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Hot second-half shooting propels Pitt

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PITTSBURGH – A January game for a Power 5 program against a nonconference opponent could easily be overlooked. After Pitt opened ACC play with a 72-61 victory against Syracuse Wednesday, head coach Jamie Dixon made sure his team was still prepared for Maryland-Eastern Shore Saturday.

“Everything’s an opportunity to get better. That was our emphasis this week. We’ve got to be a better team today after the game than we were Wednesday,” Dixon said.

Pitt was sluggish early but dominated the second half to notch a 92-58 blowout win over Maryland-Eastern Shore. The Panthers led by six at halftime, but shot 73 percent in the second half and outscored the Hawks, 53-25.

Jamel Artis and Michael Young scored 14 points each for Pitt (12-1, 1-0 ACC). Sheldon Jeter added 13 points off the bench and Sterling Smith had 12.

Bakari Copeland led all scorers with 23 points for Maryland-Eastern Shore (3-13, 0-2 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference). Devin Martin finished with 13 and Dominique Elliot chipped in 12 points.

“You just have to go into every game thinking that can’t go down to anybody’s level even if the other team might not be as great,” Smith said. “Sometimes it’s tough and we have some slippage, but we need to try to eliminate that.”

The Hawks controlled the game early and took a 16-11 lead eight minutes in. Maryland-Eastern Shore shot 58 percent and limited the Panthers to a 29 percent clip in that span.

James Robinson’s layup at the nine-minute mark gave Pitt a 22-20 lead and the Panthers never trailed again. Pitt led 39-33 at halftime.

The Panthers emerged from the half to quickly open up a double-digit lead and led by as many as 34 points. Pitt made 7 of 10 field goals and held the Hawks to 31 percent shooting out of the break.

“Every team you play does something different well,” Dixon said. “We had to get used to traps and jumping the ball in the backcourt. I think as the game progressed we did a better job.”

Johnson thought the Hawks’ offensive struggles in the second half had more to do with what his team did rather than Pitt’s defensive effort.

“I feel like we got out of our game plan,” Copeland said. “I think we took ourselves out of the game, I don’t really think it was Pitt’s defense.”

Maryland-Eastern Shore dropped its third contest in a row after the Hawks fell to St. Joseph’s and Maryland-Baltimore County as they began Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference play.

Copeland finished with a career-high 23 points. He topped his previous high of 17 set in his last game against UMBC and has hit double-digit scoring in his last five games.

Pitt concluded its nonconference schedule with Saturday’s victory. The Panthers lone nonconference loss came to then-No. 11 Purdue Dec. 1 and are now 127-5 all-time against nonconference opponents at the Petersen Events Center.

Maryland-Eastern Shore head coach Bobby Collins is rather happy to see only league opponents remaining on the schedule. The Hawks have played 13 of their 16 games this season on the road which included trips to No. 1 Michigan State and No. 6 Maryland.

“I’m glad that this brutal schedule is almost over,” Collins said. “Now we can get back focused on trying to get better as a team and prepare to win our tournament and our league.”

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