ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: WEDNESDAY, March 2, 1994                   TAG: 9403020127
SECTION: SPORTS                    PAGE: B-2   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: RAY COX STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: RIDGEWAY                                LENGTH: Medium


FREE THROWS CARRY SALEM TO 71-68 WIN

Salem used the free-throw line to fashion a noose measured for Magna Vista's neck, grabbed the state's No. 1 ranked Group AA basketball team and held off the Warriors down the stretch to win 71-68 in an opening-round Region III tournament game Tuesday night on the Warriors' floor.

The Spartans made 28 of 34 free throws in the game, outscoring Magna Vista by 23 points from the line.

"Something I learned from Denny Crum up at Louisville awhile back: When it gets to this time of the year, you'd better make your free throws," said Charlie Morgan, Salem's coach. "We take more in practice now and we want to hear string music when the players make them. That makes them concentrate even harder."

The Spartans (20-1) sank 17 of 20 free throws in the first half and really only faltered in the last 5 minutes, 57 seconds, when they made only three of eight.

That and four consecutive fruitless possessions allowed the Warriors (16-6) to whittle a 12-point lead to three points when Marcus Toney drilled the last of his five 3-pointers with 19 seconds left.

A Salem turnover later, Mac Inge got a good look at a shot beyond the arc, but missed and Salem's Bryan Monroe rebounded. Monroe was fouled and he missed the front end of the one-and-one. Toney came down the floor and was off on an open 3-pointer. Time ran out during the ensuing scramble.

"Even with all the fouls, we still had a chance to put it into overtime," said Jim Young, the Warriors' coach. "We had a good shot at a 3 and missed it. In this game, that's the way it goes."

Salem next plays Jefferson Forest of the Seminole District at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Magna Vista. The Cavaliers had an opening-round bye.

The Warriors launched many more field-goal attempts than Salem (65-38) and made more (28-20), but the shots didn't fall as readily in the fourth quarter, when Magna Vista was 6-for-20.

Salem played most of the game in a zone defense, which was one of the reasons it was able to control Warriors center Tony Holmes, who averages almost 19 points per game. Holmes finished with 12 points, eight of them in the second half.

"They made it very difficult to get the ball into Tony because they were double- and triple-teaming him out of the zone," Young said. "We really couldn't get the ball to him until the second half."

That forced most of the early action for Magna Vista to the outside. The Warriors buried five 3-pointers in the first quarter alone, three by Toney.

"I told the guys that they couldn't keep hitting like that," Morgan said. "If they were going to beat us, then they were going to have to beat us from the outside."

Salem made up for the disparity in shots by controlling the boards 32-28, which isn't that easy to do in a zone.

"You have to concentrate more because somebody usually isn't beside you like in a man-to-man, so you have to go look for somebody to box out," said Spartans center Nathan Routt, who had nine rebounds to go with 13 points.

Mark Byington, Kevin Garst and Routt were a combined 22-of-24 from the free-throw line. Byington, who also hit a trio of 3-pointers, finished with a game-high 28 points and Garst had 12, as did Matt Woolwine.

"I was handling the ball more than usual because they were putting a lot of pressure on our point guard [Monroe]," Byington said. "Whenever I got the ball, I was going to the goal."

Toney finished with 17 points and Evan Penn and Rodney Redd had 11 each. Redd, Jermaine Simmons and Leroy Valentine were disqualified in the blizzard of 29 Warriors fouls.

"We're very aggressive defensively; we'll come after you," Young said. "We're not a big team, so we have to come after you. A lot of times this year we've played with four guards and a post player.

"They played with a lot of heart. I'm very proud of them."



 by CNB