MEMPHIS, Tenn. – DeAndre Kane scored 22 points and D.D. Scarver scored
20, but the Marshall men's basketball team came up two points short of a
victory in a 73-72 loss at Memphis on Saturday in front of 16,386 at
FedEx Forum.
Although the Thundering Herd (9-11, 2-3 C-USA) never held a lead, it had
two possessions in the final minute of the game with a chance to go on
top.
Marshall trailed 71-69 and had possession with 1:03 to play, but the
Herd missed three shots. After being fouled, Geron Johnson of Memphis
(16-3, 5-0 C-USA) missed two free throws which gave Marshall another
opportunity for its first lead of the game. With five seconds left,
Marshall's Elijah Pittman attempted a three-pointer which fell short.
After two Memphis free throws all but sealed the win, a four-point lead
with two seconds to play, Kane drained a three-pointer at the buzzer for
a final score of 73-72.
"I'm proud of our kids, tremendous fight today against a very good
Memphis club in this environment; we just battled our brains out," said
head coach Tom Herrion. "We came in here with every expectation to win,
and we're disappointed with the loss, but I'm proud of my kids."
Kane, who entered the contest averaging 16.6 points all-time against the
Tigers and 19.3 points in six career games at FedEx Forum, was 9-of-18
from the field including 2-of-6 from three-point range. With his four
assists, Kane passed Travis Young for 10th on Marshall's all-time list.
Kane joins Young, Skip Henderson and Damier Pitts as the only players in
Marshall history to rank in the top 10 in assists and top 25 in scoring
(22nd, 1,313).
Scarver reached the 20 point mark for the fourth time this season. He
was 7-of-15 from the field and 3-of-7 from three-point range. Scarver
also tied a season-high with five rebounds which helped the Herd
outrebound the Tigers 39-33. Marshall had 17 offensive rebounds which
led it to 20 second chance points.
"We played really well, outrebounded them by six and only had 13
turnovers on the road," Herrion said. "I'm very, very proud of my group.
In a loss, which we don't accept, I think we showed today about our
character coming back."
A Robert Goff jump shot with 11:25 to play in the first half made it
20-18 in favor of the Tigers. Memphis then scored eight unanswered
points to extend its lead to 28-18. It was then Marshall's turn for a
run, as it scored seven unanswered points to get within three points,
28-25 with 6:06 to play.
After a tough layup made by Scarver, the game was tied 31-31 with just
over four minutes to play in the half. However, Marshall went 1-for-6
from the field the remainder of the half and trailed 38-33 at the break.
Memphis, which entered the game averaging just 4.7 made three's per
game, made five of its first six from three-point range, finished the
first half 5-of-7 and was 7-of-16 for the game.
A three from Scarver brought the Herd to within two points, 49-47 with
12:41 to play in the game. Marshall remained close throughout the half,
never trailing by more than nine points.
With the Herd trailing by four, Scarver drained his third three of the
game to make the score 68-67 in favor of Memphis with 2:18 to play. The
Herd's deficit remained one-point, 70-69 with 1:18 remaining.
"I thought we played nose-to-nose, punch-for-punch with one of the best
teams in America today," Herrion said. "Now our challenge is to do that
night-in and night-out through our games left in the conference."
Marshall shot 41.5 percent from the field, but allowed the Tigers to shoot 48.0 percent.
Memphis was led in scoring by Joe Jackson who was 6-of-9 from the field
and finished with 16 points. Adonis Thomas had 15 and Shaq Goodwin
scored 11.
Junior forward Dennis Tinnon was one point and one rebound shy of his
sixth double-double of the season as he finished with nine points and
nine rebounds. Goff finished with six points and seven rebounds before
fouling out late in the second half.
Marshall will return home for two games next week. The first is a game
with SMU on Wednesday at 7 p.m. The Herd will then host UCF on Saturday
at 2 p.m.