18
THE HARDEST PART After a busy stretch, the Orange hosts Clemson before beginning a tough road swing. page 4 SHIFTING GEARS Syracuse proves capable of winning games at any pace. page 3 SWAT Clemson’s McDaniels leads the ACC in blocks and the Tigers into the Carrier Dome on Sunday. page 5 BACK-TO-BACK Check out a two-sided poster of Tyler Ennis and Trevor Cooney, the starting backcourt for top-ranked Syracuse. page 9-12 PAINT syracuse vs clemson february 7-9, 2014 | dailyorange.com IN THE

February 7-9, 2014

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Feb. 7-9, 2014

Citation preview

Page 1: February 7-9, 2014

THE HARDEST PART After a busy stretch, the Orange hosts Clemson before beginning a tough road swing. page 4

SHIFTING GEARS Syracuse proves capable of winning games at any pace. page 3

SWAT Clemson’s McDaniels leads the ACC in blocks and the Tigers into the Carrier Dome on Sunday. page 5

BACK-TO-BACK Check out a two-sided poster of Tyler Ennis and Trevor Cooney, the starting backcourt for top-ranked Syracuse. page 9-12

PAINTsyracuse vs clemson

f e b r u a r y 7- 9 , 2 0 1 4 | d a i ly o r a n g e . c o m

IN THE

Page 2: February 7-9, 2014

Sports Editor Stephen BaileyPresentation Director Lizzie HartPhoto Editor Sam MallerCopy Chief Audrey HartAsst. Sports Editor Jesse DoughertyAsst. Sports Editor Trevor HassAsst. Photo Editor Emma FierbergDesign Editor Clare RamirezAsst. Copy Editor Sam BlumAsst. Copy Editor Phil D’Abbraccio

Chase GaewskiMANAGING EDITOR

Casey FabrisEDITOR IN CHIEF

follow us on

dailyorange.com

@dailyorange

facebook.com/dailyorangenews

@dailyorange

General Manager Peter WaackIT Director Mike EscalanteIT Support Lars NielsenIT Support Matthew HankinsBusiness Intern Tim BennettAdvertising Design Manager Abby LeggeAdvertising Manager William LeonardAdvertising Representative Mike FriedmanAdvertising Representative Gonzalo GarciaAdvertising Representative Emily MyersAdvertising Designer Kerri NashAdvertising Designer Andi BurgerAd Special Section Coordinator Evan HohenwarterCirculation Manager Jared CucinottaStudent Circulation Manager Michael RempterPromotions & Event Coordinator Ashley VilloneDigital Sales Manager Kaitlyn Chong

t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f s y r a c u s e , n e w y o r k

This time aroundThe last time Syracuse played Clemson, the Orange almost erased a 17-point deficit only to fall just short. page 6

What to watchA look at the nation’s best college basketball games this weekend. page 7

SykedBrittney Sykes dropped a career-high 31 points as the Syracuse women cruised past Virginia Tech on Thursday. page 14

Game timeFollow @DOSports for updates from Syracuse-Clemson on Sunday night. Tipoff is at 6 p.m.

Front page photo illustration by Sam Maller | Photo Editor

2 february 7-9, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

$5 off with purchase of $25 or more

Dine in or take outMust present coupon

when ordering Cannot be combined Cannot be combined with any additional

offers or all you can eat buffet

Exp: 2/28/2014

$10 off with purchase of $50 or more

Dine in or take outMust present coupon

when ordering Cannot be combined Cannot be combined with any additional

offers or all you can eat buffet

Exp: 2/28/2014

Take out or dine in

20% offMust present coupon

when ordering Cannot be combined Cannot be combined with any additional

offers or all you can eat buffet

Exp: 2/28/2014

Asian Food & BarUpscale restaurant with a cook-to-order all you care eat sushi, teriyaki, and much more! Only 10 Minutes from Campus!

3011 Erie Blvd East, Syracuse, NY 13224 (315) 445-7988 www.firudous.com

Order a minimum of $15 to get your food delivered!Also available to order online

Sushi is 50% off the regular price today! Come on by for happy hour 4pm - 7pm

Hours:Mon-Thurs: 11 am-3:00 pm, 4:00 pm-10 pmFri-Sat: 11 am-3:00 pm, 4:00 pm-11 pmSun: Noon-3:00 pm, 4:00 pm-10 pm

Page 3: February 7-9, 2014

the daily orange in the paint february 7-9, 2014 3

ANY WAY YOU WANT IT

TYLER ENNIS leads the break during a Syracuse win at the Carrier Dome. The Orange has proven itself able to emerge victorious regardless of the tempo of the game. SU can win the high-paced games like it did against Duke on Saturday, or grind out tough victories in slower, lower-scoring games like its win over Notre Dame on Monday. chase gaewski managing editor

The Atlantic Coast Confer-ence looked eerily similar to the Big East for most of

conference play. Slow paced. Turn-over filled.

Slugfests that make you want to tear your hair out, but somehow end up being incredibly entertaining.

But then Syracuse faced Duke. As SU head coach Jim Boeheim said after the game, it wasn’t just a classic because it was so close and there were so many people there — it was a classic because of the high-quality, fast-paced brand of basketball large-ly absent from the ACC this season.

Two days later, the ugliness returned against Notre Dame. But

just like Syracuse did against the Blue Devils, the Orange found a way to beat the Fighting Irish.

Syracuse (22-0, 9-0 ACC) has shown the ability to win both frenet-ic sprints to the finish line and pains-takingly gruesome games this year. Whichever approach Clemson (15-6, 6-3) opts to take, No 1. will adjust accordingly and stay unbeaten.

