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Tag: ncaa tournament

  • Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, beloved nun who inspired Loyola’s NCAA Tournament runs, dies at 106

    Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, a nun who became a national sports icon for cheering on the Loyola men’s basketball teams during their NCAA Tournament runs, died Thursday, the school said. She was 106.

    Sister Jean, as seemingly everyone on the Rogers Park campus and later the sports world knew her, had served as the team chaplain since 1994 until her retirement this summer. For decades she was a fixture at Ramblers games, offering pregame prayers with players and fans.

    She became nationally adored as Loyola made a seemingly miraculous Final Four run in 2018 as her wheelchair was pushed onto the court after each victory and Loyola players greeted her with gentle hugs as they exited the floor.

    “In many roles at Loyola over the course of more than 60 years, Sister Jean was an invaluable source of wisdom and grace for generations of students, faculty, and staff,” Loyola President Mark C. Reed said in a statement. “While we feel grief and a sense of loss, there is great joy in her legacy. Her presence was a profound blessing for our entire community and her spirit abides in thousands of lives. In her honor, we can aspire to share with others the love and compassion Sister Jean shared with us.”

    At 5 feet tall, Sister Jean stood out at Loyola games often wearing a letterman’s jacket or a maroon and gold scarf along with a pair of Nikes. She lived in a freshman dormitory on campus and had an office in the student center, where young adults struggling with studies or homesickness would often pop by for a chat.

    She also was competitive.

    When former coach Porter Moser was hired in 2011, Sister Jean left an envelope filled with scouting reports on his desk for him. She would email players words of encouragement after games but also advice on how to improve.

    She called her 98th year of life “fun.”  Sports celebrities such as Charles Barkley, Bill Walton and Dick Vitale requested a chance to meet her. She was approached frequently by fans for selfies.  She made headlines nationally — and as she was often quick to remind reporters, also “internationally” — and was interviewed on “Good Morning America” and CNN.

    In 2018, Loyola made its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1985 and its first Final Four since 1963. The Ramblers qualified for the tournament again in 2021 and 2022.

    But Sister Jean was no newcomer to sports.

    At 103, Sister Jean of Loyola University has a memoir: Shocking details? None. Gripes? Just one.

    She was born on Aug. 21, 1919, in San Francisco to a family of sports fans. During high school from 1933-37, she played on the girls basketball team. For girls at that time, the court was divided into three sections, and only the forwards could shoot.

    “I was a very short girl, so I didn’t shoot,” she told the Tribune in February 2018.

    In 1939, Sister Jean said, a rule changed allowed girls to play half-court. She became a teacher and coach, and “at noon, during lunch on the playground, I would have the boys play the girls. I told them, ‘I know you have to hold back because you play full court, but we need to make our girls strong.’ And they did make them strong.”

    Sister Jean said she knew she wanted to become a nun in third grade when she was inspired by her teacher. After high school, she left for Iowa to join the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary convent. In 1941 she returned to teach in California, where her students included actor/comedian Bob Hope’s children.

    An undated photo of Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, who worked at Mundelein College from 1961 to 1991. Sister Jean has become a fixture at Loyola Ramblers basketball games. (Loyola University Chicago)

    In 1961 she accepted a teaching job at Mundelein College, an all-women’s school near Loyola. She attended athletic events at both schools and drove some Mundelein teams to competitions.

    Mundelein merged with Loyola in 1991, and Sister Jean retired from the education department around that time. She told the Tribune she served as a “booster shooter,” checking up on athletes’ studies but not acting as an adviser.

    The basketball team’s chaplain retired and asked if she would like to take the position.

    “I wanted to be their friend first of all and be sure to encourage them,” she told the Tribune. “They know they can talk to me any time they want.”

    Sister Jean missed few games in her tenure as chaplain, but was sidelined for nine home games during the 2017-18 season after breaking her hip. Even in the hospital, she tracked the games online and emailed players.

    Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt says her pre-game prayer in the huddle before a Loyola Ramblers basketball game, March 2, 2013, at the Gentile Center. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
    Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt says her pre-game prayer in the huddle before a Loyola Ramblers basketball game, March 2, 2013, at the Gentile Center. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

    She insisted on traveling with the Ramblers to watch them win that season’s Missouri Valley Conference tournament in St. Louis, and then trekked to NCAA Tournament sites Dallas, Atlanta and San Antonio.

    Sister Jean said shortly before her 99th birthday the following August that she had a health setback with her right leg.

    Her birthday celebration was attended by students, athletic staff members and coaches at the campus student center. Her cake included 99 candles and Moser presented her with a Ramblers No. 99 jersey.

    Sister Jean in 2019 celebrated her 100th birthday.

    Her secret to a long life?

    “I eat well and sleep well,” she said at the time. “And hopefully I pray well.”

    Shannon Ryan is a former Chicago Tribune sports writer. 

    Shannon Ryan

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  • Broome says there’s no pain in elbow, will be ready to face Florida

    SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Auburn forward Johni Broome returned to practice for the Tigers on Thursday and said he has no pain in his right elbow and “no limitations” ahead of the Tigers’ Final Four matchup with Florida.

    Broome, a unanimous first-team AP All-American, is the Tigers’ leading scorer and emotional leader. Auburn got a major scare when he injured his elbow in the Tigers’ win over Michigan State to get to the Final Four.

    He returned to that game but had been held out of practice until the team arrived in San Antonio.

    “Ready to go. Taking it day by day, but set for Saturday,” Broome said. “No limitations.”

    Broome wore two layers of sleeves on his right arm and said he made sure to test the elbow by pushing and shoving with teammates in game situations. The idea was to “make it mad a little bit” to see how it would respond.

    It went well. Broome said it is having no pain.

    “Coach sat me out for precaution, but Saturday, I’ll be 100%, for sure,” when the Tigers (32-5) face the Gators (34-4).

    “I’m glad he feels that way,” Auburn coach Bruce Pearl said. “Today was the first day he moved in practice.”

    Broome’s status and pain tolerance for the elbow have been the biggest injury questions of the tournament so far.

    He had 25 points and 14 rebounds against Michigan State but briefly left the game in the second after a hard fall as the elbow bent at an awkward angle.

    Broome stayed down on the court, grimacing and holding his arm. He left the court for a medical check, but returned from the locker room five minutes later to cheers from the Auburn crowd.

    He swished a 3-pointer after he returned but also looked uncomfortable as he grabbed several rebounds with one arm after the injury.

    Broome has fought back from injury before. He missed two games earlier this season with an ankle injury. Auburn won both games against Mississippi State and Georgia.

    Florida is also on pain watch.

    Gators forward Alex Condon, who will likely match up with Broome, said his sore right ankle is “80 to 90% right now” and should be ready to play Saturday.

    Condon rolled his right ankle in the Gators’ Sweet 16 win over Maryland and played just 13 minutes in that game. Two days later, he played 28 minutes and seven points and seven rebounds in Florida’s 84-79 win over Texas Tech to get to the Final Four.

    “I’m just trying to get it right, and you know, not tweak it again,” Condon said.

    At Duke, the Blue Devils (35-3) are hopeful that forward Maliq Brown is healthy enough to contribute when they meet Houston (34-4) in the other semifinal.

    Brown was an important defender for the Blue Devils during much of the season but has been in and out of the lineup since mid-February after a dislocated left shoulder. He missed most of the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament and the first two games of the NCAA Tournament before returning for just a few minutes in wins over Arizona and Alabama.

    Brown said Thursday his shoulder feels better than last week and he’s been able to do more rehab and practice reps. He was not sure if he’s going to need surgery after the season.

    Associated Press

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  • UNC baseball outlasts LSU, advances to NCAA Tournament Chapel Hill Regional final

    UNC baseball outlasts LSU, advances to NCAA Tournament Chapel Hill Regional final

    Vance Honeycutt blasted two home runs into left field as the North Carolina Tar Heels beat LSU, the defending national champion, 6-2 on Saturday night in Game 2 of regional play in the NCAA Tournament in front of an announced crowd of 3,919 at a packed Boshamer Stadium.

    The victory puts the fourth-seeded Tar Heels (44-13) one win away from advancing to — and hosting — Super Regionals. UNC is seeking what would be its 13th regional title.

    North Carolina’s Vance Honeycutt (7) celebrates with teammates Colby Wilkerson (3) and Alex Madera (1) after connecting for a 3 RBI home run in the fifth inning to give the Tar Heels a 3-0 lead against LSU during the NCAA Regional on Saturday, June 1, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Vance Honeycutt (7) celebrates with teammates Colby Wilkerson (3) and Alex Madera (1) after connecting for a 3 RBI home run in the fifth inning to give the Tar Heels a 3-0 lead against LSU during the NCAA Regional on Saturday, June 1, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

    “We don’t have anything to celebrate yet, but that was a good ballgame between two powerhouse baseball programs,” UNC head coach Scott Forbes said. “We’ll take that win and move on and get ready for tomorrow night.”

    This matchup marked the first time since the 2013 College World Series that LSU and UNC had met on the diamond. The Tigers will now face Wofford — which beat LIU earlier Saturday — in a win-or-go-home game on Sunday for a chance to play UNC a second time.

    For a while, this clash between the Tigers and the Tar Heels was shaping up to be a real pitcher’s duel, as the contest was scoreless through four innings.

    After notching just two hits and striking out seven times in the first four frames against LSU’s Luke Holman, Carolina’s bats finally came alive in the fifth. Alex Madera got on base with a bunt down the third base line, Colby Wilkerson then slapped a standup double into right field, and then Honeycutt brought both in by drilling a 413-foot homer into the trees beyond the left field fence.

    North Carolina bull pen celebrates as North Carolina’s Vance Honeycutt (7) runs past after he hit a three run home run during the fifth inning of North Carolina’s 6-2 victory against LSU in the NCAA Regional at Boshamer on Saturday, June 1, 2024.
    North Carolina bull pen celebrates as North Carolina’s Vance Honeycutt (7) runs past after he hit a three run home run during the fifth inning of North Carolina’s 6-2 victory against LSU in the NCAA Regional at Boshamer on Saturday, June 1, 2024. Heather Diehl hdiehl@newsobserver.com

    Honeycutt followed that up by hitting another home run — this one, a solo shot that sailed 428 feet over the left field wall — in the bottom of the seventh.

    “(Holman) got me the first two times. I just went up there and committed to the fastball and got one,” Honeycutt said of his first homer. “I was probably pressing a little bit. Just a reminder right then to just kind of soak it in and go have fun.”

    Honeycutt’s pair of home runs — which had exit velocities of 111 and 107 mph, respectively — made him the sixth player in ACC history to hit at least 60 home runs in a career. Honeycutt now has 61, trailing the record-holder, former Wake Forest slugger Brock Wilken, by 10.

    “That was a no-doubter, for sure,” Forbes said of Honeycutt’s first home run. Of the second, he described it as: “Boom. Just a bazooka over the net.”

    North Carolina’s Vance Honeycutt (7) connects for a home run in the seventh inning to give the Tar Heels a 4-2 lead against LSU during the NCAA Regional on Saturday, June 1, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Vance Honeycutt (7) connects for a home run in the seventh inning to give the Tar Heels a 4-2 lead against LSU during the NCAA Regional on Saturday, June 1, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

    Before the first home run, Honeycutt had been 0-for-6 with four strikeouts in regional play. It was Honeycutt’s seventh multi-homer game for his career, tying the program record set by Chris Maples from 1999 to 2002.

    “It’s incredible how hard he hits the ball and how far it goes,” UNC pitcher Shea Sprague said of Honeycutt. “It’s a lot of fun to watch him. I’m glad he’s in our lineup and I don’t have to pitch against him.”

    Sprague, a left-handed junior, got the start on the mound for UNC and pitched admirably for 4.1 innings, allowing just two hits and no runs while fanning three LSU hitters. Senior righthander Ben Peterson relieved him midway through the fifth inning after Sprague allowed runners on second and first base. Peterson got out of the inning quickly, getting former N.C. State slugger Tommy White – who transferred to LSU in 2022 – to hit into a 5-4-3 double-play on the first pitch he threw.

    Peterson got into a bit of trouble in the top of the seventh, loading the bases and then walking in a run. Left-handed sophomore Dalton Pence relieved him and walked in another run before getting the next LSU batter, Hayden Travinski, to hit into a 6-4-3 double-play by throwing some well-targeted off-speed pitches.

    “Credit Pence. He made three really good pitches in a row to Travinski,” LSU coach Jay Johnson said. “He made three really difficult pitches to do anything with, other than to hit a ground ball. He pitched himself out of that.”

