No. 6 Clemson rolls to easy victory over New Mexico

Clemson's Joseph Girard III (11) shoots the ball as New Mexico's Donovan Dent (2) tries to block him during the first round game between Clemson University and University of New Mexico in the 2024 NCAA Tournament at FedExForum in Memphis, Tenn., on Friday, March 22, 2024.

Credit: Chris Day/The Commercial Appeal / USA TODAY NETWORK

MEMPHIS — What happened in Las Vegas stayed in Las Vegas.

New Mexico’s brilliant four-game, four-day run to the Mountain West tournament title last week didn’t transfer to its first-round game in the West Region of the NCAA Tournament.

Sixth-seeded Clemson got a game-high 21 points from Chase Hunter on Friday and led by as many as 23 points in the second half of a 77-56 rout of the 11th-seeded Lobos.

First-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference pick PJ Hall scored 12 of his 14 points in the first half as the Tigers (22-11) advanced to a second-round matchup Sunday against third-seeded Baylor, which brushed off No. 14 Colgate 92-67.

Iah Schieffelin added 16 points and 12 rebounds as Clemson punished New Mexico in the paint, outscoring it there 38-28.

Jaelen House scored 12 points for the Lobos (26-10) before fouling out with 6:27 remaining in the game. Nelly Joseph worked hard inside for 14 points and 12 rebounds but New Mexico never found any sort of rhythm, connecting on just 29.7 percent of its field-goal attempts and going 3 of 23 on 3-pointers.

Not making shots kept the Lobos from using their pressure defense that frequently creates easy points via turnovers. And the Tigers handled the pressure they saw nicely, committing only nine turnovers. They also converted 13 Lobo turnovers into 19 points.

New Mexico’s leading scorer, Jamal Mashburn, Jr., was a non-entity in this one. He made only 1 of 11 shots from the field and finished with six points, nine under his average.

Despite battling foul trouble, Hall displayed the inside-outside game that made him one of the toughest covers in the ACC. He drained a pair of 3-pointers in the first five minutes as Clemson grabbed a 14-9 advantage.

The margin reached 30-11 on a Joseph Girard III 3-pointer with 9:51 left, capping a 12-0 run. The Tigers took a 42-28 lead to intermission.

–Bucky Dent, Field Level Media

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