Here's What Mike Woodson Said After Indiana's 71-68 Victory over Illinois

Indiana picked up a much-needed Big Ten victory on Saturday, beating Illinois 71-68 at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Mike Woodson met with the media afterward. Here's the full video of his press conference, plus the transcript.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Indiana picked up a much-needed Big Ten victory on Saturday, beating Illinois 71-68 at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. The Hoosiers didn't play particularly well for long stretches, but they made all the play down the stretch to get their 19th victory of the season. They are also now 10-6 in the Big Ten.

Indiana coach Mike Woodson met with the media afterward, and talked about Trayce Jackson-Davis passing him on the all-time Indiana scoring list, the growth of freshman Jalen Hood-Schifino and so much more.

Here is the transcript of his postgame press conference: 

QUESTION. I imagine over the years people have asked you what's it like to be one of the most accomplished players in program history, and asked you about other players in program history similar to you. Trayce passed you on the all-time scoring list today. What will you tell people about Trayce once all of this is said and done?

MIKE WOODSON: Well, I mean, as a player myself, I was never about accolades, man. It's just something I was blessed to be able to do, scoring the basketball. The beauty about Trayce and Mike Woodson, we both didn't shoot threes. He doesn't shoot them, and I never had the three-point line. I couldn't be more proud of a young man than Trayce today. That record, I've been sitting in that spot for a long time, and for him to surpass it, man, it's special. It just means the body of work that he's put in over the years, it's been great but he can't stop there. It's just points. He's still staring at two things, a Big Ten title and a national title, and that's where I'm trying to get him.

Q. You guys are down 48-39 with a little more than 12 (minutes) to play. You climb back, and in that last minute and a half or so, why were guys like Jalen Hood-Schifino and Miller Kopp able to make such key plays?

WOODSON: We're hungry, too. This was a separation game. If they win, they separate. Even though we've got a long way to go still, this game was important. You've got to applaud Illinois and how they played. They were without their best player, and they were trying to move up, too, and they played that way. But we made the plays coming down the home stretch I thought that we needed to make in terms of getting stops, and Jalen's two big free throws, the jump shot he made, and then getting it out of that double-team right at the end there.

Q. You won a whole lot of 50/50 balls, especially in the last four or five minutes of that game. Just the effort and intensity that kind of went into everything on the defensive end, had as much to do with scoring the points, didn't it?

WOODSON: It had a lot to do with it. I think the first half we were getting beat on the boards. They won all the 50/50 balls. We were just moving in slow motion, I thought. It was heated in the locker room at halftime a little bit. But I thought we came out, and they jumped right on us right from the start, and we just kept scrapping and scraping, and we made a game out of that at the end and was able to do it what we needed to do to win.

Q. Can you talk about what your approach is with Jalen in terms of keeping the faith, because he didn't have a great statistical game, he made some mistakes, but then he's on the floor at the end of the game to make some big plays. What's your approach in terms of dealing with him on that?

WOODSON: He's a freshman. Freshmen make mistakes. I just look at the process of where he's come from and the fact when you lose your starting point guard in Xavier Johnson and you turn the ball over to a freshman to run your ballclub at a major program, that's huge. It's huge. Make no mistake about it, he's put us in in position along with the supporting cast with Trayce Jackson-Davis leading the way. You're not going to shoot it well all the time, but I always judge players at the end of the game about who they are as a player, and he made the plays down the stretch that counted. That's what I look at. 

If he had miscued those plays, then I'm in his ear after the game or tomorrow saying, hey, these are things that you've got to learn the next time you're in that position. But he made every right play except for throwing the ball away out of the time-out. As a coach, that kind of tears you up. But I thought he made winning plays coming down the stretch to help us win it.

Q. How have you seen Race since his injury attack his recovery to get back on the court? How have you seen him deal with the mental and physical hurdles of that?

WOODSON: No, I think he's coming along smoothly, I think. I played him up at Northwestern 25 minutes. I think he got 22 minutes or so tonight. So I've just got to gauge that a little bit. Somehow I've got to get Tamar (Bates) and (Jordan) Geronimo (going). Malik is playing at a good level. I've got to get them back in the swing of things because we're going to need guys like that as we continue this journey. We've still got a long way to go, and I just don't want (minutes) to pile up. Trayce is playing damn near the whole game. I think he played 37 tonight. We've got to start scaling him back if we can with Malik and Geronimo giving us some minutes up front.

