Tag Archives: buzzer

‘America’s Got Talent’: Simon Cowell’s Golden Buzzer act sings U2 – USA TODAY

  1. ‘America’s Got Talent’: Simon Cowell’s Golden Buzzer act sings U2 USA TODAY
  2. America’s Got Talent 2023 LIVE — Sofia Vergara calls Philip Bowen’s act ‘sexy’ as fans question frontunne… The US Sun
  3. U2 clears song for Putri Ariani on ‘America’s Got Talent’ live show, and Heidi Klum compares her to ‘an angel singing’ [WATCH] Gold Derby
  4. ‘AGT’ Season 18: Simon Cowell booed as he criticizes singer Summer Rios’ Qualifiers 3 performance MEAWW
  5. America’s Got Talent: Putri Ariani sings cover of U2 classic CarterMatt
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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SDSU’s Win Gave the Men’s Final Four A First-of-Its-Kind Buzzer Beater – Sports Illustrated

  1. SDSU’s Win Gave the Men’s Final Four A First-of-Its-Kind Buzzer Beater Sports Illustrated
  2. ‘We couldn’t have scripted it better’: SDSU’s Lamont Butler cements himself in March Madness lore with Final Four buzzer beater Yahoo Sports
  3. San Diego State vs. Florida Atlantic – Final Four NCAA tournament extended highlights March Madness
  4. Golf influencer Paige Spiranac has 4-word response to San Diego State’s epic win Fox News
  5. FAU star Alijah Martin appreciates Dwyane Wade showing love to team amid historic run to Final Four Heat Nation
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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At the Buzzer: Indiana 86, Ohio State 70 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on an 86-70 win against Ohio State:

How it happened

It was a well-played first half in Bloomington by Ohio State and Indiana until the final three and a half minutes. That’s when Indiana kicked it into another gear on both ends. After Zed Key’s free throw to get the Buckeyes within one at 31-30, the Hoosiers exploded. Over the final 3:31, Indiana outscored Ohio State 15-0. Malik Reneau made a bucket to get the run going. Trey Galloway followed that with an acrobatic layup. Then Trayce Jackson-Davis had a fast break dunk. Another Jackson-Davis bucket stretched the lead to nine. Then Jalen Hood-Schifino hit a 3-pointer, his sixth of the half. Another Reneau bucket stretched the lead to 14 and then Kaleb Banks scored his second bucket of the game to make it 46-30 Hoosiers at intermission.

The Buckeyes got within 11 early in the second half, but Indiana stretched the lead to 17 at the 13:30 mark on a Jackson-Davis bucket. By the under-eight media timeout, Indiana’s lead was 15 at 70-55. The Hoosiers stretched the lead out to 19 on a pair of free throws by Jackson-Davis with 5:17 remaining. Ohio State never seriously challenged Indiana the rest of the way as the Hoosiers led by double digits throughout the half. The win, Indiana’s fifth straight, improved the Hoosiers to 15-6 overall and 6-4 in league play.

Standout performers

Hood-Schifino was terrific, finishing with 24 points on 6-for-9 shooting from beyond the 3-point arc. It wasn’t the most efficient shooting night for Jackson-Davis (8-for-18), but he still managed another double-double with 18 points and 10 rebounds. He also had six assists and two blocked shots. Malik Reneau also had his second straight double-figure scoring game with 15 points and added eight rebounds, three assists and a steal.

Statistics that stand out

Indiana’s 1.32 points per possession were its highest of the season against a high-major opponent. The Hoosiers shot 10-for-20 on 3s and only turned it over nine times.

Final IU individual statistics

Final tempo-free statistics

Assembly Call postgame show

Filed to: Ohio State Buckeyes

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At the Buzzer: Indiana 61, Minnesota 57 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on a 61-57 win at Minnesota:

How it happened

The circumstances on Wednesday in Minneapolis were abnormal. Mike Woodson didn’t make the trip due to a recent COVID-19 diagnosis. Minnesota’s leading scorer, Dawson Garcia, was out with an ankle injury. Empty seats were plentiful in Williams Arena pregame. Indiana, a double-digit favorite, came out lacking focus. The Hoosiers turned the ball over five times in the first eight minutes. Minnesota got into the bonus quickly as IU struggled to defend straight line drives. By the six minute mark, Minnesota led 24-18. Indiana seemed to find its footing offensively the last six minutes as the Hoosiers scored 15 points to grab a 33-30 halftime advantage. Trayce Jackson-Davis had nine points and 11 rebounds in the first half, but was only 4-for-9 from the field. Malik Reneau led IU with 10 first half points.

