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NCAA tournament live updates: Follow all the March Madness here

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Follow the NCAA men’s basketball tournament here from the opening game through the national championship game on April 2. We will post reports on every game as soon as they end and provide any other essential information along the way, including a daily television schedule. So if you have filled out a tournament bracket, you can follow along with your picks here.

NCAA men’s tournament bracket

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Villanova cruises into the championship game with a 95-79 win over Kansas

Villanova's Jalen Brunson (1) drives past Kansas' Malik Newman during the second half in the semifinals of the NCAA tournament on Saturday
(David J. Phillip / Associated Press)

They held a national semifinal Saturday night and it was over before the second timeout.

The NCAA tournament game didn’t officially end at that point, of course, but it could have been halted for public indecency.

The score was Villanova 22, Kansas 4 before seven minutes had expired and that somehow wasn’t as bad as things got for the Jayhawks.

Top-seeded Kansas’ blueblood spilled all over the Alamodome court during a 95-79 whitewashing by the equally seeded but vastly superior Wildcats and their barrage of three-pointers.

Villanova made 18 of 40 three-pointers, nearly equaling the NCAA tournament record of 21 three-pointers set by Loyola Marymount against Michigan in 1990.

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Michigan ends Loyola Chicago’s Cinderella run with 69-57 win

Michigan's Moritz Wagner reacts during the second half in the semifinals of the NCAA tournament against Loyola Chicago on Saturday
(David J. Phillip / Associated Press)

Porter Moser had repeatedly told his players that there was no finish line for their season, refusing to limit the improbable possibilities of an upstart team.

Loyola Chicago finally reached the end of its NCAA tournament run Saturday. It wasn’t the one the Ramblers wanted.

A magical three-week ride ended with Sister Jean Dolores-Schmidt being wheeled out of the Alamodome with 99 seconds remaining in 11th-seeded Loyola’s deflating 69-57 loss to third-seeded Michigan in a national semifinal.

The mood was far more upbeat for the Wolverines. Forward Moritz Wagner got a high-five from TBS commentator Grant Hill after leaping over a pack of courtside broadcasters while pursuing a loose ball.

Wagner deserved the gesture after finishing with 24 points and 15 rebounds, carrying the Wolverines (33-7) through long stretches in which he was their only productive player.

He eventually got some help as Michigan ended the game on a 27-10 run that allowed enough breathing room for the Wolverines to insert their benchwarmers in the final seconds. Guard Charles Matthews added 17 points for Michigan, which will play either Villanova or Kansas in the championship game Monday.

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Kansas needs overtime to beat Duke 85-81 and reach Final Four

Duke's Trevon Duval reacts during the second half of an Elite Eight game against Kansas.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Malik Newman scored all 13 of Kansas’ points in overtime, and the top-seeded Jayhawks are back in the Final Four for the first time since 2012 after beating No. 2 seed Duke 85-81 in overtime in the Midwest Region final.

The Jayhawks had failed to get out of the Elite Eight as a No. 1 seed each of the last two years. This time the Jayhawks broke through thanks to a huge performance from Newman, who scored a career-high 32 points.

Kansas will play top-seeded East Region champion Villanova in the second national semifinal next Saturday in San Antonio. Duke was trying to get to the Final Four for the first time since it won the national championship in 2015.

Newman made two free throws to tie the game, then gave the Jayhawks the lead for good at with 1:49 left. Newman scored 10 points in the first five minutes of the second half as the Jayhawks quickly erased a 36-33 halftime deficit.

Trevon Duval scored 20 points to lead Duke. Marvin Bagley III scored 16 in what probably was his last college game.

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Villanova holds off Texas Tech 71-59 and gets back to the Final Four

Omari Spellman (14) high-fives teammate Donte DiVincenzo during the second half of an Elite Eight game against the Texas Tech.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Villanova is headed back to the Final Four.

The Wildcats will have a chance at their second national championship in three seasons, courtesy of a 71-59 win over Texas Tech in Sunday’s East regional final.

They will play the winner of Kansas and Duke in the Final Four in San Antonio.

Jalen Brunson led the Wildcats (34-4) with 15 points. Eric Paschall finished with 12 points and a career-high 14 rebounds.

Donte DiVincenzo and Mikal Bridges each added 12 points.

Villanova came into the game with 44 3-pointers for the tournament. It had four 3s in Sunday’s win, but it was their defense that stood out in this one.

The Wildcats outrebounded the Red Raiders 51-33, including grabbing 31 defensive rebounds. They also had six steals.

Keenan Evans led Texas Tech with 12 points.

Villanova led 36-23 at the half, holding the Red Raiders to a season-low for first half points. The

The Wildcats’ lead grew as high as 15 in the opening minutes of the second half and took advantage of a bevy of Texas Tech fouls, racking up 29 points at the free-throw line.

The Red Raiders (27-10) were playing in their first Elite Eight and came out on fire, notching and early 9-1 lead. They got as close as 56-51 with less than five minutes to play, but Villanova closed the game on a 15-8 run.

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Elite Eight preview: A look at the East and Midwest finals

Texas Tech's Justin Gray finishes off a dunk against Purdue during their Sweet 16 game on Friday night in Boston.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

A look at the Elite Eight games on Sunday.

EAST REGIONAL

at Boston

1 Villanova (33-4) vs. 3 Texas Tech (27-9)

Time: 11:20 a.m. TV: Ch. 2

Villanova is looking to win its second title in three seasons under coach Jay Wright, while Texas Tech is playing in the Elite Eight for the first time, in coach Chris Beard’s second season. The top-seeded Wildcats have made 44 three-pointers in the tournament so far and have 432 for the season, 11 away from a Division I record. VMI made 442 three-pointers in 2006-07. The Red Raiders’ reserves have played well in the tournament, outscoring Purdue’s reserves 33-6 in the Sweet 16.

Villanova and Texas Tech are two of the best defensive teams left in the field. Including their Big East championship win over Providence, the Wildcats have held opponents to 38% from the field, including 28% from three-point range. The Red Raiders have held tournament opponents to 66 points or fewer.

MIDWEST REGIONAL

at Omaha

1 Kansas (30-7) vs. 2 Duke (29-7)

Time: 2 p.m. TV: Ch. 2

Kansas might feel like it is more of an underdog than the top-seeded team when it plays Duke and its talented cast of freshman, led by Marvin Bagley III. The Jayhawks have had to scratch their way to the Elite Eight, defeating Seton Hall and Clemson in their last two tournament games by four points each. The Blue Devils cruised into the Sweet 16 before a challenge by Syracuse tested them on Friday.

Although both teams have talented underclassmen, their senior point guards run the show, although each is coming off subpar performances. Devonte’ Graham, the Big 12 player of the year, made only four of 12 shots in Kansas’ 80-76 defeat of Clemson. Grayson Allen connected on only three of 14 three-pointers in a 69-65 victory over Syracuse. The Jayhawks also will rely on sophomore center Udoka Azubuike, who returned to action Friday after injuring a knee in the conference tournament.

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Charles Matthews steps up for the Wolverines in regional final

Michigan's Charles Matthews, center, celebrates at the end of the game to defeat Florida State in the regional final of the NCAA tournament.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

The shot will be forgotten amid the shower of maize and blue confetti at Staples Center, the new Final Four T-shirts and hats Michigan players tugged on, the wide grins as they posed with the hefty trophy after beating Florida State in the West Regional final.

But Charles Matthews made certain the third-seeded Wolverines had reason to celebrate Saturday.

“You’ve got to find a way to make it happen,” he said.

That’s exactly what Matthews did.

Less than four minutes remained. The game Michigan once led by 10 points had turned into a tense, back-and-forth contest.

The Wolverines couldn’t seem to put the game out of reach in the face of ninth-seeded Florida State’s relentless, pressing defense. Michigan managed only one field goal in nearly six crucial minutes. Its lead shriveled to three points.

Then with 3 minutes 51 seconds left, Matthews drove toward the basket, spun and hit a fadeaway jump shot that looked like a move by an NBA veteran.

The redshirt sophomore, who finished with a game-high 17 points in addition to eight rebounds, finally gave Michigan room to breathe.

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Michigan defeats Florida State to advance to Final Four

Michigan's Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman (12) shoots against Florida State's Terance Mann (14) during an NCAA tournament regional final.
(Alex Gallardo / Associated Press)

Duncan Robinson took a pass in the corner, rose for a three-pointer that fell through the basket and whirled around to momentarily watch his teammates commence Michigan’s celebration in earnest.

The long-range shot gave the Wolverines a 10-point cushion over Florida State on Saturday night at Staples Center, seemingly more than enough with a little more than two minutes to play.

They ended up needing every bit of it.

A flurry of missed free throws ignited a furious Seminoles rally that allowed P.J. Savoy to take what would have been a tying three-pointer with 58 seconds left.

It bounced off the rim, allowing Michigan to finally exhale after a 58-54 victory in the West Regional final.

The third-seeded Wolverines will play 11th-seeded Loyola Chicago on March 31 in a national semifinal at the Alamodome in San Antonio. Michigan (32-7) will make its eighth trip to the Final Four and first since 2013 after setting a school record for victories.

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Final Four bound: No. 11 Loyola Chicago beats Kansas State 78-62

Loyola Chicago's Marques Townes dribbles past Kansas State's Kamau Stokes.
(David Goldman / Associated Press)

Sister Jean and the Loyola Ramblers are headed to the Final Four.

This improbable NCAA tournament just took its craziest turn yet.

Ben Richardson scored 23 points and 11th-seeded Loyola romped to a 78-62 victory over No. 9 Kansas State on Saturday night, capping a remarkable run through the bracket-busting South Region.

The Ramblers (32-5) matched the lowest-seeded team ever to reach the Final Four, joining LSU (1986), George Mason (2006) and VCU (2011). Those other three all lost in the national semifinals.

Don’t bet against Loyola, which emerged from a region that produced a staggering array of upsets. The South became the first region in tournament history to have the top four seeds — including overall No. 1 Virginia — knocked out on the opening weekend.

In the end, it was the Ramblers cutting down the nets.

And after three close calls, this one was downright easy.

“Final Four! Final Four!” the scarf-clad faithful from Chicago chanted as the final seconds ticked off.

Loyola continued to be inspired by its 98-year-old team chaplain, Sister Jean Dolores-Schmidt, who led a prayer in the locker room before the game, then was pushed onto the court in her wheelchair to join the celebration when it was done. Joining the celebration were Jerry Harkness and other members of the Ramblers’ 1963 national championship team, which played one of the most socially significant games in college basketball history on its way to the title.

It was known as the “Game of Change,” matching the Ramblers and their mostly black roster against an all-white Mississippi State team at the height of the civil rights movement, setting up an even more significant contest three years later when Texas Western, with five African American starters, defeated Kentucky in the national championship game.

Even with a title on their resume, this performance came out of nowhere. Loyola had not made the tournament since 1985 until they broke the drought by winning the Missouri Valley Conference.

Then, as if benefiting from some sort of divine intervention, the Ramblers won their first three tournament games by a total of four points.

Finally, with the Final Four on the line, they turned in a thoroughly dominating performance.

Not the least bit intimidated, Loyola came out in attack mode right from the start against a ninth-seeded Kansas State team that rode a stifling defense to the regional final. Moving the ball just as you’d expect from a veteran squad with two seniors and two fourth-year juniors in the starting lineup, the Ramblers kept getting open looks and shot 56% in the opening half, opening up a 36-24 lead.

The Ramblers really turned it on in the second half.

Richardson swished a three-pointer as he was fouled by Kamau Stokes, winding up flat on his back while flashing a huge smile with his arms raised above his head. He knocked down the free throw to complete the four-point play, stretching the lead to 44-29.

Things went so well for the Ramblers that they actually increased their lead during the first television timeout of the second half. The officials went back and reviewed a replay of Donte Ingram’s jumper in the opening minute of the period, ruling he was behind the three-point line when he released the shot to change the margin from 46-33 to 47-33.

Not that it mattered at the end.

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Elite Eight preview: A look at the South and West finals

Florida State guard Terance Mann drives past Gonzaga forward Corey Kispert during the second half of their Sweet 16 game.
(Alex Gallardo / Associated Press)

SOUTH REGIONAL

at Atlanta

9 Kansas State (25-11) vs. 11 Loyola Chicago (31-5)

Time: 3 p.m. TV: TBS.

Loyola Chicago’s 13-game win streak is the longest active in the nation. The Ramblers have won their three NCAA tournament games by a combined four points. For Kansas State, defense has been key. The Wildcats held Kentucky to a season-low point total in a 61-58 victory and have held opponents under 59 points in seven consecutive games. They will be defending a team that made 75% of its shots in the second half against Nevada. Loyola-Chicago will be seeking its second Final Four appearance, the first coming in 1963 when it won the national championship. Kansas State last appeared in the Final Four in 1964, where the Wildcats lost to UCLA.

WEST REGIONAL

at Staples Center

3 Michigan (31-7) vs. 9 Florida State (23-11)

Time: 5:45 p.m. TV: TBS.

Florida State is seeking its fourth consecutive tournament upset. If Michigan advances, it would have a school-record 32 wins and its first Final Four appearance since 2013. The Seminoles, whose only Final Four trip came in 1972, are playing an Elite Eight game for the third time in school history. The Wolverines have reached this plateau three of the last six years. Florida State uses 11 players extensively, and nine Seminoles are scoring at least 6.6 points per game. Florida State likes to employ a full-court defense described by Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski as a “containment press.” Michigan is riding a 12-game winning streak, with its last loss coming Feb. 6 at Northwestern.

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Texas Tech pulls away from Purdue in the final minutes to reach its first Elite Eight

Texas Tech's Zach Smith celebrates as the Red Raiders open a big lead against Purdue during the second half Friday night.
(Elsa Garrison / Getty Images)

Texas Tech is headed to the Elite Eight for the first time in program history.

Keenan Evans had 16 points as the third-seeded Red Raiders overcame an early first-half hole and dominated second-seeded Purdue down the stretch to earn a 78-65 victory in the Sweet 16 on Friday night.

Texas Tech will play top seed Villanova in the East Regional final Sunday.

Zach Smith added 14 points and five rebounds.

Texas Tech trailed by as many as seven points in the first half. But it closed the period on a 10-0 run to take a 30-25 halftime advantage. Purdue got it down to one early in the second, but the Red Raiders never surrendered the lead.

Carsen Edwards led Purdue with 30 points, including four three-pointers.

The Boilermakers (30-7) were playing in their second straight regional semifinal. They were denied what would have been their first Elite Eight berth since 2000.

Purdue came in ranked second nationally in three-point percentage and connected on seven of 18 for the game. But the Boilermakers allowed the Red Raiders 17 second-chance points.

Texas Tech (27-9) also got 33 points from its bench, compared to just six for Purdue.

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Duke holds off the long reach of Syracuse to advance to Elite Eight

Duke forward Marvin Bagley III dunks the ball against Syracuse during the second half Friday night.
(Streeter Lecka / Getty Images)

Duke found a way to crack Syracuse’s zone defense, and now the Blue Devils are back in the Elite Eight for the first time since the 2015 team won it all.

Freshman Marvin Bagley III turned in a giant second-half effort, and second-seeded Duke held off the 11th-seeded Orange in a 69-65 chess match of a victory in the Midwest Region semifinals Friday night.

All that talk about busted brackets and the maddest March ever — not happening in the Midwest.

The win by Duke (29-7) set up a 1 vs. 2 showdown against Kansas, which also escaped with a four-point win earlier against Clemson.

Syracuse (23-14), the last at-large team invited to the tournament, saw its unlikely run to the Sweet 16 end — unable to overcome 16 turnovers against a Mike Krzyzewski-designed zone that was every bit as pesky as Jim Boeheim’s vaunted 2-3.

Bagley scored 13 of his 22 points and had all eight of his rebounds in the second half. Seven of those boards were on the offensive end and led to second-chance baskets.

But Syracuse stayed in it until the end. Not until Gary Trent Jr., made two free throws with 6.3 seconds left was this game sealed.

Tyus Battle led the Orange with 19 points.

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Villanova becomes the second No. 1 seed to make it to Elite Eight

Villanova's Omari Spellman celebrates with teammate Collin Gillespie (2) during the second half Friday.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Villanova’s three-point party rolled past the pressure of West Virginia to bring the Wildcats to the doorstep of another Final Four two seasons after winning a national championship.

The top-seeded Wildcats continued their outside feast, downing the fifth-seeded Mountaineers 90-78 on Friday night to earn their second trip to the regional finals in three seasons.

Jalen Brunson led Villanova with 27 points and Omari Spellman added 18 with eight rebounds as the Wildcats overcame the West Virginia press by hitting 13 of 24 shots from three-point range.

Jevon Carter and Sagaba Konate each had 12 points to lead West Virginia.

Villanova (33-4) has now made 47 three-pointers for the tournament. The outside shots helped the Wildcats overcome 16 turnovers.

Villanova’s Sweet 16 plan for the team nicknamed “Press Virginia:” Attack the stifling defense head-on.

The Wildcats struggled at times, especially in the first half, but dug out of a six-point hole in the second half with an 11-0 run.

“What a game, man. I hope that looked as good as it did from the bench, man,” Villanova coach Jay Wright said. “That was the most physically demanding, mentally draining 40 minutes we’ve played in a long time. They are so relentless.”

The Mountaineers (26-11) stayed close throughout the night, ramping up the pressure and making Villanova play faster than it wanted to early. But foul trouble throughout the second half was too much for West Virginia to overcome after it gave up the lead.