Q. Obviously Miller, he had a tough night shooting the other night at Northwestern, but he bounces back. Was there any conversation with him afterward? I know it was an emotional game for him. How happy were you as a coach to see him play like that tonight after a tough game at Northwestern?

WOODSON: Well, Miller has been around a long time, and that Northwestern scene is not a good scene for him, going back to last season. It is what it is, man, but the bottom line, he's played well here at home for us. So I expect him to make shots here. He's got the fan base, and he's got everybody in his corner, so it makes it a lot easier for him.

Q.  You alluded to Jalen having the ball in his hands so much, but as a team with 14 turnovers that led to 16 points off of those turnovers and then at the free-throw line Illinois was 14 of 18, 78 percent, Indiana just 61 percent, was 50 something percent for most of the game. How concerned are you about those things as this season starts to wind down?

WOODSON: Well, again, we've kind of been up and down in those areas in terms of the free throws, but for the most part we've been better this year shooting free throws, especially when it counts. You're always concerned about that. You look at every statistical category on the stat sheet, you can go in and nit-pick and say this and that, and in some games it's just smooth sailing and things are great.

But again, stats are what they are. Sometimes I gauge things on what happens at the end of the game. If it's a close game, a lot of it's on me. Yeah, I live my fantasies through these guys to see who's going to make plays. That's what I get excited about. Tonight, Jalen made plays, shooting a stupid number. It was crazy. But he still made plays down the stretch to help us win the game.

Q. Illinois made 6-of-12 three-pointers in the first half, missed all eight in the second half. What was the halftime adjustment for the three-point shooting and how did three-point shooting affect the game on both sides of the ball?

WOODSON: Again, I thought that they were the most aggressive team the first half, and we were just playing on our heels. The ball was just floating around the perimeter easily. Guys were just freelancing, beating us off the drive. It wasn't pretty basketball the first half I didn't think. I thought the second half, especially as the game started to get tighter, our defense started to pick up and eliminated a lot of the threes and the good looks that they had the first half.

Q. You've been around a lot of young basketball players in your career. What is it about Jalen that allows him to throw a bad pass that they take for a dunk and then turn around, come right back, make a shot, make two free throws ...

WOODSON: Well, it wasn't pretty, like I said. I mean, that's a coach's worst nightmare, man. You come out of the timeout and you throw the ball right to your opponent, and they didn't have to work for it. When he was coming back down, I was screaming at him. And he took it upon himself to run a pick-and-roll and make up for it and make the shot, and then he makes the two free throws, so go figure.

Q. Specifically, Matthew Mayer had 16 from the field in the first half and only two from the field in the second. How much of the halftime adjustment was specifically keying in on him, and what did you see from your guys?

WOODSON: Miller got an earful, and guys that didn't switch up on him, at halftime. Hell, I thought he was going to go for a career high here the way he was playing. He was playing extremely well. But second half we kind of closed in on him and took away a lot of the gaps where he was able to work on.

Related stories on Indiana basketball

  • GAME STORY: Jalen Hood-Schifino made big plays down the stretch and Trayce Jackson-Davis had 26 points and 12 rebounds as Indiana erased a nine-point second-half deficit and beat Illinois 71-68 on Saturday at Assembly Hall. CLICK HERE
  • WHAT PLAYERS SAID: Trayce Jackson-Davis scored 26 points and grabbed 12 rebounds in Indiana's 71-68 win over Illinois on Saturday. Miller Kopp bounced back with 12 points on 4-for-5 3-point shooting. Here's what Jackson-Davis said after the game, with video attached. CLICK HERE
  • ILLINOIS REMAINS POSITIVE AFTER LOSS: Illinois suffered a 71-68 loss on Saturday at Indiana, but coach Brad Underwood said he believes in his team more right now than he has at any point this season. CLICK HERE
  • WATCH JACKSON-DAVIS CLIMB SCORING LIST: Indiana forward Trayce Jackson-Davis passed his coach Mike Woodson for fifth on the Indiana all-time scoring list on Saturday against Illinois. CLICK HERE
  • WATCH JACKSON-DAVIS TRIM LEAD: Indiana forward Trayce Jackson-Davis came down with a loose ball and laid it in just before halftime of Saturday's game against Illinois. CLICK HERE

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Tom Brew
TOM BREW

Tom Brew is an award-winning journalist who has worked at some of America's finest newspapers as a reporter and editor, including the Tampa Bay (Fla.) Times, the Indianapolis Star and the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. He has covered college sports in the digital platform for the past six years, including the last five years as publisher of HoosiersNow on the FanNation/Sports Illustrated network.