Daily Press

Cavaliers shake out of slump

UVA moves into a tie for second

- By Nathan Warters

A return to John Paul Jones Arena seemed to cure what ailed No. 13 Virginia.

Following a road swing that resulted in back-to-back losses, the Cavaliers found some offensive success and played their usual stingy defense Tuesday night in a 64-57 victory over a hungry Clemson team seeking a big win to pad its NCAA Tournament résumé.

It was hardly a flawless performanc­e, but UVA found an edge on defense and on the boards, and the Cavaliers shook a recent shooting slump in making 41% of their field-goal attempts.

“It was far from perfect, but it was what we needed, and we tried to move hard and work hard offensivel­y and just be true to who we are,” Cavaliers coach Tony Bennett said.

The Cavaliers (22-6, 14-5), who improved to 14-1 at home this season, outrebound­ed the Tigers 38-32 and forced 11 turnovers (10 steals).

UVA moved into a tie with Miami for second place in the ACC and clinched a top-four seed for the upcoming conference tournament — which comes with a double bye and a direct line to next Thursday’s quarterfin­als.

The Cavaliers could wrap up the second seed in the tournament with a home win over Louisville on Saturday in the regular-season

finale and a Pittsburgh win over Miami.

Freshmen Isaac McKneely (12 points) and Ryan Dunn (10 points, five rebounds) came off the bench to give UVA a spark. They were two of four Cavaliers who scored in double figures along with senior forward Jayden Gardner (12 points, nine rebounds) and senior guard Armaan Franklin (12 points).

UVA’s bench outscored Clemson’s 24-7.

“I thought their two freshmen off the bench were very big,

and that was the difference in the game,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said.

Cavaliers guard Reece Beekman filled up the box score with seven points, eight assists, one turnover, four steals, two blocks and three rebounds.

Bennett said the offense looked better after three straight sub-40% shooting games, including a 39.7% showing in a loss at North Carolina on Saturday.

“A little better, and we’ll take it. We need it all,” Bennett said. “Hopefully, we’ll keep improving and keep getting the right kinds of shots.”

On Saturday, Bennett said he was pleased with the defensive effort his team showed in the second half of the loss to the Tar Heels. That intensity carried over into their game against Clemson in a big way, McKneely said.

“The pack-line defense is meant to be together, and I thought we played together on the defensive end tonight, and that’s the reason we came out with the win, in my opinion,” McKneely said.

Clemson (21-9, 13-6) scored more than 90 points in three of its previous four games, but couldn’t seem to get untracked against UVA’s stifling defense. Junior center P.J. Hall scored 19 points and grabbed nine rebounds for the Tigers, and senior forward Hunter Tyson had 17 points and nine boards.

“I thought both teams played exceptiona­lly hard,” Brownell said. “They played a little better than we did. They are very good defensivel­y, and they’re hard to get into a good rhythm against.”

Virginia’s biggest lead was 14 near the midway point of the second half, but Clemson clawed back to get to within four with 31 seconds remaining. UVA point guard Kihei Clark made 3 of 4 free throws in the final half-minute, and McKneely knocked down two foul shots with three seconds remaining to help the Cavaliers put it away.

Virginia held a moment of silence before the game to honor former Cavaliers basketball coach and athletic director Terry Holland, who died on Sunday.

 ?? MIKE KROPF/AP ?? Virginia’s Jayden Gardner (1) celebrates during the second half of Tuesday night’s game against Clemson. Gardner finished with 12 points and nine rebounds.
MIKE KROPF/AP Virginia’s Jayden Gardner (1) celebrates during the second half of Tuesday night’s game against Clemson. Gardner finished with 12 points and nine rebounds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States