VILLANOVA 61, SAINT MARYS 57
HARTFORD, Conn. -- The defending national champions are
moving on in the NCAA Tournament.
Phil Booth scored
20 points, fellow senior Eric Paschell added 14 and No. 6 seed Villanova held
off Saint Mary's 61-57 in the first round of the South Region.
Jordan Ford and Malik Fitts each
had 13 points for Saint Mary's (22-12), which never trailed by more than eight.
The 11th-seeded Gaels, who pulled off an upset win over Gonzaga
in the West Coast Conference Tournament, had a chance down the stretch in this
one.
Ford's basket in the lane after a few nifty moves got the
Gaels within six points at 61-55 with 34 seconds left. After Paschell missed a
foul shot on the other end, Fitts cut the deficit to four points with a leaner
in the lane.
The Gaels had two more chances in the final seconds after a
foul by Booth and some missed free throws. But Fitts hit the rim on a 3-point
attempt and Saddiq Bey stole
the ball from Ford in the final seconds to seal the win.
GONZAGA 87, FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON 49
SALT LAKE CITY -- One year after dreamers and underdog
lovers rejoiced at top-seeded Virginia's first-of-its-kind, first-round loss,
the Gonzaga
Bulldogs crushed any thought of a repeat with a wire-to-wire
thumping of Fairleigh Dickinson in the West Region.
Rui Hachimura led
the Zags (31-3) with 21 points and eight rebounds.
Gonzaga led by 10 after the first 4:12, by 20 after 10:25
and by the score of 53-17 at halftime.
By the time Gonzaga turned it over when Josh Perkins tried
flipping a no-look pass backward to Killian
Tillie, coach Mark Few looked barely awake, sitting in his chair,
cheek cupped in his hand. The Bulldogs led 70-34.
The Knights (21-14) were unable to repeat their amazing
shooting three nights earlier in a come-from-behind win over Prairie View
A&M in the First Four.
Fairleigh Dickinson shot 30 percent and went 6 for 21 from
3-point range. Its star from the win, Darnell Edge,
had trouble getting any looks, let alone good ones. He went 2 for 11 for seven
points.
MURRAY STATE 83, MARQUETTE 64
HARTFORD, Conn. -- Ja Morant recorded
the ninth triple-double in the NCAA Tournament since 1987 as Murray State
trounced fifth-seeded Marquette in the first round of the West Region.
Murray State continued a trend of a No. 12 seed winning at
least one game in all but three tournaments since 2001 -- including last year's
-- but this looked nothing like an upset.
Morant had 17 points, 16 assists and 11 rebounds as he
sliced through Marquette and showed the Racers (28-4) were better in every way
than their opponent from the Big East. The Ohio Valley Conference champions
face fourth-seeded Florida State on Saturday as the Racers next try to take
down an Atlantic Coast Conference foe.
With 4:36 left in the second half and Murray State up 20,
Morant grabbed his 10th rebound. Racers fans began chanting
"triple-double" to mark the first one since Michigan State's Draymond
Green in 2012 against LIU-Brooklyn.
The game was billed as a showcase of two of the nation's
best point guards and Morant and Markus Howard delivered
plenty of highlights. Howard scored 16 in the first half on a mix of 3s off
screens and hard drives to the hoop and finished with 26 points for Marquette
(24-10).
FLORIDA 70, NEVADA 61
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Kevarrius
Hayes scored 16 points, Jalen Hudson added
15 and 10th-seeded Florida beat Nevada in the West Region in the first round of
the NCAA Tournament after squandering most of an 18-point lead.
Andrew
Nembhard, whose last-second shot beat LSU in the Southeastern
Conference Tournament last week, drove to the basket for a layup with 1+
minutes left and Florida scored the last seven points after the Wolf Pack had
cut the lead to two points.
The Gators (20-1) won their tournament opener for the third
straight year and became the third double-digit seed to win on Thursday.
Cody Martin scored
23 points and twin brother Caleb Martin had
19 for the Wolf Pack (29-5). The two combined for 28 of their team's 33 points
in the second half.
KeVaughn
Allen made back-to-back shots to start a 12-0 run early in the
second half that swelled the lead to 51-33 with 14 minutes left.
