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In the past

Temple wins first A-10 tournament since 1990

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Posted: Sunday March 12, 2000 10:33 AM

  Lamont Barnes Temple senior forward Lamont Barnes plucks a rebound away from Caswell Cyrus in the first half. AP

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Sixth-ranked Temple finally got to celebrate an Atlantic 10 championship instead of watching the other team do it.

A year after coach John Chaney made his players sit in tears and watch Rhode Island celebrate a last-second victory in the A-10 final, the Owls beat St. Bonaventure 65-44 Saturday for their first conference title since 1990.

"I always had my team sit there and watch the other winner, even with tears in their eyes," Chaney said. "I think it's important to do that. It tells you what you're made of."

Making a final push for a high seed in the NCAA tournament, the Owls (26-5) looked dominant one moment and vulnerable the next. They led by as many as 28 points in the first half, stumbled in the second and finally got a smile out of Chaney, their dour leader, when it was over.

Asked if he thought his team deserved a No. 1 seed when the NCAA pairings are announced Sunday night, Chaney said, "I'm not much into it. I know that we've earned (one of) 64, and that's what I've been saying since I got here."

Tournament MVP Quincy Wadley led Temple with 16 points, and Mark Karcher had 15. Star point guard Pepe Sanchez failed to score and missed his only two shots, but had eight rebounds and seven assists.

"If we're granted a No. 1 seed, then so be it," Wadley said. "We're going to take all comers."

It was Temple's first A-10 championship since 1990, when the Owls were led by Mark Macon. The Owls tied UMass with their fifth conference title, also winning in 1985, '87, '88 and '90.

"This is a more talented team," Chaney said. "This team has more depth. But I dare say that they're not as smart as the others."

David Messiah-Capers had 12 points and hit 4 of 5 from beyond the 3-point arc for the Bonnies (21-9), who are likely headed to the NCAA tournament despite the lopsided loss. It was only the second time in school history that the Bonnies made it past the second round of the tournament.

"I certainly feel we deserve to be in the tournament with what we've done, winning eight of our last 11 games," Bonnies coach Jim Baron said.

St. Bonaventure, hindered by shot-blocker Caswell Cyrus' bout with the flu, finished with its highest victory total since going 21-8 in 1977-78.

"We had two good games and one bad game," Bonnies point guard Tim Winn said. "We're ready for the next stage, whatever that may be."

For such a long title drought, Temple's postgame celebration was fairly subdued. Much of their early lead disappeared during a 17-5 run by the Bonnies that infuriated Chaney.

Sanchez, who spent a long time on the bench next to Chaney in the second half, seemed unfazed by his coach's rantings. After Sanchez threw away a behind-the-back pass, Temple's ornery coach slammed his clipboard on the floor -- with the Owls leading 34-6.

Asked by Chaney if celebrating was better than watching the other team do it, Sanchez said, "I've lost so many times, I'm used to it."

Chaney finally relaxed when the tournament trophy was awarded to the Owls, joking with Wadley and other players. Perhaps the victory will help him forget Temple's four straight losses to UMass in the A-10 title game in the 1990s, as well as last year's 62-59 loss to Rhode Island on Lamar Odom's buzzer-beating 3-pointer.

The Bonnies didn't score until more than five minutes in, when Peter Van Paassen put in a layup at the 14:53 mark to cut Temple's lead to 9-2. Van Paassen also got the Bonnies' first rebound, an incredible 10:45 into the game. To that point, the Owls outrebounded St. Bonaventure 17-0.

The normally cold-shooting Owls were 8-for-12 on 3-pointers in the first half while the Bonnies missed 10 of their first 11 shots and 23 of 28 in the half.

The extent of the romp was even evident on the referees' faces. After Lynn Greer hit his second straight 3-pointer to give the Owls a 29-4 lead, referee Joe DeMayo walked by the press table and rolled his eyes.

The next trip down the floor, Wadley hit a 3-pointer to make it 32-4 and shook his head in disbelief as he backpedaled down the court.

But St. Bonaventure made it respectable -- and gave Chaney something to be sour about -- with a 17-5 run spanning the last five minutes of the first half and the first four minutes of the second. Patricio Prato's 3-pointer cut it to 39-23 with 15:55 left. The Bonnies got no closer than 14 points.

St. Bonaventure's 12 points in the first half was the third-lowest total in any half in tournament history. The record is 10 by George Washington in 1994 and West Virginia in 1992 -- both in semifinal games against Temple. It was the fewest points in a half of an A-10 championship game.

The Owls placed three players on the all tournament team -- Wadley, Karcher and Sanchez. Winn and UMass' Monty Mack were the others.

 
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