If you like great college hoops, then this was a fun Saturday. The exciting games continued today with some awfully competitive Second Round games and frenetic finishes.
Oh. There also was another upset as well. Let’s just say that this time, Duke wasn’t so lucky as the other night when it narrowly escaped to win by one over 15th seeded Belmont.
They couldn’t beat seventh seeded West Virginia, who used a strong second half from star forward Joe Alexander along with inspired guard play from reserve guard Joe Mazzulla and senior floor leader Darris Nichols to comeback and eliminate them 73-67.
In the first half, it was the Blue Devils who got out of the gate quickly leading almost the entire way thanks to a more crisp offense and their lower Big East seeded opponent’s dreadful outside game which saw them misfire on all six three-point attempts.
Despite being largely outplayed, Bob Huggins’ club trailed by only five 34-29 at the half. It allowed the fiery coach who’s in Year One at his alma mater to air some things out in the locker room and make adjustments for the second half.
“His message was that we couldn’t play any worse and we were down by five,” leading scorer Alexander noted to the AP after pacing the Mountaineers with 22 points and 11 rebounds.
“The biggest thing that surprised me is how calm he is, most of the time. He’s notorious for being a yeller. Oh, he’s a yeller. Big time. But most of the time, he’s calm. And first, he’s a teacher.”
Playing much better man-to-man D and executing their offense to perfection, West Virginia started the second half with an 8-3 run which featured a miraculous off balance Alex Ruoff right wing trey as the shotclock expired to tie the score at 37.
“His passion, his lack of fear, is something we try to put out on the court,” added Ruoff. “When you see that passion on the sideline, the last thing you want to do is let that man down.
They continued to play well while Duke struggled in the halfcourt forcing several contested three’s which clanged plenty of iron. During a long stretch, the Blue Devils missed 15 straight from beyond the arc which helped explain how they suddenly fell behind 47-40 on a Mazzulla driving lay-up to cap an 18-3 Mountaineer run.
Speaking of the Mazzulla, he was the noticeable difference in helping breakdown Duke off the dribble while scoring or setting up open teammates.
“The MVP of the game,” losing coach Mike Krzyzewski pointed out of the sophomore who nearly had a triple double (13 pts, 11 rebs, 8 assists).
Coach K’s team had no answer for him. With Mazzella running the offense, it allowed Alexander to get more than half his output more easily off the pick n’ roll and freed up Ruoff (17 pts) plus Nichols (all 5 pts during run).
The Mountaineers also hurt the Blue Devils crashing the glass by outrebounding them 47-27 including 19 offensive.
It all added up to a third Sweet 16 appearance in the last four years. On the opposite end of the spectrum, Duke was ousted on the tourney’s first weekend for a second consecutive year. They previously made the Regional Semifinals from 1997 thru 2006.
Just goes to show that all great runs come to an end. The bottom line with Duke is for as great a program as they are, their style just doesn’t work anymore. Unless Krzyzewski gets a better interior to balance out the offense, they’ll continue to perform well in the regular season only to bow out early in March.
And for Duke, that’s not good enough. Especially for Dick Vitale’s sake.
Perhaps the game of the day took place between Marquette and Stanford. This was a classic battle of contrasting styles. Big East versus Pac-10. The Golden Eagles speedy guards against the brute strength of the Lopez twins inside.
This game had everything to technicals on both coaches including a rare tournament ejection to dynamic runs, lead changes and even a classic duel.
Not surprisingly, the well played game needed overtime to decide with it all boiling down to who had the ball last. That turned out to be good for Stanford as they prevailed thanks to a very difficult 14-foot right baseline turnaround from star center Brook Lopez which gave his school the hard fought 82-81 win advancing to the Regional Semis.
The 7-foot Lopez was brilliant in the second half and OT netting 24 of his 30 after intermission. He and brother Robin combined for more than half the Cardinals’ points to offset a strong performance from Marquette’s Jerel McNeal, who also finished with 30 with many coming in a variety of ways.
In fact, he hit for nine of his school’s 10 in OT draining three trifectas all off screens from the left part of the key surprising even one of his biggest backers. McNeal’s never been what I’d call a great shooter but has the uncanny ability to step up and make big shots late.
He clearly tried to carry his team, who also got strong performances from Wesley Matthews (14 pts, 7 rebs) and orchestrator Dominick James who finished with nine while dropping 10 dimes. Anytime you hit at least that many in a college game, it’s not by accident as James is very good.
While he was quite good, then Stanford’s Mitch Johnson was off the charts handing out 16 assists while also netting the same number of points James had. Sure. A big part of that was all he had to do was get the ball inside to the Lopez tandem. Still, racking up that total is extremely impressive at the college level.
Stanford got out to a good start and built an eight point lead but Marquette stormed back with a 10-0 run fueled by a pair of technicals on Cardinal coach Trent Johnson leading to an automatic toss. The coach made the mistake of coming a few feet onto the court to voice his displeasure over a foul on one of his players.
To his credit, he later admitted that it was entirely his fault and was thankful his team responded the way they did after the half. Very stand-up if you ask me.
It’s never easy to see a coach tossed in such a huge game. And for the most part, it’s a rarity. However, sometimes it happens. We’ve seen Huggins get the heave ho a few years ago with Cincinnati. Heck. Even legendary North Carolina coach Dean Smith was tossed back in the 1991 Final Four against Kansas.
“The bottom line was, the responsibility was on me, and I was out of line,” the classy Johnson later expressed. “Just leave it at that if you would, please.”
