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Louisville basketball drops third in four, falling at home to FSU | Takeaways

Sábado 03 de Febrero del 2018

Louisville basketball drops third in four, falling at home to FSU | Takeaways

Louisville basketball struggled on offense in the second half and lost its third game in four to FSU.

Louisville basketball struggled on offense in the second half and lost its third game in four to FSU.

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Louisville's David Padgett talks after the Cards lose a close one at home to FSU 80-76. Scott Utterback/Louisville Courier Journal

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Louisville suffered its third loss in four games with an 80-76 defeat on Saturday against visiting Florida State at the KFC Yum Center.

The Cards took an early seven-point lead but Florida State shot 52 percent in the second half to slowly take control of the game.

Six Seminoles reached double-digit scoring for FSU, which improved to 17-6 and 6-5 in the ACC. Terance Mann's block on a driving V.J. King sealed the win with six seconds to play.

"You've got to give them credit," interim Louisville coach David Padgett said. "They came in here and exposed us on defense and out-rebounded us, which we knew was going to be a big key to the game. ... That team was desperate for a win and they came out and showed it."

Louisville (16-7, 6-4) got 19 points and eight rebounds from Deng Adel, and Quentin Snider added 15 points and seven assists. Ray Spalding missed the game's waning minutes after spraining his ankle, but he collected 13 points, nine rebounds, three steals and two blocks before leaving.

More: Louisville basketball is bruised but not broken after another loss to Virginia

See also: 3 key questions Louisville basketball faces during critical February ACC stretch

King totaled 10 points and six rebounds.

Late-game shot selection: It's been an issue for Louisville beyond just late-game scenarios, but poor shot selection late in Saturday's game hurt the Cards. King's drive didn't appear to be the shot Louisville wanted, nor did Malik Williams' late 3. It burned Louisville late, when the Cards had a chance to tie or win on the final possession. It burned Louisville at Virginia and at Clemson, too. The ball needs to be in Quentin Snider's hands, with movement and spacing.