Mistakes of immaturity cost Huskies, coach Lorenzo Romar said. / Drew Sellers, Sportspress Northwest file

Listening to Washington coach Lorenzo Romar Sunday after his team’s latest setback, an 82-70 loss to No. 10 Connecticut (10-1) at Alaska Airlines Arena, it was clear why his Huskies were letting wins slip away.

“I just think we have to mature,” Romar said after the Huskies (6-5) committed 16 turnovers. “Right now we are not mature enough to handle runs from the other team. We are not mature enough to handle the adversity that comes along throughout your season.”

For the opening 13 minutes, the Huskies played their best basketball of the season. They were patient offensively and active defensively, racing to a 31-17 lead with 7:21 left in the first half. They occasionally mixed in a 2-3 zone with Romar’s trademark extended man-to-man and were able to frustrate UConn guards Shabazz Napier and Ryan Boatwright, a backcourt duo that entered the game averaging a combined 26.5 points per game.

UW forward Desmond Simmons made his first appearance of the season after missing the first 10 games following arthroscopic knee surgery. The 6-foot-7 junior provided a spark, scoring a quick five points by knocking in a wide open three and a pair of free throws.

For the first time this season, Alaska Airlines Arena felt like it could shake.

Then in the final eight minutes of the first half, as UW guard C.J. Wilcox later explained, the Huskies let their foot off UConn’s gullet. The East Coast Huskies began pressuring, using a half-court trap that flustered UW’s Andrew Andrews and Nigel Williams-Goss. The West Coast Huskies began committing turnovers, taking wild shots, airmailing passes, allowing cutters to run freely, giving Napier and Boatwright driving lanes.

UConn finished the first half on a 26-8 run to take a 43-39 lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

“We knew they were going to (go on a) run. That was one of our keys on our scout was that they were a team of runs, and when they make a run it’s usually like a 10-point or 13-point run, which is exactly what they did,” said Andrews, who finished with eight points, three assists and three turnovers. “It was something we were prepared for. We just had to do a little bit better executing on offense, executing our passes and just taking care of the ball.”

C.J. Wilcox led UW with 19 points (six of 15 from the field), adding three rebounds to go along with four assists. He cut UConn’s lead to 53-48 about five minutes into the second half and to 68-60 on a layin through traffic with 6:50 left, but the Huskies couldn’t get any closer because they weren’t valuing the ball and couldn’t contain Napier (20 points) and Boatwright (16 points).

The Huskies shot 39 percent in the second half after posting a 48 percent mark in the first. The drop-off, Romar said, was attributed to the 11 second-half turnovers.

“I think it was mostly us who had a lot of unforced turnovers,” Wilcox said. “We haven’t been taking care of the ball the past couple games. Same story tonight. Their defense has something to do with it, but we could have taken care of the ball better.”

Romar intimated the Huskies were struggling more with focus than effort, more with the learning curve that comes from playing freshman Williams-Goss and freshman wing Darin Johnson (13 points, zero rebounds and an assist in 26 minutes), than talent disparity.

And yes, the turnovers don’t help.

“I think the turnover story was maybe the difference in the game,” Romar said. “Credit UConn. They have a lot of quickness out front. They anticipate well, and we didn’t do a very good job of taking care of the basketball. I don’t think that was just the second half. I don’t think all game we did that. That’s been a recurring issue in the last four games.”

“That bit us in the butt,” he said.

Williams-Goss labored for the second straight game. The All-America pick from Findlay Prep spent half of the second half on the bench in foul trouble, save for a little garbage time when a win was out of reach and fans had filed to the exits. In 25 minutes, Williams-Goss shot three-of-10 from the field, made three turnovers and accounted for zero assists.

“He’ll be fine. You have a lot of freshmen that go through (that in a) season,” Romar said. “A lot of time they start out gangbusters, then they go through a lull.  The good ones bounce back. He’ll bounce back.”

The Huskies need to follow suit. They play Mississippi Valley State and Hartford at home this week before beginning Pac-12 play Jan. 2 against Arizona State.

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3 Comments

  1. When Pat Riley coached the Lake Show his mantra was “No rebounds, no rings.” That is a big weakness on this current team and when they have streak shooters it’s a glaring one. They’re well coached on the defensive side but the execution isn’t always there. They do pass well and keep the ball in motion. They might have to go the Doug Moe/Paul Westhead route of focusing on outscoring the other team because rebounding and defense isn’t their forte right now. Hopefully Coach Romar can get that to change at some point during the season.

    • Agreed to a point. I’d go a little farther back in basketball history to when Larry Brown was coaching the Carolina Cougars and Moe was his assistant (the two were inseparable from their NC days).

      The way Brown’s system worked was that it all started on defense, in particular the guards, with forcing turnovers using traps and run-and-jump defense. That would lead to a lot of transition opportunities and points. Offensively, Brown gave his players two seconds to do SOMETHING with the ball, be it drive, shoot or pass it. That meant lots of ball movement with players getting more touches…it also meant going deep on your bench and cutting starters’ minutes because it requires more effort to play. The players ended up buying into it and the Cougars went from 35-49 when Tom Meschery coached them to 57-27 and Coach of the Year honors for Brown.

      Both Moe and Westhead used that system later and Grinnell scores a TON of points with something similar now. Might work at the UW, which is a guard-oriented team, but most coaches are loathe to step away from the tried-and-true.