The Denver Post

Shorthande­d Rams drop 5th straight

- By Nathan Wright

Colorado State was even more shorthande­d than usual Saturday evening against Utah State and that did nothing to help the Rams get their season back on track.

Down two more players this weekend — Jalen Lake with a concussion and Tavi Jackson with an illness, leaving the team with only seven available scholarshi­p players — the Rams couldn’t keep up with the hot- shooting Aggies in the second half and eventually lost, 88- 79, at Moby Arena.

With the loss, the Rams dropped to 10- 14 overall and 2- 9 in the Mountain West Conference. They have lost five games in a row and 10 of their last 12.

“Obviously, you play every game to win,” CSU head coach Niko Medved said. “That was our mindset. You try to give yourself an opportunit­y. We knew going into it we were going to be a little shorthande­d, we’d have some really difficult matchups that way.”

CSU only trailed by one at halftime, but that small deficit grew into a large one in a matter of minutes at the start of the second half as the Aggies showed why they are one of the best 3- point shooting teams in the country.

After making 6- of- 18 from long range in the first half, the Aggies lit up the Rams from beyond the arc even more in the second, making 12- of- 21 3- pointers. Despite shooting 70.4% from the field in the final 20 minutes itself, CSU somehow could not keep up.

The Aggies went ahead by as many as 14 points in the second half, taking a 7460 lead with 6: 18 remaining.

Behind some hot shooting from Isaiah Stevens and John Tonje, the Rams, as they have a few times during their ongoing losing streak, made a late run.

A deep 3 by Tonje cut the Utah State lead to six points at 83- 77 with 53 seconds remaining. That would be as close as the Rams would get, with free throws aiding the Aggies’ final- minute edge.

Stevens led CSU with 25 points, 21 coming in the second half.

The Rams shot 55% from the field in the game but were only 3- of- 17 from 3- point range. Utah State shot 51%, but 18 of their 29 field goals were 3- pointers.

Many times, the Rams felt like they were trading 2s for 3s and couldn’t keep up with the Aggies’ pace.

“Most of the guys from their team shot a high percentage from there,” Stevens said. “Obviously, wish we would have ran them off the 3 a little bit better. Had good vision on a lot of these guys on the run- around, but they took them and made them tonight.”

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