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2 turnovers in last 19 seconds mean 71-64 defeat for Flashes in Las Vegas

Crowd vs. Georgia (1).jpg

Arena at Thursday halftime warmup, when attendance was announced at 120. At the start of Friday game, I counted — literally counted — 49 people in the stands. (wbbFlashes photo.)

Twice this season Kent State has won games in the last minute. A third game went to overtime (KSU won).

But in Las Vegas Friday, the last-minute rally went the other way as Troy pulled out a victory over the Flashes 71-64.

Kent State had led for almost the entire game, but Troy used a pressure defense to rally in the fourth quarter.

With the score tied 64-64 and 19 seconds to play, Troy senior  forward Japonica James stepped between Kent players who weren’t more more three feet apart on an inbounds pass in front of the Kent bench. She tipped the ball, then grabbed it and drove the length of the court for a layup. She was fouled and made the free throw.

“She shot the gap,” KSU coach Todd Starkey said. “A really good player made a great play.”

“They just jumped it,” said senior Megan Carter, who was inbounding the ball.

On the next possession, the Flashes got the ball to forward Nila Blackford, who looked to have a clear path to the basket. But she traveled as she went up for a layup.

The loss at the Las Vegas Holiday Hoops Classic leaves the Flashes’ record at 6-4. 

Troy is 9-2. Its RPI, a ranking system based on record and schedule strength, is now 59th of 351 teams. That’s higher than any team in the MAC. The Troy radio announcer called the win the team’s biggest of the season.

Starkey was far more upbeat after the loss than he was about the team’s 62-48 win over 2-7 Georgia Southern on Thursday.

“I thought we played a really good basketball game,” the coach said. “I thought we showed incredible toughness against a really good Troy team.

“We kind of gave that game away. Their pressure was intense, so we obviously needed to take care of the ball the way we needed to.

“We learned that we need to execute down the stretch, show our composure a little bit — and understand that we’re a really good basketball team when we play with that kind of intensity.

The Flashes took an 8-5 lead six minutes into the game and led for the next 33 minutes.

But in the fourth quarter, Troy went to a full-court press, and the Flashes has seven turnovers in the last four minutes and got off just four shots. The Trojans ended the game on a 14-2 run.

“They amped up their defense, but I think we just got careless,” Carter said. ‘We weren’t managing our possessions well.”

Kent State, which hadn’t played in 11 days before the Las Vegas tournament, is now off another 10 for Christmas. The Flashes will play their last non-conference game against Hiram on Dec. 30 at the M.A.C. Center, then start MAC play the next week.

“We gotta keep our heads up,” she said. “It’s one loss. We  should have had this game, but you can’t dwell on the past. It’s learn from it and take that anger that we should have won and put it on the next opponent.”

Box score

Notes

The view from Troy

Coach Chanda Coach Rigby quoted on Troy’s website

“We were down for the pretty much the whole game and every time we would score, they would score. Finally, we broke it down to two and one point deficits but couldn’t never get over that hump. Other than that, the first score of the game, James’ layup was the first lead we had.”

On the late game rally

“I can’t say enough about our senior leadership. Kayla’s been in these battles for four years and she’s hungry. She’s been coming off the bench for us and has been playing her role fantastic.

“I can’t say enough about Japonica either. She couldn’t get going the entire tournament. She couldn’t get anything except fouls called against her but she kept her spirit up and made the play of the game for us.”

 

 

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