Fast or slow, aesthetically off-put-ting or gorgeous, it doesn’t matter.

Syracuse can and will win either way.“It was just a great game,”

Boeheim said after the Duke game. “I don’t think I’ve been involved in a better game in here that I can remember, where both teams played at such a high level.”

It was almost like the NBA All-Star game. Or a game of pickup at Archbold Gymnasium. Even a game of NBA 2K Blacktop Mode. Every shot went in.

Boeheim said he couldn’t remem-ber a game with two typically good defensive teams where the score was so high. With the back-and-forth action and fluid rhythm to the game, it somehow exceeded the massive

amount of hype that surrounded it in the proceeding months.

“If you paid $3,400 on the market for a courtside seat, it was money well spent,” Boeheim said. “You should be happy that you did.

“If you sold your tickets for this game, you should be ashamed because you made some money and missed an epic.”

Afterward, C.J. Fair — who scored a career-high 28 and epitomized the pizazz of the game with a slew of silky jumpers and snazzy layups — said he loved playing in such an exhilarating game.

Fair, who usually stays back to rebound, found himself leaking

out in transition more than he usu-ally does. That led to easy baskets, which are usually hard to come by in the ACC, even against lower-echelon teams.

“This was a high-paced game,” Fair said. “It was exciting. I like games like this. Not so much of a scare, but I like high 80s, low 90s.”

Yet Syracuse, a team with a big three that thrives in the open floor, rarely scores in the 80s or 90s. In fact, the Orange has only cracked the 80-point plateau five times this season. The last time it happened before the Duke game was against Binghamton on Dec. 7.

Syracuse can win games at any tempo as evidenced by Duke, UND performances

see hass page 17

TREVOR HASSWITH NO REGARD FOR HUMAN LIFE

Page 4: February 7-9, 2014

4 february 7-9, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

By David Wilsonstaff writer

Exhaustion had set in. With two games in three days, three in eight and four in 10, Syracuse had entered one of the most

grueling stretches of its schedule. The emo-tional win against Duke was in the rear view. All the Orange had to do was outlast Notre Dame and it would survive the taxing stretch.

C.J. Fair could feel it in his legs — or, rather, he couldn’t feel anything. Every time he left his feet for a jump shot, everything felt good, but nothing would fall.

“You might think, what’s wrong with my shot? Is it not jumping enough? Or is my legs tired?” the forward said. “Because sometimes when your body’s tired you don’t really feel it during the game, but like other people can see you don’t jump enough in your shot. But to yourself, it’s like you shot regularly.”

As Fair struggled against the Fighting Irish, so did SU. A game that No. 1 Syracuse should have been able to cruise through became yet another close contest in a season full of them. The Orange

(22-0, 9-0 Atlantic Coast) will enter the Carrier Dome on Sunday for a 6 p.m. tipoff against Clem-son (15-6, 6-3) after six days off, just enough time to gear up for another series of tests.

The Tigers come to the Carrier Dome, but road games against No. 25 Pittsburgh, No. 11 Duke, Maryland and Florida State fill the final

C.J. FAIR drives toward the basket during SU’s win over Duke on Saturday. After his career night against Duke, Fair’s performance against Notre Dame on Monday took a hit because of his fatigue. SU has six days off in between UND and Clemson. sam maller photo editor

BE FRESHGOTTA

see clemson page 16

Syracuse welcomes Clemson before tough road swing

Page 5: February 7-9, 2014

the daily orange in the paint february 7-9, 2014 5

Saturday, February 8th, 2014NYS Fairgrounds

Dairy Building1st Session: 1PM - 4PM

2nd Session: 6PM - 9PM

69 different craft breweriesover 200 beers

Live music by Rob and the Jʼs!

$30 advance tickets are available at:•Middle Ages Brewing Co.•The Blue Tusk•Empire Brewing Co.•Syracuse Suds•Party Source Tickets are $35 at the door.

Contact Bill at 315-471-6588 or 315-488-3835or [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] more info

Proof of age required21+ only

18th Annual CNY Brewfest

BLOCK PARTYBy Sam Blumasst. copy editor

Montay Brandon thought he had an easy two points. With Florida State trail-

ing Clemson by seven with just under 90 seconds to play, he intercepted a pass from a trapped K.J. McDaniels and had an open lane to the basket.

It would have cut the lead to five and given the Seminoles the momentum.

But McDaniels had other ideas. He raced over from the side-

line where he’d thrown his errant pass, extended his entire body and grabbed Brandon’s shot out of the air with both hands.

“He swallowed it,” the television announcer bellowed.

Clemson held on for the 53-49. “It felt like it kind of took the wind

out of the place,” McDaniels said. “It took the fans’ energy from them after that. They were cheering loud when they stole the ball, but as soon as that happened they were quiet.”

It was the first time the junior had completed such a block while at Clem-son. But swatting shots is nothing new for the 6-foot-6 combo forward.

In his first two seasons with the Tigers, he rejected 78 shots, ranking No. 1 in school history for a player his height or shorter. This season he’s averaging 2.62 per game — tops in the Atlantic Coast Conference — and out of the top 50 shot blockers in the nation, he’s com-mitted the fewest amount of fouls.

He’ll get a chance to show off his defensive ability when Clemson trav-els to play No. 1 Syracuse at the Car-rier Dome on Sunday at 6 p.m.

“It’s a natural feeling for me,” McDaniels said. “I’ve always been the athletic-type guy. I’ve always been that way and I’ve always had that ability to jump.

“It’s just putting it all together. Just doing all the things and being more versatile.”

