Florida slips past Ole Miss in overtime
Published 9:45 pm Wednesday, January 30, 2019
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Despite missing his first six 3-pointers, KeVaughn Allen remained confident.
He even wanted the ball in crunch time.
Allen hit a 3-pointer to send the game into overtime and added two huge baskets in the extra frame to help Florida beat Ole Miss 90-86 on Wednesday night.
Allen finished with 21 points, none bigger than those three that came on a shot in front of Florida’s bench with 2.5 seconds to play in regulation. He made two driving layups in overtime and then made a diving save of a ball headed out of bounds in the final minute.
“Guys made some huge plays, led by KeVaughn down the stretch,” coach Mike White said. “Guys earned a W against a very good team.”
Allen’s night wasn’t perfect, though. He had a critical turnover in the final seconds of overtime that put the outcome in jeopardy. Fortunately for the Gators (12-8, 4-3 Southeastern Conference), Noah Locke made two free throws with 11.2 seconds left to seal the victory.
Locke finished with 22 points. Keyontae Johnson added a career-high 15 points before fouling out in overtime. And Andrew Nembhard chipped in 12 points and six assists.
Allen, Locke and Nembhard — Florida’s starting backcourt — scored the final 26 points for Florida. The Gators shot 56 percent in the second half.
“I thought we took a big step offensively tonight,” White said.
Terence Davis led Ole Miss with 26 points, and Breein Tyree added 20. The Rebels (14-6, 4-3), who fell out of the AP poll this week, have dropped four of five.
The Rebels fell to 2-5 when trailing at halftime. This one was a shocker considering they did just about everything right in the second half, making 16 of 27 shots (59.3 percent) and hitting all 10 free throws. Ole Miss struggled in overtime, however, missing five of six shots.
The Rebels might have been shocked to see the game get past regulation. Coach Kermit Davis considered fouling Florida with a three-point lead and 8.8 seconds on the clock, but opted against it and will spend the next few days second-guessing his decision.
“Normally about 90 percent of the time we foul in that situation, which was almost nine seconds,” Davis said. “Still bad. We switched it off like we were supposed to, and he made a dead run and 3. … A lot of good things in the game. Florida made a couple of plays right at the end.”
Davis and Tyree looked like they would carry Ole Miss to victory in regulation. Davis scored on a spinning, baseline drive that put the Rebels up 72-71 with 1:23 to play, and Tyree followed with both ends of a one-and-one with 8.8 seconds remaining.
But Allen gave the Gators life on the other end and a big lift in the final period.
He has been at his best this season in the last five games, including his top two performances in Florida’s last two home games.
“He makes those types of shots all the time,” Locke said. “I thought it was going in. I know him. He practices those all the time, shot clock going down and he makes one of those. I wasn’t surprised it went in.”