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  • A-10 Tournament: Duquesne upsets Dayton in semifinals 77-66, advance to championship game
    A-10 Tournament:  Duquesne upsets Dayton in semifinals 77-66, advance to championship game

    A10 Duquesne Dayton Basketball

    AP Photo

    March 13, 2009 | AP Press

    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Duquesne is a win away from its first NCAA tournament berth in 32 years, just 2 1/2 years after five basketball players were shot in the school’s worst incident of on-campus violence.

    Aaron Jackson and Melquan Bolding scored 24 points each and the seventh-seeded Dukes won their third game in as many days with a 77-66 victory over Dayton in the semifinals of the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament on Friday night.

    Duquesne (21-11) will play fourth-seed Temple (21-11) on Saturday night for the A10 title and an automatic berth in the NCAA tournament. The Owls upset No. 19 Xavier 55-53 in the opening semifinal at Boardwalk Hall in this casino resort.

    “When you sit in the locker room and the coach says ‘Bring it in,’ you realize you are playing for a championship,” said Jackson, a senior guard and the only player who was shot who remains on the team. “It’s something basketball players dream of their whole career.

    “I won two championships in high school and I thought about it after my freshman year in college that I might not get a chance to win a championship again,” he added. “Now we’re playing for a championship tomorrow, a college championship in a good conference. I’m so excited.”

    Jackson even joked that he would get a Duquesne tattoo if the team wins, a violation of coach Ron Everhart’s rules.

    When Everhart reminded him during the postgame news conference, Jackson laughed.

    “I’m out of here,” he said.

    The postseason run is a welcome bright spot for a program that endured a dark moment on Sept. 17, 2006, when players Sam Ashaolu, Kojo Mensah, Shawn James, Stuard Baldonado and Aaron Jackson were injured when they were shot as they left an on-campus dance.

    Eric Evans added 12 points as Duquesne won its third straight tournament game and posted its second straight upset in knocking off the third-seeded Flyers (26-7). They beat second-seeded Rhode Island in the quarterfinals.

    If Duquesne wins, it would give the city of Pittsburgh three teams in the NCAA tournament with the Dukes joining Pittsburgh and Robert Morris.

    “The good part is we made it a realistic situation for us,” Everhart said. “Hopefully our guys understand that. They have had a great grasp on how to handle tournament play. If you would have told me a month ago, two months ago that this group of guys with eight freshmen and Aaron as our only senior would handle this situation that way I would have doubted that seriously. It’s amazing to me how fast this ballclub has grown up.”

    Duquesne has not been to a postseason tournament since 1994, when it made the NIT.

    Mickey Perry had 15 points to lead Dayton, which beat Duquesne twice during the regular season. Charles Little added 13 points and Chris Wright had 12 for the Flyers, who will have to wait until Sunday to find out whether they will get their first NCAA tournament berth since 2004.

    “Hopefully we’ll get a chance to do something special next week,” Dayton coach Brian Gregory said.

    Bolding hit two of his career-hit seven 3-pointers during a 14-5 first half spurt that gave Duquesne a 29-19 lead. The Dukes took a 35-29 lead to the locker room and they never lost it in the second half.

    “I just felt like I couldn’t miss today,” said Bolding, who was 7 of 10 from long range. “My teammates did a great job of passing me the ball and I just knocked down the shots.”

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  • A-10 Tournament: Five double-digit scorers lead Dukes past Minutemen
    A-10 Tournament:  Five double-digit scorers lead Dukes past Minutemen

    A10 Massachusetts Duquesne Basketball

    AP Photo

    March 11, 2009 | AP Press

    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Melquan Bolding had 23 points to lead five Duquesne players in double figures in the Dukes’ 91-81 victory over Massachusetts in the first round of the Atlantic 10 tournament Wednesday night.

    Aaron Jackson added 18 points and seven assists for the Dukes (19-11), who advanced past the first round for just the second time in their last 13 trips to the A-10 tournament. Bolding contributed a career-high 13 rebounds.

    No. 7 seed Duquesne will play second-seeded Rhode Island at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in a quarterfinal game.

    Chris Lowe had 23 points and Anthony Gurley scored 22 for UMass (12-18), which has lost eight straight A-10 tournament games. Ricky Harris added 17 and Tony Gaffney had 11 points and 10 rebounds for the Minutemen.

    Duquesne, which led by as many as 19 points in the first half, broke open a tight game in the second half with an 11-2 run that was capped by Eric Evans’ four-point play that gave the Dukes a 73-66 lead with 5:22 left.

