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Hawkeyes head out of a defeat with some positives
Nick Pugliese
Dec. 30, 2010 7:17 pm
If Next Man In was the theme for Iowa's victory against Missouri in the Insight Bowl, get used to hearing Getting Better as the men's basketball team's mantra in 2010-11.
In the wake of Wednesday night's 87-77 loss to Illinois, you heard disappointment from the Hawkeyes about the outcome of their Big Ten opener. But you also heard words of encouragement from a program that has suffered more than its share of poor performances recently in conference play.
“You know, I thought we kept coming. We kept coming,” Coach Fran McCaffery said after watching the Hawkeyes (7-6, 0-1) fall behind by 19 early in the second half and cut the lead to six with 8:21 remaining. “I mean, we lost to a really good team, and a team that I have a lot of respect for and, hopefully, we have learned from this experience and we'll be better the next time out.”
Matt Gatens, who led Iowa with 21 points, said the defense could have been better against an Illinois team that made 13 of 18 3-pointers, many of them uncontested.
“Coach always says if a team makes over 10 3s, it's going to be tough to beat them,” Gatens said. “We didn't close out the shooters as well as we should have. In the second half, we did a much better job locating them and having a sense of urgency of getting out on them and avoid those open looks. It's nice to see we learned from it, but we can't let that happen in the first place.”
As hot as the 23rd-ranked Fighting Illini (11-3, 1-0) were, McCaffery was even hotter when he called a timeout two minutes into the second half after Illinois outscored Iowa 9-2. This after Bryce Cartwright's bank shot at the buzzer pulled Iowa within 12 at halftime and had the sellout crowd at Carver-Hawkeye Arena buzzing.
“We were right there, even though we didn't play well,” McCaffery said. “And then we started poorly to go down (19) and then can't seem to put it in at the free-throw line, so that was unfortunate.”
The Hawkeyes were 8 of 15 from the free-throw line, but three misses really stung. Eric May missed both shots after being intentionally fouled on a breakaway with Iowa trailing by 8 with 10:46 left. Two minutes later, Devyn Marble's layup cut the lead to six, but the freshman guard missed the free throw after being fouled on the play.
“I feel bad for Eric. He shot a ton of free throws,” McCaffery said. “We have shot more free throws in practice than any other team in America. I guarantee you, and we are drilling them.”
One Hawkeye who wasn't drilling anything Wednesday was freshman forward Melsahn Basabe, who has been ill. He played 12 minutes and had four points and two rebounds.
“I think you could see his energy level is not what it needs to be,” McCaffery said. “He's been sick since the Louisiana Tech game (Dec. 21). I thought we could get some quality minutes out of him. He'll be better. He has not eaten in about five or six days.”
If Next Man In was the theme for Iowa's victory against Missouri in the Insight Bowl, get used to hearing Getting Better as the men's basketball team's mantra in 2010-11.
In the wake of Wednesday night's 87-77 loss to Illinois, you heard disappointment from the Hawkeyes about the outcome of their Big Ten opener. But you also heard words of encouragement from a program that has suffered more than its share of poor performances recently in conference play.
“You know, I thought we kept coming. We kept coming,” Coach Fran McCaffery said after watching the Hawkeyes (7-6, 0-1) fall behind by 19 early in the second half and cut the lead to six with 8:21 remaining. “I mean, we lost to a really good team, and a team that I have a lot of respect for and, hopefully, we have learned from this experience and we'll be better the next time out.”
Matt Gatens, who led Iowa with 21 points, said the defense could have been better against an Illinois team that made 13 of 18 3-pointers, many of them uncontested.
“Coach always says if a team makes over 10 3s, it's going to be tough to beat them,” Gatens said. “We didn't close out the shooters as well as we should have. In the second half, we did a much better job locating them and having a sense of urgency of getting out on them and avoid those open looks. It's nice to see we learned from it, but we can't let that happen in the first place.”
As hot as the 23rd-ranked Fighting Illini (11-3, 1-0) were, McCaffery was even hotter when he called a timeout two minutes into the second half after Illinois outscored Iowa 9-2. This after Bryce Cartwright's bank shot at the buzzer pulled Iowa within 12 at halftime and had the sellout crowd at Carver-Hawkeye Arena buzzing.
“We were right there, even though we didn't play well,” McCaffery said. “And then we started poorly to go down (19) and then can't seem to put it in at the free-throw line, so that was unfortunate.”
The Hawkeyes were 8 of 15 from the free-throw line, but three misses really stung. Eric May missed both shots after being intentionally fouled on a breakaway with Iowa trailing by 8 with 10:46 left. Two minutes later, Devyn Marble's layup cut the lead to six, but the freshman guard missed the free throw after being fouled on the play.
“I feel bad for Eric. He shot a ton of free throws,” McCaffery said. “We have shot more free throws in practice than any other team in America. I guarantee you, and we are drilling them.”
One Hawkeye who wasn't drilling anything Wednesday was freshman forward Melsahn Basabe, who has been ill. He played 12 minutes and had four points and two rebounds.
“I think you could see his energy level is not what it needs to be,” McCaffery said. “He's been sick since the Louisiana Tech game (Dec. 21). I thought we could get some quality minutes out of him. He'll be better. He has not eaten in about five or six days.”
A young fan cheers as a near capacity crowd fills Carver-Hawkeye Arena for Iowa's Big Ten Conference college basketball game against Illinois Wednesday, Dec. 29, 2010 in Iowa City. (Brian Ray/The Gazette)