ap-siena-purdue_20100319164819_JPG

Purdue's JaJuan Johnson, left, Chris Kramer, center, and Kelsey Barlow, right, work to block Siena's Ronald Moore in the second half of an NCAA first-round college basketball game in Spokane, Wash., Friday, March 19, 2010. (AP Photo/Rajah …

wish-purdue-sienna_20100319160324_JPG

Purdue's JaJuan Johnson tries to put up a shot as Siena's Ryan Rossiter defends in the first half of an NCAA first-round college basketball game in Spokane, Wash., Friday, March 19, 2010. (AP Photo/Rajah Bose)

ap-siena-purdue_20100319151952_JPG

Siena's Alex Franklin drives to the basket as Purdue's John Hart, right, and Patrick Bade, left, defend in the first half of an NCAA first-round college basketball game in Spokane, Wash., Friday, March 19, 2010. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)

ap-e-twaun-moore_20100319130538_JPG

Purdue's E'Twaun Moore is shown during NCAA college basketball practice in Spokane, Wash., Thursday, March 18, 2010. Purdue plays Siena in a first-round game on Friday. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)

ap-matt-painter_20100319114126_JPG

Purdue head coach Matt Painter is shown during NCAA college basketball practice in Spokane, Wash., Thursday, March 18, 2010. Purdue plays Siena in a first-round game on Friday. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)

wish-jajuan-johnson_20100319104716_JPG

JaJuan Johnson said a lot of people are counting the Boilers out but as long as the team believes in themselves, they'll be OK.

wish-matt-painter_20100319103939_JPG

Coach Matt Painter's squad is facing a Siena team that suddenly appears as favorites. Many experts picked Siena to win and most of the Purdue players are using that as added fuel.

ap-purdue-ohio-state_20100217205355_JPG

Ohio State's Evan Turner, left, knocks the ball away from Purdue's Lewis Jackson (23) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Feb 17, 2010, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Terry Gilliam)

wish-purdue-basketball-practice-ncaa_20100318175341_JPG

Advertisement

Grant comes up big as Boilers beat Siena 72-64

Updated: Friday, 19 Mar 2010, 5:22 PM EDT
Published : Friday, 19 Mar 2010, 3:22 PM EDT

SPOKANE, Wash. (WISH/AP) - Forgotten amid all that angst over Purdue's NCAA tournament chances without Robbie Hummel: The Boilermakers still have Keaton Grant.

The senior, who became a starter after the do-it-all Hummel blew out his knee three weeks ago, ignited a decisive, 20-3 run with 11 points to begin the second half. That opened up the inside for teammate JuJuan Johnson's 23 points and rallied fourth-seeded Purdue past No. 13 seed Siena 72-64 on Friday in the first round of the South Regional.

Johnson, the tallest player on either team at 6-foot-10, tied his career high with 15 rebounds.

E'Twaun Moore added 12 points for the Boilermakers (28-5). They were steamed that even President Barack Obama had joined a national chorus predicting the Saints (27-7) would pull a first-round upset in the third consecutive NCAA tournament.

Take that, Mr. President!

Edwin Ubiles scored 18 points for Siena, which came from 15 points down to pull within 66-63 on a layup by Ryan Rossiter off a deft pass by Ronald Moore with 62 seconds left — before Purdue clinched the win with free throws.

Then Lewis Jackson, who had airballed a shot and missed a free throw seconds earlier, made two foul shots. The first, tension-breaking one plopped in after a thud onto the back rim as Jackson sheepishly smiled.

Ronald Moore missed from inside off the front rim at the other end with 40 seconds remaining, and Chris Kramer made two foul shots to put Purdue up 70-63 with 33.9 seconds left. Then Johnson added two free throws with 28.6 seconds to go to make it 72-64.

Only then could the Boilermakers exhale.

Siena leading scorer Alex Franklin had 10 points — but none after halftime — and 12 rebounds, and Rossiter added 10 points and 13 rebounds.

The small school with 3,000 undergraduates outside Albany, N.Y., had beaten Ohio State and Vanderbilt to begin its previous two NCAA tournaments — and talked Thursday of even feeling pressure as a "favored" No. 13 seed.

