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Boise State tops San Diego State, 53-52 in MWC title game

San Diego State v Boise State

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MARCH 12: The Boise State Broncos bench reacts after a three-point basket during the championship game of the Mountain West Conference basketball tournament against the San Diego State Aztecs at the Thomas & Mack Center on March 12, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Boise State won 53-52. (Photo by David Becker/Getty Images)

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LAS VEGAS - Boise State works on the “perfect possession” every practice, where they have to get one stop and grab a rebound.

“We’ve done it so many times in practice,” freshman Tyson Degenhart said, “that we just knew what to do when it came time to do it.”

San Diego State had the ball with 28 seconds left Saturday, but Matt Bradley and Trey Pulliam both missed shots before Boise State’s Emmanuel Akot grabbed the rebound as time wound down - and the Broncos defeated the Aztecs 53-52 to win the Mountain West Tournament and earn the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

“We said one more stop and we’re the champions,” Akot said. “And we did it. It was a great feeling.”

Degenhart, who led the Broncos (27-7) with 13 points, provided another pivotal moment late in the season half, when he took a charge on Pulliam under the rim with 2:48 left in the game. Boise State led by one at the time, and sending Pulliam to the line with a chance for the Aztecs to take the lead with have swung momentum.

Instead, Degenhart gave the Broncos a three-point lead, 53-50, with a bucket at the other end on the next possession.

“Whatever is needed, they step up and do, no matter who it is,” said Broncos coach Leon Rice, whose Broncos came into the tourney just 5-10 all-time and 3-7 in the quarterfinal round since joining the league in 2012. “And they find what’s needed and figure it out on the fly.”

Tournament MVP Abu Kigab scored 11 points and Emmanuel Akot added 10 for the Broncos, who became just the fifth team in Mountain West history to win an outright regular-season conference championship and the league’s postseason tournament. Boise State - which had made the semifinals just three times in 10 years, and had just one appearance there since 2015 - entered the tourney coming off their first outright regular-season conference title in more than three decades.

“The job is finished now, I can smile,” Kigab said. “We came into this tournament with a chip on our shoulder. We knew that we had to prove that we were the best. And we knew that we were going to get every team’s best game.”

San Diego State (23-8) was led by Bradley, who finished with 17 points and seven rebounds. Lamont Butler finished with 16 points for the Aztecs.

“I had space to just go down the lane and make a layup,” said Bradley on his last shot attempt. “I should have made it. I was right at the rim. I missed two earlier layups the same way. I should have made it, I got the rebound and Trey had a great look, too.

“We had two great looks at the end of it, but I definitely should have finished mine.”

Boise State was playing in its first conference tournament championship game as members of the Mountain West. The last time the Broncos played in a conference tournament title game was in 2011 when Boise State was a part of the Western Athletic Conference.

It was the sixth conference tournament championship in the history of Boise State’s program.

Trailing by three at halftime, the Aztecs opened the second half with a quick five points to take a 30-28 lead. But the Broncos ended San Diego State’s mini-run and the teams began trading buckets while trading the lead seven times before Boise State took the lead with 6:41 left in the game and never looked back.

ALL TOURNEY

Kigab, Akot and Bradley were joined on the all-tournament team by Nathan Mensah (San Diego State) and David Roddy (Colorado State).

BIG PICTURE

San Diego State, which has won the event a record six times, was in the final for the fifth straight season. The Aztecs have played for the tournament title in eight of the last nine years and in 12 of the last 14 seasons.

Boise State’s 27 total victories this season are a program record and their resume could nab a top-seven seed in the NCAA Tournament. As of Saturday, the Broncos were 29th in the NET rankings. The Broncos have been to two NCAA Tournaments (2013 and 2015) during the Leon Rice era, earning the only two at-large bids in school history.

UP NEXT

San Diego State: Awaits word on a possible at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament.

Boise State: Will play in the NCAA Tournament.