Utes coach Larry Krystkowiak said he wasn't a very good coach last week after hearing about the death of Jon Huntsman Sr. pic.twitter.com/QNJ8Yvq5Fe — Lynn Worthy (@LWorthySports) February 9, 2018

Utes senior forward David Collette swatted a shot by Stanford’s Josh Sharma with 3:58 remaining, his third block of the night. Collette celebrated by pounding a fist against his chest after the ball sailed out of bounds.

Unfortunately for Collette, the exuberance resulted in a technical foul and him fouling out. Fortunately for Utah, its lead had already reached 23 points on the way to a 75-60 win in the Jon M. Huntsman Center on Thursday night. Utah, led largely by a contingent of seniors, earned a win over a Stanford team that came into the day tied for fourth place in the Pac-12 Conference standings.

“I got in trouble for showing emotion,” the 6-foot-10 Collette quipped about the technical. “Apparently, there’s not emotion in basketball anymore.”

Utes senior David Collette talked about the energy and focus the team played with tonight in a win over Stanford. pic.twitter.com/Cx5YGOtOQG — Lynn Worthy (@LWorthySports) February 9, 2018

The win allowed Collette, who scored 13 points in 14 minutes, to be lighthearted about the foul. He and fellow seniors Justin Bibbins (18 points, four assists) and Tyler Rawson (eight points, 10 rebounds, five assists) set a tone, and junior guard Sedrick Barefield added 17 points and four assists

The Utes got a shot in the arm from four senior starters — Gabe Bealer started along with Collette, Rawson and Bibbins — playing with a sense of urgency.

“Coach mentioned that before the game, he was starting four seniors, and we need to step up our play,” Bibbins said. “We just wanted to come out more aggressive, play smarter but know that every game matters at this point.”

The Cardinal were coming off of a 96-point effort in a win against Oregon that included a 50-point first half last week. Thursday, the Cardinal didn’t reach 50 points until less than six and a half minutes remained. Collette’s three blocked shots were part of a season-high 10 for the Utes (14-9, 6-6) on a night when they held the Cardinal (13-12, 7-6) to 35.8 percent shooting.

The Cardinal start three players 6-foot-8 or taller, including preseason All-American forward Reid Travis, who is 6-foot-8 and 245 pounds with bulging biceps and muscular physique that makes him look he’d been carved out of granite.

However, the Utes controlled post play on both ends of the floor and outscored the Cardinal 36-24 in the paint.

“We talked about it all week,” Utes coach Larry Krystkowiak said. “We haven’t been stellar all the time with our post play, but we aren’t going to go anywhere without it. So we continue to stress throwing the ball inside, those guys making some moves and making their teammates better.”

Despite the Utes coming off of one of their worst offensive performances of the season in which they scored a season-low 55 points at Colorado, Krystkowiak’s message leading up to the game was that offense would take care of itself if they locked in on defense.

He proved prescient as the Utes shot 50 percent from the field, their highest percentage against a Pac-12 opponent this season.

The Utes led by 12 at halftime, 40-28, and Bibbins, who’d scored just seven points last week at Colorado, scored 11 first-half points while going 4 for 5 from the field and making all three of his 3-point attempts.

The lead reached 20 points after Collette used an up-fake to create space under the basket and threw down a one-handed slam, Barefield drove the lane for a layup and Parker Van Dyke came up with a steal near midcourt and converted a layup to make it a 64-44 lead with 9:37 remaining.

“It’s crazy how fast it goes,” Collette said of the sense of urgency for the seniors. “Everyone says it, but once you’re in that position you start to realize it goes quick. Coach has been talking a lot about it and helping us realize that it goes fast and getting us to take it in and give our best effort going out.”

The Utes earn a win against a Stanford team near the top of the Pac-12 standings