McDaniels said he modeled his game after Dwayne Wade’s, because, despite his size, he’s always going up at the backboard and surprising defenders with his ability.

Like Wade, McDaniels has fantas-tic instincts. He often starts racing to the basket to block a shot before the player on offense even starts his shooting motion.

McDaniels leads ACC in blocks, presents defensive obstacle for Syracuse on Sunday

K.J. MCDANIELS denies a shot by Duke’s Jabari Parker. This season, McDaniels has been one of the nation’s top shot blockers and has elevated his scoring ability for Clemson. courtesy of rex brown, iptay mediasee mcdaniels page 15

Page 6: February 7-9, 2014

LAST TIME THEY PLAYED |

Trailing by 17 points with just under eight minutes left, Jim Boeheim turned the game into a foul-shooting contest — Clemson’s big-gest weakness.

And it almost worked.“If we had two more minutes, we would have

won,” Syracuse forward Demetris Nichols told The Daily Orange after the game.

The Tigers began to prove why they shot 58.8

percent from the free-throw line going into the game, and Syracuse whittled away slowly but surely. The deficit was cut to one with 19 ticks on the clock, but Clemson (24-10) manned up to make its foul shots and keep the Orange at bay. The result was a 74-70 Tigers victory in

Clemson, S.C., that knocked Syracuse (24-11) out of the NIT on March 21, 2007 and ended the Orange’s season.

After the first half ended, Boeheim was handed a technical foul for arguing with the referees. That’s how poorly the first 20 minutes went for SU — it made mistakes even with no time on the clock.

“I was talking to one guy and the other guy called a technical,” Boeheim said. “He told me that I can’t stay there and talk to the other official at halftime. The guy I was talking to can give me a technical if he thinks I need it. I was just talking to him about the call.”

The Tigers took an 11-point lead going into halftime behind 58.3 shooting percentage from 3-point territory. K.C. Rivers spearheaded the effort with 21 points on 4-of-7 shooting from 3, including a desperation heave as the shot clock expired late in the half.

“They made some tough shots against our defense,” Boeheim said. “Those things happen. Teams bang 3s. When the shot clock is running out they throw it in from seven or eight feet behind the line. When those things happen, that’s part of the game.”

In the first 10 minutes of the second half, the Orange never drew closer than 11 and then found itself down by 17 after a Raymond Sykes

CLEMSON 74, SYRACUSE 70 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 2007

Syracuse nearly comes back to beat Tigers in NIT

6 february 7-9, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

dunk at the 7:48 mark.Boeheim called for a 20-second timeout.“When you are 17 down, you have to get eight

or 10,” Boeheim said. “You can’t let the clock go down to two minutes and expect to come back.”

Out of the timeout, SU fought back. A 12-2 run made it a 60-53 game with four minutes remaining as Clemson went nearly three min-utes without scoring, misfiring on four field goals and three free throws.

After James Mays completed a three-point play to push the Tigers’ lead to 10, Syracuse embarked on another run. Terrence Roberts responded with six points unanswered, and SU hit five free throws to draw within two with 1:28 left.

Mays hit 1-of-2 from the charity stripe — making Clemson’s record four of its last 10 from the line — and SU guard Eric Devendorf’s left-handed layup with 1:04 remaining slashed the lead to one point.

After the Tigers cleaned up their own miss with a putback, Nichols came up with a basket to draw the Orange back within a point. Nine-teen ticks on the clock.

Devendorf fouled Rivers, in hopes that the Tigers’ struggles at the line would persist.

Not the case. Rivers sank both. And at the other end, Josh Wright missed

a 3 with 11 seconds left that would’ve tied the score. Clemson hit three more free throws, and SU’s season was done.

“We have been in these situations a couple times this year and got back,” Boeheim said. “These guys have battled all year. It was just dis-appointing that we did not play harder earlier.”

—Compiled by Phil D’Abbraccio | asst. copy editor, [email protected], @PhilDAbb

When you are 17 down, you have to get eight or 10. You can’t let the clock go down to two minutes and expect to come back.

“Jim BoeheimSU HEAD COACH

DARRYL WATKINS attempts to block a shot during Clemson’s win over Syracuse in 2007 in the NIT quarterfinals.courtesy of sefton ipock anderson independent-mail

Page 7: February 7-9, 2014

the daily orange in the paint february 7-9, 2014 7

AROUND THE NATION

In a less than arousing college basketball week-end there’s still, as always, a fair share of story lines presented by Saturday’s slate.

Wichita State will probably continue its undefeated season. Steve Fisher will continue to coach in a time machine. And someone on Kansas is going to baptize someone on West Virginia.

After that, treat yourself to some average basketball and bank on next week being a little more exciting.

No. 15 Texas at Kansas State, 1:30 p.m., ESPN3It’s an underwhelming weekend of college basketball when a Big 12 matchup featuring an unranked team sneaks its way into the top games. The Longhorns (18-4, 7-2 Big 12) are white hot in conference play, winning their last seven games including four against ranked opponents. Texas recently met Kansas State (15-7, 5-4) on Jan. 21 and beat the then-No. 22 Wildcats 67-64. Don’t expect this one to be as close as that, as the Longhorns are hitting their stride with a formi-dable combination of staunch rebounding and up-tempo offense.

No. 10 Michigan at No. 17 Iowa, 2 p.m., ESPNMichigan (17-5, 9-1 Big Ten) was brought back down to earth by Indiana last Sunday, after starting 8-0 in the Big Ten. Then the Wol-verines got back on track with a blowout win

over Nebraska this week and will look to feast on a stumbling Hawkeyes (17-6, 6-4) squad. Iowa has lost three of its last five games — one of which was against Michigan two weeks ago. The Hawkeyes will have a chance if they slow down play in the half court, but if the Wolverines outshoot them, Nik Stauskas, Glen Robinson III and Caris LeVert will catapult the visiting team to a win.

