VERMILLION, S.D.—South Dakota point guard
Kruz Perrott-Hunt scored a career-high 25 points and
Mason Archambault added 16 more as the Coyotes topped Tennessee State 83-66 Sunday inside the Sanford Coyote Sports Center.
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The Coyotes, 3-1 overall, improved to 2-0 at home and 2-0 in the Nebraska MTE. The final game of the event is Saturday when South Dakota travels to Lincoln, Nebraska, to face the Cornhuskers in a 1 p.m. tip.
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Free throws were the difference in this one. Tennessee State utilized an aggressive full-court, pressing defense to its detriment. The Coyotes reached the bonus early in both halves and shot 49 free throws, making 39. Perrott-Hunt was 15-of-16 from the stripe. Archambault was 11-of-12.
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Hunter Goodrick added 12 points and a career-best 11 boards for South Dakota, which finished with a 41-26 edge on the glass. Kassim Nicholson had 10 rebounds to go with nine points for Tennessee State (1-3).
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The Tigers out of the Ohio Valley Conference, jumped out to a 12-2 lead and led 22-11 eight minutes into the contest. It was near the end of the first half that the fouls added up, frustrations mounted and the Coyotes made their move.
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Perrott-Hunt scored 12 points during an 18-2 USD run that turned a 29-20 deficit into a 38-31 lead with 2:37 left in the first half. The Tigers were assessed back-to-back technical fouls following a shooting foul drawn by Perrott-Hunt. Archambault made all four technical free throw and Perrott-Hunt made his two to complete a six-point possession.
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South Dakota got hot from behind the arc and started fast out of the intermission. Perrott-Hunt made one of his two 3-pointers and
Tasos Kamateros made back-to-back triples to give USD its largest lead at 54-42 five minutes into the half.
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Tennessee State got within five points at 63-58 on a Marcus Fitzgerald Jr. jumper with 6:30 to go. South Dakota scored the game's next 10 points – all at the foul line – to make it 73-58 less than 90 seconds later and the Tigers couldn't recover.
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Carlos Marshall Jr., who missed all of last season due to injury, came off the bench to lead the Tigers with 16 points on 6-of-8 shooting. He made all three 3-pointers he took, but the rest of the team was 2-of-12 from behind the arc. Dedric Boyd, who came in leading TSU with 16 points per game, had three points on 1-of-5 shooting Sunday.
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This was the second matchup between the two programs and first since 1960.
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