It wasn’t a particularly strong start to the second half, but Indiana made enough plays to stretch the lead to seven at 45-38 on a Jackson-Davis bucket off a baseline out of bound play. The Hoosiers led 47-40 at the under 12 media timeout. Minnesota, however, had an answer. The Gophers scored the next seven points to tie it at 47, forcing Yasir Rosemond to take a timeout. Minnesota then took the lead at 50-49 on a Jamison Battle 3-pointer with 8:55 to play. Indiana, however, quickly retook the lead on a Trey Galloway 3-pointer with 8:28 to play. Minnesota took the lead again at 55-54 on a Battle 3-pointer with 6:22 to play. A dunk by Jackson-Davis with 2:22 remaining cut the Minnesota lead to 57-56.

With 43.7 seconds to play, Race Thompson split a pair of free throws to make it 57, but a Jackson-Davis offensive rebound on the free throw miss and subsequent putback gave IU a 59-57 lead. Ta’Lon Cooper missed a 3-pointer on the next Minnesota possession and Miller Kopp grabbed a loose ball and called timeout with just over 20 seconds to go. Minnesota then let the clock run down to 8.2 seconds to go before fouling Trey Galloway. Galloway made both to make it 61-57 and secure a fourth-straight victory.

Standout performer

Jackson-Davis was dominant again, finishing with 25 points, 21 rebounds and six blocked shots. He became the program’s all-time blocked shots leader after tying Jeff Newton in the Michigan State game.

Statistic that stands out

Indiana finished the game on a 7-0 run and didn’t allow a Minnesota point over the final 3:20 of the contest.

Final IU individual statistics

Final tempo-free statistics

Assembly Call postgame show

(Photo credit: IU Athletics)

Filed to: Minnesota Golden Gophers

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At the Buzzer: Indiana 80, Illinois 65 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on an 80-65 win at Illinois:

How it happened

Indiana fell behind 4-0 early, prompting Mike Woodson to call for an early timeout. The Hoosiers responded by scoring the next 12 points to grab an eight-point lead at the 14:38 mark. The lead hit double figures for the first time at 18-7 on a Jordan Geronimo layup and was stretched to 14 at 26-12 on a Jalen Hood-Schifino by the 8:15 mark. The Hoosiers would go on to build a 19-point lead in the first 20 minutes, but Illinois cut the cushion to 10 by halftime. Still, it was an impressive 20 minutes for the Hoosiers as Trayce Jackson-Davis and Geronimo both scored 13 points and Hood-Schifino had 10 in 20 first-half minutes.

By the 14:51 mark of the second half, Indiana pushed the lead back to 18 on a bucket from Jackson-Davis. The Hoosiers stretched the lead to 21 on a Miller Kopp 3-pointer with 12:19 to play, but Coleman Hawkins answered just 11 seconds later with a 3-pointer of his own to make it 62-44 at the under 12 media timeout. Indiana’s lead was back at 21 after a Jackson-Davis bucket made it 66-45 with 10:12 to play. Indiana turned it over three times in less than two minutes and the Illini got within 15 at 66-51 with 8:27 to play. Terrence Shannon’s 3-pointer with 7:48 to play made it 66-54 Indiana. The Hoosiers stopped the 9-0 Illini spurt with a bucket by Trey Galloway with 7:17 remaining. After a missed Shannon jump shot, Galloway scored on a breakaway on the next possession to push the IU lead to 16 with 6:36 to play. Indiana was never seriously challenged the rest of the way. The win, Indiana’s second on the road this season, improved the Hoosiers to 12-6 overall and 3-4 in Big Ten play.

Standout performer

Jackson-Davis was dominant, finishing with 35 points on 15-for-19 shooting. The All-American forward added nine rebounds, five assists and three blocked shots in 35 minutes.

Statistics that stand out

It wasn’t as strong of an effort as the Wisconsin game, but Indiana was stout defensively in Thursday’s win. The Hoosiers held the Illini to just .95 points per possession and only 38.7 percent shooting from the field.

