Todd Golden breaks down Florida basketball win vs. FAMU

Florida beat FAMU by 24 points on Tuesday, but there are many areas where head coach Todd Golden would like to see his team improve. Here’s everything he said after the win.

Florida basketball is 5-0 to start the season, but head coach [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] wasn’t happy with his squad’s second-half effort against Florida A&M on Tuesday night.

“Look, I thought we played really well in the first half,” Golden opened his post-game press conference. “I thought we did a good job to get a 24-point lead, and I just thought in the second half we let our foot off the gas a little bit. Stylistically, I thought offensively we played pretty well.

“Obviously, we did not shoot it well. We missed 15 threes and I thought we allowed that to affect our defense a little bit in the second half, and we just fouled way too much on the defensive end — sent them to the line 19 times in the second half.”

Moving forward, the goal is to put forth a more competitive effort for the entirety of the game, starting with Friday’s matchup.

“Like I talked about with the guys in the locker room, our expectation is to be able to play two complete halves, play 40 minutes. I thought tonight, we played 20 really good minutes in the first half and then we were just okay in the second. A lot to improve upon. We’ll have some good film to break down tomorrow with the guys as we prepare for Southern Illinois on Friday.”

Florida has struggled to jump out to early leads the season, especially within the first five minutes of the game.  The Gators have not trailed at any point this season by the 15-minute mark of the first half, but they’ve only jumped out ahead early against Grambling State — tied against South Florida, up three against Jacksonville, up six against Grambling State, up one against Florida State and up four against FAMU

“I think we come out with the right mentality,” he said. “We haven’t played our best in the first four minutes. We did win the first mini-game. I think we were up 7-6, or whatever it was, but sometimes it does take you a couple possessions to get in the flow and to get comfortable. But I do believe our mentality was good and we had the right spirit about us coming out. We just didn’t play our best until kind of the middle of the first half.”

Strong finishes to each half

Despite the slow start to each half, Golden praised his team for putting a better effort together in the final minutes on both sides of the break.

“I was pleased with both (finishes to each half) for different reasons,” he said. “In the first half, to be able to extend (the lead) to 24 on a 19-2 run was awesome. Different guys stepped up and helped us create that lead. We challenged our guys (in the second half).

“The last eight minutes we were getting after them pretty good because we have bigger goals. Making sure we’re competitive for all 40 and not letting ourselves off the hook.

“In that last mini-game, we challenged them and said, ‘Listen, we’re not satisfied with how this game is ending right now. We have to find a way to spread it out a little bit,’ and we did. Again, we want to more complete, but in those specific situations, I thought we did a good job.”

Golden praises veteran leaders

The returning duo of [autotag]Walter Clayton Jr[/autotag]. and [autotag]Will Richard[/autotag] have helped keep the team level through these first five games, and Golden added FAU transfer [autotag]Alijah Martin[/autotag] into that group as well.

“I’d throw Alijah in there, too. He had 14 (points), nine (rebounds) and four (assists), no turnovers. Those guys, as you all know, we built this team with those three guys being the main cogs on the perimeter and guys we play off of and lead us with their veteran leadership and their experience,” he said.

“All three of those guys have scored 1,000 points in college, all are great shooters, tough, physical defenders and guys that understand how to win.”

Golden added that being able to rely on that trio allows him to make adjustments on the fly, even if it means giving them more minutes in a game that should be able to go to the backups.

“It gives you a lot of confidence as a coach to be able to rip those guys out there. When we’re at our best, they’re just playing, right? Like we’re getting stops, we’re getting clean rebounds and we’re getting out in transition and they’re just making plays.

“I had to play them a little more than I wanted to tonight to be able to make sure that we finished the game the right way but, yeah, it gives you a lot of comfort as a coach when you’re able to roll those guys out there.”

Martin stepped up in particular against FAMU, which speaks to his competitive nature as a player.

