Booker powers Tigers

By JOEDY McCREARY, Associated PressAssociated Press
Saturday, November 21, 2009



photo

Lynn Hey/AP

UNC Greensboro's Ben Stywall's (right) shot is blocked by Clemson's Milton Jennings. Jennings, a freshman from Pinewood Prep, scored 14 in the Tigers' 89-67 win.

GREENSBORO, N.C. -- If this is what passes for a tight game for No. 22 Clemson, the Tigers will take it.

For the first time, a team kept it closer than 40 points against them -- but it still wasn't enough to test them for 40 minutes.

As a result, Clemson routed North Carolina-Greensboro 89-67 on Friday night behind a season-high 17 points from Trevor Booker.

Milton Jennings added 14 points for the Tigers (3-0), Andre Young had 13 and David Potter finished with 11. Clemson shot 54.5 percent, forced 23 turnovers, broke it open by closing the first half with a huge run and extended its school-record winning streak in non-conference road games to 11.

Clemson won its 29th straight game in November since 2005. Their previous two have come by 43 points against Presbyterian and 40 at Liberty.

"It just says that we've got a lot of talent. Defensively, we're there. We've got to keep working," Potter said. "We've just got to learn not to let up in the second half, when we know we've got the game (in hand). We've got to have that killer instinct. ... Once we start to develop more as a team and understanding more what coach wants on the defensive end, I think we're going to be great."

Brandon Evans had a season-high 17 points and Ben Stywall added 13 to lead UNC Greensboro (0-3). All of the Spartans' losses have come against ACC schools, and they fell to 1-29 against the conference. Their ambitious schedule includes half of the ACC's 12 teams.

For Clemson, it was an early season chance to get comfortable in a building they'll visit again in a few months -- when the stakes will be considerably higher.

The Tigers were one of four ACC teams playing at the Greensboro Coliseum, the site of this season's conference tournament.

None of the current players had been here before; Clemson hadn't appeared in Greensboro since the 2006 ACC tournament.

GREENSBORO, N.C. -- Trevor Booker scored a season-high 17 points, and No. 22 Clemson routed North Carolina Greensboro 89-67 on Friday night.

Milton Jennings added 14 points for the Tigers (3-0), Andre Young had 13 and David Potter finished with 11.

They shot 54.5 percent, broke it open by closing the first half with a huge run and extended their school-record winning streak in non-conference road games to 11.

Clemson's victory, its 29th straight in November since 2005, was its closest of the season. Neither of its previous two victories was decided by fewer than 40 points.

Brandon Evans had a season-high 17 points and Ben Stywall added 13 to lead UNC Greensboro (0-3). All of the Spartans' losses have come against ACC schools, and they fell to 1-29 all-time against that conference. Their ambitious schedule includes half of the ACC's 12 teams.

For Clemson, it was a chance to get comfortable in a building they'll visit again in a few months -- when the stakes will be considerably higher.

The Tigers were one of four ACC teams playing at the Greensboro Coliseum, the site of this season's conference tournament. None of the current players had been here before; Clemson hadn't appeared in Greensboro since the 2006 ACC tournament.

After a slow start by their standards, the Tigers made themselves right at home.

They closed the first half with a 17-2 run in which they hit three 3s and stretched their lead into double figures for good. Young had six points during the spurt, knocking down a 3 with a hand in his face moments before converting a three-point play, and Booker capped the run with a free throw that made it 42-24 with 42.1 seconds left.

Clemson came away with points on 10 of its last 13 possessions of the first half while holding UNC Greensboro to one field goal during the final 5 minutes.

Before that, the Spartans kept things tight mainly because foul-prone Clemson kept sending them to the line. UNC Greensboro missed 10 of its first 11 attempts and shot 22 percent in the first half, but hit 10 of 14 free throws.

Demontez Stitt made it a 20-point game with a layup with 18:44 to play, and Booker pushed it into the 30s with a three-point play with 7:49 remaining.

/AP-ES-11-20-09 2114EST

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