IOWA 63 | NO. 6 ILLINOIS 48
Hawkeyes put clamps on Illini
Dismal shooting results in Illinois suffering first loss
Sunday, January 08, 2006
Todd Dvorak
ASSOCIATED PRESS
</IMG> CHARLIE NEIBERGALL | ASSOCIATED PRESS Brian Randle of Illinois reacts after fouling out in the second half.
IOWA CITY, Iowa — For at least one day, Iowa put aside its shooting troubles.
Coming off one of their worst shooting performances under coach Steve Alford, Iowa rebounded to beat sixthranked Illinois 63-48 in a Big Ten game yesterday, snapping the Illini’s 15-game winning streak.
The Hawkeyes (12-4, 1-1) did just enough on offense. Jeff Horner scored 16 points and helped Iowa take command in the second half, when the Hawkeyes scored 40 points on 53 percent shooting from the field and were 18 of 21 from the free throw line.
But it was the defense that flustered the Illini (15-1, 1-1), who were held below 50 points for the first time in nearly seven years.
"I know how good Illinois is, so to beat that team the way we did today, and to defend — we can guard anybody," said Alford, whose team shot 17 percent from the field in the second half in a loss to Wisconsin earlier in the week.
"We told them we don’t care if you shoot 25 percent in this game today. Make sure you’re guarding the way we’ve been guarding."
The Hawkeyes did just that.
In a physical battle between two of the conference’s best defensive teams, Iowa held Illinois to 35 percent shooting from the field and shut down flashy point guard Dee Brown, who scored just six points on 2-of-13 shooting — one game after he scored a career-high 34.
The Illini, who had won 54 of their past 55 regular-season games, committed 16 turnovers, trailed throughout the second half and shot 19 percent from three-point range.
"Coach (Bruce Weber) always talks about the basketball gods, how they’ll allow 40 one night and four the next," said Illini center James Augustine, who led his teamwith 14 points and nine rebounds. "But we don’t have to put everything on (Brown’s) shoulders. We needed to have somebody else step up."
Illinois’ first loss came after a grueling win over No. 7 Michigan State, a game that Weber said might have drained his team’s emotional tank.
"It was such a high the other night. Maybe it was all blown out of proportion," Weber said. "It shows you how vulnerable you are if you’re not ready."
Iowa also got 15 points from Adam Haluska and 10 from Mike Henderson.
The Hawkeyes didn’t shoot all that well, either — 35 percent from the field. The difference was at the foul line, where Iowa went 24 of 32 and Illinois’ 7 of 15.
Horner sank all six of his foul shots in the final minute to seal the win. Brown’s struggles started early. His only point in the first half came when he sank the second of two free throws with 8:05 left. He missed all six of his shots from the field, including two fast-break layups, and had only one assist.