Prairie View A&M coughs up lead and loses in First Four

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Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Prairie View A&M gives up lead and loses in First Four
Prairie View A&M gives up lead and loses in First Four

DAYTON, Ohio -- Eleven months ago, Fairleigh Dickinson coach Greg Herenda was seriously ill with life-threatening blood clots. On Tuesday night, he danced on the court and hugged his players after they secured the first NCAA Tournament win in school history.



Senior guard Darnell Edge scored a career-high 33 points and Jahlil Jenkins had 20 of his 22 points in the second half as the Knights capped a furious comeback by taking down Prairie View A&M 82-76 in a First Four game on Tuesday night.



"It's overwhelming," said Herenda, in his sixth season at the Hackensack, New Jersey, school. "When you coach for 35 years and you take a team to an NCAA Tournament and a team that, when I got here six years ago, we had nothing. And to build it, and then it's here, and it's so sad that every coach can't experience this."



Fairleigh Dickinson (21-13), which got the automatic tournament bid by winning the Northeast Conference Tournament, won its first NCAA tourney game in six tries. The Knights move on to play Gonzaga, the No. 1 seed in West Region, on Thursday in Salt Lake City.



Prairie View (22-13), also seeking its first tournament win, built up 13-point leads in both halves, but Fairleigh Dickinson took control in the second half behind the shooting of Edge and Jenkins.



"Jahlil Jenkins has the biggest heart in Ohio right now," Herenda said. "As a sophomore, he took over the game in the second half."



A 3-pointer by Gary Blackston pulled Prairie View back to within two points, 78-76, but a layup from Mike Holloway Jr. and a pair of free throws by Edge with 17 seconds left sealed it for Fairleigh Dickinson.



Blackston led the Panthers with 26 points and Devonte Patterson had 17.



"Having coach go through that last year, I remember us being in practice and him always just telling us that he just wanted to be there with us," Edge said. "All he thought about while he was in the hospital was us. So we rallied together, and it's just a great win for us, for our program."



BAD START, GREAT FINISH



Prairie View threatened to run away with it early, ripping off a 14-0 first-half run as Fairleigh Dickinson committed nine turnovers in the first 10 minutes to fall into a 19-6 hole. The Knights chipped away, with Edge hitting a 3-pointer and a layup in the last minute of the half to reduce the deficit to 41-34 at the intermission.



The Knights went down by 13 again early in the second, but methodically came back.



"Could have gone either way, but I guess the best team made plays late and they were able to win the game," Prairie View coach Byron Smith said.



SWEET REDEMPTION



Fairleigh Dickinson returned to the First Four three years after their first trip to Dayton. It didn't go well that time.



The Knights were beaten by Florida Gulf Coast by 31 points.



"It was just a great feeling for me, being here three years ago and losing by over 30 points and then coming back this year and being able to get a win," Edge said. "It's a great feeling. It's history."



BIG PICTURE



Prairie View: The Panthers' only previous tournament appearance was 21 years ago. They had high hopes after winning the Southwestern Athletic Conference regular season and tournament, going 21-2 to finish the season.



UP NEXT



Prairie View: Season ends.

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