KENTUCKY 79, ABILENE CHRISTIAN 44
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Keldon
Johnson scored 25 points in a huge mismatch that was over by
halftime, and second-seeded Kentucky romped in the Midwest Regional over NCAA
Tournament newcomer Abilene Christian.
The Wildcats shot 60 percent in the opening period, held
Abilene Christian to 5 of 26 from the field and went to the locker room with a
39-13 lead.
Even without PJ Washington,
who sprained his left foot in the Southeastern Conference Tournament, the
Wildcats had far too many weapons for the Southland Conference representative,
a No. 15 seed. Reid Travis added
18 points and Tyler Herro 14.
Jaren Lewis led
Abilene Christian with 17 points, the only player in double figures.
The big question: Will Washington be able to go? Kentucky
coach John Calipari tweeted before the game that a foot specialist confirmed
the injury was only a sprain, not a fracture.
MARYLAND 79, BELMONT 77
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Maryland's Darryl Morsell made
a crucial defensive stop as Belmont went for a last-second upset in the NCAA
Tournament, allowing the Terrapins to escape in the East Regional.
The mid-major powerhouse from Nashville, Tennessee couldn't
knock off the No. 6-seeded Terrapins (23-10) from the Big Ten, despite a
35-point performance by Dylan Windler.
Maryland was clinging to a one-point lead and the shot clock
was off as Belmont (26-6) had a chance to win it at the buzzer. The Bruins
didn't bother calling a timeout to set up a play; they knew what they wanted to
do -- a backdoor pass to Windler. But Morsell anticipated the pass and stepped
in front of Windler to pick intercept the pass while the Belmont star tumbled
to the court.
Morsell was fouled with 2.5 seconds to go, sending him to
the foul line for two shots. He made the first and missed the second, and
Windler heaved an unsuccessful desperation shot from midcourt.
Jalen Smith led
four Maryland players in double figures with 19 points, including a huge
three-point play with 1:41 remaining, and Bruno
Fernando added 14 points and 13 rebounds
Belmont led by as many as 12 points in the first half and
went to the break with a 40-34 lead.
MINNESOTA 86, LOUISVILLE 76
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Minnesota won its first NCAA Tournament
game in six years behind 24 points from freshman Gale Kalscheur as the
10th-seeded Gophers rolled past Louisville in the opening round of the East
Region.
It was the first tournament win in Richard Pitino's six
seasons coaching the Gophers and came against the school that fired his father,
Rick Pitino, in 2017.
Jordan Murphy and Amir Coffey each
had 18 points for Minnesota (22-13), which knocked down 11 3s despite entering
play ranked 344th nationally in made 3s per game.
Kalscheur's layup early in the second half gave Minnesota
its first double-digit lead, 43-33, and Murphy's layup made it a 50-38 game
with 16:06 left.
The Cardinals went to a full-court press in an effort to
slow the surging Gophers. But that just left Kalscheur open from the same spot
on back-to-back possessions, and he drilled two 3s to give Minnesota a 59-43
lead.
The seventh-seeded Cardinals (20-14) did cut it to seven
late, but Christen
Cunningham missed an open 3 that could've made things interesting
down the stretch.
Cunningham led Louisville (20-14) with 22 points, and Steven Enoch had
14.
AUBURN 78, NEW MEXICO STATE 77
SALT LAKE CITY -- After a teammate passed up an open layup
that could have tied the game, New Mexico State's Terrell Brown was
fouled behind the arc and missed two of three free throws as the Aggies dropped
a heartbreaker to fifth-seeded Auburn in the Midwest Region.
The Aggies (30-5) were trailing 78-76 when guard A.J. Harris
had his defender beat and looked to be headed to the glass for the tying
bucket. He instead lobbed out to Brown, who was spotted up at the elbow for a
possible game-winner. Brown missed but was fouled with 1.1 seconds left.
With Auburn's J'von McCormick grabbing his throat as Harris
toed the line, Brown missed the first, made the second, and then watched the
third one rim out.
Auburn (27-9) knocked the ball out of bounds on the rebound
and New Mexico State had one more good look, but Trevelin
Queen's 3 at the buzzer was an air ball.
MICHIGAN STATE 76, BRADLEY 65
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Cassius
Winston scored 26 points and second-seeded Michigan State held
off Bradley in the East Region.
