West Virginia rides Derek Culver, Oscar Tshiebwe double-doubles to win
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — West Virginia’s young inside presence stood out, but it was a balanced scoring attack that helped the Mountaineers outlast Nicholls State’s pesky defense.
Sophomore Derek Culver scored 16 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, and freshman Oscar Tshiebwe had 15 points and 11 rebounds to lead West Virginia to an 83-57 victory over Nicholls State on Saturday.
West Virginia pulled away down the stretch after Nicholls State had tied the score. And it took a team effort to do it. Miles McBride added 15 points, and Emmitt Matthews Jr. and Sean McNeil scored 10 apiece for the Mountaineers (9-1).
“That was really good,” Tshiebwe said. “Coach told us we’ve got to play like we’re down 10 to 15 points.”
With Culver and Tshiebwe doing their work near the basket, it’s allowed players like McNeil and Taz Sherman to showcase their outside shooting. McNeil and Sherman combined to make 4-of-8 3-pointers.
“Having somebody like Sean, who can make shots, really helps us,” Mountaineers’ coach Bob Huggins said. “Taz is starting to be the player that we thought we recruited.”
So is Tshiebwe, a McDonald’s All-American as a high schooler who leads the Big 12 in rebounding at 9.3 per game. Culver is third at 8.9.
Culver made 6 of 9 shots from the floor Saturday.
“If you all knew how far he’s come. He’s come a long way,” Huggins said. “He just continues to get better.”
West Virginia transfer D’Angelo Hunter scored 14 points for Nicholls State (6-5), including a three-point play that helped erase a 10-point deficit and tied the score 43-43 with 16:43 left. But the Colonels never retook the lead.
“At the end, I was just disappointed,” Nicholls coach Austin Claunch said. “I thought the last four minutes we lost our way a little bit.”
Culver scored six points during an ensuing 20-5 run that gave the Mountaineers a 63-48 lead with 8:57 left. Nicholls State got no closer than 11 points after that.
“Once we calmed down in the second half and locked in, we became who we are in our DNA, which is to be the tougher team,” Culver said.
Nicholls State committed 17 turnovers and shot 4 of 25 (16%) from 3-point range.
West Virginia outrebounded Nicholls State, 44-27, including 19-9 on the offensive glass.
“Overall, it was just a great experience to come play here against a team that is going to be better than people realize,” Claunch said.
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