Huskies’ NCAA hopes suffer big blow in 86-73 loss at 13th-ranked Oregon
When the game ended, many of the 12,364 fans at Matthew Knight Arena remained in their seats, ready to celebrate the careers of the Oregon Ducks seniors who played their final home game on Sunday night.
A postgame ceremony loomed.
They let out a cheer as each name was announced, and those muffled shouts served as background noise to Lorenzo Romar’s conversation with reporters in the hallway outside the Washington Huskies’ locker room.
There was no celebration for the Huskies, who left this lavish basketball palace in the same condition as every other visiting team this season: defeated.
That result seemed preordained, given Oregon’s dominance at home and UW’s late-season swoon.
It was 13th-ranked Oregon 86, Washington 73 on Sunday with the Huskies trimming their deficit to six points late in the second half before watching the older, stronger, more cohesive Ducks run and dunk their way to a 25th consecutive home victory.
The Huskies didn’t get embarrassed. They didn’t quit. They didn’t allow Oregon to maintain the 15-point lead it built in the opening minute of the second half.
But they also didn’t win — this is their sixth loss in the past seven games — and those losses have at last accumulated to visit upon UW a frustrating truth:
Washington, at 16-13 overall and 8-9 in Pac-12 play, almost certainly cannot earn an at-large bid into the NCAA tournament. And that has to sting for a team that began the conference season with a 5-1 record.
“The most disappointing thing for me is what I’ve continued to say — that we’ve made improvements and don’t have the wins to show for it,” Romar said after Washington’s sixth consecutive loss in Eugene. “That’s the most disappointing thing. Because we’ve gotten better. But if you just look at the scores, you just look at them from a distance, you can’t tell some of the things that we’re doing much better than we were doing, even when we were 5-1. But other teams have gotten better, too.”
And Oregon (23-6, 12-4) is better than most. The Ducks have experience, size and skill. Senior forward Elgin Cook has all three and on Sunday, he had 26 points on 8-for-13 shooting, slashing to the rim and proving a handful for the Huskies to guard.
Not that they guarded anyone else all that well. Oregon sophomore forward Dillon Brooks added 19 points. Jordan Bell and Casey Benson had 12 points apiece. Oregon shot 53.7 percent from the field and 57.7 percent in the second half, running an efficient offense and taking swift advantage of UW’s turnovers.
They rebounded better than the Huskies, too, which isn’t surprising if you’ve watched Washington play basketball this season. Oregon turned 12 offensive rebounds into 14 second-chance points, and nine of those came in the second half. And yet the Huskies were in this game, trailing only 71-65 after Dejounte Murray’s basket with 5:05 to play.
Washington trailed 47-32 just one minute into the second half after a quick 7-0 burst by Oregon, but Huskies senior guard Andrew Andrews, who finished with 21 points and eight assists, led a comeback that cut that margin to two possessions.
But again …
“We couldn’t get over that hump,” said Murray, who finished with 20 points. “We couldn’t cut it to a one-possession game or take the lead. We just couldn’t. We tried. We fought.”
Cook scored. Benson missed a pair of free throws, but Oregon got the ball back, and Cook got to the line 16 seconds later and made one.
After UW forward Marquese Chriss missed a dunk attempt — Romar and the Huskies bench insisted he was fouled — the Ducks took a 76-65 lead via Bell’s thunderous dunk on the other end, a two-handed flush that brought the rowdy crowd to its feet.
“There were certain times during the game that we kind of let our guard down, so to speak, and they took advantage of it, which is what good teams really do,” Romar said. “They take advantage of your mistakes.”
And so this ended up being another game in which Washington did enough things well to give itself a chance to win, but still did enough things wrong to fully understand why it wound up on the wrong side of the scoreboard.
Wash, rinse, repeat, repeat, repeat.
“We’ll have a good run, we’ll turn it over, and it’ll lead to them getting a fastbreak point or something like that,” Andrews said. “So I think defensively we played them pretty well. But if we stop the swings and the runs that they had on our mistakes, it could have been a different (outcome).”
Washington’s regular season will end with an 8 p.m. Wednesday game in Seattle against last-place Washington State. The Cougars have lost 15 consecutive games. The Huskies will be expected to win big. Then it’s on to Las Vegas, where the Pac-12 tournament begins March 9, and where the Huskies now must win four games in four days in order to avoid missing the NCAA tournament for a fifth consecutive season.
“We’re still the same team,” Murray said. “We’re still going to come out and play hard and stay together.”
Said Andrews: “Oregon blows a lot of teams out here at home. The fact that we kept with them and kept close shows that we’re a pretty good team. Once we find out what it is that we need to do to bring it all together for the full 40 minutes, we’ll be all right.”
Time is running out.
Game in review
Player of the game: Elgin Cook dominated the Huskies with a variety of moves — scoring in the post, making mid-range jumpers, driving to the rim, drawing fouls and making free throws. The senior forward finished with a game-high 26 points on 8-of-13 shooting (and 10-of-11 from the free throw line) and also added seven rebounds in 38 minutes. He was good.
It was over when: After the Huskies cut Oregon’s lead to 71-65 with 5:05 to play, the Ducks reeled off a 9-2 run to take an 80-67 lead with 2:58 remaining. UW had little chance after that.
State of the game: Oregon had 12 offensive rebounds and 14 second-chance points. The Ducks had a 40-26 rebounding advantage overall.
Quotable: “As long as we work hard, I’m proud of this group of guys. We’ve just got to keep going. It’s not over. This definitely was a big game, but we fell short to a really good team.” — UW guard Dejounte Murray
What it means: This loss, almost certainly, is the death knell for Washington’s hope of earning an at-large bid into the NCAA tournament (if that hope wasn’t already gone). Oregon is a top-15 team that did not lose a home game this season, so the outcome isn’t surprising. But it does force the Huskies into a win-or-miss-the-tourney scenario once the Pac-12 tournament begins March 9.
Up next: Washington State at Washington, 8 p.m. Wednesday, ESPNU
ccaple@thenewstribune.com
This story was originally published February 28, 2016 at 10:01 PM with the headline "Huskies’ NCAA hopes suffer big blow in 86-73 loss at 13th-ranked Oregon."