Mocs rally in overtime for sixth straight win

Staff photo by Robin Rudd /  UTC's Malachi Smith, left, and Darius Banks (5) help Stefan Kenic up after he was fouled during Wednesday night's home win against Western Carolina.
Staff photo by Robin Rudd / UTC's Malachi Smith, left, and Darius Banks (5) help Stefan Kenic up after he was fouled during Wednesday night's home win against Western Carolina.

Stefan Kenic was amazing Wednesday night.

The rest of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga men's basketball team was equal parts horrendous, lackadaisical - and amazing when it needed to be.

And the Mocs' winning streak is still alive.

UTC forced overtime against Western Carolina with a 12-0 run to end regulation play at McKenzie Arena, then after falling behind by four in overtime, the home team finished the period with a 12-0 run to win 89-81, sweep the Southern Conference season series with the Catamounts and push its streak of victories to six.

UTC (18-5, 9-5) is a game out of first place with four games left in league play, with an important matchup at first-place UNC Greensboro (15-7, 10-4) set for 5 p.m. Saturday.

Kenic, a 6-foot-9, 223-pound senior forward, was a UTC-record 7-for-7 from 3-point range and finished with a career-high 29 points. Malachi Smith added 20 points, including a game-clinching dunk in the final moments after a steal, and grabbed seven rebounds and four steals. David Jean-Baptiste and Darius Banks added 12 points each - Jean-Baptiste with seven steals - and K.C. Hankton had 12 rebounds for UTC.

For the Catamounts (9-13, 2-11), the leading scorers were Cory Hightower (19 points), Brad Halvorsen (17), Sin'cere McMahom (15) and Xavier Cork (14), who had 12 rebounds, two blocks and two assists.

Mocs star

Kenic was on fire on offense, but he also defended well and grabbed six rebounds in just 27 minutes.

Key stat

The Mocs - who had defended well during the streak but struggled Wednesday - held the Catamounts to six points over the final 9:09, which included overtime.

Turning point

The consecutive 3s in OT made by Kenic and Hankton, who finished with seven points, turned a four-point deficit into a two-point advantage with 1:36 to play, and that was followed with a layup by Smith and a steal and a dunk by the 6-foot-4 sophomore guard to put the game away.

Final thought

From an excitement standpoint, Wednesday was everything the Mocs and their fans would want. But from an execution standpoint, the Mocs definitely want to improve on the performance, because UNCG won't allow them to get back in it like a young Catamounts team missing its best player – preseason first-team All-SoCon selection and leading scorer Mason Faulkner wasn't available - did Wednesday night.

Contact Gene Henley at ghenley@timesfreepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @genehenley3.

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