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Men's basketball stunned by Notre Dame Fighting Irish at home

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Published: Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Updated: Thursday, January 26, 2012 00:01

theodore-the-setonian-1.25.12

Leah Poland, The Setonian

Senior Jordan Theodore (above) and sophomore Fuquan Edwin (below) have led a Pirate resurgence this season, but fell short on Wednesday night.

After a low-scoring first half that saw neither team score more than 20 points, it didn't seem like it could get much worse. But it did, or at least for the Pirates, who fell to Notre Dame 55-42 on Wednesday night.

The loss is the Hall's third consecu­tive and the first loss at home this sea­son.

The Pirates (15-5, 4-4) put on their worst offensive performance of the sea­son, shooting below 30 percent from the floor, in front of a sold-out student section and a crowd of more than 8,000 fans.

It was the fewest points the Pirates have scored in a game since a 93-40 loss at Duke on Nov. 16, 2005.

"If you shoot 26 percent, you're not going to win a lot of games in this league," head coach Kevin Willard said.

Senior guard Jordan Theodore led the Hall with 11 points and only one as­sist, after averaging 7.5 assists per game on the season.

Herb Pope, the Pirates' other starting senior, leads the team in both scoring and rebounding, but shot just 2-of-16 from the floor in the game before foul­ing out with just six points and seven boards.

"We're only going to be as good as those two play," WIlliard said, referring to his two starting seniors.

The Fighting Irish (13-8, 5-3) kept all the luck to themselves because the Hall's shooting woes continued throughout the game, from beyond the arc to the free throw line, even right un­derneath the basket.

"We missed a lot of shots early," Williard said. "We had opportunities in front of the rim, even had some open shots, but we didn't make them. We just played a little flat on the offensive end."

It was the Hall's defense that kept Notre Dame under 20 points in the first half.

The Pirates forced the Irish to turn the ball over 14 times in the game.

Despite the stingy defense, the Pi­rates were unable to capitalize on of­fense all night.

"I was really happy with the way we played defensively in the first half to keep us in the game," Williard said. "I thought we did a really good job de­fensively, but again we missed a couple easy shots at the start of the second half to lead us to a quick demise."

Notre Dame only edged Seton Hall by one point, 19-18, at the end of the first half.

The Pirates shot just 20.7 percent from the floor in the half, but the Fight­ing Irish didn't have a much better per­formance, shooting only 33 percent.

In the first half, both teams struggled behind the arc as well.

The Fighting Irish made one of their nine 3-point attempts while Seton Hall was 1-of-6, with the team's first 3-point bucket coming off the fingertips of freshman guard Haralds Karlis with 30 seconds remaining.

"I don't think we have a lack of con­fidence," Williard said. "We have a lot of ‘I' going on right now. ‘I'm a good player. I did this. I scored that.' I think we've all forgotten what's got us to how good we were playing. We have to get back to that."

Disappointed Pirate fans agreed with Willard, booing the team – ranked No. 25 in the country just two weeks ago – off their home court.

The ranting by Seton Hall students extended to social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter post-game.

"You better have a short memory in this conference or it makes for a long year," Williard said.

Despite their recent woes, the Pi­rates already boast a better overall re­cord than last season, 20 games into the season

The Pirates return to action on Sat­urday night when they face Louisville at home.

Krissy Wrobel can be reached at wrobelkr@shu.edu

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