The # 4 SU Basketball team has their first win over a top ten team this season, a 72-68 win over the # 10 Florida Gators, but it was head coach Jim Boeheim's apology after the game that had everyone talking. Boeheim taking it upon himself to apologize for questioning the motives of the men who accused the recently fired Bernie Fine of molesting them as minors.
"I believe I misspoke very badly in my response to the allegations that have been made," said an emotional Boeheim, "I shouldn't have questioned what the accusers expressed or their motives. I am really sorry that I did that, and I regret any harm that I caused." Boeheim says he has spent time this passed week at the McMahon Ryan House for child abuse in Syracuse and that he wants to get more involved in helping to raise awareness.
As far as the game goes, Boeheim says Scoop Jardine's performance was clutch in SU's win. Jardine scored eight points in a 9 point stretch late in the game to allow SU to pull away. Jardine finished with 16 points, seven assists, four rebounds and four steals, and became the 56th player in SU history to score 1,000 career points. A huge performance with SU shooting poorly for most of the game.
"This is the first really bad shooting game," said Boeheim after the game, "I thought we had good shots, but they picked up their shooting and got to them, started making threes. We could not get it going. Fortunately Brandon (Triche) hit a huge one when we went down three and then Scoop hit a big one coming off a screen."
"They made shots," added Jardine, "we knew they were great players that can make shots. Myself and Triche made shots to keep us in it, but like I said it was the 50-50 plays that Syracuse got and that's why we won."
Triche led the Orange with 20 points, but agrees it was Scoop who sealed the deal.
"He did what he was supposed to do, says Brandon Triche, "as an experienced guard he came down the stretch and knocked down shots. The biggest thing was his three steals in a row and we were able to get them in foul trouble or convert on most of them. He played a great game and I'm happy for him on getting his 1000 points."
"If he didn't get that, we wouldn't be talking about winning," says Boeheim, "he got us there and then he got 1,000. Dion wasn't playing great, he was 1-for-7 in the first half and he just didn't seem to have it. We got him in there to start the second half but I had a feeling, usually my feelings don't always work out but this one did. He went in there and literally won the game. We were dead, and he made a couple of drives that were really hard. After he made those, he came off the screen I knew he was going to make that three."
Here's what the Associated Press said about the big win, and about Boeheim's post game comments.
----------------------------------------------------
Boeheim taking it upon himself to apologize for questioning the motives of the men who accused the recently fired Bernie Fine of molesting them as minors.
"I believe I misspoke very badly in my response to the allegations that have been made," said an emotional Boeheim, "I shouldn't have questioned what the accusers expressed or their motives. I am really sorry that I did that, and I regret any harm that I caused." Boeheim says he has spent time this passed week at the McMahon Ryan House for child abuse in Syracuse and that he wants to get more involved in helping to raise awareness.
As far as the game goes, Boeheim says Scoop Jardine's performance was clutch in SU's win. Jardine scored eight points in a 9 point stretch late in the game to allow SU to pull away. Jardine finished with 16 points, seven assists, four rebounds and four steals, and became the 56th player in SU history to score 1,000 career points. A huge performance with SU shooting poorly for most of the game.
"This is the first really bad shooting game," said Boeheim after the game, "I thought we had good shots, but they picked up their shooting and got to them, started making threes. We could not get it going. Fortunately Brandon (Triche) hit a huge one when we went down three and then Scoop hit a big one coming off a screen."
"They made shots," added Jardine, "we knew they were great players that can make shots. Myself and Triche made shots to keep us in it, but like I said it was the 50-50 plays that Syracuse got and that's why we won."
Triche led the Orange with 20 points, but agrees it was Scoop who sealed the deal.
"He did what he was supposed to do, says Brandon Triche, "as an experienced guard he came down the stretch and knocked down shots. The biggest thing was his three steals in a row and we were able to get them in foul trouble or convert on most of them. He played a great game and I'm happy for him on getting his 1000 points."
