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Posted: 10:22 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012
By Bob Ferrante
Special to The Palm Beach Post
TALLAHASSEE —
Florida has been impressive on defense this season, but nothing like during the first half on Wednesday night.
Mike Rosario and Kenny Boynton had 14 points, and Patric Young had 10 points and eight rebounds as No. 6 Florida overwhelmed cold-shooting Florida State 72-47 before 10,593 fans at the Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center.
Florida (7-0) had been impressive in holding opponents to just 48.5 points this season. The Gators held FSU to just 34 percent shooting and nine points below the Seminoles’ season low.
“I thought the zone was effective for us in both halves,” Florida coach Billy Donovan said. “And our press was effective for us. Them not shooting a high percentage – at least in the first half – what it enabled us to do was get out on the break. … The steals enabled us to get to the free-throw line. And we stole some baskets, so to speak.”
The Gators won their fourth straight game in the rivalry, and three of them have been double-digit wins. It was the second biggest margin of victory over FSU in the 17-year Donovan era, and most since a 96-61 win over the Seminoles in 1999.
Florida pulled away early on Wednesday. The Gators shot 48.1 percent in the first half, grabbing a 35-15 lead after the first 20 minutes as Rosario led the way with nine points.
“I was happy for him,” Donovan said. “The one thing with Mike is he can be streaky sometimes. This just happened to be one of those games where he shot the ball well. I thought he gave us a very good lift offensively in the first half.”
The Seminoles (4-4) were sloppy from the start, turning the ball over 13 times and shooting just 5 of 20 in the first half. It was the worst half of basketball for FSU this season and it didn’t get much better the rest of the way.
FSU’s star guard, Michael Snaer, didn’t score until a layup with 12:33 left in the game. He finished with 10 points and five rebounds, and Okaro White added nine points and six rebounds.
The Seminoles finished with a season-high 22 turnovers and had just seven assists. FSU has now lost three straight, all at home.
“Tonight I thought we ran into one of the better teams that we’ve played since I’ve been at Florida State,” said FSU coach Leonard Hamilton, who has been in Tallahassee since 2002. “Late in the game, I turned to my assistants and said, ‘Can we really be this bad?’ “
FSU likely isn’t as bad as it showed on Wednesday. But Florida gave indications of how good it is.
The Gators have battled through injuries and lineup changes. Yet they are off to their best start since opening 9-0 in 2009.
FSU was hoping to put on a good show in front of a full house on what was a carefully orchestrated visit for the nation’s No. 1 basketball recruit, forward Andrew Wiggins.
A senior attending a prep school in Huntington, W.Va., Wiggins appears to have narrowed his college choices to Kentucky and FSU. He took an official visit to Tallahassee with his parents for Wednesday’s game, and a few times was serenaded to chants of “We want Wiggins.”
While FSU was not allowed to name Andrew Wiggins, his parents, both former FSU student-athletes, were honored at halftime with a video tribute and received a standing ovation. Marita-Payne Wiggins was a sprinter who won a silver medal as part of Canada’s 4x400 relay in the 1984 Olympics, and Mitchell Wiggins was a guard who was a first-round draft pick by the Indiana Pacers in 1983 and had a 20-year pro career in the U.S. and overseas.
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