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Bellarmine University Athletics

WhiteheadVsMSUM
Justin Pyles
75
Minnesota State Moorhead MSUM-M 35-4
92
Winner Bellarmine BU 31-3
Minnesota State Moorhead MSUM-M
35-4
75
Final
92
Bellarmine BU
31-3
Winner
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 F
Minnesota State Moorhead MSUM-M 43 32 75
Bellarmine BU 49 43 92

Game Recap: Men's Basketball | | by Adam Pruiett, Assistant SID

All 'four' one: Knights headed to Final Four after slaying Dragons

EVANSVILLE, Ind. — The flood of Bellarmine University men's basketball faithful turned the Ford Center into a literal Knights Nation.

And utter domination is what they witnessed from the Knights.

It happened throughout the Midwest Regional of the Division II NCAA Tournament. And it happened again on Wednesday night in the Elite Eight. The Knights played every bit of what they steadfastly refer to as "Bellarmine basketball," which typically results in a mind-boggling efficiency that gradually decimates the hope of opponents.
 
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Josh Derksen dunks on the Dragons

The target Wednesday was fourth-ranked Minnesota State University-Moorhead, a formidable group that entered with a glittering 35-3 record and left with a 92-75 defeat against the third-ranked Knights that equaled their most lopsided loss of the season.

"These players have deserved every ounce of the credit all year, and that doesn't change tonight," lauded BU Coach Scott Davenport.

The Knights have now marched into the Final Four for the third time in five years behind wins of 24, 26, nine and 17 points. They are 31-3 but their most difficult challenge lies ahead in the form of top-ranked Florida Southern, which edged BU 101-96 in overtime at Knights Hall in mid-December. The two heavyweights will meet at 9:30 p.m. (ET), 8:30 p.m. (CT) on Thursday. Florida Southern defeated Southern New Hampshire 81-70 just ahead of Bellarmine's game.

"I remember after we lost," recalled senior forward Jake Thelen, "we said, 'We'll see them again.'"

Getting reacquainted will occur because Bellarmine was nearly unstoppable against Minnesota State Moorhead. The Knights shot a blistering 60.7 percent from the floor, setting the standard for an electrifying performance by draining 67.9 percent of their shots before halftime. The "comedown" in the second half was 54.5 percent shooting. The Dragons kept pace before the intermission with impressive 52.9 percent shooting, but they dropped to 40.7 percent in the second half and were left in the rearview mirror by the Knights.

"We're in a rhythm right now," said Thelen, who poured in a game-high 26 points on 12-of-16 shooting and clutched a game-best eight rebounds, "and we have great shooters and passers."

The Knights sure did verify that statement from their consensus All-American.

Senior guard Chris Whitehead scored 18 points and dished out five assists. Sophomore forward Josh Derksen matched him with 18 points. Sophomore guard Rusty Troutman buried all three of his 3-pointers in scoring 11 points with four rebounds and three assists. Junior forward George Suggs added eight points and senior guard Corbin Maynard chipped in six.

Things were clicking right from the start for Bellarmine. The Knights hit their first five shots, including a pair of 3-pointers from Suggs and Derksen. When Maynard converted a traditional three-point play, BU gained a 17-9 lead and forced the Dragons into catch-up mode.

Derksen followed a steal by Thelen with a layup for a 12-point advantage. As expected from a team with over 30 wins, Minnesota State Moorhead pushed back and got to within 49-43 at halftime as both teams eclipsed 50 percent shooting from the floor. The Knights threatened 70 percent as Thelen, Derksen and Whitehead were all in double figures by the intermission.

There was no letup to start the second half. In fact, Bellarmine started out just like it did in the first half. Troutman fired to Thelen for a transition layup, which started a string of seven straight shots that the Knights would make. Included in that onslaught were 3-pointers by Derksen and Troutman and a pair of baskets by Whitehead.

In addition, Thelen, who lobbed an alley-oop to Derksen for a slam dunk in the first half, found his teammate again with a sweet backdoor pass for another jam. A little over five minutes into the second half, Bellarmine's lead skyrocketed to 17 points.

"Our kids' passing was just timely," Davenport said. "I've seen that type of teamwork since October."

Minnesota State Moorhead got to within 13 but no closer. The result of Thelen's last basket was a 23-point advantage for the Knights. While Bellarmine's All-American erupted, Jordan Riewer, an All-American for the Dragons, was limited to 11 points on 4-of-11 shooting. Aaron Lien and Tyler Vaughan had 13 apiece.

Derksen summed up Bellarmine's effort on defense by saying "I have complete faith in the guy next to me and behind me."

Behind him as well was the Bellarmine fan base, which came out in full force. The stands were a sea of scarlet. Knights Nation, indeed.

"It's easy to be successful when you have a community and a school that supports you as much as Bellarmine does," Suggs said. "We're extremely proud to be a part of that community."

That community will now cheer them on in the Final Four.

BOX SCORE (HTM)

 
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