Home floor, struggling ASU presents chance for CU Buffs men’s basketball to get right – The Denver Post

It was only a month ago when Colorado and Arizona State collided in Tempe.

In what has evolved into a recurring theme for the CU men’s basketball team, the Buffaloes played that game without Cody Williams and Julian Hammond III, while Tristan da Silva made his first appearance following a three-game injury absence.

The Buffs had hoped da Silva’s return would spark a bounce-back performance in the wake of a drubbing suffered at Arizona two days earlier, but instead porous first-half defense led to a three-point loss for CU.

CU hasn’t exactly floundered since then but, in large part due to continuing injury issues, the Buffs have been treading water instead of taking off. ASU, meanwhile, improved to 4-0 in the Pac-12 with that win against the Buffs but has struggled since, bringing a run of losses in six of seven games with four in a row into the rematch on Thursday night in Boulder.

Following Wednesday’s practice, head coach Tad Boyle didn’t specifically comment on the game-day outlooks for Williams (face) and Luke O’Brien (ankle), both of whom missed Saturday’s loss at Utah. But he did say both players practiced on Wednesday, brightening the possibility the Buffs will have their top seven rotation players in the mix for just the 12th time this season.

“They both practiced (Wednesday). A step in the right direction,” Boyle said. “Luke’s ankle is not a hundred percent for sure. (Tuesday) he was limping. (Wednesday) he wasn’t. The fact that they’re out here practicing is a good sign.”

Fully healthy or not, the Buffs have a chance to gain confidence defensively against a Sun Devils squad that boasts the lowest overall field goal percentage (41.4) and 3-point percentage (29.8) in the Pac-12. However, the Sun Devils shot 53.3% in the first half of last month’s win against CU, and da Silva has been among the veterans reminding his teammates that other scouting reports this season have detailed a few weak-shooting teams, only to watch those clubs get on track against the Buffs’ inconsistent defense.

“I feel like a lot of times when people struggle, once we start playing them they get going,” da Silva said. “We can’t let that happen. We’ve got to make sure we lock-in defensively and not let them get going. Not let them get any easy buckets. There were way too many at their place that we just gave up on.”

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