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McCaffery likes Hawkeyes' poise in 2nd half
Dec. 1, 2010 2:34 pm
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Iowa blew an 18-point lead Tuesday night at Wake Forest, then fell behind by 10 points and still had a chance to win the basketball game.
That was a lot for Iowa Coach Fran McCaffery to digest a few minutes after a 76-73 loss. But one area McCaffery chose to address was how the team rallied with poise after a shocking 28-point turnaround in a 11-minute, 44-second span.
“You have to be able to say to yourself, ‘OK, this thing got away from us a little bit, but we've got plenty of time,'” McCaffery said. “You cannot completely panic. We didn't. We got the stops when we needed them. We took the lead. It was a great play on a steal and an and-one by Eric May (to take a late lead).
“The game was in the balance. We executed everything we needed to execute down the stretch.”
Iowa's first-half play on both ends of the court was solid, even impressive at times. Iowa forced 13 Wake Forest turnovers and converted them into 16 points. Iowa (3-4 overall) shot nearly 48 percent from the floor despite hitting only 3-of-11 3-point attempts.
Early in the second half, everything unraveled for the Hawkeyes, who were outscored 25-6 at the outset. But after trailing by 10 points, Iowa worked itself back into the game with better defense and higher-percentage shots. Twice Iowa took the lead late in the game, the last coming on a pair of free throws by Zach McCabe with 2:41 left. Wake Forest freshman J.T. Terrell hit a 25-foot shot with 2.7 seconds left to win the game.
Despite the loss, McCaffery said the team's offensive execution was stronger later in the second half than it was in building its first-half lead.
“You have to be able to execute the play calls down the stretch - out of bounds plays, transition offense, half-court sets, half-court motion ...,” McCaffery said. “Whatever you're running, you have to be able to execute that, and we haven't been doing that. We've been scoring in transition, we've been driving the ball but we executed (Tuesday), and we were able to manage the game and actually took the lead and had two really good looks to win the game.
“From that standpoint I'm really pleased we made some strides. For us to beat good teams, you have to be able to do that.”
Although it was a difficult loss to digest, Iowa's players said they will learn from the defeat.
“Coach said a lot of positives come from this game,” Iowa junior Matt Gatens said. “It's a tough ACC opponent on the road in a tough environment. We've just got to keep our heads up. It's a win that we definitely could have had and should have had. It's tough to let it slip away, but we have to keep our heads up and move forward.”
Iowa's Melsahn Basabe (1) has his shot blocked by Wake Forest's Ty Walker (40) in the second half of Wake Forest's 76-73 win in an NCAA college basketball game in Winston-Salem, N.C., Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2010. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

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