By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE – Crowds for men’s basketball games at John Paul Jones Arena this season have been smaller and less raucous than in years past, in part because of the COVID-19 protocols in place. Virginia fans turned out in force Saturday night, however, and they had plenty to cheer.
Against Miami, one of the ACC’s upper-tier teams, UVA took the lead for good on a 3-pointer by guard Armaan Franklin with 13:33 left in the first half. Franklin, a transfer from Indiana, finished with a game-high 22 points and added three rebounds, four assists and four steals in the Cavaliers’ 71-58 victory.
“I thought this was a very fine performance from him, which I was grateful for,” UVA head coach Tony Bennett said.
Virginia (14-9 overall, 8-5 ACC) led by 21 points when, with 1:35 to play, Bennett substituted for Franklin, Kihei Clark, Reece Beekman, Jayden Gardner and Kadin Shedrick. They left to a standing ovation from the crowd of 14,089, the second-largest at JPJ this season.
Concession stands at the arena, which were closed for the Wahoos’ previous two home games, were open again Saturday night. That added to the festive atmosphere.
“I think when you’re hydrated and you’re nourished you can go a little harder and yell a little more,” Bennett said, smiling. “So I think that the concession stands opening up allowed the sugar rush, the caffeine burst, all that stuff. But, no, the crowd was great tonight. It was good to see that.”
Franklin said: “It’s always a boost when the crowd is going like that and can get you going on runs. They were a big help today.”
For the first time since early last month, the Wahoos have posted back-to-back wins. They defeated Boston College 67-55 at JPJ on Tuesday night.
“I think we’ve slowly been improving,” Bennett said, “and sometimes in that improvement … we’ll take a step back here and there, but slowly there’s been improvement in terms of that, and the experience of more games and guys playing together, I think, has helped. But that’s what you’re always chasing: chasing quality, chasing improvement. I think guys are a little more settled in and understand what it’s going to take and how you have to play.”
Virginia turned the ball over four times in the first five minutes and fell behind 10-7. But Franklin responded with seven straight points, and the Cavaliers rarely stumbled the rest of the way. The 58 points were a season low for Miami (16-7, 8-4).
“I thought we established some real quality basketball on both ends, and guys worked,” Bennett said.
The Hurricanes have supremely gifted perimeter players in Kameron McGusty, Charlie Moore and Isaiah Wong, and their one-on-one skills challenged Virginia’s Pack Line defense.
“You could see when we were just off a little bit or made a little breakdown, they could just create their own offense,” Bennett said. “So they tested us, but I thought our guys stayed intent on what they needed to do.”
Miami missed its first 10 shots from 3-point range and finished 4 for 17 from beyond the arc. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, shot a season-high 60 percent from the floor, and they were 8 for 15 on 3-pointers. They handed out 23 assists, also a season high.
“I feel like today was a good day for us, just as a team,” said Beekman, who had a game-high 10 assists and also contributed nine points, two rebounds, two steals and one blocked shot. “I feel like we all were on the same page, we were all clicking. So I feel like when we’re all together and just as one team, we’re hard to beat, and we showed that today.”
Clark, the Cavaliers’ most experienced player, sank three 3-pointers and also had three assists and three steals. Power forward Jayden Gardner finished with 12 points and a game-high seven rebounds, and centers Francisco Caffaro and Shedrick totaled 14 points and nine boards between them.
