The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gators hope to solve late-game woes against Dogs

‘Clock-watchers’ are struggling down the stretch, coach says.

- By Mark Long

Florida coach Mike White said he has a team of “clock-watchers,” guys seemingly content to coast through the final minutes of games and hope to win.

It’s the only way he can explain how the Gators have struggled down the stretch in Southeaste­rn Conference play.

Florida (9-7, 1-3) has done little right in the closing min- utes of league play, leading to the program’s worst confer- ence start since 1996.

The Gators were outscored 10-2 in the final 2:51 of a 71-68 loss at No. 24 Mississipp­i State earlier this week and watched third-ranked Tennessee close with a 9-0 run in a 78-67 setback last weekend.

Throw in blowing a 14-point, second-half lead to South Car- olina and squanderin­g most of a 16-point lead at Arkansas, and White’s team appears to lack mental toughness, intes- tinal fortitude and the ability to put anyone away.

“When it’s winning time, you can’t freeze up offensivel­y and defensivel­y,” White said Friday. “We have to do what got us there and do it even better.”

White hopes to see better results beginning today at Georgia (9-7, 1-3).

Florida’s late-game failures have varied with each outing, but there have been enough similariti­es that White had his staff crunch the crunchtime numbers. Turnovers, defensive lapses, poor shot selection, missed 3-pointers, botched layups, all of them showed up repeatedly in the final four minutes of the last four games.

White said opponents have shot 50 percent from 3-point range while the Gators have made 1 of 10 from behind the arc. He added that his team is 2-for-7 shooting layups and dunks.

“Not very good,” he said. “We had some miscommuni­cation issues. We’ve had some uncharacte­ristic stuff happen, both offensivel­y and defensivel­y, that just hasn’t happened (early) in those games.”

Part of the problem has to do with Florida relying on three freshmen, guards Andrew Nembhard and Noah Locke and forward Keyontae Johnson. They are naturally going to have some growing pains.

But White pointed to the play of his upperclass­men as being the bigger culprit. Jalen Hudson is 8-of-38 shooting (21 percent) in SEC play, including 3-of-19 from 3-point range. Fellow senior KeVaughn Allen has been the team’s leading scorer in each of the last three games, but he has been ineffectiv­e late. Allen almost single-handily cost Florida against Tennessee, promoting White to put him on the bench in the final minutes.

Junior Keith Stone was there, too, and has been for most of the last four games.

Stone’s stat line in league play: 0-for-10 shooting, four points, six turnovers, nine rebounds and 10 fouls.

The real head-scratcher for White is who to get the ball to in tight games.

“We just have to play to win and not play not to lose in the clutch and make big plays when they matter,” Nembhard said.

 ?? BRANDON WADE / AP ?? Turnovers, defensive lapses, poor shot selection, missed 3-pointers and botched layups all have plagued Florida coach Mike White’s team late in games.
BRANDON WADE / AP Turnovers, defensive lapses, poor shot selection, missed 3-pointers and botched layups all have plagued Florida coach Mike White’s team late in games.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States