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Ex-Huskies star Bouknight tossed; No. 24 UConn tops Xavier

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Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Former Connecticut player and current Charlotte Hornets rookie guard James Bouknight, right, talks in the ear of Connecticut's Tyrese Martin as Martin gets ready to inbound a ball in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Xavier, Saturday, Feb. 19, 2022, in Storrs, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

STORRS, Conn. ā€“ Former UConn star James Bouknight of the Charlotte Hornets was tossed from his courtside side by a game official in the second half Saturday as the No. 24 Huskies held off Xavier 72-61.

Bouknight, who played two seasons for Connecticut and is in his NBA rookie season, was sitting in the front row opposite the Xavier bench when he was asked to leave.

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Bouknight then moved over to the UConn student section.

ā€œThat was not an ideal scenario, because we were playing bad and kind of melting down a bit,ā€ UConn coach Dan Hurley said. ā€œHe got tossed. I didnā€™t really see what happened. And then I saw him again somewhere near the student section.ā€

R.J. Cole and Tyler Polley each scored 16 points for UConn (19-7, 10-5 Big East), which has won four of its last five games. Adama Sanogo had 15 points and nine rebounds.

Xavier (17-9, 7-8), which has lost four of five, was led by Adam Kunkelā€™s 15 points. Zach Freemantle added 11 points and 10 rebounds.

Playing before a raucous, sold-out crowd for the second straight game, the Huskies hit 52% of their shots and took a 17-point lead at halftime.

That UConn advantage unraveled quickly at the start of the second half as the Huskies struggled with turnovers under some heavy pressure. UConn turned the ball over 10 times in the opening seven minutes of the second half, watching Xavier pull within 49-43.

ā€œWe let our guard down a little bit and just were too casual, too weak,ā€ Hurley said.

Xavier had scored 10 straight points before Coleā€™s 3-pointer with 12 minutes to play ended the spurt. The Musketeers eventually got within four before Cole scored on a pair of drives to the basket that extended his teamā€™s edge back to 10 with just under two minutes to go.

UConn is 7-0 this season in Gampel Pavilion, its on-campus arena.

Xavier won the first meeting between the teams 74-68 just nine days earlier. In that game, the Musketeers had a 35-31 edge in rebounding.

The Huskies were much better in that category in the rematch, pulling down 42 rebounds to Xavierā€™s 26. Senior Tyrese Martin led UConn with 11 boards.

ā€œObviously we were able to outrebound them at our place," Xavier coach Travis Steele said. ā€œIā€™m sure they (UConn players) have heard that narrative or that stat several times over the last few days. And they got us on the glass. Theyā€™re the No. 2 offensive rebounding team in the country for a reason. Theyā€™re big, theyā€™re strong, theyā€™re athletic, theyā€™re physical. I thought they set that tone early.ā€

UConn missed its first five shots in the game and went scoreless for over three minutes. The Huskies used an 18-5 run to take a 44-27 lead at the break.

HONORING A BARRIER-BREAKER

UConn inducted Harrison ā€œHoneyā€ Fitch into its Huskies of Honor on Saturday, recognizing the first Black basketball player in the programā€™s history.

Fitch, who played at UConn from 1932-34 when it was known as Connecticut State College, had his jersey join the likes of Ray Allen, Kemba Walker, Jim Calhoun, Rebecca Lobo, and Diana Taurasi on the wall inside Gampel Pavilion during a halftime ceremony.

The Huskies of Honor program, which is the schoolā€™s version of a hall of fame, was started in 2006.

Fitch died in 1984 but his son, Harrison ā€œBrooksā€ Fitch Jr. was on hand Saturday.

ā€œWeā€™re very proud as a family. Weā€™re proud, pleased, honored, and humbled with this honor,ā€ said Brooks Fitch, a 1964 graduate of UConn.

Honey Fitch was forced to deal with a great deal of racism during his college days, perhaps none more significant than when the Coast Guard Academy refused to play against Connecticut State College Jan. 27, 1934, because it featured a Black player.

ā€œGoing back to an incident that happened in 1934, racist incident, at that time UConn stepped up in a big way,ā€ Fitch said. ā€œAnd also thatā€™s whatā€™s happening in 2022. This level of recognition is very, very significant.ā€

HANGING TOUGH

Xavier played rather well and rallied to make things close, but still has dropped four of its last five games. Theyā€™re still in reasonably good shape to make the NCAA Tournament but obviously need more wins to be sure.

ā€œItā€™s a long season, itā€™s a marathon. Weā€™ve got to stick together. Weā€™ve got to stay positive. Weā€™re going to get out of this rut,ā€ Steele said.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

With three wins since Sunday, UConn is likely to move up a few spots from its current perch.

BIG PICTURE

Xavier: Guard Nate Johnson, the Musketeersā€™ fourth-leading scorer, missed the game with a knee injury.

UConn: Forward Akok Akok missed his sixth straight game with a foot injury, though the junior did go through warmups with his teammates Saturday.

UP NEXT

Xavier: Plays at No. 8 Providence on Wednesday.

UConn: Hosts No. 10 Villanova on Tuesday in Hartford.

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More AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25


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