Irish Crush Cincinnati

A 10-point halftime lead quickly became a second half blowout as the Fighting Irish conducted a halfcourt offense clinic en route to a 89-51 victory.  Ben Hansbrough scored 23 points to lead Notre Dame in the scoring column, but all five starters excelled.  Carleton Scott scored 18 points, secured 6 rebounds, and blocked 4 shots.  Tim Abromaites had 17 points and 6 rebounds, Scott Martin added 11 points, and Ty Nash keyed the rally that settled the game.

Dion Dixon led the Bearcats with 15 points, and Yancey Gates followed his 25-point performance against USF with 12 tonight.  Gates also corralled 9 rebounds and blocked 3 shots.

The story of the game was ND’s passing.  The Irish had 22 assists, and 7 of them came in the first nine minutes of the second half when they ran to a 23-point lead.  Ty Nash got Gates’ attention from the post on Notre Dame’s first two possessions of the second half.  He drove for a basket the first time and was fouled on his drive the second time.  Then Irish head coach Mike Brey had Nash take the ball to the top of the key, and Gates followed.

Notre Dame’s shooters were hot in the first half, 7 of 11 from three point range after a 1 for 5 start; so Cincinnati had no intention of giving them open looks.  With Gates covering Nash away from the basket, the outside shooters cut to the basket for layups; and the ball found the open man time after time.  By the media timeout with 10:58 to play, the Irish had a 66-43 lead.  The only remaining question was the final score.

The first half wasn’t so easy.  The Irish had a 13-5 lead at the first media timeout, but Nash was on his way to the bench with two quick fouls.  Cincinnati battled back within 3 points at 13-10,  and the teams traded baskets for most of the rest of the half.  Jack Cooley, who led the the team lead with 7 rebounds, gave the Irish valuable minutes until Nash returned with ND leading by 5 points late in the half.  Then Notre Dame gave a preview of the second half.

Hansbrough was fouled on a drive and made both free throws, and Scott nailed a three to improve the lead to 10 points at halftime.  It had been a battle with Cincinnati pressuring the ball all over the court and pounding the offensive boards, but Notre Dame was starting to get the better of it.

Then came the second half onslaught.

“When you have a performance like that, on this stage, that’s something I’m really proud of,” Brey said.  “Hopefully it’ll give us momentum to keep playing well in New York.”

Gates lamented Cincinnati’s defense.  “I (didn’t) think we were capable of playing ‘D’ as bad as we did tonight,”  he said. “They made a lot of shots, a lot of shots early.  They did a good job of getting us to collapse and kicking it out.  They just came out ready to play.”

Bearcats head coach Mick Cronin was more succinct.  “We got taken to the woodshed,” he said.

Noteworthy

  • Notre Dame shot poorly when it visited Madison Square Garden in January.  Not so tonight.  ND made a robust 56% of its shots for the game and 47% of its three point attempts.
  • After an even first half on the boards, Notre Dame finished the game with a 35-28 rebounding advantage.
  • As always, Cincinnati pressured the ball throughout the game; but Notre Dame had just 5 turnovers, none in the second half.  That’s right, none.  ” Thought we made good decisions when they pressed us,” said Brey.  “We got open looks when we had numbers advantages.”
  • It’s unusual for an opponent to score more than 4 fast break points against Notre Dame, yet the Irish usuallylose that stat battle.  Tonight they had 9 fast breal points to Cincinnati’s none.
  • The Irish are playing their best basketball of the year at the right time, and Hansbrough attributes their ongoing improvement to their practice habits.  “It’s all a matter of how you prepare, and I think this group has prepared tremendously all year,” he said.  “We prepared ourselves mentally and took our mental preparation to the next level, and we did that through practice.  Coach Brey did a great job pushing us.”
  • Asked whether his team deserved to be in the conversation for a #1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, Mike Brey didn’t hesitate.  “Absolutely,” he said.  “We have a very strong resume for it.  Absolutely.”
  • On the other side of the bracket, Kemba Walker’s buzzer beater lifted Connecticut to an upset of #1 seed Pittsburgh; and Brandon Trische’s 22 points led Syracuse to victory over St. John’s.  The two winners will meet in the semi-finals at 7:00 PM Friday.

