NCAAB Game Recap - Radford at Vanderbilt
Tue Nov 28, 2017 8:00 PM EST

Toled
58
Kansas
96
F
Savan
66
WichSt
112
F
Baylor
63
Xav
76
F
Lou
57
Purd
66
F
(N/A)
54
FAU
91
F
(N/A)
91
SCSt
100
F
Detr
82
IPFW
91
F
LoyMD
63
Dart
64
F
UNCG
72
Presb
74
F
LIU
69
NJIT
73
F
App
72
VCU
85
F
FSU
78
Rut
73
F
Brown
62
URI
86
F
HiPt
63
Pitt
71
F
Iona
93
Ohio
88
F
David
85
UNCC
70
F
NW
51
GaTec
52
F
OakCi
57
Ball
81
F
Chat
70
Akr
75
F
Schr
55
SHSU
81
F
(N/A)
59
SEMO
83
F
VMI
76
ChaSo
68
F
LoyLA
53
SeLA
80
F
(N/A)
66
HCU
96
F
(N/A)
53
TNSt
67
F
(N/A)
56
Murr
85
F
IUPUI
77
W IL
90
F
(N/A)
75
UND
82
F
McNee
78
UL
89
F
JackSt
52
ULM
65
F
Radf
62
Vand
74
F
UtSt
65
Valpa
72
F
UTSA
96
Tuls
100
F
ColSt
67
MOSt
77
F
W MI
65
StLou
51
F
UTRGV
64
SMU
95
F
SDSt
99
Miss
97
F(OT)
NDSU
50
SFA
54
F
Maine
55
GTown
76
F
KennSt
71
Wash
85
F
LoyIL
53
Bois
87
F
Ill
73
Wake
80
F
Iowa
55
VaTec
79
F
UCSB
79
USF
72
F
CSLA
66
LoyMa
87
F
CSNor
63
Cal
83
F

Nov 28, 2017, 8:00 PM EST

Final

1

2

T

Radford

33

29

62

Vanderbilt

36

38

74

LaChance rallies Vanderbilt to 74-62 win over Radford
Wed Nov 29, 2017 12:03 AM

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Riley LaChance almost stopped Vanderbilt's three-game losing streak by himself.

The 6-foot-2 guard from Brookfield, Wisconsin, scored a career-high 27 points in a 74-62 win over Radford on Tuesday night.

"Riley was sensational," Commodores coach Bryce Drew said. "We talked about imposing your will on the game and he was the smallest one out there and yet his will was the biggest and he made play after play to carry us throughout the game."

LaChance, whose father, Tom, is an AAU coach in Wisconsin, hit all 10 of his foul shots and went 3-for-5 from 3-point range. The senior also scored on four layups.

"I thought we needed a little boost of energy, so I tried taking the ball to the basket a little bit and that worked," LaChance said. "I just was able to attack some close-outs and get to the line."

LaChance did a good job of not settling for 3's and he sped by Radford defenders when they closed out hard.

"Our rotations were really bad," Highlanders coach Mike Jones said. "We never got over there and stopped him and made him make another play, so he was able to get an angle and get his body on somebody. He's hard to find in transition sometimes. I'm sure he'd love to play Radford again."

Vanderbilt (3-4) rebounded after suffering consecutive losses to Seton Hall, No. 18 Virginia and No. 14 Southern California. Seton Hall is the first team behind No. 25 Creighton in the rankings.

"Confidence is a very sensitive thing," Drew said. "Sometimes you can bury yourself in your confidence because you're just playing really good teams."

Vanderbilt's Jeff Roberson fouled out with 7:02 left with 14 points. Roberson, who entered the game with a Southeastern Conference-leading four double-doubles, narrowly missed another one with nine rebounds.

Ed Polite Jr. led Radford (3-3) with 16 points and 12 rebounds and Devonnte Holland fouled out with 11 points.

Radford led for most of the first half as Vanderbilt missed its first eight shots from the field against the Highlanders' man-to-man defense.

Two consecutive three-point plays by LaChance gave the Commodores their first lead at 32-31 with 1:51 left in the first half.

LaChance's 3-pointer gave Vanderbilt a 36-33 lead with 49 seconds remaining in the half and they took the three-point advantage into the break.

Radford, which returns all five starters from last year's 14-18 team, outscored Vanderbilt 32-16 in bench points.

BIG PICTURE

Radford: The Highlanders dominated the first half, before Vanderbilt rallied in the second half.

Vanderbilt: LaChance enjoyed one of the best games of his career, giving the Commodores a much-needed win.

FOUL DISPARITY

Vanderbilt outscored Radford 23-7 at the foul line, getting to the line 20 more times than the visitors. "Unfortunately, we fouled too much," Jones said. "We knew coming in they were a really good free-throw shooting team and if you put those guys on the line they're going to make you pay. That really made a difference." The Commodores hit 74 percent of their foul shots.

TURNING POINT

Darius Bolstad's layup cut the deficit to 58-56 with 5:12 left, but Vanderbilt closed with a 16-6 run to win the game. "We just had to lock in and get stops," said Vanderbilt guard Payton Willis, who broke his hand three weeks before the opener, but is 90 percent healed. "We had a little drought (late). I was just making sure everybody got back to moving the ball around and making sure we got the best exit pass for the good shot."

UP NEXT

Radford: The Highlanders visit VMI on Saturday. VMI's Tyler Creammer recorded his first career double-double (16 points, 11 rebounds) in last Saturday's loss to American.

Vanderbilt: The Commodores host Kansas State (5-1) on Sunday. K-State finished third in the Las Vegas Invitational after a loss to Arizona State and a win over George Washington.

Leaders

Radford PTS +/- AST REB ST BLK
E. Polite Jr. 16 0 2 12 0 1
D. Holland 11 0 0 2 0 0
Vanderbilt PTS +/- AST REB ST BLK
R. LaChance 27 0 1 5 2 0
J. Roberson 14 0 1 9 1 0

Team Comparison

Radf Vand
Points For 62 74
Field Goals 24/61-39% 22/52-42%
Three Pointers 7/19-37% 7/27-26%
Free Throws 7/11-64% 23/31-74%
Offensive Rebounds 10 10
Defensive Rebounds 24 27
Rebounds 34 39
Blocks 1 3
Steals 1 6
Turnovers 9 8
Personal Fouls 25 16
Technical Fouls 0 0
Ejections 0 0

2017-18 Reg Season - Vand Leads Series 1-0

Date Result Away Pts Ldr Home Pts Ldr
Tue Nov 28 Radf 62 @ Vand 74 E. Polite Jr. 16 R. LaChance 27

Game Information

Stadium: Memorial Gym, Nashville, Tennessee
Attendance: 8,027
Game Time: