BeforeΒ No. 17 Louisville womenβs basketballΒ playedΒ No. 3Β South Carolina,Β CardinalsΒ coachΒ Jeff WalzΒ opted to have forwardΒ Laura ZieglerΒ try running the point.
When he asked her if she had a problem with that, the Saint Josephβs transfer said, βNo,Β sir.β Walzβs request goes to a bigger challenge for his team: contribute everywhere on the floor, not just in scoring.
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The Cardinalsβ reward for being more receptive to the challenge on Saturday was anΒ 89-65win overΒ No. 18 TennesseeΒ during theΒ Womenβs ChampionsΒ ClassicΒ at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.
“Our effort was elite,” said Walz, who’s now two wins from 500 career victories as a head coach.Β “I thought our effort was what separated us: rebounding, diving on the floor after loose balls. In the first half,Β there’sΒ a loose ball. We dive on the floor, we end up getting it, we kick it to Laura, she hits a 3.Β Plays like that are what gets everybody excited.”
Louisville (12-3)Β finishedΒ nonconference action with a 2-3 record againstΒ top-25Β teams.Β ItβsΒ the only team in the ACC to have played five ranked opponents in the first two months of the season. The challenging stretch will be key when conference action resumesΒ Jan. 1,Β whenΒ Louisville hosts SMU.
Ziegler has been one of the main Cardinals to have embraced being a do-it-all player. When her scoringΒ wasnβtΒ there, she stillΒ reboundedΒ the ball, leading the team with 7.4 boards per game. If either of those two categories were lacking, sheΒ relied on her ball-handling skills, going back to her days of playing point guard in Denmark.
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βWhen I got to theΒ States, I was tall. My coach was like,Β youβveΒ got to get in the paint a little bit,β Ziegler recalled after the CardinalsβΒ win over Eastern Kentucky. βI was like, dang it. ButΒ I’mΒ good.Β I’veΒ been playing stretch ball a lot, which means I often have been handling the ball. It’sΒ definitely beenΒ different. … I see it as a challenge.β
Ziegler had a well-rounded game ofΒ 10 points, eight rebounds and six assists,Β with rebounding playing a keyΒ part in LouisvilleβsΒ success.Β TheΒ teamΒ had 12Β second-chance pointsΒ onΒ sixΒ offensive reboundsΒ during the second quarterΒ forΒ aΒ 41-36Β halftime lead.Β ElifΒ IstanbulluogluΒ led the battle ofΒ the boardsΒ with a career-highΒ 14,Β helping the Cards outrebound theΒ VolsΒ (7-3),Β 59-37.
“In practice, he said five to the glass every single time, and if we could do it, push it or go back up and shoot it,” said Imari Berry, who finished with a double-double (15 points, 13 rebounds) to go along with four steals and three assists against her home state university.Β “We executed really well.”
Ziegler later played the role of a cheerleader, pumping up the team after a layup fromΒ Reyna ScottΒ that put the team up, 68-52, with 8:21 left in the game.
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“She’sΒ positive all the time, no matter what,” Istanbulluoglu said of Ziegler.Β “SheΒ doesn’tΒ do just one job.Β SheΒ basicallyΒ doesΒ every job on the court, whichΒ she can do.Β When thingsΒ (are)Β goingΒ down,Β I knowΒ she’sΒ going to be the first person toΒ communicateΒ (with)Β all of us.Β I thinkΒ she’sΒ a great leader on the court and off the court also.”
Scott, who scored 12 points, has been part of a Louisville bench that averages the fourth-most points per game in the country (35.5).Β And on defense, BerryΒ andΒ Skylar JonesΒ combined effortsΒ to pocket four stealsΒ during a third quarter in which Louisville forced 12 Tennessee turnoversΒ for eight points. Berryβs final steal came in the final seconds, preventing the Vols from cutting into Louisvilleβs 63-52 lead.
Similarly, Louisville’s turnover troubles allowedΒ Tennessee to stay in the game early. The Cardinals had three consecutive turnovers midway through the opening frame for the early 10-all game.Β They finished withΒ 20Β turnovers, well above their average of 11.8 per game.Β But unlike the Volunteers, UofL found other ways to make up for the miscues, heeding Walzβs wordsΒ of being all-around contributors.
“It’sΒ a great win,” Walz said.Β “We are playing someΒ pretty goodΒ basketball.Β I wish weΒ weren’tΒ going on break right now, just howΒ we’reΒ passing the basketball, howΒ we’reΒ sharing the ball,Β everybody’sΒ involved, the attitudes.”
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Reach Louisville football, women’s basketball and baseball beat writer Alexis Cubit at acubit@gannett.com and follow her on X at @Alexis_Cubit.
This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Louisville WBB benefits from Laura Ziegler position switch vs Vols