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West Virginia knocks off N.C. State

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Posted 5:42AM on Monday 3rd January 2005 ( 20 years ago )
RALEIGH, N.C. - John Beilein said he&#39;d rather his West Virginia team remain under the national radar. The coach might not have a choice anymore.<br> <br> Johannes Herber and Mike Gansey each scored 15 points Sunday to lift West Virginia past No. 17 North Carolina State 82-69, giving the Mountaineers their best start in more than 40 years.<br> <br> Patrick Beilein and Tyrone Sally each scored 11 points in a balanced effort by the Mountaineers, who improved to 10-0 for the first time since the 1959-60 season when Jerry West played for West Virginia. Six players scored in double figures and West Virginia shot 59 percent.<br> <br> The Mountaineers beat No. 20 George Washington 71-65 last week, then followed by beating a team that had won 48 of 52 nonconference games in the RBC Center. That could add up to West Virginia&#39;s first appearance in The Associated Press&#39; Top 25 since March 1998, which was the last year the Mountaineers reached the NCAA tournament.<br> <br> ``A ranking would be nice,&#39;&#39; Gansey said. ``But at the same time, it doesn&#39;t really matter I guess.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Freshman Andrew Brackman scored 19 points in his first start for the Wolfpack (10-3), who played without leading scorer Julius Hodge. Hodge, last year&#39;s Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year, was sidelined with a sprained right ankle suffered in last week&#39;s lopsided loss to St. John&#39;s.<br> <br> Wolfpack point guard Tony Bethel, who has battled flulike symptoms for a week, played 21 minutes and went scoreless for the third straight game.<br> <br> But considering the way the Mountaineers played, it might not have mattered.<br> <br> West Virginia shot the ball confidently from the start, played effective and physical defense and got out in transition to get several easy baskets. The Mountaineers led 43-36 at halftime, then hit 10 of their first 15 shots after the break to build a 14-point lead with about 7.5 minutes left.<br> <br> West Virginia went 10-for-18 from 3-point range, and got several easy layups off backdoor cuts and crisp passing.<br> <br> The Mountaineers got contributions from just about everywhere. Gansey, a 6-foot-4 guard, led the team with 10 rebounds and four steals. Four players had at least three assists, five hit 3-pointers and D&#39;or Fisher blocked six shots.<br> <br> ``Coach Beilein&#39;s got great strategies and we&#39;ve got guys who have really bought into the system and really want to play with each other,&#39;&#39; Gansey said.<br> <br> After Sally&#39;s jumper from the right side put the Mountaineers up 69-55, the Wolfpack cut into the lead with a fadeaway jumper from Ilian Evtimov and four free throws from Brackman. That recharged a lethargic home crowd, but the surge wouldn&#39;t last.<br> <br> As they did all day, the Mountaineers patiently ran their motion offense to get good looks. It paid off with a jumper from Herber. Then, Gansey drove right by Cameron Bennerman for an easy layup to push the lead back to 73-61 with about 5 minutes left.<br> <br> The Wolfpack shot just 39 percent, and missed Hodge when it came to finding a go-to guy to hit a needed shot as the game slipped away.<br> <br> It was hardly the way N.C. State wanted to follow a 63-45 loss to St. John&#39;s in the finals of the Holiday Festival in New York. The Wolfpack shot a school-record low 20 percent in that game, including 2-for-24 from 3-point range.<br> <br> Now the Wolfpack will have to find a way to recover from two disappointing losses before opening ACC play at Miami next weekend. It&#39;s unclear whether Hodge will be ready to play by then.<br> <br> ``We have to get healthy and then get better,&#39;&#39; N.C. State coach Herb Sendek said. ``Our guys are fully aware that we have to rise to the challenge.&#39;&#39;

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