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College Basketball Capsules - Men: It's bounce back time for No. 2 Tigers

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Frank Haith said it best the day Missouri rose to No. 2. No one big victory would define the team, nor would one tough loss.

The coach could not have anticipated those words to be tested so soon with one of the school's most impressive victories in recent seasons followed by an excruciating setback.

The Tigers (18-2, 5-2 Big 12) got two first-place votes in this week's poll, coming off their triumph at then-second ranked Baylor. They stumbled just four days later at mediocre Oklahoma State, losing 79-72 Wednesday night.

Missouri has been a juggernaut at home, where the players hope to shake off some of the bad taste against struggling Texas Tech (7-12, 0-7) on Saturday. And where coaches can use the loss as a motivational tool during a breakout season that nobody anticipated.

Earlier in the week, Haith wanted to make sure players avoided getting "caught up in the hoopla" of the school's highest ranking since being No. 2 in 2001-02 and highest this late in the season since 1989-90. It won't be as much of a tough sell now.

"It's a classroom. It's our time to teach," Haith said. "As well as handling adversity, you have to be able to handle the other stuff, too."

The victory at Baylor was the school's first over a top-five team since 1994. Missouri had been 75-40 all-time against Oklahoma State before fading late. The Tigers shot just 40 percent after entering the game second-best in the nation at 51 percent. They were just 4 for 19 from 3-point range and no one was really clicking.

Especially at the Mizzou Arena, Haith has been able to hone the thin seven-man rotation he inherited from run-and-gun Mike Anderson into a cohesive, efficient machine that has been able to grind down teams with much deeper benches. There's a lot of balance, with six players leading the team in scoring the last nine games.

Missouri is 11-0 at home with an average margin of 27 points, including blowouts over Texas and Texas A&M in conference play.

Forward Ricardo Ratliffe, the lone big man in a four-guard starting lineup, is threatening the NCAA single-season record for field goal accuracy. He's at 75.4 percent after a season-high seven misses in 17 attempts at Oklahoma State, is coming off a double-double and has scored 52 points the last two games.

Virtually all his baskets have come from just a few feet away from the rim. Steve Johnson of Oregon State set the NCAA standard at 74.6 percent in 1980-81 and Jeff Warren holds the school record at 67.6 percent in 1990-91.

Ratliffe has been on a tear since getting just two points and one rebound in 14 minutes at Kansas State.

Sophomore point guard Phil Pressey, son of former NBA player Paul Pressey, has no regrets about staying put after one of his dad's closest friends left for Arkansas. One good reason: older brother Matt Pressey is a senior starter and perhaps the best defender.

"Yeah, I came to play for coach Anderson but when coach Haith got here, we had a great bond from Day 1," Pressey said. "And he put his trust in me. Whenever somebody does that, I put my trust in them."

Phil Pressey leads the Big 12 in assists and is on pace to break Anthony Peeler's school record of 179 set in 1989-90. Haith guessed Pressey was perhaps Anderson's highest-rated recruit.

"I think the biggest thing for Phil is how soon was he going to develop his point guard instincts in terms of being solid all the time," Haith said. "He's a daring player and very athletic."

Marcus Denmon is the leading scorer at 17.7 points per game and among the best rebounding guards in the nation (5.3). He's among 25 finalists for the John Wooden National Player of the Year award. Kim English is one of the nation's best 3-point shooters at 49 percent, dangerous again after a difficult junior season in which he appeared to lose confidence.

Junior Mike Dixon has been among the nation's top sixth men, averaging 11.8 points and 2.7 assists.

"We're really tight," Phil Pressey said. "Everybody's cool with each other, no problems. Outside of basketball, we all hang out together. It's a pretty tight locker room and that pretty much shows how our chemistry is on the court."

Top 25

Capsules: Zeller notches double-double as UNC cruises

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Tyler Zeller had 21 points and a career-best 17 rebounds to help No. 7 North Carolina beat North Carolina State 74-55 on Thursday night

Reggie Bullock added 11 points in his first career start for the Tar Heels (17-3, 4-1 Atlantic Coast Conference), who won their 11th straight against their longtime rivals.

With its bigger front line dominating inside, North Carolina shot 48 percent and led by 31 points in the second half.

Scott Wood scored 11 points to lead the Wolfpack (15-6, 4-2).