Carter was called for his third with 17:33 left in the game. That was followed by Daxter Miles being whistled for his third and fourth fouls over a two-minute stretch that sent him to the bench with 15 minutes remaining.

West Virginia was able to adjust for a while and took advantage of a more than three-minute Villanova scoring drought to take a 60-54 edge with just over 11 minutes left.

But Villanova heated up again. Its 11-point run was capped by a thunderous block and dunk on the other end by Omari Spellman that pushed the Wildcats back in front 65-60.

The Wildcats kept the momentum going, stretching the lead to 76-66 on a three-pointer by Brunson.

West Virginia never got closer than four points the rest of the way.

Villanova led 44-42 at the half after a fast-paced opening 20 minutes. Brunson led all scorers with 16 points in the half, with West Virginia getting 11 points from Miles.

The Wildcats came out firing, connecting on their first seven field goals. They handled the Mountaineers’ pressure well early. But the Wildcats had three turnovers over a 65-second stretch during an 8-0 Mountaineers run that put West Virginia in front 33-30.

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Top-seeded Kansas gets back to the Elite Eight with 80-76 defeat of Clemson

Kansas' Marcus Garrett is fouled by Clemson's Elijah Thomas during the second half Friday.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Kansas made it through the Sweet 16 for the third year in a row as a No. 1 seed after surviving a late scare and beating fifth-seeded Clemson 80-76 in a Midwest Region semifinal.

Now the Jayhawks will try to get through the Elite Eight for the first time since they won the 2012 national title. They’ll play Sunday against the winner of Friday night’s second semifinal between No. 2-seeded Duke and No. 11 Syracuse.

Clemson, in a regional semifinal for the first time since 1997, had a six-minute field goal drought and shot 36% in the first half. The Tigers trailed by 20 early in the second half.

But a 26-12 run fueled by Gabe DeVoe got Clemson within 74-68. DeVoe’s two free throws pulled the Tigers to 78-74 with 14 seconds left, but the Jayhawks were able to hang on.

Malik Newman scored 17 points to lead Kansas, Devonte Graham added 16 while Udoka Azubuike contributed 14 points and 11 rebounds before fouling out with 2:30 left.

DeVoe finished with a career-high 31 points.

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Kentucky’s John Calipari says his players meant no disrespect by skipping postgame handshakes with Kansas State

John Calipari
(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Some Kansas State players felt disrespected Thursday night after their Kentucky counterparts did not take part in the traditional postgame handshake following the teams’ Sweet 16 game Thursday night.

“That’s not the sportsmanship you like to see, but that’s them,” Kansas State forward Levi Stockard III said after his team’s 61-58 victory. “They just walked off the court. I don’t know what it was. I don’t know.”

Junior guard Amaad Wainright said: “They didn’t shake our hands. It’s sorry.

“On that situation, it’s all about respect. That’s what it should have been — all about respect.”

But Kentucky coach John Calipari told reporters later that night no disrespect was intended.

“My team’s not like that. Neither is our program,” he said. “There’s no disrespect in any way. They beat us. They deserved to win the game.”

Calipari added that he was able to shake the Kansas State coaches’ hands and made an attempt to do so with the opposing teams’ players as well.

“I went down to shake their hands, too, and they were turned and celebrating. So I walked off,” Calipari said. “No disrespect for anything, just that they were celebrating and I was happy for them.”

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NCAA tournament schedule for Friday and Saturday

Kansas guard Malik Newman after scoring against Seton Hall during a second-round game.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

NCAA TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE

All times Pacific (*approximate time; game will start 30 minutes after the completion of the previous one):

FRIDAY SWEET 16

MIDWEST REGIONAL

at Omaha, Neb.

1 Kansas (29-7) vs. 5 Clemson (25-9) 4 p.m.

2 Duke (28-7) vs. 11 Syracuse (23-13) *6:30 p.m.

EAST REGIONAL

at Boston

1 Villanova (32-4) vs. 5 West Virginia (26-10) 4:15 p.m.

2 Purdue (30-6) vs. 3 Texas Tech (26-9) *6:45 p.m.

SATURDAY ELITE EIGHT

SOUTH REGIONAL

at Atlanta

5 Kentucky (26-10) vs. 9 Kansas State (24-11), *6:30 p.m.

WEST REGIONAL

at Staples Center

3 Michigan (30-7) vs. 7 Texas A&M (22-12), 4:30 p.m.

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NCAA Sweet 16: East Regional preview

EAST REGIONAL

at Boston

1 Villanova (32-4) vs. 5 West Virginia (26-10)

Time: 4:15 p.m. PDT. TV: TBS.

Villanova, which won the national championship in 2016, is one of two No. 1 seeds left in the tournament following losses by Big East Conference rival Xavier and Virginia. The Wildcats were also a No. 1 seed in last year’s tournament when they lost to eighth-seeded Wisconsin in the second round. West Virginia has been one of the best-looking teams in the field so far, winning by 17 and 23 points in the first two rounds. The Mountaineers are trying to get to the Elite Eight for the first time since their Final Four run in 2010.

2 Purdue (30-6) vs. 3 Texas Tech (26-9)

Time: 6:45 p.m. PDT. TV: TBS.

Matt Haarms, a 7-foot-3 redshirt freshman, is expected to start again at center for Purdue even though senior Isaac Haas got fitted with a new brace to protect his fractured right elbow. The 7-foot Haas, who was hurt in the Boilermakers’ first-round win over Cal State Fullerton, has not been cleared to play. “If I did play, it would just be really short minutes,” Haas said. Texas Tech is in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2005 and is looking to make it to the Elite Eight for the first time in program history. Senior guard Keenan Evans has scored 23 and 22 points in the Red Raiders’ first two tournament wins.

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NCAA Sweet 16: Midwest Regional preview

Kansas center Udoka Azubuike (35) grabs a rebound against Seton Hall forward Michael Nzei (1) during the second half of a second-round game.
(Orlin Wagner / Associated Press)

MIDWEST REGIONAL

at Omaha

1 Kansas (29-7) vs. 5 Clemson (25-9)

Time: 4 p.m. PDT. TV: Channel 2.

Kansas big man Udoka Azubuike, who leads the nation in shooting percentage at 77.5%, is likely to start. Azubuike missed the Big 12 tournament because of a minor knee injury, but he played 22 minutes in an 83-79 win over Seton Hall last weekend. The “neutral-floor” game should be more like a home game for the Jayhawks. Clemson reached its first Sweet 16 since 1997 with a 31-point win over Auburn. This will be the first meeting between the schools.

2 Duke (28-7) vs. 11 Syracuse (23-13)

Time: 6:30 p.m. PDT. TV: Channel 2.

Duke averages 85 points a game but the Blue Devils will face a Syracuse team that has held three straight opponents to 60 points or fewer in the NCAA tournament. The Orange won a play-in game over Arizona State in Dayton, Ohio. Duke and Syracuse met once in Atlantic Coast Conference play, the Blue Devils winning 60-44 on their home court on Feb. 24. The teams combined to miss their first 24 three-point shots.

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Michigan runs wild over Texas A&M 99-72 to reach Elite Eight

Michigan forward Moritz Wagner was running so hard while driving for a layup in the game’s opening minutes that his momentum carried him a couple of steps past the basket stanchion after he absorbed a foul.

He spotted a pack of Wolverines fans sitting beyond the baseline inside Staples Center and threw up both arms to encourage more noise from what felt like a home crowd.

The decibel level rarely fell the rest of the way among those wearing maize and blue.

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Florida State takes down Gonzaga to earn date with Michigan in Elite 8

Florida State’s unlikely run through the NCAA tournament continued Thursday.

Behind a deep roster and press that wore down fourth-seeded Gonzaga, the ninth-seeded Seminoles surprised the Bulldogs 75-60 at Staples Center to advance to the Elite Eight.

Florida State plays Michigan on Saturday at Staples Center with a trip to the Final Four at stake.

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Kansas State sinks Kentucky 61-58 to reach Elite Eight

Kansas State's Cartier Diarra huddles with teammates during the second half against Kentucky.
(Ronald Martinez / Getty Images)

Kansas State’s dream of its first Final Four since 1964 is alive.

Barry Brown’s tiebreaking layup with 19 seconds remaining was the difference as Kansas State beat Kentucky 61-58 on Thursday night in the South Region semifinal.

Kansas State, a No. 9 seed, will play No. 11 seed Loyola Chicago on Saturday in a regional final pairing no one could have predicted.

Kentucky’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander missed a potential tying three-pointer at the final buzzer for Kentucky (26-11).

Kansas State (25-11) overcame the loss of top scorer Xavier Sneed, who had 22 points before fouling out with 1:14 remaining.

Sneed, who had nine points in the first half, was unstoppable in the second half. He scored 13 points in the first 11:30 of the second half before he was called for his fourth foul with 8:24 remaining.

When Sneed took a seat on the bench, Kansas State lost its momentum. It led 52-44 when Sneed collected his fourth foul and led only 56-55 when he returned with 2:13 remaining, with Kentucky fans chanting “Go Big Blue” to encourage the comeback.

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Loyola Chicago’s run keeps going as Ramblers get past Nevada to reach Elite Eight

Loyola Chicago's Marques Townes celebrates after hitting a three-pointer late in the second half.
(Ronald Martinez / Getty Images)

With Loyola Chicago clinging to a one-point lead and only 6.3 seconds remaining, Marques Townes sank a three-pointer from in front of the Ramblers’ bench to continue their improbable NCAA Tournament run.

Townes scored 18 points, including the key three-pointer, to lead Loyola to a 69-68 win over the Wolf Pack in Thursday night’s NCAA South Regional semifinal.

The win leaves the No. 11th-seeded Ramblers one victory from a Final Four appearance.

Not bad for a program that hasn’t been in the Sweet 16 in 33 years.

Townes charged down the court, pumping his fist, as Nevada called a timeout following the crucial three-pointer. Caleb Martin answered with a three for Nevada, but this time the Wolf Pack couldn’t extend their string of second-half comebacks in the tournament.

Loyola (31-5) awaits the winner of the Kansas State-Kentucky game in Saturday’s regional final.

Martin led Nevada (29-8) with 21 points. Twin brother Cody Martin had 16. Jordan Carolina had 19.The Wolf Pack finally faced a deficit too big to overcome.

Loyola trailed by 12 points, at 20-8, midway through the first half but stormed back to lead 28-24 at halftime. Loyola closed the half with a 20-4 run as Nevada didn’t score in the final 7:55 before the break.

After leading a combined 4 minutes, 24 seconds of their first two NCAA Tournament wins, the Wolf Pack didn’t trail in the opening 18 minutes of the first half. Even after leading 20-8 and appearing to have established command, Nevada found a way to trail at halftime for the sixth straight game.

Following a 4-4 tie, Nevada took the lead with an 8-0 run that included a layup and two free throws by Jordan Caroline.

Loyola pushed the ball in the paint on almost every possession. The Ramblers’ first 10 points came on layups.

Freshman Cameron Krutwig, who at 6-foot-9, 260 pounds stood out as the biggest player for either team, had eight of Loyola’s first 19 points but went to the bench with two fouls with 6:26 remaining in the half. He picked up his third foul midway through the second half.

Loyola’s relentless attack on the basket continued as it stretched its lead, one layup at a time, in the second half.

Following a steal by Townes, Ben Richardson’s layup gave the Ramblers their first double-digit lead at 36-26 and took their biggest lead at 40-28.

Nevada’s experience in second-half comebacks paid off. After Loyola’s layup by Clayton Custer gave the Ramblers their last 10-point lead at 57-47, the Wolf Pack charged back.

Cody Martin’s basket started a 12-2 run, and his layup tied the game at 59-all with 4:06 remaining.

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West Virginia defeats in-state rival Marshall 94-71

Sagaba Konate of West Virginia dunks against Marshall.
(Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images)

Jevon Carter scored 28 points, Lamont West added 18 off the bench and West Virginia overwhelmed its in-state rival, beating Marshall 94-71 on Sunday night in the second round of the NCAA tournament.

The Mountain State showdown more than 2,000 miles from home was a one-sided celebration for the fifth-seeded Mountaineers. Bigger, more physical and making fewer mistakes, the Mountaineers (26-10) took control with a 19-0 first-half run, and Carter’s trifecta of three-pointers in the first five minutes of the second half made sure there wouldn’t be a rally coming from the 13th-seeded Thundering Herd.

West Virginia will face top-seeded Villanova in the Sweet 16 next Friday.

Aside from his scoring, Carter was the leader of West Virginia’s swarming defense that made the night miserable for the Herd. Marshall star Jon Elmore had more turnovers than points in the first half and was held to 15 points after scoring 27 points in the upset of Wichita State.

Ajdin Penava led the Herd (25-11) with 18 points.

The first meeting between the in-state rivals since their annual series abruptly ended in 2015 was a big enough event that West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice flew out to watch the game in person. Wearing a blazer that was half dark blue and half green, Justice spent the first half on the West Virginia sideline and the second half with the Marshall cheering section.

There wasn’t much cheering from the Marshall fans as West Virginia led by as many as 31 in the second half.

This was decided in the first 20 minutes thanks to West Virginia’s dominant run to take control. While Carter, West and their teammates were getting easy looks at the offensive end, Marshall became careless with the ball and missed a number of shots around the rim.

After taking an 18-11 lead, Marshall missed six layups in the final 13 minutes of the first half and watched West Virginia surge ahead. Elmore was the most notable Marshall player to struggle with West Virginia’s pressure, finishing the first half with just three points — scored in the first 65 seconds of the game — and six turnovers.

West Virginia led 42-25 at the half, and Carter’s early threes to start the second half ended any thought of a rally. Carter had 17 points in the second half.

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Florida State comes back to knock out top-seeded Xavier

Florida State's Phil Cofer defends a shot by Xavier's J.P. Macura.
(Andy Lyons / Getty Images)

The Florida State Seminoles are on their way to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2011 after upsetting top-seeded Xavier with a furious comeback.

PJ Savoy made a three-pointer with 1:08 left to give Florida State its first lead of the second half, and the Seminoles rallied from a 12-point deficit to beat the Musketeers 75-70 on Sunday night in the second round of the West Region.

The Seminoles made Xavier the second No. 1 seed ousted in the tournament’s first weekend, sending the Musketeers out along with Virginia. Florida State (22-11) will play fourth-seeded Gonzaga on Thursday night in Los Angeles.

Savoy also hit a pair of free throws with 21.6 seconds left, putting Florida State up 73-70. Kerem Kanter shot an air ball from beyond the arc at the top of the key with seven seconds to go for Xavier, and CJ Walker added a pair of free throws with 6.4 seconds remaining. Terance Mann picked off a long pass by Paul Scruggs off Xavier’s inbound pass before running in front of Seminoles fans to start the party.

After jumping around on the court and hugging, the jubilant Seminoles ran over to their fans in the stands and exchanged high-fives.

This was sweet payback for Florida State after then-No. 11 seed Xavier routed the Seminoles 91-66 a year ago in the very same round in the same region.

Xavier coach Chris Mack had four starters back from that team, which wound up losing to Gonzaga in the Elite Eight, and Florida State coach Leonard Hamilton lost his top three scorers — two to the NBA draft.

The Musketeers didn’t get the chance to run away this time around after they took a 12-point lead. They led 56-44 with 10:42 left, and a free throw by Trevon Bluiett gave them a 66-57 edge. But Xavier didn’t score a field goal after Kanter’s jumper with 3:56 left for a 68-66 lead. Mfiondu Kabengele scored his second straight bucket, tying it at 68 with 2:32 to go.

Scruggs hit two free throws with 1:49 left, and those were the last points for Xavier. The Musketeers turned it over three times after that, twice by Bluiett, as Florida State finished the game scoring the final seven points.

Braian Angola led five Seminoles in double figures with 16 points. Trent Forrest added 13, Savoy finished with 11, and Phil Cofer and Mann each had 10.

J.P. Macura led Xavier with 17 points, Kerem Kanter had 15 and Scruggs had 11.

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Nation’s favorite underdog UMBC falls to Kansas State 50-43

Kansas State's Barry Brown defends UMBC's Jairus Lyles.
(Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)

Barry Brown scored 18 points, and Kansas State ended Maryland Baltimore County’s brief but historic run in the NCAA tournament with a 50-43 victory Sunday night.

UMBC became the first 16 seed to beat a No. 1, destroying top-ranked Virginia 74-54 on Friday night. After pulling off the biggest upset in college basketball history, the Retrievers ran out of magic against the Wildcats.

As UMBC coach Ryan Odom emptied his bench with 9.4 seconds left, the crowd gave the Retrievers a standing ovation. The players hugged at midcourt. After the game ended, players walked over to the side of the court and gave their fans an appreciative wave.

The dream had ended.

The Wildcats (24-11) move on to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2010, when they lost in the Elite Eight to Butler. They will face Kentucky on Thursday night.

UMBC had only two field goals in the final six minutes and shot just 29.8% for the game.

The Retrievers’ scrappy defense forced 18 turnovers, but they managed just three points off those. They finished six of 22 from three-point range two nights after lighting up Virginia from beyond the arc. They converted nine of 18 from the free-throw line.

UMBC (25-11) had a chance to take the lead with five minutes remaining, but Arkel Lamar was stripped of the ball on a drive to the lane and Xavier Sneed took the ball the length of the floor for a two-handed dunk.

Brown then hit a fall-away jumper.

