January 17, 2013
Humphrey's return has Huggins thinking small
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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. - Matt Humphrey finally got back on the floor for West Virginia's basketball team Wednesday. If Bob Huggins does what he promised late that same night, Humphrey might be getting even more chances.

The Mountaineers played their third straight game that came down to the final possession and lost for the second time in that span. Iowa State won 69-67 on a layup by Georges Niang with 2.5 seconds to play at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa, and WVU never got off a last shot.

Humphrey was part of a long-range shooting exhibition put on by the Mountaineers that enabled them to erase all of an 18-point deficit to tie the game with less than 12 seconds to go. Freshman Eron Harris and sophomore Jabarie Hinds also contributed as WVU, after missing its first 13 3-pointers, made 9 of 11 at the end of the game to make things interesting.

It was a comeback forged through shooting and aggressive play by a small lineup, something Huggins vowed later to continue to use - not so much because it was briefly successful, but because his preferred bigger lineup isn't getting the job done at all.

"We're going with a smaller lineup. I'm not doing that anymore,'' Huggins said a few moments after his team had lost for the third time in four Big 12 Conference games. "I'm done. They've had ample opportunity. They've had over half the season.

"How could it be worse? We're 1-3. How could it be worse?''

Huggins would prefer to stay with a bigger lineup. It's just his style of play. He likes to throw the ball close to the basket and get easy shots and he likes having big bodies protecting the goal at the other end.

But try as he might this season, he hasn't been able find a big-man combination that works. He has four of them - seniors Deniz Kilicli and Dominique Rutledge, junior Aaric Murray and redshirt sophomore Kevin Noreen - but for the most part they will rise up for a possession or a half or even a game, but then disappear again.

Against Iowa State, Noreen had 10 rebounds. Those other three bigs combined had just nine. The three guards who played most of the game - Hinds, Harris and Juwan Staten - had 15.

So what's the advantage of playing a big lineup if three guards are outrebounding three bigs?

"We changed lineups, tried to spread them and penetrate and get shots and played with one big,'' Huggins said. "We played with the one big that actually tried to get a rebound.''

That would be Noreen, although at game's end it was Murray on the floor. Noreen had just turned the ball over twice to toss away valuable possessions and Murray was needed for his defense. He wound up blocking the shot that gave West Virginia the chance to tie the game with 11.6 seconds to go on a 3-pointer by Hinds.

So now comes Huggins' opportunity to simply scrap the big men and go small. The Mountaineers have the perfect opportunity to test it out, facing Purdue on Saturday afternoon in West Lafayette, Ind., in the team's final non-conference game of the season.

"You get tired of saying the same things to the same people day after day after day,'' Huggins said. "We're not going to do that anymore.''

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