Looking to rebound from a poor effort at Florida, No. 20/22
Wisconsin (2-1) responded Sunday afternoon at the Kohl Center with a 73-40
victory over Cornell (1-3) in the first of two regional round games in the Las
Vegas Invitational.
Just a few days removed from finding themselves down 9-0
minutes into the game against the Gators, the Badgers avoided a similar deficit
against the Big Red. After allowing a Cornell basket on the opening possession,
UW responded with a 14-0 run over the next 7:27 that effectively ended any
chance of a second straight defeat.
Facing questions about their depth in the face of the
season-ending knee injury to projected starting point guard Josh Gasser, the
Badgers had arguably their most balanced effort in the past two years as three
players reached double figures and a full six had at least six points.
Not one but two Badgers finished the evening with a
double-double. Junior guard Ben Brust was the first to reach that mark,
finishing with a team-high (along with senior forward Jared Berggren) 18 points
and 12 rebounds on 6-of-13 shooting.
“He has a nose for the ball…” UW head coach Bo Ryan said of
Brust. “He is just a gamer. He goes all-out.”
Senior forward Ryan Evans had his 3rd career
double-double, finishing with 12 points and 10 rebounds despite a shaky first
half effort that resulted in just 2 points and 3 rebounds and only 11 minutes
of court time.
“He is definitely capable,” Brust said. “It was good to see
him get his confidence up. Knock down some shots, finish {around the basket}
and pick up some boards.”
Wisconsin imposed its will on the outmatched Cornell team
all night, forcing 18 turnovers and holding the Big Red to just 26% shooting.
“They are a heck of a defensive ball club…” Cornell head
coach Bill Courtney said after the game. “They don’t let you get anything near
the basket.”
Freshman Sam Dekker once again proved a spark off the bench
for UW. The Sheboygan native finished with 7 points and 6 rebounds, highlighted
by a steal that resulted in a one-hand dunk right in front of the Grateful Red.
“I’ve just accepted my role more,” Dekker said. “And I am
getting more comfortable coming off the bench.”
Though Dekker was a highly touted recruit, any freshman at
Wisconsin is forced to go through a learning process, with some able to move
along faster than others. With three solid performances under his belt, Dekker
seems comfortable enough to move along even at this early stage in his college
career.
“The question you should be asking is whether I feel
comfortable with him,” Ryan said. “He’s got things to learn{…} but its early.”
Though Sunday’s win was a much-needed bounce back for the
Badgers, reoccurring issues remain on both ends of the floor. Wisconsin turned
the ball over 16 times against Cornell’s occasional run-and-jump while allowing
a much smaller Big Red team to grab 11 offensive rebounds.
Those turnovers snapped a span of 69 consecutive games in
which UW turned the ball over fewer than 14 teams and were the highest total since
the Badgers turned it over 18 times in an overtime loss to UW-Green Bay in
2009.
“It’s a good thing that it happened early,” Brust said. “We
have time to clean it up before we face some long athletic teams.”
But ahead of a difficult week of non-conference play,
Sunday’s win was a positive improvement over the loss to Florida.
“This was the next 40 minutes,” Ryan said. “35 of it was
pretty good but there were 5 or 6 minutes in there we think we can change.”
With another ranked opponent in Creighton waiting just a few
days away, the Badgers have one more opportunity to improve when they take on
Presbyterian Tuesday night at the Kohl Center.
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