Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

United States

Men’s N.C.A.A. Tournament: North Carolina Ousts Top-Seeded Baylor in Overtime

North Carolina jumped to a big lead, then in overtime held off the reigning champion Bears, who became the first No. 1 seed to be bounced from this tournament.

The University of North Carolina’s men’s basketball team spent part of December being crushed by Kentucky. January brought humiliations at Miami and Wake Forest. February included being embarrassed on its home court by Duke and Pittsburgh and requiring overtime to beat a woeful Syracuse.

Then came March. The Tar Heels went over to Duke and spoiled Mike Krzyzewski’s final game at Cameron Indoor Stadium on March 5. Then, in overtime on Saturday in Fort Worth, they upset Baylor, the No. 1 seed in the East region and the reigning national champion, to advance to the round of 16 in the N.C.A.A. tournament.

Each signature victory is of the stripe that can redeem any misbegotten season. But both? As Roy Williams, who retired as North Carolina’s coach last year but was in the stands on Saturday, might say: “Daggum.”

Advertisement

The eighth-seeded Tar Heels, who blew a 25-point lead with less than 11 minutes remaining in regulation before recovering, will meet either St. Mary’s or U.C.L.A. on Friday in Philadelphia.

They — and any other team remaining in this year’s men’s tournament — might be hard-pressed, though, to author a greater work of suspense than their 93-86 downing of Baylor, the first No. 1 seed to lose this year.

Yes, Baylor won the tipoff, and with Kendall Brown’s dunk off a fast break, built a 4-0 lead in all of 68 seconds. Then U.N.C. seized it and did not even allow the game to be tied until there were 15.8 seconds remaining and Baylor had improbably erased a performance by the Tar Heels that had seemed more likely to wind up in the record books than in overtime.

Freshman Dontrez Styles opened overtime with a 3-pointer and U.N.C. managed — this time — to hold on.

“It was just something,” said Armando Bacot, one of North Carolina’s star players. “It was stressful, for sure.”

In the first half — after which the Tar Heels led by 13 — Baylor struggled mightily behind the arc and its turnovers fueled Carolina’s rise and accounted for 15 of the Tar Heels’ 42 points before the intermission.

So did R.J. Davis, a sophomore from White Plains, N.Y., who scored 30 points to lead U.N.C. by day’s end.


NCAA

Men’s

Basketball:

West

  • 1 Gonzaga
    93

    16 Georgia State
    72

  • 8 Boise State
    53

    9 Memphis
    64

  • 5 Connecticut
    63

    12 New Mexico State
    70

  • 4 Arkansas
    75

    13 Vermont
    71

  • 6 Alabama
    64

    11 Notre Dame
    78

  • 3 Texas Tech
    97

    14 Montana State
    62

  • 7 Michigan State
    74

    10 Davidson
    73

  • 2 Duke
    78

    15 Cal State Fullerton
    61

  • Saturday
    1 Gonzaga
    9 Memphis
  • Saturday
    12 New Mexico State
    4 Arkansas
  • Sunday
    11 Notre Dame
    3 Texas Tech
  • Sunday
    7 Michigan State
    2 Duke
  • Wednesday
     
     
  • Wednesday
     
     
  • Friday
     
     

    Swipe for Other Regions →

    NCAA

    Men’s

    Basketball:

    East

    • 1 Baylor
      85

      16 Norfolk State
      49

    • 8 North Carolina
      95

      9 Marquette
      63

    • 5 St. Mary’s
      82

      12 Indiana
      53

    • 4 U.C.L.A.
      57

      13 Akron
      53

    • 6 Texas
      81

      11 Virginia Tech
      73

    • 3 Purdue
      78

      14 Yale
      56

    • 7 Murray State
      92

      10 San Francisco
      87

    • 2 Kentucky
      79

      15 St. Peter’s
      85

    • 1 Baylor
      86

      8 North Carolina
      93

    • IN PROGRESS
      Halftime
      5 St. Mary’s
      29

      4 U.C.L.A.
      36

    • Sunday
      6 Texas
      3 Purdue
    • Saturday
      7 Murray State
      15 St. Peter’s
    • Thursday
      8 North Carolina
       
    • Thursday
       
       
    • March 26
       
       

