December 5, 2012
Marshall's Herrion: 'We beat ourselves'
Chip Ellis
WVU's Gary Browne (15) and Keaton Miles (55) defend a shot by Marshall's DeAndre Kane.
Advertiser

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Tom Herrion made clear he wasn't disrespecting West Virginia after his Marshall team lost 69-59 Wednesday in the Capital Classic, but he felt his team lost the game more than the Mountaineers won it.

Between the Thundering Herd's 13 first-half turnovers, two long stretches without a field goal and the usual mediocrity at the free-throw line, the Herd stayed behind the proverbial 8-ball in the final 24 minutes. Getting outrebounded, a no-no under Herrion, didn't help matters.

Marshall shot 36.5 percent from the floor, but that included a nice 9-of-20 performance from 3-point range. Subtract those shots and the Herd went 10 of 32 from inside the arc, barely 30 percent.

That has become Marshall's bugaboo in recent games - get open shots, get to the rim and fail to finish. That failure helped finish Marshall off for the second straight Capital Classic.

"I'm not sure West Virginia beat us tonight," Herrion said. "We contributed mightily to the loss ourselves. And I don't mean that in any disrespect to them."

The Herd jumped out to a 12-5 lead but was tied at 19 with 5:09 left. D.D. Scarver hit a 3-pointer and Dennis Tinnon made two free throws to give the Herd a 24-19 lead with 4:27 left.

From there, the Mountaineers' pressure turned the Herd offense into mush. Marshall missed its first five shots and committed three turnovers, and was lucky to be down 31-25 at the half. WVU finished on a 12-1 run, and it could have been more.

Six different MU players committed turnovers in that half, including four by DeAndre Kane.

"I thought we got shook," Herrion said. "We knew they were going to pressure us. We turned it over every which way possible. We talked about playing low, playing strong with the ball. We got shook and sped up, and clearly a bad way to go through that stretch near the end of the first half."

The turnovers were cut down to four in the second half, but so was the Herd's field-goal percentage - 10 of 29 total, 5 of 17 from inside the 3-point arc. There was a six-minute drought without a field goal, a stretch that saw WVU extend a 42-37 lead to 51-40.

Recommended Stories

Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Popular Videos
The Gazette now offers Facebook Comments on its stories. You must be logged into your Facebook account to add comments. If you do not want your comment to post to your personal page, uncheck the box below the comment. Comments deemed offensive by the moderators will be removed, and commenters who persist may be banned from commenting on the site.
Advertisement - Your ad here
Advertisement - Your ad here
Advertisement - Your ad here