Syracuse wins second-longest Division I game ever

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Friday, March 13, 2009
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By the numbers


Times Syracuse led through the first five overtimes

0

Length of time taken to play

3:46

Players who fouled out, four on each team

8

Block shots recorded by UConn, and number of steals by Syracuse

16

Turnovers committed by UConn

28

Combined three-point attempts

57

Combined made free throws, including 40 by Syracuse

64

Minutes played by Syracuse guard Jonny Flynn, and total number of personal fouls

67

Combined made field goals

82

Combined free throws attempted

93

Combined total field-goal attempts

211

Syracuse and Connecticut played a game for the ages Thursday night and into early Friday. When it was over, everybody in Madison Square Garden was exhausted and, except for the losing team, exhilarated.

Telling someone that No. 18 Syracuse beat No. 3 Connecticut 127-117 in six overtimes in the quarterfinals of the Big East tournament is equivalent to saying there’s a star in the sky.

There’s more, so much more.

“I’ve got no words,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said when asked to describe the second-longest Division I game ever. “I’ve never been prouder of any team I’ve coached.”

There were the numbers, from the 3 hours, 46 minutes it took to play the game that ended at 1:22 a.m., to the combined 244 points, 102 of which came after the regulation buzzer, to the eight players who fouled out, to the six who registered double-doubles.

And that wasn’t nearly all. Just ask Syracuse point guard Jonny Flynn, who had 34 points and 11 assists in a game-high 67 minutes, only 3 fewer than were played.

“I just wanted to get the game over with,” he said. “I was thinking, ‘Lord, just get this game over with. Whoever wins the game, let’s just get it over with.’ “

Much earlier in the evening, West Virginia beat No. 2 Pittsburgh 74-60, meaning that instead of a much-anticipated third meeting between two teams that held the No. 1 ranking this season in the semifinals, it will be sixth-seeded and 18th-ranked Syracuse and the seventh-seeded Mountaineers.

“I can’t even feel my legs right now,” Flynn said. “It was a tough game, we battled it out, but we have to turn it around—today—and face a tough team in West Virginia.”

Top-seeded and fifth-ranked Louisville will meet fourth-seeded and 10th-ranked Villanova in the other semifinal.

Andy Rautins hit a 3-pointer 10 seconds into the sixth overtime, giving the Orange their first lead since regulation.

“We needed to get one tip and sure enough we had the set play and we had Andy coming off a set screen and boom, he made it,” Boeheim said. “That was pretty big.”

The game finished one overtime short of the record set in Cincinnati’s 75-73 victory over Bradley on Dec. 21, 1981.

Paul Harris had 29 points and 22 rebounds, while Eric Devendorf had 22 points and Rautins had 20, all but two on 3-pointers.

The Orange made 40 of 51 free throws, but Connecticut made just 24 of 42.

“We lost the game because we turned the ball over 27 times and couldn’t make a foul shot,” Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun said.

A.J. Price had 33 points and 10 assists for the Huskies (27-4), while Stanley Robinson had 28 points and was one of three Connecticut players with 14 rebounds. Hasheem Thabeet had 19 points, 14 rebounds and six of the Huskies’ 16 blocked shots.

What will almost be forgotten as this game is recounted over the years was that it was nearly over before even one overtime was played.

Connecticut’s Kemba Walker, one of the smallest players on the court, grabbed a loose rebound and laid it in with 1.1 seconds left in regulation to tie the game at 71. After a Syracuse timeout, Harris ran the baseline and threw an inbounds pass past midcourt that was deflected by Connecticut’s Gavin Edwards to Devendorf, who let a shot go from about 28 feet just as the red lights around the backboard went off.

It went in, and Devendorf jumped up on the courtside press table, pounding his chest and screaming as his teammates reached up and pulled him down to the court.

The play was reviewed—as are all shots near the end of halves—and veteran officials John Cahill and Bob Donato watched replay after replay, finally stepping back and ruling the shot was late, sending the game into the first overtime 5-minute overtime.

It wouldn’t end until six of them were played.

“It would have been a lot better if they just counted Eric’s shot and we could have gone home 2 hours ago,” Boeheim said, “but that’s the way it goes.”

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