One hundred points. The Maroons had not scored that many points in a game since January 19, 2007 and, in Fridayโs game at Carnegie, it looked like that drought was going to continue.
That is, until fourth-year forward Tom Williams stepped up to the foul line for two shots.
With 34 seconds left in the UAA contest, and the Maroons (9โ5, 2โ1 UAA) overwhelming the Tartans (6โ8, 1โ2) 98โ53, he sunk the first to put the Maroons within one point of 100. Then it was time for the second.[img id=โ91547โณ align=โleftโ/]
โAll I heard was that people were going to be [angry] if Tom Williams missed one of those free throws and left us at 99,โ Maroonsโ head coach Mike McGrath said with a laugh.
Fortunately for Williams, the ball landed in the bottom of the net, and the Maroons secured a triple-digit point total, winning the critical conference clash by a score of 100โ55.
Chicago did not leave its efforts behind in Pittsburgh, however, as they routed Case 85โ66 in Sundayโs match at Cleveland. With a two-game winning streak, Chicago looks to edge out NYU (12โ1, 2โ1) on Friday and Brandeis (8โ6, 2โ1) on Sunday.
Although UAA games are typically fights to the finish, Fridayโs game at Carnegie was anything but that.
The Tartans got off to a 4โ2 lead, but that was the last lead they would see. By shooting 48.7 percent from the field in the first half, the Maroons gained a 53โ22 advantage at halftime.
By that time, McGrath was almost ready to call a victory but knew there was still a possibility for a surprise.
โIt didnโt take long to realize that [the Tartans] werenโt having their best day,โ McGrath said. โI felt like, at halftime, because of the way that Carnegie plays, if we didnโt keep an eye on the ball a little bitโฆit could zip back into a competitive game. I wasnโt sure that that was going to happen, but it definitely couldโve moved that way.โ
Fortunately McGrathโs fears did not become a reality. The Tartans shot just 37.5 percent from the field in the final 20 minutes, while the Maroons shot 51.7 percent. On top of that, Chicago was 6โ14 from behind the arc compared to Carnegieโs 1โ8.
Three Maroons had double-digit scoring performancesโHughes (18), fourth-year guard Matt Johnson (18) and fourth-year forward Steve Stefanou (15).
McGrath said that while putting up 100 points is crowd-pleasing, in the larger scheme of things, there is nothing to read between the lines about the performance.
โItโs like a rainstorm in the middle of the desert. Thereโs no explanation for it,โ Johnson said with a laugh. โItโs such an anomaly in terms of the way the game was that itโs hard to put a finger on what anything means or the significance of everything.โ
McGrath told the Maroon last week that his team needed a quick change in mentality for Sundayโs game at Case, given that Case has a height advantage on Chicago, while Carnegie is a smaller, more mobile team. But with Fridayโs rout in Pittsburgh, the shift in focus was not as difficult as anticipated.
โBecause the game on Friday was just so oddโฆwe didnโt have to make as big of an adjustment as I thought we might,โ McGrath said.
Just like their game at Carnegie, the Maroons got off to a strong start. Their efforts early on amounted to a 15โ5 lead with almost seven minutes being played.
But it was not just one person that allowed for the increasing lead. In the first half, the Maroons scored 26 points off the bench and 10 second-chance points.
It looked like things were going to get worse for the Spartans when Chicago second-year guard Derrick Davis scored a 3-pointer from three-quarters the length of the court to end the half. Case got a break though, as the referees ruled the shot left Davisโs hands after the buzzer. Still, at the halfโs end, Chicago led 42โ28.
While Chicago sustained its lead in the second half, Case closed within 10 points with a 3-pointer by forward Dane McLaughlin. The trey tightened the game at 61โ51.
After the basket, the Spartans called a timeout.
โI think at that point, I said, โHey, we just won by 45 [points] on Friday, weโve had a 20-point lead most of this game; they just cut it to 10. We just have to focus in,โโ McGrath said.
McGrathโs words appeared to rejuvenate his players, and after first-year forward Ian Joyce had an uncontested dunk with 21 seconds left, the Maroons won handily by a score of 85โ66.
Now the Maroons are focused on winning their first UAA home games of the season. But winning will be tough given NYUโs #23 national ranking and their recent upset of fourth-ranked Emory.
Still, the Maroons are very familiar with the Violets. In last seasonโs home finale, Johnson scored a career-high 39 points to give the Maroons an 82โ80 win.
At the same time, the Maroons got their glimpse of Violetsโ now fourth-year center Andy Stein.
Currently, Stein is averaging 17.3 points per game along with 7.3 rebounds.
But the Maroons will have the crowd on their side, given that it is the seventh annual Beach Night.
โBeach Night is definitely a lot of fun [because] people get really excited about it, and itโs fun to play in front of the crowd with that kind of energy,โ second-year forward Sam Gage said.
On Sunday, the Maroons will go up against Brandeis, a team that most recently lost to Emory (95โ58) last Sunday but beat Rochester (78โ64) last Friday.
Tip-off for Beach Night is scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight. The Brandeis game on Sunday starts at noon.