N.C. State finished with its worst scoring total of the season and shot 37 percent, though its second-half production came after the game was decided.

NO. 14 FLORIDA 64, MISSISSIPPI 60

OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — Patric Young scored 15 points and Kenny Boynton added 12 for Florida, which rallied from a double-digit first-half deficit.

Florida (16-4, 4-1 Southeastern Conference) fell behind 20-4 in the opening minutes and trailed 38-28 at halftime.

Young was 7 of 10 from the field despite playing with tendinitis in his right ankle. Erving Walker had 10 points and nine assists.

Terrance Henry had 21 points for Mississippi (13-7, 3-3), which shot 60.9 percent from the field in the first half, hitting all six 3-point attempts. In the second half they made just 8 of 29 (27.6 percent) from the field.

Ole Miss pulled within 63-60 with 18 seconds remaining and had a chance to tie, but turned the ball over and Bradley Beal hit a free throw that sealed the victory.

NO. 25 WISCONSIN 57, NO. 16 INDIANA 50

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Ben Brust scored 13 points and Wisconsin continued its recent rebound in the Big Ten.

Ryan Evans added 12 points for the Badgers (17-5, 6-3), who had recovered from a rough start to conference play by winning their past five games — including road victories at Purdue and Illinois.

Verdell Jones and Christian Watford scored 12 points each for the Hoosiers (16-5, 4-5), who have lost four of their past five games. The Hoosiers snapped a three-game losing streak with a victory at Penn State on Sunday.

Jared Berggren had a career-high five blocks for the Badgers, who have won nine straight over Indiana.

Wisconsin won despite going 4 for 17 from 3-point range.

The Badgers held Hoosiers freshman forward Cody Zeller to seven points on 2-for-7 shooting.

NO. 19 VIRGINIA 66, BOSTON COLLEGE 49

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Mike Scott scored 18 points and Virginia pulled away from a 44-all tie with a 22-3 run.

The victory was just the second in the last seven games against the Eagles for the Cavaliers (16-3, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference), who rebounded from a home loss to Virginia Tech on Sunday night in which they managed just 45 points.

Ryan Anderson had 12 points for Boston College (7-13, 2-4), which rallied from a 44-36 deficit to pull even on a 3-pointer by Danny Rubin with 10:25 to play. The Eagles managed just one other field goal over the next 10 minutes as the Cavaliers pulled away.

Jontel Evans and Akil Mitchell, who again replaced injured center Assane Sene in the starting lineup, both scored 10 points for Virginia, which matched its victory total of last season.

NO. 21 SAINT MARY'S 71, LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 64

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Stephen Holt scored 19 points to lead Saint Mary's to its 11th straight win over Loyola Marymount.

The Gaels (20-2, 9-0 West Coast Conference) have won 20 games for the eighth time in school history and six of those seasons have been with coach Randy Bennett.

Drew Viney had 18 points for the Lions (12-9, 5-3), who led by seven points before managing just one field goal over the final 5:10 of the first half.

Saint Mary's opened the second half on a 10-0 run to take control of the game.

Loyola got within six points in the second half.

News & Notes

Graduate hoop transfers offer teams immediate help

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — There's a free agent trend quietly developing around college basketball and coaches are trying to figure out how to get a handle on it.

Graduate transfers can market their skills as ball handlers, secondary scorers and bodies to bolster depleted front lines — and coaches and players are taking advantage of the rule. These players have graduated but still have eligibility remaining, so they transfer and play immediately by enrolling in a graduate program unavailable at their former school.

Fifteen players have played right away as graduate transfers this year, according to STATS LLC. The schools they play at range from BCS members Illinois and North Carolina State to smaller programs like Houston Baptist and Texas Southern.

It has Michigan State coach Tom Izzo concerned.

"I'm worried it could become a national problem," Izzo said. "If your team doesn't make the NCAA tournament this year or next, why not graduate that summer and go to the best team you can?"

Izzo worries it could lead to attempts to recruit players already on campuses. But that didn't prevent him from bringing in Brandon Wood, an all-conference guard who graduated from Valparaiso and is now starting for Michigan State.

Izzo — who said he had the blessing of former Valparaiso coach Homer Drew — knew Wood might've played for another Big Ten team against the Spartans if he didn't take him on.

"I don't think it's a good precedent for us to set and I don't think it's good for what we're looking to do," Izzo said. "I think the negatives could far outweigh the positives. I really, really do believe that."

