Juniors Jennifer Mossor
(Orlando, Fla.)
and Steffi Sorensen (Jacksonville,
Fla.) led four Gators in double-figure scoring
and the No. 18/20 Florida women’s basketball
team to a 74-56 victory over Ohio University Saturday evening at the Convocation Center.
The win,
which was Florida’s
14th consecutive, improved the Gators’ overall record to 14-1 this
season, the program’s best record through 15 games in its 35-year history.
“I am
pleased that the win streak is continuing,” UF head coach Amanda Butler
said. “This certainly wasn’t our best effort, but as well as Ohio played, and I give them a lot of
credit, to still be able to hold them under their average of 60 points, is a
good win. It’s a win on the road and I guess you can’t get too picky with that.”
Mossor
scored a team-high 19 points, hitting 8-of-16 from the floor, including a
3-of-4 effort from the three-point arc, while Sorensen contributed 14 points on
5-of-9 shooting, with 4-of-7 coming from long range, where the Gators were
10-of-22. It was the third time this season UF had converted 10 from beyond the
arc, just one shy of the school record.
“Jenn and Steffi were our most
consistent players tonight,” Butler
said. “They were the ones who continued to hit shots, get that tipped ball or
rebound. Jenn was very composed tonight, took good
shots and it seemed like every time we started a run, she was the one heading
it up for us.”
Sha Brooks (Jackson, Tenn.) added 13
points along with seven assists and zero turnovers, while Sharielle Smith (Bradenton,
Fla.) tallied her second double-double
of the season and third of her career with 12 points and a career-high-tying 11
rebounds. Senior Marshae Dotson, a native of nearby Columbus, Ohio,
had several family members and friends in the stands to watch her collect 10
rebounds, score nine points and block a career-high three shots.
“We had a
great Gator crowd here tonight,” Butler
commended. “Marshae had a large number of people
watching her in a Gator uniform and see her help us get a historic win. Part of
the Gator Club of Columbus was here, it seems like the Gator Nation really is
everywhere and our team gets fired-up when people wearing orange and blue are
cheering for them.”
Ohio, which lost its third straight
game, battled throughout and cut UF’s 10-point lead
to four points, 53-49, with 11:15 remaining.
That’s
when the Gators mounted a game-changing 18-5 run over the next six-and-a-half
minutes to assume a 71-54 lead and the Bobcats never recovered.
Brooks
started the run with a bucket and Mossor followed
with her third trey of the night, before Smith answered with a shot underneath
and Brooks added one more from the free throw line as part of a 9-0 spree to
start the march.
After
three points from Ohio,
Mossor hit another driving layup
and Smith put-back an offensive rebound to continue the run. Lauren Hmiel, who finished with a game-high 20 points, sank an
8-footer, but Sorensen responded with her fourth trey and Smith capped the
spree with two from the free throw line, as the Gators held a 71-54 advantage
with just under four minutes to go.
Miscues
plagued Florida
in the opening half, when the Gators committed 11 turnovers that the Bobcats
converted into 14 points. Ohio
also struggled with its shot from the floor, hitting just 34.1 percent (14-41)
with the majority of the shot within six feet of the basket after the Bobcats
crashed the boards and held the rebounding edge for the majority of the first
20 minutes, that also featured five lead changes and four tied scores.
“I was
extremely disappointed with our first-half effort, though,” Butler said. “We had some let-downs mentally
and I give Ohio a lot of credit for making us play ugly. They were very
prepared for us. I was displeased with our on-ball defense and that’s one of
the things we addressed in the locker room at halftime.”
Florida did clean up its game in the second half, when it turned
the ball over just six times and held Ohio
(4-8) to 33.3 percent shooting (9-of-27).
Overall,
the Gators shot 42.6 percent from the floor and held a 48-44 rebounding edge,
while forcing 16 Bobcat turnovers.
Florida began the second half on a 7-3 run
to extend its six-point halftime lead into a 46-37 edge. OU’s
Lauren Hmiel refused to allow a bigger run and scored
the next six points of the game, cutting UF’s lead to
three points just two and half minutes into the second frame.
Mossor
bettered Hmiel by scoring the next seven points of
the contest and tried to help the Gators pull away with a 53-43 lead. Ohio came right back
with six consecutive points from three different players to get the deficit
within four points, 53-49. That’s when Florida
mounted its final push with the 18-5 run en route to the victory.
In
addition to the turnovers, three runs also defined the first half,
the most significant was a 21-8 spree by Florida,
which turned a five-point deficit (22-17) with 7:33 to go, into an eight-point
lead, 38-30, with 1:15 on the clock.
Sorensen ignited the run with back-to-back
3-pointers. UF’s lead, however, was short-lived, as Ohio came right back
with the next two field goals and assumed a 26-23 edge with 5:02 remaining in
the opening half.
That’s
when the Gators really started crashing the boards for the first time in the
game, as Brooks put back her own
miss, before Smith accounted for the
next six points of the game, as she nailed a trey from the left corner and then
converted a three-point play to lift UF to the 31-26 lead.
After Hmiel hit a bucket to stop the Gators’ 8-0 march, Dotson put-back an offensive rebound
and Brooks stole the ball and attempted a layup that
she missed, but immediately put back for another two points and lift the lead
to seven, 35-28, with 2:17 left in the half.
Kamille
Buckner stopped another UF run with a Bobcat bucket, but Lonnika Thompson (New Orleans,
La.) followed with a 3-pointer
that gave the Gators a 38-30 lead with 1:15 on the clock. The teams traded
scores for the remainder of the period and Florida took a 40-34 halftime lead.
The Gators
did emerge with a slim 26-23 rebound edge after 20 minutes of play, with the
Bobcats collecting 14 on the offensive end.
Sorensen
led UF’s offensive charge with 11 points, hitting
4-of-5 from the field, including 3-of-4 from behind the arc in the first half,
when the Gators shot 45.7 percent from the floor (16-of-35).
The Gators
now turn their attention to Southeastern Conference action, as Florida plays host to Mississippi State
on Thursday, January 8.
“As an SEC
athlete and competitor, this is what you wait for all season,” Butler shared. “The conference comprises
almost half of the season. Everything we have done up to this point has been to
prepare us for conference games. We have a great challenge with Mississippi State coming into the O’Connell Center.
I think they are one of the most underrated teams in our league and maybe one
of the most dangerous.”
Tip-off
for Thursday’s game has been changed to 5 p.m., to give Gator fans the
opportunity to watch Florida play in the FedEx
BCS National Championship football game against the University of Oklahoma
later that night.
Doors at
the O’Connell Center will open at all four gates at 4 p.m. with free admission
for the basketball game, which starts at 5 p.m. (this is a time change from
early publications so not to conflict with fans who also want to watch the
football game). After 5:30 p.m., only UF students, faculty and staff with Gator
1 cards will be admitted to the O’Connell Center. Game coverage starts at 8
p.m. with kickoff expected at 8:17 p.m.
The football
game will be simulcast in the O’Connell Center following the basketball game.
All fans are encouraged to wear orange-colored clothing and accessories. The
football game will be shown on four large video boards.
Women’s
basketball season ticket holders and Gator Gold Card holders will have their
usual accommodations at the basketball game in terms of reserved seating and a
special entrance at Gate 1.
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