“It’s one of his best qualities, his competitiveness and his maturity in the way he attacks it,” Golden said. “First of all, he knows what winning is, playing in the Final Four (a year ago), and to have someone like him on the floor with Will and Walt that has that kind of mentality — this is all three of those guys’ last rip, and so the way they compete on a daily basis is really important.

“Alijah’s a guy that, regardless of what the score is, he’s going to compete at a high level. He’s not always going to be perfect, but he’s a guy I’d always want on my team. He’s always going to play the game the right way. I’ve seen his floor game improve dramatically since he’s been with us — another four-assist, zero-turnover night tonight. He’s just becoming a really complete basketball player this year.”

Thomas Haugh stepping up

With Sam Alexis out, [autotag]Thomas Haugh[/autotag] played a season-high 28 minutes against Florida A&M. He made an argument for increased playing time by breaking the double-digit barrier in points and forcing a handful of turnovers.

“He’s the definition of a winning player,” Golden said. “He does all the quote-unquote little things that impact winning. He’s a guy that can switch defensively, he’s a very good rebounder, a really good ball mover and facilitator on the offensive end and he hit a couple shots tonight. Twelve (points), seven (rebounds), I guess two assists and three steals, he just finds ways to impact (the game). Plus-23 in 28 minutes.

“Without having Sam, without having Denzel (Aberdeen), obviously our bench was shortened and we needed a guy like Tommy to step up and play more minutes and we knew he’d be up to the task. He’s fantastic. He comes to play and compete every day, and he generally gives us a better chance to win when he’s on the floor.”

Other players stepping up off the bench

With Haugh taking the bulk of the extra minutes in the frontcourt, Golden split Aberdeen’s minutes between freshman [autotag]Isaiah Brown[/autotag] and first-year sophomore [autotag]Urban Klavzar[/autotag], who recently was cleared by the NCAA to play this season.

“I though Urby played well, he just didn’t shoot well,” Golden said. “I thought he played hard, I thought he defended well, had a good floor game with three assists, zero turnovers. I think for him it’s just going to take a little bit to get comfortable playing at this level — just kind of getting thrown into the mix early in the season, but I was pleased with his effort. Obviously, we want him to make a couple more shots but I was pleased with his effort.

“I thought Zay was awesome. I thought he did a really nice job at the end of the first half taking advantage of the minutes that he got in the last mini-game. Hit those two big threes that really extended it to 24. Got a great defensive stop at the end of the first half. Kind of was put in a one-on-one situation in the middle of the floor, moved his feet and kind of used his physicality to force a turnover.”

With the aforementioned trio of guards in the starting rotation all set to move on from Gainesville after this season, Golden is eyeing Brown as a potential replacement in the backcourt for 2025-26.

“Zay Brown is a guy we believe will be a great player here at Florida and obviously has some really good ones in front of him right now but as early as next year, we think he can be an impact player in a big way. I was happy for him that he got to play a little more tonight and proud of him for taking the opportunity.”

Off night for Alex Condon

Preseason All-SEC forward Alex Condon scored 14 points in the win, but he shot 3 of 14 from the field. A 7 of 8 night from the free-throw line saved him and he remained effective on the glass with nine rebounds, but the poor shooting performance as him at a season-low 12.2 points per game.

“I think tonight was hopefully a little bit of an aberration,” Golden said. “He was shooting like 85% from two coming into this game and tonight just had some bad breaks. Credit to FAMU, I thought they bothered him around the rim. They blocked a couple of his shots and didn’t go for a couple of his pump fakes. He kind of got caught in no-man’s land. But Condo is always playing hard.

“He didn’t have his best game, his most efficient game, but he’s always playing hard and competing his tail off. Got on the glass, protected the rim again, got two steals so, again, he found ways to impact winning, he just did not finish tonight. Hopefully as we kind of prepare for SIU, I think he’ll be better on Friday night that way.”

Transition offense good, but could be better

Florida dominated the fast-break against FAMU, but the Gators still aren’t knocking down all of the open shots they’re creating, especially from distance.

