By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE – Neither Kadin Shedrick nor Armaan Franklin had a game to remember Saturday at Notre Dame’s Purcell Pavilion. Three nights later, they had more to smile about, as each made a significant contribution in Virginia’s 67-55 victory over ACC foe Boston College at John Paul Jones Arena.
Shedrick, a 6-foot-11 redshirt sophomore, totaled a career-best 13 points, a team-high eight rebounds, two steals and one blocked shot Tuesday night. Franklin, a 6-foot-4 junior who was 2 for 11 from the floor in UVA’s 69-65 loss to Notre Dame, finished with 12 points and three rebounds against BC. On a night when the Cavaliers made only three 3-pointers, Franklin hit two of them.
“I thought they responded well,” UVA head coach Tony Bennett said, “and that’s a good sign.”
The same was true for his team. The Wahoos (13-9 overall, 7-5 ACC) have yet to lose back-to-back games this season, and, after a rough start, they led for the final 25:31 against the Eagles (9-12, 4-7).
“We like to call these blue-collar games,” Bennett said. “It’s going to be physical, and that was the message right before we went out. I said, ‘Give everything you got defensively. This cannot be a lukewarm defensive game.’ ”
The Hoos weren’t perfect on defense, but “we scrapped and played hard,” Bennett said, “and it held us in there until we got a couple tough baskets, and then most of the night, we made them earn their looks.”
That’s Virginia basketball.
“Passion and unity were our mantras today in terms of how we wanted to play,” Bennett said, and he was pleased on both fronts.
“Our offense isn’t always gonna be there,” senior point guard Kihei Clark said, “so we gotta rely on the defensive end. Our defense will keep us in the game most of the time, hopefully, and then the offense will come on. We know shots will fall. We put in the work. The offense is going to come, but the defense always has to be there and keep us in the game.”
Against Bennett’s trademark Pack Line defense, the Eagles turned the ball over 14 times, and UVA turned those mistakes into 20 points. These Cavaliers rarely shoot well from the outside, and they attempted only seven 3-pointers Tuesday night, their fewest in a game in six years. But they made up for that with a big night at the free-throw line. Led by Clark (10 for 10), Virginia made 26 of 29 foul shots.
Clark led all scorers with 19 points, his high for the season. Power forward Jayden Gardner, who was 7 for 7 from the line, added 17 points.
For the season, only Gardner (14.5 ppg) and Franklin (11.8) are averaging in double figures for Virginia, though Clark (9.8) isn’t far off. To have four players score in double figures is “huge for us,” Bennett said. “You can’t have all the weight on your defense. The offense has to help out, and I thought it was a decent balance today, and to get those extra points … at the line and off turnovers was good.”
