VESTAL, N.Y. - Visiting UMass Lowell (8-10, 3-0 America East) broke a tie in the closing two minutes and made five free throws in the final 35 seconds to hold off Binghamton men's basketball (4-14, 0-3 AE) 73-68 Saturday afternoon at Dr. Bai Lee Court at the Events Center.
For the second straight game, Binghamton pushed an unbeaten conference foe to the closing seconds before coming up short.Â
"I like the way our guys fought," head coach
Levell Sanders said. "We came in knowing we needed to limit Lowell's second-chance points and transition game and we did that. They play a physical brand of basketball and we are undermanned, but I like the way we came in with a game plan and the guys executed. We just came up a little short. We just have to clean up some of the small things to get over the hump."
Junior point guard
Jeremiah Quigley led four double-digit scorers with 18 points (13 in first half) and eight assists. Quigley, conference assists leader who entered the game ranked 19th in the nation, continued his torrid production. In the last six games, he is averaging 17.2 points and 7.7 assists. Junior forward
Bryson Wilson netted 14 points, senior guard
Wes Peterson, Jr. totaled 13 points and nine rebounds and junior forward
Zyier Beverly contributed 11 points in 19 foul-plagued minutes.Â
Peterson keyed a 16-9 second-half run that drew Binghamton even at 63-63 with 3:26 left. Peterson netted eight and Wilson added four points during the run, which spanned 6+ minutes. But tied at 65-65, the River Hawks canned their only 3-pointer of the entire second half to take their final lead with 1:36 left. A Quigley layup brought the Bearcats to within one, 68-67, with 1:01 left. But UML made just enough free throws (5-of-8) down the stretch to hang on. Binghamton hurt its cause with three turnovers in the final 1:45.Â
UMass Lowell took the lead from the start and led by as many as 13 points in the first half. Thanks primarily to 6-of-10 marksmanship from beyond the arc, the River Hawks built a 45-36 halftime cushion. The Bearcats clamped down in the second half, however, limiting UML to just eight field goals. But the fouls began to stack up and the River Hawks took advantage of 30 free throws to create the final margin.Â
Binghamton next travels to Albany for a Thursday night encounter with its longtime SUNY rivals.Â
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