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  • A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: Duquesne wins home finale, edges Saint Louis, 70-68
    A10CollegeHoops Exclusive:  Duquesne wins home finale, edges Saint Louis, 70-68

    ajaxd

    AP Photo

    March 4, 2009 by Josh Taylor | A10CollegeHoops

    PITTSBURGH, PA. — For the second year in a row, Duquesne hosted Saint Louis at the A.J. Palumbo Center for their season home finale, and just like the previous meeting, the Dukes walked away with a win. A strong second half by sophomore forward Bill Clark and a clutch performance by senior guard Aaron Jackson helped the Dukes secure a 70-68 victory over the Billikens.

    Jackson, in his last scheduled home game of his career, scored 23 points, including the final 11 for Duquesne, with five rebounds and seven assists. Clark scored 19 points on 7-of-8 shooting, including 17 in the second half.

    Duquesne started out with Jackson in his customary role as the team’s catalyst, scoring on a layup and then assisting on one by Melquan Bolding to go out to an early 4-0 lead. Saint Louis finally got on the board with two layups by Kwamain Mitchell, and then a three-pointer by Kevin Lisch gave them their first lead, 7-6. Lisch scored 10 in the first half and tied Jackson for the game high.

    Duquesne regained the lead, and then freshman guard Eric Evans went on a run of his own, scoring six straight points for the Dukes and scoring 10 in the half. His layup with 8:44 remaining in the half put the Dukes up, 16-13.

    “We realized the mismatch on Eric,” Jackson said. “We knew right away that it’s hard for them to guard him off the dribble, and he established that early in the game. He played a heck of a game for us.”

    Saint Louis eventually cut Duquesne’s lead to one, but Evans’ three-pointer with 2:09 remaining extended it back to four. He then made one of two free throw attempts to put the Dukes up, 27-22, with 58 seconds to go.

    “I thought Eric Evans was big for us at times,” Duquesne coach Ron Everhart said, “and I thought Bolding was big for us at times early in the game.”

    After that, it was Lisch’s turn to respond, hitting a three of his own to make it 27-25 with 36 seconds left.

    “We’re not going to miss him anymore, I’ll tell you that.” a smiling Everhart said of Lisch, who tied a career high with six made from behind the arc. “He’s a hell of a player.”

    Duquesne was in position to take the final shot of the half, but a turnover by Bolding led to a last-second layup by Mitchell and a foul on freshman forward Oliver Lewinson. But Mitchell’s chance for a three-point play and the lead didn’t go in, and the two teams went into the half tied at 27.

    The second half started with a reprise of how the first ended, alternating three-point shots by Evans and Lisch. But then Bill Clark knocked down his first of five threes on the night to put Duquesne up, 33-20. Saint Louis took a 36-35 lead on a layup by Barry Eberhardt, but Clark knowcked down another three and gave the Dukes the lead back.

    “It was big for us,” Everhart said of Clark’s second half. “The only guy that has defended Billy Clark this year is Billy Clark. I hope that he can continue to keep his composure and play in our upcoming games the way he played in the second half because he was huge for us.”

    “I said, ‘let me shoot as many shots as I can before I foul out,’” Clark said, tongue-in-cheek about his late surge. “I think, as everyone in here knows, I’m good at fouling, and the refs pretty much hate me, regardless, at home. So I figure I might as well get as many shots as I can before I foul out, and I ended the game with four fouls. Mission accomplished.”

    Clark’s third three with 11:42 remaining put Duquesne up by seven, but then Saint Louis went on a 20-9 run over the next 7:35 to take the lead back. Lisch’s two free throws with 4:09 remaining gave the Billikens a 60-53 lead.

    Duquesne struck back with an 11-4 run, including Clark’s last two three-pointers and five straight points by Jackson to tie the game at 64 with 1:43 left. Jackson then hit six straight free throws after Eberhardt converted one of two to put Duquesne ahead, 70-65.

    During that run, Lisch missed two attempts from behind the arc in the last 33 seconds to keep the Billikens close. His last attempt missed with five seconds left, and Jackson pulled down the rebound, helping to stave off the late-game threat.

    “We told our guys in the timeout exactly what they were going to do,” Everhart said of Duquesne’s expectation for Lisch to get the ball. “I kind of rolled the dice telling our guys that because I didn’t know for sure that’s what they were going to do, but they did and Damian [Saunders] was right on it. I thought he really got out quick enough and got high enough to bother his shot, but with Lisch, he’s capable of making that.”

    Jackson was fouled after the rebound, and stood at the line with a chance to put the game out of reach. He hit both free throws from the double bonus and sealed it for the Dukes. Duquesne then called a 30-second timout, and after the break, the Duquesne fans gave a standing ovation, chanting, “AA-RON! AA-RON!”