    The Tar Heels added two insurance runs in the eighth when Gavin Gallaher singled to left to score Jackson Van De Brake, and Madera hit into a fielder’s choice to score Anthony Donofrio. Pence closed the game out, striking out one to notch a save in a hitless top of the ninth inning.

    UNC will face the winner of the Wofford-LSU matchup Sunday at 6 p.m.

    This story was originally published June 1, 2024, 9:42 PM.

    Mitchell Northam

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  • No. 4 UNC baseball survives, stuns upset-minded LIU in wild ninth-inning comeback win

    No. 4 UNC baseball survives, stuns upset-minded LIU in wild ninth-inning comeback win

    North Carolina’s Gavin Gallaher (5) heads to home after connecting for a walk-off grand slam in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Tar Heels an 11-8 victory over Long Island University in the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.

    North Carolina’s Gavin Gallaher (5) heads to home after connecting for a walk-off grand slam in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Tar Heels an 11-8 victory over Long Island University in the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.

    rwillett@newsobserver.com

    The scoreboard in Boshamer Stadium might as well have been a target. When the ball left the barrel of Gavin Gallaher’s bat, it sailed toward that glowing rectangular screen in left-centerfield.

    As it bounced off and settled onto the warning track, the freshman from Apex was rounding second base, and Gallaher’s North Carolina teammates were pouring out of the dugout, screaming, cheering and beating their chests. The Tar Heels had just stared down defeat — and won.

    Gallaher’s walk-off grand slam gave the fourth-seeded Tar Heels an 11-8 victory over the Long Island University Sharks in the opening game of the regional stage in the NCAA Tournament on Friday night.

    “That’s one hell of a game,” UNC outfielder Anthony Donofrio said. “Obviously, Gallaher’s got ice water in his veins, going out there and delivering that jack to set us ahead.”

    North Carolina pitchers Cameron Padgett (15) and Olin Johnson (31) storm out the the bullpen and head to home plate to celebrate their 11-8 victory over Long Island University following Gavin Gallaher’s walk-off grand slam in the bottom of the ninth inning during the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina pitchers Cameron Padgett (15) and Olin Johnson (31) storm out the the bullpen and head to home plate to celebrate their 11-8 victory over Long Island University following Gavin Gallaher’s walk-off grand slam in the bottom of the ninth inning during the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

    The victory marked the 43rd of the season for the Tar Heels, which is their most ever in a single year under fourth-year head coach Scott Forbes.

    “With this team, nothing surprises me. They’re going to play until there’s 27 outs,” Forbes said. “I thought our guys, that last inning, had some really locked-in at-bats.”

    In the ninth inning against LIU, the Tar Heels faced the lowest of lows before experiencing the highest of highs.

    Leading 5-4 with two outs in the top of the inning, UNC pitcher Matt Polston delivered an 0-2 pitch down the middle of the plate that LIU’s JC Navarro slapped into deep left field, scoring Benjamin Fierenzi. After the next LIU batter walked, Jacob Pipercic then took Polston deep, driving a 2-1 offering over the left field wall. Suddenly, after seven pitches and two swings, UNC went from leading by one run to trailing by three.

    North Carolina’s Gavin Gallaher (5) slides safely into home ahead of the throw to Long Island University catcher Luke Stevenson on a 2 RBI single by Alex Madera in the sixth inning to take a 5-3 lead during the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Gavin Gallaher (5) slides safely into home ahead of the throw to Long Island University catcher Luke Stevenson on a 2 RBI single by Alex Madera in the sixth inning to take a 5-3 lead during the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

    Then, the switch flipped for the Tar Heels. Vance Honeycutt was hit by a pitch, Casey Cook singled, and then Donofrio singled. With one out, the bases were loaded in the bottom of the ninth for UNC. Alberto Osuna drove in one run with a single, then Lance Stevenson drawing a walk pushed in another. And then Gallaher, after looking at a strike, rocketed an 0-1 pitch over the heads and gloves of all the Sharks for the win.

    Gallaher finished the game going 3-of-4 at the plate with a double, two homers, a walk and six RBIs. He said it’s the first walk-off home run he’s hit since he was in Little League.

    North Carolina’s Gavin Gallaher (5) connects for a double in the sixth inning against Long Island University in the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Gavin Gallaher (5) connects for a double in the sixth inning against Long Island University in the NCAA Regional on Friday, May 31, 2024 at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

    “I was just happy to get the job done for the team,” Gallaher said. “I think the biggest thing is slowing the game down. I feel like I did a good job of that tonight. I feel like I saw all these pitches well.”

    Gallaher’s first dinger of the day gave UNC a run back in the bottom of the fourth — trimming the early deficit to one run – but scores were still difficult to come by for the Tar Heels against LIU right-handed pitcher Garrett Yawn, who struck out the side in the bottom of the fifth. The Tar Heels got to Yawn in the sixth inning though – right around the time he crossed the 100-pitch milestone – as Gallaher and Alex Madera combined to drive in three runs.

    The Tar Heels will now face the reigning national champions, LSU, on Saturday at 5 p.m. The Tigers, seeded second in the Chapel Hill regional, scored all of their runs in the final three innings Friday afternoon to beat Wofford, 4-3. Former N.C. State third baseman Tommy White went hitless in four at-bats for LSU against the Terriers.

    Saturday’s matchup will be the first time North Carolina and LSU have faced off on the diamond since the 2013 College World Series, where the Tar Heels beat the Tigers 4-2 in an elimination game. Before UNC and LSU face off, LIU will play Wofford in an elimination game at noon.

    This story was originally published May 31, 2024, 10:33 PM.

    Mitchell Northam

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  • DU hockey is headed back the NCAA championship

    DU hockey is headed back the NCAA championship

    Denver players celebrate after an overtime win against Boston University in a semifinal game at the Frozen Four NCAA college hockey tournament Thursday, April 11, 2024, in St. Paul, Minn. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

    AP

    It seems like an annual occurrence. The University of Denver’s hockey team is once again fighting for an NCAA national championship after a 2-1 win against Boston University in the semi-finals of the Frozen Four in St. Paul, Minnesota on Thursday.

    Tristan Broz scored his second overtime goal of the NCAA Tournament to help No. 3 seed DU beat No. 2 BU. The championship game is at 4 p.m. MT Saturday. Denver will face the winner of the Michigan-Boston College game.

    Denver last won the title in 2022 and is one of the most successful hockey teams in college history

    The Pioneers (31-9-3), playing in its 19th Frozen Four, are looking for their 10th national title in program history on Saturday — which would break a tie with Michigan for the most in college hockey history.

    Denver has just two losses since the start of February, going 14-2-1 in the last 17 games.

    BU senior Luke Tuch opened the scoring at 7:45 of the first period with his 10th goal of the season. He stole the puck and went in alone for a shothanded goal. It was BU’s fourth shorthanded goal of the season — and first scored by somebody other than Nick Zabaneh.

    Boston University (28-10-2) entered 19-1-0 this season when leading after the first period.

    Denver’s Tristan Lemyre tied it at 1-all with his second goal of the season. He took advantage of a wide-open slot by beating BU goalie Mathieu Caron.

    Broz scored from the top of the right circle at 11:09 of overtime by leading a 3-on-2 and sending a wrist shot through the pads of Caron. It was the 40th point of the season for Broz.

    Matt Davis, who made his 25th straight start in net, saved 33 shots for Denver.

    The Pioneers have won five straight games against the Terriers, setting a record for the longest winning streak in the series. Denver won the first four games from 1960-67, while Boston had a four-game winning streak from 1990-99.

    It was the second Frozen Four game in a row to reach overtime after Quinnipiac won last season’s national championship game in extra time.

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  • UConn shuts down Purdue’s perimeter shooters in decisive NCAA title game win

    UConn shuts down Purdue’s perimeter shooters in decisive NCAA title game win

    By JOHN MARSHALL AP Basketball Writer

    GLENDALE, Ariz. — UConn left Donovan Clingan on the loneliest island, stuck deep in the paint to wrestle massive Purdue center Zach Edey.

    Even when Edey bulled his way to shots at the rim, the Huskies refused to give their big man help, knowing the two-time national player of the year would get his points.

    UConn had a much bigger concern than the 7-foot-4 man in the middle: Purdue’s perimeter shooters.

    And, boy, did the Huskies shut them down.

    Chasing the Boilermakers off the arc all night, UConn held one of the nation’s best 3-point shooting teams to one 3-point basket and became the first team since 2007 to repeat as national champions with a 75-60 win on Monday night.

    “Not everyone can do what they just did,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “You just have to give credit to their defense and their coach and the way they’re wired.”

    UConn has become one of the nation’s most efficient offensive teams under Coach Dan Hurley, finishing No. 1 in KenPom.com’s efficiency ratings this season.

    What has made the Huskies great is they’re a gritty, downright dominating defensive team.

    UConn held its first four NCAA Tournament opponents under 60 points and limited Alabama, the nation’s highest-scoring team, to 72 points in the national semifinals.

    For the national title game, Hurley cooked up a plan to stay connected to Purdue’s shooters while living with whatever Edey was able to get against Clingan.

    Edey finished with 37 points, but needed 25 shots to get there and didn’t hit a shot during a 10-minute stretch as UConn began taking control.

    The Huskies instead shut down what the Boilermakers do better than almost every other team.

    “They just made a decision, like we can defend the perimeter and we can take this away from you, then you’re just going to get the ball to your best player, he’s going to go one on one,” Painter said. “They were going to live with that.”

    And they won with that.

    Purdue was the nation’s second-best 3-point shooting team during the regular season at 41%, giving the Boilermakers the perfect outlet when teams inevitably double-teamed Edey.

    UConn barely even let Purdue get looks from 3-point range in the national title game.

    Freshman Stephon Castle led the charge, hounding Purdue point guard Braden Smith every step. The rest of UConn’s defenders swarmed the 3-point arc and recovered quickly when they did get beat, holding the Boilermakers to 1-of-7 shooting from deep.

    Impressive against a team that averaged 8.3 made 3-pointers and 20.5 attempts per game before Monday night.

    Purdue’s lone made 3 was the fewest since Michigan sank just one in 1996. The seven 3-point attempts was the fewest in a national championship game since UCLA in 1995.

    The Associated Press

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  • UConn, Purdue collide in NCAA title game

    UConn, Purdue collide in NCAA title game

    The NCAA Tournament has reached its finish line, down to one game pairing the two best teams that routinely win in romps and boasting a marquee post matchup that features a two-time national player of the year.Maybe that will make this version of March Madness something to remember after all.Video above: Alex Karaban helps UConn advance in NCAA Tournament Reigning champion UConn meets Purdue on Monday night in a matchup of top seeds that have combined to win their first five tournament games by an average margin of 22.3 points. They have been at the center of a tournament lacking in drama, with its second-highest average margin of victory since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985, only one last-second winning shot and few of the highlight-reel thrills that had become a staple of the event.Don’t expect the Huskies or Boilermakers to feel the least bit bothered by their dominance, either.”People that love basketball and people that really know the game, you watch good basketball,” Purdue guard Fletcher Loyer said Sunday. “Obviously the upsets are fun and real cool and they get attention. But real basketball, you like to see the two best teams go at it. And I think that’s what we have here.”The tournament’s allure remains strong, from casual-at-best basketball fans scribbling out their own bracket projections to TV ratings that keep coming in strong. Yet there’s a short list of unexpected moments this year: namely, Jack Gohlke making 10 3-pointers to help Oakland stun blueblood Kentucky in the first round and North Carolina State’s wild ride as an 11-seed to the program’s first Final Four since the “Cardiac Pack” title run of 1983 under the late Jim Valvano.As for those last-second shots that live on in tournament lore, the closest this year was KJ Simpson rattling in a baseline jumper with 1.7 seconds left to lift Colorado past Florida 102-100 in Round 1.Everything else has largely been about UConn’s run to greatness, and Purdue’s march to redemption from last year’s stunning loss to 16th-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson.”Once you get to this time of year, everything is just you are who your identity is,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said. “The way you play, it’s very automatic. It just comes down to hoping that it’s your night.”UConn (36-3) has looked like a runaway train from before the first game in its push to become the first men’s team to repeat as national champions since Florida in 2006 and 2007, and become only the third program to become a repeat winner since UCLA’s run of seven straight under John Wooden from 1967-73.”The way they’ve won, you know, there’s been some teams that have hung in there with them, then they’ve separated from them,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “There’s some other teams that have gotten flat-out blitzed.”Last year, UConn became the fifth title winner since the 1985 expansion to win all six games by double-digit margins, the closest coming by 13 points. This year, the No. 1 overall seed has been even more dominant; the Huskies’ closest game was Saturday night’s 86-72 win against Alabama, and they’ve won five games by a combined 125 points — an average of 25 per night.By comparison, North Carolina in 2009 holds the record for highest points differential of that elite group at 121 points through six games, so another double-figure win by the Huskies to complete a 6-for-6 run would shatter that record.UConn forward Alex Karaban figures that’s still compelling stuff, too.”To witness greatness from both teams and to witness greatness from what we did last year, too, I think it’s special,” Karaban said. “And it doesn’t have to be close, doesn’t have to be any of that for it to be March Madness. It can be March Madness … and making history.”As for the Boilermakers (34-4), they have won five games by an average of 19.6 points, including the 63-50 win against N.C. State in the national semifinals. The only close call was battling from 11 down before halftime to beat Tennessee 72-66 — behind 40 points from 7-foot-4 star Zach Edey —to clinch the program’s first Final Four trip since 1980.Now they’re in their first title game since their only other appearance, a 1969 loss to Wooden’s Bruins, and Edey will have to tangle with 7-2 defensive force Donovan Clingan.”It’s cool with me winning by enough points where it’s not that your palms are sweaty, being nervous like that,” Purdue guard Lance Jones said with a broad smile. “So I think having that margin of victory is good.”But that has also been at the forefront of what has been a blowout-filled tournament.The average margin of victory in this tournament has been 14.4 points, according to Sportradar. Only the 1993 tournament (14.9 points) has had a higher margin since 1985, and the average margin had been 11.8 points for the previous 29 tournaments.Now Purdue has the final chance to stop UConn’s March, and maybe have two teams tussling in a compelling finale.”You give respect to a team like UConn that can go and handle their business and go and beat a team by 15 to 20 every night,” Loyer said. “That’s tough to do and respect to them for it. So it’s making sure we’re ready to go and giving the people a show because it’s the two best teams in college basketball. I don’t know what more you could ask for.”

