Ravens too much to handle for X-Men

Ravens too much to handle for X-Men
by Chris Kallan

(Ottawa, ON)  St. Francis Xavier’s quest for a fourth W.P. McGee Trophy is over. At least for now.\r\n

The eighth-seeded X-Men were upended 94-57 by the tourney host and top-seeded Carleton Ravens in Friday night’s CIS men’s basketball quarterfinal at Scotiabank Place in Ottawa.

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Terrence Taylor scored a team-high 19 points for the X-Men, followed by Christian Upshaw with 16.  Stuart Turnbull led the Ravens offence with 23 points on nine-of-11 shooting. Attendance for the evening’s two quarterfinals was 8,924.

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“Our inexperience was a huge factor and I think if we executed our game plan a bit better we would have had a better outcome, but we have to learn how to play forty minutes of strong basketball,” said Upshaw, the Atlantic conference MVP and a first team all-Canadian. “Carleton played 40 minutes of defence and 40 minutes of offence and we just couldn’t match that.”

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None of the X-Men who dressed had ever played at a national championship before. Fifth-year co-captain Tyler Richards was not in the StFX lineup.

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The Ravens used back-to-back three balls by Aaron Doornekamp and Rob Saunders, along with a three-point play the old-fashioned way by Turnbull, as part of an 11-0 run to seize early control at 13-2 with just 3:30 played. StFX’s pressure defence was effective in stretches, but Carleton used a 12-4 rebounding edge to grab a 21-15 advantage after the opening quarter.

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The X-Men unravelled in the second quarter.

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One-on-one play and quick shots early in their possessions proved to be X’s undoing. A three-pointer by Mike Kenny at the buzzer gave the Ravens a lopsided 27-8 edge for the quarter and a comfortable 48-23 lead by halftime. StFX mustered just eight field goals by the break and shot 36.4 per cent from the floor. Carleton held a sizeable 20-10 rebounding edge, including 10 at the offensive end.

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It’s the third time in six years the X-Men have been ousted by the Ravens at the Canadian championship. Carleton, which was ranked tops in the nation all season except for one week in the No. 2 spot, previously claimed the Ontario conference by averaging a 28-point margin of victory over rivals York, Ottawa and Western.

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Carleton shot 58.2 per cent from the field and was good on 14-of-30 three-point shots. The Ravens outrebounded the X-Men 38-18, including 14-5 on the offensive glass.

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“They like to o-board but they don’t like to defensive rebound and that’s one of their weaknesses that we exploited,” said Turnbull. “We took full advantage of that.”

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StFX was ranked between third and sixth all season and was regular season champion in the Atlantic conference with a 17-3 record. The X-Men advanced to nationals via wildcard as league finalist. Other quarterfinal results include: Calgary Dinos 76, Concordia Stingers 67; UBC Thunderbirds 78, Dalhousie Tigers 54; and Western Mustangs 75, Ottawa Gee-Gees 48.

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Calgary takes on UBC in Saturday’s early semifinal (The Score, 7 p.m., Atlantic), while Carleton faces Western in the nightcap (The Score, 9 p.m. Atlantic). The final is Sunday (The Score, 5 p.m. Atlantic).

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StFX meets Ottawa in Saturday’s consolation round (3:30 p.m., Atlantic). Dalhousie and Concordia are set to tangle in the earlier consolation round matchup.

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TIP INS: StFX’s Alberto Rodriguez pinned a layup attempt by Carleton’s Cole Hobin off the backboard in the first quarter ... X’s Chad Warren went down hard with 1:21 left in the fourth and was helped off the court. He was favouring his left ankle ... The X-Men are 18-17 all-time at the Canadian championship, including 10-5 versus the Ontario conference, but 0-3 against Carleton ... StFX defeated Ottawa 64-54 in the 1993 national semifinal en route to its inaugural Canadian championship. The X-Men also won national titles back-to-back in 2000 and 2001.