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

Vandals topple Griz in two OTs

Hill, Scott keep Idaho in playoff contention

Sean Kramer Correspondent
MOSCOW, Idaho — Connor Hill fell short in his five previous career tries at the Montana Grizzlies. Maybe the most agonizing setback occurred at Memorial Gym last season, when Montana pulled out a 72-71 victory over Hill’s Idaho Vandals. So Hill was more than happy to get another shot at the Grizzlies on Thursday night. Hill’s first 28 minutes on the floor, all in regulation, didn’t do much to help Idaho toward that goal. He had 15 points – but on 17 field-goal attempts – and was 1 of 8 from beyond the arc. Lucky for him, and Idaho, Thursday’s game went beyond regulation. Lucky, also, because the Vandals chopped away at a Montana seven-point lead with 3 minutes left in the second half. Hill didn’t hesitate to shoot despite his 3-point troubles in regulation. Hill nailed both of his 3-point attempts and scored eight points after regulation to lead Idaho to a 92-87 win over the Grizzlies in double overtime. The Big Sky’s top eight teams make the conference tournament. Seventh-place Idaho is two games up on ninth-place Southern Utah. Hill collected an offensive rebound, bouncing to him off a Mike Scott 3-point miss, and immediately set his feet for a straight away 3-pointer that swung the game in Idaho’s favor and delighted a crowd of 1,500 in the process. “I knew I was pulling that as soon as the ball came out to me,” Hill said. “I had space, I caught it perfectly and my feet were down.” Idaho coach Don Verlin would expect nothing less from one of his seniors playing in his second-to-last home game, despite his rough shooting start. “If he’s open he shoots it, or he’s getting taken out,” Verlin said. Idaho (12-14, 7-8 Big Sky) was paced by its sophomores and freshmen in regulation as its three seniors had trouble adjusting to Montana’s physical defense and Martin Breunig’s dominance defending the paint for the Grizzlies. Scott went coast-to-coast at the end of regulation to earn two free throws to send the game to overtime. From there, he scored eight more points, including the last three points in the first overtime to send it to a second. “My first 20 was horrible,” Scott said. “It just motivated (me) to come out and finish out the game. The team is going to need me. They go how I go.” Montana’s Jordan Gregory led all scorers with 36 points and hit a 3-pointer at the end of the first overtime in Hill’s face. The teams went back and forth in overtime, with 23 of Gregory’s 36 points coming during the extra frames. Gregory had the last word with Hill when Wiggs hit two free throws to ice the win for Idaho at the end of the second overtime. “He said, ‘Might see you over in Europe,’” Hill said. “He said, ‘Good game.’ He’s a classy guy. We have mutual respect for each other.”
UPDATE: Adds Kramer’s game story