Tigers outlast Tigers as LSU defeats Memphis, 85-76

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By Brett Martell, AP Sports Writer

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Skylar Mays’ soaring, one-handed, frenzy-inciting jam on a determined drive down the lane made it clear he won’t always be overshadowed by the highly regarded recruits that have made LSU basketball relevant again.

Mays scored 19 points, transfer Kavell Bigby-Williams added a career-high 14, and No. 22 LSU held off a relentless effort by first-year coach Penny Hardaway’s Memphis squad, 85-76 on Tuesday night.

“It felt good, mainly because it could get the other guys going. I felt like it was a spark,” Mays said of his first-half dunk. “I told the guys, that’s about it for the year. That’s all I’ve got in me. I’m getting old, man — third year in.”

Each of LSU’s three freshmen starters — Naz Reid, Ja’Vonte Smart and Emmitt Williams — scored 11 points. Williams also grabbed 10 rebounds for the Tigers (3-0), who trailed briefly with about 13 minutes to go before surging ahead for good with a pivotal 12-1 run that included back-to-back 3s by Mays and Reid. Smart set up Reid’s 3 with a behind-the-back bounce pass from the right wing.

“It just showed we have a lot of guys that can come about and make plays any given night, so that makes us a really dangerous team,” said Mays, who was a freshman on LSU’s 2016-17 squad that went 10-21 overall and 2-16 in Southeastern Conference play. “I was here when we were pretty low, so you know I’m just happy to be part of a team that I feel is special, that is going to win a lot of games. And I feel like we’ve got a lot of guys that obviously can play at the next level.”

Memphis freshman Tyler Harris, who missed all six of his shots and didn’t score in his debut, was 6 of 13 on 3s and finished with 20 points in his second collegiate game.

Jeremiah Martin scored 15 points and Kyvon Davenport had 10 for Memphis (1-1), which remained within single digits for most of the game.

“We took the punch and hit back and got back into the game,” Hardaway said. “We couldn’t finish it but I’m proud of my guys.”

Mays scored from all over the court, mixing his crowd-pleasing dunk with his usual array of perimeter shots. He hit three times from 3-point range.

LSU had trouble distancing itself from Memphis most of the night but appeared in control for most of the final 10 minutes, when its highlights included a roundhouse dunk from Williams and Reid’s double-pump, back-to-the-basket, no-look scoop off the glass that made it 74-64 with 4:35 to go.

BIG PICTURE

Memphis: The way Memphis played on the road against a ranked team provided an early indication that Hardaway’s first season at the helm could turn out better that the fourth-place finish predicted in the AAC preseason coaches’ poll. When Harris found his shot from the perimeter, it opened up opportunities inside for Davenport and Martin.

“We can be very special when we buy into our roles. What we showed tonight was a lot of fight on the road with a young team,” Hardaway said. “We can do a lot of great things this season.”

LSU: The Tigers’ dramatic upgrade in talent was evident in the fact they led 48-39 at halftime despite Tremont Waters, their best player from last season, not scoring at all to that point. Mays also asserted himself more, scoring more points in the first half than in either of his previous two full games. Waters finished with eight points and eight assists. LSU’s top freshman reserve, Darius Days, had nine points and six rebounds.

HUSTLE POINTS

Bigby-Williams, a 6-foot-11 transfer from Oregon, never scored more than 11 in a game for the Ducks. He’s expected to be relied upon primarily for defense this season, but made all seven of his shots against Memphis, including an emphatic dunk that gave LSU a 10-point lead with seven minutes remaining.

“It’s important for him to understand that even though he does such a great job on defense, that he’s capable of scoring,” Mays said. “I feel like he’s only going to skyrocket from this game.”

Wade said Bigby-Williams’ perfect shooting night was indicative of his gritty, unselfish approach because he limits his shot-selection to high-percentage opportunities around the basket.

“The hardest move he made was his left-hand jump-hook and his left-hand jump hook’s money,” Wade said. “Everything else was right there at the rim. … When he focuses on the right things, the offense kind of takes care of itself.”

UP NEXT

Memphis hosts Yale on Saturday night.

LSU hosts Louisiana Tech on Friday night.

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