Though he was roughly five steps beyond the three-point line and had a defender in his face, Chaisson Allen knew he had to shoot.
With the men’s basketball team clinging to a 78-70 lead over conference leader Virginia Commonwealth (VCU) last night, the senior captain pulled up for a deep trey with 2:15 on the clock, and nailed it.
“The opportunity presented itself and I just shot it, and fortunately it went in,” Allen said.
The lengthy three-pointer sent the 1,095 fans inside Matthews Arena into a frenzy as the Huskies rode the wave of momentum to a 91-80 upset win. NU has won four straight games to improve to 8-15 overall and 4-8 in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA).
The Rams, who entered Wednesday’s contest on a nine-game winning streak, lost for only the second time in CAA play and fell to 10-2 in the league.
“That was the game,” said VCU head coach Shaka Smart of the Allen dagger.
Northeastern Head Coach Bill Coen said although the shot was difficult he had confidence in Allen to connect.
“Players make plays,” Coen said. “He was feeling it at that point and there’s no better player we want to take that shot.”
Allen’s three-pointer put an exclamation point on a 55-point second half for NU. After trailing 43-36 at the halftime break, the Huskies’ offense exploded by shooting 63.6 percent from the floor, including hitting on seven of nine shots from three-point distance.
The visitors had difficulty keeping up with NU’s full-court pressure as the Huskies converted 15 VCU turnovers into 15 points. Northeastern also had a definite advantage in the paint, outscoring the Rams 48-28.
Smart said his team, which typically employs a full-court press and controls tempo against opponents, had no answer for Northeastern’s defense.
“They turned the tables on us, there’s no question about that,” Smart said. “We play against the press every day, but I just thought our guys were passive.”
Allen, who was named the CAA co-player of the week, tied a career-high with 26 points while sophomore guard Jon Lee added 23 and sophomore guard Joel Smith had 15. Smith has now scored 14 points or more in his last eight contests.
While the Husky defense gave VCU fits the NU offense had little trouble beating the fleet-footed Rams up the court, cashing in on 18 fast break points.
VCU senior captain Joey Rodriguez, who led his team with 18 points, said his team’s lack of defensive effort was disappointing.
“You give up 91 points to anybody you’re not going to win a lot of games,” Rodriguez said. “This whole year we’ve been doing that really well, and it pisses me off to go back and play like this.”
Patrick McHugh Basketball VCU