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News
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Sunday's NCAA men's tournament roundup
March 21, 2010
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A quick look at Sunday's NCAA tournament games:
No. 12 Cornell 87 No. 4 Wisconsin 69
At Jacksonville, Fla., Louis Dale scored 26 points and Ryan Wittman had 24, helping 12th-seeded Cornell dominate No. 4 seed Wisconsin to reach the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament for the first time.
The Big Red entered the tourney with no victories in four previous appearances and upset fifth-seeded Temple in the opening round. They are the first Ivy League team to advance to the round of 16 since Penn in 1979.
Next up, top-seeded Kentucky in the East Regional semifinals.
Cornell (29-4) shot 59 per cent from the field to build a 43-31 halftime lead. Wisconsin (24-9) never made a serious run, falling behind by 20 points midway through the second half.
Jon Leuer led the Badgers with 23 points while Jason Bohannon had 18 and Trevon Hughes 10.
No. 2 West Virginia 68 No. 10 Missouri 59
At Buffalo, N.Y., Da'Sean Butler accounted for 19 of West Virginia's 30 points in the first half, then finished with 28 to lead the second-seeded Mountaineers past Missouri and into the round of 16.
Kevin Jones had 13 points and nine rebounds for the Big East Conference tournament champions.
Michael Dixon scored 15 points for Missouri (23-11), which went 20 of 61 from the field and was just as bad from the free-throw line, going 12-of-20.
West Virginia (29-6) advances to face No. 11 seed Washington at Syracuse, N.Y., on Thursday. It marks the fifth time the Mountaineers reached the final 16, and first since 2008.
MIDWEST REGIONAL
No. 5 Michigan State 85, No. 4 Maryland 83
At Spokane, Wash., Korie Lucious hit a three-pointer at the buzzer to cap a frenetic finish and give injury-depleted Michigan State, which lost star guard Kalin Lucas, a victory over Maryland.
The Spartans blew a 16-point lead in the second half. Greivis Vasquez put fourth-seeded Maryland (24-9) ahead 83-82 with six seconds left, but Michigan State pushed the ball up the floor and Lucious, filling in for Lucas, drained a three from the top of the key, setting off a wild celebration by the Spartans.
No. 5 seed Michigan State (26-8) advanced to play ninth-seeded Northern Iowa on Friday in the Midwest Regional semifinals in St. Louis.
Lucas, a two-time all-Big Ten selection, got hurt with 2:28 remaining in the first half and did not return.
Spartans coach Tom Izzo said the junior likely has a torn Achilles' tendon, which would make it almost impossible for him to play in the round of 16 -- and probably would sideline him for the rest of the tournament.
No. 2 Ohio St. 75 No. 10 Georgia Tech 66
At Milwaukee, Evan Turner rebounded from one of the worst shooting nights of his career with 24 points, and second-seeded Ohio State outlasted foul- and turnover-plagued Georgia Tech.
Jon Diebler added 20 points for the Buckeyes (29-7) and David Lighty had 18.
Ohio State faces sixth-seeded Tennessee on Friday night in St. Louis in a Midwest Regional semifinal.
ACC freshman of the year Derrick Favours, who played just five minutes in the first half after picking up two quick fouls, finished with 10 points before fouling out in the last minute for 10th-seeded Georgia Tech (23-13).
WEST REGIONAL
No. 1 Syracuse 87 No. 8 Gonzaga 65
At Buffalo, N.Y., Wes Johnson scored a career-high 31 points and pulled down 14 rebounds, and Toronto's Andy Rautins added 24 points as top-seeded Syracuse hit a dozen three-pointers to rout No. 8 Gonzaga.
Syracuse's storybook season -- the Orange were unranked before the season and made it to No. 1 for the final week before losing to Georgetown in the Big East tournament -- continues Thursday. The Orange (30-4) will play fifth-seeded Butler in Salt Lake City.
Elias Harris led Gonzaga (27-7) with 24 points.
No. 6 Xavier 71 No. 3 Pittsburgh 68
At Milwaukee, Jordan Crawford scored 27 points, including a breakaway dunk with just over two minutes remaining, to help sixth-seeded Xavier beat No. 3 Pittsburgh in the second round.
Jason Love had 14 points and a key block down the stretch for the Musketeers (26-8), who advanced to play second-seeded Kansas State in the West Regional semifinals in Salt Lake City on Thursday.
Ashton Gibbs scored 19 points and Brad Wanamaker had 16 points and 10 rebounds for the Panthers (25-9), who nearly rallied with two 3-pointers by Gilbert Brown in the final 28 seconds.
Gibbs missed a potential game-tying three-pointer with less than a second left. Pittsburgh had one last chance to inbound the ball with 0.4 seconds left, but Wanamaker left the shot short.
SOUTH REGIONAL
No. 1 Duke 68 No. 8 California 53
At Jacksonville, Fla., Nolan Smith scored 20 points, Kyle Singler added 17 and top-seeded Duke reached the round of 16 by beating California.
Brian Zoubek finished with 14 points and 13 rebounds -- the sixth double-double of his career -- as the Blue Devils overcame some long-range shooting woes with dominant post play.
Duke (31-5) advanced to play No. 4 seed Purdue in a South Regional semifinal Friday in Houston.
The eighth-seeded Golden Bears (24-11) failed to get past the opening weekend for the fourth time in as many NCAA tournament appearances.
No. 4 Purdue 63 No. 5 Texas A&M 61 (OT)
At Spokane, Wash., Chris Kramer's drive past one defender and layup over another six inches taller than him with 4.2 seconds remaining in overtime sent fourth-seeded Purdue into the regional semifinals with a bruising victory over No. 5 Texas A&M.
B.J. Holmes got a final, frantic chance to win the game for Texas A&M with a rushed three-point try from in front of his bench at the buzzer, but it hit short on the rim to ensure a sixth regional appearance in 12 NCAA tournaments dating to 1994 for Purdue (29-5).
Kramer, Purdue's leader with Robbie Hummel out with a knee injury, led the Boilermakers with 17 points and seven rebounds.
Bryan Davis led the Aggies (24-10) with 17 points and 15 rebounds. The six-foot-nine senior was the man who leaped but could not block Kramer's winning shot.
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