Feb 16, 2002
Box Score
By DOUG TUCKER
AP Sports Writer
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) - Even an under-the-weather Drew Gooden is still good
for a double-double.
The 6-foot-10 junior, who sat out Thursday's practice with the flu, scored
just four points in the first half but wound up with 11 points and 14 rebounds
as the No. 2 Jayhawks beat Baylor 87-72 to remain unbeaten in the Big 12.
It was Gooden's 19th double-double of the season.
"I guess I was about 75 percent. Before the game I thought I'd just
concentrate on getting rebounds," said Gooden, the Big 12's leading scorer and
rebounder.
He was clearly winded in the first half.
"I can be sick as a dog and rebound," Gooden said. "I was a question mark
as far as me running up and down the court and getting my shots up. I got them
up, but they just didn't go in for me today."
Kansas coach Roy Williams, alarmed that Gooden's illness might spread, has
the entire team taking antibiotics.
"Sometimes you have to get by with playing ugly," he said.
Nick Collison had 22 points as the Jayhawks (23-2, 12-0 Big 12) overcame
early lethargy and sloppy ball-handling for their 10th win in a row.
"It was obviously not the same Drew we've seen," said Collison, who scored
Kansas' last eight points.
"His health had a little bit to do with that. But we were real sloppy. It
wasn't pretty like some games where we're really passing the ball and
running."
The Bears (14-11, 4-8) came in as 22-point underdogs but led by as many as 3
points during the first half and trailed by only two about six minutes into the
second half.
"We wanted to make them compete and I think we did," said Baylor guard
John Lucas. "We left our hearts out on the court."
The Jayhawks' offense, which had scored over 100 points four of the previous
five games, was never able to get in high gear against the more deliberate
attack of the Bears.
"I'm not sure we slowed anything down," said Baylor coach Dave Bliss, who
dropped to 5-16 against Kansas.
"Kansas is just a terrific basketball team."
Collison hit the last two buckets in a 10-2 run that put the Jayhawks on top
83-68 with 2:32 left.
"We tried," Kansas guard Kirk Hinrich said. "We were just real sluggish,
real complacent. Fortunately, we were able to pull away late for the win. Drew
still did some good things for us, but he wasn't the same."
Baylor's Wendell Greenleaf, who'd been averaging 14 points, was just 1-of-10
for 2 points.
Outshot and outrebounded, the Jayhawks trailed much of the first half while
Gooden and Hinrich struggled.
Jeff Boschee's 3-pointer at the buzzer gave Kansas a 4-point halftime lead
and Baylor never regained the lead. Kansas led 53-51 when Keith Langford hit a
12-foot jumper and triggered a 9-2 run that finally gave Kansas a
semi-comfortable lead.
Boschee, who had 15 points at halftime, finished with 21 as the Jayhawks won
their 10th in a row and dropped the Bears' road record to 0-9. Since spraining
his left thumb two games ago, Boschee has hit 12 3-pointers. Hinrich, who had
been averaging almost 19 points during the winning streak, wound up with 11
points on 4-of-12 shooting.
Lawrence Roberts had 21 for Baylor while Lucas had 16, mostly on off-balance
jumpers and runners.
Now four wins away from being the first Big 12 team to go unbeaten through
the conference, the Jayhawks can clinch at least a tie for the title by beating
Iowa State on Monday night.
"We'll be up for that game," Gooden said.