Sneed, who had eight points, had a monster dunk off an offensive rebound and later knocked down a baseline jumper with a minute left to push the Wildcats’ lead to five. Makol Mawien added a dunk on a fast break to seal the victory with 45 seconds left.

The Retrievers showed no sign of a letdown early on, jumping out to a 7-0 lead after Kansas State missed its first eight shots — five of those from beyond the arc.

Kansas State didn’t score until the 13:40 mark of the first half, but the Wildcats closed the half on a 17-8 run and led 25-20 at the break despite going zero for eight from three-point range.

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Clemson beats Auburn 84-53

Elijah Thomas (14) celebrates with David Skara as they take on the Auburn Tigers.
(Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images)

Gabe DeVoe scored 22 points and Elijah Thomas had 18 points and 11 rebounds for Clemson, which closed the first half with a 25-4 run that helped it beat cold-shooting Auburn 84-53 on Sunday and advance to the Midwest Region semifinal.

In a matchup between Southern schools better known for football, the No. 5 seed Clemson Tigers proved far more adept on the hardwood than the No. 4 seed Auburn Tigers.

The blowout win put Clemson (25-9) into the Sweet 16 for the fourth time overall and the first since 1997, earning it a spot against Kansas in the regional semifinal.

Auburn, which played this season under the cloud of a federal investigation into corruption in college basketball, finished 26-8.

The final 10 minutes of the first half were a nightmare for Auburn, which made only 6 of 33 shots (18.2%) in the first half and 17 of 66 overall (25.8%).

Jared Harper made a jumper with 10:33 before halftime to pull Auburn to 18-15. The Tigers then missed their next 18 field goals as Clemson raced to a 43-19 halftime lead.

Clemson scored 17 straight points, highlighted by 3-pointers by Anthony Oliver II and DeVoe, to make it 35-15.

Chuma Okeke made two free throws for Auburn, but the Tigers still couldn’t hit a field goal. They got two more free throws by Mustapha Heron with 1:20 to go.

Auburn finally snapped the drought from the field when Bryce Brown hit a 3-pointer 44 seconds into the second half. All that did was pull the Tigers within 21 points.

Heron and Bryce Brown each scored 12 points for Auburn and Horace Spencer had 10.

Marcquise Reed added 16 for Clemson and Shelton Mitchell had 10.

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Nevada rallies from 22 points down to beat Cincinnati for a spot in Sweet 16

Nevada's Josh Hall (33) and Hallice Cooke (13) celebrate after Cincinnati failed to get get off a potential game-winning shot.
(Andy Lyons / Getty Images)

The Nevada Wolf Pack just keeps digging out of deep holes. And now they’re on their way to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2004.

The seventh-seeded Wolf Pack trailed this time by 22 before an amazing comeback.

Josh Hall hit a short jumper with 9.1 seconds left to give Nevada its only lead of the game at 75-73, and No. 2 seed Cincinnati couldn’t get a shot off before the clock expired sending the Wolf Pack celebrating and hugging on the court.

Nevada trailed by 14 in the second half of their first-round game when they forced overtime and beat Texas.

Cincinnati was the highest remaining seed left in the South Region after a string of upsets, and now the Bearcats are the latest to go down.

Now Nevada will play another surprising team in Loyola-Chicago in the South Region semifinals Thursday in Atlanta.

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Texas A&M defeats reigning champion UNC 86-65

Texas A&M's Tyler Davis blocks a shot by North Carolina's Luke Maye during the second half Sunday.
Texas A&M’s Tyler Davis blocks a shot by North Carolina’s Luke Maye during the second half Sunday.
(Bob Leverone / Associated Press)

T.J. Starks scored 21 points and Texas A&M overpowered North Carolina inside, upsetting the reigning national champions 86-65 Sunday in the NCAA tournament to mark the second straight year a title holder missed the Sweet 16.

The seventh-seeded Aggies (22-12) did everything they had to do to hand the Tar Heels a rare loss in a home-state NCAA game. They dominated the glass. They used their size to control the paint and block shots. And they pounced when UNC’s small-ball lineup couldn’t make an outside shot.

Robert Williams finished with 13 rebounds, helping the Aggies take a 50-36 edge while shooting 52% — including 10 of 24 from three-point range.

Joel Berry II scored 21 points in his final game for the second-seeded Tar Heels (26-11), who were trying to reach their third straight Final Four. But they ended up falling to 34-2 in NCAA tournament games in their home state, with the only other loss coming in 1979.

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Syracuse plays spoiler, beats Michigan State 55-53

Syracuse's Oshae Brissett battles for the ball with Michigan State's Nick Ward during an NCAA tournament game on March 18.
(Elsa Garrison / Getty Images)

Michigan State’s season is over after the Spartans were eliminated from the NCAA tournament by 11th-seeded Syracuse in their own backyard.

Despite a partisan crowd cheering them on in Detroit, the Spartans missed their last 14 shots from the field and lost 55-53.

The Orange were led by Tyus Battle’s 17 points and won for the third time in five days to secure an improbable Sweet 16 matchup against second-seeded Duke.

Michigan State’s loss is a bracket-buster for many college hoops fans, with more than a quarter of those who filled out brackets on ESPN picking the Spartans to reach the Final Four.

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Purdue slips past Butler 76-73 to reach Sweet 16

Purdue's P.J. Thompson had 14 points with two assists in a victory over Butler in an NCAA tournament game on March 18.
(Elsa Garrison / Getty Images)

Vincent Edwards scored 20 points and Dakota Mathias made a clutch three-pointer with 14.2 seconds left, helping second-seeded Purdue hold on for a 76-73 win over 10th-seeded Butler Sunday in the second round of the NCAA tournament.

The Bulldogs trailed by 10 with less than six minutes left and had a shot to tie the game when they had the ball with 1.8 seconds left. Butler’s Kamar Baldwin just missed a long three-pointer that a game official said was released before the buzzer as he walked off the court.

Purdue overcame the loss of Isaac Haas by relying on redshirt freshman Matt Haarms, who made his first start in place of the injured senior standout.

The Boilermakers (30-6) will face Texas Tech (29-6) in the East Regional on Friday in the tournament’s round of 16 in Boston.

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Sunday’s NCAA men’s tournament schedule (with TV listings)

Maryland Baltimore County's K.J. Maura (11) and Jourdan Grant (5) celebrate their 74-54 victory over Virginia on March 16.
(Streeter Lecka / Getty Images)

All times Pacific (*approximate time; game will start 30 minutes after the

completion of the previous game):

EAST REGIONAL

at Detroit

2 Purdue (29-6) vs. 10 Butler (21-13) 9 a.m., CBS

at San Diego

5 West Virginia (25-10) vs. 13 Marshall (25-10) *6:30 p.m., TBS

SOUTH REGIONAL

at Nashville

2 Cincinnati (31-4) vs. 7 Nevada (28-7) 3 p.m., TNT

at Charlotte, N.C.

9 Kansas State (23-11) vs. 16 Maryland Baltimore County (25-10) *5 p.m., TruTV

MIDWEST REGIONAL

at Detroit

3 Michigan State (30-4) vs. 11 Syracuse (22-13) *11:30 a.m., CBS

at San Diego

4 Auburn (26-7) vs. 5 Clemson (24-9) 4 p.m., TBS

WEST REGIONAL

at Charlotte, N.C.

2 North Carolina (26-10) vs. 7 Texas A&M (21-12) 2:15 p.m., CBS

at Nashville

1 Xavier (29-5) vs. 9 Florida State (21-11) 5:30 p.m., TNT

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Jordan Poole’s buzzer-beating three sends Michigan past Houston 64-63

Michigan's Jordan Poole (2) and Moritz Wagner (13) celebrate Poole's three-point buzzer beater over Houston.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Michigan freshman Jordan Poole drained a long three-pointer at the buzzer after Houston squandered a chance to lock up a spot in the Sweet 16, giving the third-seeded Wolverines a heart-stopping 64-63 victory in the second round of the NCAA tournament Saturday night.

Devin Davis had a chance to seal the win, but the Cougars’ gritty forward missed a pair of foul shots with 3.6 seconds left. The Wolverines (30-7) called timeout to set up a final play — Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman found Poole on the wing, and the guard’s shot hit nothing but net.

The officials reviewed it to make sure, but Poole had clearly gotten the shot away in time.

Abdur-Rahkman and Moe Wagner scored 12 points apiece to lead Michigan, but it was the unheralded freshman who stole the show. Poole’s flair for the dramatic earned coach John Beilein’s team a trip to Los Angeles for a West Regional semifinal against North Carolina or Texas A&M next week.

Rob Gray scored 23 points and Davis finished with 17 for the Cougars (27-8), who were trying to reach their first Sweet 16 since the last of the Phi Slama Jama teams went to the Final Four in 1984.

They just about did it.

Davis gave the Cougars the lead when he made two free throws with 44.1 seconds left. He pushed the advantage to 63-61 when he made the second of two more foul shots with 24.9 seconds to go.

Abdur-Rahkman and Charles Matthews came up empty at the other end for Michigan, and Davis pulled down a crucial rebound, then stalked to the foul line.

The senior forward missed both.

The down-to-the-wire outcome was hardly surprising given the way the rest of the game went. There were 17 lead changes and 12 ties, including 28-all at halftime.

After Gray’s huge performance against San Diego State, the Wolverines were wary of him every time he touched the ball. They blanketed Houston’s star on the perimeter, cut off lanes to the basket and held him to just eight points on two-for-11 shooting in the first half.

Wagner continued to struggle after a poor NCAA tournament opener, scoring just three points while dealing with foul trouble. Abdur-Rahkman was two of eight from the field, including zero of five from the arc. Michigan air-balled three shots from behind the arc in four possessions spanning the break.

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Keenan Evans, Texas Tech advance to Sweet 16 with win over Florida

Texas Tech's Keenan Evans attempts a shot past Florida's Egor Koulechov.
(Tom Pennington / Getty Images)

Keenan Evans keeps making big plays, extending Texas Tech’s season — and his time with second-year head coach Chris Beard.

They have another game with the Red Raiders headed to the NCAA tournament’s Sweet 16 for the first time since 2005.

Evans, who treats every game like senior night and doesn’t want to be done, scored 22 points and hit a tiebreaking three-pointer with 2:35 left to play as third-seeded Texas Tech beat Florida 69-66 on Saturday night.

Though the next loss will end All-Big 12 guard Evans’ career, high-flying freshman Zhaire Smith is just getting started.

Smith had 18 points, nine rebounds and seven assists, and was on the receiving end of an alley-oop pass from Evans with 29 seconds left for a punctuating dunk to send the Red Raiders (26-10) to Boston for a matchup against Purdue or Butler next Friday night.

Chris Chiozza did go the length of the court for a Florida layup with 25 seconds left before Evans lost the ball when trying to fight through a double-team after the inbound pass.

The Gators gathered the ball after a wild scramble. Egor Koulechov and KeVaughn Allen both had three-point attempts in the final 10 seconds that came up short.

Florida (21-13) fell short of the Sweet 16 — and the Elite Eight — for the first time in their last six NCAA tournament appearances. The last time they didn’t even make it to the Sweet 16 was in 2010, when the SEC team lost a first-round game to BYU.

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Gonzaga beats Ohio State 90-84 for Sweet 16 return

Ohio State's Jae'Sean Tate (1) battles for the ball with Gonzaga's Zach Norvell Jr. (23) during the second round of the 2018 tournament.
(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Zach Norvell Jr. had 28 points, Rui Hachimura added 25 and Gonzaga is headed back to the Sweet 16 with a 90-84 victory over Ohio State in the West Region on Saturday night.

Norvell hit the late tiebreaking three-pointer against UNC-Greensboro in the opening round to help the Zags advance. The confident freshman made six of 11 from behind the arc against Ohio State to lead Gonzaga (32-4) into the Sweet 16 for the fourth straight season — two wins from a return trip to the Final Four.

The Bulldogs jumped out to a big early lead, withstood a second-half Ohio State charge and made the big plays down the stretch to earn a spot in the West Region semifinals against the Xavier-Florida State winner in Los Angeles.

The resilient-all-season Buckeyes (25-9) rallied from an abysmal start and an 11-point halftime deficit to take a brief second-half lead before Gonzaga went on an 11-0 run to snatch it back.

Keita Bates-Diop had 28 points and Kam Williams 19 for Ohio State.

Ohio State and Gonzaga met four months ago in the PK80 Invitational.

It did not go well for the Buckeyes.

The Zags shredded Ohio State’s defense while shooting 59% and held the Buckeyes to 35% in an 86-59 thrashing.

The Buckeyes said they are a better team now. Their record reflects it, too: 25 wins, a second-place finish in the rough-and-tumble Big Ten Conference and a return to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2015.

The Zags looked a little rusty in their opening 68-64 win over UNC-Greensboro. They looked more like the team that blew out BYU in the West Coast Conference title game early against the Buckeyes.

Gonzaga scored the game’s first 15 points while hitting six of nine shots and blocking two of Ohio State’s. The Buckeyes had three of their first seven shots roll off the rim early and didn’t score until Jae’Sean Tate hit a three-pointer at 14:18

Ohio State righted itself on offense, but struggled to slow the zigging Zags, who made 18 of 31 shots to lead 44-33 at halftime.

The Buckeyes got even more shots to fall coming out of halftime and forced a rash of Gonzaga turnovers during a 12-2 run to go up 58-54.

Gonzaga answered with an 11-0 run, going up 73-67 on Hachimura’s three-pointer at the shot clock buzzer.

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Kansas holds off Seton Hall 83-79 to reach Sweet 16

Kansas' Malik Newman drives against Seton Hall's Eron Gordon in the first half.
(Jeff Gross / Getty Images)

Malik Newman scored 28 points, Udoka Azubuike stood toe-to-toe with Seton Hall’s bruising Angel Delgado, and No. 1 seed Kansas held off the plucky Pirates 83-79 on Saturday night to send the Jayhawks to their third consecutive Sweet 16.

Svi Mykhailiuk added 16 points and Lagerald Vick had 13 for the Jayhawks (29-7), who converted on every crucial play down the stretch to advance to the semifinals of the Midwest Region.

They’ll take on the winner of Sunday’s game between Auburn and Clemson in Omaha, Neb.

Delgado finished with 24 points and 23 rebounds in a virtuoso effort for the No. 8 seed Pirates (22-11), who snapped a four-game NCAA tournament skid in the opening round.

Khadeen Carrington finished with 28 points, many of them on three-pointers in the closing minutes, and Myles Powell added 14 as the pair of guards tried in vain to keep Seton Hall alive.

It was 71-66 with 53 seconds left when Devonte Graham made two free throws for Kansas. Carrington kept pouring in shots for Seton Hall, but the Jayhawks kept making foul shots to seal the win.

Azubuike played just three minutes in the Jayhawks’ opener because of a lingering knee injury, but he came up big against Delgado. The 7-foot, 280-pound sophomore played 22 minutes, including some tough defense on his bruising counterpart, rendering Seton Hall’s star far less effective than when Mitch Lightfoot and Silvio De Sousa were trying to guard him.

Kansas led just 31-26 at halftime, when Delgado had already piled up 12 points and 12 rebounds, and was forced to make some significant adjustments in the locker room.

On defense, coach Bill Self called for double-teams on Delgado whenever he got the ball down low, especially when Azubuike was sitting on the bench. On offense, he had his guys throw it to Azubuike on the block or rely on Mykhailiuk — by nature a three-point specialist — to slash to the basket.

Together, they helped the Jayhawks stretch their lead to double digits.

Delgado kept the Pirates in the game, though. Azubuike went to the bench with four fouls with about 9 minutes left, and coach Kevin Willard instructed his own guys to go right back to their center.

Delgado was so effective that Self gambled by putting Azubuike right back in the game.

Seton Hall closed to 63-59 with 3:22 to go, but Newman answered with a three-pointer and a pair of foul shots, and the poised Jayhawks never allowed the Pirates to come all the way back.

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Loyola Chicago does it again, knocking off third-seeded Tennessee

Clayton Custer is swarmed by teammates after hitting the game-winning shot against Tennessee on Saturday.
(Ronald Martinez / Getty Images)

Another NCAA tournament pray answered for Loyola-Chicago, and the Ramblers are set to bring Sister Jean to the Sweet 16.

Clayton Custer’s jumper took a friendly bounce off the rim and in with 3.6 seconds left, and 11th-seeded Loyola beat Tennessee 63-62 in a South Region second-round game Saturday night.

Custer’s winner came two days after Donte Ingram’s buzzer-beating three-pointer for Loyola against Miami, surely to the delight of Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, the 98-year-old nun, team chaplain and primary booster watching from her wheelchair on a platform near the main TV cameras.

The Ramblers (30-5), who won the Missouri Valley tournament, broke the school record for wins set by the 1963 NCAA championship team. Loyola will play the Cincinnati-Nevada winner in the regional semifinals Thursday in Atlanta.

No. 3-seeded Tennessee (26-7) took its only lead of the second half on three-point play by Grant Williams with 20 seconds remaining. After Loyola almost lost the ball on an out-of-bounds call confirmed on replay, Custer dribbled to his right, pulled up and let go a short jumper that hit the front of the rim, bounced off the backboard and went in.

A last-gasp shot from the Vols’ Jordan Bone bounced away, and Custer threw the ball off the scoreboard high above the court as he was mobbed by teammates in the same spot that the Ramblers celebrates Ingram’s dramatic winner,,.

