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Taylor drops 28 on Hoosiers

MADISON -- It was the Jordan show Thursday night at the Kohl Center.
One guard named Jordan got off to a hot start, pushing his team out to an early lead. The other came alive when his team needed him most, and sealed the deal late by dribbling out the game's final seconds.
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Less than five minutes into the game, Jordan Hulls scored 10 straight points for Indiana on four shots from the field, pushing the Hoosiers' lead from 6-4 to 14-6. Hulls would add just six more points, however, finishing with a team-high 16 on 7-of-12 shooting.
Hulls, who averages 10 points per game, went 2-for-4 from 3-point range, which fell in line with his season average of 51.7 percent from long distance.
"You let your best players play," IU head coach Tom Crean said of Hulls' shooting. "Jordan took shots, he was very aggressive and I think there's some growth with him on that part. I don't think it's anything special that we're doing. We've been saying he needs to shoot the ball more since last year."
Jordan Taylor, on the other hand, was just getting started after Hulls had completed his 10-point streak. With just four points on two layups to that point, Taylor exploded for a career-high 28 points while shooting 9-of-15 from the floor and a perfect 7-for-7 at the free throw line.
Taylor added his own stretch of eight straight points for the Badgers, which cut the Hoosiers' lead to 19-18, midway through the first half. The junior guard also finished the first half with five straight to make it 34-30 at the break.
In the second half, Taylor really took control of the game, scoring nine of Wisconsin's 11 points over a five-minute stretch that determined the outcome of the game. During that same time, the Badgers' went from down 48-47 to a 58-52 lead.
"Jordan really progressed over the past three years," said Wquinton Smith, who has guarded Taylor in practice over the same span. "He's getting more confident with his shot and it's more hard to guard him in practice. I get a little frustrated sometimes.
"That's what he's been showing against all the Big Ten guards. He's holding his own, and to me is the best guard in the Big Ten."
Smith, who was impressive in his own right with two points, two assists and a steal in 12 minutes of play, was far from the only one impressed by Taylor on the night.
Crean, a coach that is very familiar with Bo Ryan's program dating back to his time at Marquette, alluded to Taylor being comparable to former UW guard Devin Harris. As for his rank among current players, Crean said he thought Taylor was up their among the nation's elite.
"I think Jordan Taylor's not only one of the premier guards in the league -- that's obvious -- I think he's one of the premier guards in the country," Crean said. "And it's not just because he played great tonight. He is an outstanding player.
"He's got all three facets when it comes to scoring -- he can get to the rim with anybody, he's got a great shot fake... he's got the mid-range game, and he's certainly got the 3-point game."
Modest to the point of continually downplaying any personal accomplishments, Taylor credited his teammates Thursday any time he was asked about something he did.
Along with that modesty, however, Taylor has an unmistakable confidence about him that allows him to succeed. With his 28-point performance, Taylor took back the Big Ten scoring lead in conference games. He's averaging 22 points per contest, one better than Purdue's JaJuan Johnson at 21 points per game.
"Jordan, as people are finding out, is a pretty good player," Ryan said. "He's been very instrumental in putting us in the position that we're in right now. And we're definitely going to need him to continue to play like that, that's for sure."
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