Loss to Jayhawks marks end of conference play for Cyclones
March 14, 2003
DALLAS — For the third time this season, Kansas proved to be
too much for Iowa State. The top-seeded Jayhawks knocked the No. 9
seed Cyclones from the Big 12 Tournament 89-74 Friday in the second
round.
Big 12 player of the year Nick Collison shot the ball just eight
times, but he got plenty of help from the rest of his team as all
five starters scored in double-figures for the Jayhawks with Keith
Langford leading the way with 19 points.
After going into the half down by 15, Iowa State could only
match Kansas in the second half with 44 points, but couldn’t put
together any long runs. Jackson Vroman led all scorers with 24
points to go along with 12 rebounds.
“Vroman was tough for us from the get-go,” Kansas head coach Roy
Williams said. “On the perimeter, we tried to make it difficult for
Jake Sullivan and Tim Barnes to get their shots.”
Sullivan had just six points on 2-of-11 from the field. He was
guarded mostly by Kansas star Kirk Hinrich.
“I don’t think he gets enough credit for what he does on the
defensive end of the floor,” Williams said of Hinrich.
With Collison scoring just 14 points, big-man Jeff Graves
stepped it up for Kansas grabbing 12 boards and scoring 16
points.
“We didn’t do a very good job keeping him off the glass,” Vroman
said. “A lot of his points came off offensive rebounds.”
“I think it was Graves’ best game since he’s been at Kansas,”
Williams added.
Marcus Jefferson had another solid game scoring 18 points off
the bench for Iowa State. Tim Barnes drained four three-pointers en
route to 13 points and Jared Homan also scored 13. But the Cyclones
shot just 40 percent for the game compared to nearly 60 percent for
Kansas.
“We knew they were going to make runs, so we just tried to play
at a tempo that gave us the best chance to win,” Jefferson said.
“Unfortunately, we didn’t do a very good job of that today.”
Kansas dominated in the paint out-scoring Iowa State 56-30 and
scored 23 points off of Cyclone turnovers.
“We had a lot of breakdowns today because of who we were
playing,” head coach Larry Eustachy said. “They are a potential
national championship team.”
Vroman was disappointed with his team’s effort, noting they
didn’t go after the loose balls the way they did against Texas
A&M on Thursday.
“Sometimes you can’t compete athletically with some guys, but
you can always out-hustle someone to a ball and we didn’t do that
today,” he said.
The loss marks the end of conference play for Iowa State but the
team is expected to be invited to play in and possibly host some
games in the National Invitational Tournament next week.
“We’ll meet Sunday night, maybe practice a little bit,” Eustachy
said. “We’re not sure of who, what, when or where. But I think it’s
going to happen.
“Some teams look at it like it’s a disappointment. We look at it
as a positive, a step in the right direction.”