    The NCAA Tournament has reached its finish line, down to one game pairing the two best teams that routinely win in romps and boasting a marquee post matchup that features a two-time national player of the year.

    Maybe that will make this version of March Madness something to remember after all.

    Video above: Alex Karaban helps UConn advance in NCAA Tournament

    Reigning champion UConn meets Purdue on Monday night in a matchup of top seeds that have combined to win their first five tournament games by an average margin of 22.3 points. They have been at the center of a tournament lacking in drama, with its second-highest average margin of victory since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985, only one last-second winning shot and few of the highlight-reel thrills that had become a staple of the event.

    Don’t expect the Huskies or Boilermakers to feel the least bit bothered by their dominance, either.

    “People that love basketball and people that really know the game, you watch good basketball,” Purdue guard Fletcher Loyer said Sunday. “Obviously the upsets are fun and real cool and they get attention. But real basketball, you like to see the two best teams go at it. And I think that’s what we have here.”

    The tournament’s allure remains strong, from casual-at-best basketball fans scribbling out their own bracket projections to TV ratings that keep coming in strong. Yet there’s a short list of unexpected moments this year: namely, Jack Gohlke making 10 3-pointers to help Oakland stun blueblood Kentucky in the first round and North Carolina State’s wild ride as an 11-seed to the program’s first Final Four since the “Cardiac Pack” title run of 1983 under the late Jim Valvano.

    As for those last-second shots that live on in tournament lore, the closest this year was KJ Simpson rattling in a baseline jumper with 1.7 seconds left to lift Colorado past Florida 102-100 in Round 1.

    Everything else has largely been about UConn’s run to greatness, and Purdue’s march to redemption from last year’s stunning loss to 16th-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson.

    “Once you get to this time of year, everything is just you are who your identity is,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said. “The way you play, it’s very automatic. It just comes down to hoping that it’s your night.”

    UConn (36-3) has looked like a runaway train from before the first game in its push to become the first men’s team to repeat as national champions since Florida in 2006 and 2007, and become only the third program to become a repeat winner since UCLA’s run of seven straight under John Wooden from 1967-73.

    “The way they’ve won, you know, there’s been some teams that have hung in there with them, then they’ve separated from them,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “There’s some other teams that have gotten flat-out blitzed.”

    Last year, UConn became the fifth title winner since the 1985 expansion to win all six games by double-digit margins, the closest coming by 13 points. This year, the No. 1 overall seed has been even more dominant; the Huskies’ closest game was Saturday night’s 86-72 win against Alabama, and they’ve won five games by a combined 125 points — an average of 25 per night.

    By comparison, North Carolina in 2009 holds the record for highest points differential of that elite group at 121 points through six games, so another double-figure win by the Huskies to complete a 6-for-6 run would shatter that record.

    UConn forward Alex Karaban figures that’s still compelling stuff, too.

    “To witness greatness from both teams and to witness greatness from what we did last year, too, I think it’s special,” Karaban said. “And it doesn’t have to be close, doesn’t have to be any of that for it to be March Madness. It can be March Madness … and making history.”

    As for the Boilermakers (34-4), they have won five games by an average of 19.6 points, including the 63-50 win against N.C. State in the national semifinals. The only close call was battling from 11 down before halftime to beat Tennessee 72-66 — behind 40 points from 7-foot-4 star Zach Edey —to clinch the program’s first Final Four trip since 1980.

    Now they’re in their first title game since their only other appearance, a 1969 loss to Wooden’s Bruins, and Edey will have to tangle with 7-2 defensive force Donovan Clingan.

    “It’s cool with me winning by enough points where it’s not that your palms are sweaty, being nervous like that,” Purdue guard Lance Jones said with a broad smile. “So I think having that margin of victory is good.”

    But that has also been at the forefront of what has been a blowout-filled tournament.

    The average margin of victory in this tournament has been 14.4 points, according to Sportradar. Only the 1993 tournament (14.9 points) has had a higher margin since 1985, and the average margin had been 11.8 points for the previous 29 tournaments.

    Now Purdue has the final chance to stop UConn’s March, and maybe have two teams tussling in a compelling finale.

    “You give respect to a team like UConn that can go and handle their business and go and beat a team by 15 to 20 every night,” Loyer said. “That’s tough to do and respect to them for it. So it’s making sure we’re ready to go and giving the people a show because it’s the two best teams in college basketball. I don’t know what more you could ask for.”

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  • UConn, Purdue collide in NCAA title game

    UConn, Purdue collide in NCAA title game

    The NCAA Tournament has reached its finish line, down to one game pairing the two best teams that routinely win in romps and boasting a marquee post matchup that features a two-time national player of the year.Maybe that will make this version of March Madness something to remember after all.Video above: Alex Karaban helps UConn advance in NCAA Tournament Reigning champion UConn meets Purdue on Monday night in a matchup of top seeds that have combined to win their first five tournament games by an average margin of 22.3 points. They have been at the center of a tournament lacking in drama, with its second-highest average margin of victory since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985, only one last-second winning shot and few of the highlight-reel thrills that had become a staple of the event.Don’t expect the Huskies or Boilermakers to feel the least bit bothered by their dominance, either.”People that love basketball and people that really know the game, you watch good basketball,” Purdue guard Fletcher Loyer said Sunday. “Obviously the upsets are fun and real cool and they get attention. But real basketball, you like to see the two best teams go at it. And I think that’s what we have here.”The tournament’s allure remains strong, from casual-at-best basketball fans scribbling out their own bracket projections to TV ratings that keep coming in strong. Yet there’s a short list of unexpected moments this year: namely, Jack Gohlke making 10 3-pointers to help Oakland stun blueblood Kentucky in the first round and North Carolina State’s wild ride as an 11-seed to the program’s first Final Four since the “Cardiac Pack” title run of 1983 under the late Jim Valvano.As for those last-second shots that live on in tournament lore, the closest this year was KJ Simpson rattling in a baseline jumper with 1.7 seconds left to lift Colorado past Florida 102-100 in Round 1.Everything else has largely been about UConn’s run to greatness, and Purdue’s march to redemption from last year’s stunning loss to 16th-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson.”Once you get to this time of year, everything is just you are who your identity is,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said. “The way you play, it’s very automatic. It just comes down to hoping that it’s your night.”UConn (36-3) has looked like a runaway train from before the first game in its push to become the first men’s team to repeat as national champions since Florida in 2006 and 2007, and become only the third program to become a repeat winner since UCLA’s run of seven straight under John Wooden from 1967-73.”The way they’ve won, you know, there’s been some teams that have hung in there with them, then they’ve separated from them,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “There’s some other teams that have gotten flat-out blitzed.”Last year, UConn became the fifth title winner since the 1985 expansion to win all six games by double-digit margins, the closest coming by 13 points. This year, the No. 1 overall seed has been even more dominant; the Huskies’ closest game was Saturday night’s 86-72 win against Alabama, and they’ve won five games by a combined 125 points — an average of 25 per night.By comparison, North Carolina in 2009 holds the record for highest points differential of that elite group at 121 points through six games, so another double-figure win by the Huskies to complete a 6-for-6 run would shatter that record.UConn forward Alex Karaban figures that’s still compelling stuff, too.”To witness greatness from both teams and to witness greatness from what we did last year, too, I think it’s special,” Karaban said. “And it doesn’t have to be close, doesn’t have to be any of that for it to be March Madness. It can be March Madness … and making history.”As for the Boilermakers (34-4), they have won five games by an average of 19.6 points, including the 63-50 win against N.C. State in the national semifinals. The only close call was battling from 11 down before halftime to beat Tennessee 72-66 — behind 40 points from 7-foot-4 star Zach Edey —to clinch the program’s first Final Four trip since 1980.Now they’re in their first title game since their only other appearance, a 1969 loss to Wooden’s Bruins, and Edey will have to tangle with 7-2 defensive force Donovan Clingan.”It’s cool with me winning by enough points where it’s not that your palms are sweaty, being nervous like that,” Purdue guard Lance Jones said with a broad smile. “So I think having that margin of victory is good.”But that has also been at the forefront of what has been a blowout-filled tournament.The average margin of victory in this tournament has been 14.4 points, according to Sportradar. Only the 1993 tournament (14.9 points) has had a higher margin since 1985, and the average margin had been 11.8 points for the previous 29 tournaments.Now Purdue has the final chance to stop UConn’s March, and maybe have two teams tussling in a compelling finale.”You give respect to a team like UConn that can go and handle their business and go and beat a team by 15 to 20 every night,” Loyer said. “That’s tough to do and respect to them for it. So it’s making sure we’re ready to go and giving the people a show because it’s the two best teams in college basketball. I don’t know what more you could ask for.”

    The NCAA Tournament has reached its finish line, down to one game pairing the two best teams that routinely win in romps and boasting a marquee post matchup that features a two-time national player of the year.

    Maybe that will make this version of March Madness something to remember after all.

    Video above: Alex Karaban helps UConn advance in NCAA Tournament

    Reigning champion UConn meets Purdue on Monday night in a matchup of top seeds that have combined to win their first five tournament games by an average margin of 22.3 points. They have been at the center of a tournament lacking in drama, with its second-highest average margin of victory since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985, only one last-second winning shot and few of the highlight-reel thrills that had become a staple of the event.

    Don’t expect the Huskies or Boilermakers to feel the least bit bothered by their dominance, either.

    “People that love basketball and people that really know the game, you watch good basketball,” Purdue guard Fletcher Loyer said Sunday. “Obviously the upsets are fun and real cool and they get attention. But real basketball, you like to see the two best teams go at it. And I think that’s what we have here.”

    The tournament’s allure remains strong, from casual-at-best basketball fans scribbling out their own bracket projections to TV ratings that keep coming in strong. Yet there’s a short list of unexpected moments this year: namely, Jack Gohlke making 10 3-pointers to help Oakland stun blueblood Kentucky in the first round and North Carolina State’s wild ride as an 11-seed to the program’s first Final Four since the “Cardiac Pack” title run of 1983 under the late Jim Valvano.

    As for those last-second shots that live on in tournament lore, the closest this year was KJ Simpson rattling in a baseline jumper with 1.7 seconds left to lift Colorado past Florida 102-100 in Round 1.

    Everything else has largely been about UConn’s run to greatness, and Purdue’s march to redemption from last year’s stunning loss to 16th-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson.

    “Once you get to this time of year, everything is just you are who your identity is,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said. “The way you play, it’s very automatic. It just comes down to hoping that it’s your night.”

    UConn (36-3) has looked like a runaway train from before the first game in its push to become the first men’s team to repeat as national champions since Florida in 2006 and 2007, and become only the third program to become a repeat winner since UCLA’s run of seven straight under John Wooden from 1967-73.