    “It was a really cool feeling,” Jackson said about the end of the game. “I try not to get too emotional. The crowd, knowing it’s my last game ever, is probably something I’ll remember for the rest of my life.”

    Mitchell’s long three-pointer from half court counted at the buzzer, but it would only count to cut the final gap to two points. The game had already been won, and the victors held their veteran leader at the heart of it.

    “It’s his last home game, so you feel you want to win,” Clark said. “I’d say this game is for Aaron; not for ourselves, but for Aaron.”

    For the senior who endured a 3-24 season as a freshman and a horrific campus shooting that wounded him and four of his teammates as a sophomore, Jackson was able to look fondly upon ending his career as a contributor to back-to-back winning seasons at Duquesne for the first time since the 1980-81 season.

    “When you look at Duquesne on the A-10 schedule, you don’t say, ‘Oh, here’s Duquesne, this is a guaranteed win,’” Jackson said. “When you play Duquesne, it’s like, ‘We’re going to have to give them our best shot.’ Words cannot express how happy I am to be a part of this new era of the Duquesne Dukes.”

    “I talked to our kids before we walked out of the locker room tonight, and I said to them, ‘this is the last game this guy is going to play in this arena,’” Everhart said. “‘Make sure this is a night he’s going to remember the right way, not the wrong way because someday he’s going to have to tell his kids what happened the last night you played in your gym.’ I’m very excited they were able to do that.”

    Both teams will close out the regular season Saturday, with Duquesne visiting Dayton and Saint Louis hosting LaSalle. The Atlantic 10 Championships will commence on March 11 in Atlantic City.

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  • Everhart, improved Dukes defeat Massachusetts
    Everhart, improved Dukes defeat Massachusetts

    ricduq

    February 25, 2009 | AP Press

    AMHERST, Mass. – Bill Clark’s 22 points led five Duquesne players in double figures as the Dukes defeated Massachusetts 94-77 Wednesday night.

    Duquesne (17-9, 8-5 Atlantic 10 Conference) finished the first half on a 15-4 run to take a 46-35 lead at the break. Massachusetts made a late surge and cut its deficit to 10 on a Gary Correia’s 3-pointer with just under six minutes left, but never got closer.

    Damian Saunders added 18 points and seven rebounds for Duquesne, while Aaron Jackson had 17 points, nine assists and five rebounds. Eric Evans scored 14 points and Jason Duty had 10, rounding out double-digit scorers.

    Anthony Gurley led Massachusetts (10-16, 5-8 A-10) with 18 points off the bench, Ricky Harris added 14 points and Matt Glass had 12.

    The 94 points were the most Massachusetts surrendered this season. The Minutemen lost despite hitting 16 3-pointers, breaking their record for threes in a game.

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  • Jackson scores 25, Dukes topple La Salle 79-68
    Jackson scores 25, Dukes topple La Salle 79-68

    ajduq 

    February 22, 2009 | AP Press

    PHILADELPHIA, PA – Aaron Jackson scored 17 of his 25 points in the first half to lead Duquesne to a 79-68 win over La Salle Sunday.

    Damian Saunders added 22 points, matching his career high, for the Dukes (16-9, 7-5 Atlantic 10), who had lost three of their last four.

    Rodney Green had 14 points to lead four players in double figures for the Explorers (14-12, 5-7), who dropped their second straight.

    The victory guarantees Duquesne its second straight winning season, marking the first time since the 1979-80 and 1980-81 seasons they will finish above .500 in two straight campaigns.

    Jackson got Duquesne off to a strong start, making seven of his first nine shots to finish with 17 points in the first half and help the Dukes to a 44-41 lead at the break. Vernon Goodridge’s layup 13 seconds into the second half brought La Salle within 44-43. But the Dukes scored the next six points and the Explorers never got closer than three the rest of the way.

    Eric Evans also reached double figures for Duquesne with 11 points, while Saunders set a career high with 14 rebounds. Kimmani Barrett and Paul Johnson had 12 points apiece for La Salle, and Goodridge finished with 11.

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  • A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: Duquesne’s late struggles continue, fall at home to Temple, 78-73
    A10CollegeHoops Exclusive: Duquesne’s late struggles continue, fall at home to Temple, 78-73
    Jason Duty tries to pass against Temple's zone

    Jason Duty tries to pass against Temple's zone (Photo courtesy: Stacy Gault)

    February 15, 2009 by Josh Taylor | A10CollegeHoops  

    When considering Duquesne’s last three games, including their upset victory over then ninth-ranked Xavier on February 7, the constant trend is the Dukes have had a hard time maintaining leads and finishing games.