The Ramblers fell behind 15-6 in less than five minutes before the Volunteers missed their next nine shots and fell behind for the first time on Custer’s three-pointer with six minutes left in the first half.

Admiral Schofield scored 11 of those first 15 Tennessee points but didn’t score again until a three-pointer nearly 32 minutes later that started a rally from a 10-point deficit in the final four minutes by the SEC regular-season co-champions.

Tennessee coach Rick Barnes lost at American Airlines Center, home of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, for the first time in six NCAA games. The first four wins were during his 17 seasons leading the Texas Longhorns.

Schmidt, who leads the pregame prayer and gives the players feedback after, wasn’t the only one pulling hard for Loyola.

Late-arriving fans waiting for crowd favorite Texas Tech in the late game joined the raucous Ramblers supporters wearing maroon-and-gold scarfs and standing almost the entire game in sections across the court from their team’s bench.

Aundre Jackson, who grew up in the Dallas area, led Loyola with 16 points, and Custer had 10. Schofield scored 14 for Tennessee.

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Kentucky dispatches Buffalo by pulling away for a 95-75 victory

Kentucky's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander tries to silence the crowd after scoring against Buffalo during the first half Saturday.
(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Kentucky put an end to any upset talk on its watch Saturday, getting 27 points and a near-perfect shooting game from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in a 95-75 rout of 13th-seeded Buffalo.

Gilgeous-Alexander went 10 for 12 and made both of his three-point attempts to send fifth-seeded Kentucky (26-10) to the Sweet 16 for the second straight season.

Coming into the day, the basketball world was still reverberating from Maryland Baltimore County’s 16 vs. 1 stunner over Virginia the night before. Villanova and Duke both rolled early; the evening slate started with Kentucky, and the Wildcats, with their all-freshman starting lineup, trailed only once: 2-0.

It wasn’t a runaway until the last seven minutes.

Buffalo (27-9), which got here with a 21-point blowout over Arizona, twice trimmed a double-digit lead to five midway through the second half.

Gilgeous-Alexander answered both times — once with a three-pointer to extend the lead to eight, then again a few minutes later with a three-point play that started a 12-2 run and put the game away.

Hamidou Diallo also got hot — going nine for 12 and scoring all but four of his 22 points in the second half while the Wildcats were turning this one into a laugher.

About that UMBC win — it could affect Kentucky more than you think. With Virginia and Arizona gone, the Wildcats came into the day seeded behind only Cincinnati and Tennessee in the South.

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Duke rolls into Sweet 16 with 87-62 win over Rhode Island

Duke's Marvin Bagley III celebrates making a three-point shot against Rhode Island during the second half Saturday.
Duke’s Marvin Bagley III celebrates making a three-point shot against Rhode Island during the second half Saturday.
(Rob Carr / Getty Images)

Coach Mike Krzyzewski might want to stop worrying about his team’s inexperience. The loaded-if-young Blue Devils hardly seemed intimidated by the NCAA Tournament’s bright lights.

If anything, they’re thriving under them.

Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year Marvin Bagley scored 22 points to go with nine rebounds, fellow freshman Wendell Carter Jr. added 13 points and second-seeded Duke rolled by seventh-seeded Rhode Island 87-62 in the second round Saturday to earn the program’s 26th trip to the Sweet 16. Freshmen guards Gary Trent Jr. and Trevon Duval combined for 29 points and 11 assists for the Blue Devils.

Duke (28-7) will play either Michigan State or Syracuse in the Midwest Regional semifinals in Omaha, Neb., on Friday. The victory gave Krzyzewski 1,098 wins during his Hall of Fame career, breaking a tie with Tennessee women’s coach Pat Summitt for the most by an NCAA basketball coach.

The Rams (26-8) and their senior-laden roster never threatened after the opening 10 minutes. E.C. Matthews led Rhode Island with 23 points, but the Rams were never really in it after the Blue Devils revved it up midway through the first half.

Krzyzewski’s relationship with Rhode Island coach Dan Hurley dates back to when Krzyzewski recruited Dan’s older brother, Bobby, to Duke 30 years ago. Krzyzewski praised the Hurley family for their love of the “dignity of work,” an ethos that has helped Dan turn the Rams into a force in the Atlantic 10.

Work ethic is one thing. Talent is another. The Rams have plenty of the former. When the young but rapidly maturing Blue Devils are as fully engaged as they were on Saturday, they have a staggering amount of both.

The proof came in a clinically efficient opening half in which Duke picked the Rams a part. If Allen and Trent weren’t knocking down three-pointers, then they were getting the ball inside to Bagley or Carter, the program’s “other” potential lottery pick who is dealing with an achy Achilles. Though he winced at least once while trying to set up on the block, when Carter had the ball in his hands, the grimace disappeared. He scored nine of Duke’s first 11 points to establish the Blue Devils’ dominance in the paint, and when the backcourt got going, the Rams simply couldn’t keep pace.

A 23-5 surge midway through the first half put the Blue Devils firmly in command. Their extended zone defense with Allen at the top disrupted Rhode Island’s rhythm, at one point forcing Matthews to put up an off-balance, one-handed airball from the three-point arc as the shot clock expired.

By the time Duval’s second three-pointer of the half went down, the Blue Devils were up 45-28 at the break.

As the Rams came out for the second half, junior guard Will Leviton went over to a section of Rhode Island fans and urged them to “get up, I still need you! It’s still a game.”

Not really. A pair of Bagley dunks shortly after intermission pushed Duke’s advantage to more than 20, and the Blue Devils were on their way to Omaha.

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Top-seeded Villanova has no problem beating Alabama to reach Sweet 16

Mikal Bridges hit five three-pointers, scored 23 points and helped No. 1 seed Villanova put the field on notice that it’s the team to beat with an 81-58 win over ninth-seeded Alabama on Saturday.

The Wildcats (32-4) are in the Sweet 16 for the first time since they won the 2016 national championship. Bridges, Jalen Brunson, Phil Booth — and yes, the Big Ragu — look every bit the favorite to make it two in three years.

Villanova plays Friday in Boston against the Marshall-West Virginia winner.

The sport is still buzzing from top-seeded Virginia’s 20-point loss to 16th-seeded UMBC on Friday night.

After a tense first half in a round that has given the program fits, the Wildcats hit their first six three-pointers in the second and put on a thrashing under coach Jay Wright.

Bridges, who averaged 17.9 points and played his way into a likely NBA draft lottery pick, scored one point and missed all five shots in the first half. He found his groove once the second half tipped, scoring the first five points of the half and then finishing a thunderous alley-oop on a pass from Booth that made it 41-27 and sent the Wildcats wildly waving their arms in celebration headed into a timeout.

Bridges hit his first three three-pointers in succession to cap an 18-1 run, and a Sweet 16 berth was in sight.

Brunson added a three-pointer to make it 56-31, and the rest of the half was simply a countdown to Boston. Villanova made 17 of 41 from long range.

The Wildcats lost in the first weekend as a 1 or 2 seed in 2010, 2014, 2015 and 2017.

Villanova got a brief scare that it might add 2018 to the list against Alabama (20-16). They missed eight of their first 11 three-pointers in the first half, and Alabama briefly grabbed the lead.

Donte DiVincenzo steadied Villanova with three straight three-pointers that brought a gasp from the crowd and gave the Wildcats a 22-15 lead. He threw in a fast-break layup off his own steal and hit his fifth three of the half to make it 32-27.

DiVincenzo — the redheaded guard nicknamed “the Big Ragu” — scored all 18 of his points in the half. Villanova attempted 20 three-pointers (and made seven) out of 27 shots.

DiVincenzo’s production was sorely needed with starters Brunson, the Big East player of the year, and Omari Spellman on the bench because of early foul trouble. They each played only 10 minutes, while Wright rolled the dice that DiVincenzo and reserve Collin Gillespie could handle the load.

Alabama defensive ace Herbert Jones earned three fouls in the half and picked up a fourth less than two minutes into the second half.

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Saturday’s NCAA men’s tournament schedule (with TV listings)

EAST REGOINAL

At Detroit

9 Alabama (20-15) vs. 1 Villanova (31-4) 9:10 a.m., CBS

At Dallas

6 Florida (21-12) vs. 3 Texas Tech (25-9) 5:40 p.m., TNT

MIDWEST REGIONAL

At Pittsburgh

7 Rhode Island (26-7) vs. 2 Duke (27-7) 11:40 a.m., CBS

At Wichita, Kansas

8 Seton Hall (22-11) vs. 1 Kansas (28-7) 4:10 p.m., TBS

SOUTH REGIONAL

At Boise, Idaho

13 Buffalo (27-8) vs. 5 Kentucky (25-10) 2:15 p.m., CBS

At Dallas

11 Loyola Chicago (29-5) vs. 3 Tennessee (26-8) 3:10 p.m., TNT

WEST REGIONAL

At Boise, Idaho

5 Ohio State (25-8) vs. 4 Gonzaga (31-4) 4:45 p.m., CBS

At Wichita, Kansas

6 Houston (27-7) vs. 3 Michigan (29-7) 6:40 p.m., TBS

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Remember the name: Maryland Baltimore County comes up with the biggest upset in NCAA tournament history

Anyone could have guessed that top-seeded Virginia versus University of Maryland Baltimore County would be a 20-point blowout.

But who would have predicted it would be the biggest upset in the history of the NCAA tournament?

UMBC — an acronym unfamiliar to most people before Friday night — shocked the college basketball world with a 74-54 victory over Virginia, becoming the first No. 16 seed ever to beat a No. 1.

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Maryland Baltimore County beats Virginia, becomes first No. 16 seed to upset No. 1 team in NCAA tournament

UMBC's Jairus Lyles celebrates after scoring during an NCAA tournament game against Virginia.
(Streeter Lecka / Getty Images)

Senior guard Jairus Lyles scored 28 points, and Maryland Baltimore County pulled off the most shocking upset in NCAA tournament history, defeating Virginia 74-54 on Friday night to become the first No. 16 seed ever to beat a No. 1 seed.

Virginia entered the NCAA tournament as the No. 1 overall seed after going 31-2 this season, including 20-1 in ACC competition.

But the Cavaliers couldn’t get anything generated on offense, and the nation’s top-ranked defense couldn’t contain the America East Conference champions.

The 74 points were the most Virginia had allowed this year.

Lyles was the catalyst.

He diced up Virginia’s defense in the second half, getting to the hole easily on six different occasions and making easy layups. He also knocked down a pair of three-pointers as UMBC built a 16-point lead.

Lyles finished with 23 of his points in the second half and Joe Sherburne finished with 14 points.

The game was tied at halftime, but the Retrievers came out confident and motivated in the second half and built a double-digit lead that Virginia could never erase.

Sherburne scored on an and-one drive and then knocked down a three-pointer from the top of the key after a behind-the-back pass from KJ Maura. After Virginia made a foul shot, the shifty 5-foot-8, 140-pound Maura drove the lane for uncontested layup.

A Tony Bennett timeout couldn’t stop the bleeding, as Lyles hit two more threes and Sherburne hit one to extend UMBC’s lead to 14 with 14:57 left in the game. Lyles was fouled on a three-point shot, and suddenly the Retrievers led by 16.

A corner three-pointer and a layup off a fast break by Arkel Lamer gave UMBC its biggest lead at 67-48. From there, the party was on as chants of “UMBC” rang through the arena.

It was yet another early exit for the Cavaliers in a season that seemed to hold so much promise.

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A look at the biggest upsets in NCAA tournament history since 1985

Virginia's Isaiah Wilkins (21) is consoled after fouling out during the second half of the upset loss to UMBC on Friday.
(Chuck Burton / Associated Press)

A look at top-four seeded teams that have lost first-round games (the NCAA tournament expanded to 16 seeds per region in 1985):

2017 — No. 16 UMBC 74, No. 1 Virginia 54; No. 13 Buffalo 89, No. 4 Arizona 68; No. 13 Marshall 81, No. 4 Wichita State 75

2016 — No. 15 Middle Tennesse 90, No. 2 Michigan State 81; No. 14 Stephen F. Austin 70, No. 3 West Virginia 56; No. 13 Hawaii 77, No. 4 California 66

2015 — No. 14 UAB 60, No. 3 Iowa State 59; No. 14 Georgia State 57, No. 3 Baylor 56

2014 — No. 14 Mercer 78, No. 3 Duke 71

2013 — No. 15 Florida Gulf Coast 78, No. 2 Georgetown 68; No. 14 Harvard 68, No. 3 New Mexico 62; No. 13 La Salle 63, No. 4 Kansas State 63-61

2012 — No. 15 Norfolk State 86, No. 2 Missouri 84; No. 15 Lehigh 75; No. 2 Duke 70; No. 13 Ohio 65, No. 4 Michigan 60

2011 — No. 13 Morehead State 62, No. 4 Louisville 61

2010 — No. 14 Ohio 97, No. 3 Georgetown 83; No. 13 Murray State 66, No. 4 Vanderbilt 65

2009 — No. 13 Cleveland State 84, No. 4 Wake Forest 69

2008 — No. 13 San Diego 70, No. 4 UConn 69, OT; No. 13 Siena 83, No. 4 Vanderbilt 62

2006 — No. 14 Northwestern State 64, No. 3 Iowa 63; No. 13 Bradley 77, No. 4 Kansas 73

2005 — No. 14 Bucknell 64, No. 3 Kansas 63; No. 13 Vermont 60, No. 4 Syracuse 57, OT

2003 — No. 13 Tulsa 84, No. 4 Dayton 71

2002 — No. 13 UNC Wilmington 93, No. 4 Southern Cal 89, OT

2001 — No. 15 Hampton 58, No. 2 Iowa State 57; No. 13 Kent State 77, No. 4 Indiana 73; No. 13 Indiana State 70, No. 4 Oklahoma 68, OT

1999 — No. 14 Weber State 76, No. 3 North Carolina 74

1998 — No. 14 Richmond 62, No. 3 South Carolina 61; No. 13 Valparaiso 70, No. 4 Mississippi 69

1997 — No. 15 Coppin State 78, No. 2 South Carolina 65; No. 14 Chattanooga 73, No. 3 Georgia 70

1996 — No. 13 Princeton 43, No. 4 UCLA 41

1995 — No. 14 Old Dominion 89, No. 3 Villanova 81, 3 OT; No. 14 Weber State 79, No. 3 Michigan State 72; No. 13 Manhattan 77, No. 4 Oklahoma 67

1993 — No. 15 Santa Clara 64, No. 2 Arizona 61; No. 13 Southern University 93, No. 4 Georgia Tech 78

1992 — No. 14 ETSU 87, No. 3 Arizona 80; No. 13 Southwestern Louisiana 87, No. 4 Oklahoma 83

1991 — No. 15 Richmond 73, No. 2 Syracuse 69; No. 13 Penn State 74, No. 4 UCLA 69

1990 — No. 14 Northern Iowa 74, No. 3 Missouri 71

1989 — No. 14 Siena 80, No. 3 Stanford 78; No. 13 Middle Tennessee State 97, No. 4 Florida State 83

1988 — No. 14 Murray State 78, No. 3 N.C. State 75; No. 13 Richmond 72, No. 4 Indiana 69

1987 — No. 14 Austin Peay 68, No. 3 Illinois 67

1986 — No. 14 UALR 90, No. 3 Notre Dame 83; No. 14 Cleveland State 83, No. 3 Indiana 79

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Florida State finishes off first round with 67-54 win over Missouri

Florida State's Braian Angola throws a pass around Missouri defenders.
(Andy Lyons / Getty Images)

The Florida State Seminoles might not have a flashy scorer. They do have plenty of Seminoles who can score.

Ninth-seeded Florida State beat No. 8 seed Missouri 67-54 Friday night in the West Region. A total of 10 different Seminoles scored at least two points — by halftime — as they wore out a Missouri team with only eight players available for this game.

Michael Porter Jr. came off the bench for his third game with Missouri. He finished with 16 points, scoring 13 in the second half as the Tigers tried to rally. But they got within 50-44 only to see the Seminoles reel off 15 straight points.

Florida State plays No. 1 seed Xavier on Sunday.

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There’s no 12 over 5 upset this year: Clemson eliminates New Mexico State 79-68

Clemson's Gabe DeVoe drives against New Mexico State's Zach Lofton.
(Donald Miralle / Getty Images)

There won’t be a No. 12 seed advancing in the NCAA tournament.

The last hope for the seemingly yearly 12-5 upset ended Friday night as No. 5 seed Clemson beat New Mexico State 79-68 in the Midwest Region. It’s just the second time since 2008 a No. 12 seed won’t advance.

Shelton Mitchell scored a season-high 23 points and Gabe Devoe added 22 as the Tigers advanced to the second round for the first time since 1997. Clemson shot 56% to knock out the champions of the Western Athletic Conference.

Zach Lofton led New Mexico State with 29 points, but the Aggies had too many stretches without scoring to keep up with the Tigers hot shooting.

Clemson will face No. 4 seed Auburn in the round of 32 on Sunday.

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Syracuse plays its way into second round with 57-52 defeat of TCU

TCU's Alex Robinson is forced into an awkward shot by Syracuse's Paschal Chukwu during the first half.
(Elsa Garrison / Getty Images)

Syracuse is moving on.

The Orange’s trademark zone defense contained Texas Christian for a 57-52 win in the first round of the NCAA tournament. They’ll face Michigan State in Detroit on Sunday in a matchup of schools with basketball lineage.

TCU shot 17% from behind the three-point arc against Syracuse, which won a play-in game Wednesday.

