No. 14 Tigers improve to 2-0 with 91-54 rout
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Despite watching his team struggle during the first half for the second consecutive game, Missouri coach Frank Haith remains encouraged.
After all, the Tigers are only returning one player from last year's 30-5 team.
"This team is a work in progress," Haith said. "We're not going to be where we're going to be in January. We're not going to be where we're going to be in February."
Missouri made just nine of its 39 attempts before the break and held a seven-point halftime advantage thanks to Phil Pressey's deep 3-pointer with three seconds left. But the 14th-ranked Tigers used an 18-3 run across halftime that blew the game open en route to a 91-54 win over Alcorn State on Tuesday night.
Pressey scored 21 points and Laurence Bowers added 14, all in the second half. Bowers went 3 of 4 from behind the arc, his first 3-pointers since the 2009-10 season after going 0 for 8 in 2010-11 and missing last season recovering from a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.
"When you have four guys out there as opposed to two or three that can shoot it, it just makes you tougher to guard," Haith said.
LeAntwan Luckett scored 14 points and Anthony Nieves added 13 for Alcorn State (1-1), which struggled from poor shooting of its own. The Braves only shot 30.6 percent for the game, including 9 of 31 in the first half.
"They executed their plays," Luckett said. "They come up with steals. They just listened to their coach. Their point guard just led the team real well. What else can I say?"
The Braves kept within seven points the entire first half despite several players participating in their first Division I game, including Luckett, a highly-touted recruit who sat out his freshman season.
Alcorn State defeated Oakville University of the United States Collegiate Athletic Association in its opener Sunday, 85-41.
Bowers' second-half surge followed a similar performance in the opener against Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, when he scored 18 of his 20 points in the closing half. The problem, he says, is the team's energy level. Only after a stern halftime message from Haith was the team able to pull away.
"It was a sense of us being lethargic," Bowers said. "Coach got under us, and we came out in the second half playing with a fire under us. And we ended up playing great. That halftime speech was a spark."
"Next game, I said in the huddle, we need to put two halves together, and I think that's what we're going to do. We're going to come out with a better focus."
Bowers scored eight consecutive points five minutes into the second half to give the Tigers a 56-31 advantage, capped by a two-handed dunk off a pass from Pressey that triggered the loudest reaction from the 8,013 in attendance.
Missouri won its 67th consecutive home game against a nonconference opponent dating back to the 2005-06 opener.
Pressey says his halfcourt passes to Bowers are nothing new; he remembers doing the same two years ago during his freshman season. He's just happy to have Bowers back.
"Pressey played with poise the entire game," Alcorn State coach Luther Riley said. "He managed the game, when they didn't have the offense. And they trusted him to manage the game and I think he did a great job."
Haith said it's nice to have a guard such as Pressey who can see plays develop and affect the game in a positive way even when he doesn't score.
"We don't want Phil thinking he has to do everything himself," Haith said. "And that's the trust we need him to continue to develop within his teammates."
Bowers and Pressey were the only players on the court who had worn a Missouri uniform before this season as Michael Dixon watched his second consecutive game from the bench, suspended for an undisclosed violation of team rules. Dixon also missed both of the team's exhibition games, and Haith declined to specify a timetable for his return.
"I'll let you guys know, as I've said from day one, when he's not suspended," Haith said. "He is still suspended."
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