    That was the recurring sentiment among the team after falling to Temple, 78-73, in a Sunday matinee at the A.J. Palumbo Center in which they led by as much as eight points midway through the first half. They held the Owls’ talented senior guard, Dionte Christmas, to 15 points on 4-of-15 shooting, but could not overcome a late second-half collapse, combined with the clutch shooting of Ryan Brooks and freshman Juan Fernandez.

    “I thought our kids really did a great job on Christmas today,” Duquesne head coach Ron Everhart said at the postgame press conference, “and I thought our game plan worked out really, really well. It was unfortunate because they got a lot of production out of the other two [guard] spots.”

    Temple got out to an early 9-5 lead in the first half, but then Duquesne scored seven consecutive points on a three-point play by Bill Clark, a steal and breakaway slam by Damian Saunders, and a pair of free throws by Aaron Jackson to make it 12-9. 

    The Dukes maintained the lead through the end of the half, but missed a handful of opportunities to extend it, and an 18-7 run by the Owls in the last seven minutes of the half put Duquesne up by only one at the break, despite 11 points from Saunders and 10 from Jackson.

    “When we have a lead, we need to take decent shots because we could have been up by 10 or 12 at halftime,” said Jackson, who finished with a game-high 21 points. “But we took poor shots and we didn’t shoot the ball as well.”

    The second half was no more promising, as Christmas knocked down a three-pointer and a jump shot to put Temple up by four within the first two minutes. But Duquesne responded with a 9-0 run, capped off on a no-look pass from B.J. Monteiro to a cutting Saunders for a layup with 15:40 remaining.

    After four ties and seven lead-changes in the second half, Temple took a 62-58 lead on a Brooks three-pointer. He shot 3-for-4 from behind the arc and finished with 11 points. Clark, the Dukes’ top outside shooter, second in the conference in three-point percentage, answered with a three of his own, and Duquesne was back within one.

    The next three possessions for the Dukes would embody the struggles they have faced in their last three contests, including going nearly the final eight minutes in the win over Xavier without a field goal. Freshman point guard Eric Evans missed two open three-point attempts, and then Jackson missed on a driving layup opportunity. Two layups by 6′9″ sophomore Lavoy Allen sandwiched around a made free throw, plus two free throws by Christmas gave Temple the seven-point surge they needed to grab a firm hold on the lead and keep it the rest of the way.

    “We had three straight possessions where Evans missed two wide open three’s — and I mean they were wide open,” Everhart said, “and then Jackson comes down the lane, and that same layup that he made against [George Washington] and against Charlotte… he missed it.

    “Those three possessions really hurt us because they had the dribble-drive with Allen, and Christmas got fouled on the dribble-drive and made two free throws.”

    A layup by Jackson, followed by two free throws and another pair from Clark cut the deficit to four, but a nice spin and layup on a post-up move by Fernandez on Jason Duty broke the Dukes’ back with 41 seconds left. An Argentina native having enrolled in only December, Fernandez shot 7-of-9, including 2-for-4 from three-point range for 19 points, and his performance was not lost on the host team.

    “I was impressed watching him a couple of weeks ago,” Jackson said of Fernandez. “I saw him on TV and I thought he was going to be a really good point guard in this league. He runs the team really well, he’s a phenomenal passer, and he’s really poised to be a freshman.”

    Sophomore forwards Bill Clark and Damian Saunders have had to assume veteran roles due to Duquesne's young roster

    Sophomore forwards Bill Clark and Damian Saunders have had to assume veteran roles due to Duquesne's young roster (Photo courtesy: Stacy Gault)

    Speaking of youth, Everhart refused to blame the loss on his roster’s lack of experience. Having eight scholarship freshman and only one scholarship upperclassman, Duquesne has one of the youngest rosters in the country based on average age.

    “I wish we had better depth, especially up front,” Everhart said, “but we have what we have. I think Clark and Saunders are giving us everything they’ve got, but in our backcourt, we’ve got to have one of our guards step up off the bench and be more productive for us.”

    “It’s always tough when you get a loss, or you’re going on a two-game losing streak, but I think it’s just that we’ve got to come together, have a meeting or something, and get everybody on the same page,” Saunders said. “We have guys going off, being wild, and trying to play their game, but it’s really a team effort.”

    The Dukes have five games remaining on their schedule, including a week off before visiting LaSalle and Massachusetts in a three-day span. One win in those last five games will secure a winning season for the Dukes, the second in Everhart’s three years as head coach and the program’s first consecutive winning run since the 1979-80 and 1980-81 seasons.