Most of this year's group redshirted a season due to injury and completed undergraduate degrees as they closed their junior athletic year. They represent a different type of tweener: not talented enough to be stars or bolt for the NBA, yet good or experienced enough that a coach wants them even for just a season.

Some — including Wood, Chicago State's Lee Fisher, Fairleigh Dickinson's George Goode and Louisiana Tech's Trevor Gaskins — average around 10 to 12 points. Guys like Oregon's Olu Ashaolu and San Diego State's Garrett Green provide scoring and rebounding up front in about 20 minutes per game. Others offer little more than spot duty.

While transfers typically sit a year, the NCAA offers a one-time exception allowing graduate transfers to play right away if the former school doesn't renew the scholarships. NCAA spokeswoman Emily Potter said requiring graduation and graduate-school enrollment provide "an appropriate threshold" for a rule that fits a limited number of players.

Nonetheless, players are shopping their services.

Players are on year-to-year contracts as schools renew their athletic scholarships on an annual basis. In professional sports, players are often waived before they can become free agents; in college, the first school must not renew the player's scholarship for the player to be granted a waiver.

It hasn't worked out for the player in every case.

Todd O'Brien, a 7-footer, graduated from St. Joseph's and transferred to UAB to enroll in the public administration graduate program. He's practicing with the Blazers but hasn't played in his final year of eligibility because St. Joseph's wouldn't support his request, while his appeals to the NCAA have been denied.

At independent Cal State Bakersfield, Alex Johnson had redshirted a year with a knee injury, wanted to play in a conference and wasn't particularly interested in the school's graduate programs. He chose N.C. State, which needed a backup point guard after the transfer of freshman Ryan Harrow to Kentucky. Johnson studies family life and youth development with plans of mentoring troubled youth.

"It's got to be a 50-50 balance," Johnson said of academics and athletics. "I felt like I didn't want to go somewhere where the basketball is good but they don't have what I want to do for the master's degree. ... Making my decision for academics, I made sure that I wanted to do something I really wanted to do, something that was interesting to me."

But Johnson admits the playing opportunity was key in choosing the Wolfpack instead of Florida State, which had a similar graduate program but also several returning guards. He's averaging about five points in 20 minutes as N.C. State has its best start in Atlantic Coast Conference play in six years.

"I feel as though if basketball doesn't work out," Johnson said, "I have something to show for it: a master's program ... where I can actually help people."

Johnson could've looked down the road in Chapel Hill for a successful example.

After sophomore Ed Davis entered the NBA draft followed by the surprise transfers of freshmen David and Travis Wear in May 2010, North Carolina had two big men left and it was too late to find a recruit capable of immediate help. Around that time, Alabama's Justin Knox planned to finish undergraduate work and transfer after three years.

The 6-9 forward wanted to pursue playing professionally, setting up a perfect marriage with the short-handed and high-profile Tar Heels. He played every game as a reserve for a team that won the ACC regular season and nearly reached the Final Four. Knox finished his academic work, though he postponed the internship required to complete the two-year program in sports administration because he's playing professionally in Belarus.

Coach Roy Williams would be open to doing it again, though he's not adding graduate transfers to recruiting lists.

"For me, it would have to be a specific need," Williams said. "We don't always sit around, having a little meeting, put our hands together and have a seance and try to figure out who's going to leave and have a year's eligibility left."

It's not always easy for a player to find that fit.

Sam Maniscalco missed most of last season at Bradley with an ankle injury and decided to leave after a coaching change. He graduated and drew recruiting interest from several schools before choosing Illinois, which lost Demetri McCamey to graduation and had only freshman Tracy Abrams at the point. Maniscalco is enrolled in a recreation, sport and tourism program, and hopes to play professionally before possibly coaching.

"It definitely was not an easy thing to do and I did not take the decision lightly at all," said Maniscalco, who averages nine points in 27 minutes. "It was something I put a lot of thought into. And then you have to go through the whole adjustment of a new coaching staff, new teammates, a new city, new fans.

"For just one year. Almost like a free agent type of thing."

Illini coach Bruce Weber is glad to have Maniscalco, but he shares some of Izzo's concerns.

"I'm not sure if I like the rule," Weber said. "I know if I was at a mid-major or a low major, I wouldn't like it at all."