West Virginia at No. 8 Kansas, 4 p.m., ESPNKansas (17-5, 8-1 Big 12) dropped its first con-ference game to Texas last weekend but hung on to its Top 10 spot. West Virginia (14-9, 6-4) has been shaky since the start of conference play — relying heavily on the scoring duo of Juwan Staten and Eron Harris — and will have to have a lot of things go its way to stick in this one. With Kansas, it really comes down to which Andrew Wiggins, Joel Embiid and Wayne Selden Jr. show up. They’re all going to get their shots, and if they’re hitting, the Jayhawks effortlessly put teams away.

Baylor at No. 21 Oklahoma, 7 p.m., ESPN2After starting conference play with some sig-nature wins, Oklahoma (17-6, 6-4 Big 12) has sputtered out with two straight losses. The buck doesn’t stop on Saturday against Baylor (14-8, 2-7), a team itching to prove its worth after a miserable start to its league slate. The

Bears currently sit ninth in the conference and need to start getting more production out of sophomore Isaiah Austin. The Sooners are a good team for Austin to get back on track against, as they struggle against big men who can stretch the floor.

No. 23 Gonzaga at No. 24 Memphis, 9 p.m., ESPNI hate reverting to the mid-major spiel, but Gon-zaga is making it easy this year. Sure, the Bulldogs (21-3, 11-1 West Coast) are nearly untouched in conference play, but have played too many close games against far inferior opponents and there-fore haven’t earned the pedigree of a Top 25 team. Memphis (17-5, 7-3 American Athletic) is in a prime position to boost its strength of schedule in a game that is so randomly placed in both teams’ conference schedules.

Alabama at No. 3 Florida, noon, ESPN The Gators (20-2, 9-0 Southeastern) are unde-feated in the SEC, but have yet to face a ranked conference opponent. That won’t change Saturday when the lowly Crimson Tide (9-13, 3-6) visit the Stephen C. O’Connell Center for what should be a landslide Florida victory. The Gators aren’t set to face a ranked opponent until they travel to face No. 18 Kentucky at 9 p.m. next Saturday. That will just be another teeny bump in the road.

—Compiled by Jesse Dougherty, asst. sports editor, [email protected]

Michigan-Iowa highlights weekend’s slate of matchupsAP POLLThe latest Associated Press college basketball Top 25.

1. Syracuse (65) 22-02. Arizona 22-1 3. Florida 20-24. Wichita State 24-05. San Diego State 20-16. Villanova 20-27. Cincinnati 22-28. Kansas 17-59. Michigan State 20-310. Michigan 17-511. Duke 18-512. Creighton 18-313. Saint Louis 21-214. Louisville 19-415. Texas 18-416. Iowa State 17-417. Iowa 17-618. Kentucky 17-519. Oklahoma State 16-620. Virginia 18-521. Oklahoma 17-622. Connecticut 17-523. Gonzaga 21-324. Memphis 17-525. Pittsburgh 19-4

Page 8: February 7-9, 2014

8 jan. 31- feb. 1, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

“I honestly didn’t go out. I just like, hung out and was happy that we won. And that’s it.”Rachel Rudich freshman public health major

“After Syracuse beat Duke, I went to a very big party and got very drunk. Illegally.”Joey Sims sophomore physics major

“Ran around the house screaming. Yeah, that’s it.”Taylor Hodge junior biology major

“I went back to my dorm, and chilled out with all of my friends and celebrated and listened to some nice dance music and went hard.”Patrick Smith freshman civil engineering major

“I was camping out for 13 days and I was sitting front row, so I was really tired and I went home and went to sleep. And I’m also not 21 so I couldn’t go to the bars.”Hailey Temple junior public relations and information management and technology major

“I went back to my room and drank a lot more and then went out with some friends.”Emily Sims freshman communications design major

“Party, go celebrate, and party.”Sixto Acevedo sophomore accounting major

“I got really hammered. We got hammered and went to a party.”Sarp Oflazoglu freshman economics major

perspectivestext and photos by emma fierberg asst. photo editor

What did you do after Syracuse beat Duke last weekend?

follow @dosports on twitter

“So after the freak out and after hugging everybody that was around me, I went out to Chuck’s and to The Orange. It was a party and I loved it.”Andrew Pregler junior broadcast journalism/information management and technology major

