by PointGuard » Tue Oct 12, 2021 6:12 pm
Boston College Chronicle
Kinsey Ramsey
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
ACC TOURNAMENT--FIRST ROUND
#15 seed Wake Forest-69, #10 seed Florida State-66
#11 seed Georgia Tech-87, #14 seed Syracuse-78
#12 seed Pittsburgh-75, #13 seed Virginia Tech-68
ACC TOURNAMENT—SECOND ROUND
#5 seed Louisville-93, #12 seed Pittsburgh-76
#6 seed North Carolina-92, #11 seed Georgia Tech-77
#7 seed Clemson-80, #15 seed Wake Forest-72
#8 seed North Carolina St.-79, #9 seed Miami (FL)-68
ACC TOURNAMENT—QUARTERFINALS
Mar. 10, 2028: #8 seed North Carolina St. Wolfpack (19-12) vs #1 seed Boston College Eagles (28-3)
In a home game earlier this season, the Eagles ripped the Wolfpack 91-64.
In their tournament opener, the Eagles held a lead through most of the first half, but fell behind by 5 points late in the half. BC then went on an 11-0 run in the last few minutes and went to the locker room with a 45-42 edge. C Courtland Reese accounted for 14 of the Eagles first half points and SF Dusty Stowers had 12 for North Carolina St.
The score was close in the early going of the first half but midway through the half, the Eagles lead grew to 11 points. BC stayed in control of the game from that point and won with ease by a final score of 91-75. Boston College’s main advantage was total control (42-21) of the boards.
Six of the Eagles scored in double figures: C Courtland Reese-24, SF Leonard Meliet-15, PF/C Jason Caldwell-12, PG Phil Thompson-12, PG Josh McFadgon-11, and PF Marvin Reese-10. Courtland Reese and SG James Lilly both had 8 rebounds. SF Dusty Stowers scored 22 points for North Carolina St.
Other Games:
#2 seed Virginia-88, #7 seed Clemson-74
#3 seed Notre Dame-76, #6 seed North Carolina-56
#4 seed Duke-74, #5 seed Louisville-66
ACC TOURNAMENT—SEMIFINALS
Mar. 11, 2028: #4 seed Duke Blue Devils (28-5) vs #1 seed Boston College Eagles (29-3)
Boston College defeated the Blue Devils by 17 and 19 points in their two conference games this season. But Duke’s SF Rod Allen and C Brian Taylor are both Norton Award finalists and Allen has declared for the pro draft as has Duke’s talented reserve SF David Dye.
Both of the Eagle’s starting guards were relegated to the bench with 2 fouls apiece within 6-1/2 minutes of the start of the game. Duke went to the foul line 13 times in the first 10 minutes to take a 19-12 lead. The Eagles used some excellent shooting (59% on FG’s including 67% on 3’s) to get back into the game. Duke scored 13 more points at the foul line though. At the end of the half Duke was ahead 37-35. Leonard Meliet scored 11 points for BC and Rod Allen scored 13 points for Duke. Six players on BC had 2 fouls assessed against them in the first half. None of the Blue Devils players had more than a single foul called on them.
Boston College began the 2nd half with an extremely tight defense and scored 15 unanswered points to go ahead by a score of 50-37 with 14-1/2 minutes remaining. BC increased their lead to as much as 19 points. But Duke made a furious late comeback which included another slew of trips to the foul line. With 1:15 left, the Eagles lead had been whittled to 76-74. Then 57 seconds to go, Duke picked off an errant pass. Duke called a time out but their 3 pointer after than was off target. BC rebounded and SG James Lilly kissed a 14 footer off the glass to give the Eagles a little breathing room. Duke hurriedly fired off another 3 point shot that went off the rim. Lilly was quickly fouled. He dropped in both ends of a one-and-one. Duke’s last shot didn’t go down either and Boston College came away with an 80-74 victory. Duke hit 31 of 40 free throws, scoring 21 more points at the line than the Eagles. But BC outshot the Blue Devils 55% to 37%.
SF Rod Allen dropped in 31 points for Duke as well as pulling down 9 rebounds and making 3 steals and 2 blocks. But that was offset by the Eagles again getting scoring and rebounding throughout their entire lineup and bench. SF Leonard Meliet hit for 20 points and 5 assists, C Courtland Reese scored 13 points and pulled down 9 boards to go along with 4 assists, 3 steals, and 2 blocks, PF/C Jason Caldwell scored 11 points, and SG James Lilly had 10 points, 8 rebounds, 4 assists and 2 steals.
Coach Fred Aura said, “Duke gave us everything we could handle tonight. The refs putting Rod Allen on the line 21 times was almost more than we could overcome. Our combination of great offense and defense at the beginning of the 2nd half was the difference in this game.”
Other Game:
#3 seed Notre Dame-81, #2 seed Virginia-66
ACC TOURNAMENT—CHAMPIONSHIP
March 12, 2028: #3 seed Notre Dame Fighting Irish (25-7) vs #1 seed Boston College Eagles (30-3)
Boston College beat Notre Dame by 12 early in the season, but that was played on the Eagles home court. And the Fighting Irish came into this championship game sporting a 9-game win streak. Four of their starters are averaging in double figures. To win the Eagles needed to crack Notre Dame’s vaunted defense which has allowed the 11th fewest points in Division I basketball this season. Opponents have averaged just 61 ppg throughout Notre Dame’s recent win streak.
Notre Dame took a 5-0 lead in the first minute of play. Six turnovers by BC put them behind by 8 with 14 minutes to go in the half. Boston College doggedly fought back late in the half to trail by just a 30-27 score at the break. PG Marqus Gibson carried the Fighting Irish with 12 points.
Four minutes into the 2nd half, James Lilly hit 2 free throws to forge a 36-36 tie. Then Leonard Meliet and Courtland Reese were charged with their 3rd fouls in the next minute and went to the bench. Notre Dame re-opened a 7 point lead but BC came back and Phil Thompson hit an off-balance jumper with 8:46 to give the Eagles their first lead at 48-47. 90 seconds later the Eagles were on top by 6 points. Notre Dame answered by scoring 8 straight points to move ahead by 2. Notre Dame hit a 3 with a little over a minute to play to put them up by 5 points. The Eagles were forced to foul which caused them to lose 66-57.
None of the Eagles scored in double figures. The team hit just 33% of their FG’s and 13% of their 3’s. “Credit Notre Dame’s defense,” said Coach Fred Aura.
“Not only did they prevent us from getting many clear shots, but they forced us to turn the ball over 20 times. The Fighting Irish will be a force in the NCAA Tourney.”
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