MBB: Nichols’ career night leads Orange over LeMoyne in final exhibition
At Syracuse’s preseason basketball media day, head coach Jim Boeheim spoke about the need for his junior class to fill the void left by the outgoing senior class. Demetris Nichols, Terrence Roberts, Darryl Watkins and Louie McCroskey had to be a second and third scoring option to Gerry McNamara, Boeheim said.
In SU’s final exhibition game Thursday night, Nichols answered the call. In a 94-54 defeat of LeMoyne at the Carrier Dome, the junior forward scored 23 points and was 4-for-7 from the 3-point line. In what would be a career game for Nichols, he found his confidence from beyond the arc, sinking his last three 3s.
‘When Demetris gets his balance, he can make that shot,’ Boeheim said. ‘Gerry didn’t have to get 26 or 28 and that’s good.’
Boeheim started the four juniors against LeMoyne, as he did against Saint Rose. Nichols was part of the starting lineup at the beginning of last season but was on a short leash when he struggled early.
Against the Dolphins, he air-balled his first 3-point attempt and missed a long jumper two minutes later. But as a veteran on the team, he had the opportunity to work his problems out.
‘I think that that was a bad shot,’ Nichols said of his first attempt at 18:40 of the first half. ‘Coach talked to me about it and told me to get on balance. I feel confident.’
At 15:15 of the first half, Nichols netted his first points of the game, putting in a rebound on a McNamara missed 3. It put the Orange up 5-0 and Nichols on a roll. Two minutes later, he swished his first 3 on a feed from McNamara to extend the lead to double digits.
‘(Nichols is) a good shooter and our guys found him good shots,’ Boeheim said. ‘I thought Louie and Gerry did a good job finding spots. That’s what he needs – someone to help him.’
McNamara finished with nine assists and McCroskey with six. Five of their combined 17 assists came on Nichols scoring plays. But they weren’t all on 3-point attempts. At 18:39 of the second half, Nichols finished a McNamara pass in the corner with a thunderous one-handed slam.
Nichols looked comfortable exploiting the defense down low and the crowd of 8,531 was appreciative of his play as they were showered with t-shirts from Manny’s with each of his bombs.
‘(Nichols’) confidence is definitely increasing to another level at every practice,’ McCroskey said. ‘He just doesn’t believe he’s gonna miss. It’s our job to find him and if he keeps making them, we will.’
McCroskey said it was easy for the juniors to get down on themselves if they were pulled from a game last season. This year, he says, they have more confidence knowing they are the leaders for the Orange.
Though it was an exhibition game against LeMoyne, Nichols said he is more confident this season and that Orange fans can expect similar performances once the season begins.
He was visibly excited when he hit his last 3 of the game with four minutes remaining to put the Orange up, 90-47. It was his third swish in a row from beyond the arc.
‘D works on his shot constantly,’ McCroskey said. ‘All of us do but that’s his game. He’s a prototype for the NBA – he’s 6-8 and he can shoot
Published on November 3, 2005 at 12:00 pm