Oklahoma State vs. Missouri - Men's College Basketball 2000-2001
Автор: Oklahoma State Athletics
Загружено: 2011-01-28
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Full game: Oklahoma State vs. Missouri - February 5, 2001 from Gallagher-Iba Arena in Stillwater. Nine days after a tragic plane crash took the lives of ten members of the Oklahoma State family, basketball returned to the court as the Cowboys hosted the Missouri Tigers.
AP recap: When the game was over and his Oklahoma State basketball team had beaten Missouri, coach Eddie Sutton couldn't help himself. He cried.
Sutton had just led the Cowboys to a 69-66 victory in their first game since a Jan. 27 plane crash in Colorado killed two players and eight other members of the team's traveling party.
"This game was one of the most important games I've ever coached in," said Sutton, who has coached 935 games in 31 years. "It would have been devastating not to win.
"It's a very, very important win for Oklahoma State University. It's important because it continues this healing process that all of us are going through."
Spurred throughout by a boisterous crowd, the Cowboys used a second-half run to take the lead and held on at the end. Fredrik Jonzen tied a career best with 26 points, Maurice Baker had 22 and Andre Williams had 15 rebounds and four blocks.
"This past week has probably been one of the toughest times in my life, if not the worst," Jonzen said. "And tonight was probably the best time of my life."
Many in the crowd, along with the coaches from both schools, wore orange ribbons in memory of the victims. The main lobby of the arena remained filled with flowers and handwritten messages to the victims.
The students, most of them in place 90 minutes before tipoff, gave each of the Oklahoma State players a standing ovation as they filed out, a few at a time, for the pregame shootaround. Jonzen, the first out, applauded back at them with upraised arms.
The players received a standing ovation as they trotted to the dressing room shortly before the game. Then, moments later, the arena fell silent for 30 seconds to honor the victims.
Four minutes before gametime, the arena rocked with noise once again as the team came onto the floor. Sutton followed moments later, trailed by nearly a dozen television cameras.
The game program was dedicated to the victims and the cover featured a picture of each. The lineup sheets provided to media listed the names of players Dan Lawson and Nate Fleming, with a ribbon alongside each. The Cowboys uniforms included a black square on the chest with the number 10 and a ribbon inside.
"It was hard to just focus on basketball," Williams said. "I'm just used to looking over and glancing at a couple of faces that weren't there. At times, it was hard to just focus on the game. But it's going to be an empty feeling from here on out. I just have to play through it."
Once the game began, it was business as usual - Sutton coming out of his seat several times, either to holler at his players or the officials.
The Cowboys (14-4, 5-2 Big 12) used a 13-4 run midway through the second half to take a 59-52 lead. Missouri (14-7, 5-3) fought back and made it a one-point game, 65-64, on Brian Grawer's steal and layup with 1:39 left.
Baker sank four free throws in the final 45.5 seconds to keep the Cowboys up by three. Missouri had a chance to tie it with 3.4 seconds left, but Melvin Sanders stole the inbound pass and the clock ran out.
"I thought Oklahoma State was terrific," Missouri coach Quin Snyder said. "They showed the type of character that their team has, their coach has and their program has. This was not an easy game for anybody."
After the final buzzer, the Oklahoma State players celebrated by huddling briefly at midcourt before leaving the floor, and again in the locker room.
"I was emotional," Sutton said. "I got in the dressing room and I think a lot of us were emotional. I don't think I was the only one who shed a tear."
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