(17) Indiana 64, Penn State 68

1 2 OT T
#17 IND (25-6) 30 28 6 64
PSU (15-15) 31 27 10 68

Final

2:00 PM ET, March 9, 2008
Bryce Jordan Center
University Park, PA

Penn State hands No. 17 Hoosiers second straight road loss

WERE YOU THERE?
Passport

Did you attend this game? If so, start chronicling your sports memories today with ESPN's Sports Passport. Enter the games you attend, upload your photos and share your memories!
I was there »

Team Stat Comparison
INDIANA PENN STATE
Points 64 68
FG Made-Attempted 22-58 (.379) 25-67 (.373)
3P Made-Attempted 7-33 (.212) 7-28 (.250)
FT Made-Attempted 13-17 (.765) 11-20 (.550)
Fouls (Tech/Flagrant) 14 (0/0) 17 (0/0)
Largest Lead 8 6
Game Leaders
 INDIANAPENN STATE
PointsE. Gordon 26D. Jackson 13
ReboundsD. White 12D. Jackson 10
AssistsJ. Crawford 5T. Battle 5
StealsJ. Crawford 1B. Hassell 3
 · Team Stats: Indiana | Penn State
Game Flow
2007-08 Season
DATEGAMELINKS
Jan 20, 2008 @IND 81, PSU 65Recap | Box Score
· Mar 9, 2008 @PSU 68, IND 64Recap | Box Score
Next 5 Games
INDIANA (ET) PENN STATE (ET)
03/14 MINN 9:00pm
03/21 ARK 9:40pm
11/15 NWST 7:00pm
11/18 IUPU 6:30pm
11/24 @ND 5:30pm
03/13 ILL 2:30pm
11/14 W&M 6:30pm
11/17 NJIT 7:00pm
11/20 HART 7:00pm
11/23 UNH 2:00pm
 · Complete Schedule: Indiana | Penn State
Big Ten Conference Standings
TEAMCONF W-LTOTAL W-L
#8 Wisconsin16-229-4
#15 Purdue15-324-8
#17 Indiana14-425-7
#18 Michigan State12-625-8
Ohio State10-819-13
Minnesota8-1020-13
Penn State7-1115-16
Iowa6-1213-19
Illinois5-1316-19
Michigan5-1310-22
Northwestern1-178-22
 · View expanded standings

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- One of the best freshmen in the country was outperformed by a band of less-heralded first-year players.

After overcoming Indiana (No. 17 ESPN/USA Today, No. 18 AP) and guard Eric Gordon's 26 points, maybe more people will start noticing the fresh faces at Penn State, too.

Freshman David Jackson tied the game in regulation with a three-point play and hit a decisive bucket in overtime, and fellow freshman Talor Battle made up for a 2-of-15 shooting performance from the field with key late free throws to defeat the Hoosiers, 68-64 on Sunday.

Another newcomer this season, junior college transfer Stanley Pringle, hit one of two foul shots to put Penn State (15-15, 7-11 Big Ten) up 67-64 with 15 seconds left in overtime, and Indiana's D.J. White secured the rebound.

Armon Bassett missed an open 3 from the wing, and Pringle lunged out of bounds to try to save the ball but ended up throwing it to Gordon. The Indiana freshman, known for his 3-point shooting ability, missed a potential tying 3 with about 3 seconds left.

Fans rushed the court after a late foul shot from Battle sent the Hoosiers (25-6, 14-4) to their second straight road loss.

Penn State announced before the game that veteran forward Jamelle Cornley was done for the season with a left knee injury, so coach Ed DeChellis' youngsters are raising their level of play at just the right time.

"I'm real proud of our kids. They've been resilient all year, taken some hits," DeChellis said. "They've tried to stay the course and get better as a team."

With the conference tournament next, Penn State clinched seventh place in the Big Ten.

Indiana entered the game eliminated from the Big Ten regular-season title chase after Wisconsin clinched the crown with a win Saturday over Northwestern. The Hoosiers' loss, coupled with Purdue's victory later Sunday over Michigan, dropped Indiana to third place.

Now, Indiana doesn't have momentum either as they head into the conference tournament.

"Cornley or no Cornley, a Big Ten road game is a Big Ten road game," Indiana interim coach Dan Dakich said. "They got themselves a great win."

With Miami Heat coach Pat Riley watching in the stands, Gordon shot 8-of-24 from the field, including 4-of-16 from 3-point range. Nineteen points came after halftime.

White added 20 points and 12 rebounds for Indiana.

Jackson had 13 points and a career-high 10 rebounds, while Battle added 10 points. Another freshman, Jeff Brooks, was put into the starting lineup to replace Cornley and responded with a career-high 12 points.

Together, the Nittany Lions' freshmen compiled 41 points and 28 rebounds.

Jackson had muscled his way through the paint to convert an offensive rebound to put Penn State ahead for good, 63-61 with 1:51 left in overtime.

"I was telling Talor earlier, every time somebody shoots, as a rebounder you've got to think it's going to miss," Jackson said. "I just tried to get a hand on it and keep it alive."

Kyle Taber hit one of two from the foul line to put Indiana ahead 58-55 with 1:42 left before Jackson's 3-point play with 22.9 seconds left tied the game in regulation. That sequence completed the Nittany Lions' rally from an eight-point deficit. Penn State also upset then-No. 8 Michigan State at home on Feb. 2.

"One of our things going into this game was to make sure we absolutely dominated the backboard, and we didn't do that, obviously," Dakich said. "We just didn't do a good job rebounding."

With a tense crowd on its feet, Dakich put the ball in Gordon's hands to try to win at the end of regulation, but his jumper in the lane rattled off the rim and Jackson secured the rebound as the buzzer sounded.

Gordon nearly single-handedly got the Hoosiers back in the game after Indiana went the first 5:29 of the second half without a field goal to trail 36-30. A 3-point play and three 3-pointers by Gordon during a 14-0 run put Indiana ahead 46-38 with 11 minutes left in regulation.

But the poor outside shooting eventually caught up with Indiana, which hit just 38 percent from the field, including 7-of-33 (21 percent) from 3-point range.

Indiana had won five of its previous six, though the one loss in that stretch was a disastrous 103-74 rout to Michigan State, the Hoosiers' most lopsided defeat in four years.

This one hurt for the Hoosiers just as much.

Indiana was also missing a key player in forward Jamarcus Ellis, who didn't make the trip to Happy Valley for disciplinary reasons. Dakich didn't elaborate after the game and said Ellis' availability for the Big Ten tournament would be determined by "Ellis' reaction."


Men's Basketball Scores

Other Scores:

Sunday, March 9th
South Carolina 56 Final
4 Tennessee 89
Oklahoma State 57 Final
9 Texas 62
Cincinnati 51 Final
14 Connecticut 96
15 Purdue 72 Final
Michigan 58
17 Indiana 64 Final
Penn State 68 OT
18 Michigan State 54 Final
Ohio State 63
Illinois State 49 Final
21 Drake 79
Santa Clara 48 Final
23 Gonzaga 52