    “The way they’ve won, you know, there’s been some teams that have hung in there with them, then they’ve separated from them,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “There’s some other teams that have gotten flat-out blitzed.”

    Last year, UConn became the fifth title winner since the 1985 expansion to win all six games by double-digit margins, the closest coming by 13 points. This year, the No. 1 overall seed has been even more dominant; the Huskies’ closest game was Saturday night’s 86-72 win against Alabama, and they’ve won five games by a combined 125 points — an average of 25 per night.

    By comparison, North Carolina in 2009 holds the record for highest points differential of that elite group at 121 points through six games, so another double-figure win by the Huskies to complete a 6-for-6 run would shatter that record.

    UConn forward Alex Karaban figures that’s still compelling stuff, too.

    “To witness greatness from both teams and to witness greatness from what we did last year, too, I think it’s special,” Karaban said. “And it doesn’t have to be close, doesn’t have to be any of that for it to be March Madness. It can be March Madness … and making history.”

    As for the Boilermakers (34-4), they have won five games by an average of 19.6 points, including the 63-50 win against N.C. State in the national semifinals. The only close call was battling from 11 down before halftime to beat Tennessee 72-66 — behind 40 points from 7-foot-4 star Zach Edey —to clinch the program’s first Final Four trip since 1980.

    Now they’re in their first title game since their only other appearance, a 1969 loss to Wooden’s Bruins, and Edey will have to tangle with 7-2 defensive force Donovan Clingan.

    “It’s cool with me winning by enough points where it’s not that your palms are sweaty, being nervous like that,” Purdue guard Lance Jones said with a broad smile. “So I think having that margin of victory is good.”

    But that has also been at the forefront of what has been a blowout-filled tournament.

    The average margin of victory in this tournament has been 14.4 points, according to Sportradar. Only the 1993 tournament (14.9 points) has had a higher margin since 1985, and the average margin had been 11.8 points for the previous 29 tournaments.

    Now Purdue has the final chance to stop UConn’s March, and maybe have two teams tussling in a compelling finale.

    “You give respect to a team like UConn that can go and handle their business and go and beat a team by 15 to 20 every night,” Loyer said. “That’s tough to do and respect to them for it. So it’s making sure we’re ready to go and giving the people a show because it’s the two best teams in college basketball. I don’t know what more you could ask for.”

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  • Wolfpack’s balance fails at wrong time in Final Four power outage vs. Purdue :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Wolfpack’s balance fails at wrong time in Final Four power outage vs. Purdue :: WRALSportsFan.com

    — North Carolina State’s miraculous late-season run to the Atlantic Coast Conference title and an even more improbable Final Four trip had been the product of a blending of talent, balance and cohesion when the pressure peaked.

    One first-half tumble appeared to change everything — and the magic all came undone in the second half against Purdue in the national semifinals.

    The offense that had consistently produced double-figure scorers to support DJ Burns Jr. inside and DJ Horne on the perimeter just never got into a flow. Layups rolled off the rim. Outside shots clanged away harmlessly. And no one outside of Horne found any consistent success as the team struggled to adjust after point guard Michael O’Connell suffered an early hamstring injury that derailed his night.

    It ended with the Wolfpack shooting just 28.6% while scoring 21 points after halftime to fall to the Boilermakers 63-50 on Saturday night.

    “One hundred percent, we were definitely out of sync, we couldn’t get in a rhythm,” starting wing Casey Morsell said softly, his hoodie pulled up over his head after a scoreless night. “It was tough to kind of get going.”

    The Wolfpack’s ride had become the stuff of legend at a school where there’s history with the miraculous. This was the first Final Four since the “Cardiac Pack” made a run to win the national title under late coach Jim Valvano, and this year’s group had offered shades of ’83 with an 11th-seeded bunch playing nothing-to-lose basketball as the calendar pushed into March with no postseason destination assured.

    They became the first team to go 5-for-5 and win the ACC Tournament, then followed with four NCAA wins in a row to get back to the sport’s biggest stage. Along the way, there had been a formula: three or four double-digit scorers, players ready to feed Burns inside and then capitalize on kickouts, and finding that confident rhythm.

    It just never happened Saturday on the sport’s biggest stage.

    Horne finished with 20 points but needed 21 shots to get there. No other Wolfpack player reached double figures until Jayden Taylor’s 3-pointer with 42 seconds left and N.C. State trailing by 16.

    The trouble seemingly started after O’Connell tumbled to the court in transition and sat up grabbing his left hamstring. He spent long stretches riding an exercise bike trying to loosen it up at the end of the bench, though he labored to get up and down the stairs smoothly that lead to the raised court in State Farm Stadium.

    The steady Stanford transfer had been a critical part of the Wolfpack’s surge, scoring in double digits six times in the nine-game run — including the banked-in 3-pointer to force overtime in an ACC semifinal win against Virginia.

    “There was no chance I wasn’t going to try to step back on the floor,” O’Connell said. “If it’s a Final Four game, I’m going to do everything I can to be back on unless I can’t walk.”

    He checked in for one 3 1/2-minute stretch after halftime, his left thigh heavily wrapped as he pointed at the scorer’s table during a timeout — and he took just one shot (a made 3) all night.

    O’Connell’s injury had a ripple effect on the lineup, removing a set-up man in getting teammates the shots they want. It put more burden on Horne to run the offense, while Breon Pass saw major minutes after playing a combined three minutes in four NCAA Tournament games so far.

    “We had different guys doing different things they weren’t really used to,” forward Ben Middlebrooks said.

    And the frustration built.

    One moment came when Taylor had a transition chance with his team down 49-40, though he knew Purdue big man Zach Edey was lurking nearby.

    Taylor smartly went under the basket and tried a reverse layup with the basket obstructing the 7-foot-4 Edey’s path, only to see the ball roll softly off the rim at a key moment.

    Moments later, Burns muscled past Edey on the baseline to get to the other side of the paint and bank in a tough shot — only to be called for a travel.

    It encapsulated a rough night for the burly 6-foot-9, 275-pound Burns, who battled fouls and the length of the two-time national player of the year in Edey. After becoming a March Madness star and scoring 29 points in a regional final against Duke, Burns had just eight points on 4-for-10 shooting while pulling down just one rebound and battling some foul issues.

    Morsell, who came in averaging 11.5 points, missed all five of his shots. And that left O’Connell as the only starter to make at least half his shots with that lone catch-and-fire corner 3 off a first-half feed from Burns.

    By the end of the night, Taylor was firing a meaningless 3-pointer on the final possession as the seconds ticked away. The ball hit long, sealing the worst scoring game of the season for N.C. State.

    “Right now in the moment, it’s definitely tough to really grasp that and understand, because we wanted to win — we wanted to win it all,” O’Connell said. “So it’s tough in the locker room. Obviously everyone’s down, but at the same time too, we’ve also just got to be grateful for where we’re at and what we accomplished.”

    ___

    AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

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  • Holliday: From final five to Final Four, NC State’s dream season lives on :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Holliday: From final five to Final Four, NC State’s dream season lives on :: WRALSportsFan.com

    We begin with a shout out to the late, great Jim Valvano, who did so much to make March magic in West Raleigh. Folks forget that after NC State’s wild ride to the NCAA Championship in 1983, the Wolfpack made deep runs in both 1985 and 1986. In fact, the Pack played in the very last Elite Eight game in both of those years. Coach V dubbed it “the Final Five.”

    I can still hear Coach V pregame in 1986. “Once again we made it to the Final Five,” he said. They had lost to his paisan Lou Carnesecca and St. John’s in 1985. Wolfpack hopes were high in 1986, but Kansas and Danny Manning won a close one to again relegate State to a “Final Five” finish. No Final Four.

    In 2024, NC State reached the Final Five for the first time in 38 years. Yes, the Wolfpack was again playing for the very last ticket to college basketball’s biggest event – against arch rival Duke no less! What are the odds?

    Well this team crashed through the glass ceiling, earning the coveted trip to Phoenix, merely one state and one time zone away from Albuquerque, which virtually no one even associated with the current NC State team remembers. I mean Coach Kevin Keatts was only 10 when the ’83 Wolfpack won it all.

    NC State is headed west (always heading west it seems) because of a phenomenal second half Sunday in a 76-64 win over the Duke Blue Devils. It was but another chapter in this march through March for the Wolfpack, an extraordinary postseason journey that defies statistical evaluation alone.

    Something else is also at work here, and for that explanation I turn to the late Dan Fogelberg, who wrote these powerful words circa 1980. Fogelberg was writing about horses, but I feel the same sense of mystery about the 2024 Wolfpack.

    “It’s breeding, and it’s training, and it’s something unknown that guides you and carries you home.”

                                                                                                                                               Dan Fogelberg 1981

    There are of course tangible reasons for NC State’s success this spring. Beginning with the maestro, point center D.J. Burns. Marquette double teamed big D.J. He only scored 4 points, but dished out 7 assists, mostly to three point shooters like D.J. Horne, Jayden Taylor and Michael O’Connell, who buried the three ball at a 47% clip against the Golden Eagles.

    Duke’s Jon Scheyer knew from the ACC season about Burns’ extraordinary passing skills. So his Blue Devils played Burns straight up. Burns absolutely torched the Devils scoring 29 points on a dazzling display of positioning, footwork, spins and shooting touch. Kyle Filipowski and Mark Mitchell fouled out trying to contain Burns as Duke’s four big men recorded a collective 15 fouls trying to rein in DJB.

    DJ Burns

    If Burns is the DJ that gets the party started, Horne is the DJ that keeps it going. His electric shooting has fueled more than one NC State run during this postseason, including Sunday when the Wolfpack outscored the Blue Devils 22-9 around the midpoint of the second half to break open a tight game.

    Casey Morsell is another tangible reason for NC State’s success. Morsell is State’s lockdown defender. Duke shot just 32% against State and made only 5-20 from beyond the arc. Also, Morsell, like Taylor, can hit the tough shots when needed.

    Michael O’Connell is the point guard to Burns’ point center. O’Connell runs the offense, in both the half court and transition. He handed out six assists against Duke. And of course his 30-foot bank shot in the ACC Semifinals against Virginia is the sole reason NC State is still playing.

    Last but certainly not least is the inspiring Mo Diarra. The 6’11 forward has been observing Ramadan this entire postseason, meaning no food or even water between sunrise and sunset. The Duke game, being played before sundown, Diarra took none of the sports drinks and other nutritional supplements he had been permitted during several other later games. Diarra still grabbed seven rebounds Sunday.

    APTOPIX_NCAA_NC_State_Duke_Basketball_36695

    So NC State has transformed itself from a 17-14 club whose coach was on the hot seat, into a postseason juggernaut, riding a nine-game win streak and playing in its first Final Four in 41 years.

    ESPN analyst Jay Bilas says, “NC State going to the Final Four this season is the most amazing thing I have ever seen in basketball.” Wow. Let that sink in.

    Bilas was a freshman at Duke in 1983 and vividly remembers the NCAA Championship run. He says 2024 is even more remarkable.

    Speaking in a video on Instagram released Sunday night, Bilas reminds us that “NC State had to play on Tuesday. There wasn’t even a thought of them winning the ACC Tournament.”

    But of course they did, and then after those emotionally draining five days, getting refocused for the NCAA’s. In the two ensuing weeks, the Pack has put away Texas Tech, Oakland, Marquette, and Duke.

    Says Bilas, “You keep thinking it has to end, but it never ends!”

    NC State, Purdue look to end championship game droughts

    Remarkably, NC State next faces a program with an even longer Final Four drought and less NCAA history – not that those things will matter on the court. Purdue last reached the Final Four under Lee Rose in 1980. Led by seven footer Joe Barry Carroll, that Purdue team beat Duke to earn a trip to the Final Four in Indianapolis. However the Boilers lost in the Semifinals to UCLA at the old Market Square Arena 67-62.

    As a young college student, I can remember Purdue making a deeper NCAA Tournament run. In 1969, sharp shooting Rick Mount, Bill Keller and North Carolina native Herm Gilliam paced a Purdue team that absolutely buried ACC Champion North Carolina 92-65 in a flurry of Tar Heel turnovers. Purdue reached the National Championship before losing to John Wooden’s UCLA. I was there for those games in Louisville’s Freedom Hall, one of 25 Final Fours I have witnessed or covered.

    And now a third Final Four for a school still seeking its first national championship. Like in 1980,Purdue is again led by a big man, 7’4 Zach Edey. All Edey did in Purdue’s Midwest Regional Final against Tennessee was to score 40 points and grab 16 rebounds. Edey over the course of the season averages 25 points per game.