“Partied with all of my friends.”Emma Torres senior finance and marketing major

point guard game-winning layup vs. pitt

Page 9: February 7-9, 2014

st

er

lin

g b

oin

sta

ff p

ho

tog

ra

pher

PO

ST

ER

S

ER

IES

PAR

T 2

OF

6

TR

EV

OR

CO

ON

EY

shoo

ting

gua

rd n

ine 3

-poi

nter

s vs

. not

re d

ame

Page 10: February 7-9, 2014

sam maller photo editor

POSTER SERIESPART 3 OF 6

TYLER ENNISpoint guard game-winning layup vs. pitt

Page 11: February 7-9, 2014

the daily orange in the paint february 7-9, 2014 13

2014 Basketball RostersSyracuse

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Year Hometown/High School0 Michael Gbinije F 6-7 200 So. Richmond, Va./Benedictine College Prep2 B.J. Johnson F 6-7 185 Fr. Philadelphia, Pa./Lower Merion3 Jerami Grant F 6-8 210 So. Hyattsville, Md./DeMatha Catholic4 Nolan Hart G 5-10 152 Sr. Albany, N.Y./Albany Academy 5 C.J. Fair F 6-8 215 Sr. Baltimore, Md./Baltimore City College H-S/ Brewster Academy (N.H)10 Trevor Cooney G 6-4 195 So. Wilmington, Del./Sanford School11 Tyler Ennis G 6-2 180 Fr. Brampton, Ontario/St. Benedict’s Prep (N.J.)12 Baye Moussa Keita C 6-10 220 Sr. Saint Louis, Senegal/Oak Hill Academy21 Tyler Roberson F 6-8 212 Fr. Union, N.J./Roselle Catholic23 Russ DeRemer G 6-5 203 Sr. Wrentham, Mass./Xaverian Brothers/St. Andrew’s/Worcester Academy25 Rakeem Christmas C 6-9 250 Jr. Philadelphia, Pa./Academy of the New Church32 DaJuan Coleman F 6-9 280 So. Jamesville, N.Y./Jamesville-DeWitt33 Albert Nassar F 6-6 195 Jr. Stuart, Fla./South Fork34 Ron Patterson G 6-2 200 Fr. Broad Ripple, Ind./Broad Ripple/Brewster Academy35 Chinonso Obokoh C 6-10 210 Fr. Rochester, N.Y./Bishop Kearney

Clemson

1 Austin Ajukwa F 6-5 190 Fr. Columbia, S.C./Cardinal Newman HS2 Carson Fields G 6-4 200 Jr. Pewee Valley, Kent./South Oldham HS3 Adonis Filer G 6-2 190 So. Chicago, Ill./Notre Dame Preparatory 4 Patrick Rooks G 6-2 185 Fr. Charlotte, N.C./Charlotte Christian HS5 Jaron Blossomgame F 6-7 215 Fr. Alpharetta, Ga./Chattahoochee HS12 Rod Hall G 6-1 210 Jr. Augusta, Ga./Lucy C. Laney HS20 Jordan Roper G 5-11 165 So. Columbia, S.C./Irmo HS21 Damarcus Harrison G 6-4 205 Jr. Greenwood, S.C./Christ School32 K.J. McDaniels F 6-6 200 Jr. Birmingham, Ala./Central Park Christian School33 Josh Smith F 6-8 260 So. Charlotte, N.C./Olympic HS35 Landry Nnoko C 6-10 250 So. Yaounde, Cameroon/Montverde Academy42 Ibrahim Djambo F 6-10 215 Jr. Bamako, Mali/Three Rivers CC50 Sidy Djitte C 6-10 240 Fr. Dakar, Senegal/Northwood Temple Academy

Page 12: February 7-9, 2014

14 february 7-9, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

By Josh Hyberstaff writer

Birthday celebrations came early for Brittney Sykes on Thursday.

Just hours before the star sophomore guard turned 20 years old, the player who wears No. 20 on her back turned in a special performance in front of 506 Thursday night at the Carrier Dome.

Sykes scored a career-high 31 points — 21 of which came in the first half — and added eight rebounds, leading Syracuse (17-6, 6-4 Atlantic Coast) to a 73-48 victory over Vir-ginia Tech (11-11, 1-8).

“She could have had 71 tonight,” SU head coach Quentin Hillsman said.

Sykes sat on 27 points for 4:34 — a span that included a missed free throw, 56 seconds on the bench and a missed jump shot. But with 8:29 to go in regulation, Sykes caught an outlet pass from Rachel Coffey on the left side of the lane and laid it in off the glass.

“Usually it takes me until the second half to realize what the defense is doing and how

they’re playing me,” Sykes said. “But my team-mates were giving me the ball and were trust-ing me. I was finding the open gaps, and luckily I was scoring the ball early and was on a roll.”

Sykes, who until Thursday averaged only 6.8   first-half points on 39 percent shooting in ACC play, began the night with a hot hand. She outscored the entire Hokies team 8-7 at the 14:04 mark of the first half, and the Orange led 13-7.

Two minutes later, Sykes blew by Hokies

guard Vanessa Panousis and hit a layup to extend SU’s lead to 15-8. Moments later, Taylor Ford intercepted a pass and quickly threw it ahead to Coffey, who then tapped it underneath to Sykes for another layup.

Sykes was all over the floor, curling around screens and  hitting several jumpers. The 5-foot-9 guard hit a high-arcing jump shot over 6-footer Lauren Evans to give SU a 17-8 lead.

Several fans sitting courtside enjoyed the Sykes Show. When Sykes rose for a jumper from the left corner, Syracuse Director of Athletics Daryl Gross raised his hand in anticipation. When the shot back-rimmed, Special Assistant to the Athletics Director Floyd Little yelled, “Keep shooting, Britt!”

She didn’t need the reminder.With 9:17 left in the first half, Sykes hit

a jumper to put the Orange up 26-12, and moments later converted a three-point play to extend the lead to 29-12.

Another layup and two more free throws and Sykes led the Hokies 20-15. Syracuse led Vir-ginia Tech 33-15 with 6:42 remaining in the half.

At the end of the first half, the Orange held a 43-22 lead. Of the 43, Sykes had 21.

“I looked up and I didn’t even know I had 21,” Sykes said. “All my teammates were cheering, and the only thing I was worried about was making sure I carried that energy into the sec-ond half so we could put the game away.”

Sykes’ first points of the second half didn’t come until 14:28 — a 12:14 span since she had last scored in the first half. Sykes tied her

career-high 27 with a layup with 13:03 left gave the Orange a 35-point lead at 60-27.

The culmination of the night came on a quintessential Sykes play — she took a feed from Coffey and went right down the middle of the lane and hit a layup.

