Cats get back on track, roll past LSU to end 3-game losing streak

Published 4:13 pm Monday, January 25, 2021

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BY KEITH TAYLOR

Kentucky Today

Kentucky ended one streak and started another one Saturday night.

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The Wildcats snapped a three-game slide with an  82-69 win over LSU, giving the Wildcats a shot of much-needed momentum after three losses left Kentucky in a dire need of a victory. It was the Wildcats’ first win since a 76-58 win at Florida on Jan. 9.

Kentucky (5-9, 4-3 Southeastern Conference) made nine of its first 14 field goals, including four three-pointers, setting the tone early for the decisive win.

“We needed to win a game,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “I’m disgusted over the last couple (of games). We needed to win this.”

The Wildcats led from start to finish against the Tigers, who lost for the second straight time. LSU, which lost to Alabama in its last outing, fell to 10-4 overall and 5-3 in the conference.

Kentucky made seven-pointers, including four in the opening half. BJ Boston, Davion Mintz, and Dontaie Allen connected on two shots each from long range.

For the second straight contest, Boston led the Wildcats in scoring with 18 points as four players finished in double figures. Keion Brooks followed Boston with 15 points, followed by Olivier Sarr with 13 and Mintz finished with 11. Brooks just missed a double-double with nine rebounds.

Boston scored eight in a row in the second half after the Tigers narrowed the lead to single digits. The timely production by Boston allowing the Wildcats to stay in the lead and prevent a late collapse similar to last Wednesday’s disappointing 63-62 setback at Georgia.

“The two games that we lost (to Georgia and Auburn), we should have won,” Boston said. “We beat ourselves with turnovers and other teams that helped us lose the game. We came out with the mindset that we were out here to win and play for each other.”

Kentucky did just that against the Tigers. The Wildcats had been averaging 15 turnovers per game, committed just nine against the Tigers, and finished with 15 assists. Calipari said the biggest reason behind his team’s recent struggles has been turnovers and emphasized the importance of taking care of the ball on the chalkboard in the locker room prior to the game.

“(I wrote) let’s have 10-12 turnovers,” he said. “We never have that on the board. We have rebounds, field goal percentage, assists, and now I’m saying, ‘I (just) want 10-12 turnovers.’ … we are just starting to crack those (bad) habits.”

Isaiah Jackson was active for the Wildcats in the post and pulled down 15 rebounds to go along with one blocked shot. Jackson collected 11 defensive rebounds as the Wildcats held a commanding 46-31 edge on the glass.

“He (was) rebounding and got every ball,” Calipari said.

Despite the recent stack of losses, Kentucky freshman Lance Ware said the Wildcats remained focused on the task at hand.

“We still believed that we are still a good team,” Ware said. “Some people may have other beliefs, but the coaching staff, me, all my teammates everybody around us know how hard we work. We still believed that we can (win).”

Calipari was pleased the Wildcats didn’t falter down the stretch going onto Tuesday’s showdown against league-leading Alabama.

“There are a lot of people who don’t want to see us get going because of how we defend and how long we are,” he said. “…I was really aggressive. We had a 9- 10- 11-point lead. I was on guys. … saying look, ‘finish this off.’”

The Wildcats did just that.

Gametracker:  Kentucky at Alabama, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (EST). TV/Radio: ESPN, UK Radio Network.

Keith Taylor is sports editor for Kentucky Today. Reach him at keith.taylor@kentuckytoday.com or Twitter @keithtaylor21.