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  Monday, Jan. 10 9:00pm ET
Mouring, El-Amin lead Huskies
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- It wasn't quite one of those team meetings that usually turn things around after some emotions are bared. After all, it was just two guys. But it worked.

Connecticut point guard Khalid El-Amin called a meeting with backcourtmate Albert Mouring, and it's been what the Huskies (No. 4 ESPN/USA Today, No. 5 AP) have been looking for.

Khalid El-Amin, Ivan Wagner
Connecticut's Khalid El-Amin plays tight defense against Texas' Ivan Wagner.

"The day before the Pittsburgh game I told Albert I wanted to talk to him," El-Amin said of last Saturday's road victory. "I told him there was no way we could do it without him. We needed him to shoot so people couldn't play a box-and-1 on me or a zone against us. He's too good a shooter for that."

Since the talk, Mouring has gone 9-for-11 from 3-point range, and that included making his first five against No. 15 Texas on Monday night in a 77-67 victory.

The Huskies (12-2) had won 11 straight games until losing to Notre Dame, which played almost all zone, last week. Mouring's shooting seemed to relax the Huskies in the first game in the Hartford Civic Center since then and helped them to a 56-39 lead with 12:35 to play.

"That was the second terrific game for Albert Mouring," Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun said, referring to his career-high 22 against Pittsburgh and 21 against Texas. "He's starting to feel more confidence in himself. The past six or seven games he's been very consistent for us."

Calhoun also credited Mouring's ball-handling.

"He did more than just make points," Calhoun said. "He took some pressure off (El-Amin)."

Mouring's fifth 3 in as many attempts gave the Huskies their biggest lead in the very physical game that featured a lot of whistles and little action and it seemed they would coast to the win.

But the Longhorns (9-4) went on a 15-3 run as Connecticut scored once in 11 possessions and were within 59-54 with 4:46 left on two free throws by Ivan Wagner.

That's when El-Amin, who led Connecticut to the national championship last season, took over and was responsible for scores on the next three possessions.

He found freshman Tony Robertson on the break for a layup that made it 61-54. After Chris Mihm scored for Texas, El-Amin and Connecticut center Jake Voskuhl worked a nice screen-and-roll play that saw the big man dunk for a 63-56 lead.

Texas again answered on a hook shot by Mihm, but El-Amin extended the lead by working the same screen-and-roll with Voskuhl, only this time the guard didn't pass to the center and instead nailed a 3-pointer for a 66-58 lead with 3:01 to play.

"Khalid was terrific," Calhoun said. "That's what he does for us. Teams can't play him straight up or they get hurt."

The Longhorns got within 71-67 on a 3-pointer by Wagner with 25 seconds left but Mouring and Edmund Saunders each made two free throws and Saunders scored on a layup after a steal by El-Amin for the final margin.

El-Amin had 14 points and eight assists. Voskuhl had nine points and 11 rebounds in his matchup with Mihm, which drew 22 NBA scouts.

The Huskies finished with 10 blocked shots and also got some solid minutes from reserve center Souleymane Wane.

"I think we couldn't do this last year," Calhoun said. "We wouldn't block 10 shots on you, against anybody. Two centers had 17 rebounds between them tonight. Souleymane's a much improved player. Jake's improved."

Mihm finished with 18 points and 10 rebounds, scoring eight points over the final six minutes. Gabe Muoneke and Darren Kelly each added 12 points for Texas.

"It was frustrating. I couldn't even see the other guy coming and by the time I got into my shot, he was right there," Mihm said of Connecticut's inside defense. "Jake did a great job of really fighting me out there and making it hard to get the ball. I couldn't get into an offensive groove."

Texas, which shot 33 percent (24-for-72), really hurt itself at the free throw line, going 13-for-25 as it had a three-game winning streak snapped.

"They made some great defensive plays. I don't think there's anything wrong with getting your shots blocked. The difference was when they had to make the 3s they made them," Texas coach Rick Barnes said. "You dig yourself a hole when you miss free throws and it puts a lot of pressure on your offense."

Connecticut shot 44 percent (24-for-54) and led by Mouring's 5-for-6, went 6-for-10 from 3-point range.

Barnes and Calhoun went against each other 14 times when Barnes was coaching at Providence and those games were known for their physical style and emphasis on defense.

"A couple of times I thought I looked up and saw Michael Smith and Dickey Simpkins and those guys," Calhoun said, referring to the former Providence rebounding specialists. "It seemed like an old Big East battle for sure."
 


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AUDIO/VIDEO
video
 Khalid El-Amin dishes the rock to Ajou Ajou Deng.
avi: 857 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Jake Voskuhl drives baseline for the layup.
avi: 680 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1