Sykes came out with 5:26 left in the game and took a seat next to Brianna Butler. The team’s

second-leading scorer let out a wide grin and gave her friend a congratulatory tap on the head.

“We’ve got more games to look forward to,” said guard Cornelia Fondren. “I think she can have better games than these — offensively and defensively. We have more games to come, and she has better games to play.”

[email protected]

Sykes leads Syracuse past Virginia Tech with 31 points

Day paces Orange in paint with 12 rebounds, 6 blocksBy Tyler Piccotti staff writer

While Brittney Sykes was taking care of busi-ness on the offensive end, the Orange’s interior defense received a boost from Briana Day on Thursday night.

Although Syracuse (17-6, 6-4 Atlantic Coast) was sporting special white and pink jerseys on Play 4Kay Day, the freshman forward left Virginia Tech (11-11, 1-8 Atlantic Coast) seeing red. She grabbed a team-high 12 rebounds and added six blocks to stymie the Hokie offense during the Orange’s 73-48 victory at the Car-rier Dome.

In doing so, she treated the 506 fans in attendance to what she called one of her better games this season.

“The rebounding thing and the six blocks…and the fouls,” Day said. “That was good today — to get fouled a lot — so I guess it’s one of the best.”

As a team, the Orange quickly asserted its dominance beneath the basket. Shakeya Leary began the game by outmuscling opposing center Monet Tellier for two quick rebounds. She then put SU on the board with a three-point play.

But it was at the 16:30 mark that Day entered the game and proceeded to steal the show.

The North Carolina native immediately snagged a rebound on her first defensive series, which led to an easy bucket for Sykes on the offensive end. She finished the first half with seven boards in all.

Her best sequence came with only four min-utes remaining in the half. Virginia Tech’s Uju Ugoka tried to drive along the baseline, but Day was there to swat away both of her shot attempts. Cornelia Fondren was fouled in tran-sition on the ensuing break, and her two shots at the charity stripe extended the SU lead to 18.

In total, Syracuse held the Hokies to only six points in the paint and three offensive

rebounds through the first 20 minutes. It also forced Virginia Tech into 11 three-point attempts, most of which were contested.

Only one resulted in points.Sykes said that head coach Quentin Hills-

man had stressed the importance of defend-ing those outside shots before the game. The success of Day and others around the cylinder made that task much easier.

“We have a good inside presence with the Day twins and Shakeya Leary and sometimes Taylor Ford, if she plays at the five,” Sykes said. “For us to really defend down low and Briana Day having six blocks, it just shows that we do have an inside presence and we can take advantage of the inside and make them score from the outside.”

Even though the Orange sported a comfort-able 21-point lead out of the break, it continued to cause chaos in the paint. Leary and Sykes coupled to force a Hokie turnover only one

minute into the latter frame.Seconds later, Day re-entered the game and

continued to apply suffocating pressure in the paint. She quickly forced a jump ball and fol-lowed that with yet another rebound on the ensuing defensive sequence.

She also pitched in offensively, scoring two quick buckets en route to a final tally of nine points.

“Just trying to do what I can for my team and trying to keep my coach a little happy,” Day said. “That’s what it was. I’m just playing hard.”

Hillsman said that Day is a good anchor of the Orange’s zone, and it was great to see her have success in multiple areas.

But, most of all, at the rim.“She attacks the offensive glass. She really

rebounds the basketball.” Hillsman said. “If we can get half of that each way for her every night as a freshman, we’ll take it.”

[email protected]

BRITTNEY SYKES elevates for two of her career-high 31 points Thursday. Sykes outscored the Hokies in parts of the first half in SU’s win. logan reidsma contributing photographer

All my teammates were cheering, and the only thing I was worried about was making sure I carried that energy into the second half so we could put the game away.

“Brittney SykesSU GUARD

women’s basketball

Page 13: February 7-9, 2014

the daily orange in the paint february 7-9, 2014 15

Sun.Feb. 23rd

nyrecordfairs.com

Amber AleNow available @ Carrier Dome!

on tap @ Club 44 & some concession stands

empire brewing companyserving lunch and dinner 7 days a weekawafree wifi

www. empirebrew.com120 Walton St., Syracuse, 13202

award winning ales & lagers

“That’s a natural gift from God,” said Tigers assistant coach Earl Grant, who recruited him to play at Clemson. “A lot of the stuff that K.J. has, it’s natural. You can’t teach it. It’s in his genes.”

What Grant saw when he first saw McDaniels play at Central Park Christian (Ala.) School was an

oversized power forward. He didn’t have as many refined skills, but his instincts for blocking shots and playing defense were well ahead of the curve.

Every day before practice, Central Park Christian head coach Donovan Broadnax would run a tip drill. Players would jump then throw the ball off the backboard then jump up and do it again. Ten times with each hand, then 10 more with both hands. They couldn’t stop and couldn’t bobble the ball.

At the end of the year, Broadnax would make it a competition to see who could last the lon-gest. McDaniels would sometimes do it more than 100 times without messing up, well ahead of his teammates.

“He has natural ball instincts,” Broadnax said. “If you don’t screen him out he’s going to put it back. And he’s going to put it back on your head, if you don’t put a body on him. I think that helps with his shot blocking.”

Broadnax said it’s cool to turn on the televi-sion and see McDaniels on SportsCenter, but also said he fears that McDaniels’ success and elevating stock might affect his personality.

“Once you start getting on ESPN Top 10 pret-ty regularly, it’s hard to stay humble,” Broadnax said. “You’re in the same Top 10 as like LeBron (James) and Blake Griffin. That’s big time, espe-cially coming from Birmingham, Ala.”

