Tide flips switch to down Aggies in SEC opener
Cecil Hurt
TideSports.com Columnist
It was hard to guess what flipped the switch for the University of Alabama basketball team in the final 12 minutes of Tuesday night's win over Texas A&M. Perhaps it was Anthony Grant's anger at a missed call to end the first half. Perhaps it was simply the aggressiveness of Retin Obasohan.
Whatever it was, Alabama should bottle it for use over the rest of the SEC season.
The Crimson Tide blew out Texas A&M, 65-44, to open league play with a win, and cap a perfect 5-0 homestand.
Ricky Tarrant paced UA with 15 points but Obasohan scored 12 points off the bench, including 10 in the decisive second-half stretch.
Playing without leading scorer Jalen Jones, out with an ankle injury, the Aggies struggled to find offensive consistency but used some timely 3-pointers to keep the game close into the second half. Alex Caruso and Peyton Allen hit back-to-back 3-pointers coming out of the first media timeout of the second half, cutting Alabama's lead to 36-33 with 13 minutes to play.
But Obasohan brought energy off the Alabama bench, attacking the rim and sparking a 14-2 UA run that put the Aggies out of reach.
"It's a great way to start SEC play'" Alabama head coach Anthony Grant said. "In the first half, we did some things that were not characteristic of what we want to do, but we met the challenge in the second half.
"I thought Retin gave us a lot in the second half. He has been doing that defensively, but he brought something offensively tonight, and as he continues to get healthy, I think he can do more of that."
Alabama had built a lead of as many as 13 points in the first half, but Texas A&M closed the half on a 12-2 run, including a buzzer-beating basket by Alex Robinson to end the half. Replays seemed to show the ball still in Robinson's hand as the clock ran out, but officials awarded the basket, angering Grant to the extent that he came out of the UA locker room at halftime to speak with SEC observer of officials on hand. That heat carried over in the second half as well.
Peyton Allen scored 13 points off the bench to pace Texas A&M (9-4, 0-1 SEC). The Aggies shot just 30.8 percent (16 of 52) in the game.
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