 10 games in this three-day tournament were decided by
fewer than 10 points. The average margin of victory entering the
championship game was 18.5, with Washington heavily favored to increase
that figure over Air Force.
|