Glover scores 14, No. 24 Florida beats Marshall 73-67

Ques Glover started his college career as Florida’s least heralded freshman. He’s quickly becoming the team’s most important one.

Glover scored 14 points, Keyontae Johnson added 13 and No. 24 Florida rallied from an eight-point halftime deficit to beat Marshall 73-67 Friday night.

It was the Gators' fourth consecutive victory and first this season in which they trailed at the break.

Glover has played a pivotal role in the winning streak. After scoring just two points in the team's first four games, he has 40 in the last four.

“We knew it would just be a matter of time before he broke through,” coach Mike White said.

Glover carried the Gators (6-2) in the first half, scoring 10 points in 12 minutes. Without him, Florida would have been in an even bigger hole. The Gators trailed 33-25 at the break after missing all 10 shots from 3-point range and failing to notch an assist.

It was the first time in White's five seasons in Gainesville that his team failed to record an assist in a half. White said it also might have been the first time in his coaching career that’s happened.

“I can’t imagine,” he said. “That ball stuck. We were stagnant.”

The Gators played with more energy and better ball movement for most of the second half, helping them avoid falling out of the national rankings for the second time in two weeks.

Still, they nearly gave it away in the final minute. Florida had a 13-point lead with a little more than 2 minutes to play, but Marshall (2-4) hit a 3-pointer, scored off a turnover and converted a three-point play to help make it a two-point game, 69-67.

Andrew Nembhard answered with a step-back floater in the lane with 20 seconds remaining. Dontay Bassett blocked a shot on the other end, and Noah Locke closed it out with a pair of free throws.

“That was huge,” Bassett said. “It felt good.”

Iran Bennett led Marshall with 16 points. Jannson Williams added 15, and Taevion Kinsey chipped in 14.

"I've said it all along, we're a growing team," Marshall coach Dan D'Antoni said. "This is going to help us grow. Not the way I want to. I want to do it with a 'W,' but we learned some valuable things about people."

The 5-foot-11 Glover made 5 of 9 shots to go along with four free throws and two rebounds. The last addition to White’s top-10 recruiting class, Glover credited his emergence with getting more comfortable at this level.

Now he’s making more of an impact than fellow newcomers Scottie Lewis, Jason Jitobah, Tre Mann and Omar Payne.

“It really has been confidence because coming in early in the season I was playing a little timid because I didn’t want to go out there and make mistakes and hurt the team,” Glover said. “Now I’m playing with more confidence, and it’s starting to help me and benefiting the team as well.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.