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Xavier steamrolls Texas Southern 102-83

Xavier guard Paul Scruggs reacts from the bench during an NCAA tournament game against Texas Southern.
(Mark Humphrey / Associated Press)

The top-seeded Xavier Musketeers are moving on to the round of 32.

J.P. Macura scored a career-high 29 points, Trevon Bluiett added 26 and Kerem Kanter had 24 as Xavier routed No. 16 seed Texas Southern 102-83 Friday night in the West Region.

This was Xavier’s first time playing as a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. Only the pesky Tigers kept Xavier from never leading by more than 24.

Damontrae Jefferson led five Tigers in double figures with 20 points. He led Texas Southern from the Southwestern Athletic Conference playing every minute of the game.

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Auburn advances past Charleston 62-58

Auburn's Bryce Brown reacts during the second half of an NCAA tournament game against Charleston.
Auburn’s Bryce Brown reacts during the second half of an NCAA tournament game against Charleston.
(Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images)

Fourth-seeded Auburn is moving on in the NCAA tournament. Barely.

Mustapha Heron had 16 points and Auburn hit some key late free throws to hold off No. 13 seed Charleston 62-58 in the first-round of the Midwest Region on Friday.

The Tigers were in a fight the entire second half and trailed 55-54 with three minutes left after a three-pointer from Charleston’s Marquise Pointer. But Bryce Brown’s three put the Tigers back in front, and Jared Harper added a three-pointer with 1:14 left to give the Tigers a 59-56 lead.

Charleston had chances in the final minute to close the gap but missed three key free throws, and Grant Riller’s attempt at a tying three-pointer in the final 10 seconds was well short. It appeared Riller was fouled, but no call was made.

Jarrell Brantley had 24 points to lead Charleston.

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Michigan State holds off pesky Bucknell 82-78

Michigan State's Miles Bridges celebrates with Joshua Langford (1) during an NCAA tournament game against Bucknell.
(Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)

Miles Bridges scored 29 points, and third-seeded Michigan State outlasted 14th-seeded Bucknell 82-78.

The Spartans advance to play the winner of the TCU-Syracuse game.

Michigan State led just 44-40 at halftime but held the Bison to 10-of-28 shooting in the second. Zach Thomas scored 27 points for Bucknell before fouling out on a technical with 6:06 remaining.

Bucknell made five three-pointers in the last 90 seconds or so to make the final score close — a flurry that seemed to impress even the Michigan State fans in Detroit — but the outcome wasn’t really in doubt late.

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Kansas State beats Creighton to move on in NCAA tournament

Barry Brown is congratulated by Kansas State's coaching staff as he leaves the floor during an NCAA tournament game against Creighton.
(Bob Leverone / Associated Press)

Barry Brown scored 18 points, and ninth-seeded Kansas State led wire-to-wire to post a 69-59 victory over No. 8 Creighton on Friday night despite playing without leading scorer Dean Wade.

Mike McGuirl added 17 points and Kamau Stokes had 11 as the Wildcats reached the final 32 in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012. Wade had been expected to play after suffering a stress fracture in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament, but never saw the floor.

His teammates picked him up, particularly on defense.

Creighton came into the game ranked 10th in scoring in Division I at 84.3 points per game but tied a season-low with 59 points after shooting 33.8 percent from the field, including 26 percent from beyond the 3-point arc.

Leading scoring Marcus Foster, who spent two seasons at Kansas State, was held scoreless for the first 28 1/2 minutes and finished with five points on 2-of-11 shooting.

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Jevon Carter leads West Virginia past Murray State 85-68

Murray State's Ja Morant competes for a loose ball with West Virginia's Daxter Miles Jr.
(Donald Miralle / Getty Images)

Jevon Carter scored 21 points, had eight assists and six steals, Teddy Allen added 16 points and No. 5 seed West Virginia overwhelmed 12th-seeded Murray State 85-68 in the first round of the East Region on Friday.

The Mountaineers (25-10) pulled away in the second half and advanced to the round of 32 for the third time in the last four seasons as four players finished in double figures.

Next up for West Virginia: A Mountain State showdown with 13th-seeded Marshall far away from home.

Carter had 13 points in the second half and was the trigger of a second-half surge by the Mountaineers after Murray State had trimmed a 14-point lead down to five.

Terrell Miller led Murray State (26-6) with 27 points, but he was the only Racers player to shoot well. Miller made 8 of 11 shots, but his team hit just 41%. Murray State had won 13 straight games entering the NCAA tournament, the second-longest active win streak in the country.

More important than what Carter did offensively was the job he and his teammates did on the defensive end shutting down Murray State star Jonathan Stark. It was Stark who had carried the offensive load all season for the Racers.

Stark had scored in double figures in 30 of 31 games entering the NCAAs, including three games of 30 or more points late in the season.

But Stark never found his shot from the outside, and anytime he beat his defender there were Mountaineers waiting. Stark, who was averaging 21.8 points per game, was one of 12 shooting and finished with nine points.

Murray State lingered long enough to at least make the Mountaineers work. Down by 14 early in the second half the Racers rallied, pulling within 49-44 on Shaq Buchanan’s basket. It capped a surge the Racers needed to avoid getting blown out. But the surge by Murray State was fleeting.

The Mountaineers scored nine of the next 10 points. Carter was the catalyst with a three-point play, and a steal where he found Logan Routt for a breakaway dunk and a 58-45 lead.

Murray State never got closer than 11 the rest of the way.

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Cal State Fullerton can’t keep up with Purdue, falls 74-48 in first-round game

Cal State Fullerton's Khalil Ahmad, left, Kyle Allman and Jackson Rowe react on the bench against Purdue.
(Elsa Garrison / Getty Images)

Cal State Fullerton’s unlikely season is over.

In the school’s first NCAA tournament appearance in a decade, the Titans fell to Purdue 74-48 in a first-round game at Little Caesars Arena on Friday.

Fullerton kept the second-seeded Boilermakers close during most of the first half and trailed by only two points after hitting back-to-back three-pointers late in the period.

But Purdue’s imposing front line -- anchored by 7-foot-2 center Isaac Haas -- was too much for the height-challenged Titans to handle.

Haas finished with 10 rebounds while Carsen Edwards and Vincent Edwards each scored 15 points.

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Caleb Martin helps Nevada avoid upset bid by Texas

Texas forward Royce Hamm Jr. reacts after losing in overtime to Nevada on Friday.
(Mark Humphrey / Associated Press)

Caleb Martin scored 18 points and made two huge three-pointers in overtime Friday as Nevada rallied to beat Texas 87-83 for its first NCAA tournament victory since 2007.

Nevada (28-7) erased a 14-point, second-half deficit and tied the score at 68 when Jordan Caroline hit one of two free throws with 3.8 seconds left in regulation. The Wolf Pack came back again after trailing by five early in an overtime session that featured 34 combined points.

The Wolf Pack, seeded seventh in the South Region, advanced to a Sunday matchup with No. 2-seeded Cincinnati (31-4). The Bearcats beat Georgia State 68-53.

Martin’s 3-pointer with 2:26 left in overtime gave Nevada its first lead since opening the game on a 5-0 run. Texas’ Matt Coleman took a jumper that went around and out, and Martin hit another 3 that extended Nevada’s lead to 81-77 with 1:36 left.

After Coleman cut Nevada’s margin to 81-79, Martin passed to twin brother Cody for a layup that made it 83-79 with 53 seconds remaining. Tenth-seeded Texas later got within two on a three-pointer by Kerwin Roach II with 15.5 seconds left, but that’s as close as the Longhorns got.

Caleb Martin also had 10 rebounds and five assists. Cody Martin had 14 points, eight rebounds and five assists. Nevada’s Kendall Stephens had a team-high 22 points.

Roach had a career-high 26 points for Texas (19-15) and shot 6 of 10 from three-point range. Coleman had a career-best 25 points.

After trailing 40-26 early in the second half, Nevada tied it on Caroline’s foul shot. That came after the fifth foul on Texas’ Mohamed Bamba, who finished with 13 points and 14 rebounds.

Texas’ Dylan Osetkowski then threw an inbounds pass half the length of the court to Jericho Sims, who knocked the ball out of bounds. That turnover gave Nevada the ball about 20 feet from Texas’ basket with 1.6 seconds left.

Caleb Martin missed a potential game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer. But he was right on the mark with the game on the line in overtime.

Nevada coach Eric Musselman was pumped up after the victory and his locker room speech that was broadcast live ended up being rated PG-13.

The CBS/Turner cameras caught Musselman three times, twice loud and clear, dropping an obscenity while excitedly congratulating his team. After the third time, the cameras cut away.

Musselman later opened his postgame news conference by apologizing for his language.

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Martin, Baldwin lead Butler past Arkansas 79-62

Butler's Tyler Wideman dunks the ball during an NCAA Tournament game against Arkansas.
Butler’s Tyler Wideman dunks the ball during an NCAA Tournament game against Arkansas.
(Elsa Garrison / Getty Images)

Kelan Martin scored 27 points and Kamar Baldwin added 24 to lift 10th-seeded Butler to a 79-62 victory over seventh-seeded Arkansas in the NCAA Tournament’s East Region on Friday.

The Bulldogs (21-13) raced to a 21-2 lead in the opening minutes. Although Arkansas wiped out that entire deficit before halftime, Butler took control again early in the second.

The Bulldogs advance to play second-seeded Purdue on Sunday.

Jaylen Barford scored 15 points for Arkansas, but the Razorbacks (23-12) struggled in the paint — 6-foot-11 freshman Daniel Gafford managed only two field goals.

After falling behind by 19 early, Arkansas rebounded impressively with a 27-6 run, but the Razorbacks’ lead was brief, and Butler was up 36-31 at halftime.

The Bulldogs quickly pushed the lead back to double digits in the second. Martin, who surpassed 2,000 points for his career during the game, made two 3-pointers in a 9-2 run that made it 49-38.

The Arkansas pregame notes noted that Gafford had 27 more dunks this season than Butler’s whole team, but it was the Bulldogs who threw down the first one of this game when Tyler Wideman slammed in an offensive rebound to make it 7-2. Another Butler dunk — this one by Baldwin — made it 18-2, and after a 3-pointer by Martin, the Razorbacks used their second timeout of the half.

Arkansas answered with a quick 10-0 run, and although Gafford was contributing little offensively, the Razorbacks came all the way back and took a 29-27 lead on a 3-pointer by C.J. Jones.

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Defending champion North Carolina knocks off Lipscomb 84-66

North Carolina's Theo Pinson shoots between Lipscomb defenders during the second half of an NCAA Tournament game on Friday.
(Gerry Broome / Associated Press)

Kenny Williams scored 18 points and defending national champion North Carolina took its time before opening up, beating Lipscomb 84-66 Friday in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Theo Pinson had 15 points and flirted with a triple-double for the Tar Heels (26-10), the No. 2 seed in the West Region.

Playing for the first time in the NCAA tourney, the 15th-seeded Bisons (23-10) shot well at the start and held an early six-point edge. They led 33-31 with under four minutes left in the first half before North Carolina went on a 12-1 run to take control by the break.

UNC won its 12th NCAA game in 13 tries going back to the 2016 tournament that ended with a title-game loss to Villanova.

Williams had played only spot duty that season and missed last year’s title run due to an injury. He made 6 of 8 shots Friday and 4 of 5 3s, helping the Tar Heels shoot 52% while making nine 3s.

Kenny Cooper scored 14 points for the Bisons, who made just 7 of 28 3-pointers.

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Jarron Cumberland leads Cincinnati over pesky Georgia State 68-53

Cincinnati's Jarron Cumberland puts up a shot against Georgia State.
(Andy Lyons / Getty Images)

Jarron Cumberland had 27 points and 11 rebounds to set career highs in both categories Friday as Cincinnati recovered after blowing a 10-point lead in the second half to beat pesky Georgia State 68-53 in the NCAA tournament.

Cincinnati, the No. 2 seed in the South Region, won its eighth game in a row and advanced to a Sunday matchup against either seventh-seeded Nevada or 10th seed Texas.

After trailing 42-32 early in the second half, Georgia State (24-11) rallied to take a pair of one-point leads, its last one coming on a driving bank shot from D’Marcus Simonds with 9:30 left.

Cincinnati (31-4) answered by reeling off 10 straight points.

Gary Clark, the American Athletic Conference player of the year, put Cincinnati back in front by sinking a three-pointer with 9:02 left. Kyle Washington added two straight baskets before Jacob Evans III provided the exclamation point by sinking a baseline three-pointer that gave the Bearcats a 56-47 edge with 6:19 remaining.

Cincinnati’s lead didn’t drop below seven the rest of the way.

Washington scored 13 points for Cincinnati, while Clark had 11 points and 13 rebounds. Simonds scored 24 for Georgia State.

Georgia State was trying to repeat its 2015 NCAA run, when it produced a first-round upset of Baylor as a No. 14 seed.

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Marshall ousts Wichita State in a shocker

Marshall's Rondale Watson dives for a loose ball late in the second half against Wichita State.
(Sean M. Haffey / AFP / Getty Images)

Another No. 4 seed has been sent packing.

No. 13 seed Marshall beat Wichita State 81-75 in the first round of the East Region on Friday.

Jon Elmore was spectacular for the Thundering Herd. The senior guard scored 27 points, including a number of deep three-pointers in the second half. Ajdin Penava added 16 points and had a key basket late.

The key sequence came with about two minutes left when Penava scored on a drive to give the Herd a 76-72 lead. C.J. Burks then stole the ball in the backcourt, and his dunk gave Marshall a 78-72 lead.

Wichita State pulled within 78-75 on Conner Frankamp’s three-pointer, but that’s as close as the Shockers would get. Frankamp led the Shockers with 27 points.

The final 60 seconds took several minutes after a number of reviews that killed the momentum of the game.

On Thursday, 13th-seeded Buffalo knocked No. 4 seed Arizona out of the tournament.

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Texas A&M holds off Providence 73-69

Providence's Kalif Young defends against Texas A&M's Tyler Davis.
(Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)

Tyler Davis and Robert Williams spent all Friday snatching rebound after rebound, blocking a few shots and had Williams offer a highlight-reel capper in the final minute.

When Texas A&M’s bigs are playing like this, it’s tough to tussle with these Aggies. And that gives them their best chance to stick around the NCAA tournament for another weekend.

Davis had 14 points and 15 rebounds and Williams added his own double-double to help Texas A&M beat Providence 73-69, sending the Aggies on to the second round of the West Region.

Williams finished with 13 points and 14 rebounds for Texas A&M (21-12), the region’s No. 7 seed. They also each blocked two shots.

“We got a lot of help from our guards, too,” Davis said. “Our guards put bodies on the outside so we can play one-on-one inside. It was really a team effort. We were able to snag a couple of boards.”

A couple? The 6-foot-10 forwards outrebounded Providence’s entire team.

“We’re just out there doing our job,” Davis said. “This is what we do. We know we have the advantage inside most games so this is just another game where we came out and gave 100% effort on the glass.”

Providence’s players knew it would be a challenge for their smaller group to battle on the boards. The game plan, guard Kyron Cartwright said Thursday, was simply “box out.” And all through the Friars’ locker room in Charlotte on Friday were orange signs saying the same thing.

Still, knowing what they had to do and executing it were two different things.

The Aggies finished with a 44-26 rebounding advantage and had 11 offensive rebounds against the 10th-seeded Friars (21-14).

“Even though we were checking out, and I thought we did a decent job, they got length rebounds,” Providence coach Ed Cooley said. “There’s really nothing you can do. That’s God’s gift to them. There’s really nothing you can do about it. You keep encouraging your kids, but when you’ve got 7-6 wing length and 7-5 wing length, that’s genetics, baby.”

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Cal State Fullerton trails Purdue 30-21 at halftime

Purdue center Isaac Haas, left, and Cal State Fullerton forward Arkim Robertson battle for the ball.
(Paul Sancya / Associated Press)

Cal State Fullerton’s hopes for an upset of second-seeded Purdue at the NCAA tournament appeared to be fading after the first half at Little Caesars Arena on Friday.

Plagued by missed shots, fouls and turnovers, the Titans trailed the Boilermakers, 30-21.

This is Fullerton’s first tournament appearance since 2008. It comes on the heels of the school’s surprising championship at the Big West tournament after finishing fourth in the conference during the regular season.

Kyle Allman led the Titans with nine points in the first half, though they shot just 32% from the field, turned the ball over eight times and were called for 12 fouls.

Vincent Edwards had a game-high 13 points for Purdue.

A No. 15 seed has upset a No. 2 seed only eight times in tournament history, though four of those wins have come since 2012.

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Cal State Fullerton’s diverse basketball team readies for the biggest stage — the NCAA tournament

Cal State Fullerton coach Dedrique Taylor takes a shot at mid-court during practice on March 15 in Detroit.
(Carlos Osorio / Associated Press)

Two years ago, Arkim Robertson had never heard of Cal State Fullerton.

The Grenada native played for a junior college in Oklahoma after a highlight video on YouTube caught a coach’s attention. Robertson wanted to continue his career and Fullerton was the lone Division I school to offer a scholarship.

There was one problem. The big man didn’t even know where the school was located.

“I went out and searched it up,” Robertson said Thursday. “California. OK. Sunshine, they’ve got beaches and it’s warm out there. It kind of reminded me of back home.”

He will face the biggest challenge of his career Friday when Fullerton plays second-seeded Purdue in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Little Caesars Arena.

