Analysis: No. 25 BYU’s offensive versatility on full display in 77-56 rout of visiting West Virginia

Mountaineers took away Cougars’ 3-point shooting, so Fouss Traore went to work inside to flip the script

For about 17 minutes on Saturday night, the West Virginia Mountaineers were showing themselves, and every other team in the Big 12, how to slow down the well-oiled machine known as the BYU basketball offense.

The visitors were doing it so well in front of 17,978 at the sold-out Marriott Center that they had a 4-point lead and were causing a rather uneasy, and unfamiliar, feeling to sweep through the crowd.

Then it was as if BYU coach Kevin Young flipped a switch, went to Plan B, and all was right again in Cougarville. The No. 25 Cougars went inside to senior Fouss Traore, who would finish with a double-double — 20 points and 10 rebounds — and WVU had no answer for the 6-foot-6 muscle man.

BYU kept it rolling in the second half, scoring 52 points after intermission, and ended up with a 77-56 conquest of WVU to stay tied for fourth place in the Big 12 standings with Iowa State.

The Cougars (21-8, 12-6) and Cyclones (22-7, 12-6) — who pounded Arizona on Saturday night — will square off Tuesday in a huge showdown in Ames, Iowa.

The No. 4 seed, and the double bye in the Big 12 tournament that comes with it, could be on the line, although BYU still has to take care of business a week from Saturday at home against rival Utah.

“That was the ultimate tale of two halves for us,” Young said.

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