(14) Stephen F. Austin 44, (3) Syracuse 59

1 2 T
#14 SFA (24-8) 22 22 44
#3 SYR (28-10) 38 21 59

Final

12:15 PM ET, March 20, 2009
American Airlines Arena
Miami, FL

Balanced effort spurs Syracuse past Stephen F. Austin

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Team Stat Comparison
STEPHEN F. AUSTIN SYRACUSE
Points 44 59
FG Made-Attempted 18-73 (.247) 25-55 (.455)
3P Made-Attempted 2-21 (.095) 2-16 (.125)
FT Made-Attempted 6-10 (.600) 7-10 (.700)
Fouls (Tech/Flagrant) 11 (0/0) 12 (0/0)
Largest Lead 0 26
Game Leaders
 STEPHEN F. AUSTINSYRACUSE
PointsB. Akpan 12J. Flynn 16
ReboundsB. Akpan 10P. Harris 16
AssistsE. Bell 3J. Flynn 7
StealsG. Adams 3A. Rautins 1
BlocksJ. Alexander 1R. Jackson 5
 · Team Stats: Stephen F. Austin | Syracuse
Game Flow
Series
DATEGAMELINKS
· Mar 20, 2009 @SYR 59, SFA 44Recap | Box Score
Associated Press

MIAMI -- Jonny Flynn and Paul Harris stood in the Syracuse locker room before tip-off, imploring teammates to dash Stephen F. Austin's upset hopes before they could even begin.

As usual, the Orange listened to their leaders -- then went out and won their first NCAA tournament game in exactly five years.

Fast Facts

• Syracuse never trailed and led by 16 10 minutes into the game. The Orange sent Stephen F. Austin home in its first NCAA tournament appearance and earned their first tournament win in five years.

• Jonny Flynn led Syracuse with 16 points and has scored in double figures in all but two games this season.

• Syracuse is 9-2 all-time as a No. 3 seed and won the championship as a 3 in 2003.

• Syracuse finished 2-for-16 from 3-point range, its worst shooting day behind the arc this season. Stephen F. Austin was no better, finishing 2-for-21 from 3.

-- ESPN research

Flynn scored 16 points, Rick Jackson and Arinze Onuaku each added 12 and third-seeded Syracuse cruised past NCAA first-timer Stephen F. Austin 59-44 Friday in a South regional matchup.

Syracuse (27-9) ran out to a 20-4 lead over the overmatched Southland Conference champs, and will meet Arizona State in Sunday's second round.

"This is what you play for," Flynn said. "You don't come into the season saying you're playing for the Big East championship. You're playing for the NCAA championship."

Not lately, the Orange haven't been.

They won the title in 2003 behind Carmelo Anthony, then beat Maryland in the second round at Denver in March 20, 2004 -- and went 0-3 in NCAA games since, losing in the regional semifinals to Alabama that year, then endured first-round upsets at the hands of Vermont in 2005 and Texas A&M in 2006.

This time, the outcome seemed sealed within minutes.

Stephen F. Austin (24-8) missed 12 of its first 13 shots, started a mind-numbing 0-for-15 from 3-point range, and trailed by 26 points five minutes into the second half. A 1-3-1 zone slowed Syracuse considerably the rest of the way, but the Lumberjacks never made a serious run.

"We didn't play up to our capabilities," Lumberjacks coach Danny Kaspar said. "I think there was a bad case of the shakes with some of us, and even when that settled down, we just couldn't get it going."

Benson Akpan led Stephen F. Austin with 12 points and Nick Shaw scored 10. The Lumberjacks finished 2-for-21 from 3-point range, and that played perfectly into Syracuse's hands.

"We just had to stand there and hit them in the first couple minutes of the game, and we just couldn't," said Lumberjacks forward Josh Alexander, who was held to eight points on 4-for-20 shooting, 0-for-7 from 3-point range.

Eric Devendorf had 10 points and Harris had a game-high 16 rebounds for Syracuse, which shot 63 percent in the first half, 32 percent in the second. The Orange only allowed the Lumberjacks to shoot 24.7 percent, their best showing since Alabama shot 24.2 percent against Syracuse on Jan. 11, 1997.

"It doesn't matter how pretty it was," Syracuse guard Andy Rautins said. "We got the win and we're advancing."

In 80 appearances, Syracuse's all-time low for NCAA points allowed was 43 against Princeton in 1992 -- and Jereal Scott kept it that way, hitting two free throws for the Lumberjacks with 12.9 seconds left to close the scoring.

"You just want to get a win in this tournament and get to the next game," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. "That's what it's about."

Syracuse's 2-3 zone frustrated the Lumberjacks from the outset. Stephen F. Austin didn't score on any of the first six possessions where it tried to score from the post; combine that with the frigid shooting from the outside, and the Lumberjacks' first NCAA trip was destined to be a short one.

The Lumberjacks didn't get on the floor from their final pre-game locker room chat until about 1 minute before the starting lineups were announced.

Considering the way the opening minutes went, they might have wanted to head back into their dressing room quickly.

Jackson set the tone immediately, blocking Matt Kingsley's shot on the first possession of the game, then setting up Onuaku with a pass from the high post for an easy score that got the Orange on the board a few seconds later.

If there was any hope for another 14-over-3-seed upset like the one Southland member Northwestern State pulled over Iowa three years ago, it quickly vanished.

Flynn got his first score with 17:06 left in the half, making it 6-0, then took his spot atop the Syracuse zone, clapped his hands three times and yelled to no one in particular, "Turn it up."

The Orange responded.

"They're a large group of guys," Kingsley said.

Stephen F. Austin led the nation in 3-point field goal defense this year, and lived up to that billing. The Orange were 2-for-16 from long range, plus committed 21 turnovers to the Lumberjacks' six.

It didn't matter, thanks in part to a 51-32 Syracuse edge in rebounding and the worst shooting game by a Stephen F. Austin team since November 1996.

"How big a win was it?" asked Onuaku, repeating a question posed his way. "Can you say huge?"

Playing without top reserve Kristof Ongenaet -- sidelined by a flu bug that hit some members of the Syracuse travel party -- the Orange were still never threatened. Even Boeheim had a cough and congestion after the game.

Getting to the second round made him a bit better.

"I don't feel that bad," Boeheim said.


Men's Basketball Scores

Other Scores:

Friday, March 20th
16 Morehead State 54 Final
1 Louisville 74
16 E Tennessee State 62 Final
1 Pittsburgh 72
15 Robert Morris 62 Final
2 Michigan State 77
14 Cornell 59 Final
3 Missouri 78
13 Cleveland State 84 Final
4 Wake Forest 69
14 North Dakota State 74 Final
3 Kansas 84
14 Stephen F. Austin 44 Final
3 Syracuse 59
12 Wisconsin 61 Final
5 Florida State 59 OT
11 Temple 57 Final
6 Arizona State 66
13 Portland State 59 Final
4 Xavier 77
11 Utah State 57 Final
6 Marquette 58
9 Tennessee 75 Final
8 Oklahoma State 77
11 Dayton 68 Final
6 West Virginia 60
12 Arizona 84 Final
5 Utah 71
10 USC 72 Final
7 Boston College 55
9 Siena 74 Final
8 Ohio State 72 2OT