“That’s kind of who we are,” Golden said. “We want to get out in transition and score early in the clock, and to win that battle, 30-4, is important. To be honest, I thought we should have done a little better, in terms of what we were able to do on the offensive end. I do think that when we go back and watch, we missed some really good looks from three. I thought we maybe took three quick ones or ones that weren’t great shots, but for the most part I think we got some really great catch-and-shoot looks that we just didn’t knock down.

“Playing the percentages, I do believe that will go in our favor here shortly, especially with the guys that are taking those shots. It just hasn’t gone that way for us, but fortunately we’ve still been able to wins.”

Drawing fouls a positive for Florida

Florida has attempted 25 or more shots from the free throw line in all but one game so far this weekend. With the three-ball not falling as frequently as the Gators would like, the ability to draw fouls consistently has helped Florida stay out in front in most games.

“When you’re not shooting the ball well, you can go through spells where you have a lot of empty possessions. When you’re able to get to the line, I feel like that settles you a little bit. We shot it decent from the line, about 70% tonight, but that’s the most efficient way to score. You get to the line, it’s about 1.4 points per possession. It’s a good way to maintain consistency and not allow teams to go on runs against you.”

On the flip side of that coin, Florida got in some foul trouble during the second half, which hurt its ability to extend the lead.

“To be honest, that’s why we were having so much trouble keeping FAMU down in the second half. We just let them get to the line 19 times, and to their credit, they made 85% of them. Our field-goal percentage on defense was great, 34 from the field, they only shot 24 from three, but that free-throw percentage for them was the equalizer and allowed them to play us even in the second half.”

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Three takeaways from Florida’s blowout win against FAMU

Florida took care of business Tuesday night against the FAMU Rattlers, with the Gators winning by 24 points despite a lackluster second half.

Florida (5-0) continues its undefeated start to the 2024-25 college basketball season Tuesday night with an 84-60 victory over the Florida A&M Rattlers (0-4).

The Gators came into the game favored by more than 30 points, even without two key members of the rotation, but a competitive second half kept the margin of victory at a clean two dozen. Guard Denzel Aberdeen and forward Sam Alexis missed the contest due to illness, opening the door for [autotag]Isaiah Brown[/autotag] and [autotag]Urban Klavzar[/autotag] to see some more action.

[autotag]Will Richard[/autotag] led all scorers with 20 points on 8-for-15 shooting (3-for-9 from distance) and added seven rebounds (five offensive) to his stat sheet. [autotag]Walter Clayton Jr[/autotag]. trailed Richard with 17 points (7-for-13, 3-for-7 3PT) and five assists, but ended the night with four fouls.

[autotag]Alijah Martin[/autotag] (14 points) and [autotag]Thomas Haugh[/autotag] (12 points) both reached double figures, with the latter being one of three Gators to secure nine rebounds — the other being frontcourt starters [autotag]Rueben Chinyelu[/autotag] and [autotag]Alex Condon[/autotag].

Florida’s early-season three-point struggles continued in the victory, but the Gators cleaned up their turnover problem a bit as a tradeoff.

Improved ball-handling

The biggest takeaway from the expected blowout comes from the turnover margin. Florida forced 15 turnovers and gave the ball up just seven times. Head coach Todd Golden came into Friday’s matchup against Florida State hoping for 12 or fewer turnovers but got 19 instead.

Although Florida A&M is not as competitive of a matchup as FSU, it’s a big positive to see Florida keep its giveaways in single digits against a lesser opponent.

Even more encouraging is seeing Clayton turn the ball over just once after back-to-back games with four. He’s working on distributing the ball more to impress NBA scouts, but players often rack up more turnovers while trying to pad the assists column in the scorebook. Clayton finished the night with five assists, his second-best figure of the season after a seven-assist outing against Jacksonville.

Increased minutes for Brown, Klavzar

With Aberdeen and Alexis out, Golden needed to spread out 35 minutes among his other players. Brown and Klavzar were the main benefactors of the extra time, but Haugh and Chinyelu also got some extra playing time in the frontcourt rotation.

