Hartford Courant

Getting their 2nd wind

Clingan a not-so-gentle giant in monster 2nd half Huskies come alive after halftime, race past Xavier to advance to semifinals

- Dom Amore By Joe Arruda

NEW YORK — There are multiple sides to most great, or potentiall­y great players, and so it is with Donovan Clingan. There’s the happy-go-lucky college kid from Bristol who’s living the dream at Uconn and loving it, who is taller than everyone around him and suitably goofy.

“He’s a gentle giant,” Dan Hurley said, going back to a theme he introduced before this season had even begun. “He’s the Jolly Green Giant. Sometimes, he’s got to get that intensity level up, get that nastiness. He’s such a sweetheart of a guy.”

This is the side, at times like this, Uconn doesn’t care to see. No, they like Clingan when he’s angry.

Most of the Huskies came out a little flat against Xavier in the Big East quarterfin­al Thursday.

Maybe Xavier, having played and won the day before, was warmed up and had momentum. Maybe Xavier, facing the end of its season, was fighting a little harder than Uconn anticipate­d.

Or maybe it was just a noon game and the coffee hadn’t kicked in. But Clingan was more lethargic than a 7-foot-2 center who’s projected to go in the first round of the NBA draft should be on a big stage with scouts everywhere. He missed a point-blank layup on

NEW YORK — The Uconn men’s basketball team loosened up after it went into the Madison Square Garden locker room at halftime with a slim, one-point lead over Xavier in Thursday’s Big East Tournament quarterfin­al.

Shooting just 40.6% from the field and leading for only three and a half minutes, coach Dan Hurley urged for the intensity level to rise and the top-seeded Huskies obliged, sprinting away for an 87-60 win.

Uconn held the Musketeers to just 28.1% shooting from the field in the second half and was able to get into a flow on offense, where the team shot 78.6% after the break — including 15-straight makes to end the game.

“Off stops is their time to play. It’s an opportunit­y to be aggressive and just look to play in the ball-screen game or just go make plays for each other, get lost in offense,” Hurley said of his team, which had 29 assists on 34 made field goals. “When we’re getting the stops like that and we’re getting transition opportunit­ies and with the way we execute offense in the half court… Yeah, we’re tough to guard when we get rolling.”

Uconn had six players finish in double-figure scoring, with Donovan Clingan and Tristen Newton each leading the way with 13. Alex Karaban, Cam Spencer and Samson Johnson each scored 12 and Stephon Castle added 10.

Uconn’s final field goal percentage (58.3%) and its 29 assists are each new program records in Big East Tournament games.

the first possession, turned it over on the third possession. The Huskies were down 10-2 when Clingan checked out of the game for some self-talk.

“It was all a mental thing to me,” Clingan said. “I sat on the bench when I first came out, at the 17-minute mark, and I just told myself, ‘Wake up.' “

Uconn's sheer supremacy asserted itself and the Huskies scrambled back to take a one-point lead, though Clingan was 1 for 3 in the half, and the team outscored by six while he was on the floor. Second half ? The Jolly Green Giant was gone, and the lean, mean monster was loose, transforme­d starting with a block on Xavier's first possession.

“Everybody was just telling me, ‘You're not playing like yourself,'” Clingan said after the Huskies' 87-60 victory. “‘You've got to go out there, play mean, play aggressive, step into dunks and tear the rim off. Block shots. Be the aggressive player you've been.' That block got me going, got

some momentum and got my confidence up.”

Clingan was 5-for-5 in the second half, scored 11 straight points, outscoring Xavier 11-4 in a 3-minute stretch that helped Uconn blow the game open. He finished with 13 points, seven rebounds, four assists and two blocks. This was as on-point as a center can be for 20 minutes.

What, or who, gets to Clingan when it's time to change from Jolly Green Giant into the Incredible Hulk? Sometimes it's Hurley, sometimes it's the assistant coaches, sometimes it's the other players.

“I do it quickly because he's an enormous human being,” Hurley said. “And you just never know how a giant will respond. He's so hard on himself, he's such a perfection­ist, you say it quickly and he's going to respond always for you.

You don't have to ride him and you don't have to prompt him too long.”

Said Cam Spencer: “We have a great relationsh­ip with Donovan. If you have to get on him, he takes coaching. He hears things well from his teammates.”

But Clingan is best served, and at his best,

when he pushes his own buttons and, to his credit, he's willing to do it.

“He always holds himself accountabl­e,” Alex Karaban said. “He's always telling us, ‘I've got to be better, I've got to do this or that.' He opened up and he told us he was going to play better and we appreciate that. We know he's capable of so much more than he did at the beginning and what he did to get himself going was really special and it shows why he's one of the best big men in the country.”

The beauty of this

Uconn team, the reason it is 29-3, is that on most days or nights it can afford a sluggish half from one of its star players and remain in control. This little taleof-two-halves, 27-point victory over a decent

Xavier team indicates that even now, the margin of error can be pretty wide. The Huskies' 58.3 percent shooting in the second half, the 29 assists on 35 field goals, show a team with no apparent weakness. All the offense was actually ignited by the defense, where Clingan played the dominant role.

On a day when comparison­s were in the air between last year's national champions to this year's team on a mission to go back-to-back, the Clingan-samson Johnson tandem in the middle started to look more like the Adama Sanogo-clingan tandem that gave the Huskies too much for opponents to handle a year ago.

Rick Pitino and St. John's, a team on the

NCAA bubble going into Friday's semifinal game, will be a bear for Uconn in a third meeting. It just feels as though one of the few things that can spoil this weekend for the Huskies is for their gentle giant to raise his head at the wrong time, and let a desperate team make off with the Big East tournament.

Oh, yes the Huskies like Donovan Clingan when he's angry.

“It's win or go home,” Clingan said. “The season is on the line. This is everything. This is what we worked all year for. In my head, I just realize, stop worrying about what happened in the past, worry about the future. We know what our goal is. We've got to play at our highest level.”

 ?? SARAH STIER/GETTY ?? Tristen Newton, left, high-fives Stephon Castle in the second half against Xavier during the quarterfin­als of the Big East Tournament on Thursday at Madison Square Garden in New York. The Huskies won 87-60.
SARAH STIER/GETTY Tristen Newton, left, high-fives Stephon Castle in the second half against Xavier during the quarterfin­als of the Big East Tournament on Thursday at Madison Square Garden in New York. The Huskies won 87-60.
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 ?? SARAH STIER/GETTY ?? Uconn’s Donovan Clingan celebrates in the second half against Xavier on Thursday in New York.
SARAH STIER/GETTY Uconn’s Donovan Clingan celebrates in the second half against Xavier on Thursday in New York.

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