"If he didn't get that, we wouldn't be talking about winning," says Boeheim, "he got us there and then he got 1,000. Dion wasn't playing great, he was 1-for-7 in the first half and he just didn't seem to have it. We got him in there to start the second half but I had a feeling, usually my feelings don't always work out but this one did. He went in there and literally won the game. We were dead, and he made a couple of drives that were really hard. After he made those, he came off the screen I knew he was going to make that three."
Here's what the Associated Press said about the big win, and about Boeheim's post game comments.
----------------------------------------------------
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - A contrite Jim Boeheim apologized again Friday night after another big victory.
The beleaguered Syracuse basketball coach said he had talked to some people in the community and wanted to make three points clear after the No. 4 Orange defeated No. 10 Florida, 72-68.
"I believe I misspoke very badly in my response to the allegations that have been made. I shouldn't have questioned what the accusers expressed or their motives. I am really sorry that I did that, and I regret any harm that I caused," he said.
"It was insensitive for the individuals involved and especially to the overall issue of child abuse."
He also said it was important that he get involved in terms of raising awareness.
"They need to get the message out," he said. "I'm going to do everything I can to do that, whether I'm coaching or not coaching."
Some sex abuse victims' advocates have said Boeheim should resign or be fired after Boeheim's disparaging comments regarding the accusers in defense of his longtime friend.
This was the second game since the firing of longtime associate head coach Bernie Fine, who has been accused by three men - including two former Syracuse ballboys - of molesting them as minors.
Fine, who was fired Sunday, has denied the allegations.
On the bench Friday, as Syracuse remained unbeaten, Boeheim maintained a stoic facade amid the intense federal investigation into his program. Behind the postgame microphone, though, was a different story.
Just as he was in Tuesday's home win over Eastern Michigan, Boeheim was greeted by a nice ovation when he was introduced to a crowd of 24,459. It was the largest on-campus attendance in the nation so far this season, and it included former Syracuse star Carmelo Anthony and former Orange assistant Rob Murphy, in his first year at EMU, in front-row seats.
Syracuse (8-0) breezed to its first seven wins with an average margin of victory of 26 points, but the Gators (5-2), whose only previous loss was by seven at No. 2 Ohio State, figured to provide a stiff challenge and they did in a game that seemed like a midseason encounter in the Big East.
But, once again, the game was secondary on the first Friday of December.
"It's been crazy," said Matt Roe, a Syracuse star from the late 1980s who does color on radio broadcasts. "Nonstop for 14 days. What am I going to say? I don't know anything. (Boeheim) is a good man."
Judging by the reaction of the crowd and the jammed student section - two signs were held aloft often that read: "In Boeheim we trust" and "In Jim we trust" - Boeheim continues to enjoy wide support.
And his players certainly responded against the Gators.
Brandon Triche had 20 points and Scoop Jardine finished with 16 and seven assists for the Orange. Kenny Boynton led Florida with 22 points and Erving Walker had 17.
Neither team led by more than six points in a first half that was tied six times.
Florida, which entered the game shooting 42.9 percent from beyond the arc and was averaging 12 3-pointers a game, went 3 of 14 from long range in the period - all by Erving Walker - while the Orange struggled even more, hitting just 1 of 10.
Syracuse still managed to forge ahead at the break, 31-27, behind seven points each from Kris Joseph, Fab Melo and Triche.
After the Orange built a 39-30 lead early in the second, Boynton led the Gators back with three 3s, the last putting Florida back on top 49-46 with 9:19 to go. Triche tied it for the fourth time in the period 11 seconds later with his first 3 of the game.
Jardine fed Joseph for a one-handed slam to break the tie and Jardine's steal and layup had the Orange up 54-49 with 6:20 to go and the crowd shaking the Carrier Dome.
The roar reached another crescendo when Jardine hit a runner in the lane as the shot clock neared zero, Joseph fed C.J. Fair for a baseline jumper, and Jardine hit a 3 from the left wing in a span of 2:19.
That gave Syracuse a 61-53 lead with 3:52 left and the Gators couldn't rally back.