Porterville Recorder

No. 16 Kentucky blows out Louisville

- By GARY B. GRAVES

LEXINGTON, Ky. — Shai Gilgeous-alexander and his Kentucky teammates knew they were capable of a dominant performanc­e. Facing archrival Louisville motivated the No. 16 Wildcats to go out and prove it.

Gilgeous-alexander came off the bench to score a career-high 24 points, including 17 after halftime, PJ Washington added 16 and Kentucky used several runs to blow out rival Louisville 9061 Friday in the annual showdown for Bluegrass supremacy.

Seeking to regroup after last week’s 83-75 loss to unranked UCLA, the Wildcats (10-2) used a 20-6 run to close the first half with a 41-27 lead. Their 24-11 surge over 8:41 in the second helped built a 67-38 lead that eventually reached 32, a gap helped by 57 percent second-half shooting.

Gilgeous-alexander had a lot to do with that, especially inside.

The freshman guard from Canada shot 6 of 10 after the break to finish 9 of 16 from the field and top his previous scoring best of 15 points against Monmouth on Dec. 9. Playing at times with Washington and Quade Green (13 points), Gilgeous-alexander registered five second-half layups alone.

“I knew it would come eventually,” said Gilgeous-alexander, who also had five rebounds and four assists in 33 minutes. “I’ve just been working, and once you work good things will happen. And it happened tonight.”

Washington helped earlier with 10 points down the stretch in the first half for a halftime lead that expanded as Kentucky earned its biggest series win since a 76-46 rout in Lexington during the 1999-2000 season.

The Wildcats’ mix of man and zone defenses meanwhile held Louisville (10-3) to 35 percent shooting, including 3 of 25 from long range. Most impressive to coach John Calipari was doing that after last weekend’s disappoint­ing effort against the Bruins.

“That’s as good as we play,” the coach said. “We played just about as good as we can play, mainly because we finally competed and battled for an entire game.”

Playing its first rivalry game in 16 seasons without coach Rick Pitino, who was fired in October amid a federal bribery investigat­ion of college basketball, the Cardinals faltered after leading for the last time at 19-16.

They were outscored 42-30 in the paint and couldn’t hit from behind the arc, with and without being contested, in having their six-game winning streak stopped. Deng Adel had 13 points.

“We had to try and weather the storm there as much as we could to get to halftime,” Padgett said, “and that’s when they made their run and we just couldn’t overcome it at the end of the day.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JAMES CRISP ?? Kentucky’s Quade Green shoots between Louisville’s Ray Spalding (13) and Anas Mahmoud (14) during the second half Friday in Lexington, Ky. Kentucky won 90-61.
AP PHOTO BY JAMES CRISP Kentucky’s Quade Green shoots between Louisville’s Ray Spalding (13) and Anas Mahmoud (14) during the second half Friday in Lexington, Ky. Kentucky won 90-61.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States