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Cougars defeat San Francisco in overtime to advance to WCC finals
BYU vs. San Francisco Notes and Quotes
BYU vs. San Francisco Box Score
BYU vs. San Francisco Facebook Photo Gallery
LAS VEGAS – Kyle Collinsworth’s double-double and Tyer Haws' 24 points led the BYU men’s basketball team over San Francisco in a 79-77 overtime win on Monday to advance to the West Coast Conference championship game.
"We got some great individual performances from a lot of players," BYU men's basketball coach Dave Rose said. "This is one of those wins where you just take it as a group and be thankful for the great plays that were made by our guys and then move on."
Video Highlights and Interviews
Collinsworth finished with a double-double, 18 points and 12 rebounds, while Eric Mika finished with a double-double of his own with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Haws' 24 points were a game high and he hit 14 of 14 from the free-throw line and grabbed four rebounds on the night.
Anson Winder added 15 points and five rebounds with Matt Carlino scoring 11 points off the bench.
The Cougars scored the first six points in overtime with Collinsworth’s putback and Haws’ two trips to the free-throw line for BYU’s 70-64 lead. Mika’s dish to Haws led to a layup to maintain the six-point lead with 2:39 remaining. The Dons brought it back within one after connecting on a 3-pointer, but Collinsworth responded with two free throws with 0:24 left. Following a Winder free throw, USF had possession down by two with eight seconds remaining but misfired on a three at the buzzer.
BYU opened the game with an 8-0 start with Winder and Collinsworth going coast to coast for layups in the first minute of the game. Collinsworth scored the next four points for BYU on a drive to the rim and a baseline jumper to lead San Francisco by seven with 15:24 remaining. After extending the lead by double-digits on Mika’s putback and free throws, Haws’ turnaround jumper maintained BYU’s 20-10 lead.
Following a block by Josh Sharp, Winder connected on a 3-pointer at the 8:06 mark for a 27-17 lead. Trailing 29-20, the Dons answered with an 11-0 run to take a two-point lead with under four minutes left in the half. Winder’s baseline layup tied it at 33 a piece and Collinsworth’s offensive rebound and dish to Winder for a layup gave BYU the 35-33 lead with 1:42 remaining.
San Francisco scored the final four points of the half to lead 37-35 at the break. Haws led the Cougars with 10 points, going 6 of 6 from the charity stripe, with Winder scoring nine points on 4 of 5 shooting.
Both teams went without a field goal for the first 2:20 of the second half until Haws grabbed his own miss for the putback to give BYU a 38-37 lead. After a San Francisco 3-pointer put the Dons ahead 43-40, Winder responded with his second make from beyond the arc to tie it at 43-43. Carlino’s first field goal came on a three-point play at the 12:19 mark to break a 45-all tie.
With 11:18 remaining, Carlino connected on a 3-pointer and followed it up with another three-point play from Collinsworth’s backdoor pass to extend BYU’s lead to 56-51. Collinsworth’s layup gave the Cougars a seven-point lead with 10:11 left to play.
Winder recorded a steal to lead to a Haws layup on the fastbreak and increase BYU’s lead to 64-56 at the 6:14 mark. The Dons closed the gap, going on an 8-0 run to tie it at 64-64 with 3:21 remaining. San Francisco and BYU went scoreless for the remainder of the period to send it into overtime.
BYU finished the night going a season-best 85.7 percent from the free-throw line, 24 of 28, and outrebounded the Dons 45-35.
The Cougars will advance to the WCC championship game to take on Gonzaga on Tuesday at 6 p.m. PDT. The game will be televised live on ESPN and broadcast on the Cougar IMG Sports Network on KSL Newsradio 102.7 FM/1160 AM.
BYU to play San Francisco for a spot in the WCC title game
With a trip to the West Coast Conference title game on the line, No. 2 seed BYU will face No. 3 seed San Francisco in the semifinals on Monday at 8:30 p.m. PST at the Orleans Arena. The Cougars defeated the Dons 83-76 on the road and 68-63 at home for the regular season sweep. Monday's semifinal matchup will be televised live on ESPN2 and the Cougar IMG Sports Network on KSL Newsradio 102.7 FM and 1160 AM and BYUcougars.com.