Final IU individual statistics

Final tempo-free statistics

Assembly Call postgame show

(Photo credit: IU Athletics)

Filed to: Illinois Fighting Illini

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At the Buzzer: Indiana 77, North Carolina 65 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on a 77-65 win against North Carolina:

How it happened

The first half was a defensive clinic for Indiana on Branch McCracken Court. The Hoosiers smothered North Carolina and held the Tar Heels to 29 points on just 8-for-28 shooting. But even with the stellar defensive effort, Indiana couldn’t separate itself from last season’s national runner-up.

Fouls were a big reason, as the Hoosiers committed 11 of them and sent North Carolina to the free throw line 14 times. The Tar Heels led 22-21 at the 7:41 mark before a 13-2 run put the Hoosiers ahead 34-24. Indiana, which scored 1.12 points per possession in the first half, led 35-29 at intermission. Jalen Hood-Schifino was a major factor offensively in the opening 20 minutes as he had 12 points in 19 minutes. Trayce Jackson-Davis wasn’t far behind with 10 points and seven rebounds in 15 minutes.

The Hoosiers started strong in the second half, pushing the lead to out to 15 at 46-31 on a Jackson-Davis layup with 15:59 to play. By the under-12 media timeout, Indiana led 52-41. After North Carolina closed to within nine after the timeout, Indiana scored the next five points to push the lead back to 14 at 57-43. The Tar Heels got within seven with 6:39 to play, but Indiana answered again. Trey Galloway, who was a pest all night defensively, had a huge steal and a layup with just over six minutes to play to give the Hoosiers a 61-52 lead. Out of the final media timeout, Caleb Love hit a 3-pointer to get Carolina within eight at 65-57. The Tar Heels would get no closer the rest of the way as IU improved to 7-0.

Standout performers

Jackson-Davis led all scorers with 21 points and had 10 rebounds, four assists and four blocked shots. Johnson had 20 points, Hood-Schifino added a career-high 14 points, and Galloway, in his return from injury, was the fourth Hoosier in double figures with 11 points.

Statistics that stand out

Indiana dominated the points in the paint, outscoring North Carolina 50-24. Indiana also won the points off of turnovers battle 17-4.

Final IU individual statistics

Final tempo-free statistics

Assembly Call postgame show

Filed to: North Carolina Tar Heels

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Portland Trail Blazers’ defense, Jerami Grant, lead way in 106-95 win at New Orleans Pelicans: At the buzzer

Damian Lillard was not pleased that the Portland Trail Blazers sat him as a precaution for their visit to New Orleans Thursday night as he continues to ease back from a calf injury.

It spoiled an anticipated matchup against CJ McCollum, his longtime former teammate and good friend.

Next came news that Jusuf Nurkic (right adductor soreness) and Shaedon Sharpe (right finger sprain) also would be sidelined with injuries.

With so many key bodies down, the Blazers appeared to be a long shot to win at the Smoothie King Center.

But once again, the Blazers’ available players elevated their games, the defense continued to thrive and Portland pulled off a 106-95 victory.

Jerami Grant led the Blazers with 27 points and Anfernee Simons scored 23. But it was the defense that carried the night, holding down a Pelicans team that entered Thursday averaging 118.2 points per game, third-best in the NBA.

Simons began slowly, going scoreless and missing all five of his shots in the first quarter. But like he always does, Simons kept firing and eventually his shots began to fall. He scored 10 points in the second quarter, then added 11 more in the third.

The Blazers shot 43.5% from the field, including 35.3% from three-point range. And perhaps the most encouraging statistic was nine — as in nine turnovers. The team had been averaging 17.2, tied for the most in the NBA.

“Obviously, the thing I’m most proud of in this game is our turnovers,” Blazers coach Chauncey Billups said. “When you don’t turn it over, teams don’t score in transition on you. I like our defense in the half court. They do a decent enough job. I thought our zone was incredible in this game tonight. We just kept fighting.”

Zion Williamson led the Pelicans with 29 points. McCollum finished with 13 points and seven assists. Brandon Ingram, who fouled out with 3:32 remaining, had 14 points and five rebounds.

The Blazers held the Pelicans to 41.8% shooting.

“Very huge win,” Blazers forward Justise Winslow said. “This is a team we’re going to see four times this year. They’ve been playing well. We had people down and out. But it’s alway next-man up mentality. Guys stepped up and guys made necessary plays when we needed.”

