Yuma Sun

No. 5 Kentucky upsets No. 1 Tennessee in top-5 matchup

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LEXINGTON, Ky. — No. 5 Kentucky got the strong start it sought against No. 1 Tennessee and for a moment was blowing out the Volunteers.

Most important was that the Wildcats finished off the Vols on a national stage, just what they needed days after letting one slip away.

PJ Washington scored 23 points, Keldon Johnson added 19 and Kentucky upset Tennessee 86-69 Saturday night to end the Volunteers’ school-record, 19game winning streak.

The Wildcats used a 25-7 surge over a little more than seven minutes for a 62-38 lead, providing a cushion that withstood the Volunteers’ 13-0 spurt soon after that cut the advantage in half. Kentucky maintained a double-digit lead to win the highly anticipate­d matchup of top-five schools.

Kentucky (21-4, 10-2) also avoided a second consecutiv­e SEC loss to stay within reach of co-leader Tennessee (23-2, 11-1), which hadn’t lost since Nov. 23 to No. 2 Kansas.

“It shows everybody that we can still play with great teams in this league and also in the country,” said Washington, who scored

KEN: 21-4 overall, 10-2 SEC TEN: 23-2 overall, 11-1 SEC

Kentucky’s first seven points and finished 9 of 12 from the field for his seventh 20-point effort in the past eight games.

Johnson, meanwhile, made 8 of 14 with three 3-pointers as the Wildcats shot 55 percent. Tyler Herro had 15 points and 13 rebounds as Kentucky beat Tennessee 39-26 on the glass.

It was a big improvemen­t from Tuesday night’s 73-71 home loss to No. 19 LSU, a game decided on a last-second tip-in the Wildcats thought was basket interferen­ce. However, Kentucky played a big role with breakdowns and questionab­le shots that let the Tigers rally and eventually win the game.

The Wildcats rebounded with an effort that was thorough in many phases.

They outscored the Vols 36-20 in the paint and edged them 17-14 in secondchan­ce points. And instead of letting Tennessee expand its one encouragin­g run, Kentucky did what it had to do to keep a double-digit advantage.

“I hit them right after the game with LSU and said, ‘Hey, that was a tough loss,’” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “But you know, we needed it. We need to go back to what we were, and sometimes you’ve got to get knocked in the head to know that.

“So the loss to LSU probably helped us win this game.”

Other than managing to enter the break trailing 3731 and that second-half run, Tennessee wasn’t a factor.

Jordan Bone had 19 points and Admiral Schofield 17 for the Volunteers, who scored the game’s first basket but trailed afterward. Tennessee shot 35 percent in the second half and 41 percent overall.

“Tonight, we weren’t Tennessee tough,” Schofield said. “Kentucky was totally kicking our butt, scoring the ball, defense, everything.”

BIG PICTURE

Tennessee: The Volunteers never got a chance to take the three-game lead they sought against Kentucky and must wait for the March 2 rematch in Knoxville to get revenge. That will require improved shooting and rebounding after a game in which they struggled at both.

“We had some shots early and didn’t make them, and that’s part of it,” coach Rick Barnes said. “But they’re not giving much room to work with.”

Kentucky: The Wildcats needed this win on many ways after letting LSU off the hook. They still have ground to make up on the Volunteers but succeeded not only in getting ahead of Tennessee, but closing out the Vols. Reid Travis had 11 points.

 ??  ?? (5) Kentucky 86 (1) Tennessee 69
(5) Kentucky 86 (1) Tennessee 69

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