After starting the season with an 8-7 record, BYU has come on strong, winning 14 of 17 and nine on 10, including Saturday's 85-74 quarterfinal victory over Loyola Marymount. The Cougars have now won 20-plus games in nine-straight seasons under coach Dave Rose. BYU is looking for its ninth-straight postseason appearance – BYU has six NCAA and two NIT appearances under Rose – and its first conference tournament title under Rose.
No. 2 BYU Cougars (22-10, 13-5 WCC)
- Head Coach: Dave Rose
- Alma Mater: Houston, 1983
- Career Record: 231-76 (9th)
- Record at BYU: Same
No. 3 San Francisco (21-10, 13-5 WCC)
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Head Coach: Rex Walters
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Alma Mater: Kansas, 1993
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Division I Career Record: 129-125 (8th)
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Record at San Francisco: 98-92
Series Information vs. San Francisco
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Series Record: BYU leads 10-6
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Last Meeting: BYU won 68-63, 2/8/14
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H/A/N: 5-1/3-4/2-1
Game Information
- TV: ESPN2
- TV Talent: Dave Flemming (play-by-play), Sean Farnham (analyst)
- Live Video: WatchESPN.com
- Radio: Cougar IMG Sports Network, KSL 102.7 FM / 1160 AM, BYU Radio - Sirius XM 143
- Radio Talent: Greg Wrubell (play-by-play), Mark Durrant (analyst)
- Live Audio/Stats: BYUcougars.com
Projected starters
San Francisco Dons (21-10, 13-5 WCC) | |||||
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No. | Name | Ht. | Pos. | Ppg | Rpg |
25 | Cole Dickerson | 6-7 | F | 14.6 | 7.6 |
15 | Kruize Pinkins | 6-7 | F | 12.5 | 6.4 |
23 | Mark Tollefsen | 6-9 | F | 10.8 | 4.0 |
12 | Avry Holmes | 6-2 | G | 12.7 | 2.4 |
5 | Matt Glover | 6-5 | G | 7.8 | 5.8 |
BYU Cougars (22-10, 13-5 WCC) | |||||
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No. | Name | Ht. | Pos. | Ppg | Rpg |
5 | Kyle Collinsworth | 6-6 | G | 13.9 | 8.0 |
20 | Anson Winder | 6-3 | G | 6.4 | 1.6 |
3 | Tyler Haws | 6-5 | G | 23.3 | 3.8 |
33 | Nate Austin | 6-11 | F | 4.0 | 8.3 |
41 | Luke Worthington | 6-10 | F | 1.1 | 0.9 |
By the numbers
1 | Tyler Haws is the only player in BYU history to surpass 1,800 career points during his junior season. The previous record holder for points through a junior season by a Cougar was Danny Ainge, who scored 1,685 in his first three years at BYU. Haws and Ainge are the only Cougars to reach 1,000 career points as sophomores. Ainge had 1,030 at the end of his sophomore season while Haws had 1,177. |
4 | The number of players in the NCAA ranked in the top 175 in both rebounding and assists: BYU’s Kyle Collinsworth (62nd in assists, T-107th in rebounding), UCLA’s Kyle Anderson (4th in assists, T-54th in rebounding), Saint Joseph’s Halil Kanacevic (76th in assists and 64th in rebounding) and Vermont’s Brian Voelkel (23rd in assists and 89th in rebounding). Rankings as of 3/3/14. |
6 | The number of career games for Tyler Haws shooting 100 percent from the free throw line with a minimum of 10 attempts, a BYU record. He hit 10 of 10 at Wyoming on Feb. 20, 2010, 12 of 12 vs. Cal State Northridge on Nov. 24, 2012, 10 of 10 vs. Utah on Dec. 8, 2012, 10 of 10 at Weber State on Dec. 15, 2012, 14 of 14 at Loyola Marymount on March 2, 2013 and 11 of 11 vs. Wichita State on Nov. 26, 2013. |
7 | The number of times a player in the West Coast Conference has scored 35 points or more in a single game since BYU joined the league in 2011. Five of the seven instances have been achieved by Tyler Haws: 42 vs. Virginia Tech on 12/29/12, 37 vs. Washington on 3/19/13, 35 vs. Pepperdine on 1/9/14, 48 at Portland on 1/23/14 and 38 vs. Pacific on 1/30/14. The other two players to reach 35 are Stephen Holt of Saint Mary’s (35 on 2/22/14) and Jared Brownridge of Santa Clara (38 on 3/1/14). |
8 | BYU has reached the postseason in eight-straight years under BYU coach Dave Rose. In his first season on the job, he took the Cougars to the 2006 NIT. That was followed by six-straight trips to the NCAA Tournament and last season’s NIT bid. |
9 | Including 2013-14, the number of seasons Dave Rose has been BYU’s head coach and the number of consecutive seasons BYU has won at least 20 games, the longest streak in program history. |
