4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday -- March 17, 1997 NCAA TOURNAMENT Minnesota tames Temple zone; Chattanooga knocks off Illinois KANSAS CITY (AP) - Sam Jacobson hit four of Minnesota's 10 zone-busting 3- pointers and the top-seeded Gophers cruised past No. 9 seed Temple, 76-57. The Gophers (29-3) did exactly what they promised against the feared matchup zone of Temple, which held Mississippi to a Midwest Regional-record low of 40 points in the first round. Jackson was 4-for-8 from behind the 3- point arc and Charles Thomas was 3-for-6. Altogether, the Gophers hit 10-of-23 Yesterday's 3-pointers while hold- games ing the Owls (20-11) to 31-percent shooting. CLEMSON 65, TULSA 59 Clemson shot just 32 percent but held Shea Seals, Tulsa's career scoring leader, to five points in advancing. Terrell McIntyre and Merl Code com- bined for 31 second-half points while Seals spent much of the game on the bench after drawing his fourth foul early in the second half. Seals, who became the school's leading scorer during Tulsa's first-round 81-52 vic- tory over Boston University, shot 2-for-11. Clemson (23-9) shot just 18-for-57 from the field, but Tulsa (24-10) kept the Tigers in the game by making only 13-of-28 free throws. West UTAH 77, NORTH CAROLINA CHARLOTTE 58 All-American Keith Van Horn had 27 points and eight rebounds, and Michael Doleac scored 18 as Utah's quick big men wore down North Carolina Charlotte. Ben Caton added 12 points for the Utes (28-3), who won their 13th straight and reached the final 16 for the second straight year. Tremaine Gardiner led the 49ers (22-9) with 14 points, Dimingus Bundy had 11 and Shanderic Downs 10. Alexander Kuehl had nine points and 11 rebounds. East LOUISVILLE 64, NEW MEXICO 63 DeJuan Wheat, playing with a shoulder injury that required a second cortisone shot in five days, led the Cardinals (25-8) with 22 points. New Mexico (25-8) had a last chance to win but David Gibson badly missed a dri- ving, over-the-head layup with 2.3 seconds left. It will be the fourth trip to the round of 16 in five seasons for Louisville. The Cardinals got a big break when New Mexico's Kenny Thomas fouled out by elbowing Damion Dantzler on the first of two Nate Johnson free throws with 3:53 left. Johnson and Dantzler made all four free throws, opening the lead to six points. TEXAS 82, COPPIN STATE 81 Reggie Freeman scored 22 points and Texas stole an inbounds pass with four sec- onds left as the Longhorns withstood Coppin State's scrambling guards for the narrow victory. The Longhorns are in the final 16 for the first time in seven years, while the Eagles were bidding to become the first No. 15 seed to go that far. With the Longhorns holding a one-point lead, DeJuan Vazquez stole an inbound pass from Fred Warrick with four seconds left to preserve the win. Warrick had just replaced Coppin State star Terquin*Mott, who fouled out. Southeast TENNESSEE-CHATTANOOGA 75, ILLINOIs 63 The 14th-seeded Mocs knocked off another higher seed, ousting No. 6 Illinois after stunning No. 3 Georgia in the first round. UTC (24-10) held Illinois to one basket in the final 10:09 and advanced to the round of 16 for the first time. Against the Fighting Illini (22-10), UTC finished with a 20-4 spurt to put the game away. The Mocs became only the second No. 14 seed to reach the final 16, joining Cleveland State in 1986. Willie Young led UTC with 15 points and the Mocs held a commanding 39-21 advan- tage on the boards. AP PHOTO Wake Forest's Tim Duncan was limited to 14 points as the Demon Deacons lost to Stanford, 72-66, yes- terday. The All-American had an especially frustrating second half, managing to score only four points while grabbing four rebounds. Upsets shake TOURNAM ENT Continued from Page 1B wound up with' 21 points on 7-of-16 shoot- ing, including a pair of airballs on 3-point attempts and a baseline jumper that banged off the side of the backboard. Rebounding continued to be a problem for the Blue Devils, who came in having won nine of 12 since switching to a smaller line- up in late January. Providence had a 43-24 edge on the boards. The Friars had 15 offen- sive rebounds, including six by Brown. Brown, a 6-foot-6 junior college transfer who had been averaging 17 points, gave Providence a needed boost on a day when Croshere, a first-team all-Big East selection, picked up his second personal foul less than seven minutes into the contest. He was assessed his fourth on a charging call with 16:14 remaining in the game and went to the bench. Croshere came back in with 11:57 left and the Friars leading by a point. Providence responded with an 11-5 run, getting a layup and two rebounds by Brown in the surge, to go up 72-65, the Friars' biggest lead to that stage. . But Capel hit a 3-pointer to start a 9-2 run for the Blue Devils. Capel added two more baskets in the surge, which tied it at 74 with 5:34 