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RIVALRY VICTORY: Northern Stops Michigan Tech


NORTHERN MICHIGAN VERSION

Northern Michigan University Men's Basketball used a 27-8 run to close out the first and captured their third-straight Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference victory after defeating rival Michigan Technological University 63-59 Saturday afternoon.

Senior Naba Echols (Memphis, Tenn.) led all scorers with 23 points, making 6-6 from the free throw line, and also posted three assists and had two steals. Junior Sam Taylor (Chicago, Ill.) added 13 points. Redshirt freshman Troy Summers (Grayling, Mich.) aided the effort with eight points and seven rebounds.

 

Junior Myles Howard (Chicago, Ill.) notched 12 rebounds on the day, his third time reaching double-figures on the glass in the past four games. He also tallied two blocked shots.

Summers scored for NMU but nine points from Michigan Tech gave the Huskies a 9-2 lead early in the game. Taylor then made his first three but another three from MTU made it 12-5 four minutes into the game.

 

Echols answered with a three and two free throws, but the Huskies hit another from behind the arc to go ahead 15-10. They then pushed their lead out to 22-10 with 12 minutes to go in the half.

On the next possession, Echols made a three but MTU answered with two free throws. Sophomore Alec Fruin(Beloit, Wis.) responded with a three-pointer and Taylor made another three before Summers scored twice in the paint to make it 24-23 at the 7:27 mark.


On the next NMU possession after a Michigan Tech timeout, Taylor made a layup to give NMU their first lead of the game, 25-24 with 7:14 to go in the first half. Howard extended the lead with two free throws and Johnson made his first basket of the game to put NMU ahead 29-24. Tech finally scored again by hitting a jumper to make it a 29-26 Wildcat lead with 4:49 to play.


Echols answered the Tech score with a layup but MTU responded with another score. NMU then got a three-pointer from both Taylor and Echols to go ahead 37-28 with a little over a minute to play. Tech added a jumper in the final minute to make it 37-30 at halftime.

In total, the Wildcats finished the first half on a 27-8 run over the final 12 minutes, including a 15-2 run to take the lead.


MTU scored five points early in the half before Taylor made a jumper and Johnson sank a free throw to make it 40-37 after another Tech score. Johnson and Echols both added two baskets over the next few minutes to give NMU a 48-37 lead with 11:15 to go.
 

Tech answered with a three, but Summers scored inside and junior Marcus Matelski (Boyne Falls, Mich.) made a three to make it 53-40 with nine minutes to go. The Huskies answered with five points before Fruin scored again with five minutes to play, making the NMU lead 55-45.
 

After an MTU basket, junior Kenton Mack (Algonquin, Ill.) made a free throw at the 3:32 mark to keep the Wildcats up 56-47. Echols then exchanged free throws and a layup with the Huskies to make the score 60-51 with two minutes to play.
 

Michigan Tech pulled within 60-56 but Echols sank two more free throws with 17 seconds to go and Fruin added one from the line. Tech hit a three late but it wasn't enough and the Wildcats captured the 63-59 victory.

Northern Michigan improves to 11-7 on the year and 6-5 in the GLIAC while Michigan Tech drops to 9-9 this year, 4-7 in the conference. The Wildcats will now hit the road for a week as they head to new GLIAC foe University of Wisconsin-Parkside Thursday night and Purdue University-Northwest Saturday.

MICHIGAN TECH STORY BELOW
 

The Michigan Tech men's basketball team came up just short at rival Northern Michigan University Saturday afternoon, falling 63-59 in a Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference contest in Marquette. The Huskies stormed back from a 13-point deficit in the second half to get within striking distance late, but unfortunately it's wasn't enough to overtake the Wildcats in the end.

"I thought both teams fought hard and it was an excellent GLIAC basketball game," Michigan Tech Head Coach Kevin Luke said. "Basically, what it boiled down to is their perimeter players made shots and our interior game struggled this afternoon based on our percentages. Our young players battled today and credit goes to Northern Michigan for coming out on top, but credit our team as well for playing tough all the way to the end. In defeat, we moved forward because this is a game that could have completely gotten away from us, considering Northern Michigan's senior leadership and veteran players. Once again, I'm proud of our guys that they didn't quit, competed hard, and are making a great effort in doing what we ask them to do."

