CourtFrame
Liga Uruguaya
Tuesday, February 3, 2026 • Arena Bigua
118-70
Game Finished
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Total
Bigua30253033118
Cordon1221211670

Team Statistics

StatBiguaCordon
Field Goals26/3623/37
3-Pointers17/325/26
Free Throws15/199/15
Rebounds3424
Assists3314
Steals148
Blocks04
Turnovers1418

Game Recap

Biguá didn’t leave room for suspense on February 3, 2026. Playing at Arena Biguá, the home side jumped on Cordón immediately and never eased up, rolling to a 118-70 win that was essentially decided by the end of the first quarter.

Game flow: one-way traffic from the start

The opening 10 minutes were the game. Biguá ripped off a 30-12 first quarter, forcing Cordón to play uphill the rest of the night. Cordón stabilized slightly in the second (21-25), but Biguá answered with another 30-point third quarter (30-21) and then delivered the knockout in the fourth, a 33-16 closing burst that pushed the final margin to 48.

The separator: Biguá’s passing vs. Cordón’s stagnation

The clearest statistical gap was in creation. Biguá finished with 33 assists, a number that speaks to consistent advantage creation and a willingness to make the extra pass. Cordón managed 14 assists, a stark contrast that mirrored the scoreboard: fewer connected possessions, fewer clean looks, and too many empty trips while the deficit kept expanding.

Context: what it means going forward

The win moves Biguá forward from a 10-9 record and reinforces a pattern of volatility reflected in its recent form (LWLWL) — but this performance showed the ceiling when the offense stays organized and unselfish. For Cordón, now 3-16 with a recent run of LLLWL, the challenge remains finding sustainable offense and structure for full quarters; against Biguá, the early hole made everything else feel like damage control.

By the numbers

Final: Biguá 118, Cordón 70

Quarter scores: 30-12, 25-21, 30-21, 33-16

Assists: Biguá 33, Cordón 14

Key Takeaways

  • Large record gap (Bigua 10-9 vs Cordon 3-16)
  • Recent form favors Bigua slightly (2-3 vs 1-4)
  • No head-to-head data, so season records carry more weight