    And he has help: Braden Smith, Lance Jones, and Fletcher Lowyer all average in double figures. Versatile Trey Kaufman-Renn is the fifth starter. Mason Gillis and Myles Colvin bring energy off the bench.

    Purdue will bring a record of 33-4 to Phoenix. And get this – all of the Boilers’ losses came against Big Ten competition. Matt Painters’ club is undefeated against the likes of Gonzaga, Tennessee, Marquette, Alabama, Arizona and Tennessee again.

    The most fascinating matchup when Purdue meets NC State of course will be Edey vs. Burns. I mean woah!

    I would seriously doubt that Painter will double Burns; he will want Purdue’s guards clinging to NC State’s perimeter shooters.

    So Edey will be mano a mano with Burns and State’s other post players, as he almost always is. Edey has blocked 80 shots this year and almost certainly will get his hands on some of Burns’ attempts at the basket. Burns will certainly try to get the big guy in foul trouble but Edey only averages two fouls per game.

    I’m thinking Burns might have some success with his fall away and step back jumpers. He may also be able to spin around Edey and use his body to shield college basketball’s player of the year on a reverse. We shall see.

    The larger issue is Burns defending Edey. DJB is somewhat foul prone. Maybe State’s team defense can force Edey to catch post passes eight feet from the basket, but there’s no stopping him four feet from the basket. If this happens and Burns is one on one with Edey, it will be more important for him to merely contest the shot but not reach and try to block it, even if Edey scores. Which he will. It’s much better that Edey score rather than Burns get in foul trouble.

    Kevin Keatts will no doubt make ample use of Ben Middlebrooks against Edey. Middlebrooks is a different style defender than Burns, with active feet and quick hands. He may pick up fouls but that’s OK. Middlebrooks, valuable as he is overall, is not the central point of NC State’s offense as Burns is.

    Edey by the way, is just an average free throw shooter. He made only 14-22 against Tennessee.

    Because of Edey’s dominance inside, the Wolfpack will need a huge game along the perimeter. Note this: Tennessee’s three point shooters hit 42% beyond the arc.

    Horne, Taylor, O’Connell and Morsell need to take shots that don’t require an offensive rebound. You get me? Because oh, yeah, Edey owns the defensive boards, too. Tennessee Sunday rebounded only 15% of its missed shots. Hard to win that way.

    NC State’s best chance to win hinges on its defense, which has played superbly in four NCAA games. Check out these numbers:

    • No NC State opponent has shot better than 39%; most in low 30’s.
    • Keatts’ men really defend the 3 point line; three of four opponents below 25%.
    • Wolfpack is forcing 9 turnovers per game and scoring more than 10 points per game off those turnovers.

    Remember, the foundation of the Kevin Keatts system is to shoot the three and stop the three; and then win the turnover battle. Defense is vital to helping State get easy transition baskets, and even fast breaks.

    Matt Painter at Purdue will try to make this a half court game Saturday. He did that against Tennessee to the surprise of Vols’ Coach Rick Barnes.

    NC State must do everything humanly possible – and note that Diarra will once again play during a full fast for this 3 p.m. Pacific Time tipoff – to play a faster game and keep this amazing streak going.

    It all starts with tempo for these men who have adopted the motto “Why Not Us?” Gotta play fast. And smart.

    It’s the chance of a lifetime in a lifetime of chance; it’s high time we joined in the dance

                                                                                                                               Dan Fogelberg 1981

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  • In Iowa vs. UConn, a Colorado forward plans to bring the defense

    In Iowa vs. UConn, a Colorado forward plans to bring the defense

    Iowa’s Addison O’Grady gave LSU’s Angel Reese ‘fits’ during the most-watched women’s college basketball game in history. Here’s what’s next.

    LSU forward Angel Reese (10) looks to pass against Iowa forward Addison O’Grady (44) during the third quarter of an Elite Eight round college basketball game during the NCAA Tournament, Monday, April 1, 2024, in Albany, N.Y. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

    AP

    Ahead of Iowa’s clash with LSU in the Elite 8 last weekend, Addison O’Grady told herself one thing: The former Aurora basketball star would have to be the most aggressive version of herself. And, in front of the record 12.3 million people who tuned in to watch the game, it was clear she understood the assignment.

    “It’s kind of easy to get up for a game like this when you’re playing against someone who’s really aggressive too,” O’Grady, who played at Grandview High School, said in the locker room after the game. “That helps because you can just battle with them, and battling with Angel (Reese) really helps me be more aggressive.”

    That’s the Angel Reese; LSU star, All-American and defending national champion.

    Related: Denver is getting its first women’s sports bar

    O’Grady brings a necessary balance to Iowa’s fast pace attack. While star guard Caitlin Clark has made headlines hitting three point shots from the next time zone, O’Grady has made a living pushing people around down low, under the basket.

    In Monday night’s rematch, starting forward Hannah Stuelke got into early foul trouble defending Reese and was forced to sit. In stepped O’Grady, who promptly brought Angel down to earth.

    “Addi went in and played some good minutes tonight for us,” Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said after the game. “I think she did a nice job in there.”

    “She came in, and she brought the size that I don’t have,” Stuelke told the Daily Iowan. “And I think it gave Angel some fits.”

    On the few occasions Reese possessed the ball near the hoop, O’Grady seemed to force the All-American so far behind the backboard that Reese couldn’t see the basket. What often followed was a desperate shot and an errant miss. In the 15 crucial minutes O’Grady was on the court, Reese scored only once, on a breakaway play far from O’Grady.

    “It gives me a lot of confidence. And just what coach keeps saying, ‘You never know when your number’s going to get called,’” O’Grady said. “Just do whatever I can to help this team.”

    Iowa forward Addison O’Grady (44) scores in front of LSU guard Aneesah Morrow (24) during the first half of a Elite Eight college basketball game in the NCAA Tournament, Monday, April 1, 2024, in Albany, N.Y. (AP Photo/Hans Pennink)
    AP

    Her five points might not have drawn a lot of attention in the shadow of another record breaking night and 41 points by Clark. But O’Grady’s four defensive rebounds, one block and scoring shutout against Reese were critical to Iowa’s 94-87 win and to clinching back-to-back Final Four appearances.

    “I don’t think I can even wrap my head around it really. That was our goal. So, we are not as shocked right now,” she said. “I think I’m going to look back in 10 years and be like, ‘Wow, that’s crazy.’”

    And she’ll need to be her most aggressive self again when Iowa takes on UConn in the semifinals. While player-of-the-year award winners Clark and Paige Bueckers trade jump shots and highlights, O’Grady will be charged with helping slow down All-Big East star Aaliyah Edwards.

    “The goal is to win the national championship,” O’Grady said. “Two more games and we will be there.”

    Iowa and UConn tip off at 7 p.m. Friday.

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  • March Madness: How to watch the women’s Final Four and what to watch for in the NCAA Tournament :: WRALSportsFan.com

    March Madness: How to watch the women’s Final Four and what to watch for in the NCAA Tournament :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Women’s basketball is having itself a moment as March Madness heads to the Final Four on Friday night.

    A year ago, 9.9 million people tuned in to see Angel Reese and LSU beat Caitlin Clark and Iowa in a national championship game made unforgettable by the two stars who backed up their talk with stellar play. The game was on a national network — ABC — for the first time since 1996.

    Well, this season Clark and Reese were back for more and Iowa won a thrilling rematch in the Elite Eight behind 41 points from Clark as more than 12 million people watched in a record for a women’s college basketball game on Monday night. The Hawkeyes next face Paige Bueckers and UConn in one semifinal on Friday night. In the other, North Carolina State will take on No. 1 overall seed South Carolina, which hasn’t lost all season and has a chance to become the 10th perfect national champion.

    Clark has been the talk of the sport all season after becoming the all-time leading scorer in Division I history and selling out venues wherever Iowa went. She will share the stage in Cleveland this weekend.

    1 South Carolina vs. 3 N.C. State (7 p.m. Eastern, Friday). The Wolfpack weren’t even ranked in the preseason but they climbed to No. 3 in the AP Top 25 by December and have been one of the top teams in the country for months. Caitlin, Paige, Angel and USC’s JuJu Watkins have been in the spotlight, but N.C. State guard Aziaha “Zaza” James is a star, scoring 29 points and then 27 the past two games. The Gamecocks are deep and relentless, riding 22 points from center Kamilla Cardoso in the Sweet 16 and then 15 from Tessa Johnson in the next game to advance to the semifinals.

    1 Iowa vs. 3 UConn (9:30 p.m. Eastern, Friday). The Friday night lights will be bright for the Clark vs. Bueckers show, two standout guards who make their teammates shine. Clark’s scoring has been the talk of the sport, but she also leads the nation in assists per game while Bueckers is back in MVP form for the Huskies, who are in their record 23rd Final Four.

    NCAA LSU Iowa Basketball

    Every game of the women’s tournament will be aired — here is a schedule — on ESPN’s networks and streaming services with select games on ABC. While ESPN will air the Final Four, the title game will be back on ABC, just like last season.

    South Carolina is the overwhelming favorite to win its second title in three years and third overall, all since 2017, under coach Dawn Staley. Behind the Gamecocks (in order) are Iowa, UConn and N.C. State, according to FanDuel Sportsbook.

    The Final Four is in Cleveland on Friday night with the championship game at 3 p.m. Eastern on Sunday.

    From Clark to Reese to Watkins, the star power for March Madness is on full blast. A lot of those talented players happen to be freshmen, too. And some of the coaches who reached the NCAA Tournament certainly know their way around campus, since they are at their alma mater.

    There was a lot of talk about how to stop Clark, who is coached by Lisa Bluder, and her prolific scoring. It’s been tried, with mixed success. The Pac-12 put seven teams in the tournament as the conference fades away, but none advanced to the Final Four.

    The games at times have been overshadowed despite robust attendance and ratings. The NCAA had to replace one official at halftime when it was discovered she had a degree from one of the schools whose game she was officiating. Notre Dame star Hanna Hidalgo missed a chunk of the Fighting Irish’s Sweet 16 loss when officials made her remove a nose ring, which she had played with earlier in the tournament.

    Away from the court, Utah players and coaches were subjected to racist taunts near their Idaho hotel, which was 40 minutes away from their game site. The NCAA also said one of the 3-point lines on the court used this past weekend in Portland, Oregon, was about 9 inches short of regulation at its apex without notice during five tournament games.

    ___

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  • Wolfpack make history, send both men’s and women’s teams to Final Four :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Wolfpack make history, send both men’s and women’s teams to Final Four :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Sweet 16 weekend was not only a winner for North Carolina State University and its fans, it was historic.

    For the first time, the NC State Wolfpack is sending both teams to the Final Four in the same year.

    The women’s team took care of business in Portland against the Texas Longhorns, 76-66, behind a 27-point performance from Aziaha James.

    Later on Sunday evening, the men’s team continued its miraculous postseason run, handling the in-state rival Duke Blue Devils 76-64 in its Elite Eight matchup in Dallas.

    NC State’s last appearances in the Final Four

    It is the first time since the Wolfpack’s miraculous 1983 championship run that the men’s team reached the Final Four. In that year, the Wolfpack defeated the Houston Cougars in the title game on a dunk by Lorenzo Charles. The title won by the “Cardiac Pack” is considered one of the greatest upsets in college basketball and arguably all sports.

    The Wolfpack men needed a miracle just to make the NCAA Tournament. After finishing the regular season 26-14 (9-11 ACC), they won five games in five days to win the ACC Tournament Championship over the North Carolina Tar Heels and an automatic bid in the NCAA Tournament.

    In winning on Sunday, The Wolfpack became the first team in the history of the NCAA Tournament to reach the Final Four with 14 or more losses, according to ESPN.

    The women’s team has been a regular in the NCAA Tournament, and has made the Sweet 16 five times in six years, but it hadn’t reached the Final Four since 1998, when the late Kay Yow led the team. The Wolfpack lost that year to the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs in Kansas City.

    “Just a flood of emotions right now,” Wolfpack coach Wes Moore said after the game. “I think of Kay Yow and 34 years at NC State. I think of the players two years ago who were a double overtime away from being in this same spot…unbelievable.”

    The Wolfpack women started the year unranked before rattling off 14 straight wins to start the year, including a win against the 3rd-ranked UConn Huskies. The Wolfpack stumbled at the end of the season and lost in the ACC Tournament Championship game against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

    The Wolfpack became the 11th school to send both men’s and women’s teams to the Final Four. It is the first time since 2017 that a school has sent both women’s and men’s teams to the Final Four. and the 14th time overall. The Huskies have done it four times and are the only team to do it multiple times.

    The South Carolina Gamecocks were last to do it. In 2024, the UConn men – the No. 1 overall seed — have made the Final Four. The Huskies women play Monday night for a chance to join them.