Klavzar played 15 minutes and Brown saw eight, but the two guards played very different games. Klavzar played a distributor role, finding three teammates for assists, and struggled to shoot the ball, making just one of seven attempts and going 0-for-4 from three-point range.

Brown was far more efficient, draining both of his three-point attempts and hitting 3 of 4 shots from the free-throw line. With Florida set to lose all three of its starting guards after this season, it’s easy to see Klavzar fitting in at the ‘1’ and Brown at the ‘2’ if they continue to improve over the next year.

Second-half effort lacking

It’s hard to complain about a 24-point win, but Florida didn’t play its best basketball in the second half. It’s almost as if the Gators came out of the half content with the margin and allowed themselves to play a sloppier brand of hoops than Golden would have liked.

Florida fouled 12 times in the second half to just five in the first and shot 3-for-18 (16.7%) from deep after making 7 of 16 (43.8%) before the break. Even the turnovers came more frequently — two in the first half and five in the second.

In fact, the only column where the Gators improved after halftime was rebounds (27 to 20), and many of those came on the offensive end following errant shots.

This team hasn’t proven itself enough to get lazy. Expect Golden to address the issue in practice this week in hopes of getting a 40-minute effort on Friday against Southern Illinois.

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NCAA clears international transfer to play for Florida basketball

Slovenian guard Urban Klavzar came to Florida to play basketball. Despite a small delay, the NCAA has cleared him for action, and he will see the court Friday.

About an hour before Todd Golden spoke with the media on Thursday, his staff learned that the NCAA cleared Slovenian international transfer guard [autotag]Urban Klavzar[/autotag] to play this season for the Florida Gators men’s basketball team.

Kalvzar’s eligibility status remained up in the air through the first three games of the 2024-25 season as the deciding body worked through his “unique” case. Ultimately, the NCAA decided that Klavzar’s time with a second-level professional team in Spain did not meet the criteria to rule him ineligible. He will begin his college career as a sophomore with three years of eligibility.

Golden plans to get Klavzar on the court immediately, saying he will see the court on Friday night against Florida State. With Walter Clayton Jr., Alijah Martin and Will Richard all locked into the starting lineup, Klavzar will come off the bench for most of the season. Adding him to the rotation should benefit Florida’s pick-and-roll game and give the Gators another three-point shooter.

“He’ll play tomorrow night, for sure,” Golden said on Thursday. “And it’s going to take some time for him to kind of become acclimated and integrate him in with the other guys. Obviously, we’ve played three games and we have a good flow going, but he’s a high-level player and he’s a guy that we have counted on being a part of this rotation, since the summertime, since he came to Florida.”

Golden likened the situation to what the team went through with Zyon Pullin a year ago. Pullin was suspended the first three games of the season after participating in pro workouts ahead of the NBA draft process. In the end, Pullin earned All-SEC First Team honors from the coaches. The Gators are hoping this move works out the same way.

Florida’s compliance staff worked diligently to get Klavzar cleared, according to Golden. He named Senior Associate Athletics Director Jamie McCloskey and Associate Athletics Director Kim Green as key players in the process, while also thanking the SEC and NCAA for “doing what was right.”

“I think anybody that’s kind of studied this year’s class of freshmen from Europe realize that there was a lot of guys that had this unique circumstance,” he said. “So, I’m not necessarily surprised it took a little longer.”

Klavzar’s experience will help him integrate with the team quickly. He’s played in big-time environments and has seen the court at some of the highest levels on the international scene.

“The great thing about Urby, he’s not going to be your your normal freshman,” Golden said. “He’s not a guy that’s coming out of the high school ranks, bright-eyed, bushy-tailed going into Florida State. … I think he will be ready to help us right away.”

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Freshman G Urban Klavzar unavailable for Gators hoops opener

Florida men’s basketball is still waiting for the NCAA to determine international signee Urban Klavzar’s eligibility status as the 2024-25 season begins.

Florida men’s basketball will start the season without 20-year-old freshman [autotag]Urban Klavzar[/autotag], according to Swamp247.

Klavzar’s eligibility remains in question, and third-year Gators head coach Todd Golden addressed the hold-up last week.

