Morris and Iowa State race past Iona, 94-81 | Zagsblog
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Saturday / May 18.
  • Morris and Iowa State race past Iona, 94-81

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    DENVER (AP) — His right shoulder no longer throbbing, Monte Morris felt good about Iowa State’s ability to make amends Thursday.

    “The shoulder felt great. We’ve got a great training staff. They did everything for me these past weeks to get me back feeling good,” Morris said. “Yesterday in practice it let me know mentally that I could shoot the ball at an efficient rate.”

    So, after a good night’s rest, he let it fly in warmups.

    No pain.

    No worries.

    With no lingering effects of the painful right shoulder injury that hampered him a week earlier in a loss to Oklahoma in the Big 12 tourney, Morris scored 20 points and dished out eight assists in Iowa State’s 94-81 win over 14th-seeded Iona in the NCAA Tournament.

    “The only worry I had was losing this game again,” Morris said, recalling the Cyclones’ stunning 60-59 loss to 14th-seeded UAB in the NCAA tournament a year ago.

    “If I wasn’t able to get it going offensively I was going to do everything I could on the defensive end to be successful.”

    Georges Niang‘s 28 points led the No. 3 seed Cyclones (22-11), who had all five of their starters score in double figures – and put up all but two of the team’s points.

    “Man, I felt like since Sunday all I’ve been hearing is `Iona is going to upset Iowa State. A.J. English, A.J. English, A.J. English,'” Niang said. “I was like, `What about the Iowa State Cyclones? They’re pretty good.’ This is huge for us. This is motivation. We really wanted to beat these guys to really show people we’re real. This is a real team we have here.”

    Morris showed just how healthy he was, running an efficient offense that shot 50 percent from the floor and stifled high-scoring Iona (22-11), which was led by A.J. English’s 28 points and Jordan Washington‘s 26.

    That wasn’t enough to keep up with the balanced Cyclones, who got 19 points from Abdel Nader, 14 from Matt Thomas and 11 from Jameel McKay.

    “We tried to slow them down,” English said. “We just couldn’t.”

    The Gaels cut an 18-point second-half deficit to seven with just under three minutes remaining when English hit a pair of free throws to make it 83-76. The comeback fizzled, however, after English was whistled for traveling on the next possession and then drew a technical foul during a timeout.

    “We were having fun the whole game, that’s what I felt like. It was basketball players talking to each other. Honestly I was smiling when I was talking back to the player and I didn’t understand why the ref made the call on me,” English said

    “I’m just sad somebody had to make that call toward the end of the game,” he added. “If that’s the case. If he didn’t want anybody talking trash then from the beginning of the game just call it whether it’s on me or whoever else. But it happens. One tech doesn’t lose game.”

    Iona coach Tim Cluess concurred: “There was talk going back and forth all game long. The referee was standing there. Both parties were jawing at each other. Though time to call it. I’m going to leave it at that.”

    After jumping out to a 5-0 lead, the Gaels watched the Cyclones seize control with a blistering 16-2 run engineered by Niang, Iowa State’s first two-time All-American.

    The Gaels were playing catch-up the rest of the way.

    They trailed 45-33 at halftime and every time they made a run, Iowa State pushed back with its superior quickness, size and athleticism – with Morris leading the way.

    Video: GEICO SportsNite: Iona falls to Iowa State

    Copyright 2016 by The Associated Press

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    Adam Zagoria is a Basketball Insider who covers basketball at all levels. A contributor to The New York Times and SportsNet New York (SNY), he is also the author of two books and is an award-winning journalist and filmmaker. His articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide. He also won an Emmy award for his work on the SNY mini-documentary on Syracuse guard Tyus Battle. A veteran Ultimate Frisbee player, he has competed in numerous National and World Championships and, perhaps more importantly, his teams won the Westchester Summer League (WSL) championships in 2011 and 2013. He lives in Manhattan with his wife and children.

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