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The Roanoke Times: Press Box

with our sports staff

Hokies lose to State

Mark Berman back here from Blacksburg late Wednesday night after the Virginia Tech men's basketball team suffered an abysmal 70-59 loss to a North Carolina State squad that had been in the ACC cellar entering the game.
"It had nothing to do with offense or defense tonight. We didn't come out with enough energy," said Zabian Dowdell. "They were the first ones to every loose ball, every rebound. They just played harder than us.
"We prided ourselves [entering the game] on playing harder than the next team. It seemed like tonight guys were out there hoping things [would] happen instead of making things happen."
The No. 16 Hokies (16-6, 6-2) dropped out of first place in the ACC, falling into a tie for second with Boston College.It was their first home loss this year.
"I can't really say one thing that, 'Boy we did a good job with that,' " coach Seth Greenberg said.
Losing a game it had been expected to win easily comes at a bad time for the Hokies, who will now enter what figures to be their toughest three-game stretch left this season. Tech visits Boston College on Saturday, hosts Virginia next Saturday and visits North Carolina on Feb. 13.
The Hokies shot just 35 percent from the field,
"We were able to penetrate when we had good spacing. But guys were out there with no spacing," said Dowdell, who had 11 of his 16 points in the first half. "It was hard creating."
Did State do anything defensively to make it tough on the Hokies to shoot?
"I couldn't tell you because I don't think we executed offenisvely enough to figure that out until I look at the film," Greenberg said.

Coleman Collins was 0-of-5 from the field, failing to score for the first time since the win over Wake Forest in December.
"Just going up body-to-body against him," State center Ben McCauley said of his approach to containing Collins.
State improved to 12-8, 2-5.
McCauley said State's defensive focus was trying to prevent Dowdell and A.D. Vassallo from getting the ball. Dowdell was 4-of-11 from the field; Vassallo was 2-of-7.
McCauley was 10-of-14 from the field, finishing with 20 points. State shot 53.1 percent from the field.
"Oh, we had a game plan" to stop him, Greenberg said. "Obviously we didn't do a very good job.
"We didn't defend him early. We didn't get the ball out of his hands, didn't make him a passer."
The Hokies finished 7-2 in January, still the most wins they have had in any month since going 9-1 in January 1996 - the last season in which they made the NCAA tournament.

Comments

# 1

[February 1, 2007 9:16 AM]

Tom Doss

This just gives us a taste of what's in store for the Hokies

# 2

[February 1, 2007 9:39 AM]

Andy

Welcome to ACC Basketball!! Lesson of the night: There is no such thing as "bottom of the cellar team" in the ACC!

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Quick thoughts

  • Poll voters get it right -

    Who knew the Virginia football program carried so much weight? Southern Cal moved up from No. 3 to No. 1 in the Associated Press media poll, and from No. 2 to No. 1 in the coaches’ poll, after its 52-7 rout of UVa in Charlottesville. “To see a team go on the road and play a New Year’s Day bowl team from last season, and not only play them but destroy them, how could you not reward that team?” voter Stewart Mandel of SI.com told the AP. Now we all know UVa is hardly the same team that played on Jan. 1. But the voters still got this right. USC proved more at UVa than a Georgia team that beat Division I-AA Georgia Southern or an Ohio State team that beat I-AA Youngstown State. — Mark Berman

  • ACC stinks it up -

    Arkansas State won at Texas A&M. Bowling Green upset Pitt. Louisiana Tech beat Mississippi State. But the ACC laid the biggest egg of all in Week 1, reinforcing its reputation as a weak conference. Preseason ACC favorite Clemson was squashed by Alabama. ECU upset the Hokies. USC flattened UVa. Maryland only beat Delaware by a 14-7 score, and UNC had to rally to beat McNeese State. On Thursday, South Carolina shut out N.C. State. At least Wake Forest beat Baylor. But the ACC was an object of ridicule on national sports talk radio Saturday night, and rightly so. And it won’t get any better next weekend when Miami visits Florida. — Mark Berman

  • Intriguing ACC games for VT hoops -

    The 2008-09 schedule for the Virginia Tech men’s basketball team was released this week, and the Hokies will begin and end the ACC portion of it in noteworthy fashion. Their ACC opener will be a Sunday night visit to Durham on Jan. 4 to take on Olympic coach Mike Krzyzewski and Duke in a game airing on Fox Sports Net. Their next game features a visit to Cassell Coliseum by Virginia. And the Hokies better hope they have a good record before their final three games of the regular season, because that will be the toughest stretch of their year by far. They host Duke in an ABC game on Feb. 28, followed by a March 4 visit from Tyler Hansbrough and North Carolina in an ESPN game. The regular-season finale is a trip to Florida State, where Tech always loses. — Mark Berman

  • Good showing for UVa at Olympics -

    With the Olympics over, UVa has plenty to be proud of. Ex-Cav Angela Hucles, the leading goal scorer in UVa history, now has to be considered one of the best female athletes UVa has ever produced. Not only did she win her second gold with the U.S. women’s soccer team, but she scored a team-high four goals in Beijing — including two in the semifinals and one in the quarterfinals. Ex-Cav Lindsay Shoop also won gold — one of three UVa grads to medal in rowing. And Dawn Staley was part of a winning basketball team as an assistant. As for Virginia Tech? Well, ex-Hokie Ieva Kublina had a few good basketball games for Latvia. And Queen Harrison reached a hurdles semifinal at the age of 19. London could be in her future. — Mark Berman

  • Hightower making us look good -

    Tim Hightower is making The Roanoke Times — and Division I-AA football in this state — look good. Hightower was a standout running back at Richmond last fall, helping the Spiders reach the I-AA semifinals. We chose him as the Roanoke Times’ state Division I offensive player of the year, eschewing I-A stars. Now comes word that the fifth-round draft pick will likely be Edgerrin James’ top backup with the Arizona Cardinals. Good for him. I just hope he fares better off the field than our offensive player of the year picks in 1999 and 2004, Michael and Marcus Vick. — Mark Berman

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