“We’re working on it on a day-to-day basis and hoping for good news soon but nothing definitive,” Golden said. “We can’t play him yet but, again, my hope is that we’ll hear something in the next however-many-days until Monday with some good news. Listen, the guy deserves to play college basketball. That’s just how I feel.”

Although the specifics of the issue remain unknown, but Jacob Rudner of 247Sports notes that it could be linked to Klavzar’s time in the second division of the Spanish basketball league system.

NCAA rules say that players forfeit eligibility if they “have ever taken pay, or the promise of pay, for competing in that sport.”

Klavzar’s professional history was public when Florida added him to the roster as an international signee, and the program remains optimistic that he will be declared eligible for at least part of the season.

“He’s getting straight As right now here at Florida,” said Golden, “and I understand a lot of the rules and legislation that’s in place and the reason why it is but this guy deserves to play college athletics.

“There’s no benefit with him not being able to play for Florida. It’s not a disadvantage to somebody else. He’s done all the academic work to be admitted into a place like Florida and now I think he deserves the right to play.”

Klavzar is a pick-and-roll scorer who can shoot near 40% from three-point range and attack the basket. There are questions about his game translating from Euro ball to the SEC, which points to Golden’s argument of him deserving an opportunity to prove himself at this level.

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Local JUCO guard joins Florida basketball team as walk-on

The Gators added their eighth offseason addition to its roster with walk-on guard Kevin Pazmino out of Santa Fe College.

Florida basketball added a walk-on to its 2024-25 roster on Tuesday with the addition of guard [autotag]Kevin Pazmino[/autotag] out of Gainesville (Florida) Santa Fe College. The 6-foot-4-inch native of Weston, Florida, brings three years of collegiate eligibility along with him.

In 29 games with the Santa Fe Saints — all starts — Pazmino averaged 10.3 points, 2.6 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game, shooting 39.4% overall from the field, 82.5% from the free-throw line and 38.8% from beyond the arc. He drained four or more three-point attempts in 11 games and had eight games in which he made five or more.

Pazmino joins 7-foot-9-inch center Olivier Rioux out of IMG Academy in Bradenton as the Gators’ two walk-ons this offseason — making a total of eight additions to the Orange and Blue ahead of the upcoming campaign.

Former Florida Atlantic guard [autotag]Alijah Martin[/autotag], former Chattanooga forward [autotag]Sam Alexis[/autotag] and former Washington State center [autotag]Rueben Chinyelu[/autotag] arrived in Gainesville through the transfer portal. International players, guard [autotag]Urban Klavzar[/autotag] and forward [autotag]Viktor Mikic[/autotag], and former four-star high school signee [autotag]Isaiah Brown[/autotag] are welcomed to the program as first-year players.

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Gators basketball adds Slovenian guard Urban Klavzar to fill out roster

Florida basketball’s final roster spot goes to another player from the international scene. Slovenian sharpshooter Urban Klavzar is now a Gator!

Florida’s backcourt got help in a big way on Monday as Todd Golden completed the 2024-25 men’s basketball roster with the addition of Slovenian point guard [autotag]Urban Klavzar[/autotag], according to Swamp247.

While technically a freshman, the 20-year-old Slovenian product has been around European professional basketball since 2014. He debuted in 2021 and got significant playing time last season in Spain’s second division. He’s a three-point specialist who shot 42.7% from deep.

Klavzar should get playing time early on, giving Florida’s veteran backcourt a break in any non-conference games that get lopsided. [autotag]Walter Clayton Jr[/autotag]. and Will Richard are both back and shoe-ins to start. They could end up at the 2 and 3, allowing FAU transfer [autotag]Alijah Martin[/autotag] to break into the starting five. Junior [autotag]Denzel Aberdeen[/autotag] is in the mix, too.

That leaves Klavzar fighting to break into a fairly established rotation, but he has the experience to do it. Some of the international teams Klavzar has played against are comparable to the NBA G-League or better, so the transition to college ball shouldn’t be too shocking.

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