News Archive for Kris Joseph

Syracuse Rolls, Off To Best Start In School History

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Jim Boeheim and his Syracuse Orangemen (22-1) just keep rolling, winning their ninth straight game over Providence  by a score of 85-68.  Kris Joseph came of the bench to lead Syracuse with 23 points and Arinze Onuaku chipped in a season-high 20 points in the blowout victory.  Jamine Patterson dropped in 25 points for the Providence Friars (12-10) in the defeat.

Orange Set School Record

The victory set a school record for the best start to a season.  The 1979-1980 basketball squad, Boeheim’s fourth season at the helm, got off to a 22-1 before fading down the stretch and getting knocked out of the NCAA Tournament in the Sweet Sixteen round.  That team was led by the “Bouie and Louie” show, with Roosevelt Bouie and Louis Orr driving the team along with future NBA player Danny Schayes coming off the bench.

Syracuse once again showed its depth with seven players rotating and getting at least 20 minutes.  Joseph and Onuaku were the hot hands on the floor and the Syracuse offense steered the ball in their direction.  Joseph was 9 of 11 from the field and a perfect 5 for 5 on the foul line, while Onuaku was 10-12 from the field and was ferociously dominating in the paint.

The famed Syracuse 2-3 zone dominated in the second, busting open the three point lead the Orangeman held at halftime.  Opening with a 22-7 run, the Orangemen never looked back and were never seriously threatened thereafter.  Syracuse did this without standout forward Wesley Johnson.  Midway through the first half, Johnson landed hard on the court after being upended in mid-air for a dunk.  Johnson would log just three minutes in the second half.

The difference maker in the game were the little things that don’t always show up on the ESPN highlight show.  Leading the team in assists was F/C Rick Jackson with seven assists.  Point guards Brandon Triche and Scoop Jardine both finished the game with zero turnovers, keeping the ball in Syracuse hands and limiting Providence in scoring transition baskets.

“It just shows that they’re deep,” Providence coach Keno Davis said. “They’ve got so many guys that can have big games against you. And then their defense. They force you outside. They really understand their defense and they’re pretty physical when you try to rebound. It’s just a deep, physical, talented team.”

Next up for Syracuse,  a road game at Cincinnati (14-7) on Sunday where they will look to extend their team record streak to open a season.

Syracuse Survives Scare At DePaul

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

The Syracuse Orangemen came out sleeping at the start for the second straight game, but were able to overcome an 18-point deficit on the road to defeat the DePaul Blue Demons 59-57 in a Big East Conference matchup.  Syracuse was lead by Wes Johnson who registered 16 points, 13 rebounds and 7 assists to lead the Orange.  DePaul’s Will Walker scored 21 points in a losing effort.

Wesley Johnson

Syracuse Survives In DePaul

Syracuse came out flat, falling behind 14-6 in the opening minutes.  It was replay of their slow start against Georgetown this past Monday night, spotting the Hoyas 14 points before they got onto the scoreboard.  But unlike the Georgetown game, Syracuse had work much harder to pull themselves back into this game, as the offense was unable to pull itself out of its lull.

As Syracuse laid brick after brick on the rim, DePaul was able to extend its lead to 33-15 with 8:53 left in the first half.  The vaunted Syracuse 2-3 zone the kicked in and left DePaul with no answers as the Orange went on a 16-0 run that spanned 7:40 before DePaul’s Krys Faber nailed a jumper to halt the run, allowing DePaul to head into halftime with 35-31 lead against the #3 ranked team in the country.

Syracuse’s offensive woes continued into the second half, as senior guard Andy Rautins was unable to breakout of a two-game shooting slump and Syracuse struggled to get baskets to fall.  DePaul built its lead back up to 52-43 after a Mac Koshwal layup with 7:20 remaining.

From that point on, it was all Syracuse.  Kris Joseph, Rautins and Scoop Jardine connected on consecutive three-point baskets.  The Syracuse offense then shifted into transition mode, as Johnson beat the Blue Demons up the court for a highlight reel dunk to tie the game and on the next possession Jardine was able to push through and past traffic for a layup that gave Syracuse the lead for the first time in the game at 56-54 with 3:37 left in the game.

Syracuse would not relinquish that lead again.

The Blue Demons has their chances to put Syracuse away, but squandered numerous opportunities.  The key to the game actually didn’t happen on the floor, it happened in the coaches box for DePaul.  Interim head coach Tracy Webster, who recently replaced the fired Jerry Wainwright, and his team squandered their timeouts in the second half.  After using their final timeout at 8:28 while extending their lead, DePaul was unable to slow the momentum of Syracuse’s late run that would snatch away a chance at getting their 2nd Big East victory in their last 29 Big East games.

For Syracuse, it was another game that tested the mettle of its squad.  It gives them some things to work on, but they should come away positive from the victory knowing that their worst offensive performance of the season resulted in a victory.  When the pressure was on, the Orange once again delivered on both ends of the court.