Syracuse goes OT again to reach Big East final
But after 6OT-win vs. UConn, only 5 extra minutes needed to beat WVU
![]() Julie Jacobson / AP Syracuse's Eric Devendorf celebrates after making a 3-point basket in the No. 18 Orange's 74-69 victory over West Virginia on Friday. |
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March Madness leads to six overtimes for Syracuse March 13: After six overtimes, Syracuse outlasted University of Connecticut in an almost four-hour Big East Tournament game. NBC's Ann Curry reports. Nightly News |
NEW YORK - Jonny Flynn was sitting in front of his locker, looking as though he could play another few overtimes. After all, he and his Syracuse teammates have plenty of experience playing college basketball games that go beyond the traditional 40 minutes.
With his headband still on and his smile still broad, Flynn was explaining how being tired wasn’t a factor as No. 18 Syracuse followed its epic six-overtime win less than 24 hours later with a 74-69 victory over West Virginia in the Big East tournament semifinals Friday night.
The win that sent the Orange on to the championship game went a paltry one overtime. Come on, five more minutes for a big win after needing 30 more to beat Connecticut 127-117 in the quarterfinals on Thursday was no big deal.
“You have to overcome that,” Flynn, who played 67 minutes Thursday and all 45 on Friday, said of feeling tired. “There’s a lot of obstacles you have to overcome and fatigue is one of them. (Assistant) Coach Mike Hopkins tells us if you say you’re not tired enough times, your body is going to start believing that. You have to be mentally tough out there and believe you’re not tired and I think that’s we did tonight and we won a tough game.”
Instead of people running for the history books for games to compare its six-overtime win over No. 3 Connecticut to, Syracuse had a sellout crowd at Madison Square Garden shaking its heads when regulation ended in a tie.
“I thought we looked good for a long time tonight,” said Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim, whose team improved to 5-0 in overtime this season. “I know Jonny was feeling it the most. I didn’t really see it, the other guys, didn’t play quite as many minutes maybe, but I didn’t see it. At the end I think both teams were probably a little tired.”
Flynn will get to test his theory of beating feeling tired again Saturday.
The Orange (26-8) will face top-seeded and fifth-ranked Louisville in the championship game. The Cardinals advanced to their first title game with a 69-55 victory over fourth-seeded and 10th-ranked Villanova.
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They were wrong.
Eric Devendorf had 23 points, one more than he had in 61 minutes in the classic win over Connecticut, for sixth-seeded Syracuse. Flynn, who had 34 points and 11 assists in 67 minutes in Thursday’s win over the third-seeded Huskies, had 15 points and nine assists Friday.
“I think he’s the most talented point guard in the country,” West Virginia coach Bob Huggins said of Flynn. “He’s a great, great athlete. He has great speed. He’s as fast with the ball as anybody in transition. ... He’s a great, great player.”
Freshman Devin Ebanks, who sent the game into overtime with two free throws with 4.8 seconds left in regulation, had 22 points and Da’Sean Butler added 21 for the seventh-seeded Mountaineers (23-11).
“We’ll bounce back, we’ve bounced back all year,” Huggins said. “We’re very resilient, but we’re a little dejected right now.”
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