Fill out our Daily Orange reader survey to make our paper better


Men's Basketball

Ennis forced to sit due to foul trouble in crunch time for first time this season

Sam Maller | Staff Photographer

Tyler Ennis had to sit in crunch time with four fouls, the first time he has sat in a close game this season.

For the first time all season, Tyler Ennis was forced to sit down with Syracuse in a tight game late in the second half.

After being called for a charge with 9:10 left in regulation and the Orange trailing Virginia 46-42, Ennis sat for the next 2:20 as the Cavaliers pushed their lead to 52-45.

“I know my team needs me late in the game to make plays,” Ennis said, “so I can’t be in that position on the bench.”

Ennis ultimately fouled out with No. 4 SU’s (26-3, 13-3 Atlantic Coast) 75-56 loss well cemented, finishing with 13 points on 4-of-11 shooting and four assists. He picked up two charge calls and a hasty third foul in transition that kept him sidelined during part of the No. 12 Cavaliers’ (25-5, 16-1) 33-14 game-closing run.

While the freshman point guard has picked up four fouls in five other games this season, that hadn’t forced him off the court in crunch time of a close game until Saturday.



“I thought a couple of the plays I could’ve avoided fouls with the charges,” Ennis said. “But I’ve got to play smarter down the stretch.”

SU head coach Jim Boeheim declined to comment on the charge calls, the second of which led him to sarcastically wave his hand toward the court. The Orange has been on both the winning and losing side of block or charge calls in recent weeks.

A charge on C.J. Fair helped No. 6 Duke beat the Orange on Feb. 22, while a no-call on Baye Moussa Keita allowed SU to hold off Maryland last Saturday.

Boeheim did say that he thought the importance of Ennis’ foul trouble paled in comparison to SU’s perimeter defense. The Cavaliers shot 7-of-11 from 3-point range in the second half.

“I don’t think that was a factor that much,” Boeheim said of Ennis.

When Ennis returned to the court, he was put in a position that the Orange centers have often found themselves in this season.

But he didn’t appear to play hesitantly, despite the defense’s struggles.

Keita said that’s the approach the whole team has taken this season.

Said Keita: “When we play, we just go ahead and play hard. It doesn’t matter how many fouls we have or what’s the score. We’re just going to play every single play like it’s our last.”





Top Stories

Column

Opinion: Hurricane Helene foreshadows our climate's future

It’s clear that climate change impacts numerous communities in a variety of severe, unequal ways. To ensure its effects don’t continue to persist, we must listen to the experts. We can no longer ignore them, especially when the evidence is right in front of us. Read more »