Purdue's win after a 3-2 stretch without Hummel left No. 13 seeds just 22-80 in games against No. 4 seeds since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985. They added another loss when Wisconsin held off Wofford later in the day.

Purdue's early decision-making on offense — freshman point guard Kelsey Barlow's pass into Siena's zone to no one, a full-court pass over the head of towering Johnson and into the Siena band — had coach Matt Painter sitting on the scorer's table near his bench and yelling, "What are we doing?"

He knew after halftime.

The Boilermakers charged out of the locker room to score the first 13 points.

Purdue had missed eight of its first nine 3-point shots before going 3 for 4 to start the second half. Grant had all three of those, after missing his first four shots. That shooting opened up the inside, and Johnson roamed free for dunks over the bewildered Saints.

Grant's first 3-pointer changed the tone of the game. And when Lewis Jackson, playing with a foot fracture, zoomed uncontested down the lane for a scoop shot, Purdue had instantly turned a three-point deficit into a 37-32 lead.

Siena called timeout, and frustrated Saints coach Fran McCaffery got a bench warning for being on the court and yelling.

As McCaffery swore at his players throughout the timeout, his players felt their own warning — that their third consecutive first-round upset in the NCAAs was slipping away.

Grant hit another 3 after the timeout, and Chris Kramer stole the ball at halfcourt, soared for a breakaway dunk and yelled to his teammates on the bench. Purdue led 42-32 with 17 minutes left, and McCaffery glared at the officials to begin his second timeout.

When Grant made his third consecutive 3, from the wing, former Boilermakers coach Gene Keady was on his feet two rows behind the Purdue bench and roaring over the 45-35 lead.

Siena's best answer from 3-point range was on the bench. Starter Clarence Jackson, a 39-percent shooter from deep, did not play after spraining his ankle.


Underdog Boilers

Purdue's bad loss in the Big Ten Tournament has many experts, including President Obama picking Siena to beat the Boilers and the guys in the Purdue locker room have noticed.

The Boilermakers went through a closed practice at Whitworth College in northeastern Washington Thursday before hitting the Spokane Arena court for their open practice.

The good news is E'Twaun Moore's ankle looks good. He's running well on it and should be close to 100 percent come game time.

Point guard Lewis Jackson is a different story. He has yet to practice two days in a row and says he's about 75 percent, 80 percent on a good day. He did look OK running and jumping on the court.

Coach Matt Painter said both players should be fine for today’s game against a Siena team that suddenly appears as favorites. Many experts, including president Obama, picked Siena to win and most of the Purdue players are using that as added fuel. They don't want their once promising season to end just yet.

"Being here at Purdue and all the years

I've been here, we've been an underdog in everything that we do, especially in basketball, so it’s not a new thing for us," said senior Keaton Grant.

JaJuan Johnson agrees. "Ever since Rob's gone down, a lot of people have been counting us out, a lot of people didn't think we could win the Big Ten championship. We were able to accomplish that, and as long as our team knows we're good and the coaches have faith in us, we'll be all right."

Does it fire them up? Chris Kramer thinks so.

"It does a little bit. You watch that stuff and see people pick against you, you think you're a better team. They're sizing us up on one game getting blown out, and it sets people off more, so it starts with us laying it all on the line."

Siena center Ryan Rossiter doesn't like being a favorite.

"We've gotten used to the underdog role, but we like all the exposure and all the attention we've gotten, so it doesn't matter when the ball is thrown up Friday. It's us versus Purdue, and both will give it their all so it will be an interesting game."

JaJuan Johnson should be able to take advantage of his matchup with Rossiter inside, which could open things up for Moore and company.
 

Comments


WISH-TV is migrating to a more stable commenting system called DISQUS. This system is used by CNN, TIME, FOX News, numerous blogging sites and has over 75 Million registrered users. Unfortunately we can't migrate our current user accounts to this new system.


To sign up for a DISQUS account, click the DISQUS button just below and to the right and then click Login.


DISQUS lets you login with several different options, including Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo or OpenID. We expect it to allow more conversation and better moderation. If you have any questions, please feel free to comment below.


 
blog comments powered by Disqus
Advertisement
Advertisement