• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
New York Sports Today

New York Sports Today

New York Sports News Continuously updated

  • Football
    • Giants
    • Jets
    • Guardians
  • Baseball
    • Mets
    • Yankees
  • Basketball
    • Knicks
    • Nets
    • Liberty
  • Hockey
    • Devils
    • Islanders
    • Rangers
  • Soccer
    • Gotham FC
    • NYC FC
    • NYC FC 2
    • Red Bulls
    • Red Bulls 2
  • Colleges
    • Army
    • Fordham
    • Manhattan College
    • Rutgers
    • Seton Hall
    • St John’s
    • Syracuse
    • University of Connecticut
  • Team Stores

Despite 86-71 win, Syracuse’s poor defensive effort allows Monmouth to hang in

December 13, 2022 by The Daily Orange

To support student journalism and the content you love, become a member of The Daily Orange today.

At its best, Syracuse’s defense stood tall when cornering Monmouth’s guards against the baseline, drawing one of 14 turnovers, locking down one of the most inexperienced teams in the country. At its worst, it stood still.

With 2:45 left in the first half, the Orange sat in a position they neve thought they’d be in Monday night — down three points to the Hawks and looking down the barrel of another possible upset. They were in the midst of allowing a 56.7% shooting performance from the field against a team that hardly shot 45% entering the game.

Then, Maliq Brown punched out a pass inside the paint to Tahron Allen, but didn’t chase after the ball as it dribbled up into the hands of Jakari Spence at the top of the key. Spence kicked out to Jack Collins and he overdrew a long 3-pointer. But the long rebound darted past Jesse Edwards and scooted by Joe Girard III at the free throw line. Benny Williams was so out of position that he could hardly reach out to touch Spence when he finally got the ball and pulled up to make a long two-pointer. Head coach Jim Boeheim threw his arms down and started barking at his players as the Orange fell to their largest deficit of the night.

Syracuse managed to come out of halftime with better success. Monmouth was physical down low. Far more than Georgetown and Notre Dame, according to Boeheim. Syracuse could find success against the teams that didn’t push its forwards around. The Orange (7-4, 1-0 Atlantic Coast) ultimately won 86-71 over the Hawks (1-10, 0-0 Colonial Athletic), but played a poor defensive game, allowing one of the worst shooting teams in Division I to finish firing 48.2% from the field.

“We’re not winning playing basketball like this,” Boeheim said. “We have to play some defense. If we played some defense, it would have been a close game, but we would have been up eight or 10. We were lucky to be ahead at halftime.”

The Orange started off slow, quickly falling behind 10-5 off of 3-pointers from both Myles Ruth and Collins. Boeheim said that Monmouth is one of the better teams against the zone because it passes better and is able to get quick shots from the outside despite averaging just 30.1% from the field. But not even Boeheim thought the Hawks could shoot above 50% from both in and outside the arc. It didn’t help that the Orange were leaving the team’s best 3-point shooter, Collins, open from range either.

Slow starts have become commonplace for Syracuse, even in wins, with the most egregious examples coming in the last two games against woefully inferior opponents. Against both Monmouth and Georgetown, SU allowed its opponent to hang in the game throughout most of the first half. In both starts, the Orange allowed their opponent to shoot over 40% from the field and 35% from deep.

“On defense, we tend to stand sometimes,” Williams said. “We get beat on backdoors, get face cut. We just got to stay active and stay on our toes.”

Even after an 8-0 run towards the end of the first half, Syracuse almost let Monmouth draw level going into the halftime break. Beginning with a bounce pass at the top of the key from Jack Holmstrom to Myles Foster that split between Judah Mintz and Girard, Foster grabbed the pass and cut to his left past Edwards before shooting. Chris Bell didn’t bite on the layup attempt, leading John Bol Ajak one-on-one. Foster simply ducked underneath the center and got the layup, drawing a light foul on Ajak in the process.

Monmouth was the worst team on Syracuse’s schedule, per KenPom, a team with an average experience of 0.56 years of collegiate ball. It was coming off of a 37-point loss to Princeton and only shot as well as it did from the field against the Orange twice before.

“Some players, it’s hard to get up for these games,” Williams said. “Monmouth’s 1-9, players come into this game thinking we’re just gonna go by them.”

The defense was standing instead of stopping cuts, and the guards were allowing too many “high-post touches,” according to Mintz. Boeheim has also been adamant that players like Bell, Brown and Williams don’t want to rebound, singling out Bell and Brown after Monday’s win. Despite Edwards averaging 11.3 rebounds per game, SU only outrebounded Monmouth on offensive rebounds 13-11.

Syracuse won, Mintz said, that’s all that matters. The Orange are 7-4, six wins coming in non-conference play and have rattled off four straight victories. Their defense improved in the second half, holding the Hawks to 38.5% from the field and 3-of-12 on 3-pointers. Boeheim credited Mintz and Girard for stepping up to help mitigate the forwards who “have not wanted to play this year.”

