Washington Leads No. 5 Cats Past Bulldogs in Starkville
Then the compliments ended. It was time for the truth.
“If you want me to tell you everything’s all good, it isn’t,” Calipari said. “I went right down to each guy. Not mean, screaming or cussing. I wasn’t.
“But you’re here because you want me to keep it real. Well, this is real.”
And the truth is that No. 5 Kentucky was fortunate to escape Humphrey Coliseum with a 71-67 victory over Mississippi State. The Wildcats let an 18-point lead early in the second half dwindle to just one possession with 1:18 remaining before a defensive stop in the final seconds sealed the win.
PJ Washington scored 23 points, Keldon Johnson added 13 and Tyler Herro had 12, including a crucial 3-pointer with three minutes left. Kentucky (20-3, 9-1 Southeastern Conference) hasn’t lost since its conference opener against Alabama on Jan. 5.
The Wildcats looked like they might cruise to the win after Washington hit a 3-pointer early in the second half to give them a 49-31 lead. But Mississippi State responded with a huge run to pull within 51-50 on a pair of free throws by Quinndary Weatherspoon with 8:41 left.
Washington and Ashton Hagans hit back-to-back layups to squash the Bulldogs’ momentum, but Mississippi State kept fighting and Weatherspoon made a free throw to cut Kentucky’s advantage to 70-67 with 1:18 left.
Another SEC road win in the books. | #DreamBIG pic.twitter.com/Mi7od0TDLe
— Kentucky Basketball (@KentuckyMBB) February 9, 2019
“Once we turned the defense up, I feel like that’s when we’re better offensively,” Mississippi State guard Nick Weatherspoon said. “We got going, started getting points in transition and felt like we got them on their heels.”
But Mississippi State came up empty on its final possession when Quinndary Weatherspoon lost possession and Kentucky’s Johnson came up with the loose ball.
“Once they made that run, we just had to come together even more, stay focused and stay together,” Johnson said.
Lamar Peters led the Bulldogs with 16 points while Quinndary Weatherspoon added 14, all in the second half. The Bulldogs have lost four of their last six.
Kentucky’s Washington scored at least 20 points for the fifth time in six games. The 6-foot-8 sophomore shot 9 of 13 from the field, but Calipari wasn’t particularly impressed. The veteran coach made it clear he has high standards.
“I think he’s the best player in the country, but not like he played today,” Calipari said. “He doesn’t go get rebounds, doesn’t get loose balls, missed one-footers, missed free throws. What? If you’re the best, play that way. Come out with great energy. A motor.”
“It’s not about making shots. It’s the way you play.”
Mississippi State (16-7, 4-6) led 17-15 midway through the first half, but Herro nailed a contested 3-pointer to give Kentucky the lead. The Wildcats never trailed again, outscoring the Bulldogs 25-8 over the rest of the first half for a 40-25 halftime advantage.
EARLY MORNING
Calipari wasn’t happy with the way his team had played during games with early tipoffs this season, so at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, barely four hours before the noon tipoff, he brought his team to Humphrey Coliseum for a shootaround.
He said that might have been part of the reason for the rocky second half.
“I never do that, but I knew how hard this game was going to be,” Calipari said. “We may have run out of gas because I did that.”
BIG PICTURE
Kentucky: The Wildcats’ defense has been phenomenal over the past few weeks, but they gave up 42 points in the second half. They’ll have some things to get fixed on that end as they prepare to host LSU and Tennessee over the next week.
Mississippi State: The Bulldogs have now lost 13 straight games to Kentucky dating to 2009. Mississippi State still has a legitimate path to the NCAA Tournament thanks to good wins during nonconference play, but the Bulldogs need some conference wins in a hurry. Tuesday’s home game against Alabama is a big one.
UP NEXT
Kentucky returns home to face LSU on Tuesday.
Mississippi State wraps up a three-game homestand against Alabama on Tuesday.