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No. 20 Tennessee shuts down No. 11 Louisville to end three-game skid
Tennessee guard Ja'Kobi Gillespie. Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

No. 20 Tennessee shuts down No. 11 Louisville to end three-game skid

Not only did the 20th-ranked Tennessee Volunteers shoot efficiently on Tuesday night, but they completely shut down No. 11 Louisville's high-octane offense in an 83-62 rout.

The Cardinals (9-2) entered the night scoring the seventh-most points per game (94.3 PPG), but Tennessee (8-3) held them to just 38% shooting overall and 7-of-34 (21%) from long range. While the absence of freshman standout Mikel Brown Jr. (lower back) was certainly a major blow to the offense, it probably would not have been enough regardless considering the Volunteers' lockdown effort defensively.

Tennessee's physicality, efficient shooting too much for Louisville

Senior guard Ja'Kobi Gillespie (23 points, 5-of-12 FG, 10-of-10 FT) was the leading scorer for the Volunteers and made it look easy on this drive to the basket to extend Tennessee's lead to 42-31 just over three minutes into the second half.

Not only was Tennessee stout defensively, but it also excelled on offense, shooting 55% from the field and converting on seven of its 18 three-point attempts. This one from sophomore guard Ethan Burg, who had five points off the bench, was one of those seven.

The physicality was also a factor in Tennessee's ability to hold Louisville to a season-low point total. This jam from forward Felix Okpara was the exclamation point on a dominant showing as the Volunteers stretched their advantage to 81-56 with three minutes to play.

Senior guard Ryan Conwell (22 points) and sophomore guard Adrian Wooley (19 points) were basically the only offense the entire game for the Cardinals as Tennessee forced 16 turnovers and outscored them, 42-30, in the paint.

Aside from Gillespie's 23 points — 20 of which were in the second half — junior forward Jaylen Carey had a 12-point, 10-rebound double-double off the bench, while freshman Nate Ament (13 points, seven rebounds) had his best performance against stiffer competition after scoring 11 points or fewer in three of the last four games.

Not only was scoring an issue during Tennessee's three-game losing streak coming in, its usually strong defense did not play with the same physicality, giving up 48% shooting in the most recent loss to then-No. 14 Illinois.

According to KenPom, the Volunteers are ranked 15th despite their three early-season losses, which speaks to their potential when everything is clicking.

When Tennessee is the more physical team and the defense is on point, it has proved several times under head coach Rick Barnes how difficult it can be to contain. Tuesday night was just the latest example.

Colby Colwell

Colby Colwell is a freelance contributor with a bachelor’s in Computer & Information Technology and a minor in Psychology from Western Kentucky University. With a deep passion for sports, especially NASCAR, he offers his substantial knowledge along with his adept writing skills. When he’s not writing, Colby enjoys traveling, cooking, and spending time with his family

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