DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
-- Embry-Riddle (Fla.) head men's basketball coach Steve Ridder earned
the 500th win of his 21-year career in dramatic fashion on Friday
evening (Feb. 5), as the sixth-ranked Eagles (20-4 overall, 9-1
conference ) pulled out a 71-67 overtime win over Johnson & Wales
(Fla.).
"I think this win is important for our entire athletic
program," Ridder stated. "It's something that everyone in this arena -
our faculty, staff, students, administration, former student-athletes,
boosters - they have collectively contributed to this success. This
milestone should make us all proud. It has taken a lot of hard work and
sacrifice to create something that's truly special for our university.
That's what tonight represented."In 21 seasons at the
helm of the Eagles' basketball program, Ridder has led the Eagles to
seven conference regular season and tournament titles and 10 NAIA
national tournament appearances and in 1999-00, the Eagles reached the
NAIA pinnacle claiming the first national championship. A three-time
conference Coach of the Year, Ridder was named the NAIA National Coach
of the Year in 2000 and was inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame in 2009.
Many
of Ridder's 500 wins have been hard-fought battles and Friday's game
was no different as the Eagles faced a very determined Johnson &
Wales team.
Embry-Riddle got off to a somewhat sluggish start.
After Ryan Christian hit a jumper for the first points of the game at
the 19:03 mark, the Eagles went cold over the next three minutes,
turning the ball over twice and missing both of their shots from the
field. On the other side of the court, David Tucker took control of the
game for the Wildcats, scoring their eight of their first nine points
to give Johnson & Wales a six-point lead (9-3).
A 30-second
timeout helped the Eagles turn things around and a 13-4 run put the
home team ahead 16-13 with 10:41 left in the half. The Johnson &
Wales offense, which started out on fire, cooled quickly as the Eagle
defense limited the Wildcats to just 29 percent shooting from the
field. Offensively, the Eagles shot 46.7 percent from the field in the
first half, including five three-pointers to take a 39-25 lead going
into the break.
The Eagles built the lead to as many as 16
points in the second half, but Johnson & Wales, helped by the
Eagles' struggles at the free throw line (4-10) steadily battled their
way back into contention and a Stephen Nosworthy jumper at the 3:41
mark sparked an 11-2 run Wildcat run that made it a one-point Eagle
lead with 57 seconds left in regulation.
Following back-to-back
turnovers by the Eagles, the Wildcats moved ahead, 61-60, on a Tucker
layup. With 46 seconds left to play, Danny Krazit was fouled, but the
Eagles' free throw woes continued to plague them as Krazit made the
first but missed the second, resulting in a tied game. On the ensuing
Wildat possession, Blake Tuchard corralled a Matthew Stanley miss,
giving the Eagles the opportunity for the last shot.
With the
game knotted at 61, the Eagles took a time out to draw up a play for
the last nine seconds of regulation. Coming out of the timeout, they
got the ball to Lorenzi whose initial shot attempt fell short of the
mark with two seconds left on the clock. Butler grabbed the rebound,
but his shot attempt rattled around the rim and neither team was able
to control the ball sending the game into overtime.
In a touch
of irony, free throws were the difference in overtime. Both teams shot
just 33.3 percent from the field, but while Johnson & Wales missed
their only free throw attempt in overtime, the Eagles connected on
eight of their 14 trips to the charity stripe to pull out the win.
"I
have to give credit to Johnson and Wales," Ridder said. "I was
impressed with their preparation. They battled hard for 40 plus
minutes. We didn't finish strong tonight and we need to learn from
that. That being said, all great teams find a way to win and we found a
way to earn a victory tonight."
Touchard finished with a
game-high 17 points, including four three-pointers, to go with four
assists and two steals. Lorenzi totaled a season-high 15 rebounds and
matched Ray Graham (7 rebounds) and David Butler (9 rebounds) with 13
points each.
Tucker also tallied 17 points on the night to go
with his 11 rebounds. Stanley and Nosworthy each finished with 13
rebounds and nine points and 16 points, respectively as the Wildcats
fall to 4-18 overall and 2-9 in league play.
The Eagles return to action at 7 p.m. on Saturday when they host No. 14 Northwood at the ICI Center.