    ‘We are the story’ Wolfpack fans ready for more

    NC State fans traveled to the NC State Memorial Bell Tower to celebrate the Wolfpack’s historic Sunday, and a win over an in-state rival.

    “It felt good to see my friends lose,” one NC State fan said. “I still love Duke from a distance, but I love NC State all-day long. Let’s go Pack.”

    Even North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper got in on the celebration on Twitter.

    NC State alums like Kasey McCalla said they’ve felt like the entire country has been pulling for the Wolfpack as the team continues its run through the big dance.

    “I feel like we’re America’s team,” she said. “We’re the only double-digit seed left, and we’re the team that has gotten that far. We are the story.”

    Many Wolfpack fans who felt scorned by the school’s string of bad luck over the last four decades say the Cinderella-run has made them closer to the team, and the school.

    “Having graduated a few years ago,, it makes me feel reconnected to my former classmates, and my school,” NC State alum Kate Luna said.

    While it doesn’t happen very often, double-digit seeds making the Final Four is extremely rare. Since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, seven double-digit seeds, including the Wolfpack on Sunday, have made the Final Four.

    The last double-digit seed to make the Final Four was the UCLA Bruins in 2021, who lost to the Gonzaga Bullldogs in overtime, 93-90.

    No double-digit seed has won a Final Four game since expansion.

    The NC State men will face Zach Edey and the Purdue Boilermakers on Saturday at 6:09 p.m., while the women will face the undefeated Gamecocks on Friday.

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  • Duke women’s basketball rallies late against UConn but falls in NCAA Tournament Sweet 16

    Duke women’s basketball rallies late against UConn but falls in NCAA Tournament Sweet 16

    Duke’s Oluchi Okananwa (5) defends against UConn’s Paige Bueckers in first half action of their NCAA Sweet 16 game in Portland.

    Duke’s Oluchi Okananwa (5) defends against UConn’s Paige Bueckers in first half action of their NCAA Sweet 16 game in Portland.

    For The News & Observer

    Duke coach Kara Lawson stood on the sideline in the second quarter, emphatically waving her hands up and down. Settle down, she told her team. Settle down.

    It looked more comfortable, especially in the fourth quarter, cutting the UConn lead to five points in the fourth, it dug too big of a hole. The Huskies led the entire game and went up by as many as 20 points.

    No. 7 seed Duke (22-12) ended its season against No. 3 seed UConn (32-5), 53-45, on Saturday in the NCAA Tournament regional semifinal. It finished with more turnovers (23), including 13 in the first half, than field goals (18).

    The Huskies entered the game as an 8.5-point favorite, according to U.S. sports books, and were given an 80.7% chance of winning. That was for good reason, too. UConn is one of the best overall teams in the nation, ranking in the top 50 for scoring offense and defense.

    Despite the disappointing performance, Duke deserves credit for its defense and effort. It fought for loose balls and wasn’t afraid to go one-on-one with anyone in the Husky rotation. Its defense held the Huskies to their lowest offensive output of the season, which was previously 58 points.

    Freshman Delaney Thomas entered the game early in the first quarter. Her defensive effort led to a block on KK Arnold’s shot — it was her first block since Feb. 11 against North Carolina — and a UConn turnover on the baseline.

    Duke finished with six blocks, six steals and forced 13 turnovers. Duke scored six points from the Huskies’ turnovers.

    That was something UConn head coach Geno Auriemma knew his team would need to account for.

    “They play with a tremendously high level of energy. To me, a lot of times, really young teams are the most dangerous teams,” Auriemma said Friday. “They haven’t experienced a crushing loss in the NCAA Tournament that they’re carrying around with them. They’re just free and clear, letting it rip.”

    Duke’s high level of energy manifested in positive and negative ways. The Blue Devils out-rebounded the Huskies 43-28. Of those rebounds, 16 came on the offensive glass and led to 11 second-chance points.

    The early deficit, however, was too big to overcome.

    Duke went 18-55 (32.7%) from the field compared to UConn’s 22-55 (40.0%). Plus, it was called for 20 fouls in addition to the turnovers. The Huskies scored 23 on the mistakes and added six points from the line.

    ACC Sixth Player of the Year Oluchi Okananwa led the Blue Devils with 15 points, 11 of which came in the second half. Kennedy Brown contributed 10 rebounds in the effort.

    Jadyn Watson-Fisher

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  • Swanson: UCLA and LSU put on a show worth talking about

    Swanson: UCLA and LSU put on a show worth talking about

    ALBANY, N.Y. — What’s your opinion of Kim Mulkey? I bet you have one.

    And it might not be favorable. Shoot, odds are it isn’t. But odds are you know who she is.

    You can’t miss her; she’s the sequined-out lady on the sideline, though rarely just toeing the line. And she’s been in the game for decades; she went 130-6 as a Louisiana Tech player and reached the Final Four every year before going on to become coach, since becoming the only person to lead two programs to national titles, including last season, when she did it with these LSU Tigers.

    On Saturday, she coached a Sweet 16 game against No. 2 seed UCLA. Her third-seeded Tigers out-executed the Bruins down the stretch to win 78-69 in a thrilling opening act at MVP Arena, where most of the sold-out crowd was there to see Caitlin Clark and Iowa knock out Colorado 89-68 afterward.

    That sets up a rematch. The rematch. A sequel of last season’s NCAA women’s basketball championship game. It drew a record 9.9 million viewers and was, as far as I can think, the biggest women’s sports moment in America since the U.S. women’s national soccer team won the 1999 World Cup at the Rose Bowl on Brandi Chastain’s penalty kick.

    Last season’s title game was so riveting, so rousing, so needing to be debated that its ripple effects gave women’s basketball in L.A. a boost. It was like a brilliant bounce pass to JuJu Watkins and her Elite Eight-bound USC squad and to Cori Close and her talented Bruins, too.

    Those teams did their own heavy lifting, to be certain, upholding their part of the bargain by going 26-5 and 25-6, respectively, USC winning the Pac-12 title and UCLA spending the season in the top 10 nationally.

    Their head-to-head games in L.A. drew a record 10,657 at Galen Center and a women’s record 13,659 fans at Pauley Pavilion in some part because of the groundwork laid by Iowa and LSU – women’s basketball is a thing!

    And now, with a couple more Pac-12 schools out of the way, LSU and Iowa are going to tango again Monday in an Elite Eight matchup that feels a lot like it should be a Final Four matchup – much like how UCLA’s entanglement with LSU also felt like it coulda been.

    Like it woulda definitely been elite Elite Eight theater.

    And like it probably shoulda gone UCLA’s way, if not for a pivotal sequence of events down the stretch, when the Bruins’ 67-64 lead with 2:46 to play unraveled as they missed layups and free throws and LSU made its layups and free throws.

    “I’m gonna say we’re the better team, we just didn’t show up today,” said center Lauren Betts, one of six sophomores on what remains a promising if unfulfilled Bruins team that will be better for this experience, as much as it stinks and stings.

    Despite UCLA’s consistently high billing all season, it was placed in the NCAA Tournament’s version of the “Group of Death.” They’d had to travel farthest to get here. Plus their plane was delayed en route, and they then had the earliest practice time Thursday, at what was, for their West Coast clocks, 4 a.m.

    No excuses, Close said.

    “We had this under our control,” she said. “We could have not been in Albany, but we lost some (regular-season) games we shouldn’t have.”

    UCLA came into the season ranked No. 4, got as high as No. 2 and finished the regular season at No. 6 – before bowing out in the Sweet 16 for the fifth time in Close’s 13-year UCLA tenure, when the Bruins have reached the Elite Eight only in 2018.

    “I’m the head coach. I’m responsible,” she said. “They’re young; I need to lead them in to situations where they have the confidence so we execute in those scenarios.”

    As Close dutifully fell on her sword, Mulkey sharpened hers, turning another newspaper story into the story postgame.

    A couple hours before tipoff, the Washington Post published the nearly 7,000-word piece that had been hotly anticipated since Mulkey brought attention to it during a recent news conference, predicting what turned out to be an in-depth and balanced profile would be a hit piece.

    This time, she ripped a Los Angeles Times article that portrayed her team’s matchup against UCLA as a “reckoning” between good versus evil, saying it struck her as “sexist,” “awful” and “wrong” — and taking issue, among other things, with a gendered characterization of the women on her team being “dirty debutantes” and UCLA’s as more “milk and cookies.”

    She was right. They’re all actually hoopers. Competitors. Crazy-tough kids.

    Close could tell you. She took to social media and apologized for re-posting the story, saying she made a mistake and that she only wants to “be a person that is about growing our game and building up the people in it.”

    The Bruins might be less demonstrative than some of their opponents, but UCLA’s Londynn Jones can cast a glare when a deep shot goes down, as she did Saturday. Bruins star Kiki Rice can get chatty. And, no, it surprised no one that LSU’s high-profile stars Angel Reese and Flau’Jae Johnson, respectively, had something to say to a UCLA assistant and the Bruins’ fans – because that’s all part of the show, and it’s a good show!

    Mirjam Swanson

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  • Watch Paige Bueckers play: How to watch today’s Duke vs. UConn women’s NCAA March Madness Sweet 16 game

    Watch Paige Bueckers play: How to watch today’s Duke vs. UConn women’s NCAA March Madness Sweet 16 game

    gettyimages-1923597189-1.jpg
    Paige Bueckers #5 of the UConn Huskies handles the ball against the Georgetown Hoyas at Entertainment & Sports Arena on January 07, 2024 in Washington, DC. 

    G Fiume/Getty Images


    The Duke Blue Devils face the UConn Huskies in the Sweet 16 round of the women’s NCAA tournament. UConn’s senior star Paige Bueckers missed the entire 2023-24 college basketball season due to an ACL injury, but the Minnesota native is back to her signature difference-making on the court.

    Playing some of the best basketball of her college career, Paige Bueckers hopes to propel the Huskies to the Final Four. They’ll have to get past the Duke Blue Devils first. Keep reading for how and when to watch the Duke vs. UConn Sweet 16 game today.

    CBS Essentials, CBS and Paramount+ are all subsidiaries of Paramount. CBS is one of the broadcast homes of the 2024 men’s March Madness tournament.


    When is March Madness 2024?

    • Selection Sunday was on March 17, 2024. 
    • The women’s tournament will be played March 20, 2024- April 7, 2024.
    • The men’s tournament will be played March 19, 2024 – April 8, 2024.

    How and when to watch the Duke vs. UConn game

    The NCAA March Madness Sweet 16 women’s college basketball game between Duke and the University of Connecticut will be played on Saturday, March 30, 2024 at 8:00 p.m. ET (5:00 p.m. PT). The game will be broadcast on ESPN.

    All women’s March Madness 2024 games, including the Final Four, will air on ABC or ESPN and stream on ESPN+.


    How to watch the Duke vs. UConn game without cable

    If you’ve given up your cable subscription, or your cable provider doesn’t include the channels carrying March Madness this year, you can subscribe to one of the streaming or live TV platforms featured below.

    Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle: The one way to stream every March Madness game

    You can watch March Madness 2024, including both the men’s and women’s tournaments and all of Paige Bueckers’ games, with the Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle. The bundle features 95 channels, including ESPN, ABC and CBS, and includes ESPN+, so you’ll be able to watch every game of both tournaments. The women’s Final Four will be broadcast live on ESPN+. Unlimited DVR storage is also included. Watch every March Madness game on every network this season with Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle.

    Hulu + Live TV comes bundled with ESPN+ and Disney+. It’s priced at $77.


    Watch the Duke vs. UConn game for free with Fubo

    If you’re new to streaming sports, you should know about Fubo. Fubo is a sports-centric streaming service that offers access to every March Madness game airing on network and cable TV, plus your local TV affiliates, hundreds of cable TV channels and 1,000 hours of cloud DVR storage. Another great reason to love Fubo is its lookback feature, which lets you watch sporting events up to 72 hours after they air live. 

    Start watching NCAA basketball on Fubo and get access to network-aired NFL, NBA and MLB games by starting a three-day free trial of Fubo. You can begin watching immediately on your TV, phone, tablet or computer. After your free trial, Fubo starts at $80/month for the Pro tier, which includes 199 channels, but the streamer is currently offering the first month for $60.

    Note: Because Fubo doesn’t carry TruTV, TBS or TNT, you won’t be able to watch every game of the men’s tournament with a FuboTV subscription. And because the women’s Final Four broadcasts on ESPN+, you’ll still need an ESPN+ subscription in conjunction with your Fubo subscription. If you want one streaming platform to watch the entire tournament, you’ll need a subscription to Hulu + Live TV.

