What went wrong for Tennessee basketball in SEC opening loss to Arkansas

What went wrong for Tennessee basketball in SEC opening loss to Arkansas

Bishop Boswell lost Meleek Thomas at the arc, and a foot of space was all the Arkansas freshman guard needed to get his shot off.

Boswell made a desperate attempt to contest the 3-pointer, and his arm made contact with Thomas, who didn’t have room to land and drew the foul. All of a sudden, the Vols’ four-point lead — and the momentum they built coming out of halftime — evaporated.

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Every time No. 20 Tennessee basketball (10-4, 0-1 SEC) had the chance to create some separation in its conference opener, it squandered the opportunity. Missed free throws, blown layups and 14 turnovers made it impossible to steal a win on the road.

Eventually No. 18 Arkansas (11-3, 1-0) went on a run, scoring 11 straight points to break the game open with six minutes left, and the Vols lost 86-75 at Bud Walton Arena on Jan. 3.

«They made layups at the rim, we didn’t. They made their free throws, we didn’t,» Tennessee coach Rick Barnes said. «They won it because they did the things that were necessary to win it, and we didn’t.»

Vols don’t get enough from post players

Barnes was most disappointed the Vols didn’t get what they needed from three of their four post players. He thought Felix Okpara, who hadn’t practiced the past two days due to a hip bruise, was more prepared than the rest of the bigs.

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«You can’t. You can’t, you can’t win. I mean, this league is too good,» Barnes said of winning if post players don’t perform. «We’re good enough to beat anybody in the country, we really are, but we’re not going to beat anybody in the country if we don’t take care of the details.»

The Vols’ guards scored 51 of the team’s points, led by freshman Amari Evans’ 16 points on 7-for-7 shooting. J.P. Estrella led the forwards with nine points on 3-for-3 shooting, but freshman DeWayne Brown II and Jaylen Carey combined for 12 points on 6-for-15 shooting, and both had multiple shots blocked. Tennessee missed 14 of its 25 layups.

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Barnes said most of the defensive breakdowns were due to blown coverage by post players.

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Underperforming veteran forwards is part of why three of Tennessee’s five freshmen played significant minutes, which is something Barnes didn’t anticipate. He said forward Nate Ament, who had 13 points, played at the 4 instead of the 3 because the other post players «weren’t getting it done.»

Evans getting more time on the court with some smaller lineups was one of the lone bright spots for Tennessee.

«He’s not afraid to compete,» Barnes said of Evans. «We still thought those older guys would be playing more than these guys. But the fact that matter is, freshmen have earned their minutes, and (Evans is) one of them that’s done that.»

Free throws hurt Tennessee again

Tennessee has shot poorly from the free-throw line in three of its four losses. It hit both free throws on only three trips to the line against Arkansas, and it missed both on two trips in the first half.

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Ament went 5-for-11 at the line, and Tennessee shot 12-for-23 overall on free throws (Arkansas was 29-for-33).

The Vols haven’t shot better than 67% from the foul line in their past six games, and they’ve shot above 60% twice. The missed free throws are more than just lost points. It adds weight on everything else, too.

«You want to run some things, but then you start thinking, well, if they get fouled or they don’t make the free throws — guys that you want to be aggressive, they go pick up fouls and don’t make free throws,» Barnes said. «It really just continues to put pressure on every other part of the game.»

Cora Hall is the University of Tennessee women’s athletics reporter for Knox News. Email: cora.hall@knoxnews.com; X: @corahalllBluesky: @corahall.bsky.social‬. Support strong local journalism and unlock premium perks:knoxnews.com/subscribe

This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: What went wrong for Tennessee basketball in SEC opening loss to Arkansas

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