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NOTEBOOK: Men's Basketball Tangles With Brown in Another Wild Affair

By Catherine E. Coppinger, Crimson Staff Writer

Despite leading by 22 with 12:58 to play in the second half of its league contest against Brown, the Harvard men’s basketball team found itself all tied up at the end of regulation.

And while the Crimson eventually claimed a victory, 89-82, in thrilling fashion at Lavietes Pavilion on Saturday, the double-overtime contest was not Harvard’s first surprising game against the Bears in recent memory. Nor was it the first time co-captain Christian Webster helped spur his team to victory over Brown at home.

The senior converted two three-pointers in overtime, one in each period, including the go-ahead bucket with 4:38 to play in the second extra frame. From there, thanks to one layup apiece from rookie point guard Siyani Chambers and sophomore wing Wesley Saunders along with four free throws, Harvard was at last able to hold its lead, closing the contest with a seven-point advantage.

“It was a little tighter than we’d like it to be, but we were able to pull out the victory,” said Saunders, who finished the game with a team-high 18 points. “Same thing as always, we got out early and let them back into the game.”

On Feb. 12, 2011, the eventual Ivy League co-champion Crimson team found itself down by 22 points against an underdog Bears team that had just two wins after its first eight Ivy contests. But after a second half in which Harvard outscored Brown by a whopping 54-25 margin, the Crimson was back on top, 85-78, by the game’s end.

Webster—who also played an instrumental role in Harvard’s recent comeback victory over Dartmouth—had a team-high 18 points and four treys in the second half of that contest.

“Christian makes some big shots for us all the time,” Saunders said. “He’s just been clutch for us this whole season. We look for him whenever we need a shot, and he’s been able to knock them down.”

GOING, GOING, GON

For the second time in his career, Chambers finished with a double-double Saturday night, contributing an impressive 17 points and 10 assists. But according to Harvard coach Tommy Amaker, the freshman’s defense on Brown guard Sean McGonagill was instrumental to the success of his Crimson squad.

“[Chambers’] defense was the key for us, that he was able to defend McGonagill so many times,” Amaker said. “He is very good and crafty, and for Siyani to stay in front of him as much as he did, to me, was the key to the game.”

Though McGonagill ended the contest with 20 points—including the game-tying bucket with one second remaining in regulation—Chambers and the Crimson kept his Bears’ counterpart out of the action for much of the game.

In the first half, McGonagill, who averages 14.7 points per game, was held to two points until just 5:41 remained in the period, during which time the junior converted a three-pointer and a layup to close out the half. Chambers led his team in scoring during the frame, chipping in 14 points.

McGonagill upped his point total to 20 in the second frame on four-of-six shooting but was unable to convert in the extra session. The guard recorded two assists but was held scoreless during the final 10 minutes of the extended game.

FOUL PLAY

Saturday night’s contest featured an inordinate number of free throw attempts, as the two teams exchanged hacks toward the hectic end of the contest. By the game’s end, the Bears had been whistled 23 times while the Crimson was called for 19 fouls of their own.

“I thought we played in poor position in the second half,” Amaker said. “Certainly they made some shots, but I thought our lack of discipline in fouling and putting them on the line was one of the bigger keys to the game.”

In the final two minutes of regulation, Harvard went to the line five times on non-shooting fouls. In overtime, the Crimson added nine more free throw attempts, as two Brown players—Rafael Maia and Cedric Kuakumensah—fouled out of the game.

Overall, the Crimson got to the line 27 times and walked away with19 points from the charity stripe, good for over 70 percent shooting. But down the stretch, the numbers got worse from the line for Harvard. Discounting a solid first half in which Harvard netted 10 of 11 free-throw attempts, the Crimson was 4-for-7 in the second half and 5-for-9 in overtime.

Sophomore Steve Moundou-Missi—who ended the game with nine points and as many rebounds—came away with five made foul shots despite attempting a game-high 11.

“Steve all day was tremendous for us,” Amaker said. “He was just aware of a lot of things, and that’s what we need our post players to be, aware and alert. I wish he would have been a little better from the foul line. It would have really capped off his individual performance.”

Brown was on the opposite trajectory from the line, hitting 14 of 16 free throws in the second half and beyond, including all four of its overtime attempts.

—Staff writer Catherine E. Coppinger can be reached at ccoppinger@college.harvard.edu. Follow her on Twitter @catcopp.

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