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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Second place in WAC eludes Vandals

It was right there for the taking for the Idaho men, but Nevada and Luke Babbitt "outtoughed" the Vandals down the stretch to pull out a 69-65 win at the Cowan Spectrum on Saturday night.

Keep reading for my game story, which will appear in the S-R tomorrow.

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By JOSH WRIGHT

Correspondent


MOSCOW, Idaho – Hard as it was to believe, the din inside Cowan Spectrum might have been more ear-splitting than two nights before against Boise State. Idaho was on what's become its patented late-game tear at home, and Nevada appeared helpless to stop it.


But that was before Luke Babbitt showed why he's one of the most heralded recruits in Wolf Pack history.


The 6-foot-9 freshman erupted for a season-high 24 points and took over in crunch time to carry Nevada past the Vandals 69-65 on Saturday night in a fight for second place in the Western Athletic Conference.


Instead of vaulting up the league standings, UI fell to 10-11 overall and 4-4 in league play – just ahead of sixth-place San Jose State.


“You've got to give Nevada credit,” Idaho coach Don Verlin said. “We get up five with 4 minutes to go and they outtoughed us. That's the bottom line.”


The Wolf Pack (13-8, 6-2) overcame a gritty Idaho push and a rambunctious crowd of 2,806 on the shoulders of Babbitt. The Reno, Nev., product and McDonald's All-America started lighting it up about the time Idaho took its first lead, which ballooned to a 61-56 advantage after a Brandon Wiley layin with 4:41 left.


Nevada responded with a 3-pointer from Babbitt, which ignited a 13-4 Wolf Pack flurry to finish the game. Seven of those points came from the skilled forward.


“We were against the ropes,” Babbitt said. “Idaho had us down and we knew if we didn't make a play, we'd go home with a loss. Two losses on the road trip – we didn't want that, so we had to do something.”


Nevada, the five-time defending WAC champs, was the preseason favorite to take the crown once again. Yet it came close to losing twice in January to the Vandals, who were picked to finish last but opened the conference season with a 78-73 win in Reno.


“We didn't execute a lot (like) our coach wanted us to,” UI guard Kashif Watson said. “But they're a good team. They came out and executed. That's what Nevada does.”


The sleeker and longer Wolf Pack gave the jittery Vandals fits in the first half. Nevada blocked 12 shots (eight in the opening half), four of which came from Dario Hunt in the first 12 minutes.


But the Vandals persevered on the strength of deft 3-point shooting from Trevor Morris (13 points on 4-of-7 shooting from long range) and the penetration of Watson and point guard Mac Hopson.


The athletic backcourt duo combined for 30 points, while Hopson matched his total of eight assists from an emotionally draining win over BSU on Thursday.


NOTES -- Idaho missed five straight free throws at one point and finished 12 of 19 from the stripe. Verlin said he was "at a loss" why the Vandals are struggling so much from the foul line. ... Morris' night was especially encouraging given the fact he came shooting 26 percent from 3. His errant long-range attempt with 30 seconds left would have moved Idaho to within 67-66. Wiley picked up the offensive rebound after the miss and appeared to get hacked while going up for the follow, but no call was made.



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