But coming out of the under-16 timeout in the second half, Monmouth was down just two points. Had it not been for an eventual 19-4 run that took place from the 12-minute mark on, the Hawks could have forced the Orange down to the wire. SU had a lineup with Williams at the small forward, Ajak at power forward and Edwards at center. Boeheim said having Ajak in the mix wasn’t an ideal lineup — he’s simply in there for more height. Ajak played on the outer arc of the 2-3 zone, where he let a pass from Allen to Foster penetrate the paint behind him.

He tried to readjust and help Edwards, but a spin move from Foster caught Edwards reaching. Edwards fouled Foster as he hit a close-range fadeaway and headed to the charity stripe in hopes of giving the Hawks the lead. He did, but it lasted just one possession before SU reclaimed the lead and finally clamped down on defense to close out Monmouth.

“It’s just a matter of not playing to somebody’s record,” Mintz said. “We get up for games like Georgetown, and we kind of lay back in the beginning of the game against (teams) like Monmouth.”

banned-books-01

The post Despite 86-71 win, Syracuse’s poor defensive effort allows Monmouth to hang in appeared first on The Daily Orange.

Filed Under: Syracuse

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Report: Knicks shopping former 1st-round pick Pacome Dadiet ahead of trade deadline
  • Brian Burns snubbed from First-Team All-Pro honors after Giants’ dismal campaign
  • The Yankees could have an opportunity to steal Nico Hoerner from the Cubs
  • The Yankees have already reached out to the Cubs for potential shortstop upgrade
  • The Yankees and Cody Bellinger need each other despite the impasse

Categories

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • 247 Sports
  • Bleacher Report
  • Elite Sports NY
  • Empire Sports Media
  • Empire Writes Back
  • MSG Networks
  • New York Daily News
  • New York Times
  • New York Post
  • Newsday
  • OurSports Central
  • SNY - SportsNet New York
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • WFAN Sports Radio
  • YES Network

Baseball

  • MLB.com - Yankees
  • MLB.com - Mets
  • Amazin Avenue
  • Last Word On Baseball - Mets
  • Last Word On Baseball - Yankees
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Yankees
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Mets
  • Rising Apple
  • Yanks Go Yard

Basketball

  • NBA.com - Knicks
  • NBA.com - Nets
  • Amico Hoops - Knicks
  • Amico Hoops - Nets
  • Daily Knicks
  • Hoops Hype - Knicks
  • Hoops Hype - Nets
  • Hoops Rumors - Knicks
  • Hoops Rumors - Nets
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball - New York Knicks
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball - Brooklyn Nets
  • Nets Daily
  • Nets Wire
  • Nothing But Nets
  • Posting And Toasting
  • Pro Basketball Talk - Knicks
  • Pro Basketball Talk - Nets
  • Real GM - Knicks
  • Real GM - Nets

Football

  • New York Giants
  • New York Jets
  • Big Blue Interactive
  • Big Blue View
  • Gang Green Nation
  • Giants Gab
  • Giants Wire
  • Gmen HQ
  • Jets Fix
  • Jets Gab
  • Jet Nation
  • Jets Wire
  • Last Word On Pro Football - New York Giants
  • Last Word On Pro Football - New York Jets
  • NFL Trade Rumors - Giants
  • NFL Trade Rumors - Jets
  • Our Turf Football - Giants
  • Our Turf Football - Jets
  • Pro Football Focus - Giants
  • Pro Football Focus - Jets
  • Pro Football Rumors - Giants
  • Pro Football Rumors - Jets
  • Pro Football Talk - Giants
  • Pro Football Talk - Jets
  • The Gang Green
  • The Jet Press
  • Total Giants
  • Total Jets
  • Turn On The Jets
  • Ultimate NYG

Hockey

  • All About The Jersey
  • Blue Line Station
  • Blue Shirt Banter
  • Elite Prospects - Devils
  • Elite Prospects - Islanders
  • Elite Prospects - Rangers
  • Eyes On Isles
  • Last Word On Hockey - Devils
  • Last Word On Hockey - Islanders
  • Last Word On Hockey - Rangers
  • Lighthouse Hockey
  • Pro Hockey Rumors - Devils
  • Pro Hockey Rumors - Islanders
  • Pro Hockey Rumors - Rangers
  • Pro Hockey Talk - Devils
  • Pro Hockey Talk - Islanders
  • Pro Hockey Talk - Rangers
  • Pucks And Pitchforks
  • The Hockey Writers - Devils
  • The Hockey Writers - Islanders
  • The Hockey Writers - Rangers

Soccer

  • Last Word on Soccer - NYC FC
  • Last Word on Soccer - Red Bulls
  • Last Word on Soccer - Sky Blue FC
  • MLS Multiplex - NYC FC
  • MLS Multiplex - Red Bulls
  • Once A Metro

Colleges

  • Against All Enemies
  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Forgotten 5
  • Inside The Loud House
  • Orange Fizz
  • Rumble In The Garden
  • Saturday Blitz
  • The Daily Orange
  • The UConn Blog
  • Troy Nunes Is An Absolute Magician
  • Zags Blog

Footer

Copyright © 2026 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in