After a poor defensive effort Friday night that ended with
an 84-74 loss to No.14 Creighton, Wisconsin needed a bounce back effort
Saturday against Arkansas to avoid heading into the ACC/Big Ten Challenge in a
tailspin. Although the Badgers continued to struggle en route to a 40-29
halftime deficit, they recovered with their best half of basketball thus far
this season and left Sin City with a 77-70 victory in the third-place game of
the Las Vegas Invitational.
Having struggled mightily against the pressure shown by both
Creighton and Florida, UW was in a tough spot facing a Razorback team that
played the “fastest 40 minutes” style of their head coach, former Missouri head
coach Mike Anderson. With just a day to prepare for the constant pressure
Arkansas would show, the Badgers were clearly slow to adjust, committing 8
first-half turnovers that resulted in 13 Razorback points.
But as ugly as the first twenty minutes were for UW, the
final twenty were a complete reversal. Sparked by two quick three-pointers that
cut the Arkansas lead to just 5 less than two minutes into the half, Wisconsin
erased the Razorback lead with a 16-5 run to finally tie the game with 12:18
left.
“We were frustrated at halftime,” Senior forward Mike
Bruesewitz said of the locker room atmosphere at halftime. “We knew we could
play better. In the second half we took care of the ball better, knocked down
shots and played defense. That’s exactly what we needed to do and that’s
exactly what we talked about in the locker room.”
One of the Badgers who led the charge was freshman Sam
Dekker. Coming into the game averaging 10 points in just over 18 minutes, the
Sheboygan native gave Wisconsin 12 big second-half points en route to a career
and team-high 19 for the game.
Bruesewitz also played a key role in the turnaround. Despite
spending most of the night in foul trouble, the St Paul, Minn native finished
with 11 points and 9 rebounds in his best performance since an injury that left
him out of practice for most of the preseason.
After UW made its initial run, the lead would change hands a
total of 6 times (including ties) before the Badgers finally took control on a
three-point play by Dekker off an explosive back cut and a perfect feed from
senior center Jared Berggren. When the subsequent free throw was made by the
freshman, Wisconsin had a 61-58 lead they would not relinquish over the final
5:56.
“We were hungry,” Bruesewitz added. “We were in the same
position last night with six or seven minutes left and didn’t get it done.
Tonight we did.”
One of the reasons the Badgers were finally able to close
this game out was an improvement at the free throw line. After starting the
game 8-for-19 from the charity stripe, UW finished strong by making 17 of their
final 19 attempts in the second half.
More importantly, however, UW executed in the second half
far better than they had in their previous five periods against major
conference opponents.
“There was nothing said in that locker room at halftime that
wasn’t said before the game,” UW head coach Bo Ryan said. “The guys just
executed better and stuck to our plan.”
Having successfully avoided the possibility of a losing
skid, UW now must turn its attention toward building the type of momentum that
only winning can provide. With Virginia and California set to visit the Kohl
Center this week and a trip to Marquette just a week later, the Badgers need to
continue executing on that game plan in order to build that momentum in one of
the toughest stretches of non-conference play Wisconsin has seen in some time.
-uwbadgers.com contributed to this report
-uwbadgers.com contributed to this report
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