No. 11 Wichita State collected its 10
th win of the season on Friday night as the Shockers and Temple concluded non-conference play.
No. 11/11 Wichita State 75, Florida Gulf Coast 65
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- Landry Shamet scored 23 points to push No. 11 Wichita State past Florida Gulf Coast 75-65 on Friday night.
Shamet was 8 of 12 from the field while the rest of his team went 14 of 44.
Darral Willis finished with 15 points and 13 rebounds for Wichita State (10-2).
Brandon Goodwin scored 20 points to lead Florida Gulf Coast (7-7), and Zach Johnson had 19. Goodwin and Johnson were a combined 15 of 38 from the field.
Among the most notable developments was the season debut of Markis McDuffie, a 6-foot-8 junior who led the Shockers in scoring and rebounding last season. McDuffie missed the first 11 games recovering from a stress fracture in his left foot that required surgery.
McDuffie, who returned to practice this week, had three points and four rebounds in a planned 10 minutes of playing time.
A layup by the Eagles' Brady Ernst tied the score 61-61 with 4:48 remaining. Free throws and a tip-in by Willis helped the Shockers finally pull away.
Wichita State was 22 of 26 at the free throw line while Gulf Coast was 6 of 10.
Georgia 84, Temple 66
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -- After Yante Maten's season-high 30 points and suffocating defense in the first half led Georgia to an 84-66 win over Temple Friday, Temple coach Fran Dunphy still considered the Owls' defense on Maten passable.
Maten made 12-of-17 free throws and finished with 12 rebounds in Georgia's 84-66 win over Temple on Friday.
"Maten did a great job on a number of plays," said Dunphy afterward. "I still thought we controlled Maten really well."
Maten moved into the top 10 in career scoring at Georgia with 1,472 points, passing D.A. Layne and Sundiata Gaines. He is one of only four Bulldogs to rank in the top 10 in both points and rebounds, along with Alec Kessler, Bob Lienhard and Terry Fair.
Georgia (9-2) is off to its best start since winning 12 of 14 to start the 2010-11 season.
Freshman Nicolas Claxton came off the bench to score a career-high 14 points and William Jackson II scored 10.
"Yante has more game than he showed," said Fox. "He is in great physical shape, and he lets the game come to him."
Inevitably, Maten's jump hook sets up the rest of his game.
"He has a hook over both shoulders," Fox said. "He has learned that in practice in the gym, hours and hours of repetition."
"It is one of the building blocks of my game," said Maten. He credited assistant coach Jonas Hayes with helping him.
Obi Enechionyia led Temple (7-4) with 27 points. Quinton Rose scored 13.
After Temple took an early 7-2 lead, the Owls went stone cold, missing 10 of their next 11 shots as Georgia went on a 17-2 run, grabbing a 19-9 lead with seven minutes to go in the half after a pair of Maten free throws.
A tip-in at the halftime horn by Claxton put Georgia up 42-23.
Claxton's father, Charles Claxton, scored 1,274 points for the Bulldogs. Nicholas Claxton said he is learning the college game.
"The biggest challenge has been knowing where I have to be on defense and offense," he said. "It has been mental. I don't feel lost."
Temple shot 31 percent from the field and 43 percent from the free-throw line in the first half, while the Bulldogs shot 52 percent and 83, respectively. Georgia had a 25-11 rebounding advantage at the half, while Maten had 15 points and seven rebounds.
Back-to-back jump hooks by Derek Ogbeide and Maten gave the Bulldogs a 46-23 in the opening minute of the second half. But the Bulldogs went nearly seven minutes without a field goal while Temple closed the gap to 54-40 as Enechionyia heated up from beyond the arc. He hit 7-of-9 3-pointers for the game.
Jackson ended the drought for Georgia with a 3-pointer, followed by a short jumper, stretching Georgia's lead to 62-43 with 9:11 remaining.
Three Owls fouled out -- Josh Brown, De'Vondre Perry and Ernest Aflakpui -- as they pressured the Bulldogs. Georgia shot 39 free throws, hitting 28.