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This ride's over

Georgetown's Otto Porter, left, reacts after scoring against Pitt in the second round of the Big East Tournament at Madison Square Garden. The 14th-ranked Hoyas eliminated the Panthers, 64-52.
Georgetown ousts Pitt in Big East

NEW YORK — Henry Sims had an impressive stat line and that made No. 13 Georgetown very good.

The 6-foot-10 senior center had 20 points, 13 rebounds and five assists to lead the Hoyas to a 64-52 victory over Pittsburgh on Wednesday in the second round of the Big East tournament.

“I thought he was very good today in terms of his effectiveness on the block, his effectiveness as a passer and his decision-making out there,” Hoyas coach John Thompson III said. “We're pretty good when we get that kind of effort out of him, smart effort, when he produces like today.”

Sims, who came in averaging 11.1 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.4 assists, wasn't alone in leading Georgetown's frontline.

Freshman Otto Porter had a season-high 20 points for the Hoyas and finished 7 for 11 from the field — just off Sims'7-of-10 effort.

“I just tried to step up for my team when it comes down to playing hard and things like that,” said Porter, whose previous career-high was 19 points against Marquette in the final game of the regular season.

The fifth-seeded Hoyas (23-7) will play fourth-seeded Cincinnati in the quarterfinals on Thursday at Madison Square Garden. Georgetown lost to eventual champion Connecticut in the second round of last year's Big East tournament.

“When it came to the tournament last year we had an early exit, and me and (fellow senior) Jason (Clark) talked and we didn't want that to happen this year, and I did my best to make sure that didn't happen today,” Sims said.

Ashton Gibbs had 14 points for the 13th-seeded Panthers (17-16), who went through two 8-minute scoring droughts during the game and couldn't recover from Georgetown's 16-2 run to close the first half that gave the Hoyas a 31-23 lead.

“Obviously I thought we got off to a good start. We did some good things,” Pittsburgh coach Jamie Dixon said. “We attacked the zone, did some pretty good things as the game progressed. We didn't do what we needed to do as far as rebounding and that was clearly a deficiency in our area.”

Greg Whittington added 11 points for the Hoyas, who shot 48.7 percent from the field for the game (19 of 39) and finished 22 of 31 from the free throw line compared to the Panthers' 11 of 18. Georgetown finished with a 36-25 rebound advantage.

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