
Wade Payne/Associated Press
The No. 7 Tennessee Volunteers remained atop the SEC on Saturday with a 71-52 blowout win over the No. 4 Kentucky Wildcats at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tennessee.
With the win, Tennessee avenged an 86-69 road loss to Kentucky last month that knocked it from the No. 1 ranking. The Volunteers are now 26-3 on the season and tied for first with LSU in the SEC at 14-2, while the Wildcats are 24-5 overall and 13-3 in the conference.
Junior forward Grant Williams and junior guard Jordan Bone led the way for Tennessee on Saturday, as they finished with 24 points and seven rebounds, and 27 points and three assists, respectively.
Kentucky’s stars didn’t fare nearly as well in what was a miserable shooting performance from the Wildcats. Sophomore forward PJ Washington registered 13 points and three rebounds, and freshman guard Keldon Johnson ended up with seven points and seven rebounds.
Overall, the Wildcats shot just 31.8 percent from the field and 26.3 percent from deep, while the Vols shot 43.5 percent from the field and 36.4 percent from long range.
Kentucky was also thoroughly dominated by Tennessee in the paint with Reid Travis missing his third consecutive game because of a knee sprain.
Tennessee owned a 37-24 lead at halftime that was owed in part to a 16-2 run during a nearly seven-minute stretch. Among the highlights for Tennessee during that run was this monster jam from senior guard Admiral Schofield:
CBS Sports @CBSSports
“THAT’S A MAN’S JAM” https://t.co/59Cpkn2eDn
The 24 points scored by the Wildcats were their fewest in a single half this season.
Their struggles in the first seemed to carry over into the second, as Tennessee was able to extend its lead over the first several minutes. The Volunteers went on a 10-3 run to start the second half and led by as many as 20.
Kentucky simply couldn’t find enough rhythm on offense to hang with Tennessee, and the Wildcats are now in danger of missing out on the regular-season SEC crown.
Grant Williams Deserves National Player of the Year Consideration
Williams often gets lost in the shuffle when it comes to the Naismith College Player of the Year conversation, but after coming up big once again in a huge game Saturday, the narrative needs to change.
The 6’7″, 236-pound big man proved too much for Kentucky to handle in the paint, as he managed to get to the free-throw line on 11 occasions.
That has been one of Williams’ greatest assets this season even if it isn’t an ability that generally draws a ton of praise, as pointed out by Seth Davis of CBS Sports:
Seth Davis @SethDavisHoops
“Grant Williams is so good at drawing fouls.”
I think that’s a compliment.
Williams gets criticized at times because of the notion that he flops and exaggerates contact in order to get to the line, but there is no question that Tennessee is better for whatever he does to draw fouls. Kent Spencer of WHAS said as much Saturday:
Kent Spencer @WHAS11Kent
Credit Grant Williams…. that kid works the officials…. he’s responsible for the officials looking at this play
Williams is also a quality rebounder, and he showed during the win over Kentucky that he can do more than the typical big man. His smooth passing was also on display, especially when he found Jordan Bowden for an alley-oop that had whipped Volunteers fans into a frenzy.
Grant Ramey of 247Sports pointed out that Williams’ pass may have elicited the loudest reaction to ever emanate from Thompson-Boling Arena:
@GrantRamey @GrantRamey
Grant Williams throws an oop to Jordan Bowden and I’m not sure I’ve ever heard this building get that loud.
Tennessee 34, Kentucky 20 (1:36)
As the emotional and statistical leader of one of the top teams in college basketball, Williams should be mentioned in the same breath as players like the Duke freshman combo of Zion Williamson and RJ Barrett or Marquette’s Markus Howard more often.
Williams has the type of profile to look for in the College Player of the Year, as he was named SEC Player of the Year last year, although he doesn’t have the benefit of being viewed as a blue-chip prospect when he entered the college ranks.
If Williams can secure another SEC Player of the Year award this season as expected, he will become the first player to do it in back-to-back years in nearly 25 years, per Matt Norlander of CBS Sports:
Matt Norlander @MattNorlander
Grant Williams probably locking up SEC Player of the Year thanks to this performance today. He’ll become the first back-to-back winner of the award since Corliss Williamson in ‘94 and ’95.
Williams was lightly recruited by power-conference schools, and there was almost no hype surrounding him when he came to Tennessee unlike players like Williamson and Barrett this year.
If anything, Williams deserves some added credit for overcoming that stigma and developing into one of college basketball’s best players.
Williams also showed great resilience against Kentucky on Saturday. In the first meeting between the teams this season, Williams only attempted four shots from the field and didn’t do enough to keep his team in the lead.
He did more than enough Saturday, and he is a big reason why the Vols control their own destiny when it comes to winning a share of the SEC title.
What’s Next?
Tennessee will host the Mississippi State Bulldogs on Tuesday before closing out its regular-season slate on March 9 against the Auburn Tigers on the road.
Meanwhile, Kentucky will face the Ole Miss Rebels away from home Tuesday, and then host the Florida Gators in its final game of the regular season.
This article will be updated to provide more information soon.
Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.
from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2SFfuc2
via IFTTT