Everything Indiana’s Mike Woodson said before facing Auburn in Atlanta

Everything Indiana’s Mike Woodson said before facing Auburn in Atlanta

Indiana head coach Mike Woodson held a press conference Thursday at Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana, before traveling to Atlanta ahead of this weekend’s game. Indiana will face Auburn at 1 p.m. CT on Saturday at State Farm Arena in Atlanta.

It is the second meeting between the two schools ever and the first since the 1987 NCAA Tournament.

Woodson was the head coach of the Atlanta Hawks from 2004-2010. State Farm Arena, was his home arena — albeit named the Phillips Center at the time.

Here’s everything Woodson said.

On facing an Auburn team that plays aggressive defense and crashes the offensive glass…

“We just work, my man. That’s all we do. We do what we do, and that’s just work. They’re no different than some teams that we play that apply pressure. We’ve just got to handle the basketball, not turn it over, and get shots.

What they do to you, you’ve got to reverse it and do the same thing to them. That’s kind of how I look at it.”

On the health of starting guard Xavier Johnson…

“I don’t know yet. Right now he’s rehabbing, and hopefully he’ll be back here in the near future. That’s all I can give you right now.”

On areas of concern defensively when facing Auburn’s offense…

“I’m concerned about every team we play, not just Auburn. They’re a good basketball team. They do a lot of good things. But any team in college basketball is beatable.

We’ve just got to stick to our game plan, put a good game plan together, and see where we go.”

On the development of freshman guard Gabe Cupps…

“He’s just been steady. He’s been steady ever since we brought him on campus. Yes, he has a long way to go still, still trying to figure out the college game, but the fact that he competes, he loves to compete, he puts the work in. So he doesn’t look lost, just put it that way.

I’m pleased where he is, but knowing that there’s a lot of room for improvement.”

On playing a game in Atlanta…

“It means a lot. That’s where my head coaching career began, and I still have a home there, a lot of friends, people that supported me when I first started my journey as a head coach in Atlanta.

It was important that I take a game back there because I think for a lot of the people that supported me that were in my corner, they are still there, and that means a lot to me.

I figure bringing a game back would be something special for the people that have supported me all these years.”

On forward Kaleb Banks playing a game close to home…

“Again, he’s played well. He’s had his ups and downs, as a number of guys on our team, but we’ve been able to hold things together based on how we compete as a team. I thought the other night he was brilliant coming off the bench. He did a lot of good things for us.

Louisville is probably his best game where he logged a lot of minutes and played tremendous for us to help us win that game. I thought the bench the other night, they were wonderful in terms of how they competed. They scored the basketball, and they got after the perimeter guys.

Payton being big, he banged around a little in there. Walker doing what he needed to do. As we continue this journey, they’re going to have to continue to do that and grow together to help us win basketball games.”

On getting the most out of starting center Kel’el Ware…

“You heard the same stories that I heard. That was the knock on him. But again, that’s behind him. I don’t even know why we’re even rehashing it, revisiting it because it’s behind him.

That’s what was said about him when he played back there at Oregon, but we didn’t recruit him for those reasons. We recruited him because we thought he could help us win basketball games and that we could, as a staff, put him in the best position possible to be successful to help us.

He’s a young kid too that’s trying to figure it out. He’s come in here, and we pushed him, and he’s played some pretty damn good basketball for us. But we’ve got a long way to go. He’s got to continue to grow as a player and get better, and doing that, I think he can help us continue to win basketball games.”

On how facing major conference competition now can help Indiana this season…

“Competition is good, gentlemen. It’s always been that way in basketball. I’ve never been a coach to shy away from competition. It kind of puts our team and lets you know where you are and where you stand as a basketball team, win or lose.

We’ve got a tough schedule. We knew that coming in this season, based on the players that we brought in. Auburn is next up. We’ve got today and tomorrow to continue to prepare for them, and we’ll see where it leads us on Saturday.”

On a favorite coaching memory in Atlanta…

“No, not really. Because when I started that journey, I started out with 18, 19, 20-year-old young men that didn’t have a clue in what the NBA was about, and I didn’t have a clue as a coach because it was a struggle because we were so young.

But the beauty about that young team, from my peers, everybody kept saying, boy, you guys play hard. Boy, you’re competitive. But we just weren’t experienced enough to win games. We grew together as a group, and we eventually broke the ice and got in the playoffs, and that’s when it all took off.

We took Boston that year in the first round to seven games, and they ended up winning the NBA title, which that was the biggest thing for those young kids to experience because they hadn’t been in the playoffs. Once they got there, the media and everybody had us being swept and wouldn’t win a game. Hell, we forced a Game 7, which could have went either way. They ended up winning and then going on to win an NBA title.

Those were fond memories, to be able to take a team of young men and build it and have some success behind it.”

On guard CJ Gunn’s improvement and seeing shots go down…

“It’s very important. He had his struggles. He’s made a lot in practice and just didn’t carry over in the game for him. The fact that he made a couple, that was fantastic for us.

But I looked at the other parts of his game, where he defended, he looked more under control. He did a lot of things that we expect him to do, and I just hope it is a carryover as we continue to move on in the schedule.”