Iowa
Hawkeyes make up for Owen Freeman’s absence just fine in 96-77 win over South Dakota
Josh Dix lit it up with 23 points, and sophomore Seydou Traore had a very nice first game as a Hawkeye with 12 points and shot-blocking
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IOWA CITY — A West African influence is looking like a very good influence for the Iowa men’s basketball program.
On the day the news came that Mali native and 6-foot-10 forward Bidara Diakite of Connecticut committed to the program as a Class of 2025 recruit, two current Iowa players of West African descent were very good in the Hawkeyes’ 96-77 win over South Dakota Tuesday night at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
Forward Seydou Traore, a 6-7 sophomore playing his first game as a Hawkeye after missing the team’s opening two contests with a foot issue, had 12 points in 22 minutes. Soph forward Ladji Dembele had a career-high 11 points and a game-high 8 rebounds.
Traore was born and raised in New York City, but his parents came to the U.S. from the Ivory Coast, which borders Mali. Dembele was born in Mali and lived there until he was 13 when his family moved to Spain, and then New Jersey.
Another Hawkeye, freshman Chris Tadjo, lived in Mali before moving to Montreal.
With starting center Owen Freeman out with illness, Traore and Dembele helped make up for his absence. Traore blocked a pair of shots. Dembele had four offensive rebounds.
“I think they fit well into this institution and into this state,” Iowa Coach Fran McCaffery said of Dembele, Traore and Tadjo. “I think our style of play fits all of them, but it’s been impressive to me how easy it has been to coach those guys.
“They’re innately workers. They work, they listen, they want to do what the coach asks them to do. If anything, I try to get them to be a little more free-flowing. Just trust your talent and make plays. And you’re seeing that more with Ladji this year. And you’ll see with Chris. Seydou’s doing it already.
“I have no doubt our addition will do the same.”
Traore averaged 11.8 points last season as a freshman with Manhattan. He confidently made a couple of first-half 3-pointers.
“You can’t speed him up,” McCaffery said. “He plays at his pace.
“He makes plays for himself, but he almost appreciates making plays for other people more.
Traore said “I didn’t miss a beat” in his first practice back from what he called a tweak in his right foot. It didn’t appear he missed a beat in the game, either. One of the night’s biggest roars came when he finished a lob from Brock Harding with an authoritative dunk.
Traore was an AAU teammate of Diakite’s with the New York Lightning.
“It’s just amazing having another brother commit to the Hawkeyes,” Traore said.
Oh, Iowa’s player from western Iowa was especially good Tuesday, also. Junior guard Josh Dix of Council Bluffs made 5-of-6 three-pointers and scored 23 points.
“My teammates were really just finding me when I was open, making it easy for me,” Dix said. “I was just catching and shooting wide-open threes.”
Freeman, who had 15 points and three blocks in both of Iowa’s first two games, is expected back Friday. That’s when Iowa (3-0) plays Washington State (3-0) at Vibrant Arena in Moline, Ill., at 7:30 p.m.
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