45 | The number of consecutive games Tyler Haws has scored in double figures, a career-best streak and the 4th-best streak in BYU history. |
46 | Matt Carlino became the 46th BYU player to score 1,000 career points when he reached the milestone against Santa Clara on Jan. 19, 2014, his 81st career game. He currently has 1,167 career points, good for 31st all-time and 3 from tying Randy Reid for 30th. |
88.1 | Tyler Haws’ career free-throw percentage, second all-time in BYU history. He has hit 489 of 555 from the line in his career. |
231 | Dave Rose (2005 to present) is second all-time in BYU basketball history with 231 career victories, behind only the great Stan Watts, who coached the Cougars to 371 wins from 1949 to 1972 and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1986. Rose and Watts are the only BYU coaches to coach at least 300 career games. |
1,877 | The number of points Tyler Haws has scored in his career, good for 6th all-time and 8 from tying Russell Larson for 5th. |
Dave Rose
BYU head coach Dave Rose has led BYU to one of the most successful runs in program history since taking over in 2005. His career record of 231-76 ranks him second in BYU history in total victories and first in winning percentage (.752). Rose has been named conference coach of the year three times, district coach of the year twice, led the Cougars to four conference titles, six NCAA Tournament appearances, two NIT appearances, six 25-win seasons and nine 20-win seasons. In 2010, he led BYU to its first NCAA Tournament win in 17 years and the Cougars have also won at least one postseason game in the three seasons since, including a spot in the Sweet 16 in 2011 and a trip to the NIT semifinals in 2013.
Kyle of all trades
In his first season since serving a two-year mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Russia, Kyle Collinsworth is averaging 13.9 points, 8.0 rebounds, 4.8 assists and 1.8 steals per game. He is proving to be one of the most versatile players in the WCC. As of 3/8/14, he ranks in the top 15 in the four of the five major statistical categories: 15th in scoring, 3rd in rebounding, 3rd in assists and 3rd in steals. He is also top 13 in five other categories: 13th in FG percentage, 11th in assist/turnover ratio, 6th in offensive rebounds, 4th in defensive rebounds and 6th in minutes played.
We talkin’ about a half, not a (full) game, not a (full) game, not a (full) game. We talkin’ about a half!
In 2002, NBA star Allen Iverson didn’t want to talk about practice. With BYU’s leading scorer Tyler Haws, we don’t want to talk about a full game, but just a half. In his career, Haws has scored 20 or more in a half nine times, including seven this season.
30 the old fashioned way
Tyler Haws scored 31 points against Loyola Marymount while hitting 9 of 19 from the field and 13 of 14 from the free throw line. He joined Brandon Davies (33 vs. Weber State on Dec. 15, 2012) as the only other player to score 30-plus points without hitting a three since Keena Young scored 34 vs. UNLV on March 10, 2007. The last BYU wing/guard to score 30 without hitting a three was Travis Hansen on Jan. 5, 2002 when he netted 30 against Pepperdine. Prior to Hansen, the last guard to score 30-plus was Marty Haws, Tyler’s father, on Jan. 4, 1990 vs. Hawaii.
30 without a free throw
Matt Carlino tied his career high with 30 points against Portland without making a free throw. It was only the fifth game in BYU history in which a BYU player has scored 30-plus points without making a free throw.
Cougars leading the league
In each of BYU’s three seasons in the WCC, the Cougars have had the leading scorer in all games (Noah Hartsock in 2011-12, Tyler Haws in 2012-13, Haws in 2013-14) and in league games (Brandon Davies in 2011-12, Tyler Haws in 2012-13, Haws in 2013-14). Only one other school (Loyola Marymount from 1988-89 to 1991-92) has had the league’s leading scorer in at least three-straight seasons in all games. In league games, a school has had the league’s leading scorer in at least three-straight seasons three other times (San Francisco from 2006-07 to 2008-09, Loyola Marymount from 1982-83 to 1985-86 and Loyola Marymount from 1987-88 to 1991-92).