How the shorthanded Kansas Jayhawks handled K-State basketball in Sunflower Showdown
Four minutes, 30 seconds of game time.
That’s how long it took for the Kansas State Wildcats to score a point on their in-state rival, as the Kansas Jayhawks scored the first 14 points of Saturday’s meeting in Allen Fieldhouse.
The Jayhawks led by as many as 16 on Saturday, never trailing in an 84-74 win over the Wildcats. From the time it was 20-4 until the final buzzer, the No. 9 Jayhawks played cool, calm and collected, answering each K-State run with timely buckets.
KU’s Hunter Dickinson finished with 25 points and eight rebounds, while guard Zeke Mayo added 24 points. The Jayhawks (13-4, 4-2 Big 12) now lead the Sunflower Showdown series 203-96.
Kansas freshman big man Flory Bidunga made his first start in place of the injured KJ Adams (shoulder separation). Dajuan Harris, Shakeel Moore, Mayo and Dickinson started alongside the freshman.
The Jayhawks went into the half leading 39-29, thanks to 14 points from Mayo. Kansas State rallied late, but the Wildcats never got closer than six in the second half.
“I thought the first eight minutes, we played as well as we could play regardless of who’s in the game,” coach Bill Self said. “The last 30 minutes, we missed KJ — when the game settled in and how you’re going to guard different things.”
Up Next: KU travels to Fort Worth, Texas, to face TCU on Wednesday.
Until then, here are three takeaways from Saturday’s home game …
No KJ Adams? Flory Bidunga, AJ Storr stepped up
Before Saturday’s game, Kansas coach Bill Self talked about how Adams’ absence would be felt, but noted it was an opportunity for others to step up.
He pointed out that Bidunga, Storr, Rylan Griffen and Rakease Passmore would play more prominent roles.
Well, two players — Storr and Bidunga — did just that.
Bidunga earned the start. He finished with six points, nine rebounds and two assists in 25 minutes. He helped lock down the paint; KU had 46 points in the paint to K-State’s 34. That said, he did finish with four fouls.
Meanwhile, Storr had his best game in a while. He looked comfortable and didn’t hesitate to take shots. He also hustled for loose balls and played defense with a focus he hasn’t had for most of the season.
Storr finished with seven points on 3-of-6 shooting in 17 minutes. He’s still earning Self’s trust, but his play in limited minutes was a welcome sight.
“It’s good having AJ out there,” Dickinson said. “I know it’s real ups and downs, but he’s had such a great attitude through it all. I really commend him for that. It could have been easy for him to jump off ship early on, but he’s stayed with it. ...
“Obviously today, his role is starting to expand slowly, slowly since KJ is out. He has ups and downs like everybody, but he went out there, played hard and good today.”
3-point shooting played a role
It’s not often the Jayhawks are the better shooting team from deep. Especially to the degree KU was on Saturday.
KU certainly took advantage of the long ball in the first half. Kansas shot 5-for-13 (38.5%) on 3-pointers. That was especially notable for a team that ranks No. 322 in 3-point rate.
Meanwhile, the Wildcats shot just 2-for-15 (13.5%) from deep in that time.
KU did a good job of contesting KSU’s 3-pointers, but even the open 3-pointers were a struggle. The gap did lessen a bit in the second half. KU finished the night shooting 37.5% from deep, while KSU improved to 23.1%.
Zeke Mayo continues to cook
The best way to describe South Dakota State transfer and Lawrence native Mayo would be a word Bill Self has often used to describe his best players: stud.
Naturally, Mayo continued his stellar season vs. the Wildcats.
He scored 14 points on 5-for-8 shooting from the floor … in the first half. He shot a blistering 4-of-6 (66%) on 3-pointers. Mayo answered the call whenever the Jayhawks needed a bucket to cool the Wildcats’ momentum.
He did have a quieter second half but still finished with 24 points and five rebounds. Nobody could have imagined the South Dakota transfer becoming KU’s best offensive player, but Mayo has earned that title.
“He was great,” Self said. “I thought he drove the ball better, too. He’s getting better at getting fouled. I would have never thought going into the season that Mayo would be the guy that could get more free throws than anybody else on our team.”