VCU Edges Drexel 59-56 To Capture CAA Title
RICHMOND, Va. (3/5/12) - VCU built a big first-half lead
behind its trademark pressure defense , and Troy Daniels' clutch free throws in
the final minute allowed the second-seeded Rams to hang on for a 59-56 victory
over #1 seed Drexel in the 2012 Virginia 529 CAA Men's Basketball Championship
game. The game was played before a sellout crowd of 11,200 at the Richmond
Coliseum.
VCU (28-6), which captured its fifth CAA championship
overall and first since 2009, returns to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth
time in the last six seasons a year after making a magical run to the Final Four.
Drexel (27-6) nearly erased a 16-point deficit in the second
half, but the Dragons saw their 19-game winning streak come to an end when
Frantz Massenat's game-tying three-point attempt in the final seconds went off
the back of the rim.
Daniels finished a perfect 5-for-5 from the line, including
four key makes in the final 20 seconds. Prior to Graham's four consecutive
conversions, VCU was just 11-for-17 at the line in the second half, including
2-of-7 in the final four minutes.
VCU, which has won six straight, led by 11 with 5:04
remaining after Darius Theus followed his own miss with a putback that gave the
Rams' a 52-41 edge. Theus finished with a team-high 16 points and was named the
CAA Championship Most Outstanding Player.
Damion Lee scored a game-high 20 points for Drexel and
ignited a late rally with his fourth three-pointer. Lee's baseline lay-up with
1:56 remaining cut the deficit to 54-50 and his steal on an inbounds play on the
next possession set up a Samme Givens' free throw that made it 54-51.
After Treveon Graham hit 1-of-2 at the line for VCU, Massenat
knocked down a pair of free throws to pull Drexel within 55-53. Daniels
answered with a pair of free throws at the other end to push the advantage to
four with 19 seconds to go. Chris Fouch then drilled a long three from the
right wing to pull Drexel within a single point, 57-56, but Daniels once again
stepped to the line and converted twice with 12 seconds to go for what proved
to be the final margin.
Daniels finished with 11 points, and Graham added 13. Theus
was 7-for-12 from the field and recorded five steals and five assists.
Lee added 10 rebounds for a double-double and also had a
pair of steals. Fouch finished with 15 points, including three huge second-half
three-pointers, as Drexel chipped away after the break. Massenat finished with
13.
The defensive battle that many expected materialized over the
opening 20 minutes, but it was VCU's full-court pressure and timely shot making
that allowed the Rams to open up a 16-point lead at the half.
VCU forced 12 turnovers in the first half, including eight
steals, and blocked four shots never letting Drexel settle into an offensive
rhythm. The Dragons went nearly seven minutes without a field goal during one
stretch, missing nine consecutive shots and committing four turnovers.
Theus' lay-in following a Juvonte Reddic block gave the Rams
a 16-9 advantage, and Briante Weber's bucket after another steal pushed the
lead to 21-13. Following another forced turnover in the backcourt, Bradford Burgess
knocked down a pair of free throws to extend the lead to double digits, 26-15,
with 4:19 remaining in the half.
Burgess' steal in traffic at midcourt set up Daniels' three
in the final minute, sending VCU to the break with a 35-19 edge.
Drexel was able to solve the pressure and build some
offensive momentum to start the second half, but VCU had an answer each time
the Dragons threatened. After Fouch
connected on two treys in the first five minutes of the second half, cutting
the deficit to 37-25, Theus countered with a three-pointer of his own.
Lee connected from long distance then turned a steal near
midcourt into a breakaway dunk to trim the deficit to single digits, 41-32,
with 12:59 remaining. Burgess answered with a jumper following a VCU timeout,
and D.J. Haley's emphatic putback ignited the pro-Rams crowd once again and
pushed the lead back to, 45-34.
Lee scored five consecutive points for the Dragons on a
three-pointer and two free throws pulling Drexel within 45-39, but Graham's
three-point at the other end gave VCU a 48-39 edge with 8:38 remaining.
VCU, which entered the contest leading the nation in steals
per game (10.7), finished the game with 10 steals, its school-record
ninth-straight game with double-digit thefts. Rob Brandenberg blocked three
shots and Reddic finished with two blocks.
Drexel, which held the nation's second-longest winning
streak, held a 41-24 edge on the boards behind Givens (15) and Lee.
The championship game was the third consecutive sold out
session, which helped set a total tournament attendance record of 47,833. The
CAA Championship has drawn more than 42,000 fans for six consecutive years.
Game Notes:
-
Monday's CAA Championship game was third
consecutive session to sell out, a first in the tournament's history.
-
The total attendance for the 2012 Virginia 529
CAA Men's Basketball Championship was 47,833, surpassing last year's record of
46,544.
-
VCU will be making its fourth NCAA Tournament
appearance in the last six seasons and 10th overall.
-
Tonight's contest marked the first time since
2009 that the #1 and #2 seeds met in the championship game (#1 VCU 71, #2
George Mason 50)
-
Drexel made its second appearance in the CAA
Championship game and first since 2003, when it lost to UNC Wilmington (70-62).
-
VCU made its seventh appearance in the CAA
championship game in the last 11 seasons and is now 4-3 in those 11 title
games.
-
Drexel's 19-game winning streak was second only
to Kentucky's (22).
-
VCU extended its winning streak to six games,
and the Rams have now won 17 of their last 18 games.
-
VCU tied its school record for victories in a
season (28) with tonight's win (2006-07, 2010-11).
-
VCU defeated Drexel, 62-60, in the quarterfinals
of last season's tournament.
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM: Rob
Brandenberg (VCU), Bradford Burgess (VCU), Damion Lee (Drexel), Frantz Massenat
(Drexel), Mike Morrison (George Mason), Darius Theus (VCU)
MOST OUTSTANDING PERFORMER: Darius
Theus, VCU