Michigan Tech (9-9, 4-7 GLIAC) stormed out of the gate early with the hot hand, knocking down four triples in the opening four minutes of play. Sophomore Trent Bell dialed in three of the four with freshman Owen White cashing in the other. Northern Michigan (11-7, 6-5 GLIAC) posted five points in that stretch on a layup by Troy Summers followed by a three-point bucket courtesy of Sam Taylor. With all the points on the stat sheet, the Huskies held a 12-5 lead with 16:17 left to go in the first half.

The Wildcats then reeled off five straight points over the next couple of minute to close the gap to 12-10. Naba Echols secured all five, which eventually turned into a game high 23 points at the conclusion of the afternoon. Fortunately, the Huskies answered with a 10-0 scoring burst of their own to open up a 12-point gap at 22-10.

Sophomore Dawson Bilski sent home a triple followed by a two-point bucket from freshman Jake Witt. Bilski added a mid-range jumper and Bell found the target on his fourth three-point field goal of the first half to cap the run with 12 minutes on the clock. Unfortunately, the Wildcats were able to slow Tech's momentum and claw their way back into the game.

Trailing 24-13 after two free throws by senior Bryan Heath with 10:26 left in the half, Northern Michigan began the run on a triple out of the hand of Alec Fruin. Fruin's three points were the first of 16 consecutive for the Wildcats during a five-minute span. Isaiah Johnson wrapped up the string with a mid-range jumper at the 5:16 mark, giving the Wildcats a 29-24 edge. Northern Michigan eventually carried a 37-30 advantage into the locker room at halftime.

The Huskies regrouped at the break and notched the first five points of the second half on a trey by Bell and a jump shot in the paint by White, slicing the deficit to 37-35. It remained a one possession contest from there until four consecutive points by the Wildcats increased their lead to 42-37 with 15:33 to play. Northern Michigan kept the points coming while holding the Huskies' offense at bay. An Echols layup at the 11:15 mark gave the Wildcats their first double digit lead of the day at 48-37. It then grew to 53-40 on a Marcus Matelski triple with just under nine minutes remaining on the clock.

Michigan Tech stopped Northern Michigan's advance with a Bilski jumper and Heath three-pointer, closing the gap to 53-45 with 6:01 left to go in the second. The Wildcats lead fluctuated from eight to 11 points until the final two minutes of the contest. Trailing 60-49 following an Echols layup, sophomore Isaac Appleby kick started a 7-0 scoring run for the Huskies by cutting his way to the basket for a layup.

The defense then generated a couple of key stops and combined with a triple by White and a layup from Bell, Tech had climbed back to within four points of NMU at 60-56 with 40 seconds left. Unfortunately, the Wildcats made 3 of 4 chances at the free throw line to push their lead out to seven at 63-56 with less than 15 seconds remaining. Appleby knocked down a three-pointer on Tech's last possession, but not enough time was left to get the ball back for a chance to get any closer, resulting in the 63-59 final.

Bell powered the Huskies' attack with a career high 22 points and in addition paced the club in rebounds with nine Saturday afternoon. Bell connected on 8 of 10 shots from the field, including a 6 for 8 performance from behind the arc. Bell's previous career high in points was 15 at home against Tiffin on January 6, 2018. White followed with 10 points while Heath and Bilski chipped in nine points apiece. Appleby tacked on seven points and dished out a team best four assists.

As a team, the Huskies were 22 of 59 from the field (37.3%), 11 of 24 from three-point land (45.8%), and 4 for 4 at the charity stripe (100.0%). Tech's defense forced 10 turnovers which led to 12 points on the offensive end of the floor.

Echols had a game high 23 points to guide Northern Michigan followed by Taylor with 13 points. Echols also paced the team in assists while Myles Howard hauled down a game high 12 rebounds and blocked two shots. The Wildcats connected on 22 of 54 looks from the field (40.7%), were 8 of 18 from long distance (44.4%), and 11 of 15 at the free throw stripe (73.3%). Northern Michigan also had the edge in rebounding at 39-32 and points in the paint with 22.

The Huskies will look to bounce back Thursday night when they travel to Purdue Northwest to begin round two of the GLIAC schedule. Tech defeated the Pride 78-62 in the first meeting of the year between the two clubs on December 8 in Houghton. Thursday's tip-off is slated for 8 p.m. eastern time.