Portland Trail Blazers guard Anfernee Simons (1) drives to the basket against New Orleans Pelicans forward Zion Williamson (1) in the second half of an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022. The Trail Blazers won 106-95. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) APAP

WHAT IT MEANS

Before the season started, this six-game trip looked like it would be a doozy for the Blazers (9-3). But they surprisingly have won four of the first five games, even though Lillard has sat three times, Nurkic and Simons have each missed two games and Grant has been sidelined once. The Pelicans fell to 6-6.

“We’ve played some really good teams on this trip and we’ve earned every single thing on this trip, so far,” Billups said. “We thought that it was going to be a very challenging trip and it has been.”

JERAMI GRANT DELIVERS

Before the game, Billups said he told Grant, who played 42 minutes, that the team would need everything he had given how shorthanded they were.

Portland Trail Blazers forward Jerami Grant (9) slam dunks over New Orleans Pelicans guard Trey Murphy III, right, and forward Herbert Jones, left, in the second half of an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022. The Trail Blazers won 106-95. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) APAP

In fact, Billups told Grant and Simons to take some questionable shots here and there in order to create offense with Lillard, Nurkic and Sharpe out.

“I thought Jerami was big time all night,” Billups said.

One of Grant’s biggest moments came with 4:56 remaining when drove the lane, elevated and dunked over two Pelicans defenders to give the Blazers a 97-89 lead.

“For a guy that’s not aggressive, there was a lot of aggression on that dunk,” Billups said. “I think he knows that once you go down there, if you don’t dunk it hard, they could block it … I though it was just a great move and an even better finish.”

NASSIR LITTLE

With three key players out, that left the Blazers’ bench thin. Coach Chauncey Billups went with an eight-man rotation, and Nassir Little was a key option. He came through with 15 points and four rebounds, while hitting 6 of 11 shots. He made several key baskets in the second half.

Portland Trail Blazers forward Nassir Little goes to the basket between New Orleans Pelicans guard Trey Murphy III (25) and guard CJ McCollum (3) in the second half of an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022. The Trail Blazers won 106-95. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) APAP

“I was really proud and happy for Nas,” Billups said.

The only other players to come off of the bench were Trendon Watford and Jabari Walker. The pair combined for six points and eight rebounds. Watford had three steels.

Billups said both did a good job of helping the offense become less stagnant late in the game by making smart plays with the ball.

“Those guys we depend on to just make things go,” Billups said. “Their numbers most of the time won’t be noticeable on the stat sheet.”

NEXT UP

The Blazers close out their six-game trip Saturday at 5:30 p.m. at Dallas (6-5).

— Aaron Fentress reported from New Orleans.

— Aaron Fentress | afentress@Oregonian.com | @AaronJFentress (Twitter), @AaronJFentress (Instagram), @AaronFentress (Facebook). Subscribe to Oregonian/OregonLive newsletters and podcasts



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Jayson Tatum’s layup at buzzer gives Boston Celtics win over Brooklyn Nets in Game 1 of first-round playoff series

BOSTON — Jayson Tatum made a layup at the buzzer on a pass from Marcus Smart to give the Boston Celtics a dramatic 115-114 victory over the Brooklyn Nets in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series on Sunday.

Tatum scored 16 of his 31 points in the second half, the final two after a poised Boston possession in the frantic final seconds. Jaylen Brown dribbled toward the middle and swung the ball out to Smart, who fired it in to a cutting Tatum, who spun around and dropped in his layup just before time expired.

Dating back to last postseason, Tatum has four straight 30-point games in the playoffs, matching Larry Bird in 1987 for the longest streak in Celtics history. His buzzer-beater was also the first in the playoffs for the Celtics since Paul Pierce in 2010 against the Miami Heat.

Brown added 23 points. Al Horford had 20 points and 15 rebounds, and Smart finished with 20 points, including four 3-pointers.

Kyrie Irving finished with 39 points, including 18 in the fourth quarter. But the Celtics forced the ball out of his hands the last time Brooklyn had it and Kevin Durant missed a jumper with a one-point lead that set up the Celtics’ final possession.

Durant added 23 points but shot just 9-of-24.

Boston charged out of halftime with a 23-8 run to open a 82-69 lead, sparked by Smart’s dead-eye shooting from beyond the arc.

