Harrell leads No. 2 Louisville over Bellarmine

Harrell leads No. 2 Louisville over Bellarmine

Published Nov. 8, 2012 3:51 a.m. ET

No. 2 Louisville endured a dreadful shooting night and still managed a 65-46 exhibition win over Bellarmine on Wednesday night.

Freshman Montrezl Harrell had 16 points to lead the Cardinals, who missed their first 17 3-point attempts and finished 1 of 19 from behind the arc.

Luke Hancock made Louisville's lone 3-pointer, with 4:06 to play.

Gorgui Dieng added 14 points, 12 rebounds and three blocks for the Cardinals while Russ Smith had 11 points.

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Chris Dowe led Bellarmine with 19 points and 11 rebounds. The Knights advanced to the NCAA Division II national semifinals last season after winning the national championship in 2011.

Bellarmine pulled within five points midway through the opening half but a 17-2 Louisville run provided a 20-point lead on the way to a 32-15 halftime advantage.

Dowe and Vance Hall combined for 15 straight points for the Knights who cut their deficit to 48-35 with 7:50 remaining but would draw no closer.

''I really do think our poor shooting was a product of rushing and just having tired legs from chasing them around,'' Louisville coach Rick Pitino said. ''But most of the night they did a really good job of chasing them around.''

Hancock said the Cardinals had good looks and took good shots.

''They just didn't fall,'' he said. ''If we got those same looks tomorrow, they'd fall.''

Louisville held Bellarmine to 16 of 60 shooting from the field.

''I don't think I've ever been more proud of a team that shot 27 percent,'' Bellarmine coach Scott Davenport said.

Bellarmine offered familiar faces for Louisville fans in a matchup of schools separated by less than 4 miles. Davenport, a former assistant to Pitino, coaches the Knights and shares the bench with former Cardinals star Reece Gaines, a first-year assistant.

Davenport's son, Doug, is Louisville's director of video operations and played four years under his father at Bellarmine.

Pitino will face another former assistant, Steve Masiello, in Sunday's opener against Manhattan and said that's when he'll begin to measure his team.

''I don't put a lot of stock in this game,'' Pitino said. ''I don't put a lot of stock in the Pikeville game. You're just not going to see 6-11 guys chasing 6-foot-1 guys.

''We're going to have handle pressure against Manhattan. They're going to play exactly like we will, in terms of all the pressure and changing defenses. It will be a much better test of how we play.''

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