Auburn’s home streak presents tall task for visiting Seattle in NIT
Soon after his Seattle University squad defeated St. Thomas in the opening round of the NIT, Redhawks coach Chris Victor was asked about facing top-seeded Auburn in its next matchup.
At that moment, Victor wasn't concerned about how his team is one step away from the quarterfinals.
"I haven't thought about it yet," Victor said, smiling. "Really, I'm just worried how we're going to get out there."
The Redhawks (21-13) will be meeting an 18-16 Auburn team Sunday afternoon minus one of its starters, as Tigers forward KeShawn Murphy, who averaged 10.7 points and a team-high 6.8 rebounds, decided against participating in the NIT.
Auburn rallied from a six-point halftime deficit to defeat South Alabama 78-67 in its tourney opener Tuesday, as Kevin Overton and Keyshawn Hall each scored 21 points.
Overton made 7 of 8 3-point attempts after the intermission after going 0 for 5 in the first half.
"The shots were falling in the second half," said Overton, who added seven rebounds and four assists. "In the first half I was trying to find that rhythm. When you make those simple ones, the other ones become easier."
Hall leads the Tigers with 19.9 points per game, with Tahaad Pettiford next with 15.4 points and a team-best 3.6 assists.
Seattle beat St. Thomas 67-52 as Brayden Maldonado had 15 points, six rebounds and five assists.
Maldonado leads the Redhawks with 14.4 points per game, with Will Heimbrodt averaging 12.3 points and a team-high 5.3 rebounds.
"We've shown that we can beat some really good teams," said Heimbrodt, who added 13 points and five rebounds in Tuesday's victory. "We had an ACC win (against Stanford) and a Big Ten win (against Washington). So going into Auburn ... it's going really fun.
"They're a great team, but I think we can hang in there with anyone."
It won't be easy, as the Tigers have won 65 consecutive nonconference games at home dating to the 2016-17 season. That's the longest current streak in the nation.
But the Redhawks boast the No. 23 scoring defense in the country this season, giving up fewer than 67 points per game.
"One of the better defensive teams we'll have gone against all year," Auburn coach Steven Pearl said. "Incredibly active, they really fly around and make what you do really difficult."

