I was very happily surprised at the way the Gators played.  Short end of the 
score, yes, but we played a *great* game considering who we were up against and 
where we played.  A part of me is fervently hoping that in 3-4 years we are 
still a Big Dance team every year (or almost every year), and we won’t have 
slowly slipped back to an 18-14 team most years.  I’d love to be able to know 
that we maintained our consistently high level of play after Billy D departed.  
Before last night, after losing to the only two ranked teams we played this 
year, I was kind of worried.  I think my worries were somewhat assuaged last 
night, even with a loss.  We looked good.

 

Go Gators!  Go Chris Chiozza!

 

John

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Realtracs
Sent: Sunday, December 13, 2015 1:12 PM
To: Gator Talk
Subject: [gatortalk] Fwd: [gatornews] [SUN]: Gators fall short against 
top-ranked Michigan State

 

We may have lost, but we quieted that crowd down a couple of times in the 
second half when we took the lead. 

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI, SFR

Real Estate Broker

PARKS

305 B Indian Lake Blvd

Suite 220

Hendersonville TN 37075

Mobile: 615-972-4239

Office: 615-826-4040 

Sent from my iPhone


Begin forwarded message:

From: Shane Ford <[email protected]>
Date: December 13, 2015 at 11:30:38 AM CST
To: GatorNews <[email protected]>
Subject: [gatornews] [SUN]:  Gators fall short against top-ranked Michigan State
Reply-To: [email protected]

 

  
<http://www.gatorsports.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Avis=GS&Dato=20151212&Kategori=ARTICLES&Lopenr=151219924&Ref=AR&Maxw=800&Maxh=800>
 

Michigan State's Deyonta Davis (23) and Eron Harris (14) and Florida's KeVaughn 
Allen (4) and Devin Robinson (3) vie for a rebound. Michigan State topped the 
Gators 58-52.






Gators fall short against top-ranked Michigan State


By Kevin Brockway 

Gainesville SUN Staff writer
Sunday, December 13, 2015 12:19 AM


EAST LANSING, Mich --- The fans at the Breslin Center were anxious. Through 35 
minutes of missed shots and with starting center John Egbunu mired in foul 
trouble, somehow, someway, Florida scrapped its way to chance to upset No. 1 
Michigan State.

But the Spartans used their experience and physicality down the stretch to 
knock off the Gators 58-52 before a charged crowd of 14,797.

“We obviously came up a little short, but we took a step in the right 
direction, and played as hard as we’ve played and really competed,” Florida 
coach Mike White said. 

Indeed, Florida rose to the occasion of playing the top-ranked team in the 
country, diving on the floor for every loose ball and tumbling into benches out 
of bounds to save possessions. But with the loss, Florida fell to 2-14 when 
facing the No. 1 team in the country.

“We had a great effort on defense,” Florida sophomore point guard Chris Chiozza 
said. “That’s just how we’ve got to play every game. It doesn’t matter who we 
are playing, the number one team, not ranked.”

Yet for as much effort and athleticism as the Gators showed in making it a 
close game, critical empty trips down the stretch proved costly. 

With Florida down 54-50 and 4:06 remaining, the Gators had turnovers on three 
straight possessions. The first was a fast pass by Dorian Finney-Smith that 
went through freshman Kevarrius Hayes’ hands. The second came when point guard 
Kasey Hill was stripped going for a drive to the basket. And the third was when 
Finney-Smith fumbled away a dribble on the wing.

“They were just able to out battle us, out tough us the last five or six 
minutes,” Chiozza said.

Michigan State extended its lead to 56-50 on an offensive rebound tip in by 
Marvin Clark Jr. The Gators had a chance to make it a one-possession game with 
55 seconds left when Hill made a driving layup in transition and was fouled. 
But Hill, who went 3-of-8 from the free-throw line, missed a free throw to 
complete the three-point play.

Then, with Florida down 56-52, Finney-Smith missed a 3-pointer in transition 
with 24 seconds left.

“There were a couple of times there that we considered taking a time out,” 
White said. “We got a few decent looks we couldn’t convert. But again, we’re 
just searching on the offensive end.”

Finney-Smith and Hill led Florida with 13 points apiece. Chiozza scored 11 
points, all in the second half, while sophomore forward Devin Robinson had 10 
points and 9 rebounds.

It was a charged atmosphere, with Michigan State’s student section circling the 
lower bowl. At halftime, Michigan State honored its 2000 national championship 
basketball team that beat the Gators in the title game. Also, in the first 
half, the Big Ten champion Michigan State football team addressed the crowd 
before its trip to face Alabama in the College Football Playoff.

White made a few starting lineup changes, going with Chiozza over Hill at point 
guard and freshman Brandone Francis-Ramirez over KeVaughn Allen at shooting 
guard. Francis-Ramirez got the nod because Allen has been dealing with groin 
and knee tendinitis issues. Hill asked out of the starting lineup for the good 
of the team.

“That’s something I’ve never seen in 16 years of coaching,” White said.

The Gators hung around, despite making just 3 of their first 17 shot attempts 
and going 0-of-8 from 3-point range in the first half. The 6-foot-11 Egbunu was 
whistled for two fouls within in the first two minutes of the game, including 
one on a careless reach in, and sat the final 18 minutes of the first half.

Hill provided energy off the bench, and his speed was tough for Michigan 
State’s defenders to handle. The 6-foot-1 former McDonald’s All-American scored 
seven points in the first half, including a steal and breakaway layup that cut 
Michigan State’s lead to 27-25 before halftime. 

“I thought it was his best game, offensively, defensively,” White said.

Said Michigan State coach Tom Izzo: “He was running around us, then circling 
back and running around us again.”

But Florida had a lull to start the second half, allowing Michigan State to go 
on a 8-2 run to extend its lead to 35-27. That’s when Chiozza heated up. The 
sophomore made the first of three straight 3-pointers (Florida was 0-11 at that 
point from beyond the arc) to cut Michigan State’s lead to 35-30.

Chiozza found Devin Robinson on a pretty pass inside for a layup to cut 
Michigan State’s lead to 38-35, then hit another 3-pointer to tie the score at 
38 with 14:06 left.

“I was hoping that was going to spark us and we would build on the lead,” 
Chiozza said. “We started out slow. We were already in a hole. It just got us 
back even and we couldn’t keep the run going.”

Eventually, Florida took a 45-42 lead when Finney-Smith made a 3-pointer with 
9:52 left off a scramble possession in which Hayes got a key offensive rebound. 
UF’s last lead, 47-46, came on a Robinson offensive rebound and putback with 
7:16 left.

But Michigan State tightened up down the stretch, and Egbunu never became a 
factor. He fouled out with 4:24 left with 0 points, 2 rebounds and 1 blocked 
shot in seven minutes. With Egbunu on the bench, the Gators were compromised on 
the boards. Michigan State outrebounded Florida 45-34, with 16 offensive 
rebounds.

“We’re obviously a different team with him on the floor,” White said. “It was 
disappointing.”

Star swingman Denzel Valentine led Michigan State with 17 points, but had to 
work for it, going 5 of 17 from the floor. Valentine hit his biggest shot late 
in the shot clock to put the Spartans up 53-49. Florida scored 12 points off 12 
Michigan State turnovers.

“I was impressed with Florida,” Izzo said. “They are going to win a lot of 
games this year. I think if we wouldn’t have turned it over and gave up those 
interceptions for touchdowns, it would have widened the gap a little bit.”


































































Sent From Shane's iPhone

Go Gators!   &   Skål Vikes!

ALPCA #8756 

Europlate #1045

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