By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
Two weeks after Virginia gave up 98 points to top-ranked Gonzaga, head coach Tony Bennett is encouraged by his team’s progress on defense. He’s also realistic.
No. 22 UVA is unbeaten since its one-sided loss in Fort Worth, Texas. In none of those games, however, have the Cavaliers “played an offensive team like Gonzaga,” Bennett noted Saturday on a Zoom call from Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Mass. “They’re as special as it gets this year.”
Since losing to the Zags, Virginia has defeated ACC foes Notre Dame, Wake Forest and Boston College. “Slowly but surely,” Bennett said, his 12th team at UVA is starting to demonstrate the commitment to defense that has been his program’s trademark.
“I think our energy and our ball pressure has been better,” Bennett said, “and [UVA players are] just covering for each other more.”
This is not unprecedented, fifth-year senior Jay Huff said Saturday after Virginia’s 61-49 win over BC. “I think this has been true of most of the teams that I’ve been a part of. It’s been a growing process.”
Early in the season, Huff said, the Cavaliers often experience “a few bumps. There’s some times where we haven’t quite figured out how to play the defense that we play together yet, just because it’s a rotating cast of characters. It happens every year, but once we figure it out––and I think today was a really good step in that direction––we can really just get to what we know we can do and what has been done traditionally in this program.”
Boston College was coming off a near-upset of No. 21 Duke. The Eagles led most of the way Wednesday night before falling 83-82 at Cameron Indoor Stadium.
Against UVA (7-2, 3-0), points were much harder to come by for BC (2-9, 0-5). The Eagles shot only 30.9 percent from the floor against Virginia’s Pack Line defense.
“I think they didn’t get many easy looks,” Bennett said.
The 7-1 Huff was a formidable last line of defense for Virginia. He blocked a season-high five shots, giving him 123 for his career, and matched his career high with 18 points. He also grabbed eight rebounds.
“His length bothered them,” Bennett said, “and then when he played one-on-one [defense], he was good.”
So were the Cavaliers’ starting guards, 5-9 junior Kihei Clark and 6-3 freshman Reece Beekman, who helped harass BC guard Wynston Tabbs into 0-for-9 shooting from the floor. Tabbs, who came in averaging a team-best 14.6 points per game, finished scoreless.
“I thought the on-ball defense today was the best we’ve had,” said Bennett, who singled out Clark, Beekman and junior forward Trey Murphy III for their efforts in that area.
With 12 minutes to play in the first half, the Hoos led 18-11 and appeared to be in command. Then came a mystifying stretch during which UVA went nearly nine minutes without scoring. The Eagles capitalized with 14 unanswered points, but the Cavaliers closed the half on an 11-1 run to regain control.
As frustrating as their scoring drought might have been for the Hoos, Huff said, they’ve survived similar stretches. “And so we try not to pressure ourselves in that way,” he said.
“We really just don’t want to get down on ourselves when that happens, because we’ve been in that situation before. I’ve been in more 10-seconds-left-in-the-game, down-two or up-two situations that I can count, so it doesn’t really make me too nervous anymore. And the same goes for when a team goes on a run. It just kind of is what it is.”
That poise was apparent in the second half. After BC cut its deficit to five with 10:34 left, Virginia scored 13 of the next 14 points to blow the game open.
