No. 8 'Cats squeak past Marquette on Reynold's late shot

Scottie Reynolds knows the ball is going to be in his hands at the
end of a tight game.
That doesn't always mean Villanova's senior guard takes the
decisive shot -- but he's expected to read the defense and make
something happen.
He did both on Saturday, hitting a shot in the lane with 18.1
seconds left to give No. 8 Villanova the lead, and the Wildcats
held on to beat Marquette 74-72 in their Big East opener.
After watching Tim Tebow play his final game for Florida's
football team the night before, Villanova coach Jay Wright drew a
comparison to his own team's leader.
"You can just see how much everybody loves [Tebow] -- his
teammates, his coaches," Wright said. "Scottie's the same way for
us."
Reynolds scored 23 points, including 16 in the second half,
and freshman reserve Maalik Wayns tied a season high with 16 points
for the Wildcats (12-1, 1-0).
Jimmy Butler had 19 points and Lazar Hayward added 17 points
and 14 rebounds for the Golden Eagles (9-5, 0-2), who blew their
second chance to knock off a ranked conference rival this week.
Marquette also frittered away a late lead at West Virginia on
Tuesday night.
Missed free throws figured prominently in both games.
Marquette coach Buzz Williams said his team should expect to
be in close games the rest of the season, and needs to figure out
how to win them.
"We can get better, or we can get bitter," Williams said.
Marquette managed to hang with Villanova despite going 7 for
24 from 3-point range.
The Golden Eagles shot over 60 percent from long range in
each of their previous two games, including a 10-for-16 performance
in the loss at West Virginia.
Wright said he expects Marquette to rebound.
"It's not going to break them," Wright said.
But Wright hopes it doesn't happen too soon -- Villanova
faces Marquette at home next Saturday.
Reynolds was 3 for 4 from the field and scored 7 points in
the first half, and wasn't pleased with his play.
"Coach knew that, and I knew that," Reynolds said. "And I
wanted to come out and set a spark."
Caught in a close game in the second half, Reynolds tried to
rally his teammates during a timeout.
"I was just looking at my teammates and saying, 'We need this
win," Reynolds said. "We needed to establish ourselves, create our
own identity."
But Marquette took a 69-67 lead on David Cubillan's 3-pointer
as the shot clock expired with 4:10 left in the game, and
Villanova's Reggie Redding missed a pair of free throws.
A Villanova foul then sent Darius Johnson-Odom to the line,
but he missed both.
Redding went back to the line on Villanova's next possession
and hit both to tie it at 69.
Butler then was fouled on a drive to the basket, hitting a
pair of free throws to put Marquette up 71-69 with 1:49 left. A
loose ball then went out of bounds on the other end, giving the
ball back to the Golden Eagles.
A foul on Hayward sent Redding back to the line, and he again
hit both to tie the game with 56.5 seconds left.
After a miss on Marquette's end, Hayward was fouled on a
rebound -- and he left the first one short off the front of the rim
but hit the second for a 1-point lead with 27.4 seconds left.
Reynolds then hit a shot in the lane with 18.1 seconds left,
and was fouled by Johnson-Odom on the play.
Reynolds missed the free throw, and Butler got a wide-open
look under the basket -- but he missed inside, and Marquette picked
up a loose-ball foul, sending Redding back to the line.
Redding hit one of two, putting Villanova up 74-72 with 2.6
seconds left.
Marquette couldn't get a shot off on its final play.
"If we keep working the way we're working, something has to
give, something has to change," Hayward said. "We can't keep
working as hard as we are, and things like this keep happening."