LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — It was Louisville’s annual “Teddy Bear Toss” game, where fans can bring teddy bears to throw on the court for kids charities at the KFC Yum! Center.
Montana had no intention of being toyed with. The Grizzlies played No. 16 Louisville tough for a dozen minutes or so, before the Cards got down to business, and went down to Sananda Fru.
Louisville | Kentucky | Indiana | Eric Crawford
Louisville was down a starting point guard (Mikel Brown, back) and a backup (Kobe Rodgers, concussion protocol). Still, they put a bow on their pre-holiday schedule by wrapping up Montana and stuffing them in a sack, 94-54.
"Those games right before Christmas, you always worry about guys having sugar plums dancing in their heads," Louisville coach Pat Kelsey said. "But our preparation was really good, and obviously coming off that loss at Tennessee kind of got their attention."
The start was clunky. The threes weren't falling. But they then got their Fru shot. They fed the big man for dunks, post baskets and putbacks. He finished with a career-high 18 points on 9-of-11 shooting. It was enough to make Santa take notes.
Louisville, a 30.5-point favorite, didn’t just cover. They reupholstered the spread and turned it into a La-Z-Boy heading into a 10-day holiday break.
A few takeaways, such as they are in a game where the Cards were not threatened.
Fru-nomenal efficiencyÂ
With Louisville’s guards missing early threes (just 5-for-18 from deep in the first half), the 6-foot-10 Fru went 7-for-7 before halftime and finished. He added 8 rebounds, 2 blocks, and a steal in just 23 minutes — easily his most complete performance as a Cardinal.
At one point, Kelsey toyed with a two-big lineup with Fru and Aly Khalifa, the team’s No. 2 assist man.
“My team did a great job finding me in the right actions,” Fru said. “So many lobs. Without our point guards, the execution was great.”
Said guard Isaac McKneely: “A big emphasis for us the past two days was getting the bigs involved.”
And, once the inside scores started coming, Louisville was able to take a lid off from three-point range.
No Brown, no Rodgers
Brown wore a back brace outside his uniform on the bench, and Rogers sat out after his head was stepped on following a collision at Tennessee.
In their place, J'Vonne Hadley and McKneely were the ballhandlers.
“I hadn’t played point guard since high school,” McKneely said. “It was a little rough to start, but then we got the flow of it.”
Kelsey called Hadley, "one of the best Swiss Army knives I've ever coached. You can put him at 1 through 5 and he can play it. He takes pride in being that guy."
Hadley dished out three assists and had just one turnover in 28 minutes.
McKneely emerges from slump
McKneely, a 40-percent three-point shooter for his career, was 1-for-10 his past two games, but bounced back with 4-for-6 shooting on Saturday.
“It had been a rough couple of games,” McKneely said. “But it was nice to see the ball go in. That kind of gives you confidence moving forward. … But as a shooter, it’s all mental. I know the reps I put in and the work, I feel like the next shot is going on. That’s what my team needs me to do.”
Dominance on the glass and defensive disruption
The Cards outrebounded Montana 48-25, including a 14-4 edge on the offensive glass, leading to 21 second-chance points. They also tallied 13 steals, forced 19 turnovers, and turned those into 17 points.
McKneely added 16 for Louisville, followed by 14 for Cadwell and 13 for Hadley.
More Sports Coverage:
Coffee with Crawford | Bozich's Senate tribute, Valvano and the NBA Cup, Davenport's book
CRAWFORD | Resilient Alabama rallies past Oklahoma, sets Rose Bowl date with Indiana
CRAWFORD | The people who moved us: WDRB’s 2025 sports people of the year
Copyright 2025 WDRB Media. All Rights Reserved.