No. 22 BYU Outlasts WVU Saturday Night at the Coliseum
February 03, 2024 08:25 PM | Men's Basketball
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – Foussyni Traore got an emergency start at center and responded with a season-high 24 points in leading 22nd-ranked BYU to an 86-73 victory over West Virginia Saturday night at the WVU Coliseum.
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BYU's regular starting center, Aly Khalifa, did not make the trip to Morgantown because of illness.
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The Cougars overcame some cold first-half shooting to connect on 54.8% of their field goal attempts in the second half, including 8-of-19 from behind the arc.
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West Virginia coach Josh Eilert points to BYU's 19 second-chance points off nine offensive rebounds as a deciding factor in the game.
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"They do a good enough job in the half court and to get those extra 3s were a killer," he said. "When you combine second-chance and fastbreak scoring, that's 27 points right there and those are easy buckets."
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After seeing its 17-point lead whittled down to six, 67-61, BYU got a Richie Saunders bank-shot 3 ahead of the shot clock to push the Cougars' lead back to nine. Another 3 by Trevin Knell answered two RaeQuan Battle free throws to make it an eight-point lead.
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More triples by Jaxson Robinson and Dallin Hall pushed the margin back to 14 with 1:27 remaining.
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"Those were demoralizing shots and credit to them because they went in," Eilert said.
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Overall, BYU was 32 of 66 from the floor for 48.5% and 13 of 36 from 3 for 36.1%. The Cougars came into the game averaging more than 12 3-pointers per game.
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"When you are making defensive miscues and you can't rebound out of it that's going to be a problem against a team like that," Eilert said.
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Spencer Johnson contributed 15 points and Robinson tallied 12 for the Cougars, now 16-5 overall and 4-4 in Big 12 play.
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Traore, at 6-foot-6 and 240 pounds, was giving up five inches to West Virginia's starting center Jesse Edwards and two inches to backup Patrick Suemnick, but it didn't matter. Traore drew a couple of early fouls on Edwards to send him to the bench and then began working on the others.
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He was 10 of 15 from the floor, 4 of 4 from the free throw line and grabbed nine rebounds.
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"He just did an excellent job of backing us down," Eilert explained. "To double or not to double, especially when he is surrounded by four shooters, that's a hard decision. We just thought we had a decent matchup down there but credit to him. He came in here with an opportunity and, man, did he make the most of it."
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BYU assisted on 19 of its 32 field goals and turned the ball over just eight times.
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West Virginia, which had its three-game home winning streak snapped, got a season-high 23 points from guard Kerr Kriisa, who made 8 of his 14 field goal attempts including half of his 10 3-point tries.
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Edwards scored 16 on 7-of-9 shooting while Battle finished with 14.
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Tonight's loss drops West Virginia's record to 8-14 overall and 3-6 in Big 12 play. Tonight's paid attendance was announced at 11,753.Â
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West Virginia will have a week before its next game at Texas next Saturday in Austin. Earlier this year, WVU upset the Longhorns 76-73 at the Coliseum back on Jan. 13.
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BYU's regular starting center, Aly Khalifa, did not make the trip to Morgantown because of illness.
Â
The Cougars overcame some cold first-half shooting to connect on 54.8% of their field goal attempts in the second half, including 8-of-19 from behind the arc.
Â
West Virginia coach Josh Eilert points to BYU's 19 second-chance points off nine offensive rebounds as a deciding factor in the game.
Â
"They do a good enough job in the half court and to get those extra 3s were a killer," he said. "When you combine second-chance and fastbreak scoring, that's 27 points right there and those are easy buckets."
Â
After seeing its 17-point lead whittled down to six, 67-61, BYU got a Richie Saunders bank-shot 3 ahead of the shot clock to push the Cougars' lead back to nine. Another 3 by Trevin Knell answered two RaeQuan Battle free throws to make it an eight-point lead.
Â
More triples by Jaxson Robinson and Dallin Hall pushed the margin back to 14 with 1:27 remaining.
Â
"Those were demoralizing shots and credit to them because they went in," Eilert said.
Â
Overall, BYU was 32 of 66 from the floor for 48.5% and 13 of 36 from 3 for 36.1%. The Cougars came into the game averaging more than 12 3-pointers per game.
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"When you are making defensive miscues and you can't rebound out of it that's going to be a problem against a team like that," Eilert said.
Â
Spencer Johnson contributed 15 points and Robinson tallied 12 for the Cougars, now 16-5 overall and 4-4 in Big 12 play.
Â
Traore, at 6-foot-6 and 240 pounds, was giving up five inches to West Virginia's starting center Jesse Edwards and two inches to backup Patrick Suemnick, but it didn't matter. Traore drew a couple of early fouls on Edwards to send him to the bench and then began working on the others.
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He was 10 of 15 from the floor, 4 of 4 from the free throw line and grabbed nine rebounds.
Â
"He just did an excellent job of backing us down," Eilert explained. "To double or not to double, especially when he is surrounded by four shooters, that's a hard decision. We just thought we had a decent matchup down there but credit to him. He came in here with an opportunity and, man, did he make the most of it."
Â
BYU assisted on 19 of its 32 field goals and turned the ball over just eight times.
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West Virginia, which had its three-game home winning streak snapped, got a season-high 23 points from guard Kerr Kriisa, who made 8 of his 14 field goal attempts including half of his 10 3-point tries.
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Edwards scored 16 on 7-of-9 shooting while Battle finished with 14.
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Tonight's loss drops West Virginia's record to 8-14 overall and 3-6 in Big 12 play. Tonight's paid attendance was announced at 11,753.Â
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West Virginia will have a week before its next game at Texas next Saturday in Austin. Earlier this year, WVU upset the Longhorns 76-73 at the Coliseum back on Jan. 13.
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Team Stats
BYU
WVU
FG%
.485
.424
3FG%
.361
.286
FT%
.643
.750
RB
35
35
TO
8
9
STL
4
4
Game Leaders
Players Mentioned
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