    What you’ll get with Fubo Pro Tier:

    • There are no contracts with Fubo — you can cancel at any time.
    • The Pro tier includes 199 channels, so there’s something for everyone to watch. 
    • Fubo includes most of the channels you’ll need to watch college and pro sports this year, including CBS and ESPN.
    • In addition to March Madness, Fubo offers NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, MLS and international soccer games. 
    • All Fubo tiers come with 1,000 hours of cloud-based DVR recording.
    • Stream on your TV, phone and mobile devices.

    Sling TV: The most cost-effective way to stream the Duke vs. UConn game

    If you don’t have cable TV that includes ESPN, one of the most cost-effective ways to stream the March Madness tournament this year is through a subscription to Sling TV‘s Orange or Orange + Blue tier. The Orange tier offers access to ESPN (plus TNT and TBS), so you can watch today’s game. The Orange + Blue tier includes access to your local ABC affiliate, allowing you to watch more college basketball games. All tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based recording.

    To watch today’s game, Sling TV is currently offering a prepaid deal where you can get four months of the Orange tier for $120, a discount of $40. The Orange tier is also available for $40 per month — you can cancel anytime. To watch both men’s and women’s games, except those airing on CBS, subscribe to the Orange + Blue tier for $60 per month. 

    Note: Because some men’s March Madness 2024 will be broadcast on CBS, you won’t be able to watch all the men’s March Madness 2024 games with a Sling TV subscription. If you want to stream the entire NCAA tournament, we suggest a  Hulu + Live TV subscription.

    Top features of Sling TV Orange + Blue tier:

    • There are 46 channels to watch in total, including ESPN, TNT, TBS and ABC. (where available).
    • You get access to most local NFL games and nationally broadcast games next season at the lowest price.
    • All subscription tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based DVR storage.

    ESPN+: How to watch the women’s Final Four

    ESPN+ is ESPN’s subscription streaming platform. It offers exclusive live events, original studio shows and top-tier series that aren’t accessible on the ESPN networks. To watch the women’s Final Four, simply sign into the ESPN app. You’ll watch college basketball at no extra charge. You can stream ESPN+ through the ESPN app on your favorite mobile device and ESPN.com. It’s also available as an app through major smart TV streaming platforms and gaming consoles such as the PS5.

    Keep in mind there are some blackouts prohibiting you from watching certain in-market games with ESPN+, even if they’re nationally televised. If you’re looking to avoid those blackouts, we suggest subscribing to the Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle featured above.

    It is important to note that ESPN+ does not include access to the ESPN network. It is a separate sports-centric service, with separate sports programming.

    An ESPN+ subscription costs $10.99 per month, or save 15% when you pay annually ($110).  ESPN+ is also currently offering a cost-saving bundle. Get ESPN+ (with ads), Disney+ (with ads) and Hulu (with ads) for $14.99 per month.


    When was Selection Sunday?

    Iowa v Minnesota
    A fan holds up a sign for Caitlin Clark #22 of the Iowa Hawkeyes before the start of the game against the Minnesota Golden Gophers at Williams Arena on February 28, 2024 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Hawkeyes defeated the Golden Gophers 108-60.

    David Berding / Getty Images


    The day when the tournament’s brackets and seeds are released is known as Selection Sunday. For the 2023-24 NCAA college basketball season, Selection Sunday was held on Sunday, March 17, 2024.  


    Paige Bueckers’ road to the Final Four

    The NCAA tournament is single elimination, which means Paige Bueckers isn’t guaranteed a spot in the Final Four, or the national championship. If the Huskies win today, below is a roadmap of what Bueckers’ March Madness schedule will look like. Bookmark this post so you can check back for updates on the UConn Huskies next game.

    • First Four: Wednesday, March 20 and Thursday, March 21, 2024
    • First round: Friday, March 22 and Saturday, March 23: UConn beats Jackson State 86-64
    • Second round: Sunday, March 24 and Monday, March 25: UConn beats Syracuse 72-64
    • Sweet 16: Friday, March 29 and Saturday, March 30: Duke vs. UConn
    • Elite Eight: Sunday, March 31 and Monday, April 1
    • Final Four: Friday, April 5 (ESPN+)
    • National championship: Sunday, April 7 at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleveland, Ohio (ABC)

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  • How to watch today’s Clemson vs. Alabama men’s NCAA March Madness Elite 8 game: Livestream options, more

    How to watch today’s Clemson vs. Alabama men’s NCAA March Madness Elite 8 game: Livestream options, more

    gettyimages-2121459685-1.jpg
    Grant Nelson #2, Aaron Estrada #55 and Mark Sears #1of the Alabama Crimson Tide celebrate after defeating the North Carolina Tar Heels during the second half in the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at Crypto.com Arena on March 28, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. The Alabama Crimson Tide won, 89-87 

    Ronald Martinez/Getty Images


    The Clemson Tigers face the Alabama Crimson Tide tonight in the men’s March Madness Elite 8. Rivals on the football field, today’s game is a rare postseason showdown between these two Southern schools. Neither school’s basketball program has ever advanced to the Final Four. That changes today. 

    Keep reading below for how and when to watch or stream today’s Clemson vs. Alabama game, even if you don’t have cable. 

    CBS Essentials, CBS and Paramount+ are all subsidiaries of Paramount. CBS is one of the broadcast homes of the 2024 men’s March Madness tournament.


    When is March Madness 2024?

    The 2024 NCAA men’s college basketball tournament is being played from March 19, 2024 through April 8, 2024. 


    How to watch the Clemson vs. Alabama Elite 8 game

    The Clemson vs. Alabama men’s college basketball NCAA Elite 8 game will be played on Saturday, March 30, 2024 at 8:49 p.m. ET (5:49 p.m. PT).  The game will broadcast live on TBS and TruTV and stream on the platforms featured below. 


    How to watch the Clemson vs. Alabama game without cable

    If you’ve given up your cable subscription, or your cable provider doesn’t include the channels carrying March Madness this year, you can subscribe to one of the streaming or live TV platforms featured below.

    Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle: The one way to stream every March Madness game

    You can watch March Madness 2024, including both the men’s and women’s tournaments, with the Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle. The bundle features 95 channels, including CBS, ESPN, TNT, TBS, ABC and TruTV, and includes the ESPN+ streaming service, so you’ll be able to watch every game of both tournaments. The women’s Final Four will be broadcast live on ESPN+. Unlimited DVR storage is also included. Watch every March Madness game on every network this season with Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle.

    Hulu + Live TV comes bundled with ESPN+ and Disney+. It’s priced at $77 per month.


    Sling TV: The most cost-effective way to stream March Madness 2024

    If you don’t have cable TV that includes TBS and TruTV one of the most cost-effective ways to stream the March Madness tournament this year is through a subscription to Sling TV Orange plan. The streamer offers access to your local network affiliate’s live feed (excluding CBS) and also includes the NFL Network and ESPN with its Orange + Blue tier plan. Also worth noting: Sling TV comes with 50 hours of cloud-based DVR recording space included, perfect for recording all the season’s top NFL matchups.

    You can watch today’s game with Sling TV Orange. Sling TV is currently offering a prepaid deal where you can get four months of the Orange tier for $120, a discount of $40. The Orange tier is also available for $40 per month — you can cancel anytime. To watch both men’s and women’s games, except those airing on CBS, you’ll want to subscribe to the Orange + Blue tier for $60 per month.

    Note: Because some men’s March Madness 2024 will be broadcast on CBS, you won’t be able to watch all the men’s March Madness 2024 games with a Sling TV subscription. If you’re looking to stream the entire men’s tournament, we suggest a subscription to Hulu + Live TV.

    Top features of Sling TV Orange + Blue tier:

    • There are 46 channels to watch in total, including ESPN, TNT, TBS and ABC. (where available).
    • You get access to most local NFL games and nationally broadcast games next season at the lowest price.
    • All subscription tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based DVR storage.


    Men’s NCAA tournament full schedule

    If you’re looking for more March Madness Elite 8 games, and looking ahead to the national championship game, below are the winners, losers and upcoming schedule for the men’s tournament. All times Eastern.

    March Madness 2024: Elite 8 games schedule

    The Elite 8 games will be played from Saturday, March 30, 2024 through Sunday, March 31, 2024. 

    Saturday March 30 (Elite 8)

    • (1) UConn vs. (3) Illinois | 6:09 p.m. | TBS/truTV
    • (4) Alabama vs. (6) Clemson | 8:49 p.m. | TBS/truTV

    Sunday, March 31 (Elite 8)

    • (2) Tennessee vs. (1) Purdue | 2:20 p.m. | CBS
    • (11) NC State vs. (4) Duke | 5:05 p.m. | CBS

    March Madness 2024: Final Four games schedule

    The Final Four will be played on Saturday, April 6, 2024. The games will be played at State Farm Stadium in Phoenix, AZ.


    March Madness 2024: NCAA Tournament Championship Game

    The NCAA Tournament Championship Game will be played on Monday, April 8, 2024. The game will be played at State Farm Stadium in Phoenix, AZ at 9:20 p.m. ET. The game will air on TBS.


    Completed March Madness rounds:  Dates and scores

    gettyimages-2079936741-1.jpg

    Getty Images


    The First Four games were played from March 19 through March 20, 2024. All games were played at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, OH.

    First Four winners: March 19, 2024

    Below are the men’s First Four matchups and scores for Tuesday, March 19, 2024.

    Tuesday, March 19 (First Four)

    First Four winners: March 20, 2024

    Below are the men’s First Four matchups and scores for Wednesday, March 20, 2024.

    Wednesday, March 20 (First Four)


    March Madness 2024: First round

    The NCAA March Madness Round of 64 began on Thursday, March 21, 2024 with the Mississippi State vs. Michigan State game and ended on Friday, March 22, 2024.

    March Madness first round: Thursday, March 21 game times and network

    Below are the March Madness first-round matchups, winners, scores and networks that aired each men’s March Madness game on Thursday, March 21, 2024. All times Eastern.


    March Madness first round: Friday, March 22 game times and network

    Below are the game times, matchups, scores and networks that aired each first-round men’s March Madness game on Friday, March 22, 2024. All times Eastern.


    March Madness 2024: Second round 

    The NCAA March Madness Round of 32 began on Saturday, March 23, 2024 and ended on Sunday, March 24, 2024.

    March Madness second round: Saturday, March 23

    Below are the March Madness second-round matchups, winners and scores for games played on Saturday, March 23, 2024.

    • (2) Arizona vs. (7) Dayton (Arizona, 78-68)
    • (5) Gonzaga vs. (4) Kansas (Gonzaga, 89-68)
    • (1) North Carolina vs. (9) Michigan State (North Carolina, 85-69)
    • (2) Iowa State vs. (7) Washington State (Iowa State, 67-56)
    • (11) NC State vs. (14) Oakland (NC State, 79-73)
    • (2) Tennessee vs. (7) Texas (Tennessee, 62-58)
    • (3) Illinois vs. (11) Duquesne (Illinois, 89-63)
    • (3) Creighton vs. (11) Oregon (2OT) (Creighton, 86-73 2OT)

    March Madness second round: Sunday, March 24

    Below are the March Madness second-round matchups, winners and scores for games played on Sunday, March 24, 2024.

    • (2) Marquette vs. (10) Colorado (Marquette, 81-77)
    • (1) Purdue vs. (8) Utah State (Purdue, 106-67)
    • (4) Duke vs. (12) James Madison (Duke, 93-55)
    • (6) Clemson vs. (3) Baylor (Clemson, 72-64)
    • (4) Alabama vs. (12) Grand Canyon (Alabama, 72-61)
    • (1) UConn vs. (9) Northwestern (UConn, 75-58)
    • (1) Houston vs. (9) Texas A&M (OT) (Houston, 100-95 OT)
    • (5) San Diego State vs. (13) Yale (San Diego State, 85-57)

    Men’s March Madness Sweet 16: Thursday, March 28

    Below are matchups, game times and networks that aired each game played on Thursday, March 28, 2024.


    Men’s March Madness Sweet 16: Friday, March 29

    Below are matchups, game times and networks airing each game being played on Friday, March 29, 2024.


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  • Filipowski scores 16, Duke beats Houston 54-51 in Sweet 16 after All-American Jamal Shead hurt :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Filipowski scores 16, Duke beats Houston 54-51 in Sweet 16 after All-American Jamal Shead hurt :: WRALSportsFan.com

    13Duke Blue Devils 54
    Houston Cougars2Houston Cougars 51
    Final

    — DALLAS (AP) — Kyle Filipowski and Duke got pushed around again in the NCAA Tournament. This time, the Blue Devils responded to set up a Tobacco Road showdown in Big D for a spot in the Final Four.

