The Arizona Republic

Duke finding way; Kansas crumbles

- Scott Gleeson

As the Big 12/SEC Challenge kicked off Saturday, it gave plenty of teams great opportunit­ies to bolster their NCAA Tournament profiles – a rare opportunit­y in late January – without hurting their conference standings. Florida was a big winner in this category, picking up a Quadrant 1 (top-25 home, top-75 road) win over West Virginia to enhance its tourney rèsumè.

As the season nears the pivotal stretch in February, college basketball teams are starting to find their identity against top-tier competitio­n.

Duke is an interestin­g case in that the Blue Devils had slipped to .500 and were struggling a week ago while they had taken significan­t time off around the holiday with game postponeme­nts. But their demolition of Clemson was evidence that coach Mike Krzyzewski can get this team ready to turn into a contender next month.

All the winners and losers from Saturday’s action.

Winners

Duke: The Blue Devils (7-5, 5-3) were drifting in the wrong direction after three consecutiv­e losses that put them at .500 and in serious jeopardy of missing the NCAA Tournament.

But back-to-back victories, highlighte­d by Saturday’s 70-53 win over Clemson, has gotten this Duke team back on track. Saturday’s win was a collaborat­ive effort, but Matthew Hurt continues to be the go-to guy for Krzyzewski, averaging over 19 points a game.

Baylor: The Bears (16-0, 8-0) remained undefeated by dispatchin­g Auburn 84-72. Baylor has gone deeper into a season without a loss only once – a 17-0 start in 2011-12. Coach Scott Drew has a team that can fall into offensive lulls now and again, but the defense makes up for it to spearhead big runs.

The Bears lead the nation in defensive efficiency, per Ken Pomeroy’s statistica­l analysis, showed.

Florida: The Gators (10-4, 6-3) defeated West Virginia 85-80 in the Big 12-SEC Challenge to pick up a big profile-boosting non-conference victory. Florida has won four in a row and needed this win to vault out of the NCAA Tournament bubble picture. Saturday’s outcome moves the Gators from a projected No. 9 seed to a safer range of No. 7 or No. 8.

Texas Tech: The Red Raiders (12-5, 4-4) came back to escape LSU in a 76-71 decision, surviving 29 points from the Tigers’ Ja’Vonte Smart.

Texas Tech was win-hungry, after losing to West Virginia and Baylor in backto-back games and having two games postponed due to COVID-19. Winning against an SEC foe was necessary for NCAA Tournament résumé purposes, especially when the grueling Big 12 slate offers few breaks.

Virginia Tech: The Hokies (13-3, 7-2) showed their mettle against the top team in the ACC, holding off cold-shooting Virginia 65-51. Virginia Tech was propelled by Keve Aluma’s 29 points and 10 rebounds. Most notably, the Hokies controlled the tempo against the highly-discipline­d Cavaliers – which is not a feat many opponents accomplish.

Losers

and

it

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Kansas: The Jayhawks (11-6, 5-4) looked ugly in a sloppy 80-61 loss to Tennessee for their Big 12/SEC Challenge clash.

Coach Bill Self ’s team struggles to compete when it’s not shooting the ball well (6-for-24 from three against Tennessee), but in this loss Kansas got manhandled on the glass, getting outrebound­ed 38-23. Those second-chance points alone were the difference-maker. This Kansas team has lost four of five and is simply getting out-hustled. The only good news? The Jayhawks’ January is over.

Florida State: The Seminoles (10-3, 6-2) fell to Georgia Tech 76-65 and had their five-game winning streak snapped to fall out of first place in the ACC.

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