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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

No. 19 Florida State looks to fix struggles in road games

In this Feb. 18, 2017, file photo, Florida State's Dwayne Bacon (4), Braian Angola-Rodas (11) and Xavier Rathan-Mayes (22) follow head coach Leonard Hamilton from the floor after losing to Pittsburgh in an NCAA college basketball game in Pittsburgh. If No. 19 Florida State hopes to get one of the double byes for the ACC Tournament, it will need to solve its road woes quickly. (Keith Srakocic / Associated Press)
By Joe Reedy Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – If Florida State wants to get one of the top four seeds in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament, the Seminoles must quickly cure their road woes.

The 19th-ranked Seminoles play their next two games on the road, where they are 2-5 in league play and have dropped five of their last six. They play at Clemson on Saturday and at No. 10 Duke on Tuesday.

Florida State (22-6) enters the weekend in a four-way tie for No. 21 Notre Dame, seventh-ranked Louisville and the Blue Devils. They each are 10-5 in the conference and two games behind No. 8 North Carolina, but the Seminoles are currently the second seed because of their 3-1 record over the other tied teams.

The top four seeds earn a double-bye for the ACC Tournament, which begins on March 7 at the Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn.

“There’s no question we want the double bye, but the only way is not wish for it … go take it,” coach Leonard Hamilton said. “It starts by taking care of business on Saturday.”

The Seminoles, who have trailed at halftime in every road game, opened ACC road play with a 60-58 victory at No. 18 Virginia on Dec. 31. All of the road losses have been by 12 points or more and they have trailed by 15 or more at some point.

Florida State leads the conference in field goal percentage, shooting 49 percent. But on the road they have shot over 50 percent just once and are at 42.2 percent on the season.

Hamilton liked what he saw in Monday’s 104-72 win over Boston College and hopes that performance can carry over to the next two games. He wants to see his team attack the paint more often in order to get open passes to the perimeter and more touches for his post players. He has also been stressing being more efficient in their half-court offense.

“We can’t be coming down and passing only once or twice against a team in their best defensive look,” Hamilton said. “Most times when we have spread the floor and moved the ball we have been effective.”

Saturday’s game also should be a good test for FSU after it dominated Clemson by 48 points (109-61) on Feb. 5. The Tigers (14-13, 4-11) have their last three games at home and are trying to get a postseason berth.

Senior forward Jarquez Smith said he expects that Clemson “is going to come out with a grudge” and that the Seminoles have to play as relaxed as they do at home.

“I think these next two games are going to really helps us because it will test where we are physically and mentally,” guard Xavier Rathan-Mayes said. “We are really meshing as a team at the right time. We need to get a couple wins in order to go into the postseason on a high note.”