DePauw women win NCAC opener, 56-47

Saturday, December 2, 2017
Sidney Kopp (30) led DePauw with 17 points in its NCAC victory over Hiram on Friday night.
DePauw photo

Sydney Kopp led DePauw with 17 points, while Kylie Morris posted a double-double of 11 points and 13 rebounds as the Tigers opened North Coast Athletic Conference play with a 56-47 win over Hiram on Friday night.

The Tigers, ranked 15th in the latest coaches’ poll and 18th by D3hoops.com, improved to 5-1 overall, while Hiram dropped to 2-6 overall and 0-2 in the NCAC.

DePauw scored the final four points of the first quarter to take a 16-12 lead and expanded it to 25-20 at the intermission.

The margin was still five at 27-22 before Emily Budde hit two free throws followed by Claire Keefe’s jumper and two charity tosses from Kopp to make it 33-22. The Terriers trimmed the deficit to six late in the fourth before the Tigers took a 42-35 advantage into the fourth.

Hiram briefly cut the DePauw lead to six early in the fourth, but Keefe’s layup followed by two free throws from Budde and Melinda Franke’s layup pushed it to 12 at 48-36. DePauw’s largest lead was 15 when Budde’s jumper capped a 5-0 run and made it 53-38 with 4:04 left.

The Terriers scored the next seven to close to within eight, but Morris hit a bucket with 41 seconds remaining to seal the win.

Kopp matched a season high with her 17, while Morris’ 13 boards were a career best. Keefe followed with 10 points and matched a career-high with nine rebounds and Franke added 11 rebounds.

Alainna Conroy paced Hiram with 12 points, while Allison Vannoy added 11. Sarah Spehn grabbed six rebounds in the loss.

DePauw shot 33.3 percent from the floor to Hiram’s 37.0 percent and the Tigers outscored the Terriers from the line, 13-5. DePauw held a commanding 49-32 edge on the boards and converted 19 offensive rebounds into a 16-2 edge in second-chance points.

The Tigers return to action today with a 2 p.m. game against Allegheny in Neal Fieldhouse.

Purdue (men) 80, Maryland 75 — If Purdue’s conference opener was any indication, the Boilermakers are in for a heck of a ride in their bid to win a second straight Big Ten title.

Isaac Haas scored 21 points, Dakota Mathias added 20 and Purdue blew several seemingly secure leads in an 80-75 victory over Maryland on Friday night.

The Boilermakers (7-2, 1-0) blew a 14-point advantage, then let a 10-point cushion shrink to 62-60.

Mathias made a pair of foul shots and Haas had seven points in a 10-2 surge that finally gave Purdue some separation.

It was 76-68 with 58 seconds left before the Terrapins launched their final comeback. Anthony Cowan made a 4-point play, then a 3-point play to cut the gap to 78-75.

Shooting with a chance to tie it, Jared Nickens missed badly on a jumper from the corner, and Purdue’s P.J. Thompson clinched it with two free throws.

“We were pretty fortunate to get out of here with a W,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said.

Haas was instrumental in the victory, going 10 for 13 from the floor, grabbing five rebounds and blocking four shots.

Carsen Edwards scored 18 for the Boilermakers, who got all their points from the five starters. Purdue has won three straight since losing to Tennessee and Western Kentucky.

“Our guys have been resilient,” Painter said. “We’ve just got to keep fighting and figuring out ways to win.”

Cowan scored 20 and Kevin Huerter had 19 for Maryland (6-3, 0-1). Darryl Morsell went 3 for 16 from the floor, Justin Jackson went 1 for 8 and the Terrapins shot 35 percent in their first home loss.

“They’re just much further along than we are,” Maryland coach Mark Turgeon said of Purdue. “They had a summer tour for about a month. And it showed. They were terrific. They have four seniors — guys that have played a lot of minutes for them, won a lot of games for them.”

Maryland has dropped three of four.

The Terrapins scored the first seven points after halftime, the last of them on a 3-pointer by Huerter, to take their first lead at 44-43.

Soon after that, Turgeon was given a technical foul for protesting a call on the Terps’ end of the court. Vincent Edwards made both free throws as part of an 11-0 run that made it 54-44 with 15:50 to go.

The Terps came back, but the Boilermakers never folded.

“We were able to execute down the stretch and get some stops,” said Purdue forward Vincent Edwards, who chipped in with 10 points and 11 rebounds. “We put ourselves in a bad position late in the game but we were able to pull it out.”

Maryland trailed by 14 points in the first half before closing with a 10-3 run to make it 43-37 at the break.

“We just weren’t ready at the start. We fell behind,” Turgeon noted. “I loved the way we finished the half and loved the way we started the second half. And I loved the way we battled.”

Mathias scored 18 and made all seven of his field goal tries in the first half, including four 3-pointers, and Haas added 12 points on 6-for-7 shooting.

SENIOR POWER

The Boilermakers start four seniors, which helped immensely down the stretch.

“That comes with our experience as a team,” Vincent Edwards said. “We won here last year. We knew what it takes, we knew what we had to do.”

BIG PICTURE

Purdue: A solid performance by the Boilermakers on the road bodes well for the team’s effort to get back into the Top 25 and defend its Big Ten title.

Maryland: The Terrapins’ inability to win close games has proven costly. Although Maryland rallied past Bucknell on Nov. 18, their three losses are by a combined nine points.

UP NEXT

Purdue: Hosts Northwestern on Sunday.

Maryland: At Illinois on Sunday night.

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