Halftime: Northwestern 40, Indiana 40

By Greg Mroz

1st Half Reaction

1. Indiana is playing right into Northwestern’s 2-3 Zone

A zone defense will force offenses to the perimeter, and Indiana is just fine with that. The Hoosiers went 8 of 12 from three point range in the first half, with Nick Zeisloft hitting 4 of the 5 long range shots he took. The Wildcats may need to switch to man to man in the 2nd half if Indiana continues to work the perimeter for the majority of the shot clock until they find an open shot. The bottom line is that the Hoosiers are proving why they are the best perimeter team in the conference. Sometimes no defense is good enough to guard against that.

2. Vic Law has arrived

The freshman proved in the first half that Saturday’s game against Penn State was no fluke.  Law went 4 of 6 from the field with 2 three pointers to finish the half with 11 points. He is all over the floor, hustling to every ball, and more importantly getting open shots.

3. Alex Olah is winning the interior

Olah is much bigger than Hanner Mosquera-Perea, and he is making it known. Already in double figures with 10 on 4 of 8 shooting, the 7 foot Olah is getting position on 6’9″ Mosquera-Perea. The Hoosiers are a guard reliant team, and Olah along with others can take advantage in the key if they get good position on half court sets.

 

Pregame Quick Hits: Indiana (19-9, 9-6 B1G) at Northwestern (13-14, 4-10 B1G)

By Greg Mroz

Here are 3 things to think about coming into tonight’s game

1. Indiana’s outside shooting vs Northwestern’s 2-3 zone.

We’ve seen what a zone can do to a team that is dominant in the posts (Iowa) but Chris Collins has yet to face a team that shoots as well from long range as Indiana. On the season, the Hooisers are averaging 79.2 points per game, which ranks 1st in the Big Ten, and they lead the conference in three point field goal percentage at 41.2%. The Hoosiers individually have four regulars shooting over 41 percent from beyond the arch. Expect IU to shoot from the outside early and often.

2. Bryant McIntosh vs Yogi Ferrell

This will be a matchup of two really good point guards, both who run their offenses well, and both who shoot the ball well. Ferrell leads all Hoosiers in points per game at a 16.2 clip, while McIntosh is 2nd on the Wildcats at 12.2 points per game. A battle of freshman versus veteran, this should be fun to watch throughout the night

3. The Return Of Hanner Mosquera-Perea

Alex Olah is going to have his hands full with the junior from, Columbia. An injured knee kept him out for seven games before IU’s game against Purdue on Thursday. His numbers aren’t stellar (7 points per game, 4.4 rebounds per game), but he’s an impact post player on a team that is guard heavy.

Cats roll for third straight win

By: Lyndsey Armacost // NNN Sports

There were high hopes for freshman Vic Law coming into his freshman campaign and, after his performance in Saturday’s win against Penn State, now we know why.

Vic Law came off the bench for the second straight game and posted his first double-double of the season. With 17 points, 11 rebounds, and 2 steals, he was the game’s difference maker. “I just think I’m starting to get used to college basketball now so everything is getting a little easier. My mindset has changed, I think, greatly since the beginning of the season to now. I’m starting to mature a little bit more. I’m taking things a lot more seriously,” said Law. Vic Law played 31 minutes in the contest, the most he has played since November 22nd when they played Elon.

The Nittany Lions got off to a hot start, making 4 of their first 5 three pointers, but other than that the Wildcat’s zone defense was able to shut them down in the first half. “I give our guys a lot of credit, I even give myself a lot of credit because even after they hit their first four threes, it was testing my patience with sticking with the zone. We stayed the course with it and our defense was fantastic,” said Coach Collins.

“If we’re going to rely on our 3-point shooting, it’s going to be a long day for us,” said Coach Chambers. The Nittany Lions had 27 3-point attempts and, of the 8 that they made, 5 came in the first 12 minutes of the game. The Cats’ zone defense forced Penn State to take those low percentage shots because the zone allowed Olah to stay in the paint.

Penn State’s D.J. Newbill has averaged 21.1 points per game this season but the Cats were able to hold him to just 3 off of 1 for 6 shooting, 1 for 5 from 3-point range. Coach Collins said, “Our guys did a really good job of keeping awareness where Newbill was at all times. Forget that he only hit one basket, we were able to not even let him get looks and that’s the best way. Thorpe and Garner hit a few early but we were fine with those guys trying to be the playmakers if we could keep Newbill at bay.”

This was the Wildcats’ third straight win and Collins attributed that to a new found focus and maturity in all of the players, especially Law. He also mentioned that, being one game under .500, he doesn’t think that the postseason is out of the question if they can finish the season strong.

First Half Reaction: NU vs. PSU 2/21

The first half at Welsh-Ryan Arena was all about defense for Northwestern. The Wildcats currently lead the Nittany Lions 28 to 20 with 15 of Penn State’s points coming off of three pointers.  After jumping out to an early lead of 12-6, Penn State could not penetrate the Cats’ interior defense. They settled for contested three pointers and finished the half with only 2 baskets in the paint.

Vic Law had a huge impact on the first half both offensively and defensively. While he did add a steal and a deflection, more importantly he led the Cats’ in scoring with 9 points off of 4 for 5 shooting. This is Law’s second straight game coming off the bench and it seems to be working.