Xavier
Tillman had 16 points with 11 boards for the Spartans (29-6),
who'll face Big Ten rival, 10th-seeded Minnesota, on Saturday in search of
their first trip to the Sweet Sixteen in four years. Michigan State throttled
the Gophers 79-55 in East Lansing back on Feb. 9.
Bradley gave the Big Ten champions all they could handle,
though.
It was a one-possession game until Matt McQuaid drilled
a crucial 3 to put Michigan State ahead 61-55 with 3:31 left. Aaron Henry followed
with a layup to cap a 9-0 run, but Darrell Brown hit
a 3 for Bradley to make it 65-60.
The Spartans iced the game at the line, where they hit their
first 20 and finished 25 of 26.
Bradley (20-15) surged to a 35-34 halftime lead by shooting
6 of 9 from 3-point range.
Elijah Childs scored
19 points and Brown had 17 for the Braves, who went just 3 of 12 from beyond
the arc in the second half.
FLORIDA STATE 76, VERMONT 69
HARTFORD, Conn. -- Mfiondu
Kabengele had 21 points and 10 rebounds, and Florida State held
off a barrage of 3-pointers from 13th-seeded Vermont in the opening round of
the West Regional.
Terance Mann added
19 points for the fourth-seeded Seminoles (28-7), who were tied with the
Catamounts at halftime but pulled away late.
Anthony Lamb had
16 points to lead a balanced, long-range attack for Vermont (27-7), which lost
for the first time in seven games. Three Catamounts finished with 15 points.
The America East champions stayed close by hitting 16 of 32
3-point attempts. The Seminoles countered by wearing out Vermont down low,
outscoring the Catamounts 30-14 in the paint.
A dunk by Kabengele gave Florida State a 50-45 lead with
nine minutes left, part of a 6-0 run that put the Seminoles ahead for good.
Another by the 6-10 sophomore made it 61-53, and the cheers
of Vermont fans, who made the four-hour drive south from Burlington, gave way
to the tomahawk chop from behind Florida State's bench.
LSU 79, YALE 74
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Skylar Mays hit
four free throws in the final 15 seconds to help embattled LSU slip past
14th-seeded Yale.
Mays scored 19 points but sealed the game from the foul
line, and the Tigers (27-6) needed each one of his free throws.
Yale (22-8) hit four 3-pointers in the final minute and
whittled an 18-point deficit to three in the closing seconds. With the lead on
the line, Mays calmly stepped to the line and sank all his free throws.
Tremont
Waters finished with 15 points, but had just two after the
break for LSU. He was 0 for 7 from the field in the final 20 minutes after
dominating the first half with 13 points and six assists. Naz Reid had
14 points and 10 rebounds. Kavell
Bigby-Williams also had a double-double with 10 points and 10
boards.
LSU moves on without Coach Will Wade, who is suspended for
his role in an alleged cheating scandal. University officials won't allow Wade
to resume his duties unless he speaks with the school about an FBI wiretap that
resulted in his suspension. Tony Benford continued in his role as interim
coach.
Alex Copeland led
Yale with 24 points. He had 16 points in the second half and hit two 3s in the
final minute.
KANSAS 87, NORTHEASTERN 54
SALT LAKE CITY -- Dedric Lawson had
25 points and 11 rebounds, and fourth-seeded Kansas dominated inside in a rout
over Northeastern in the Midwest Region.
The fourth-seeded Jayhawks (26-9) had a notable size
advantage inside and used it, outscoring the Huskies 50-16 in the paint while
grabbing 17 more rebounds.
Devon Dotson controlled
the offense and scored 18 points, while Dedric's brother, K.J., chipped in 13
points.
Kansas shot 56 percent and advanced to Saturday's second
round against fifth-seeded Auburn.
The best shot for the 13th-seeded Huskies (23-11) was to
make their 3-point tries. They didn't. The Colonial Athletic Association
champions went 6 for 28 from the arc after finishing the regular season 17th in
Division I at 38.6 percent.
Sharpshooter Vasa Pusica had
a hard time getting separation from the Jayhawks' athletic guards, finishing
with seven points on 2-of-11 shooting. Jordan Roland had
12 points to lead the Huskies, who shot 28 percent overall.
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