The Celtics also seemed to tweak their approach to guarding Durant in the half court, fronting him and sending help over the top to limit his driving ability.

Durant and Irving still found ways to score at times, but they had to exert increased energy to get off their attempts.

It didn’t last.

With Boston leading early in the fourth, Irving got Brooklyn back in the mix with two straight 3-pointers and a layup to trim Boston’s advantage to 98-97 with just over 9 minutes left. Then, following an empty trip by Boston that saw Brown and Horford fail to convert from in close, Durant calmly drained a 3 on the other end to put the Nets in front.

Brooklyn had increased its lead to 107-102 when Durant was long with a jumper. Brown found space on the Celtics’ next possession and connected on a 3 from the wing. The Nets turned it back over on an offensive foul on Durant. Smart slid underneath Irving on Boston’s ensuring trip and tied it with a layup.

The score was tied again at 109 with less than 2 minutes left when Durant got a friendly bounce on a jumper to put Brooklyn back up. Horford’s follow shot tied it again. But Irving was good from deep on the next time down the floor give the Nets a 114-111 cushion.

Brown made a layup coming out of a timeout with 38 seconds left.

In his latest trip to face his former Boston teammates, Irving received the loudest jeers during pregame introductions and was booed whenever he touched the ball the rest of the way.

Fans also showered plenty disdain on Bruce Brown, who made headlines last week after suggesting Celtics big men Horford and Daniel Theis might be easy to attack inside without injured center Robert Williams III available to defend the rim.

Horford played the opening 12 minutes as if on a one-man mission to obliterate that notion.

Boston entered with the league’s best defensive rating since the All-Star break and applied early pressure on Durant. He tried to establish himself in the post in the first quarter, but the Celtics blitzed him with backside help defenders, stripping him three times.

Brooklyn finished with seven turnovers for the quarter, but it translated into only a 29-28 lead for Boston.

Horford was active throughout, going 3-for-4 from the field with 10 points, two rebounds and a steal.

Boston had to adjust early in the second quarter after Theis picked up his third foul. But things evened out when Drummond was whistled for his fourth foul with 4:58 left in the period.

The Celtics immediately went on a 9-2 run before the Nets clawed back to tie the game at 61 at the half.

ESPN Stats & Information and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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At the buzzer: Indiana 66, Wyoming 58 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on a 66-58 win over Wyoming:

How it happened: It was an ugly first half of basketball at the University of Dayton Arena in the First Four on Tuesday night. Indiana shot just 11-of-34 in the first half and Wyoming turned it over 13 times. The Cowboys had foul issues as Hunter Thompson committed three and Graham Ike, the team’s leading scorer this season, had two. The Hoosiers used a late 13-4 run to claim a 30-25 halftime lead. Trayce Jackson-Davis was impressive for the Hoosiers, scoring a game-high 14 in the first half and playing stellar defense in the paint. Despite managing just .85 points per possession in the first half, Indiana’s five-point lead felt comfortable because of Wyoming’s meager .71 points per trip.

By the under 16 media timeout, Indiana’s lead was just 38-35 as Wyoming found its footing offensively early on in the second half. Over the first 5:25 of the second half, the Cowboys scored 1.43 points per possession. Jordan Geromino took over the next stretch to give Indiana its largest lead at 45-37 at the under 12 media timeout. Geronimo had seven points in the first nine minutes of the second half. Indiana led 49-40 with 8:53 to play on a Jackson-Davis jumper, but Wyoming answered with buckets from Ike and Hunter Maldonado to make it 49-44 with 7:18 to play. Ike picked up his fourth foul with 6:39 to play, which forced him to the bench.

A bucket from Jackson-Davis gave Indiana an eight-point lead with 4:43 to play, but Maldonado answered to make it 52-46 with 4:29 to go. After a Race Thompson offensive foul, Geronimo fouled Maldonado and the Wyoming point guard split at the line to make it 52-47 with 4:04 to play. Indiana stretched the lead back to seven on a Jackson-Davis dunk with 3:49 to play. Out of the under four timeout, Maldonado committed his 10th turnover and Geronimo reached his career-high with 15 points with 3:11 to give the Hoosiers a nine-point lead. Brendan Wenzel was fouled on a 3-pointer with 2:45 to go and made two to make it 56-49. Jackson-Davis stretched the lead back to nine with a dunk with 2:33 to play. Parker Stewart gave Indiana a 10-point advantage with 1:48 to go with a bucket, but then fouled Maldonado on a made 3-pointer with 1:30 to play. Maldonado made the free throw to make it 60-54. Jackson-Davis gave the Hoosiers an eight-point lead with 1:04 to play and the Cowboys would get no closer than six the rest of the way.

