
No other CU player scored in double-figures, with Brett Crittenden being the closest with eight points off Campbellsville's only two 3-pointers and a pair of free throws.
Campbellsville's poor 3-point shooting (2-of-17) remained
absent in the game's final seconds, when Shawn Savage threw up an off-balanced,
desperation 3-pointer that fell short with two seconds left. Crittenden rolled
out with the rebound but was unable to get a clean look as time expired.
"We took one of the worst shots I've ever seen down three," Adkins said. "There
weren't a lot of guys out there that wanted the basketball. You've got to have
someone to take control and say, ‘I want this last shot.' We didn't have that …
We got beat by a really good basketball team. It's a team that's obviously as
good or better as any team that's going to be in Kansas City."
Colmenares scored his 38th and final point with
two minutes left to tie the game, 59-59. It was the first tie since the game
was knotted 7-7. A missed free throw by the big guy from Venezuela could have
given CU its first lead since leading 14-13.
Georgetown went on to hit 5-of-8 free throws in the final minutes to seal the
win, including two late by Hollis Giles with 34 seconds left. Giles finished
with 16 points, behind Vic Moses who passed the 1,000 point mark for his career
with 19 points and also grabbed 13 rebounds.
The orange and black Tigers led by 10 points twice in the first half, 29-19 and
31-21, before Campbellsville cut it to five, 31-25, at the break.
In addition to Colmenares, Campbellsville had three other players play more
than 30 minutes in the game, but they combined for only to 11 points to aid
Colmenares.
The Tigers' lowest scorer to play at least 15 minutes in the game was senior
point guard T.J. Bishop, who lit up St. Catharine College for 23 points in the
semifinal Saturday. He finished with one point on a technical free throw in the
first half and was 0-of-6 from 3-point range.
"I thought the fatigue factor was a big part of it with T.J. Bishop having to
play that many minutes that many days in a row," Adkins said. "T.J. never got
into it today. And that's understandable … The good thing is he has the
national tournament to make up for it and do something about it. And knowing
that young man, he will do that. He will step up and do something big out
there."
Colmenares' 30-point game was the first for the CU men's program in 42 games.
The Georgetown win ended a 10-game win streak for CU and extended Georgetown's streak to nine games. It was only CU's second MSC Tournament final after winning it all in 2005-06.
CU (26-7) awaits to find out its seeding for the NAIA National Tournament,
March 17-23 in Kansas City, Mo. The field of 32 teams will be announced Tuesday
on the NAIA Web site, while the bracket will be announced live Wednesday, March
10 at 4:30 p.m. EST on CollegeFanz.com.
Comcast cable channel 10 in Campbellsville will air the CollegeFanz bracket
announcement live via campus station WLCU-TV4.