Louisville forward Ray Spalding
Louisville forward Ray Spalding 13) works his way around the screen of Pittsburgh forward Terrell Brown
Louisville forward Ray Spalding 13) works his way around the screen of Pittsburgh forward Terrell Brown

Louisville opens ACC play with 77-51 romp over Pittsburgh

January 03, 2018 12:39 AM

UPDATED 5 MINUTES AGO

David Padgett thought his Louisville team would come out with more intensity Tuesday night, and the Cardinals proved their interim coach right.

Quentin Snider scored 19 points to lead Louisville to a 77-51 victory over Pittsburgh.

In the Cardinals' Atlantic Coast Conference opener, they quickly erased any taste left over from their 90-61 loss to Kentucky on Friday. Louisville (11-3) used a 17-0 run to take a 28-12 lead with 7:48 left in the first half and led by at least 11 points the rest of the way.

"It was good to see them respond that way," Padgett said.

The Cardinals shot 50 percent from the floor, the third time this season they made at least half of their shots. Deng Adel added 12 points for Louisville, which had four players score in double figures.

While the Cardinals looked to put the Kentucky game behind them, sophomore Ryan McMahon is hoping they can still take something from it.

"Hopefully that will fuel us for motivation throughout the rest of the season, it was pretty unforgettable," said McMahon, who scored eight of his 10 points during the decisive run.

The Panthers (8-7, 0-2) made five of their first six baskets then missed their next eight as the Cardinals pulled away. Held to a season-low in points for the second straight game, Pittsburgh made just four of its final 17 shots in the first half and shot just 35 percent overall.

Parker Stewart led the Panthers with 12 points.

STALLINGS HAS ALTERCATION

Late in the game, Pittsburgh coach Kevin Stallings got into an altercation with a fan near the Panthers' bench. Stallings allegedly told a fan that at least his team did not pay players $100,000, referencing a claim in an ongoing FBI investigation that Louisville orchestrated such a payment to five-star recruit Brian Bowen.

The incident led to the dismissal of coach Rick Pitino and prompted the school to make Bowen ineligible.

In the post-game press conference, Stallings admitted to the confrontation with the fan, but he did not reveal what he said. (https://twitter.com/TomLaneWDRB/status/948413261950672896)

"Somebody said something bad about my players," Stallings said. "So, I'm just going to stick up for my players. Probably said the wrong thing, but I'm not going to let people talk crap about my players."

Padgett said he wasn't aware about the incident until a question was asked in his press conference, and he knows the team has been - and most likely will be throughout the season - heckled on the road. At Purdue, Boilermakers fan came to the game wearing FBI shirts.

"We've just got to ignore that," he said. "Our players at Purdue, they didn't let it bother them, so it's not anything we're going to talk about or pay attention to."

BIG PICTURE

Pittsburgh: The Panthers, who have 11 new players on the roster, are still trying to find an identity midway through the season. On Tuesday, Stallings employed his 11th different starting lineup of the season by starting five freshmen for the first time in program history. Part of that is due to an injury to senior forward Ryan Luther, who missed his fifth straight game with an injured right foot.

Junior Jared Wilson-Frame came off the bench for the first time this season, as Stallings said he was hoping that would give him a spark after struggling in the last three games. However, despite the lineup shuffling, it hasn't impacted who gets playing time.

"Of course we're searching for something that works. It's just trying to reward guys that are playing a bit better," he said.

Louisville: The Cardinals did indeed recover a bit from their lopsided loss at Kentucky on Friday, but questions remain about this team's ceiling. In particular, Louisville hasn't beaten a team currently rated in the top 100 of the RPI. Louisville has plenty of opportunities ahead during the next month as nine of its next 10 opponents are in the top 100.

Padgett said he's telling his players to just take it game by game.

"That's the only way we can look at it," he said. "In leagues like this, and I remember from my playing days in the Big East, you can't look ahead. I mean, you just can't."

TIP-INS

With the loss, Pittsburgh dropped to 0-2 in conference play for the first time as an ACC member. The last time the Panthers started conference play with two losses was in the 2012-13, their last season in the Big East. Louisville's 17-0 run was its the second best this season. The Cardinals had an 18-0 run against Siena on Dec. 6.

UP NEXT

Pittsburgh: The Panthers will seek their first conference win of the season Saturday afternoon when they travel to Virginia Tech.

Louisville: The Cardinals go on the road for their next two games, with both opponents currently ranked. First up will be a trip to No. 25 Clemson on Saturday afternoon, followed by a visit to No. 24 Florida State next Wednesday.