DENVER, Colo. – When Kyle Barone doesn’t score until late
the second half, it’s a sure sign things aren’t going well for the Idaho Vandals.
So much so, the Vandals suffered their largest loss of the season as Denver
extended its home win streak to nine in the 74-58 Western Athletic Conference
game Saturday afternoon.
Turnovers were the initial problem as the Vandals turned the
ball over on four of their first six possessions and wound up with 12 for the
first half and 16 for the game. Denver used those bobbles to its advantage by
shooting out to a 10-2 early lead, 36-14 halftime edge and second-half leads of
as many as 30 points.
The biggest disappointment for coach Don Verlin was the
Vandals’ uninspired play.
“We didn’t compete like we needed to against a good Denver
ballclub,” said Verlin after Idaho dropped to 9-14 overall, 5-8 in the WAC and
the Pioneers improved to 16-8 and 10-2.
“That was the thing that was most frustrating about it. For
whatever reason, we didn’t compete like we needed to. No question about it. It’s
very frustrating at this time of year.”
No one was exempt.
“It wasn’t one guy,” he continued. “It was a team effort.”
Jalen Love set the tone early for Denver by opening the scoring then staking the
Pioneers to a 10-2 lead by scoring all of their first 10 points and 13 of their
first 15. Meantime, it was a turnover flurry by the Vandals sandwiched around a
Wendell Faines jumper and two Barone free throws. Adding to those woes, were
just 14 first-half field goal attempts.
Barone had a difficult time against the steadfast Denver
defense. He managed just the two free throws in the first half and had but one
field goal attempt – at the 5:06 mark of the opening period. It didn’t get any
easier in the second. He did have four free throws for a perfect six-for-six
for the night from the line but again he had just one shot – a jumper he made
with 5:55 to play.
Mike McChristian and Stephen Madison matched 14-point
nights, with Habeeb Mansa adding nine and Barone finishing with eight. The
Vandals did have the edge on the boards with Madison’s six helping Idaho to a
27-25 advantage.