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Cal State Fullerton vs. Purdue: How they match up

Purdue's Vincent Edwards
(Abbie Parr / Getty Images)

WHO: No. 2 Purdue (28-6) vs. No. 15 Fullerton (20-11).

WHAT: NCAA East Regional first-round game, Friday, 9:30 a.m. PDT.

WHERE: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit. TV: TruTV.

This is Purdue’s 30th NCAA tournament appearance, but the Boilermakers haven’t reached the Final Four since 1980. Fullerton’s experience in March is much more limited. The Titans last advanced to the tournament in 2008 — Purdue has played 15 tournament games since then — and haven’t won a tournament game since upsetting New Mexico and San Francisco in 1978. Current Fullerton coach Dedrique Taylor was only 3 years old then.

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Remember the Titans: Forty years after ‘Cal State Who,’ Fullerton takes on Purdue

There isn’t much time. Coach says what he has to say. We’re about to head out. But I have to go. Bad. I slip into the bathroom. A man sits on a sink, smoking a cigarette. It’s Dean Smith. His North Carolina team just lost to San Francisco. Big opening-round upset. He still looks stunned. But so do I. Because I’m alone in a bathroom with a basketball legend.

“Good game, coach,” is the best I can do.

Coach Smith nods, takes a deep drag, exhales. And I suddenly don’t have to go to the bathroom anymore.

I’m not supposed to be here. Me or my team. We are Cal State Fullerton — otherwise known as “Cal State Who?” Nobodies from nowheresville, playing the New Mexico Lobos, like lambs to a first-round slaughter. New Mexico has future Laker Michael Cooper, the numero uno ofensiva en el mundo, the whole turquoise jewelry bit. Fullerton, no bueno. Flukes. Fodder. No problemo.

Until: Cal State Fullerton 90, New Mexico 85.

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Friday’s NCAA men’s tournament schedule (with TV listings)

Michigan State players run the court during a March 15 practice for a first-round NCAA tournament game in Detroit.
(Paul Sancya / Associated Press)

All times Pacific (*approximate time; each game will start 30 minutes after the completion of the previous one):

EAST REGIONAL

At Detroit

2 Purdue (28-6) vs. 15 Cal State Fullerton (20-11) 9:40 a.m., TruTV

7 Arkansas (23-11) vs. 10 Butler (20-13) *12:10 p.m., TruTV

At San Diego

4 Wichita State (25-7) vs. 13 Marshall (24-10) 10:30 a.m., TNT

5 West Virginia (24-10) vs. 12 Murray State (26-5) *1 p.m., TNT

SOUTH REGIONAL

At Charlotte, N.C.

8 Creighton (21-11) vs. 9 Kansas State (22-11) 3:50 p.m., TNT

1 Virginia (31-2) vs. 16 Maryland Baltimore County (24-10) *6:20 p.m., TNT

At Nashville

2 Cincinnati (30-4) vs. 15 Georgia State (24-10) 11 a.m., TBS

7 Nevada (27-7) vs. 10 Texas (19-14) *1:30 p.m., TBS

MIDWEST REGIONAL

At Detroit

3 Michigan State (29-4) vs. 14 Bucknell (25-9) 4:10 p.m., CBS

6 Texas Christian (21-11) vs. 11 Syracuse (21-13) *6:40 p.m., CBS

At San Diego

4 Auburn (25-7) vs. 13 College of Charleston (26-7) 4:27 p.m., TruTV

5 Clemson (23-9) vs.12 New Mexico State (28-5) *6:57 p.m., TruTV

WEST REGIONAL

At Charlotte, N.C.

7 Texas A&M (20-12) vs. 10 Providence (21-13) 9:15 a.m., CBS

2 North Carolina (25-10) vs. 15 Lipscomb (23-9) *11:45 a.m., CBS

At Nashville

1 Xavier (28-5) vs. 16 Texas Southern (16-19) 4:20 p.m., TBS

8 Missouri (20-12) vs. 9 Florida State (20-11) *6:50 p.m., TBS

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Michigan plods to 61-47 win over Montana in NCAA tournament first round

Michigan's Duncan Robinson attempts a lay-up against Montana during the first round of the NCAA tournament in Wichita, Kan., on March 15.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Charles Matthews had 20 points and 11 rebounds, Michigan locked down on defense and the third-seeded Wolverines beat Montana 61-47 in a plodding first-round NCAA tournament game Thursday night.

Michigan (29-7) trailed by 10 in the opening minutes, struggled to get into rhythm until late in the first half, and never really went on a big run to seize control of the game.

Instead, coach John Beilein’s team methodically drew away over a long period of the second half when No. 14 seed Montana (25-8) failed to score, and chugged into a matchup with sixth-seeded Houston — a last-second winner over San Diego State — in the second round of the West Region.

Michael Oguine and Ahmaad Rorie scored 15 points apiece to lead the Grizzlies.

Perhaps the Wolverines were a bit rusty by the long layoff after the Big Ten Tournament, which was moved up a week so that it could be played at Madison Square Garden this year, because it was the plucky Big Sky champions who roared to the game’s first 10 points.

Michigan’s Zavier Simpson played just four first-half minutes because of fouls, and Moritz Wagner was scoreless at the break on 0-for-3 shooting, as Montana employed some early trapping.

It took Matthews pouring in 12 first-half points to get the Wolverines on track.

Then it took some stingy defense to pull away.

Wagner scored the first points of the second half, and after Montana’s Jamar Akoh answered at the other end, the Grizzlies proceeded to miss their next 12 field-goal attempts. They did not even get to the foul line, which meant a scoreless drought that lasted nearly 10 minutes.

Michigan used the lull to push a 31-28 halftime lead to 44-30 with about 9 1/2 minutes left, and then maintained its advantage the rest of the way in cruising into the second round.

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Florida bounces St. Bonaventure after their first NCAA win in 48 years

Florida's Chris Chiozza battles St. Bonaventure's Jaylen Adams for space.
(Brandon Wade / Associated Press)

Egor Koulechov scored 20 points and Florida eased past St. Bonaventure 77-62 on Thursday night, ending the Bonnies’ postseason run two days after their first NCAA tournament victory in 48 years.

Jalen Hudson scored 16 points and Chris Chiozza had 11 assists for the sixth-seeded Gators, who have reached the Elite Eight the last five times they’ve been in the tournament. Florida (21-12) will face Texas Tech in an East region second-round game Saturday.

A whirlwind week finally caught up with the Bonnies (26-8), who finished at 35% shooting but were in the 20s when the outcome was in doubt.

Courtney Stockard led St. Bonaventure with 14 points after scoring 26 in a win over UCLA in a First Four game in Dayton, Ohio, on Tuesday.

Stockard fouled out with 2:10 remaining and left to a standing ovation from Bonnies fans who were still on their feet in the final minutes in sections just across the American Airlines Center court from their team’s bench.

Koulechov is a graduate transfer from Rice who was a freshman at Arizona State when the Sun Devils lost a tournament opener to Texas on a buzzer-beater in 2014. He was four of 10 from three-point range.

Florida trailed 22-21 late in the first half when Mike Okauru hit a three-pointer to start a 15-0 run that continued after halftime and put the Gators up 36-22.

Hudson soared over Matt Mobley for a put-back dunk and made the free throw after a foul to give Florida its first 20-point lead at 57-37 with about eight minutes remaining.

St. Bonaventure, which set a school record for wins by beating UCLA and was an at-large choice out of the Atlantic 10 Conference, was making its first NCAA tournament appearance since 2012 and seventh overall.

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Collin Sexton, John Petty lead Alabama by Virginia Tech 86-83

Alabama's Collin Sexton drives to the basket against Virginia Tech's Chris Clarke.
(Rob Carr / Getty Images)

Collin Sexton scored 21 of his team-high 24 points after halftime to lead Alabama to an 86-83 victory over Virginia Tech on Thursday night for the Crimson Tide’s first NCAA tournament win in a dozen years.

John Petty kept ninth-seeded Alabama (20-15) in it while Sexton struggled during a sluggish opening half and finished with 20 points while shooting six of eight on three-pointers. Sexton found a rhythm in the second half, including a handful of big shots over the final five minutes to give the Crimson Tide a bit of breathing room in a game that featured 10 lead changes, with no team ever being up by more than seven points.

Alabama will face top-seeded Villanova in the East region’s second round Saturday. The Wildcats had little trouble dispatching Radford earlier Thursday.

Things weren’t nearly as easy for the Crimson Tide, who needed their freshman backcourt mates and a serious uptick in defensive intensity in the late going to advance to the second round for the first time since 2006.

Sexton and Petty were in elementary school back then. Now they’re the centerpiece of coach Avery Johnson’s dynamic attack with the Crimson Tide. Alabama shot 61% — 14 of 23 — from the floor in the second half, including a 17-footer from Sexton that hit the back of the rim and dropped in to put the Crimson Tide up 70-64 with 5:11 to play.

He knocked down a turnaround jumper with 1:35 remaining to push Alabama’s advantage to 77-72.

Justin Robinson and the eighth-seeded Hokies (21-12) kept coming. Robinson finished with 19 points but was called for an offensive foul with 48 seconds remaining and Virginia Tech down 78-74. Hokies coach Buzz Williams earned a technical foul after throwing paper onto the court in frustration. Sexton made one of two free throws and then added two more on Alabama’s ensuing possession to give the Crimson Tide just enough of a cushion.

Alabama needed a couple of wins in the SEC tournament, including an upset of rival Auburn, to reach the NCAAs for the first time in seven years. Eager to prove they were deserving of the bid, the Crimson Tide received a boost in pregame warmups when forward Donta Hall ran onto the court with his teammates less than a week after sustaining a concussion in a victory over Auburn.

Hall finished with 10 points and three rebounds in 25 minutes, but it was the play of Sexton and Petty that pushed the Crimson Tide into the round of 32.

The Hokies, making consecutive NCAA appearances for only the third time in program history, have taken a far more balanced approach under Williams. Virginia Tech came in with six players averaging at least 8.3 points and spread it around during a blistering first half in which it took a slim 43-41 advantage. Four different Hokies made threes in the first 20 minutes and Virginia Tech went seven of nine from deep.

Yet Alabama hung around even with Sexton limited to a single bucket. Petty picked up the slack. The freshman has been streaky at times this season — he went just three of 19 on three-pointers during a four-game stretch before a slump-busting 18 points in an SEC tournament loss to Kentucky.

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No Bull: Buffalo pulls off big upset, knocks off Arizona

Buffalo's Jeremy Harris drives around Arizona's Deandre Ayton during the first half.
(Otto Kitsinger / Associated Press)

Wes Clark scored 25 points, Jeremy Harris added 23 and No. 13 seed Buffalo pulled off the biggest upset of the NCAA tournament’s opening round, rolling over No. 4 seed Arizona 89-68 in the South region Thursday night.

The smaller Bulls (27-8) used their quickness to zip around the Wildcats (27-8), scoring at the rim and on kickout three-pointers.

Defensively, Buffalo neutralized Arizona’s size inside by collapsing on the paint, forcing the Wildcats to shoot from the perimeter. Arizona went two for 18 from beyond the three-point arc, while the Bulls knocked down 15 of 30.

CJ Massinburg had 19 points and Buffalo shredded Arizona’s defense at a 55% clip for the program’s first NCAA tournament win.

The Bulls move on to face Kentucky in Saturday’s round of 32.

Dusan Ristic had 16 points, and Deandre Ayton finished with 14 points and 13 rebounds to lead Arizona.

Arizona has played through one of the most difficult seasons in program history. The Wildcats were twice entangled in a federal investigation into nefarious recruiting practices and lost one of their best players twice to injury. Trier missed two games after testing positive for the same banned substance that cost him 19 games a year ago.

Outside of an 0-for-3 trip to the Bahamas, their focus on the court rarely wavered. Arizona won the Pac-12 regular-season title and routed USC in the tournament title game, becoming the second team in conference history to sweep both in consecutive seasons.

The Wildcats were the No. 4 seed in the South, but Buffalo was not an easy opening game for the Wildcats.

The Bulls are fast, play up-tempo and shoot the three — areas the Wildcats have struggled against.

Arizona had trouble keeping up with the quicker Bulls early and had trouble getting the ball inside to Ayton. Harris and Clark used their quickness to combine for 27 first-half points, and the Wildcats went one for eight from three-point range to trail Buffalo 40-38 at the break.

Buffalo used a similar blueprint to build a 65-55 lead midway through the second half. Massinburg banked in a three-pointer to stretch the lead to 13 and the Bulls kept building it, racing off to the program’s biggest victory.

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Houston holds off San Diego State 67-65

Houston's Rob Gray scores the game-winning basket against San Diego State.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Rob Gray drove for a wind-milling layup that just trickled over the rim with 1.1 seconds left, and Trey Kell’s off-balance three-pointer at the buzzer was no good, giving No. 6 seed Houston a 67-65 victory over 11th-seeded San Diego State in the first round of the NCAA tournament Thursday night.

Devin Watson had just tied the game for the Aztecs with a turnaround three-pointer, his second in a matter of seconds, when Gray dribbled up floor with 29 seconds left. He allowed the clock to tick down to six seconds before crossing over, scooting under two defenders and scooping up his shot.

The layup gave him 39 points and the Cougars (27-7) their first tournament win since 1984.

Devin Davis and Corey Davis Jr. added nine points apiece for Houston, which lost two players to fouls down the stretch and struggled to contain the Aztecs’ big front line.

Jalen McDaniels had 18 points to lead San Diego State (22-11). Kell finished with 12 points and eight rebounds, though it’s the three points he missed at the end that will stand out.

Houston will play third-seeded Michigan or No. 14 seed Montana in the West region Saturday.

The Cougars struggled much of the first half to deal with the Aztecs’ length, especially McDaniels and Malik Pope, the 6-foot-11 forwards who effectively clogged up the paint.

Houston finally started to open things up when it began drawing fouls late in the half.

Gray did most of the damage, hitting an array of floaters and lay-ins before a three from about 30 feet gave the Cougars a 39-29 halftime lead. Gray finished the half with 16 points, even though he went to the bench for a short stretch with two fouls.

For long periods in the second half, the best offense for either team came at the foul line.

McDaniels went to the stripe four times in five trips for San Diego State, and Gray answered with three straight trips for Houston. That was part of a stretch in which the Cougars mustered a single field goal over more than 10 minutes, allowing the Aztecs to slowly whittle away at their deficit.

Watson finally tied the game with a deep three-pointer with just over a minute left, only to watch Gray answer with a three of his own to give Houston a 65-62 lead with 39.4 seconds remaining.

Watson got the ball in his hands again, this time spinning around on the wing for a can-you-top-this three-pointer that electrified a vocal section of fans opposite the San Diego State bench.

It turned out that Gray would top it one more time.

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Texas Tech surges late to top Stephen F. Austin 70-60

Texas Tech's Keenan Evans drives to the basket against Stephen F. Austin defenders.
(Tom Pennington / Getty Images)

Keenan Evans scored 19 of his 23 points after halftime and third-seeded Texas Tech surged late to top Stephen F. Austin 70-60 Thursday night in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

The Big 12 runner-up Red Raiders (25-9) closed the game on a 13-2 run. Evans drove for a layup with 3:58 left, putting Texas Tech ahead to stay.

When Evans split through defenders with just over a minute left, he paused briefly to give a quick pose to the camera under the basket.

Evans had only four points in the first half, all on free throws while going zero for four from the field. But he also ignited the highlight play of the night, chasing down an offensive rebound past midcourt and then throwing an alley-oop pass to 6-foot-5 freshman Zhaire Smith, who made a 360-degree spin in the air while completing the dunk.

Texas Tech will next play the winner of the Florida-St. Bonaventure game.

Stephen F. Austin (28-7), the Southland Conference tournament champion, led by eight points early in the second half while trying to take down a Big 12 opponent in an NCAA opener for the second time in three seasons. The Lumberjacks beat West Virginia in their last tournament appearance two years ago before losing to Notre Dame.

Ivan Canete had 17 points to lead Stephen F. Austin, while Shannon Bougues had 14, Kevon Harris 12 and TJ Hoyfield 10.

Evan’s go-ahead basket began a run that included another dunk by Smith on a pass from Justin Gray and a three-pointer from the right corner in front of the Tech bench by Florida transfer Brandone Francis.

Smith was the only other Tech player in double figures with 10 points.

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Kentucky defeats Davidson 78-73 without a single three-pointer

Kentucky's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander steals the ball from Davidson's Kellan Grady.
(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Kentucky topped Davidson 78-73 in the NCAA tournament Thursday despite failing to make a single three-pointer, snapping a nation-best streak of 1,047 games with a three that began in 1988.

The fifth-seeded Wildcats went zero for six from behind the line and didn’t even try one over the final 8:46.

The last time Kentucky didn’t make a three-pointer was at the Great Alaska Shootout against Seton Hall on Nov. 26, 1988 — when Eddie Sutton was coaching, LeRon Ellis was the team’s leading scorer and the three-point arc was in only its third year in the college game.

UNLV now holds the longest active streak at 1,040 games.

Kevin Knox led the Wildcats (25-10) with 25 points, as they pulled away after 12th-seeded Davidson tied it at 54 with 8:01 remaining.

Knox finished eight for 16 from the floor, including a pair of baseline jumpers from the 15-to-17-foot range that helped Kentucky pull away. He went nine for 11 from the free-throw line, but also zero for three from three-point range.

