Pettway, Hornets Burn Tigers


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Pettway, Hornets Burn Tigers

By Josh Moon
Montgomery Advertiser



About midway through Alabama State's conference opener against Jackson State Saturday night, ASU head coach Rob Spivery saw something he couldn't believe. The Tigers were attempting to let Cliff Walker play man-to-man defense on Hornet center Alvin Pettway without help.

Pettway made the Tigers pay for that decision over and over, pouring in 23 points in leading ASU to 70-58 victory at Joe Reed Acadome.

"That really surprised me that they played him that way," said Spivery. "In all the tapes we watched of them they always played two or three players on the other team's center. I was sure happy to see it."

The decision didn't hurt Pettway's feelings either.

"I was loving it," Pettway said. "I couldn't really believe it. In the first half, I was taking a long time to get my shots off because I was waiting on a double team. In the second half, I was just having fun.""

The Hornets also were hitting Jackson State with tough defensive pressure, especially in the first half.

Jackson hit just 5-of-24 shots from the field and turned the ball over six times in the opening period.

But that tough defense came with a price, as the Hornets were whistled for seven fouls and gave up 13 points on JSU free throws.

"We were just fouling to much," said Spivery. "Half of their points come from the free throw line and that was way too many."

Pettway scored eight to lead ASU to a 26-25 lead at the half.

In the second half, Keith Gamble came to life. He hit his first three shots -- all 3-pointers -- and had a fourth 3-pointer taken away from him on a basket interference call.

"We talked about taking control of the game in the second half in the locker room at halftime," said Spivery. "Keith certainly did that for us. Those were some big-time shots he knocked down."

Gamble's shooting got the Hornets started on what would become a 19-3 ASU run over the first seven minutes of the half.

"When we're getting good looks inside and Keith is knocking down shots like he was, we're a tough team to beat," said Pettway. "We showed how good we can be during the first few minutes of the second half. We were really playing good."

The Tigers never recovered from that ASU run, as they trailed by double digits most of the way down the stretch.

Gamble scored 17 for ASU and Malcolm Campbell added 10.

ASU will next play Grambling State at home on Monday at 8 p.m.

================

Ref: M/Advertiser

:cool:
 
And since beanie got fired from his newspaper route on October 12th, here's the article from the jackson newspaper


Scoring droughts doom JSU



Tigers fall to Alabama State 70-58 in SWAC opener
By Mark Alexander
[email protected]



MONTGOMERY ? Jackson State labored through a handful of extended scoring droughts here Saturday night.

One nearly seven-minute stretch to open the second half proved the most costly.

Alabama State started the second half with a 19-3 run to break open a close game and then cruised to a 70-58 victory over JSU in the Southwestern Athletic Conference opener for both teams.

JSU trailed 26-25 at halftime and it appeared the crowd of 2,179 at the Joe L. Reed Acadome would be treated to a close game between these two teams with a history of playing close games.

But the Tigers managed just three points ? a 3-pointer by Tim Henderson ? in the opening six minutes, 58 seconds of the second half and never could recover.

"They turned it up and we came out lackadaisical, and that hurt us," said Henderson, who led the Tigers with 22 points.

Alabama State, picked in the preseason to finish second in the league, improved to 4-7.

JSU dropped to 1-9 heading into Monday night's game at Alabama A&M.

Keith Gamble got the decisive run started with a 3-pointer from the top of the key and followed with two more treys. By the time Alabama State finished the run off with a layup by 6-foot-9 center Alvin Pettway, JSU trailed 45-28.

The Tigers, who shot a frigid 28.6 from the field, could pull no closer than 10 the rest of the way.

"We played them pretty good in the first half, but they started the second half off hitting three 3's and it was tough for us to come back after that," said JSU coach Andy Stoglin, whose team was playing for the first time in 11 days. "I expected us to be a little rusty because we hadn't played in so long, but I didn't expect us to shoot so poorly. I've never had a team miss as many layups as we did tonight."

Pettway, a first-team All-SWAC pick, finished with a game-high 23 points. Gamble added 16 (5-of-8 from 3-point land) and Malcolm Campbell chipped in with 10.

"I was glad to see us execute on offense the way we did in the second half," Alabama State coach Rob Spivery said. "Keith knocked down some big 3's for us, and we were able to work the ball into Alvin in the post. That helped us push the lead out."

JSU shot just 20.8 percent in the first half, and during one 12-minute stretch scored only five points. Still, the Tigers trailed by just one, 26-25, at halftime on the strength of their defense.

JSU doubled down aggressively on Pettway in the post and recovered quickly to pick up the Hornets' guards on the perimeter.

The Tigers, however, didn't play with the same type of intensity in the second half ? particularly in the first seven minutes ? and it cost them
 



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