
Overtime Heart-Breaker Bumps Bears from Arch Madness
March 05, 2022 | Men's Basketball
ST. LOUIS – The MVC Tournament semifinal game here Saturday was everything it was billed to be with Missouri State and Drake going toe-to-toe for 45 minutes through 12 ties and 17 lead changes before a winner was decided. Â
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Drake's Tucker DeVries, the MVC Freshman of the Year, made two free throws with 1.1 seconds left in overtime to lift Drake to a 79-78 win over the Bears and set up a rematch of last year's Arch Madness championship against Loyola. He got to the line moments after Missouri State's Gaige Prim gave the No. 2-seeded Bears a one-point lead on a close-range bucket at the rim.
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Prim finished 7-for-9 from the field and racked up 21 points and 8 rebounds, while teammate and fellow All-MVC first teamer Isiaih Mosley scored a game-high 27. Donovan Clay was also on point all night, tallying 14 points and a game-high 10 rebounds.
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DeVries led four Drake players in double figures with 23 points, including 8-for-8 at the line.
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The Bears (23-10) took a five-point lead twice at the end of regulation, both on clutch buckets from Mosley. His two free throws with 2:09 to go gave MoState a 66-61 advantage and seemed to have the maroon side in a position to finish things off.
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But Drake got to the free throw line five times in the two minutes with Roman Penn making all five charity shots for the Bulldogs (24-9). Penn drew a foul with two ticks on the shot clock with 27 seconds to go in regulation to put DU up by two and cap a 7-0 run.
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Clay then came to the rescue for Missouri State, scoring the game-tying layup just before the final horn with 0.4 seconds to go, forcing overtime.
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Mosley's leaner to start overtime returned the lead to Missouri State, before the Drake gained the upper hand on two buckets by Tremell Murphy. Prim and Mosley both responded with game-tying moments before DeVries buried a 3-pointer with 1:28 to go, giving Drake a 77-74 advantage.
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The Bears found yet another gear in the final minute of overtime, first with Clay scoring on a layup at the 55-second mark, then Prim putting MoState ahead 78-77 on a layup with 9.6 seconds left. Prim's go-ahead score came on the heels of a missed 3-pointer by Penn, which caromed out of bounds to give MSU the ball with the shot clock off.
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But with time winding down, and the Bears defending for their lives, a whistle decided their fate. The freshman DeVries was awarded a two-shot foul on a hasty foul call with 1.1 seconds to go, and he made both.
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Missouri State's last-ditch effort before the buzzer saw the Bears complete a 90-foot pass to Clay who out-leaped everyone, snagged the ball out of the air and got a shot off a desperation shot at the buzzer. His attempt was offline, and the defensive contact was ignored, leaving the Missouri State faithful dazed in the in the wake of a game that was within their grasp moments earlier.
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The Bears shot 50.3 percent from the field on 30-of-59 field goal attempts, just one field goal shy of a team record in the tournament. MSU made just 3-of-16 (.188) from distance, however, and left some points at the line on 15-of-20 (.750) free throws. MSU out-rebounded the Bulldogs, 39-35 and committee an uncharacteristic 14 turnovers.
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With his 27-point effort, Mosley moved into third place on MSU's single-season scoring list with 664 points.
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Drake was held to 40.6 percent overall (28-of-69), 6-of-24 (.250) from long range and 17-of-19 (.985) at the stripe. DU committed just 5 turnovers on the night and racked up 17 second-chance points behind 13 offensive caroms.
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In the opening half, there were four ties and 10 lead changes, but the Bears' defense held Drake to just 36 percent from the field to lead 33-32 at the midway point. Mosley produced just under half of MSU's points, going for 15 in the opening stanza, while Clay had 6 points and 6 rebounds.
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Drake kept pace with 10 second-chance points from its six offensive boards in the first half, but it was Isaac Haney's put-back off a Clay miss with 24 seconds left to push the Bears up by one at the break.
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Drake's Tucker DeVries, the MVC Freshman of the Year, made two free throws with 1.1 seconds left in overtime to lift Drake to a 79-78 win over the Bears and set up a rematch of last year's Arch Madness championship against Loyola. He got to the line moments after Missouri State's Gaige Prim gave the No. 2-seeded Bears a one-point lead on a close-range bucket at the rim.
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Prim finished 7-for-9 from the field and racked up 21 points and 8 rebounds, while teammate and fellow All-MVC first teamer Isiaih Mosley scored a game-high 27. Donovan Clay was also on point all night, tallying 14 points and a game-high 10 rebounds.
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DeVries led four Drake players in double figures with 23 points, including 8-for-8 at the line.
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The Bears (23-10) took a five-point lead twice at the end of regulation, both on clutch buckets from Mosley. His two free throws with 2:09 to go gave MoState a 66-61 advantage and seemed to have the maroon side in a position to finish things off.
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But Drake got to the free throw line five times in the two minutes with Roman Penn making all five charity shots for the Bulldogs (24-9). Penn drew a foul with two ticks on the shot clock with 27 seconds to go in regulation to put DU up by two and cap a 7-0 run.
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Clay then came to the rescue for Missouri State, scoring the game-tying layup just before the final horn with 0.4 seconds to go, forcing overtime.
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Mosley's leaner to start overtime returned the lead to Missouri State, before the Drake gained the upper hand on two buckets by Tremell Murphy. Prim and Mosley both responded with game-tying moments before DeVries buried a 3-pointer with 1:28 to go, giving Drake a 77-74 advantage.
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The Bears found yet another gear in the final minute of overtime, first with Clay scoring on a layup at the 55-second mark, then Prim putting MoState ahead 78-77 on a layup with 9.6 seconds left. Prim's go-ahead score came on the heels of a missed 3-pointer by Penn, which caromed out of bounds to give MSU the ball with the shot clock off.
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But with time winding down, and the Bears defending for their lives, a whistle decided their fate. The freshman DeVries was awarded a two-shot foul on a hasty foul call with 1.1 seconds to go, and he made both.
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Missouri State's last-ditch effort before the buzzer saw the Bears complete a 90-foot pass to Clay who out-leaped everyone, snagged the ball out of the air and got a shot off a desperation shot at the buzzer. His attempt was offline, and the defensive contact was ignored, leaving the Missouri State faithful dazed in the in the wake of a game that was within their grasp moments earlier.
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The Bears shot 50.3 percent from the field on 30-of-59 field goal attempts, just one field goal shy of a team record in the tournament. MSU made just 3-of-16 (.188) from distance, however, and left some points at the line on 15-of-20 (.750) free throws. MSU out-rebounded the Bulldogs, 39-35 and committee an uncharacteristic 14 turnovers.
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With his 27-point effort, Mosley moved into third place on MSU's single-season scoring list with 664 points.
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Drake was held to 40.6 percent overall (28-of-69), 6-of-24 (.250) from long range and 17-of-19 (.985) at the stripe. DU committed just 5 turnovers on the night and racked up 17 second-chance points behind 13 offensive caroms.
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In the opening half, there were four ties and 10 lead changes, but the Bears' defense held Drake to just 36 percent from the field to lead 33-32 at the midway point. Mosley produced just under half of MSU's points, going for 15 in the opening stanza, while Clay had 6 points and 6 rebounds.
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Drake kept pace with 10 second-chance points from its six offensive boards in the first half, but it was Isaac Haney's put-back off a Clay miss with 24 seconds left to push the Bears up by one at the break.
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Team Stats
DRA
MSU
FG%
.406
.508
3FG%
.250
.188
FT%
.895
.750
RB
35
39
TO
5
14
STL
6
2
Game Leaders
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