No. 10 Georgetown shuts down Providence, 63-53

By Howard Ulman

Associated Press

Published: Saturday, Feb. 18 2012 9:26 p.m. MST

Georgetown forward Otto Porter (22) loses the ball on his way to the hoop against Providence forward Ron Giplaye (34) during the first half of their NCAA college basketball game in Providence, R.I., Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012.

Stephan Savoia, Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Gerard Coleman had just four fewer field goals in the first half than his Providence teammates. And he didn't even play.

The Friars' third leading scorer missed Saturday night's 63-53 loss to No. 10 Georgetown with the flu and that hurt their running game. They made just four of 28 shots by intermission, missing 20 straight shots in one 14-minute stretch.

"Not having Gerard is big," coach Ed Cooley said. ""I thought we were a little slow in the transition game."

Somehow, though, Providence trailed by just 31-20 at halftime.

"We should have been down by 90," Cooley said. "It's a credit to what we did defensively."

Vincent Council scored 13 points, the only Friar in double figures. Bryce Cotton symbolized their shooting woes, making just 3 of 17 shots — 3 of 13 on 3-pointers — and finishing with nine points. In his last three games he is 5-for-34 from the field.

Coleman is averaging 13.7 points per game. But without him to worry about, the Hoyas could focus more on his teammates.

"I'm sure they've made some adjustments to probably stay attached to Cotton a little more," Cooley said. "I thought Cotton was tired. He looked a half a step slow."

For the game, Providence made 14 of 54 shots (25.9 percent), the fourth time in five games an opponent has made fewer than 35 percent of its shots against Georgetown.

But coach John Thompson III wasn't satisfied.

"I have come to expect a lot from this group," he said. "In spite of the 26 percent, we can be better."

Georgetown (20-5, 10-4 Big East) was actually better in its first game against Providence (13-15, 2-13). On Dec. 31, the Friars hit only 13 field goals and shot 25.5 percent in a 49-40 loss.

"That is the best defensive team I've seen in a long, long time," Cooley said.

Hollis Thompson and Jason Clark scored 13 points each and Thompson added 10 rebounds.

The Friars cut their 11-point halftime deficit that to 36-32 before the Hoyas went on a 13-3 run to open a 49-35 lead with 9:43 remaining. Thompson had seven points in the surge that started with 3-pointers by him and Clark.

"I don't think those 3s made them give up or anything," Georgetown's Nate Lubick said. "They went on a late run."

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