Lady Vols basketball will get another taste of ranked action.
No. 17 Tennessee (7-2) faces No. 16 Louisville (10-3) in the Shark Beauty Women’s Champions Classic on Dec. 20 — the third showcase against a ranked team this season.
A 72-point win over Winthrop showed some improvements, but now they’ll have to translate over to a game against a Louisville team that took down a ranked North Carolina squad on Sunday. With the semester over, outside academic distractions are out the window.
Basketball is the main forefront for the Lady Vols.
“If they’re not locked in right now, it’s going to be a long year,” head coach Kim Caldwell said.
In the prior two meetings with opponents inside the AP Top 25 — No. 9 NC State and No. 3 UCLA — the Lady Vols have not been able to get over the hump. The Wolfpack, now out of the rankings, took Tennessee to the final seconds. Meanwhile, UCLA boat raced the Lady Vols for 99 points in a 22-point win.
Though wildly different results, the lessons learned have made Tennessee battle-tested for another matchup on neutral hardwood.
“I think we know what it takes,” Caldwell said. “I think we know what it looks like. You know you have to value every possession. You know you have to take care of the ball, you know the rebounding is going to be important. So it does help that we have some ranked games in big-time stages under our belt before we head to New York.”
It is invaluable experience, nonetheless, for a Lady Vols lineup that puts weight on true freshman guard Mia Pauldo. Tennessee’s starting guard has posted 32 points across the last two games, going for a career-high 10 assists the last time on the court. She previously had not recorded more than three assists in a game.
But part of the responsibility at guard is running the offense. Caldwell’s system does not necessarily allow for an offensive set each time down the court — but rather a joint effort to find quick buckets in transition. That’s where she’d like to see more improvement.
“Top priority is transition offense,” Caldwell said. “We need to be able to score the ball in transition. If you’re gonna, again, if you’re gonna create havoc and you’re gonna get turnovers, you gotta be able to score off of them or you’re pressing for no reason. I want our shooting percentage to go up, but I think a lot of that goes with getting easy wins in transition. And then rebounding is going to be huge for us all year ’cause if we’re gonna continue to miss shots, we’ve got to be able to go get them.”
The Lady Vols scored 28 fastbreak points against Winthrop. They forced 24 turnovers, however. Though not being causally related, a bigger emphasis could improve that.
Tennessee only forced 12 turnovers and scored just five fastbreak points against UCLA the last time it faced a ranked opponent. Ten forced turnovers and six points on the fastbreak were the result of game one against NC State.
“I don’t have a goal in mind on percentages, but obviously, I want to score off every single one,” Caldwell said. “And we’re to the point right now where we’re not even getting a shot off on every single one, and that’s where I’m having a hard time of, hey, you gotta be able to shoot. You gotta put yourself in an advantage where you can get a layup off of these. And we’re not even putting pressure on the rim to try to get the shot off. Sometimes we’re turning it right back over and that’s not acceptable.”
Louisville and Southern Indiana are the final two games that Tennessee has on the nonconference docket. Facing the Cardinals at 11 a.m. ET on Dec. 20 will give a better benchmark of where Caldwell’s team is at ahead of SEC play — when the Lady Vols host Florida on New Year’s Day.
“I think we’re getting better,” Caldwell said. “I know we’re getting better. And so I really hope that we can take a step and beat a ranked opponent before we get into the thick of things.”