2013年2月21日星期四

Naadir Tharpe redeems himself for poor game with shot to beat Oklahoma State


If Kansas goes on to extend its streak of Big 12 titles to nine in a row, the Jayhawks may remember a game-winning shot from a highly unlikely source as the play that put them over the top.
Sophomore Naadir Tharpe, who was only on the floor in double overtime since starting point guard Elijah Johnson had fouled out, took it upon himself to make a play off the dribble against Oklahoma State's weakest defender with Kansas trailing by one. After driving left and spinning right to shake freshman Phil Forte, Tharpe pulled up in the lane and buried a 12 footer with 20 seconds left to give Kansas a 68-67 road victory.

Kansas' victory avenged a previous loss to Oklahoma State in Lawrence and kept the Jayhawks in a first place tie in the Big 12 with Kansas State. Had Kansas lost Wednesday night, the Jayhawks would have been a game back of both the Wildcats and Cowboys and they would have lost any tiebreaker with Oklahoma State.
That Tharpe had the confidence to take the game-winning shot is remarkable considering the nightmarish game he had endured prior to that moment.
Of the 10 shots he attempted prior to Kansas' final possession, Tharpe missed all but one of them, drawing the ire of coach Bill Self and Jayhawks fans watching from home with his rushed perimeter jumpers early in the shot clock. Tharpe also made a key defensive blunder in the final minute of the first overtime, giving up a game-tying corner 3-pointer to Forte after he left the sharp shooter to help on a slashing Marcus Smart.
All was forgiven though when Tharpe redeemed himself, but the Jayhawks still had to come up with one final frantic defensive stop. Only after Markel Brown left a turnaround jump shot short and Travis Releford won a scramble for the ensuing loose ball could Self pump his fists in celebration of a victory Kansas desperately needed.

Kansas vs. Oklahoma State: Twitter Reaction, Postgame Recap and Analysis

In a hard-fought double-overtime battle that may end up deciding the Big 12 regular-season title, No. 9 Kansas edged out No. 14 Oklahoma State 68-67 Wednesday night in Stillwater.
This contest also featured another chance for the Cowboys' Marcus Smart and the Jayhawks' Ben McLemore to go head-to-head. Both players have been among the most impressive freshmen in the country and are two of the most promising prospects for the 2013 NBA draft. Jersey cheap

But neither budding star got off to a productive start, leaving their teammates to pick up the slack on offense. Kansas center Jeff Withey chipped in eight points in the first half while Oklahoma State's Le'Bryan Nash and Markel Brown each had seven, and the two teams fought to a 26-26 stalemate in the opening 20 minutes. 

In the second half, Travis Releford paced the Jayhawks offense, and the team was able to maintain a slim lead for much of the game. Releford finished with 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting, while late free throws from Withey allowed the big man to finish with 17. McLemore finished with just seven points.cheap jersey