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

Cougars top Oregon State for first conference win

The Spokesman-Review

After getting smoked Thursday night by Oregon in their Pac-12 opener, the Washington State Cougars knew they needed to change a few things against Oregon State on Saturday afternoon.

Well, actually, a lot of things.

The most important of which was the outcome.

They did that, holding off the Beavers 81-76 before 8,282 New Year’s Eve fans at the Spokane Arena.

“If we start off on the wrong foot it could potentially be a slippery slope downwards,” said junior forward Brock Motum, who led the Cougars in scoring (26 points) and rebounds (eight).

“It was important we got the win. We came off a pretty bad loss,” Motum added, alluding to Thursday’s 95-80 drubbing.

But this one, which the Cougars led for the final 37 minutes, had the potential to be even more devastating.

That’s because, after trailing by as many as 11 points, the final time with 5:17 left, the Beavers rallied behind their smallest player, 5-foot-9 guard Ahmad Starks.

Starks, who the Cougars targeted on the defensive end with DaVonté Lacy rising over him often for most of his 18 points, started shooting from long range away with a bit more than 5 minutes left.

A 25-footer was followed by another, just as far. The WSU lead was down to 65-60. A jumper from 15 a couple of minutes later drew OSU to within 70-66. And his last 3-pointer, from at least 25 feet with 51 seconds remaining, cut the lead to 77-74.

“He hit some tough shots with a hand in his face, for the most part,” said WSU coach Ken Bone.

And more than just in his face.

“On that last one, on his follow through, he hit my hand,” said Lacy, who was not whistled.

But two was as close as the Beavers (10-4, 0-2 in Pac-12 play) got. Not that they didn’t have their chances.

Marcus Capers, the senior guard whom OSU coach Craig Robinson kept instructing the Beavers to foul, made 6 of 8 free throws in the final two minutes. But one of his misses, and another by Lacy, were sandwiched around two makes from OSU’s Jared Cunningham, who had 10 of his team-high 21 from the line.

Lacy’s miss gave Oregon State the ball with 30 seconds left trailing 79-76.

Ten seconds later, Starks cast off from 28 feet. It missed, but Eric Moreland chased down the last of his 10 rebounds, kicking the ball out to Cunningham open at the 3-point line.

The junior rose up and fired.

“I was thinking, honestly, ‘I kind of hope he makes it so we can hit the game-winning shot,’ ” Moore said.

He was mistaken, one of the few mistakes made on an eight-point, nine-assist, one-turnover day.

Cunningham missed, the Cougars corralled this rebound and Capers finished the Beavers off with two free throws.

“I’m surprised he missed that because he’s a great shooter,” Bone said of Cunningham’s shot. “We just lucked out in the sense he missed that shot and we were able to come up with it.”

“Their guys made plays when they had to make them, we weren’t able to make plays when we needed to when the game got close,” OSU coach Craig Robinson said. “We needed to come up with some loose balls and we didn’t; when we needed to make a couple of shots, we didn’t.”

Especially early, when WSU (9-5, 1-1) showed the Beavers a 2-3 matchup zone, not the Cougars’ preferred defense. But Oregon had gashed Washington State’s man defense at a nearly 70-percent clip and Bone knew he had to change something.

“I’m not sure how confident we were in our man defense after Thursday,” he said, adding the zone “wasn’t great but it was fairly effective.”

So was a different attitude.

“That was the kind of approach I took to practice on Friday,” Moore said, “a more businesslike mentality.”

And they played as if their business depended on distribution.

“I thought we did a good job sharing the ball,” Bone said. “We definitely turned it over a few times, but you’re going to get that when you’re asking guys to move it, move it, move it.”

That movement may have resulted in 16 turnovers – still three less than OSU’s opponents average – but it also resulted in open looks and 53.8 percent shooting, including half of 12 attempts from beyond the 3-point arc.

OSU FG FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
Burton 29 7-11 0-0 2-7 3 2 14
Brandt 27 3-7 1-2 2-3 0 3 7
Collier 14 0-3 2-4 1-3 1 0 2
Cunningham 35 5-11 10-11 0-0 4 3 21
Starks 37 6-14 1-2 0-2 2 1 18
Barton 20 1-4 0-0 0-2 4 5 3
Moreland 27 3-4 2-3 4-10 0 3 8
Nelson 11 1-3 0-0 0-1 3 4 3
Totals 200 26-57 16-22 11-31 17 21 76

Percentages: FG .456, FT .727. 3-Point Goals: 8-23, .348 (Starks 5-12, Nelson 1-2, Barton 1-4, Cunningham 1-5). Team Rebounds: 3. Blocked Shots: 4 (Moreland 2, Brandt 2). Turnovers: 15 (Cunningham 4, Burton 3, Moreland 3, Collier, Starks, Barton, Brandt, Nelson). Steals: 10 (Cunningham 4, Starks 4, Moreland, Burton). Technical Fouls: None.

WSU FG FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
Motum 36 10-15 3-4 3-8 1 3 26
Enquist 23 1-4 0-0 1-4 0 1 2
Capers 32 2-3 6-8 1-5 4 2 10
Moore 35 3-5 2-2 0-1 9 3 8
Lacy 31 6-12 3-4 0-3 0 1 18
Ladd 13 3-7 1-1 0-3 0 1 7
Aden 9 0-1 1-2 0-0 0 0 1
Shelton 12 3-3 3-3 2-3 0 3 9
Lodwick 9 0-2 0-0 0-1 1 1 0
Totals 200 28-52 19-24 8-30 15 15 81

Percentages: FG .538, FT .792. 3-Point Goals: 6-12, .500 (Motum 3-5, Lacy 3-5, Lodwick 0-1, Moore 0-1). Team Rebounds: 2. Blocked Shots: 2 (Motum, Enquist). Turnovers: 16 (Motum 5, Lacy 4, Aden 3, Ladd, Capers, Lodwick, Moore). Steals: 5 (Lacy 2, Motum, Capers, Moore). Technical Fouls: None.

Halftime—Washington State 40-35. A—8,282.