      Swipe for Other Regions →

      NCAA

      Men’s

      Basketball:

      South

      • 1 Arizona
        87

        16 Wright State
        70

      • 8 Seton Hall
        42

        9 Texas Christian
        69

      • 5 Houston
        82

        12 U.A.B.
        68

      • 4 Illinois
        54

        13 Chattanooga
        53

      • 6 Colorado State
        63

        11 Michigan
        75

      • 3 Tennessee
        88

        14 Longwood
        56

      • 7 Ohio State
        54

        10 Loyola Chicago
        41

      • 2 Villanova
        80

        15 Delaware
        60

      • Sunday
        1 Arizona
        9 Texas Christian
      • Sunday
        5 Houston
        4 Illinois
      • 11 Michigan
        76

        3 Tennessee
        68

      • Sunday
        7 Ohio State
        2 Villanova
      • Wednesday
         
         
      • Wednesday
        11 Michigan
         
      • Friday
         
         

        Swipe for Other Regions →

        NCAA

        Men’s

        Basketball:

        Midwest

        • 1 Kansas
          83

          16 Texas Southern
          56

        • 8 San Diego State
          69

          9 Creighton
          72

        • 5 Iowa
          63

          12 Richmond
          67

        • 4 Providence
          66

          13 South Dakota St.
          57

        • 6 Louisiana State
          54

          11 Iowa State
          59

        • 3 Wisconsin
          67

          14 Colgate
          60

        • 7 U.S.C.
          66

          10 Miami (Fla.)
          68

        • 2 Auburn
          80

          15 Jacksonville State
          61

        • 1 Kansas
          79

          9 Creighton
          72

        • IN PROGRESS
          Second Half
          12 Richmond
          52

          4 Providence
          79

        • Sunday
          11 Iowa State
          3 Wisconsin
        • Sunday
          10 Miami (Fla.)
          2 Auburn
        • Thursday
          1 Kansas
           
        • Thursday
           
           
        • March 26
           
           

          Swipe for Other Regions →

          NCAA

          Men’s

          Basketball:

          Final

          Four

          • April 1
              Semifinal
             
             
          • April 1
              Semifinal
             
             
          • April 3
              Final
             
             

            The chaos of Saturday’s game was, in many respects, a fitting mark in North Carolina’s topsy-turvy debut campaign under Hubert Davis, who succeeded Williams.

            The Tar Heels started to rise after the 9-point loss to Pittsburgh on Feb. 16 and have lost only once since, to Virginia Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. Krzyzewski marveled over them this month, once his own team, then ranked fourth in the country, was done in by players like Bacot, a 6-foot-10 junior who collects rebounds with the zeal of an Internal Revenue Service agent, and Brady Manek, who transferred from Oklahoma and came into Saturday’s game leading North Carolina in 3-pointers.

            “We knew the potential of this team coming into this season, and we just wanted to turn it around,” R.J. Davis said on Friday. “We knew after the loss to Pitt, that wasn’t the way we wanted to play. So from that point on, I think we just turned it around and started to compete. And everyone bought into their roles and that’s kind of what we’ve been buying into.”

            Helped along by a flagrant foul, Baylor got around to buying into the majesty of being a No. 1 seed. There is only so much a team can do, though, on an afternoon when it trailed by 25.

            Waco-based Baylor, at least, avoided the overlapping indignities of a long trip home after a miserable loss, and, thanks to a victory over Norfolk State on Thursday, the ignominy of being the earliest exiting departing champion in tournament history.

            Very little else went quite as the Bears hoped.

            Baylor could not manage a basket for a stretch of close to four minutes in the second half. U.N.C. took that interlude and scored 13, building a lead of 24.

            Much of that came from Manek, whose 9 points in the first half came to feel small by the end of the second, when he had 17. It is virtually certain that he would have finished with more than 26 points, but he was ejected with just more than 10 minutes to play after a flagrant foul.

            His dismissal proved the catalyst for the kind of Baylor onslaught that, less than two hours earlier, would have seemed like a surefire route for them to Philadelphia.

            One shot after another, one opportunity after another exploited, the Bears looked like the team most expected to swagger through Dickies Arena and advance.

