Posted by Chris Megginson - Wed, Mar 17, 2010 - [Men's Basketball]
Alex Davenport alters a shot by T.J. Bishop
A
season that saw a six-week stay at the Top 10 and the program's first regular
season Mid-South Conference championship is over. Campbellsville University's
eighth appearance in the Buffalo Funds NAIA Division I Men's Basketball
Tournament was brief, as last year's No. 9 Fresno Pacific University knocked
off the ninth-seeded Tigers, 74-61, in the first round Wednesday.
"It's disappointing because we had three really
quality seniors in Nestor Colmenares, Jordan Benock and T.J. Bishop, and I'm disappointed
for them that it had to end this way, because they had some great exceptions," CU
head coach Keith Adkins said.
The Tigers struggled to stop the FPU Sunbirds in
transition early and could not find its offense, as they trailed by as many as
nine, 19-10, in the first half.
"We went up against a very good Fresno Pacific team and just weren't up to the
challenge," Adkins said. "We were doing things out there that I've never seen
our guys do."
CU went the first 12 minutes of the game without a made 3-point shot, until
Bishop hit his only 3 with 7:53 left in the opening period. From there, the lid
came off the basket from long range, but only for a short period of time, as
the Tigers were held to 5-of-28 shooting from 3-point range.
Shawn Savage gave Campbellsville its first lead of the game with 6:15 left
before the half, 20-18, on a 3-point shot. California native JaVaughn Espritt
helped work the Tigers' lead to eight, 28-20, with 3:57 left in the half, but
Fresno worked the lead down to a basket at the half. An Espritt block with one
second left preserved the 32-30 halftime lead.
Espritt, who finished with 12 points and 10 rebounds, led CU at halftime with
seven points and seven rebounds. However that changed in the second half when a
couple of traveling calls seemed to hurt his penetration to the basket.
"The walking calls were big. There was a lot of uncertainty in his moves and a
lot of uncertainty when he caught the ball in the zone after that," Adkins said.
The Tiger offense wasn't the only thing that began to falter in the second
half, as CU began to struggle defensively. With 14 minutes left in the game,
Fresno flipped a 41-40 Campbellsville lead with a 21-3 run to go up 18, 62-44,
with 5:16 to play.
Alex Davenport exploded for 13 points in the second period to lead all scorers
with 18 in the game - proving to be the difference maker.
"The bottom line was we could not guard him. None of our wings could keep him
in front and none of our guys could guard him off the glass. In early February,
we started our run, and created our run, by playing good perimeter defense, but
somewhere along the way in late February, we lost our edge," Adkins said.
With that edge out, CU needed a strong post play, but returning All-American Colmenares
was held to seven points, all early in the game.
"Defensively, we took Nestor out. That's what we wanted to do. We frustrated
them and made them try to make jump shots and they' couldn't," Fresno head
coach Jim Saia said.
That frustration led to foul trouble. Caleb Harris picked up three straight fouls
while guarding Fresno leading scorer James Lewis, who scored 12 points in the
second half. Colmenares, who was held scoreless in the second period, fouled
out of the game with 3:43 remaining.
"The biggest thing with Nestor today was foul trouble. We've probably told him all
we could that we need him to go into halftime with one or zero fouls. He's a
very emotional player and sometimes those emotions can come out in a negative
way, which leads to fouls," Adkins said. "He's a true competitor, the best
competitor and biggest winner I've ever coached."
CU cut the lead down to nine after Colmenares fouled out, but was unable to
overcome the Sunbirds' large margin.
Jordan Benock also fouled out late in the game, as he and Colmenares ended
their career on the bench.
Campbellsville concludes the season with one of the Top 10 records in program
history at 26-8.
"There's some positives to bring out of this
season of course, but I'll stop just short of saying this was a great season.
Yes we won a regular season championship, yes we had the conference Player of
the Year, but the bottom line is when it ends like this I don't think you can
translate that into a great season. The way it ends is sometimes what
determines good or bad," Adkins said.