Tennessee's inability to score had a bigger effect than a low number on the scoreboard. The Vols rely on their press to create turnovers and turn those turnovers into easy baskets. But since they struggled so much to score, they were unable to get into their press (which was actually very effective in the first half). To give you an idea of how poorly Tennessee played, Dionte Christmas, Temple's best player and leading scorer, was saddled with two fouls in the first half and played limited minutes, scoring just five points. And Temple was still up 34-25 at the break.

The second half was the Dionte Christmas show. Christmas had 35 on the game, with 30 of those coming after the half. At one point, he hit five straight three's in the span of eight possessions. I was really impressed with Christmas. He is clearly a fantastic shooter, but he can also get to the rim. He uses the threat of his jump shot to set up his penetration, as he is not all

Tennessee's press was largely ineffective in the second half. The Vols have two different presses - a hard one where they trap the first pass and look to steal the pass back to the inbounder. The second one is essentially just a full court man-to-man. Despite success forcing turnovers in the first half with the hard press, the Vols stayed with the soft press in the second half, even as Temple was pulling away. They only switched at the very end of the game, and Temple broke the press easily.
The biggest moment of the game came when Bruce Pearl got a technical foul. Tennessee had gotten a 47-34 deficit down to 52-48, and after a Christmas three-pointer, Wayne Chism was called for a travel. Pearl picked up the technical (which it looked like he wanted, trying to motivate his team), and Temple proceeded to go on a huge run. By the time Tennessee recovered, the score was 69-49.
One last thing of note - Tennessee knew every single one of Temple's in-bounds plays. In-bounds plays are like special teams in football. If you can get 6-8 points a game on your in-bounds plays under the basket, that can win you a lot of games. Preventing easy buckets on in-bounds play is all preparation and scouting. It is a good sign for Bruce Pearl and his coaching staff, because Tennessee knew every single one of Temple's plays. Granted, Temple ran some very simple plays (screen-the-screener, run the inbounder off of a screen), but Tennessee did not let them get anything easy, and even forced four or five turnovers off of them.
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