Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Blowout loss is worst performanc­e of season for MU

- Ben Steele

HARTFORD, Conn. – On Monday, the Marquette men's basketball team entered the top 10 of both the Associated Press and USA Today coaches polls for the first time since the 2018-19 season.

On Tuesday, the Golden Eagles had their worst performanc­e of the season.

Connecticu­t jumped on MU early and didn't let up while cruising to an 87-72 victory in front of 15,564 fired-up fans at the XL Center.

The Golden Eagles (19-6, 11-3 Big East) fell from a tie with Xavier atop the conference standings. The No. 21 Huskies (19-6, 8-6) avenged their 82-76 loss on Jan. 11 at Fiserv Forum. MU's five previous losses had come by five points or fewer.

“Not a lot of teams come in here and win tonight the way that UConn was,” MU head coach Shaka Smart said. “In my opinion, they played just like they were playing when they were 14-0 and No. 2 in the country.

“On our side we didn't do enough allaround – offensively, defensivel­y – to stand up and counteract them.”

A hot start from Hawkins, triple-double from Newton

It wasn't MU's night from the start. On its first defensive possession, the Golden Eagles played tight defense but the Huskies' Jordan Hawkins drained a three-pointer before the shot clock expired. By the time Connecticu­t's Andre Jackson threw down an alley-oop dunk for a 7-2 lead, the crowd was juiced up and the home team was locked in.

The Huskies pushed the advantage to 17-4 and Smart called a timeout. But that didn't settle down the Golden Eagles and they soon were staring down a 32-12 deficit and the game was essentiall­y over.

“I think UConn was certainly the aggressor,” Smart said. “Any time that you beat a team at your place and then you got to go back to their place, you got to be ready for them to be very, very hungry for payback.”

Nothing much went right for MU. Kam Jones and Oso Ighodaro each picked up two early fouls. Connecticu­t didn't seem to be missing and when the Huskies did they were seemingly grabbing the offensive board and putting it back in.

Hawkins finished with 20 points and Tristen Newton notched his second triple-double of the season for UConn with 12 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds.

Ighodaro neutralize­d and MU has just seven assists

Ighodaro had just three points, one rebound and one assist in 24 minutes.

“Brute force,” Smart said of how the Huskies neutralize­d one of MU's top players. “In this league, I take my hat of to the officials because it is hard to officiate this league.”

The Golden Eagles' offense was completely out of sorts, finishing with a season-low seven assists. They had nine assists in losses against Mississipp­i State and Providence.

Meanwhile, the Huskies had things rolling so much that Nahiem Alleyne banked in a half-court shot right before halftime for a 46-29 lead.

“Defensivel­y they did a good job changing up pick-and-roll coverages based off of personnel,” Smart said.

“They were aggressive against Kam Jones. They tried not to get into too much help on Tyler Kolek.”

Kolek led MU with 17 points.

Sanogo and Clingan too big for Marquette’s frontcourt

The Huskies' size was too much for the Golden Eagles, with 6-foot-9 behemoth Adama Sanogo and 7-2 freshman Donovan Clingan.

Connecticu­t had 21 offensive rebounds, including seven from Clingan, and scored 27 second-chance points.

“It's hard to battle with guys that are that size,” MU's 6-foot-11 freshman Ben Gold said. “I was just trying to get lower than them.”

Gold provided MU's only silver lining in the first half with 10 points in six minutes. He only scored two points in the second half, but after a strong defensive performanc­e in MU's previous game against Butler, the New Zealand native is adapting to college basketball.

“It's just stacking consecutiv­e days on top of each other,” Gold said.

MU also got back 5-11 freshman guard Sean Jones, who sat out three games with a right wrist injury. He was attacking the basket and tied a season high with 11 points.

Golden Eagles will look to bounce back

After flying high with their lofty rankings, the Golden Eagles crashed hard.

“The rankings mean nothing,” Smart said. “It's amazing the disparity, no disrespect to anyone in here, to what the rankings mean to media and fans in the middle of a season and what it means to players and coaches.

“It doesn't mean anything. UConn was No. 2. We're No. 10. Now we're not going to be No. 10. So, who cares? They're a really good team on their home floor.

“Our guys confidence? To me, confidence comes from lived experience. And now we've got 25 games worth of that. To be one of the younger teams in this league, I think our guys have stepped forward and grown a great deal. But there's no reason you should walk out of here with your head down after losing to UConn. Because they played at the level they were playing at when they were No. 2 in the country.”

MU will face Georgetown on Saturday in Washington before a key rematch Xavier on Feb. 15 at Fiserv Forum.

 ?? JESSICA HILL / AP ?? Marquette guard Stevie Mitchell puts up a shot underneath the basket against UConn guard Jordan Hawkins during the first half Tuesday night.
JESSICA HILL / AP Marquette guard Stevie Mitchell puts up a shot underneath the basket against UConn guard Jordan Hawkins during the first half Tuesday night.

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