BOISE, Idaho (AP) — UAB could be ready for another deep run in the NCAA tournament thanks to its frenetic defense.
Marvett McDonald had 21 points and hit five 3-pointers, and 11th-seeded Alabama-Birmingham used its stingy defense to pull off another upset, knocking off Louisiana State 82-68 Thursday night in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
UAB (22-10) reached the round of 16 last year after beating Washington and top-seeded Kentucky, and the Blazers seem to have that same kind of confidence after taking out the Chicago Regional’s sixth seed.
Next up for UAB is third-seeded Arizona, which had trouble with No. 14 Utah State before pulling away in the second half for a 66-53 victory.
LSU (20-10) got into the NCAA tournament with an eight-game winning streak and a one-point overtime loss to Kentucky in the SEC title game, but the Tigers were no match for UAB’s in-your-face defense.
LSU seemed to press once it fell behind and didn’t find a rhythm offensively until it was too late, ending its first trip to the NCAA tournament since 2003 in disappointment.
UAB’s attacking defense gave the Tigers fits from the start.
Using a seemingly endless bench–all 12 players saw action in the first half–the Blazers pressed the length of the floor and trapped in halfcourt sets, the Blazers hounded LSU into mistakes and disrupted the flow of its offense. The Tigers had 21 turnovers, 12 in the first half, that led to 20 points, and had trouble controlling the ball even when UAB backed off, dribbling the ball off their feet out of bounds several times.
Afraid of having the ball swiped away, the Tigers had trouble getting the shots they wanted, settling for long 3-pointers and forcing up shots in the lane. LSU shot just 35 percent and made just 6 of 31 3-pointers.Brandon Bass, the SEC’s player of the year, led LSU with 25 points and 12 rebounds, but was the only player to hit more than half his shots (8-for-10). Darrel Mitchell, LSU’s second-leading scorer at 13.5 points per game, had two points on 1-of-14 shooting and missed all nine of his attempts from long range.
UAB’s defense set up its quick-hit offense, leading to plenty of fast-break chances, spot-up 3-pointers and open looks before the Tigers were fully setup.
The Blazers led by as much as 14 in the first half, taking control with 12-2 run midway through that put them up 26-15. UAB held LSU to 10-of-31 shooting in the first half for a 41-29 lead, and it only got worse for the Tigers to start the second.
LSU started off with–surprise!–a turnover and fell behind 59-34 after UAB opened with an 18-5 run in the first 6 minutes. LSU made a late run to cut UAB’s lead to 75-66 with just over a minute left, but didn’t have enough time to come all the way back.
Forward Glen Davis
“We did not deal with (UAB’s) defensive pressure well. And as you can see we went out with a bad taste in our mouth.
“They just got up on us and we just have got to show more character. We didn’t come out there and punch them back. They punched us and we just didn’t punch back.”
Guard Darrel Mitchell
“It’s not pressure we haven’t seen before it’s just a lot of quickness teams in the SEC didn’t show as much of.”
LSU Coach John Brady
“It’s disappointing for me, for our players, that we didn’t really show what kind of team we are. That’s the most disappointing thing for me, for our players. Our team has played extremely well the last month or so. It’s disappointing for (the players) and our coaches that our team didn’t play as well as we have, or really show what we are.”
“The loss doesn’t take away from what we’ve done this season. We won 20 games. We won the West in the SEC, 14-of-17 down the stretch. That’s why tonight was a little disappointing for us, to not show the kind of team we really are.”