But McDaniels has stayed modest. His mother called Broadnax earlier this

week to talk about how proud she is of the person McDaniels has become — even though there is more attention and more cameras on him than ever before.

Before, he couldn’t create his own shots. Now he can dribble and shoot, which makes him much more dangerous.

“We’d always say, ‘If you ever jump with this shot, the way you jump, you could be looking

down at the rim shooting it in,’” Broadnax said.With the Orange struggling to score when the

other team prevents it from driving to the basket, McDaniels figures to be a key factor in Clemson’s game plan. With him clogging the middle, SU may struggle to score, which could position Clemson to knock off the undefeated Orange.

He doesn’t really have an explanation for why he’s become so versatile a player. Some of it is hard work. Some of it is just natural ability.

Whatever the cause, the result is a spec-tacle and the Orange will see it firsthand on Sunday evening.

Said McDaniels: “I have heart. Just being physical. It’s just a physics-type thing.”

[email protected] | @SamBlum3

from page 5

mcdaniels

K.J. MCDANIELS is averaging an ACC-leading 2.62 blocks per game. He has always had a natural leaping ability and is fully utilizing it this year. courtesy of rex brown, iptay media

Page 14: February 7-9, 2014

16 february 7-9, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

After each practice you try to get in the ice bath, try to get some ice — just to keep your body refreshed. But still, it takes a toll on you when you play a lot of games in a short amount of time.

C.J. FairSU FORWARD

month of the regular-season schedule. At this stage of the season, weariness is a real issue.

“I think it was fatigue,” SU guard Tyler Ennis

said after the 61-55 win against UND on Monday. He didn’t blame an emotional letdown, but just

the regular challenge of two games in 48 hours.“Mentally, we weren’t all there at some

points, but we had enough to pull it out.”This week became one to regroup and recov-

er. Fair needs to get his legs — and his jump shot — back. Ennis and Jerami Grant need a few days off to gather themselves and return to form.

SU got Tuesday off and has made an effort to stay fresh even during the hefty stretch of games.

“After each practice you try to get in the ice bath, try to get some ice — just to keep your body refreshed,” Fair said. “But still, it takes a toll on you when you play a lot of games in a short amount of time.”

The six days off brings more of the same.“Definitely just ice baths — anything,” Grant

said. “Stretching a lot. Just trying to stay in shape throughout everything.”

The style that Clemson plays, though, could make the days off obsolete. The Tigers slow the pace and clamp down on defense. It’s the same brand of basketball that so many lesser teams have used to scare the Orange this year.

Miami (Fla.) and Boston College — two .500 or worse teams — kept the score in the 50s or lower to stay competitive with Syracuse earlier this season.

Clemson ranks second in the nation in scoring defense. The Tigers can batter SU and wear it down.

UND does similar things, too. Syracuse drove the lane effectively against Duke, but couldn’t do that against the Irish. With only one day off, another physical team gave the Orange fits.

“Notre Dame did what they do against us every year,” SU head coach Jim Boeheim said. “They take time off the clock and they move the ball.”

Of course, Notre Dame also benefited from one of the worst games of Fair’s career. If the issue was fatigue, as he guessed it might have been, that shouldn’t plague him again on Sunday.

The schedule only gets tougher from here, but with a full-strength Fair, Syracuse is in good shape.

“I wasn’t getting enough lift from my legs on my jump shot. Every time I shot I thought it was good and then it was off,” Fair said. “I’ve just got to keep confidence and not change anything because I’ve made those shots before.”

[email protected] | @DBWilson2

from page 4

clemson

(TOP) TYLER ENNIS high-fives C.J. Fair during the Orange’s win over Duke. (RIGHT) JERA-MI GRANT throws down a dunk during SU’s victory on Saturday. The Orange said exhaustion set in before SU’s grind-it-out battle with Notre Dame on Monday. sam maller photo editor

Page 15: February 7-9, 2014

the daily orange in the paint february 7-9, 2014 17

With all due respect to 4-19 Binghamton, Syracuse could crack 80 against the Bearcats with its walk-ons. Nolan Hart would probably drop 20 by himself.

Much of the reason Syracuse rarely puts up 80 is because it doesn’t get off as many shots as you might think.

If you compare SU to Duke, for example, the Blue Devils are averaging four more shots per game. Fifty-eight compared to 54.3 for Syracuse. And that’s without considering the copious number of 3s Mike Krzyzewski’s team takes.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist or bas-ketball aficionado to deduce that more shots — generally speaking, at least — lead to more points. Duke’s averaging 81.9 per game, while Syracuse is a whole 10 lower.

Duke ran its style of offense against Syra-cuse. Get up 3s, and get ‘em up fast. But the Orange adjusted and still won.

“We don’t get looked at for our scoring,” guard Ron Patterson said, “mostly for our defense, but I think we can score a lot.”

Against Notre Dame two days later, though, when Mike Brey’s team deliberately slowed the pace down to the point of excruciatingly methodical offense, Syracuse rolled with it and came away with a victory.

Sure, the performance wasn’t all too pretty — sans Trevor Cooney’s lights-out shooting — but SU found a way to get a W, as it has all season.

Earlier in the year, Miami tried to work the shot clock down and nearly came away with an upset twice. Rather than try to change the pace, the Orange simply outplays the opposi-tion at its own game.

When Virginia works the ball around in a few

weeks, the approach will likely be the same. In the ACC, the pace is often slower, just

like it was when Syracuse was in the Big East. In order to win a championship, the Orange will need to continue to beat teams that work the ball around the perimeter with the hopes

of cracking the zone. It’ll also need to beat at least one team that likes to run, like Creigh-ton, Michigan or Florida, for example.