    The 7-foot sophomore center had 16 points and nine rebounds, Jeremy Roach scored all 14 of his points after halftime, and Duke advanced to the Elite Eight with a 54-51 win over top-seeded Houston, which played the final 26 minutes Friday night without All-America point guard Jamal Shead after he turned his right ankle.

    Even with Shead on the bench, the fourth-seeded Blue Devils (27-8) had to overcome a physical defense that has been one of the best in the country all season. They won despite a season low in points.

    “Any questions about their mental toughness or their heart, I think they answered those tonight,” second-year coach Jon Scheyer said.

    Duke was ousted in the second round a year ago when Filipowski, Roach and the Blue Devils were bullied in a 65-52 loss to Tennessee, their fewest points last season.

    “This game right here was that same type of game. Just a great, gritty team and their culture. Just seeing the togetherness, how we didn’t quit out there tonight, that really shows the growth from last year,” Filipowski said. “We remember how upset we were from last year, and we didn’t want to repeat that again.”

    They didn’t, and will play in the South Region final Sunday against an Atlantic Coast Conference rival, No. 11 seed North Carolina State.

    The Wolfpack, the only double-digit seed left in this NCAA Tournament, beat No. 2 seed Marquette 67-58, their eighth win in a row in a streak that included a 74-69 victory over the Blue Devils just two weeks ago in the ACC Tournament.

    “It’s going to be crazy. A rematch of the ACC Tournament,” Roach said. “They’re on a crazy run.”

    L.J. Cryer scored 15 points for Houston and J’Wan Roberts had 13. Shead finished with two points on 1-of-5 shooting with three assists and two steals.

    Shead departed with 6:38 left in the first half after his right foot turned awkwardly on a drive while missing a contested layup. By then, he had been on the floor under the basket for about 15 seconds while play continued at the other end until Houston got the ball after a Duke miss.

    The senior guard, who has been part of 120 wins at Houston in his four seasons, reached for his foot when he went down and then pulled his jersey up over his face. He walked gingerly to the locker room after getting tended to by an athletic trainer, then sat on the bench throughout the second half. He limped off the court after the Cougars (32-5) became the second No. 1 seed knocked out — a night after North Carolina lost to Alabama.

    “I hate that it ended like this. I wish I could have got back out there and at least been in the fight,” Shead said. “It would have been different if I could have at least limped around a little bit and fought a little bit.”

    The Blue Devils trailed 16-10 when Shead exited, and never led until Tyrese Proctor’s two free throws made it 21-20 with 2:46 left in the first half. They never trailed again.

    “It didn’t feel like a fair fight. Two of theirs equals one of Jamal. That’s how good he was. You don’t have another one of those,” Cougars coach Kelvin Sampson said. “You don’t have the best defensive player in the Big 12. You don’t have the guy who made all the big shots at the end.”

    Duke never led by more than six points, the last at 54-48 on Roach’s jumper in the lane with 1:15 left. Emanuel Sharp converted a three-point play with 48 seconds left for the Cougars, and they got the ball back one more time after a miss by Filipowski with 25 seconds left.

    A tough 3-point try by Sharp over Proctor was no good, and there was less than a second on the clock when Houston guard Mylik Wilson was out of bounds on the floor when trying to get the rebound.

    Duke finished with 14 turnovers, but that was after three on its first four possessions and falling behind 8-0 in the first 3 1/2 minutes.

    ELITE ACC

    The ACC has three teams in the Elite Eight, including Clemson, which faces Alabama in the West Region final on Saturday. The league is 11-2 in this NCAA Tournament, and that includes Virginia losing in the First Four.

    LONG-RANGE MAKES

    Duke has made a 3-pointer in 1,224 consecutive games, which is the nation’s second-longest active streak. UNLV’s run of 1,227 games making a long-range shot is on hold until next season. The Runnin’ Rebels made five 3s in their season-ending NIT loss Wednesday night.

    UP NEXT

    Duke made its 24th Elite Eight, matching Kansas for the third-most times getting that far in March Madness — trailing Kentucky (38) and North Carolina (29).

    ___

    AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

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  • UNC eliminated from NCAA Tournament in 89-87 Sweet 16 loss to Alabama :: WRALSportsFan.com

    UNC eliminated from NCAA Tournament in 89-87 Sweet 16 loss to Alabama :: WRALSportsFan.com

    — LOS ANGELES (AP) — Grant Nelson converted a go-ahead three-point play with 38 seconds remaining, and Alabama beat top-seeded North Carolina 89-87 on Thursday night to reach the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament for the second time in school history.

    Nelson finished with a season-high 24 points, 19 in the second half, and he blocked RJ Davis’ attempt at a tying layup after giving Alabama the lead. Rylan Griffen added 19 points, tying his career high with five 3-pointers, and Aaron Estrada also scored 19 for the fourth-seeded Crimson Tide (24-11).

    The Tide face sixth-seeded Clemson on Saturday for a berth in the Final Four. The Tigers (24-11) defeated second-seeded Arizona 77-72 in the first semifinal at Crypto.com Arena.

    After Nelson blocked Davis’ shot with 25 seconds left, Davis furiously dribbled around before missing a layup and the Tar Heels got called for a shot-clock violation with 8 seconds left. They were forced to foul, sending Nelson to the line. He calmly made both for an 89-85 lead.

    Armando Bacot scored inside with 1 second left, leaving North Carolina trailing 89-87. The Tar Heels fouled Nelson again with 0.9 seconds left. He missed both and time expired on the blueblood Tar Heels, who own six national championships.

    Bacot finished with 19 points and 12 rebounds for UNC (29-8). Cormac Ryan had 17 points and made five 3-pointers and Davis had 16 points.

    ___

    AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

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  • March Madness: Alabama ends UNC’s run in 89-87 Sweet 16 thriller

    March Madness: Alabama ends UNC’s run in 89-87 Sweet 16 thriller

    RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — North Carolina’s NCAA tournament run ended Thursday night in an 89-87 loss to Alabama.

    It was a scintillating game, played in Los Angeles at a high pace with plenty of drama. In the end, the Crimson Tide simply outlasted the Tar Heels.

    Grant Nelson converted a go-ahead three-point play with 38 seconds remaining to lift Alabama past the top-seeded Tar Heels.

    Nelson finished with a season-high 24 points, 19 in the second half, and he blocked RJ Davis’ attempt at a tying layup after giving Alabama the lead. Rylan Griffen added 19 points, tying his career high with five 3-pointers, and Aaron Estrada also scored 19 for the fourth-seeded Crimson Tide (24-11).

    UNC guard RJ Davis shoots past Alabama guard Rylan Griffen on Thursday in Los Angeles.

    Ashley Landis

    After Nelson blocked Davis’ shot with 25 seconds left, Davis furiously dribbled around before missing a layup and the Tar Heels got called for a shot-clock violation with 8 seconds left. They were forced to foul, sending Nelson to the line. He calmly made both for an 89-85 lead.

    Armando Bacot scored inside with 1 second left, leaving North Carolina trailing 89-87. The Tar Heels fouled Nelson again with 0.9 seconds left. He missed both and time expired on the Tar Heels.

    Bacot finished with 19 points and 12 rebounds in his final game for UNC, which ended the season 29-8. Cormac Ryan had 17 points and made five 3-pointers and Davis had 16 points.

    For Davis, it ended a splendid season in a nightmarish fashion. The ACC Player of the Year had his worst shooting night in memory, missing all nine of his 3-point attempts and making just 4-of-20 from the floor. Half his points came at the free throw line, where he made 8-of-9.

    At times, UNC coach Hubert Davis looked like he was still playing for his alma mater, where he starred from 1988-92 under Hall of Famer Dean Smith. Davis dashed up and down the sideline in his white sneakers, gesturing and yelling and taking his glasses on and off as he lived each play through his team.

    UNC’s Armando Bacot shoots amid an Army of Alabama defenders on Thursday in the Sweet 16 in Los Angeles.

    Ashley Landis

    Alabama trailed 54-46 at halftime. Nelson and Sam Walters combined to score nine of Alabama’s first 13 points to take a 59-57 lead.

    The Tar Heels struggled early when big man Bacot picked up his third foul five minutes in, but they tied it at 59-all on a basket by Harrison Ingram.

    “I thought in the second half, we came out a little flat,” Bacot said.

    Nelson, Estrada and Griffen teamed to score 21 of Alabama’s next 23 points that produced an 82-77 lead. Nelson ran off seven in a row, capped by a 3-pointer.

    Carolina scored eight in a row, including six straight by Davis, to take its last lead, 85-82.

    North Carolina guard Elliot Cadeau is fouled by Alabama forward Mouhamed Dioubate on Thursday at the Sweet 16 in Los Angeles.

    Ryan Sun

    The Tar Heels opened the game on a 19-9 run for their largest lead of a half in which there were eight ties and seven lead changes.

    Mark Sears went on a tear, scoring nine points – hitting a 3-pointer and turning to blow a kiss to the crowd – to help the Tide lead 39-34. Sears finished with 18 points.

    North Carolina regained control with a 20-7 spurt to end the half ahead 54-46. Ryan and Ingram had two 3-pointers each and Bacot dunked, slithered around Mohamed Wague for a layup and scored off his own steal.

    “At the end of the day, it boiled down to them making more shots than we did,” Bacot said.

    – BOXSCORE

    Alabama moves to the Elite Eight to face another ACC opponent in Clemson. Both Alabama and Clemson are in the Elite Eight for only the second time in their school histories.

    The Tide face sixth-seeded Clemson on Saturday for a berth in the Final Four.

    The Tigers got 18 points from Chase Hunter and converted a three-point play with 25.7 seconds remaining as Clemson beat Arizona 77-72 in the first West Region semifinal on Thursday night.

    Clemson players celebrate after eliminating Arizona on Thursday night.

    Ryan Sun

    PJ Hall added 17 points for the Tigers.

    “We’ve battled a lot of things. This is a great moment for Clemson basketball,” Coach Brad Brownell said.

    NC State

    Two weeks ago, 11th-seeded 14 NC State was on the outside of the tournament bubble and the dream run will continue against No. 2 seed Marquette.

    Their game is on Friday at 7:09 p.m. on CBS.

    “It’s been unbelievable actually like, it’s been something you’ve been dreaming of since you were a kid,” NC State point guard Michael O-Connell said Thursday. “These are the moments you kind of live for and you’ve been working for.”

    The Wolfpack won its first basketball national title against Marquette in 1974. That team was led by David Thompson and Tommy Burleson and coached by Norm Sloan.

    The Wolfpack’s seven-game win streak is the longest of head coach Kevin Keatts’ tenure.

    “Honestly, it’s still, it hasn’t really all sunk in,” said NC State forward Ben Middlebrooks. “Every time after we win a game it’s on to the next one so we’re all still kind of living in the moment and trying to enjoy it and trying to stay focused.”

    “We’re excited to be here in Dallas,” Marquette coach Shaka Smart said Thursday. “Obviously, NC State presents a lot of challenges. They’re playing terrific basketball. I’ve known Kevin Keatts for a long, long time, have a ton of respect for him, so it will be an exciting opportunity for us tomorrow.”

    The Blue Devils and Wolfpack practiced in Dallas on Thursday ahead of big matchups with Houston and Marquette, respectively.

    Duke

    The No.4 seed Duke Blue Devils are headed to the Sweet 16 to face No. 1 seed Houston, which narrowly avoided an upset at the hands of in-state rival Texas A&M on Sunday night.

    “Feeling great, feeling confident going into the weekend with this team,” said Duke’s Jared McCain. “I’m just excited to play again.”

    Duke reached the second weekend of March Madness for the 27th time in 39 tournaments since the event expanded to 64 teams in 1985.

    “I think anytime you look at a really good defensive team, but for Houston, look, they, probably, if not the best defensive team in the country, they’re right there,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “And you have to talk about their effort. Their effort is terrific.”

    One thing that got the Blue Devils this far was increasing their defensive intensity and holding their two opponents so far (Vermont and James Madison) well below their season scoring averages.

    “I think our guys have shown throughout the year we’re a really good defensive team,” Scheyer said. “Sometimes when you have those couple of games that don’t go your way, you know, our guys, they don’t have to, you have to get over it quickly.”

    The two teams will face off in the South Region on Friday at 9:39 p.m. on CBS.

    “Any time you can get away, get out of the first week of the NCAA tournament, it’s a blessing,” said Duke center Mark Mitchell. “You’ve got to be proud of it, but obviously, we still have got things to work on.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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