College basketball: No. 3 Syracuse wins 10th in row, tops Cincy 71-54

By Joe Kay

Associated Press

Published: Sunday, Feb. 7 2010 6:23 p.m. MST

CINCINNATI — Down by six points with 12 minutes to go, third-ranked Syracuse knew it was time for some shutdown defense. The Orange nearly pitched a shutout the rest of the way.

Syracuse held Cincinnati to one field goal over the final 12 minutes on Sunday, extending the best start in school history with a 71-54 victory, its 10th in a row.

Syracuse (23-1, 10-1 Big East) closed the game with a 28-5 run that featured Kris Joseph's two pivotal 3-pointers and a lot of good defense. The Bearcats (14-9, 5-6) managed only one field goal and three free throws after pulling ahead 49-43 with 12:26 left.

Shutdown defense indeed.

"It comes down to the last 10 minutes," said Joseph, who finished with 17 points. "The last 10 minutes is crunch time. For us, it's just playing great defense. We've seen everything. When we get on a run and get ahead, there's not a lot of teams that can come back."

Andy Rautins led the Orange with 20 points, helping Syracuse get through another game when its top scorer wasn't at his best.

Wes Johnson, who fell hard in Syracuse's win over Providence on Tuesday, was back in the starting lineup but played only 23 minutes. The forward took only three shots and had five points.

Johnson, a forward who averages a team-high 16.7 points, played only three minutes in the second half against Providence after he was fouled while going for a lob pass and hit the court hard. He was sore and missed practice during the week.

"My body wasn't as loose as I wish it was," Johnson said. "It's better than it was the day after the Providence game."

Johnson is a key component in an offense that is scoring 82.5 points a game, second-best in the league. But he was on the bench down the stretch on Sunday, letting his teammates take over.

"Wes is sore," coach Jim Boeheim said. "He was probably pushing it to even go. He felt like he could play, but he was sore and just didn't have the mobility. I thought just like in the last game, our other guys picked it up and our big guys played great. Everybody pitched in."

Joseph's first 3-pointer put Syracuse ahead to stay. His second one pushed the lead to 10.

"Kris stepped up," Boeheim said. "He had two wide-open looks. He's been telling me all year that he can make those shots. Those two 3s broke the game wide open."

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