by Bill from TampaThere were twenty lead changes and ten ties. Fortunately for Florida State there was not a twenty first lead change.
Solomon Alabi sank two free throws, the first with some dramatic flair bouncing it high off the rim to the top of the backboard and down into the net, to give the Seminoles a 67-66 lead with 22.8 seconds left.
Georgia Tech had two chances at a basket but Gani Lawal air balled a runner in the lane and the rebound was out of bounds off a Yellow Jacket with 5.3 ticks on the clock remaining.
Two seconds later Jordan DeMercy converted one of two charity shots and followed that up by intercepting the Hail Mary inbound pass to give the ‘Noles a hard fought 68-66 victory over the 19th ranked Jackets.
Following the game Leonard Hamilton laughingly agreed that it was just another typical blowout game in the ACC.
After Florida State took an early 10-2 lead, Tech came back to take the lead at 13-10. It was back and forth after that as the lead kept changing hands and always within a handful of points.
The score was tied at thirty-four all at halftime.
Hamilton commented afterwards “The game could have gone either way. But we made one more free throw. We got one more rebound. We made just one play better.”
Better was the operative word because at times it was ugly as both teams showed a propensity to turn the ball over. Florida State gave up the ball 18 times and Tech 20. The difference however was points off those turnovers with the Yellow Jackets getting only 10 points compared to FSU scoring 22 points off Tech’s miscues.
Free throw shooting was even uglier as both squads were under 60% from the stripe (FSU 16-27, 59%; GT 11-22, 50%).
“You have to give credit to Georgia Tech”, Hamilton said. “They created problems on defense for us with the various presses they ran at us. I don’t think we made good decisions, but we did not give up any points against those presses. Our turnovers were self-inflicted. We are inventing ways to turn the ball over.”
Hamilton credited Luke Loucks in handling the offense against the press.
Key in the win was FSU’s work on the boards with the ‘Noles outrebounding Tech 39-37. The Seminoles are now 13-1 when outrebounding its opponents.
Leading the way for FSU was Chris Singleton with a career high 23 points. Just 1 of 6 from behind the arc, Singleton was 9 of 17 from the floor overall scoring on numerous aggressive dribble drives. Attacking the basket also sent the sophomore forward to the free throw line often. But Singleton was unable to convert most of his opportunities with just 4 of 10 from fifteen feet.
Alabi scored 10 of his 14 points in the second half and Devidas Dulkys added 11 points.
Defensively the ‘Noles, as they did in Atlanta, held Tech’s potent combo of Gani Lawal (5) and Derrick Favors (10) to just fifteen total points.
It was Brian Oliver however who did his impersonation of NC State’s Scott Wood scoring 20 points off of six three pointers to lead Tech in scoring.
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