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Villanova’s Bryce Lindsay is breaking out of his slump at the right time for the Wildcats

Lindsay has been able to impact the game in other ways, but the transfer from JMU dropped 19 in Villanova’s win over Butler.

Villanova’s Bryce Lindsay scored 19 points against Butler as he continues to work out of his recent slump.
Villanova’s Bryce Lindsay scored 19 points against Butler as he continues to work out of his recent slump.Read moreElizabeth Robertson / Staff Photographer

Bryce Lindsay isn’t very superstitious, so he didn’t take Kevin Willard up a few weeks ago when the Villanova coach suggested maybe he reorient himself in bed and sleep a different way.

Lindsay did, however, take Willard and his family and support staff up on their advice in recent days. Lindsay was 13-for-65 from three-point range in the 11 games that proceeded his 15-point effort, behind four triples, last week in an overtime road win over Xavier. The redshirt sophomore guard carried Villanova at times through its non-conference schedule, but being the focus of the opposing team’s scouting report was taking its toll.

“They’re telling me, ‘Go out there and be you,’” Lindsay said Wednesday night after Villanova’s 82-73 win over Butler. “‘Don’t think too much. Focus on defense, focus on the other things, and your shot will come.’”

Lindsay scored 19 points Wednesday and helped Villanova get to 22-6 on the season and 13-4 in Big East play. He went 2-for-6 from three-point range and was 6-for-14 from the field overall and a perfect 5-for-5 from the free-throw line. It was Lindsay’s first time making six shots in a game since a Jan. 3 road win at Butler. He made six or more in eight of Villanova’s first 14 games before a 13-game drought.

Villanova has fared just fine despite Lindsay’s prolonged slump. But there’s no denying how much easier the offense comes when Lindsay — who shot 40.8% from deep at James Madison last season — is filling it up.

It did take a bit for Lindsay to understand that there was more to impacting a game than just making shots. This was the first real slump he remembers going through. He had some off shooting nights at JMU last season, but things never snowballed the way they did in recent weeks.

“That was probably one of the hardest things I have ever went through in my life,” Lindsay said. “I’ve never, ever played that bad until now. It comes with the game. When you’re the No. 1 player on the scout, they’re going to try to take you away and that’s what they did. I’m just figuring out ways to maneuver through that.”

» READ MORE: Forged in Baltimore, Bryce Lindsay has overcome his share of adversity. Now he’s Villanova’s leading scorer.

Willard would certainly disagree with Lindsay’s assessment of his play, and he spent recent weeks trying to build him up and remind him of that when he noticed Lindsay’s frustration showing up in his body language.

“Sometimes when you’re a shooter and you’re not shooting good and you’re standing on the court and you’re thinking about it, it’s like the worst thing you can do,” Willard said. “Just trying to get them to focus on all of the positive stuff.

“There are times on the floor where he’s plus-8, plus-9, but he’s 0-for-4. You can see his body language. You can see everything going down. But your team is playing well when you’re out there.”

Lindsay, who is averaging 14.3 points over the last three games, was plus-12 in 31 minutes Wednesday night. The advanced stats show a team that has a much better net rating in conference play with Lindsay on the floor.

“In my head I feel like I was playing bad, but in their head I’m not playing bad because the stats, my plus-minus is good,” Lindsay said. “I was always able to make shots, but when I don’t see the ball go in it’s hard.

“These past few games I tried not to focus on it as much.”

His effort Wednesday helped Villanova bounce back from Saturday’s deflating loss to No. 6 UConn in front of a sold-out Xfinity Mobile Arena. The Wildcats built a 14-point halftime lead but started sloppy in the second half and allowed Butler to climb back into the game. The lead was one before Lindsay extended it back to three with a layup with more than eight minutes to play. He again scored inside to bump an eight-point lead back to double digits with four minutes to go, then helped seal the game with four free throws inside the final two minutes.

» READ MORE: Five things to watch as Villanova plays its final four regular-season games before the Big East tournament

The fact that Lindsay scored all 10 of his second-half points inside the arc is a positive sign, too. It seemed at times like he was becoming too reliant on shooting threes in trying to break out of his slump.

“Just focusing on other things,” Lindsay said when asked how he navigated it all. “My defense, my rebounding ...”

Willard, who was seated between Lindsay and Devin Askew — who scored 16 points Wednesday — at the postgame podium, leaned over as Lindsay went on with his answer and circled a stat on the sheet in front of Lindsay.

Focused on rebounding? Lindsay had zero rebounds Wednesday.

The player and coach shared a laugh. After six weeks of slumping, Bryce Lindsay can finally smile.