They key for the Wildcats in the second half will be to continue shutting down driving and passing lanes on the defensive end. If Penn State has to continue shooting low-percentage shots around the arc because they can’t penetrate, the Cats can keep, or even extend, their lead.  The Cats’ took good shots in the first half but Olah and Demps need to do a better job finishing under the basket if they are going to be able to hold off Penn State for twenty more minutes.

Cats end losing streak, beat Iowa in OT

Cats end losing streak, beat Iowa in OT

By: Will Greer

With Northwestern up by three, needing just one stop to snap its 10-game losing streak, Iowa’s Jarrod Uthoff hit an off-balance three-pointer to send the game to overtime.

Faced with adversity again, Chris Collins told his team, “We are going to win.”

And the Cats did just that.

Bryant McIntosh scored 18 points, and Tre Demps added 16 points, including a couple of clutch 3-pointers, to propel Northwestern to its first Big Ten home win since January 21, 2014 against Purdue.

“I’m a believer in the basketball gods,” Collins said. “Today was a special win.”

Northwestern took a 27-24 lead into the locker room at halftime, thanks to nine assists on 10 made field goals and 6-12 shooting from behind the arc.

But Iowa stormed back in the second half. Jarrod Uthoff had 18 of his game-high 25 points in the game’s final 25 minutes, including an off-balance heave with three seconds left that tied the game at 54.

Northwestern outplayed the Hawkeyes in overtime, led by center Alex Olah’s 3 points and 4 rebounds. Olah finished with his fifth double-double of the season and his second in Big Ten play, tallying 11 points and 13 rebounds.

Northwestern will look to build on its momentum Wednesday night, as the Cats head to Williams Arena to take on Minnesota.

1st half notes vs. Iowa

1st half notes

Northwestern is playing an active 2-3 zone against Iowa, forcing the Hawkeyes to take deep shots. Bryant McIntosh scored the Cats’ first 7 points of the game.

Iowa shot 9-26 (34.6%) against the Northwestern zone in the first half.

Cats assisted on 9 of 10 made field goals in the first half. 6 of 10 made field goals came from behind the 3-point line.

Northwestern had 6 blocks in the first half. Iowa had 1.

Northwestern went on a 10-2 run to take its largest lead of the game at 23-13 with 7:47 in the 1st. Iowa answered with 11-4 run to end the half.

Iowa has never led in the game.

RECAP: Michigan State 68 – Northwestern 44

By Ethan Cohen

It was Gothic Night at Welsh-Ryan Arena against Michigan State on Tuesday, and for ‘Cats fans, this one was like something out of a Mary Shelley novel.

When these teams met in East Lansing earlier this year it took a late Northwestern miss and overtime for the Spartans to win. This game was the opposite as MSU dominated an undermanned Northwestern squad in all aspects.

Bryant McIntosh started the scoring off, getting to the line and making both of his shots to stake NU to a 2-0 lead less than 90 seconds into the game. However, that would be the last time the ‘Cats would lead. A three-pointer by MSU’s Denzel Valentine, the first of their 13 threes, put the Spartans up 3-2.

While it was already starting to feel like a blowout early in this one, Northwestern kept it close for the first ten minutes of the game. Thanks to good half-court defense and nine points from Tre Demps, who would end with a team-high 20, Northwestern was only down 16-13 with 10:47 to go. But that’s when it got bad. Quickly.After a string of close losses, in each of the last four games, Northwestern has been undone by huge runs by their opponents. There was a similar story in this game, only much worse. Behind missed shots by NU and 6 three-pointers from the Spartans MSU went on a 22-0 run starting with just over ten minutes in the half.

After the game Michigan State Head Coach Tom Izzo said of the first half “we might have played our best half of basketball, but… I think Northwestern might have played its worst half.”

While Demps was 4 of 7 from the field in the first half, the rest of the team was 0-15. Add to that Northwestern’s ten turnovers and only 13 rebounds and this one was over before the break.

Northwestern’s sloppy play continued into the second half, as the ‘Cats went the first three minutes without scoring. With 12 minutes left in the game MSU was up 35, its largest lead of the game.

With the Spartans slowing the tempo and the game out of hand the Wildcats started to find some rhythm. Alex Olah, Vic Law and Demps all contributed and Northwestern turned a 35-point deficit into a 24-point loss.

While Demps led all scorers with 20, the ‘Cats missed the production of Nathan Taphorn and JerShon Cobb, who were out with injuries. The duo combined for 21 points in the first matchup between these two teams and while Law contributed nine points, seven rebounds and three steals, it was not enough on this night when Northwestern Coach Chris Collins said, “I don’t think we played hard enough to be worthy of winning.”

Northwestern is back in action on Sunday at home against Iowa, when they’ll try to snap their ten-game losing streak. Collins said he hopes to spend the time off finding more fight in his team.

First half notes vs. Michigan State

By Ethan Cohen

Gothic Night at Welsh-Ryan, that means free tee shirts for students and black/gold/purple shooting shirts.

Michigan State is dominating early here. Here are some halftime thoughts:

Vic Law back into the starting lineup to replace the injured Cobb, he hasn’t looked great tonight with no points and a couple of nasty looking shots.

Northwestern ended the half on a 1-0 run, but before that MSU went on a 22-0 run. NU didn’t have a field goal after the 10:47 mark.

NU is being out-rebounded 20-13 and has 1 3PT to MSU’s 9.

Tre Demps is 4-7 from the field, the rest of the team is 0-15.