Standout performer: Jackson-Davis finished with 29 points and nine rebounds and was the best player on the floor from the opening tip. Geronimo’s career-high 15 points off the bench were also instrumental in IU’s first NCAA tournament win since 2016.

Statistic that stands out: Indiana won with its defense, limiting Wyoming to .89 points per possession in the victory.

Final IU individual statistics:

Final tempo-free statistics:

Assembly Call postgame show:

Filed to: 2022 NCAA tournament, Wyoming Cowboys

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At the buzzer: Rutgers 66, Indiana 63 – Inside the Hall

Quick thoughts on a 66-63 loss to Rutgers:

How it happened: It was a strong offensive start for Indiana in its final home game. The Hoosiers led Rutgers 14-6 by the 14:33 mark after a second chance bucket from Race Thompson. Trayce Jackson-Davis was dominant early with nine of Indiana’s first 14 points. The Scarlet Knights, also on the NCAA tournament bubble, answered with six straight points to cut the lead to two at the 13:13 mark. Indiana was able to stretch its lead to 10 late in the half on a Jordan Geronimo jumper, but Geo Baker answered with a 3-pointer and the Hoosiers settled for a 32-25 cushion at intermission. Rutgers had seven turnovers in the first half, which led to nine Indiana points. The Hoosiers outscored the Scarlet Knights 16-10 in the paint in the first half. Free throws were also a factor, as Rutgers was 0-of-4 from the stripe compared to 6-of-7 for Indiana.

The Hoosiers were stagnant offensively against the Rutgers zone to start the second half. The Scarlet Knights were able to take advantage of IU’s turnovers early and scored six points off of the first four turnovers from the Hoosiers. Rutgers took its first lead since early in the first half on an Aundre Hyatt layup that made it 38-37 with 15:32 to go. Mike Woodson took a timeout and Indiana got a bucket from Thompson and a 3-point play from Xavier Johnson to lead 42-38 with 14:40 to play. Johnson followed that up with a steal and a dunk in transition to give IU a 44-38 lead. Johnson’s 3-pointer gave IU a 47-40 cushion ahead of the under-12 media timeout.

By the under-eight media timeout, Indiana led 52-47, but Rutgers closed to within 52-50 with 6:06 to play after a Cliff Omoruyi dunk and a Paul Mulcahy free throw. The Scarlet Knights tied it at 52 on a Geo Baker layup with 5:30 to play. Indiana regained the lead at 54-52 on a Jordan Geronimo jumper. Caleb McConnell tied the game at 54 with 3:49 to play, but Johnson gave IU the lead back at 56-54 with a jump shot at the 3:16 mark. Rutgers took the lead back on a Geo Baker 3-pointer with 2:34 to play. The Scarlet Knights extended the lead to three on a pair of free throw from Omoruyi with 1:48 to play.

The Hoosiers got within one on a pair of Jackson-Davis free throws with 1:28 left. Baker missed a 3-pointer on the next possession, but Indiana couldn’t score on its ensuing possession despite getting two looks. Omoruyi then made two free throws with 41.5 seconds to play to make it 61-58. Rob Phinisee missed a layup on the next possession. Mulcahy was ejected for a flagrant two with 19.2 seconds to go after a Johnson foul. Aundre Hyatt made both free throws and then Miller Kopp made a pair from the line to make it 63-60. Parker Stewart missed a 3-pointer with 15 seconds to go, but Indiana retained possession and Stewart knocked in a 3-pointer to tie it at 63. Ron Harper Jr.’s 3-pointer with 2.1 seconds to go won it for Rutgers.

Standout performer: Jackson-Davis finished with 19 points and nine rebounds in 32 minutes.

Statistic that stands out: Parker Stewart and Miller Kopp combined to shoot 3-of-16 from the field and 3-of-14 from behind the 3-point line.

Final IU individual statistics:

Final tempo-free statistics:

Assembly Call postgame show:

Filed to: Rutgers Scarlet Knights

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