It left his assistant Doug Oliver to run the bench the rest of the way. Though they trailed by six at the half, his team came out and played inspired ball led by Brook Lopez.
They would exchange runs and leads with the Golden Eagles, who just wouldn’t break mostly due to McNeal, whose uncanny ability to get to loose balls and turn the corner for easy buckets kept his school afloat late in regulation.
Trailing by one in the final 10 seconds, Robin Lopez sank one of two free throws to knot the score at 71 setting the stage for McNeal to win or lose it. However, his forced three was long with five seconds left. Brook blocked a last ditch attempt as the buzzer sounded forcing it to a dramatic five extra minutes.
It soon became a personal duel between Lopez and McNeal with each doing it differently with the bigger center finishing near the basket while the junior guard stepped out.
With his team ahead one, McNeal got to an offensive rebound giving Marquette a new shot clock with roughly a nine second differential. They ran a solid play for him but the leading scorer’s 15-foot pull up hit the back rim rebounding out to Lopez, who handed to Johnson who brought it up.
With his team trailing by a point, he got it into Lopez, who made his move with four seconds left. The sophomore’s runner rolled around the rim before dropping much to the pro-Stanford crowd’s delight at the Honda Center giving them an 82-81 lead with only 1.3 on the clock.
“I was pretty much watching from behind the backboard the whole time, and the ground,” the hero said. “So I guess I got a nice bounce or something.”
Following a timeout from Marquette coach Tom Crean, a three-quarter pass was tipped away giving the Cards a thrilling victory.
“We were shooting jump shots in overtime and they were shooting lay-ups,” a disappointed McNeal lamented.“They got the final shot. Lay-up. Game over.”
Sometimes, that’s how it goes. We saw it with Western Kentucky’s riveting 101-99 win over Drake the other day on a buzzer beater. They had the last shot and made the most of it.
Same thing here in another memorable game.
The final one which nearly destroyed many brackets had ninth seeded Texas A & M taking West top seed UCLA to the wire before the Bruins pulled it out 53-49 thanks to some late heroics from stars Darren Collison and Kevin Love.
As my Hard Hits colleague and good laid back and snappy California buddy Nate Sousa alluded to on a recent shot, the Bruins tend to take it easy at times allowing opponents to stay in games late.
Maybe it was because they had such an easy first round and had a step up in competition. Or maybe it was just what coach Ben Howland had come to expect from a team many expect to not only reach the Final Four but win their first championship since 1995.
“That was reminiscent of a lot of games we seem to be in lately, where we’re having to make dramatic comebacks in the last few minutes,” Howland noted of how his team fought back from 10 down to deny the Aggies’ upset bid.
“But the one thing that I love about our team is that they know in their heart they’re always going to win the game. They’re going to find a way.”
Due to Michigan State holding off Big East champ Pittsburgh late, we didn’t get to see much of this game until the final few frantic minutes. Good thing too cause it worked out perfectly.
To little surprise, the Bruins rallied back to tie the game thanks to a very tough turnaround in the post by Love. The Pac-10 Freshman and Player of The Year was large down the stretch making big buckets to finish with 19 points and 11 rebounds for his 21st double double. His defensive presence though was key as he blocked seven shots and altered a few others.
“I was just very into it,” he explained. “I flexed so much, my muscles kind of hurt after this and also I stuck my tongue out so much that it was pretty crazy.”
Love’s running mate Collison also stepped up late banking in two tough runners in the lane including the winner with just 9.5 seconds to go.
“That was vintage Darren Collison,” praised Howland.
“Driving down the lane, going right, high off the glass, kissing it in. The second one was really a blessing because that thing kind of rolled in. Believe me, I’m very thankful.”
He should be. It was that special. The first one gave UCLA a 49-47 lead with under a minute to play. The Aggies’ Donald Sloan responded with a difficult stepback to once again knot it up setting the stage for Collison’s winner.
The lightning quick guard drove the lane and with defenders on him, floated a fadeaway which somehow went in off the glass. A seemingly ridiculous shot.
Following a timeout, Texas A & M went to Sloan once more but as he went up, two hustling UCLA defenders got a piece of the shot pushing it out to halfcourt as a streaking Josh Shipp tracked it down and slammed the exclamation point on the win which allowed the Bruins to win a now school record 33rd game.
“That was same thing we do all year—lock down, switch everything and fortunately, I was able to get my hand on it and make the play,” Shipp said of being credited with his school’s 11th block of the night. “The guy had just made a shot, so we knew he was most likely going to take it.”
“I drove and went up to shoot a layup and it was brought back down either by my force or somebody else’s,” Sloan said. “Leave it up to other people to see, but it didn’t go our way.”
Unfortunately, a second straight trip to the Sweet 16 wasn’t to be for first-year Aggie coach Max Turgeon’s club who had used an early 7-0 second half run to build a 36-26 lead.
“I thought we were in total control, always one step ahead,” he admitted. “I thought we were going to win.”
“We did a good job against their defense, their pressure,” he added.
“It just came down to Love and Collison at the end making plays. “I just hate to see it end. We were just really coming on.”
That’s how these games are usually decided. UCLA’s biggest stars stepped up and delivered. They’ll play either Western Kentucky or San Diego for a chance to get back to the Regionals.
Figure that battle between the two potential Cinderellas to be a fun game as should Georgetown’s tilt against 40-point man Stephen Curry and Davidson, who bring a 23-game win streak into today. That one could be very close. Especially if Dell Curry’s kid shoots the lights out as he did to Gonzaga in an awesome display notching 30 after the half.
Villanova also will be in action taking on another 13 seed in Siena. Who will prevail? Find out later today! 