Wenyen Gabriel, Hamidou Diallo and Quade Green all missed one three-pointer apiece for Kentucky, which has won despite struggling from long range all season.

The Wildcats ranked 344th out of 351 Division I teams in three-pointers made this season. Only 26% of their field-goal attempts have been from three, and it wasn’t hard to see the streak ending.

They were zero for 13 against Missouri this season before making one with 2:51 left to keep the streak alive Feb. 3. They went one for 11 in an earlier game against South Carolina.

Davidson made 11 three-pointers, led by six from Jon Axel Gudmundsson, who finished with 21 points.

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Villanova thrashes Radford 87-61 in NCAA tournament opener

Villanova's Jalen Brunson, right, fights for the ball against Radford's Ed Polite Jr. (24) in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
(Rob Carr / Getty Images)

Jalen Brunson scored 16 points and No. 1 seed Villanova hit 14 3-pointers in an 87-61 romp over Radford in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament on Thursday night.

The Highlanders (23-13) posed no threat at becoming the first 16 seed to ever knock off a No. 1 in the tournament.

Villanova (31-4) played to near-perfection for the first 30 minutes and everyone played a role. Mikal Bridges had 13 points, Eric Paschall scored 11 and Omari Spellman had 10 points and seven rebounds.

The Wildcats play on Saturday against the winner of Virginia Tech-Alabama.

Radford, out of rural southwest Virginia, must have felt like it was playing against ace pop-a-shot players. Villanova led 69-37 with 11:45 left and was shooting 75% (25 of 34) overall and 60% (12 of 20) from 3-point range.

The Wildcats turned an NCAA Tournament game into a glorified scrimmage.

Radford’s Christian Bradford opened the game with a 3-pointer and the bench erupted.

The players should hope someone snapped a photo of the scoreboard as a souvenir for the one time the Highlanders led Villanova in this game.

The rest of the half was pure dominance by the Wildcats.

At one point, Brunson had 12 points on 5-of-6 shooting. Radford? Just 10 points on 4 of 20 from the floor.

Villanova started the game shooting 13 of 16, a crisp 81%.

Phil Booth, Bridges, Brunson and Donte DiVincenzo all hit 3s in succession to blow open the game. Even when the Wildcats put the ball on the floor, they embarrassed Radford — Collin Gillespie juked guard Donald Hicks about out of his sneakers and the Highlander fell right on his behind.

Hicks led Radford with 13 points.

Radford won a First Four game to advance to Pittsburgh. The Wildcats just won the Big East Tournament in New York. With more shooting performances like this one, they’ll win much, much more in March.

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Seton Hall beats North Carolina State 94-83 in foul-filled matchup

Seton Hall's Khadeen Carrington dribbles the ball in the second half against NC State.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Khadeen Carrington scored 26 points, Desi Rodriguez added 20 and eighth-seeded Seton Hall beat North Carolina State 94-83 in a foul-filled first-round matchup in the NCAA tournament Thursday.

Myles Powell added 19 points and Angel Delgado scored 13 for the Pirates (22-11), who led the entire way a year after a late meltdown cost them an early exit against Arkansas.

Seton Hall will play top-seeded Kansas on Saturday in the second round of the Midwest regional.

Allerik Freeman hit six three-pointers and had 36 points to lead the No. 9 seed Wolfpack (21-12), who returned to the tournament under first-year coach Kevin Keatts for the first time in three years. Torin Dorn added 18 points and 12 rebounds, and Lennard Freeman contributed 13 points.

The only thing that slowed down the high-scoring, up-and-down matchup was the whistles. The teams combined for 53 fouls, resulting in 66 total free throws. Seton Hall had two players foul out — Delgado was one of them — and the Wolfpack had three players relegated to the bench.

Three other players finished the game with four fouls apiece.

The high-scoring tempo was set early on, when the Pirates scored on their first eight possessions and hardly missed a shot. If not for Allerik Freeman’s outside shooting, the bruising boys from the Big East might have put away their stunned ACC rivals before halftime.

The Wolfpack made a run of its own midway through the half, but was never able to gain the lead, and Seton Hall used another late charge to take a 51-41 lead into the locker room.

North Carolina State closed within 63-60 midway through the second half, as Freeman began to complement his three-point shooting by slashing to the basket for easy layups. But he didn’t get a whole lot of help from a team that had relied on balanced scoring all season.

During one five-minute stretch, Freeman was the only one wearing red to score.

Carrington and Powell were just effective at the other end for Seton Hall. They combined to score 12 straight points for the Pirates, highlighted by a 10-2 run to seize control, and the starting guards showed plenty of poise when North Carolina State tried to make one last run.

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Ohio State outlasts South Dakota State 81-73

Ohio State's Andre Wesson (24) handles the ball with South Dakota State's Mike Daum during the first round of the NCAA tournament.
(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Kam Williams made a tiebreaking four-point play with 1:36 left, then added a trio of free throws after being fouled on another 3-point attempt, lifting Ohio State to an 81-73 victory over South Dakota State in the West Region on Thursday.

Fifth-seeded Ohio State (25-8) built a 13-point lead by reeling off 16 straight points midway through the second half of a game that featured 71 combined 3-pointers.

South Dakota State made a late run at the Buckeyes, scoring 10 straight points to tie it at 70-all.

Williams answered — by being fouled on a pair of 3-pointers. He finished off the four-point play for a 74-70 lead and made all three free throws on the second, making it 77-70 with 64 seconds left.

Keita Bates-Diop had 24 points and 12 rebounds for the Buckeyes, who will face Gonzaga in the round of 32 on Saturday.

Ohio State went 12 for 40 from the arc.

No. 12 South Dakota State (28-7) hit 13 of 31 from 3-point range and Mike Daum scored 27 points.

Ohio State was one of college basketball’s biggest surprises in coach Chris Holtmann’s first season. He didn’t take over the program until June and the Buckeyes were picked to finish 11th in the in Big Ten.

Yet behind Bates-Diop, the Big Ten player of the year, Ohio State finished second in the conference behind Michigan State to earn its first NCAA Tournament berth since 2015.

The Buckeyes were favorites in the NCAA opener, but also a popular pick to be upset in the No. 12-over-5 seed mold.

The Jackrabbits headed into the NCAA Tournament on an 11-game winning streak and had Daum, the two-time Summit League MVP.

The Dauminator was on his game against the Buckeyes, scoring 17 points in the first half. So was Bates-Diop, who had 17 points by halftime of a 43-all game.

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Buzzer-beater lifts Loyola-Chicago over Miami in NCAA tournament return

Loyola-Chicago's Ben Richardson (14) reacts after making a three-pointer in the second half against Miami in the NCAA tournament.
(Ronald Martinez / Getty Images)

Donte Ingram hit a long three-pointer just before the buzzer, lifting Loyola-Chicago to a thrilling 64-62 win over Miami on Thursday in its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 33 years.

Ingram’s shot from well above the key — from the edge of the March Madness logo that spans midcourt — came after Lonnie Walker IV missed a free throw with a chance to give the Hurricanes a three-point lead with nine seconds remaining.

The 11th-seeded Ramblers (29-5) matched the school record for wins from their 1963 national championship team in their first NCAA trip since losing to Patrick Ewing and Georgetown in the Sweet 16 in 1985. They advanced to face third-seeded Tennessee on Saturday.

Loyola was boosted by a pregame prayer from its team chaplain, 98-year-old Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt. She’s held that post for more than two decades and, sitting courtside in her wheelchair, got hugs from the Ramblers when it was over.

“I said we wanted to get that big W up there, and we did,” she said in a postgame TV interview.

The sixth-seeded Hurricanes (22-10) led most of the second half in their third straight trip to the tournament, but couldn’t pull away in the final minutes and lost in the first round for the second straight year.

The buzzer sounded as Ingram’s shot went in, and the Ramblers celebrated wildly in front of the raucous fans wearing maroon-and-gold scarfs in the American Airlines Center sections across from their bench.

But officials put 0.3 seconds back on the clock, forcing Loyola to gather on the bench and postponing the celebration until after a desperation full-court pass bounced away harmlessly.

The game-winner came after coach Porter Moser initially signaled for a timeout after Walker’s missed free throw but then motioned his players to bring the ball up the court.

Clayton Custer hit a tying three-pointer in the final two minutes and led Loyola with 14 points on 4-of-6 shooting from long range. Ingram was three of eight from three-point range and finished with 13.

Walker scored 12 points for the Hurricanes.

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Duke routs Iona 89-67, breezes into second round

Duke's Grayson Allen (3) controls the ball against Iona during the first half of the game in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
(Justin K. Aller / Getty Images)

Marvin Bagley III dominated in his NCAA Tournament debut, pouring in 22 points to go with seven rebounds as Duke rolled by Iona 89-67 on Thursday.

The Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year made 10 of 14 shots in 32 minutes, grabbed seven rebounds and knocked down his lone three-point attempt as the second-seeded Blue Devils overwhelmed the 15th-seeded Gaels.

Grayson Allen scored 16 points and added a game-high nine assists for Duke (27-7), Trevon Duval finished with 19 points and eight assists and Gary Trent Jr. had 16 points and six rebounds as the deeper, more-talented Blue Devils withstood an early push from Iona (20-14) to win going away.

Duke will play seventh-seeded Rhode Island (26-7) on Saturday. The Rams outlasted Oklahoma 83-78 in overtime earlier Thursday.

Roland Griffin led the Gaels with 21 points off the bench. TK Edogi chipped in 11 points and nine rebounds, and Zach Lewis and Schadrac Casimir had 10 points each, but the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament champions simply couldn’t keep up, falling to 1-13 all time in the NCAAs.

Iona, making its third straight appearance in the tournament, actually came in with more March Madness experience than the freshmen-laden Blue Devils, and while coach Tim Cluess acknowledged before the game that experience would provide his team with a small advantage, at the end, “talent is talent.”

And the gap between Duke and Iona came into full focus about midway through the first half.

The Gaels welcomed the chance to run with the Blue Devils. They did. For a while, anyway.

A jumper by Griffin pulled Iona to 26-23 about nine minutes into the game as the two teams played at a breakneck pace. The Blue Devils upped the intensity a bit defensively, and when Allen hit a three-pointer at the halftime buzzer, Duke led 53-39.

A 19-7 burst to start the second half boosted the Blue Devils’ edge to 26 points, and any concerns that Duke would falter as a No. 2 seed for the second time in six years vanished.

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Top-seeded Kansas comes alive, beats Penn 76-60

Devonte’ Graham ignited sluggish Kansas midway through the first half, pouring in 29 points and lifting the top-seeded Jayhawks to a tough, grind-it-out 76-60 victory over No. 16 Pennsylvania in the opening round of the NCAA tournament on Thursday.

Lagerald Vick added 14 points for the Jayhawks (28-7), who trailed the Ivy League champs by 10 in the early stages before going on a 19-2 run late in the first half to take control.

Graham, perhaps atoning for a miserable performance in last year’s tournament loss to Oregon, also had six rebounds and six assists as the Jayhawks cruised into a second-round matchup with eighth-seeded Seton Hall or No. 9 seed North Carolina State in the loaded Midwest Region.

A.J. Brodeur had 14 points to lead the Quakers (24-9), but he was just six of 16 from the field and committed five turnovers. He was also one of five from the foul line, where Penn was five of 14 as a team.

The Jayhawks played most of the way without 7-footer Udoka Azubuike, who hurt a ligament in his left knee in practice last week. The sophomore center played three minutes, all in the first half, and clearly struggled to move while wearing a bulky brace on his leg.

Malik Newman, the MVP of last week’s Big 12 tournament, and Svi Mykhailiuk also scored 10 points apiece for Kansas, which won its 12th consecutive NCAA opener.

For much of the way, the improbable seemed entirely possible.

Trying to succeed where 132 other No. 16 seeds had failed, the Quakers raced to a 21-11 lead with about seven minutes left in the first half. They leaned on their stingy perimeter defense to limit the hot-shooting Jayhawks’ three-point barrage, and their pick-and-roll offense was humming.

It took the Big 12 player of the year to restore some order.

Graham picked the pocket of Caleb Wood on defense, trailed a fast-break play and was there to lay in Mykhailiuk’s missed layup, triggering what would become a 19-2 run over the next six minutes.

Graham added back-to-back baskets, using his speed and crossover to get to the rim, then knocked down a pair of three-pointers later in the run. Graham capped his 19-point first-half barrage by drawing a foul as the Quakers were attempted to give a foul away, then hitting all three foul shots.

That gave the Big 12 champions a 33-26 lead heading into the locker room.

Penn hung around until midway through the second half, when the bigger, stronger Jayhawks began to assert control. Their veteran backcourt did most of the work, slowly drawing away down the stretch.

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Gonzaga survives a scare from UNC Greensboro

UNC Greensboro's Demetrius Troy handles the ball against Gonzaga's Josh Perkins.
UNC Greensboro’s Demetrius Troy handles the ball against Gonzaga’s Josh Perkins.
(Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

Zach Norvell Jr. hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with 20.8 seconds left to help Gonzaga escape a major scare in the West Region on Thursday with a 68-64 victory over UNC Greensboro.

The fourth-seeded Bulldogs (31-4) trailed 64-62 with 1:48 left after squandering a 12-point lead they took early in the second half.

Josh Perkins tied the game at 64, and after Greensboro’s Francis Alonso forced up a miss, Gonzaga got the rebound and worked the ball to Norvell, a redshirt freshman, who spotted up from the right elbow and made the three-pointer for the lead.

Alonso got called for an offensive foul on the next possession, but Gonzaga’s Rui Hachimura missed a pair of free throws. Marvin Smith had a chance to tie it and his three-point attempt looked spot on, but it bounded in and out. Norvell made one more free throw to ice the game and finish with 15 points.

Gonzaga, in its 20th straight NCAA tournament, won its first game of March Madness for the 10th straight year, though that’s not the mission anymore for the Zags. They made the national title game last season and came into March playing well enough to make another run.

They ran into a grinder of a defensive opponent in the 13th-seeded Spartans (27-8), the Southern Conference champs who held Gonzaga to 37% shooting in the first half, but couldn’t make many shots of their own: They went 0 for 13 from 3 over the first 20 minutes.

Things opened up in the second, and behind Alonso and Troy Demetrius (16 points each), Greensboro chipped away, finally taking the lead on Jordy Kuiper’s tip-in.

After a missed Gonzaga free throw, the Spartans had a chance to extend the lead, but Demetrius couldn’t connect on an alley-oop pass to Smith. That turnover, Greensboro’s 13th of the game, led to the Perkins basket, and Gonzaga finished the game scoring the final six points.

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Tennessee routs Wright State 73-47

Tennessee's Admiral Schofield grabs a loose ball over Wright State's Parker Ernsthausen.
(Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press)

Admiral Schofield had 15 points and 12 rebounds as Tennessee advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament with a 73-47 win over Wright State with coach Rick Barnes back in familiar territory Thursday.

Lamonte Turner had 19 points and a career-high nine assists for Tennessee (26-8), SEC co-champions in the regular season after being picked in the preseason to finish 13th in the 14-team league. Grant Williams added 14 points and nine rebounds.

The Volunteers never had much trouble with the Horizon League tournament champ making its first NCAA appearance since 2007, even after missing their first six shots in the game. The Vols led 3-2 when Schofield made a three-pointer with 16:42 left, and Wright State (25-10) went back ahead on the next possession before Jordan Bowden’s layup put the Vols up for good.

Barnes is 5-0 in NCAA Tournament games at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, about a three-hour drive from the University of Texas. He led the Longhorns to 16 appearances in 17 years, with four NCAA wins in the home arena of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, before switching “Ts” and shades of orange three years ago.

It was Barnes’ 100th Volunteer game, and 57th win. The Vols are the No. 3 seed in the South Region.

Loudon Love led Wright State with 12 points and nine rebounds. Everett Winchester had 11 points for the Raiders, who shot only 31% (19 of 60) in their lowest-scoring game of the season.

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Rhode Island outlasts Oklahoma in overtime

Oklahoma's Brady Manek (35) loses the ball on a block by Rhode Island's Stanford Robinson.
(Rob Carr / Getty Images)

E.C. Matthews hit the go-ahead three-pointer in overtime and one more that sealed it to help Rhode Island hold off dynamic scorer Trae Young and beat Oklahoma 83-78 Thursday in the Midwest Regional.

The seventh-seeded Rams (26-7) won a game in the NCAA tournament for the second straight season and will play the winner of Duke-Iona on Saturday.

The 10th-seeded Sooners’ (18-14) late-season fade ended with a thud when Young failed to carry them as he had so many times this season. The phenomenal freshman led the nation with averages of 27.4 points and 8.8 assists. He scored 28 points on nine-of-18 shooting with six turnovers.

Young shook off an early second-half funk and scored 13 straight points for the Sooners over regulation and made two free throws to open overtime to give them a chance against a Rams team that smothered the guard at times.

Matthews hit a three-pointer in overtime for a 74-72 lead with 1:54 left and one more with 28 seconds to go for a five-point lead. Coach Dan Hurley ended the win with a big embrace with guard Fatts Russell. Russell hit three clutch three-pointers and scored 15 points. Matthews had 16 points.

The Sooners needed so much more out of Young early in the second half as they quickly gave up a four-point halftime lead.

He finally hit a three-pointer off a turnover with 2:05 left and then sank two free throws with 14.5 seconds to go that tied the game 69-all and sent it to overtime.

Rhode Island’s buzzer-beater follow shot for the win rolled off the rim.

