Tigers Fall On The Road, 71-55
March 5, 2003
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER AMES, Iowa - Tim Barnes scored 24 points and Jackson Vroman added 14
points, 15 rebounds and seven assists as Iowa State, playing under difficult
circumstances, rolled past Missouri 71-55 Wednesday night.
Iowa State (14-11, 5-10 Big 12) built a 16-point lead 10 minutes into the
game and dominated a Missouri team that had won four of five and beat then-No.
3 Oklahoma a week ago.
Missouri (18-8, 9-6) never got back into the game after Iowa State's early
surge. Rickey Paulding and Travon Bryant led the Tigers with 18 points each.
The game was played just hours after the death of Pete Taylor, the longtime
radio voice for Iowa State football and basketball and an associate athletic
director at the school. Taylor, 57, died after undergoing brain surgery.
On Monday, assistant coach Randy Brown resigned after being charged with
possession of child pornography. And top reserve Marcus Jefferson missed the
game to be with his ailing mother in East Chicago, Ind.
But if the Cyclones were spent, it didn't show. They beat the Tigers down
the floor in transition, outhustled them for offensive rebounds and never let
up.
Iowa State coach Larry Eustachy, who was good friends with Taylor, had tears
streaming down his cheek as he went to shake hands with Missouri coach Quin
Snyder after the game.
Jared Homan scored 15 points for Iowa State, while Jake Sullivan and Adam
Haluska had nine each.
Iowa State made seven of its first nine shots in jumping to a 15-2 lead.
Vroman and Homan got inside for baskets, while Sullivan and Barnes connected
from the perimeter.
Barnes' 3-pointer from the right corner and a jumper by Sullivan made it
21-5, and the Cyclones led 33-17 when Vroman backed in for a basket with 1:47
left in the half. It was 33-19 at halftime and Iowa State kept it up in the
second half.
There was a moment of silence in Taylor's memory before the game. Iowa State
staffers wore ribbons in the school colors of cardinal and gold and the players
wore black strips on the left shoulder strap of their uniforms.
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