    “I know it’s getting old, but we’ve got to learn from our mistakes,” Jackson said. “We need to just dig in and say, ‘enough is enough.’ We’ve got to start pulling out these wins.”

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  • Dukes caplitalize on 31 turnovers, defeat St. Bonaventure 74-68
    Dukes caplitalize on 31 turnovers, defeat St. Bonaventure 74-68

    ajaxd

    January 31, 2009 | AP Press

    PITTSBURGH, PA – Aaron Jackson scored 19 points and Duquesne capitalized on 31 turnovers to rally past St. Bonaventure 74-68 Saturday.

    Bill Clark scored 17 points, Eric Evans added 14 and Damian Saunders 11 for Duquesne (14-6, 5-2 Atlantic 10), which is off to its best overall and conference start since the 1980-81 season.

    The 1981 Dukes opened 14-6 and 5-2 on the way to a 20-10 record and 10-3 finish, which was good enough for a tie for the Eastern 8 title.

    Andrew Nicholson shot 13-for-18 and finished with 29 points and 12 rebounds for St. Bonaventure (12-9, 2-6), which committed three crucial turnovers in the final 2:30. Chris Matthews added 12 points, and Jonathan Hall had 12 rebounds and 11 points.

    The Bonnies led by a point, 40-39, at the break and held a five-point lead, 63-58, with 5:29 remaining.

    Duquesne went on a 8-3 run to tie the score at 66 with 3:15 left, and the teams tied again at 68 with 2:07 remaining before the Dukes broke loose.

    Evans dropped in a layup, Saunders added two free throws, and Evans added another pair in Duquesne’s decisive 6-0 run in the final minutes.

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  • Duquesne routes Fordham 89-68
    Duquesne routes Fordham 89-68

    aajak

    January 25, 2009 | AP Press

    New York, NY – Bill Clark scored 22 points, 16 of them in the opening half, and Duquesne routed Fordham 89-68 on Sunday to extend the Rams’ losing streak to eight straight.

    Melquan Bolding followed with 19 points for the Dukes (12-6, 3-2 Atlantic 10), who had five players in double-figures scoring. Jason Duty had 18 points, Eric Evans had 13 and Aaron Jackson 10.

    Mike Moore paced Fordham with 18 points. Jio Fontan and Chris Bethel each had 16 points.

    A layup by Bethal gave Fordham (2-15, 0-5) a 9-6 lead at 14:31 of the opening half. The Dukes then went on 17-1 run to turn the game into a route. Clark led the way with a pair of 3-pointers.

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  • Bolding scores career high, leads Duquesne past George Washington
    Bolding scores career high, leads Duquesne past George Washington

    melq

    January 14, 2009 | AP Press

    PITTSBURGH, PA – Freshman Melquan Bolding scored a career-high 26 points, Bill Clark and Aaron Jackson had 14 points, and Duquesne rallied to beat George Washington 88-83 on Wednesday night for its seventh straight victory.

    Eric Evans scored 13 points and Damian Saunders added 11 for Duquesne (12-4), which is 3-0 in the Atlantic 10 Conference for the first time in the school’s history.

    Duquesne, which trailed by 13 points in the first half, went ahead 80-77 on a 3-pointer by Saunders with 2:49 remaining. The Dukes had 13 3-pointers, including four from Bolding.

    Rob Diggs had 25 points for George Washington (6-8, 0-2), which lost its sixth straight.

    Reserve Noel Wilmore added 14 points for the Colonials, who shot 64 percent from the field and made eight of 10 3-pointers.

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  • Clark leads Duquesne past Bonnies 98-80
    Clark leads Duquesne past Bonnies 98-80

    bck

    January 10, 2009 | AP Press

    OLEAN, N.Y. — Bill Clark scored 24 points, leading Duquesne to a 98-80 win over St. Bonaventure on Saturday.

    Aaron Jackson scored 20 points, while Melquan Bolding scored 16. Eric Evans chipped in 14 points for the Dukes (11-4, 2-0 Atlantic 10), while Jason Duty added 13.

    Andrew Nicholson scored 18 points and grabbed eight rebounds for the Bonnies (10-5, 1-1). Jonathan Hall added 14 and had six assists. Tyler Benson scored 10 points.

    Duquesne never trailed, taking a 44-32 halftime lead after a 10-0 run.

    Duquesne shot 50 percent from the field and was 13-of-27 on 3 pointers.

    St. Bonaventure shot 45.9 percent from the field and was 6-of-16 from beyond the arc.

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