Long Beach State came out on a mission in the second half, and when center Brian Freeman found a cutting Cornel Williams for a layup that gave them a 13-point lead, the 49ers looked well on their way to a 6-1 conference record with a win over Cal State Fullerton.

Then the Josh Akognon Show began.

Fullerton’s senior guard scored nine consecutive points in just two minutes and three seconds, setting the tone for a blazing second half in which Akognon scored 23 of his game-high 31 points on 8-12 shooting from the field.  

Then, trailing by one with 18 seconds left, Akognon drove past 49er guard Casper Ware and pulled up quickly at the elbow to drain a fifteen-foot jumper that would give Fullerton the 61-60 victory before a packed house of more than 4,200 in the Walter Pyramid.

“We get up 13 and make two or three mistakes in a row, and a player of Akognon’s stature is going to make you pay,” said Long Beach State head coach Dan Monson.  “He just made one more play than we did today.  He was outstanding.”

The 49ers threw a gaggle of defenders of all shapes and sizes at Akognon – from the lightning-quick Ware, to the more physical Stephan Gilling and Larry Anderson.  After the game, Gilling said that he and Anderson traded tips on how to guard Akognon.  They agreed not to play help defense if their teammates needed it, focusing instead solely on their high-profile assignment.

“It worked in the first half, but in the second half he came out lighting it up,” Gilling said.  He and Anderson hassled Akognon into 3-11 shooting in the first half, and Fullerton shot just 10-34 (29.4%) as a team thanks to intense perimeter defense from the 49ers.  Long Beach took a 32-24 lead into the break.  Even when Fullerton made their big run in the second half, the 49ers held their advantage until an Akognon jumper gave the Titans a two-point lead with 31 seconds remaining.  

On the next play, Stephan Gilling inbounded ball under his own basket to Donovan Morris.  As he stepped back inbounds, forward T.J. Robinson set a screen on Gilling’s defender and he broke for the corner.  Morris found him wide open and Gilling drained the three-pointer to give Long Beach a one-point lead with just 19 seconds to go.

“I’ve been working on that shot for a while now,” said Gilling, who led the 49ers with 15 points.  “It felt kind of natural.”

But just 16 seconds later, Akognon nailed the winning bucket over Ware to negate Gilling’s clutch jumper and claim the victory for Fullerton.

Long Beach’s defense was superb, forcing Akognon to catch the ball about thirty feet from the basket – as Ware had been denying him intensely throughout the game.  Once he had the ball, though, Akognon dribbled left and threw on the afterburners, stopping on a dime at the free-throw elbow to pull up and release the jumper over Ware’s fingertips.  Long Beach’s freshman point guard was visibly upset with himself as the buzzer sounded.

“In the locker room [Ware’s] head was down. I told him to keep his head up,” Gilling said.  “’Cas did a good job on him, we thought.  I guess Akognon had a hot hand. Any space that he has, he’s shooting.”

Long Beach coach Dan Monson tried everything to stop the Big West’s leading scorer.

“We tried switching it, we tried trapping it, we tried just showing and getting back, and then we tried just fighting through it,” Monson said.  “We just didn’t have an answer.”

One came to him after the buzzer sounded, though.

“We were going to double him if he came off the on-ball [screen] at the end,” he said, explaining that the plan was to double Akognon if the Titans set a screen for him as they had been doing all game long.  The 49ers played great individual perimeter defense on Thursday night, but Monson wondered if he should have sent more defenders to help.

“In hindsight afterwards, I wish I would’ve come after him.”

But there was more to the loss than just the game-winning shot.  Long Beach senior guard and leading scorer Donovan Morris showed up to the game in a protective boot on his right foot after an injury suffered earlier in the week in practice.  Monson said after the game that recent X-rays came back negative, but Morris was visibly favoring the injury at times.  He had trouble making routine cuts on offense, and moved gingerly on defense – even outright limping between plays.  Morris played 26 minutes – far fewer than his season average – and scored 10 points on 5-13 shooting.

“I didn’t know if he was going to play until right before the game,” said Monson.  “There’s no damage right now, as far as that it’s sore and it’s in a sensitive spot, so we’ve got to limit right now how much he’s running on it. But he obviously was able to fight through it today and it’ll be a day to day situation.”

Morris was able to get by on offense, as his game does not rely on his being able to put the ball on the floor.  Instead, he spotted up and had space created for him by off-ball screens and filling holes in the defense.  The injury took a toll on his long-range shooting, however, as Morris was 0-4 from three.  As was noted last week on this site, the 49ers don’t rely on Morris’ scoring as much as they did last year, but still perform much better when their leading scorer does as well.  Including last night’s game, the 49ers are just 2-7 when Morris has more shot attempts than points.

There are also many positives to take away from the game, as Monson praised the efforts of freshman forward Robinson and his 15 rebounds.  He also added nine points, although Monson admitted that Robinson may have been more effective offensively had he not been so winded.  Robinson shot 3-8 from the field in his 27 minutes.  Several of his rebounds came at key points in the second half.

“That’s what I try to do,” Robinson said.  “I came to this program to help with rebounds.”

The game was played in front of a raucous crowd, and if you weren’t able to attend, I’d direct you toward my live game blog to see some of my thoughts as the action in the stands was going on.  A reported 4,263 showed up to fill the Walter Pyramid thanks to a continued high school ticket program and the return of CSULB students to campus.

With the loss, Long Beach falls to 5-2 in conference yet still remain in first place with a half-game lead over the 5-3 Northridge Matadors.  Pacific, UC Davis and UC Irvine are a full game behind the 49ers at 4-3.  Fullerton follows them at 3-3.

Long Beach travels to face UC Irvine this Saturday.  Last night, the Anteaters defeated a UC Riverside team that beat the 49ers last week.  Irvine won in Riverside, 71-66.