Syracuse hopes to avenge first home loss of season

By: The Associated Press

Monday, March 24, 2008 11:03 PM EDT

SYRACUSE -- Massachusetts made its Carrier Dome debut a memorable one back in November with a stunning victory over Syracuse. The Orange are determined not to let that happen again.
"We owe them one," Orange center Arinze Onuaku said. "They're probably going to come in here and they're probably going to think they can beat us again, but we're going to go out there and play hard. We're a better team than we were earlier in the season."

The teams meet again in the Carrier Dome on Tuesday night in the NIT quarterfinals, and a trip to Madison Square Garden will be on the line. The winner advances against either Arizona State or Florida on April 1.

The top-seeded Orange (21-13) are coming off an impressive 88-72 win at home over Maryland, while the second-seeded Minutemen (23-10) advanced with a 68-63 come-from-behind win against Akron on Saturday at the Mullins Center.

Ricky Harris scored 20 points as the Minutemen rallied from 12 points down with eight minutes to go to nip the Zips. It was eerily similar to their win over Syracuse in the fall -- UMass trailed by 12 points with 14:32 left and posted a 107-100 win, the most points ever scored by an opponent since the Carrier Dome opened in 1980.

Duplicating that feat would be remarkable. No team has beaten Syracuse twice in the dome in the same season. And only once has an opponent beaten the Orange at home twice in the same season --Penn State in 1922-23.

"I think we're more hungry," said freshman forward Donte Greene, who leads the Orange in scoring with 17.5 points per game. "We understand what we need to do."

Tops on the list will be defending the long-range shot. In their impressive victory, the Minutemen hit 14-of-31 3-pointers and methodically dissected the Syracuse zone and whatever other defense the Orange tried.

"We just want to play as well as we can," said Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim, who is 0-3 against UMass. "It doesn't matter what tournament you're in, you go out and you want to play as well as you can."

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