Matthews and Russell helped turn the game for Rhode Island.

Matthews hit a three-pointer, Russell stripped Young and connected on his own three-pointer for a 55-50 lead that sent the pro-URI crowd into a frenzy.

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Thursday’s NCAA men’s tournament schedule (with TV listings)

Iona holds a practice for the NCAA tournament first-round game in Pittsburgh on Wednesday. They will open against Duke.
(Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)

All times Pacific (*approximate time; each game will start 30 minutes after the completion of the previous one):

EAST REGIONAL

At Pittsburgh:

1 Villanova (30-4) vs. 16 Radford (23-12) 3:45 p.m., TNT

8 Virginia Tech (21-11) vs. 9 Alabama (19-15) *6:15 p.m., TNT

At Dallas:

3 Texas Tech (24-9) vs. 14 Stephen F. Austin (28-6) 4:15 p.m., TruTV

6 Florida (20-12) vs. 11 St. Bonaventure (26-7) *6:45 p.m., TruTV

SOUTH REGIONAL

At Dallas:

3 Tennessee (25-8) vs. 14 Wright State (25-9) 9:30 a.m., TruTV

6 Miami (22-9) vs. 6 Loyola Chicago (28-5) *Noon, TruTV

At Boise, Idaho:

5 Kentucky (24-10) vs. 12 Davidson (21-11) 4 p.m., CBS

4 Arizona (27-7) vs. No. 13 Buffalo (26-8) *6:30 p.m., CBS

MIDWEST REGIONAL

At Pittsburgh:

7 Rhode Island (25-7) vs. 10 Oklahoma (18-13) 9:15 a.m., CBS

No. 2 Duke (26-7) vs. 15 Iona (20-13) *11:45 a.m., CBS

At Wichita, Kan.:

1 Kansas (27-7) vs. 16 Pennsylvania (24-8) 11 a.m., TBS

8 Seton Hall (21-11) vs. 9 North Carolina State (21-11) *1:30 p.m., TBS

WEST REGIONAL

At Wichita, Kan.:

6 Houston (26-7) vs. 11 San Diego State (22-10) 4:15 p.m., TBS

3 Michigan (28-7) vs. 14 Montana (26-7) *6:45 p.m., TBS

At Boise, Idaho:

4 Gonzaga (30-4) vs. 13 North Carolina Greensboro (27-7) 10:30 a.m., TNT

5 Ohio State (24-8) vs. 12 South Dakota State (28-6) *1 p.m., TNT

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First Four: Last-in Syracuse rallies for 60-56 win over Arizona State

Syracuse's Tyus Battle dribbles the ball against Arizona State's Tra Holder during a First Four game of the NCAA tournament.
(Kirk Irwin / Getty Images)

Freshman Oshae Brissett had a double-double and led Syracuse’s second-half comeback, and the Orange — the last team to make the NCAA tournament — held on for a 60-56 victory over Arizona State on Wednesday night in the First Four.

The 11th-seeded Orange plays No. 6 seed TCU (21-11) on Friday in Detroit in the Midwest Region.

Syracuse (21-13) had to sweat out Selection Sunday, winding up as the last team to make the bracket, sent to the First Four. The Orange prevailed in a matchup of teams that started fast and then faded onto the tournament bubble.

Arizona State (20-12) opened the season with 12 wins, including victories over tournament No. 1 seeds Xavier and Kansas. The Sun Devils went 8-12 the rest of the way. They also faded at the end of their tournament game.

Brissett overcame a hard fall in the first half, scored 23 points and had 12 rebounds. He had a three-point play and a step-back jumper as the Orange overcame a seven-point deficit with seven minutes left.

Tyus Battle’s three-pointer put Syracuse ahead to stay. With a chance to take the lead, Arizona State’s Shannon Evans II missed a three-pointer with two seconds to go. Frank Howard got the rebound, was fouled and made both free throws to clinch it.

Kodi Justice had 15 points for Arizona State, which hasn’t won an NCAA tournament game since 2009.

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First Four: Texas Southern routs North Carolina Central for first NCAA tournament win

Texas Southern's Derrick Bruce (2) tries to beat North Carolina Central's John Guerra down the court.
(Joe Robbins / Getty Images)

Texas Southern got its first NCAA tournament win, a 64-46 rout of North Carolina Central in a First Four game on Wednesday night.

Demontrae Jefferson, a 5-foot-7 guard, had 25 points and eight rebounds to lift No. 16 seed Texas Southern (16-19), which became the first team with a losing record to win a tournament game. The Tigers started the season 0-13 against a rough schedule and didn’t win a game until Jan. 1. They face No. 1 seed Xavier on Friday.

A historically black college in Houston, Texas Southern slipped into the First Four by getting hot and winning the Southwest Athletic College tournament. The Tigers then were paired with Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tournament winner N.C. Central, another historically black school that was making its second straight appearance in Dayton for a play-in game with a new starting lineup.

Both of the conferences get an automatic bid every year but rarely have to play each other.

N.C. Central (19-16) was led by Raasean Davis with 19 points, part of a starting five that included a pair of true freshmen guards and a walk-on.

Texas Southern led by 10 at the half on Jefferson’s 17 points. The sophomore, who along with Miami’s Chris Lykes is the shortest player in the tournament, tied the score at 10 with a jumper, then fed an alley-oop pass to Trayvon Reed for a monster dunk and followed with a layup to cap an 8-0 run. The Tigers wouldn’t relinquish the lead.

The Eagles hurt themselves with terrible shooting, especially in the second half. They shot just 30.4% for the game — including 0 for 14 from three-point range.

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College basketball scandal will do little to decrease interest in March Madness

Arizona forward Deandre Ayton, left, and coach Sean Miller confer in the first half of a game against Stanford on March 1.
(Rick Scuteri / Associated Press)

When the NCAA selection committee hunkered down last weekend to make sense of March Madness, choosing 68 teams for the men’s basketball tournament, its members considered a wealth of information.

RPI rankings and strength of schedule figured into their debate. So did injuries, road records and head-to-head results.

They insist that one thing did not matter: the scandal enveloping the sport with coaches, agents and others accused of funneling cash to recruits and players.

When asked about this shadow looming over the tournament, committee Chairman Bruce Rasmussen acknowledged the “issues with men’s basketball at this time,” and then pivoted as deftly as any big man in the key.

“But there are a lot of great things that are happening,” he said, adding: “I would prefer to focus on those.”

If it seemed like Rasmussen was skirting the subject, he probably wasn’t the only one. Not even close.

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UCLA simply got outplayed in its play-in game

UCLA's Thomas Welsh reacts late in the game against St. Bonaventure Bonnies during the second half in the 2018 NCAA tournament on Tuesday.
(Joe Robbins / Getty Images)

The UCLA pep band didn’t show up. Only a couple of dozen UCLA fans showed up.

On a snowy night on the outskirts of the NCAA tournament, it seemed like few Bruins folks were even remotely interested in UCLA’s play-in game against St. Bonaventure.

This apparently included the players.

They didn’t show up either.

The Bruins’ journey into March Madness lasted exactly 40 minutes worth of March Badness. At the first strains of the Big Dance, they tripped on their shiny shoes and landed on their scrubbed faces. Forced to play their way into the tournament for the first time in program history, they played their way into next November with one of the worst tournament losses in program history.

The final score was St. Bonaventure 65, UCLA 58, and while that might look respectable, don’t be fooled. It could have been worse. It would have been much worse.

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UCLA loses to St. Bonaventure in the NCAA tournament

UCLA's Kris Wilkes (13) is defended by St. Bonaventure's Amadi Ikpeze (32) and Idris Taqqee (1).
(Joe Robbins / Getty Images)

The cramped locker room didn’t hold any answers.

A dozen UCLA basketball players wedged into folding chairs, knees and elbows bumping against neighbors. No one touched the refrigerator jammed with sports drinks and sodas. Voices didn’t rise above a whisper.

As team managers rolled out bags of equipment, players stared at the cinder block walls and tried to make sense of the sudden end to their season in an NCAA tournament play-in game at the University of Dayton Arena.

Plagued by uncharacteristic turnovers and an out-of-sync offense, UCLA lost to St. Bonaventure 65-58 on Tuesday.

“Unfortunately in March, there’s a finality to it,” coach Steve Alford said. “And we’ve reached our finality today.”

A chartered plane had been on call to fly UCLA to Dallas to continue the season. Instead, St. Bonaventure, which hadn’t won a tournament game since 1970, will face sixth-seeded Florida in the first round Thursday.

“We just beat UCLA,” Bonnies coach Mark Schmidt said. “How much prouder can I be?”

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Halftime: Turnovers and missed shots have the Bruins down by five

UCLA's Jaylen Hands (4) drives against St. Bonaventure's Idris Taqqee (1) during the first half of a First Four game of the NCAA tournament.
(John Minchillo / Associated Press)

The first half of UCLA’s play-in game against St. Bonaventure in the NCAA tournament hasn’t gone according to plan.

Beset by turnovers and missed shots at the University of Dayton Arena, the Bruins trailed the Bonnies 28-23 at halftime Tuesday.

UCLA went without a field goal the final 14 minutes of the half -- and turned the ball over 11 times in a sloppy, off-kilter effort.

Bruins freshman Kris Wilkes, averaging 13.8 points, didn’t start after he was late for the team bus Monday. He came off the bench five minutes into the game.

Tuesday’s winner will face sixth-seeded Florida on Thursday in Dallas.

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First Four: Radford downs LIU Brooklyn for its first NCAA tournament win

Radford's Carlik Jones is defended by LIU Brooklyn's Jashaun Agosto during the 2018 NCAA tournament on March 13.
(Joe Robbins / Getty Images)

Travis Fields Jr. and Ed Polite Jr. each scored 13 points to lift Radford to its first-ever NCAA tournament win, 71-61, over LIU Brooklyn in the First Four on Tuesday night.

Carlik Jones added 12 points and 10 rebounds for the Highlanders, who move on to face No. 1 seed Villanova on Thursday in Pittsburgh. Radford, the Big South champion, is making its third tournament appearance and first since 2009.

LIU Brooklyn stayed within striking distance for much of the game and got to within a point with five minutes left, but a 9-1 surge by the Highlanders allowed them to close it out.

The Blackbirds went without a field goal in the last seven minutes of the game and shot 30.4% in the second half. Both teams were plagued by turnovers.

Jashaun Agosto scored 16 points and Raiquan Clark added 14 for LIU Brooklyn, which is winless in seven trips to the tournament.

Radford led 30-28 at the end of a sloppy first half after leading by as many as nine. The Blackbirds scored 11 of their points on nine turnovers by Radford but were just 3 for 13 from beyond the three-point line in the half.

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What a long, strange trip it’s been for UCLA

UCLA's Thomas Welsh reacts with teammate Kris Wilkes after a dunk against Arizona on Feb. 8.
(Ralph Freso / Associated Press)

Steve Alford was watching game footage in a hotel ballroom in China, preparing for a season opener only a few days away, when everything changed.

The UCLA men’s basketball coach was informed that a few players had been spotted on surveillance cameras stealing items from a mall near the hotel where the team was staying. Authorities were questioning players.

The jolting development touched off a mad four-month scramble that involved more than the suspension of the three UCLA players who admitted shoplifting. There was a high-profile defection by one of them, LiAngelo Ball, following tweets from President Trump; a brutal travel schedule featuring roughly 23,500 air miles flown for nonconference games; the cancellation of a home game because of wildfires; a three-game losing streak; and a last-ditch effort to make the NCAA tournament.

Nothing has come easy for the Bruins, including their rushed travel arrangements after learning Sunday that they were one of the last four teams selected into the field of 68. UCLA was saddled with an additional game roughly 48 hours later just to make it into the main draw.

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USC is left dumbfounded after larceny by NCAA

USC coach Andy Enfield
(Isaac Brekken / Associated Press)

USC was more than just snubbed. USC was sucker punched.

This isn’t March Madness, this is March lunacy.

The Trojans were not among the 68 teams selected to compete in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, a dishonorable decision that flipped the tournament’s signature song on its head.

This was one shiner of a moment.

The Trojans finished second in the Pac-12 Conference regular season, finished second in the conference tournament and were 23-11 with six wins in their last eight games.

But there was nowhere to fit them in a 68-team field?

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Here’s how UCLA matches up with St. Bonaventure

UCLA coach Steve Alford
(Rick Bowmer / Associated Press)

St. Bonaventure has a fairly proud tradition for a program that has not won an NCAA tournament game since Bob Lanier led the Bonnies to the 1970 Final Four. The New York school has produced NBA players Andrew Nicholson, Freddie Crawford, J.R. Bremer, Whitey Martin and brothers Sam and Tom Stith in addition to Lanier, a Hall of Famer. Former Detroit Pistons coach Chuck Daly also attended St. Bonaventure for one year.

The biggest basketball newsmaker out of the school in recent years might be ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, the NBA journalist known for scooping his competitors. Wojnarowski and his wife, Amy, a fellow St. Bonaventure alumnus, donated $10,000 to fund student travel and ticket costs for the school’s first NCAA tournament appearance since 2012.

The Bonnies have lost their only two games against UCLA, in 1973 and ’74 but say they are emboldened by facing a school that has produced NBA greats Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Walton, among many others.

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UCLA will face St. Bonaventure in an NCAA tournament play-in game on Tuesday

UCLA coach Steve Alford
(Ringo H.W. Chiu / Associated Press)

The normal parsing of UCLA’s NCAA tournament fate no longer applied Sunday.

There was relief as the Bruins learned they had been granted one of the 36 at-large entries near the start of the nationally televised selection show … followed by disbelief a few minutes later when the brackets were revealed as part of the show’s revised format.

UCLA was being sent to Dayton, Ohio, for a dreaded play-in game, the first in the school’s storied postseason history. The Bruins (21-11) will play St. Bonaventure (25-7) on Tuesday evening at the University of Dayton Arena. The winner becomes the 11th-seeded team in the East Regional.

The tournament’s first upset might have come in the stomach of UCLA coach Steve Alford.

“It did surprise me that we were last four in, it really did,” Alford said. “I mean, I thought we were soundly in.”

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Here’s how to pick the winners in your NCAA tournament pool

Virginia's Devon Hall, left, and Isaiah Wilkins celebrate after a win over North Carolina in the ACC tournament championship.
(Abbie Parr / AFP / Getty Images)

The NCAA basketball tournament is many wonderful things. But if you want to win your office pool, you must focus on what it is not.

It is not a Cinderella story.

Despite all the highlights of buzzer-beating tears, obscure dancing mascots and little fellas leaping off the ends of benches, this is not a tournament for lower seeds and long shots.

Since the seeding began in 1979, the top four seeds have made the Sweet 16 more than all the other seeds combined. At least two top seeds have made the Final Four the majority of the time. The worst-ranked team to win a national title was seeded eighth. And, oh yeah, a 16-seed has yet to beat a one-seed in their 132 first-round matchups. Don’t even think about it.

We know you’re dying to pick 11th-seeded San Diego State or Loyola-Chicago to pull a couple of upsets. Don’t.

It is not a star search.

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Defense sets No. 1 Virginia apart from other NCAA tournament top seeds, Villanova, Kansas and Xavier

Virginia players celebrate after the Cavaliers' 71-63 win over North Carolina in the ACC tournament championship game on Saturday.
Virginia players celebrate after the Cavaliers’ 71-63 win over North Carolina in the ACC tournament championship game on Saturday.
(Abbie Parr/Getty Images)

There is nothing flashy or explosive about the way Virginia plays basketball.

The Cavaliers aren’t known for pushing the pace or raining three-pointers. None of their starters rank among the top scorers in the nation.

The team from Charlottesville will enter the 2018 NCAA men’s tournament as a top seed because of something less glamorous.

Defense. Loads of defense.

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Kyle Allman Jr., once an overlooked prep recruit, finds success, joy in Fullerton

Cal State Fullerton's Kyle Allman Jr. hoists his MVP award at the Big West championship.
Cal State Fullerton’s Kyle Allman Jr. hoists his MVP award at the Big West championship.
(Reed Saxon / Associated Press)

Cynthia Allman began a long day’s journey into a blissful night at 4 a.m. in New York on Saturday, when she arrived at the airport to catch a flight to see her son play in the Big West Conference tournament.

“The flight was canceled and rescheduled for 8 a.m.,” Allman said. “Then it was 8:30 a.m. and then 11 a.m. So I took a bus to another airport and caught a flight to Chicago and was able to make a connection to Santa Ana. I got in at 7:30 p.m. and headed to the arena.”

By 8:30, she had reconnected with her husband — who had been on a business trip in Florida — at the Honda Center.

“Not being here was not an option,” Cynthia Allman said.

Kyle Allman Jr.’s trek — from a kid in Brooklyn, hidden in the basketball shadows, to standing in the spotlight, holding up the tournament MVP trophy — has had its own obstacle course.

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A day later, USC remains in shock after missing out on the NCAA tournament

USC's Chimezie Metu drives against Arizona's Deandre Ayton.
(Ethan Miller / Getty Images)

The snub still stings.

On Monday, a day after USC learned it was not among the 68 teams selected to compete in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, coach Andy Enfield continued to express shock and disappointment over the Trojans’ exclusion.

“The feeling is the same,” Enfield said after a brief practice. “It doesn’t go away in a day because we should be in the NCAA tournament.”

USC (23-11) will play North Carolina Asheville (21-12) on Tuesday in a National Invitation Tournament opener at the Galen Center.

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