When that fast-paced game comes, the Orange will be ready. It certainly was against Duke.

Pace doesn’t matter for Syracuse. Talent does.

Trevor Hass is an asst. sports editor at The Daily Orange, where his column appears occa-sionally. He can be reached at [email protected]

or on Twitter at @TrevorHass.

from page 3

hass

TREVOR COONEY drives on a Notre Dame defender on Monday night. The guard dropped a career-high 33 points to carry the Orange past the Fighting Irish in a classic Big East-style game. SU has proven its ability to win a game of any speed. sterling boin staff photographer

Page 16: February 7-9, 2014

18 february 7-9, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

SYRACUSE 73, CLEMSON 53Thrashing the TigersSyracuse finally gets the lopsided win it hasn’t had since Jan. 7 against Virginia Tech.

(15-6) CLEMSON AT 1SYRACUSE (22-0)

Trevor Cooney has hit 68 of Syracuse’s 119 3s — 57.1 percent, which is the second-highest clip in the nation.

Clemson’s points per game in Atlantic Coast Conference play, the lowest of any ACC team.

Filer has gotten the last two starts for Clemson but only averages 15 minutes per game. He scored 12 points against North Carolina on Jan. 26, but has committed five turn-overs over his last two games. Ennis scored just six against Notre Dame, but has dished out 17 assists in his last two contests.Advantage: Syracuse

Grant has put together four double-doubles since Jan. 7 and he’s proven his explosiveness around the rim time and time again. McDaniels, however, is more of an all-around player. He ranks eighth in the ACC in scoring and tops the league in blocks per game, verifying his pres-ence on the inside and his ability to score the ball. Advantage: Clemson

Hall scores nine points per game, but has gone five consecutive games without scoring in double digits. Before Monday, it had been nine games since Cooney had hit more than three 3-pointers in a game. He exploded for nine of them Monday night and proved, once again, how forcefully he can control a game.Advantage: Syracuse

Christmas has picked up his offen-sive efficiency of late and is improv-ing his presence underneath, but Nnoko has the slight edge in points and rebounds per game and has three double-doubles on the year.Advantage: Clemson

A true freshman, Blossomgame racked up his first double-double with 14 points and 14 rebounds in Clemson’s upset of then-No. 16 Duke on Jan. 11. But in the Tigers’ last game, he turned it over three times and missed both of his field-goal attempts. Fair is coming off one of his worst games of the year but is still arguably the conference’s top player. Advantage: Syracuse

Boeheim has a clear advantage over essentially any coach he goes up against and he’s a week removed from one of his biggest regular-season wins in recent memory. Brownell is in his fourth year at Clemson and the Tigers have regressed slightly since his arrival.Advantage: Syracuse

TYLER ENNIS

6-2, 180, FR. 12.1 PPG, 5.7 APG

JERAMI GRANT

6-8, 210, SO. 12.8 PPG, 7.0 RPG

TYLER ENNIS

C.J. FAIR

RAKEEM CHRISTMAS

JERAMI GRANT

TREVOR COONEY

ADONIS FILER

JARON BLOSSOMGAME

LANDRY NNOKO

K.J. MCDANIELS

ROD HALL

TREVOR COONEY

6-4, 195, SO. 14.1 PPG, 2.0 SPG

RAKEEM CHRISTMAS 6-9, 250, JR.

5.5 PPG, 4.4 RPG

C.J. FAIR

6-8, 215, SR. 16.7 PPG, 5.9 RPG

JIM BOEHEIM

941-314

ADONIS FILER

6-2, 190, SO. 4.8 PPG, 1.5 APG

K.J. MCDANIELS 6-6, 200, JR.

16.3 PPG, 7.0 RPG

ROD HALL

6-1, 210, JR. 9 PPG, 2.2 RPG

LANDRY NNOKO

6-10, 250, SO. 5.9 PPG, 6.2 RPG

JARON BLOSSOMGAME

6-7, 215, FR. 4.4 PPG, 4.8 RPG

BRAD BROWNELL

233-136

SYRACUSE 70, CLEMSON 51This time aroundClemson will be lucky if it matches the 49 points its football team put up in the Carrier Dome this fall.

STEPHEN BAILEY

CARRIER DOME, 6 P.M., ESPNU

POINT GUARD POWER FORWARD

SHOOTING GUARDCENTER

SMALL FORWARD HEAD COACH

Clemson is second in the country in scoring defense.

In No. 1 Syracuse’s 61-55 win over Notre Dame on Monday, C.J. Fair failed to score in double figures for just the second time this season.

PREDICTIONS RANKINGS TRACKER

STARTING LINEUPS

at PITTSBURGH vs N.C. STATE vs BOSTON COLLEGE at DUKE at MARYLAND

STAT TO KNOW

BIG NUMBER

DAVID WILSON

SYRACUSE 73, CLEMSON 60Not Dabo’s tigersThe Tigers are good, but the Orange finally beats them in the Carrier Dome.

FREE THROWS

FEB. 12 FEB. 15 FEB. 19 FEB. 22 FEB. 24

1 2 3 4

5

6

7

8 9

10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

Data based on AP Top 25 poll

Pre 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

54.9TREVOR HASS

Page 17: February 7-9, 2014

S dailyorange.com se ptember 30, 2013 19 [email protected]

19 jan. 31- feb. 1, 2014 the daily orange in the paint

Page 18: February 7-9, 2014

dailyorange.com S [email protected] 20 september 30, 2013 the daily orange in the paint jan. 31- feb. 1, 2014 20

COLOR