Connecticut Post (Sunday)

MEN’S BASKETBALL UConn feels pain in tourney loss

- By Mike Anthony

R. J. Cole was left bloody and dazed. His face smacked the Madison Square Garden court, opening a gash above the eye, and he was stitched up backstage before making an emotional return to the sideline.

There was 4: 30 remaining in Friday’s Big East Tournament semifinal, with UConn leading by three, when Cole departed. By the time he had embraced coach Dan Hurley with tears in his eyes, that famous horn had sounded and the Huskies’ pursuit of a conference championsh­ip had ended with a 59- 56 loss.

These couple of midtown hours added up to a painful experience for UConn. The game was all one could want from a return to this Big East platform, all one could demand from a March night in Manhattan, two hours of gritty- not- pretty basketball that is part of this league’s allure.

It was one of those rock

fights, the term coaches often land on.

It hurts to play them, and it hurts when you don’t win them.

“I think inexperien­ce with the program and inexperien­ce with the team in a postseason game like that showed up in some critical spots,” Hurley said. “I just think as a program we needed to experience the tension and intensity of a high- leverage game in March. We haven't been in one of those in years.”

Hurley added, “They're a hair better than us.” Correct.

Ahabit after games like this is for players, coaches and impartial viewers to talk about one team wanting it more than the other. That’s almost always nonsense, of course, and nothing like that was uttered Friday.

No one wanted this more than UConn, which lost because of rebounding problems throughout and an inability to convert the tying basket as the final seconds ticked away.

No one wanted this more than Creighton, which won because of rebounding success throughout and an ability to piece together a final surge.

One team leaves crushed, one moves on elated. This is how March goes and this is how March feels. This is what being back in the Big East means and it’s something to embrace no matter the possibilit­y for such acute disappoint­ment.

UConn’s chances came apart after Cole went down and went away, gathering himself as his teammates tried to. Creighton finished on a 9- 3 run, with UConn failing not once, not twice, but three times with three good looks on the game’s final possession.

James Bouknight missed a 3- pointer with 14 seconds left. Tyler Polley managed to knock the ball back to Bouknight, who this time missed a scoop in the lane. Isaiah Whaley came up with the offensive rebound and fed Polley for a 3 that was off the mark.

The horn sounded. Ahug was needed. Cole put his head on Hurley’s right shoulder.

Hurley held him and patted him on the head.

“He took a hell of a fall there,” Hurley said of Cole. “He’s a leader, the leader, our point guard. We were a little unsettled without him.”

Injured while attempting to score on a fastbreak, Cole will await word of UConn’s NCAA

Tournament seeding while in concussion protocol. The Selection Show is Sunday. UConn, expected to remain in New York and travel straight to Indiana, will hear its name called for the first time since 2016.

Teams don’t come out of games like Friday’s unscathed, emotionall­y or physically. Come up short and you’re bounced from the Garden and something you’ve focused much of a season on — or in UConn’s case, seven years on — is over in heartbeat. Represent yourself the way the Huskies did in the league throughout the season, however, and you are rewarded.

Emotions emotions that were impossible to suppress Friday night in the locker room will fade with an embrace of the next opportunit­y as the Huskies spend the weekend resting and reflecting. UConn has now been in one more fight, a tough one, a valuable one. The Huskies remain every bit as capable as they were thought to be prior to facing Creighton, a hurdle the Huskies have yet to clear.

They lost to the Bluejays by two in overtime at home in December, a game in which Bouknight scored 40 points, a game prolonged because Cole missed two free throws with 11 seconds remaining in regulation. They lost by eight on the road in January, a game Bouknight missed while recovering from elbow surgery. And they lost again Friday, a late lead evaporatin­g with Cole being treated.

Damien Jefferson quickly tied it at 53 with a 3- pointer. Christian Bishop scored inside to give Creighton the lead. Marcus Zegarowski, the player Cole had been guarding, scored to make it 57- 53. UConn had no answer, or not enough — though not just in this final segment.

Adama Sanogo is a force when he’s not seated, as he was for the final 8: 47 of the first half with foul trouble. Giving up 17 offensive rebounds, and getting outrebound­ed overall by 17, usually won’t cut it. Nor will a 4- for- 14 shooting performanc­e by your best player. Bouknight was hounded for much of the game by Denzel Mahoney, then Jefferson, and he finished with 14 points and eight rebounds in 33 minutes a night after being carried to the locker room with severe cramps. He’ll need to be better in Indiana.

Still, these teams went face to face in a game of swings in style and momentum. For stretches, the basketball moved like a pinball and it looked as much like Hockey East as the Big East. It was beautiful even when it was ugly, and it was there for the taking.

Creighton is just a hair better, as Hurley said.

“I think we wanted it so bad that we might have gotten in our own way,” he said. “And then again you lose your point guard. [ If] they lose Zegarowski for the last four, five minutes, I'm not sure how it looks for them.”

The Big East Tournament was an experience.

Thursday was the perfect reintroduc­tion, a 34- point blowout over DePaul that partnered well with the we’reback fun of being good again and being in New York again.

Friday was a reminder of how little margin for error there is. It was possession- bypossessi­on intensity, the kind of game that can leave players bloody or in tears, or both. For UConn, it hurt. That’s OK. It should. It always will.

The Huskies were a little unfortunat­e, and a little off the mark.

“The pride feels like it's back,” Hurley said. “We have to clean up a couple of things up. And we're excited about next week. We feel like we can play with anybody and, potentiall­y beat anybody.”

 ?? Frank Franklin II / Associated Press ?? UConn’s Isaiah Whaley, second from left, James Bouknight ( 2) and Andre Jackson ( 44) leave the court after Friday’s loss to Creighton.
Frank Franklin II / Associated Press UConn’s Isaiah Whaley, second from left, James Bouknight ( 2) and Andre Jackson ( 44) leave the court after Friday’s loss to Creighton.

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