Box Score West Virginia's second-half comeback ran out of gas in overtime. The Wildcats outscored the Mountaineers 15-11 in the extra session to claim a 94-90 victory and avoid an epic second half collapse tonight at Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan, Kansas.
"It's very disappointing to come in here and be that close and to come one bounce away or one call away ...," West Virginia coach
Josh Eilert said.
Leading by 25 points with 13:04 remaining, the Wildcats went ice cold and the Mountaineers scored 33 of 41 points over the next 11 minutes to tie the game at 74 on
Quinn Slazinski's baseline jumper with 2:54 showing on the clock.
A missed Tylor Perry jumper opened the door for
Kerr Kriisa to bang a 3 and give West Virginia its first lead, 77-74, since
RaeQuan Battle scored the game's opening basket. Two Kriisa free throws pushed the lead to four, 79-75, with 1:02 left, and the Mountaineers had an opportunity to make it a four-point lead again with 24 seconds left when
Jesse Edwards was fouled trying to follow Slazinski's missed 3.
But Edwards missed both free throws and Kriisa fouled Perry at the other end where he made both with 15 seconds to go.
Eilert elected to play on instead of calling timeout and Kriisa's 3 to win the game was off the mark as the horn sounded.
In overtime, Edwards made the first free throw to give West Virginia a brief one-point lead, but Perry quickly unknotted it with a 3 and then Edwards' night was finished when he fouled David N'guessan after missing a layup.
Kriisa missed his next two 3s, helping K-State build its lead to six, 87-81, with 1:59 remaining. Battle snapped the field goal drought with a 3, and then made another one to get the margin back to one with 35 seconds left.
Perry hit two free throws at the other end to put K-State ahead by three, and the Wildcats opted to foul and put the Mountaineers on the free throw line to avoid a game-tying 3. Kriisa made both, but Perry was fouled once again four seconds later and he made two more free throws.
WVU had a chance to tie it with five seconds remaining, but Battle was off target with his 3 and Slazinski couldn't come up with the offensive rebound when replay review showed that the ball went out of bounds off him.
A Cam Carter free throw one second later iced the game for Kansas State, which is now 7-0 in overtime games this year and 12-0 in two seasons under coach Jerome Tang.
"We had so many looks close to the rim that we left on the table and it's really going to hurt when we go back and look at it," Eilert said.
Tonight's loss was crushing for a West Virginia team seeking its first victory away from the Coliseum this year and wanting to climb out of the Big 12 cellar. The loss drops the Mountaineers to 9-19 overall and 4-11 in conference play.
Kansas State (17-11, 7-8) keeps its NCAA Tournament hopes alive and moves out of a ninth-place tie with Texas.
Perry led everyone with 29 points on 7 of 12 shooting, including 9 of 10 from the free throw line. Carter contributed 19 and Arthur Kaluma and Will McNair Jr. added 13 each. Kansas State was 15 of 31 from 3-point range and 25 of 35 from the free throw line.
Battle's 28 and Kriisa's season-high 25 led the Mountaineers. Forward Pat Suemnick added 10 points and four rebounds coming off the bench to spell Edwards, who struggled on the floor making just 1 of 9 and also at the free throw line where he was 3 of 9.
"Credit to our guys for fighting, battling and giving everything they've got right to the bitter end," Eilert said.
The Wildcats swept the season series, having won 81-67 in Morgantown back on Jan. 9.
West Virginia returns to the Coliseum looking for its 10
th win on Saturday night when it plays Texas Tech in a 6 p.m. game that will be televised nationally on ESPN2.
WVU wraps up the home portion of its schedule next Wednesday night against TCU, and then ends the regular season the following Saturday at Cincinnati.
The Mountaineers and the Bearcats could end up meeting in a Big 12 Tournament opening round game based on where teams currently sit as of tonight in the conference standings.