Stevens, Watkins help Penn St. beat Syracuse 85-64

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Jones hits deep 3-pointer for Penn State

Myreon Jones Jr. finds soft spot in the Syracuse defense and drains a 3-point shot.


NEW YORK -- The Penn State Nittany Lions believed they have the makings of a good team.

They backed up their belief with a complete performance at Barclays Center which left Patrick Chambers echoing his team.

"We (have) to play to win (and) we thought we did that tonight," Chambers said Penn State's 85-64 win over Syracuse in the consolation game of the NIT Season Tip-Off on Friday.

Lamar Stevens scored 20 points and Mike Watkins had 15 points and 15 rebounds -- 10 offensive -- for Penn State (6-1). Myreon Jones had 16 points, Curtis Jones added 14 off the bench, and Seth Lundy scored 10.

Whereas Chambers left Barclays Center feeling optimistic about his squad, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim believes his squad is going to go through growing pains this season.

"I thought this team would take a while," Boeheim said. Elijah Hughes led the Orange (4-3) with 19 points and Buddy Boeheim scored 14. Quincy Guerrier had 13 points and 10 rebounds and Marek Dolezaj added 10 points.

"I thought it would take 10 or 12 games," Jim Boeheim said. "I don't know if it'll be done in 15 or 20 games."

Down by seven points at halftime, the Orange opened the second half with an 8-1 run over the first 2 1/2 minutes, capped by Hughes' break-away two-handed jam to tie the game 35-all.

Following Hughes' dunk, the Nittany Lions outscored Syracuse 24-16 to go up 59-52 with under seven minutes to play.

"I'm really proud of the way they responded," Chambers said.

Minutes later, Lundy drilled a right side 3 as the shot clock expired to extend the lead to 66-56, and Jones' fade-away, buzzer-beating 3 with seconds left gave Penn State its margin of victory.

Syracuse's frontcourt starters Marek Dolezaj and Bourama Sidibe battled foul trouble. Sidibe fouled out with 6:58 left in the second half, and Dolezaj fouled out with 1:28 left.

The Orange missed 11 free throws and made just 6 of 24 from 3-point range.

"When you're young (and) you lose a game," Boeheim said, "your confidence goes down a little bit. I don't think they're playing with confidence right now. I don't think they're shooting with confidence right now."

It was 106th meeting between the Big 10 and ACC programs, but the first since Jan. 25, 1982.

BIG PICTURE:

Penn State: Following a loss to Ole Miss on Wednesday, in which Penn State blew a 21-point lead early in the second half, Nittany Lions coach Patrick Chambers publicly challenged his team's mental toughness. Penn State limited the Orange to 33.3% shooting and outrebounded them 56-29 on Friday.

"These guys really responded well," Chambers said.

Syracuse: Coach Jim Boeheim was circumspect after the Orange were routed by Oklahoma State Wednesday night. The Orange have an inexperienced backcourt that is learning on the job. Buddy Boeheim and Joe Girard III combined to shoot 6 for 25 from the field, 3 for 14 from 3, and commit five turnovers.

"We (have) two young guards (who) are just not doing the things that we need to do to win," Jim Boeheim said.

UP NEXT:

Penn State: Hosts Wake Forest Wednesday night in the Big 10/ACC Challenge.

Syracuse: Hosts Iowa Tuesday night in the Big 10/ACC Challenge.

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