Arizona Daily Wildcat Online
sections
Front Page
News
Opinions
Sports
Go Wild
Live Culture
Police Beat
Datebook
Comics
Crossword
Special Sections
Photo Spreads
Classifieds
The Wildcat
Letter to the Editor
Wildcat Staff
Search
Archives
Job Openings
Advertising Info
Student Media
Arizona Student Media Info
UATV -
Student TV
 
KAMP -
Student Radio
The Desert Yearbook
Daily Wildcat Staff Alumni

ARIZONA 104 - Team GEORGIA 81: Room for improvement


Photo
Chris Coduto/Arizona Daily Wildcat
Sophomore guard Daniel Dillon posts a layup over a Team Georgia defender during the Wildcats' 102-81 victory last night in McKale Center. Dillon and Arizona travel to Hawaii to play in the EA Sports Maui Invitational that starts Monday.
By Shane Bacon
Arizona Daily Wildcat
Thursday, November 17, 2005
Print this

Cats' full-court press takes toll in final preseason warmup

This year's edition of the Arizona men's basketball team might not be used to running the entire game, but the strategy last night in McKale was the old press style: 40 minutes of Hell.

The Wildcats pressed Team Georgia throughout, interchanging lineups constantly to provide fresh legs on the court, and defeated Georgia 104-81 in their final exhibition matchup in front of 14,694.

Yet the team's full-court press took its toll in the second half, as Arizona was outscored 51-47.

Leading scorers

Hassan Adams
No. 21 • Forward Made first 8 shots en route to 18-point performance

Chris Rodgers
No. 13 • Guard Scored a game-high 22 points on 5-of-10 3-point shooting

Marcus Williams
No. 3 • Forward Scored 15 points and grabbed 7 rebounds

"We got a little tired, a little winded. We gave up too many open 3's and layups," said freshman guard J.P. Prince. "I'm sure we'll have a tough practice tomorrow, because (head) coach (Lute Olson) wasn't too pleased."

Olson said that Arizona's style of defense demands full effort from all five players on the court.

"You can't relax, playing the way we're playing," he said. "If one guy isn't doing his job we're going to give up a good shot, and they don't understand that yet. We can't have a letdown by anybody."

Photo
Hassan Adams

Senior guard Chris Rodgers finished with a game-high 22 points, despite missing seven of 10 shots in the first half.

He went 5-of-10 from behind the arc and had seven rebounds, four assists and four steals.

"I'm proud of the rebounds, because points are easy to score and everyone on this team is talented enough to put up points," Rodgers said. "But you really can have an overall game. That's when you know you really helped your team to win."

Arizona's offense started slow, but senior guard Hassan Adams did exactly what a team leader is asked to do, putting together a stretch with 8:28 left in the first half consisting of a 3-pointer, a cross-over dribble for a dunk and a smooth pass to Ivan Radenovic that the junior forward couldn't convert.

Adams finished with 18 points on 8-of-13 shooting, while freshmen Marcus Williams and Prince scored 15 and nine, respectively.

Photo
Chris Rodgers

"We did a good job in the first half, (but) we got lackadaisical in the second half," said senior forward Isaiah Fox, who had eight points and five rebounds. "I think that because the teams wanted to run up and down the court, and because we got up in the first half, we got lackadaisical and didn't do our job."

Olson said that he was most impressed with sophomore guard Daniel Dillon's pressure on the ball.

"We have no problem whatsoever coming with him, because we know he is going to defend," Olson said. "Right now, we can really bring Daniel in a number of positions."

The Wildcats rebounding was questionable overall, with Adams and Radenovic each pulling down just one defensive rebound, but sophomore Bret Brielmaier picked up the slack with a game-high 11 boards in only 14 minutes.

"(Bret) goes for everything," Olson said. "You didn't see Bret stand around. He goes hard, and I've felt over the last couple of weeks that he's been our most effective post guy all around."

Photo
Marcus Williams

"I wish we had another scholarship," Olson added. "He'd have it."

The Wildcats leave Saturday for Lahaina, Hawaii, where they will compete in the season-opening EA Sports Maui Invitational that takes place Monday through Wednesday.

Arizona meets Kansas in Monday's first round.



Write a Letter to the Editor
articles
Game Day Guide
divider
Commentary: Five questions for a talent-laden team
divider
Man on a mission: Senior Adams set to fill leadership role
divider
Remembering 'Polkey': Bracelets, patch help honor center
divider
Commentary: Polkey's death shows life's fragility
divider
Turning up the jets: Wildcats hope to push tempo to max
divider
Underclassmen underdogs: Guards play prominent role this year
divider
A quicker fox: Trimmer Fox a 'changed' man to start final season
divider
On point: Whisonant, Jones to lead Cats' attack
divider
Proving his point: Critics drive Shakur to succeed
divider
Men's Pac-10 preview
divider
Shooting for a larger role: Back from NBA draft, Rodgers looks to start
divider
Men's and women's 2005-06 season schedules
divider
All in the family: Hollingsworth born with basketball in blood
divider
Women's Pac-10 preview
divider
Staff picks
divider
ARIZONA 104 - Team GEORGIA 81: Room for improvement
divider
From the booth: Maui Invite promises a hoops luau
divider
Football notes: Bye week buys recovery time
divider
On the air
divider
Seniors set on extending successful run
divider
Restaurant and Bar Guide
Housing Guide
Search for:
advanced search Archives

NEWS | SPORTS | OPINIONS | GO WILD
CLASSIFIEDS | ARCHIVES | CONTACT US | SEARCH



Webmaster - webmaster@wildcat.arizona.edu
© Copyright 2005 - The Arizona Daily Wildcat - Arizona Student Media