Georgia Tech improves to 12-0
Yellow Jackets easily drub Virginia Commonwealth
Atlanta ? Marvin Lewis clanged his first three-pointer off the rim, then made his next two. At that point, he felt as if he couldn’t miss.
“I’m a shooter, and like all shooters, when you make one, you think they’re all going in,” Lewis said.
Lewis snapped out of a nearly monthlong slump by scoring 19 points, helping No. 3 Georgia Tech survive a lackluster second half to beat Virginia Commonwealth, 86-65, Monday night. The victory gave Yellow Jackets their best start ever.
They also have their highest ranking since Feb. 3, 1986, when they were No. 2, and at 12-0, they’re one game better than the 1962-63 team.
“That means a lot to me, since I’m a senior,” Lewis said. “That puts me and this team in the record book, and nobody can ever take that away from us.”
B.J. Elder and Jarrett Jack each added 17 points for Georgia Tech, and Clarence Moore had 14. Lewis finished 5-of-9 from beyond the arc after going only 8-of-28 (29 percent) in the previous five games.
A trip home during the holidays to visit his father, a high school coach, got him back on the right track.
“I went to practice with him one day, and we worked some on my technique,” Lewis said. “I basically just got a lot of reps, shooting over and over. He just told me to stay aggressive and keep shooting, because eventually, the shots would start falling.”
The Rams (6-3) were without starting point guard Alexander Harper, who is out four to six weeks after having surgery Monday to repair a broken bone in his foot. Michael Doles and Domonic Jones each had 15 points for VCU.

Georgia Tech's Marvin Lewis scores in front of Virginia Commonwealth's Michael Doles, left. The Yellow Jackets won, 86-65, Monday in Atlanta.
“We certainly struggled a little bit,” Rams coach Jeff Capel said. “He’s the only true point guard on our team. He’s the guy who is the calming influence on our guys, and he allows Domonic Jones to score and not have to worry as much about bringing the ball up.”
The Yellow Jackets looked solidly in control at halftime thanks to a suffocating 31-9 run during the final 111/2 minutes. A putback by Kevin Moore brought the Rams within 17-16, but they went about five minutes without another basket.
Meanwhile, Elder scored eight consecutive points, including two straight threes, and Georgia Tech was on its way.
A layup by Jones made it 35-19 with 6:08 left in the half before another scoring drought. The Rams missed eight straight shots, getting only a free throw from Nick George in that span, and the Yellow Jackets led 46-20. It was 48-25 at halftime.
“They got us playing their pace, and we talked about that for three days in preparation for the game,” Capel said. “They were gambling on defense and really getting after it, and sometimes, they were missing steals, but it got us in a frantic pace.”
An 8-0 spurt after halftime made it a 31-point lead, but VCU slowly rallied. B.A. Walker hit a three-pointer midway through the second half to cut the lead to 61-44, and it eventually got all the way down to 14.
“At halftime, coach just told us to go out there and fight, just fight,” Rams guard Jesse Pellot-Rosa said. “They made a run at us, but we still knew in our hearts and our minds that we were going to fight it out until the end.”
No. 2 Duke 88,
Davidson 54
Durham, N.C. — J.J. Redick scored a season-high 22 points, and freshman Luol Deng added 18 for Duke.
Shelden Williams added 14 points and six blocks for the Blue Devils (9-1), who pushed their home winning streak to a national-best 33 games, and have won six straight overall.
Ian Johnson scored 14 points to lead the Wildcats (4-7), who have lost 17 straight games against Duke.
No. 25 Marquette 77, Sacred Heart 72
Milwaukee — Travis Diener scored 22 points to lead the Golden Eagles.
Marquette (9-2) led by as many as 15 points in the first half, only to have Sacred Heart (4-5) close to 62-61 with 5:43 left. But Terry Sanders scored on a three-point play to start a 6-0 run for the Golden Eagles, making it 68-61 with 3:43 left.
Maurice Bailey led Sacred Heart with 18 points.