Yet it isn't always about big programs poaching smaller ones.

Anthony Breeze transferred from Appalachian State to Bethune-Cookman for a "change of scenery and a different environment." The 6-5 guard leads a balanced offense by averaging about 11 points per game.

Last weekend, he hit a late jumper to beat Delaware State, then followed with 20 points against Maryland-Eastern Shore for the Wildcats' fourth straight win. Breeze — the first college graduate in his family — hopes to complete the master's program in transformative leadership in December and work with children.

"He's been good for the program, really," acting coach Gravelle Craig said. "I don't think we'd be where we are without him."

That's one thing about the rule most coaches seem to agree on.

"If you have something weird and all of a sudden you've got a gaping hole, you've got to look into every area you can to see if you can plug that hole," UNC's Williams said. "I think it's a really good rule.

"I think you should reward kids and allow them to do (it) if they graduated in that time."

-- Aaron Beard

Syracuse U., Boeheim want trial moved upstate

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) — Attorneys for Syracuse University and men's basketball coach Jim Boeheim (BAY'-hym) want a defamation suit moved to Onondaga County.

Lawyers filed a motion last week to move the suit related to the Bernie Fine sex abuse allegations from New York City to Onondaga County. They argue that Bobby Davis and Mike Lang improperly filed their lawsuit because all the parties are in Onondaga County.

The two former Syracuse ball boys claim Boeheim defamed them when he called them liars out to make money with accusations that Fine, Boeheim's former assistant coach, molested them. The men's lawyers don't think they'll get a fair trial in Onondaga County because of the basketball team's huge fan base.

The 66-year-old Fine has not been charged. He was fired Nov. 27 and has denied any wrongdoing.

Anderson: Gulley expected to join Arkansas

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas coach Mike Anderson says former Oklahoma State guard Fred Gulley is expected to join the Razorbacks.

Gulley, who was granted his transfer from the Cowboys last month, said Monday he had enrolled at Arkansas and planned to play there. The Fayetteville, Ark., native was on the Razorbacks' bench in street clothes during Wednesday night's win over Auburn.

Anderson says Gulley hasn't practiced with the team and that he's currently paying his own way in school.

The 6-foot-2 guard averaged 4.0 points, 2.5 rebounds and 1.5 assists per game in eight games this season for Oklahoma State, starting five of those. He was a prep standout at Fayetteville High School before signing with the Cowboys and is a cousin of Chicago Bulls' forward and former Arkansas standout Ronnie Brewer.

Marshall freshman G Coleman dismissed from team

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) — Freshman Justin Coleman has been dismissed from Marshall's basketball team, three weeks after he had been reinstated from an earlier suspension.

Marshall coach Tom Herrion said Thursday that Coleman was dismissed for conduct detrimental to the program and not upholding its standards and expectations. He didn't provide specifics.

A native of Richmond, Va., Coleman averaged 5.5 points and 2.5 rebounds per game in 17 games this season. The guard had been suspended following Marshall's loss at Belmont on Dec. 29 and was reinstated to the team a week later.

Marshall (13-7, 4-2 Conference USA) has lost three straight games and plays at Memphis (14-6, 5-1) on Saturday.

ETSU apologizes to company over promotion

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP) — East Tennessee State has apologized for blaming an insurance company that didn't pay $20,000 to a student because of a lapsed policy covering a basketball promotion.

Junior Jamaal Hundley from Knoxville, Tenn., won an in-game promotion Monday night by hitting a layup, a free throw, a 3-pointer and a half-court shot to receive either a car or $20,000. After it appeared he wouldn't be paid, ETSU officials Tuesday night eventually gave Hundley the money using university funds, and $5,000 each from two local sponsors.

Athletic director Dave Mullins apologized Thursday, saying an employee spoke with American Hole 'n One, Inc., officials Tuesday but did not share with university administrators that the policy had lapsed. Mullins says no prize claim was ever filed with the company. The situation is being reviewed.

NIU coach dismisses F Tim Toler for rule violation

DEKALB, Ill. (AP) — Northern Illinois has dismissed forward Tim Toler from the school's basketball team. NIU head coach Mark Montgomery said Thursday that the senior from Indianapolis violated team rules before the Huskies' game Saturday against Ball State. Montgomery says Toler will remain in school.

Toler played in 16 games this season, including 14 starts, and averaged 10.8 points.


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