Damn. Utah State came might close but Utah ultimately pulled out a one-point victory.
USU, Utah Utes basketball: Aggies' dry spell proves costlyGo here for the remainder.
USU goes scoreless for five minutes, sees 7-point lead vanish
Jared Eborn
Deseret News
November 18, 2009
With 12 minutes and 54 seconds to play, Utah State's Nate Bendall hit an 18-foot jumper from the top of the key to give the Aggies a 47-40 lead.
All was right for Utah State and the crowd of 9,699 at the Huntsman center was mostly quiet.
"We were up seven," Utah State coach Stew Morrill said, "and then we go five minutes without scoring."
And just like that, the Utes put the 'Runnin' back in their name and rattled off an 11-0 rally to take the lead and eventually a 68-67 win...
and
The Ags run out of timeGo here for the remainder.
Shawn Harrison
Herald Journal
November 19, 2009
SALT LAKE CITY — It was how an in-state game should go.
Neither team enjoyed a big advantage. There were nine lead changes and the game was tied on seven other occasions. In the end, it was a one-point game.
That being said, the Aggie men’s basketball team came up on the short end of the final score and were left with an empty feeling. Utah held off Utah State Wednesday night at the Huntsman Center, 68-67, in front of 9,699 fans.
“This hurts, it hurts a lot,” said Aggie forward Tai Wesley, who had 14 points and eight rebounds. “... Losing to an in-state rival, it really hurts. If it would have been a blow out, it wouldn’t have hurt as much. We were up by seven at one point.” Aggies, on the other hand, got just 12 points on possessions created by Utah's 10 turnovers...
Plus, Tony Jones/Salt Lake City Tribune has some thoughts about the game.
+++++
Nevada's expected bugaboo came to the fore last night:
Wolf Pack Basketball: Pack slips up against UNLVGo here for the remainder.
Chris Murray
Reno Gazette-Journal
November 19, 2009
LAS VEGAS -- If Nevada's game against UNLV on Wednesday night was limited to five players per roster, the Wolf Pack would have walked out of the Thomas & Mack Center the victors.
But it wasn't, and Nevada left Las Vegas with the bitter taste of a 88-75 defeat to its archrival in front of 13,113 fans -- the Pack's fourth straight loss in the series.
After leading by five at halftime, the Wolf Pack went on an 8-0 run early in the second half to take a 54-42 lead, its largest of the game. Then what happened?
"I thought our guys got tired," Wolf Pack coach David Carter said. "They have a very, very deep team. We got tired and our defense got soft and they did a really good job of changing their on-ball screens and we just didn't handle it."
Plus, Chris Murray has more here.
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