            “We knew that as a team we weren’t going to give up, and we decided to apply pressure a lot more and be assertive out there,” said Adam Flagler, a Baylor guard. “So once we got into those diamonds and traps, we were able to get some stops and get some easy looks, and therefore got the run going.”

            Baylor’s late success in pressing North Carolina, Hubert Davis said, had two consequences: It forced the Tar Heels to speed up and led to turnovers.

            “They did not want to go home,” he said of Baylor.

            Eventually, with less than 16 seconds left, the Bears tied the game at 80, where the score would stay until overtime.

            The 3-pointer by Styles to begin overtime let U.N.C. regain control. Bacot made a free throw. Baylor effectively hung around until 78 ticks remained, with the Tar Heels up by 6 after a flurry of free throws and layups from both teams.

            Then, though, time ebbed further, and the score did not change much, with Baylor, which earned a share of the Big 12 Conference’s regular-season title, squandering chances that could have drawn it closer to salvaging an afternoon and a season.

            “At the end of the day, it’s hard making shots in that second game, and both of us don’t have deep benches and usually the numbers will probably back that up,” said Scott Drew, Baylor’s coach. “But they had two guys that came out of the gate shooting it well.”

            Drew said he thought his team had displayed “the heart of a champion” by staging the comeback it did.

            But North Carolina, a team maybe to forget not long ago, became the program to play on in March.

            Ron Jenkins/Getty Images

            Soon after Baylor was ousted from the tournament, Kansas avoided being another No. 1 seed from the Big 12 Conference to go out in similar fashion.

            Kansas fended off ninth-seeded Creighton, 79-72, in the Midwest region in Fort Worth. The Jayhawks, an experienced team that features seven seniors, advance to face the winner between No. 4 Providence and No. 13 Richmond. Kansas had lost its last two round of 32 games, but advanced to the final 16 for the third time in five years and the 24th time overall.

            With the victory, Kansas (30-6) tied Kentucky for the most men’s Division I victories all time at 2,352. Kentucky, a No. 2 seed, was stunned in the first round by 15th-seeded St. Peter’s on Thursday, so the Jayhawks can surpass the Wildcats in this tournament.

            North Carolina ranks third with 2,320 victories.

            After Kansas led by as many as 9 points, Creighton freshman Trey Alexander (14 points) hit a long 3-pointer over Remy Martin to cut the deficit to 73-70. Creighton big man KeyShawn Feazell scored on a layup off a dribble penetration pass from Alex O’Connell (16 points) to slice it to 73-72.

            After an errant pass by Alexander, Kansas’ Ochai Agbaji stole the ball and scored on a wide-open dunk in transition to give Kansas a 75-72 edge. Agbaji, the Big 12 Conference player of the year and a projected N.B.A. lottery pick, finished with 15 points and eight rebounds.

            Kansas big man David McCormack then swatted an attempted layup by Alexander under the basket, and Kansas got the ball back.

            Martin (20 points, 7 rebounds) extended the lead with two free throws and Jalen Wilson hit two more to make it 79-72. Wilson finished with 14 points and 14 rebounds. Kansas went 19 of 20 from the foul line.

            Creighton freshman Arthur Kaluma put on an impressive performance by posting 24 points and 12 rebounds, the highest scoring output for a Creighton freshman ever in the N.C.A.A. tournament.

            Creighton (23-12) played without its defensive anchor, the 7-foot-1 sophomore center Ryan Kalkbrenner, who injured his left knee during the team’s first-round victory Thursday against San Diego State. Kalkbrenner averages 13.1 points, 7.7 rebounds and 2.9 blocks. Fortunately for Kalkbrenner, his injury did not appear to be a torn ligament.

            Advertisement

            Latest Tweets

            You May Also Like

            World

            For many years we have seen how the Soft Power used by the Kremlin works exclusively through culture, exhibitions, musical groups presentations, etc. It...

            United States

            A child’s advice for coping with anxiety has gone viral after his mother shared it on Twitter. (Hint: It involves doughnuts, dinosaurs and Dolly...

            United States

            As health care workers prepare to enter the third year of the pandemic, we are experiencing disillusionment and burnout on an extraordinary scale. Many...

            United States

            In June a statistic floated across my desk that startled me. In 2020, the number of miles Americans drove fell 13 percent because of...

            Copyright © 2021 - New York Globe