Next

Louisville defeated Marquette 81-56 to advance to the semifinal match with Notre Dame.  The two went to overtime a month ago, and the Irish prevailed 89-79.  Kyle Kuric starred for Louisville that night with 28 points and 6 rebounds.  Hansbrough was Notre Dame’s high point man with 25, and Abromaitis scored 23.

Just to refresh your memory, here’s a Louisville snapshot:

  • #5 scoring offense in the Big East, 70.2 ppg
  • #6 scoring defense in the Big East, 65.7 ppg
  • #11 free throw percentage in the Big East, 67.5%
  • #8 field goal percentage in the Bg East, 43.6%
  • #2 field goal percentage defense in the Big East, 40.4%
  • #6 three-point percentage in the Big East, 35.2%
  • #12 rebounding margin in the Big East, -2.3
  • #1 assists per game in the Big East, 16.7
  • #1 turnover margin in the Big East, +2.4
  • #2 assists/turnover ratio in the Big East, 1.3 (4 teams tied)

Notre Dame’s numbers:

  • #3 scoring offense in the Big East, 71.7 ppg
  • #9 scoring defense in the Big East, 66.9 ppg
  • #6 free throw percentage in the Big East, 71.0%
  • #2 field goal percentage in the Big East, 46.8%
  • #9 field goal percentage defense in the Big East, 42.9%
  • #1 three-point percentage in the Big East, 40.4%
  • #6 rebounding margin in the Big East, +1.7
  • #4 assists per game in the Big East, 15.3 per game (tied with Syracuse)
  • #12 turnover margin in the Big East, -0.8
  • #1 assist/turnover ratio in the Big East, 1.4

Game Information

  • #4 Notre Dame (26-5) vs #14 Louisville (24-8)
  • Friday, March 11th at approximately 9:30 PM (ET)
  • Madison Square Garden, New York, NY
  • Television: ESPN
  • Internet: ESPN3.com

– Kevin O’Neill

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4 thoughts on “Irish Crush Cincinnati

  1. martinjordan says:

    Abro faded at the end of last year. This year he’s getting better. ND is now 4 and 1 on neutral courts with the one loss coming to Kentucky at Freedom Hall. Both Cincinnati and Marquette had tired legs in the second halves whereas ND and Louisville were rested. ND’s shooters are becoming comfortable at The Garden.

  2. WOW…..this is unreal. The play here in the last month of the season in unreal. What a great team and what a great example of how to play team ball. Just look at the last week. Thrash Nova at home, on the road with a great win against a team that has a great star and is also playing well, and then a total dimantling of Cinci who is a top 30 team and also playing well.

    The execution is just great and if I notice anything different from earlier in the season it is that the errors in offensive and deffensive execution have gone down and are almost nil. This is a testament to great coaching. Look at the coaches that Brey is moddeled after like Coack K and Bobby Knight and you will see a team that is playing just like those great coaches teams have played. This could continue beyond this year as 5 of the top 7 players return and other ‘mature’ kids will be ready to contribute. Apparently Brey has hit his stride…….so to all his many detractors in ND land go suck it….this guy is great, he is the right fit for ND and he has built a quality program here that competes very well in the toughest conference in the country.

    Lville is also playing at a high level and has a little bit of a coach themselves. This will be a nice matchup and given the last 2 contests I expect a barn burner. ND will be ready but if they are going to have a shooting letdown then let’s have it be tonight and not in the NCAA. This is not just a group of great shooters though, this is a great motion offense, this is a team that knows how to put the ball in the right peoples hands in the right place on the court. That is hard to stop, especially when everyone can shoot. As the expectations and accolades stack up this team has not wilted. As a matter of fact they seem like one of those rare teams that revels in the pressure and keeps stepping up more to meet and overcome it. I am a homer, but I have also been a basketball fan for over 30 years and this is a team playing with a championship attitude. Tonight will be a real test but I wouldn’t bet against this crew.

  3. Ahh I despise Louisville. However this is probably the best match up for us in our quest for a #1 seed. A win against Marquette wouldn’t have done too much and a loss would have probably dropped us to a 2 for sure.

    Still, I think our profile is very similar to Pitt’s, and that head to head road win should put us over the top. Just to be safe, let’s hope for some UNC, Duke, SDSU, and BYU losses. Oh and let’s beat Pitino and his crew of vagabonds (especially that cocky mime Katie Kuric)