remaining. Croshere put the Friars ahead to stay when he banked in a 14-footer from the right wing at the 5:13 mark. The basket started an 11-1 run that decided it. Brown followed with a layup on a difficult pass across the lane by Jamel Thomas, and Brown capped the run with a fast-break layup that made it 85-75 with 2:50 left. The Blue Devils got no closer than six the AP PHOTO rest of the way. r Thomas added 17 points, eight rebounds up tournament bracket 0 and four assists, and the Friars also got 12 points and nine assists from God Shammgod. Trajan Langdon and Roshown McLeod contributed 15 apiece for Duke and Chris Carrawell had 12. STANFORD 72, WAKE FOREST 66 Brevin Knight finally got the best of Tim Duncan, and Stanford ended the Wake Forest All-American's quest for a national champi- onship Sunday. The Cardinal, led by their second-team All-America point guard, outlasted Duncan and Wake Forest, 72-66 in the NCAA tour- nament's West Regional. Knight, who roomed with Duncan with the U.S. under-22 team last summer and was beaten soundly in their video games rivalry, displayed the cool collectiveness of an NBA veteran all game long. Duncan, meanwhile, had fits of frustration in the second half, when he scored just four points and pulled down only four rebounds. It was the first time in six games at Tucson that a lower seed won. Stanford, which had not advanced beyond the second round since winning the NCAA title in 1942, was seeded sixth and Wake Forest (24-7) was third. The Cardinal advanced to the regional finals at San Jose to play Utah, which beat North Carolina Charlotte 77-58 in the open- er Sunday. Duncan, who returned to Wake Forest rather than turn pro after his junior season - he is almost certain to be the top pick in the NBA .draft - clearly was befuddled in the second half. He drew double and even triple coverage when he got the ball down low and went 1 1:14 without scoring. ' A one point, after his pass went off the hands of a teammate out of bounds, he waved his arms in disgust. That just played into the hands of the Cardinal (22-7), who won their sixth in a row. Knight had 19 points. At the end of his magnificent college career, Duncan hugged Knight and Stanford coach Mike Montgomery, who coached the under-22 team. He then walked off the court, his head down, as the Stanford players cele- brated around him. Wake staged a late comeback, fueled by Jerry Braswell, who hit three 3-pointers ar* scored eight straight Deacons points in one stretch. A 3-point play by Tony Rutland made it 58-53 with 3:24 to go. The teams traded baskets and free throws until Rutland's two foul shots brought Wake Forest to 68-64 with 23.3 seconds to go. Knight was fouled by Braswell and the senior point guard calmly sank both free throws. The first 10 minutes were about as ugly as college basketball can get, particularly f sloppy Wake Forest. The Demon Deacone had only three points until eight minutes into the game, and they got virtually nothing from anyone but Duncan. Stanford, despite several questionable offi- ciating calls, jumped ahead 19-7 after 12 minutes off steals and quick penetrations. Knight picked up the pace whenever he could, leaving defenders in his wake; the Demon Deacons had nobody in the back- court who could keep up with him and sid. kick Arthur Lee who scored 14 points. Only Duncan's hard work kept Wake Forest close. He drew nine fouls in the first half, scoring six of his 14 points from the free throw line. lie also had 15 rebounds at the half as he lifted Wake within 25-19, even though the Deacons shot 30 percent and missed all seven 3-point attempts. Stanford gave the Pacific-10 four teams in the final 16 of the tournament. The others are conference champion UCLA, California arid Arizona. Providence's God Shammgod lived up to his name, as his team upset the Duke Blue Devils, 98-87 Shammgod contributed 12 points and nine assists to the Friars' winning effort. Kansas eliminates Purdue; Iowa State beats Cincy MEMPHIS (AP) - Paul Pierce scored 20 points and made big plays with the game in the balance as the top-seeded Jayhawks (34-1) advanced to the regional semifinals for the fifth straight year. Kansas beat Purdue 75-61. Saturday's Pierce pulled down 12 games rebounds and stepped up after Purdue, trailing by 10 at half- time, edged in front by a point with 9:58 to play. Raef LaFrentz had 18 points and 11 rebounds for Kansas, and Jacque Vaughn 12 points and nine assists. Chad Austin scored 17 for Purdue (18-12), but went 4-of-18 from the field. ARIZONA 73, COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON 69 Mike Bibby hit three free throws in the final 30 seconds as Arizona survived a scare from the College of Charleston. The Wildcats (21-9) trailed by as many as 10 points during the first 15 minutes of the second half after missing nine of their first 11 shots against Charleston (29-3), which hadn't lost since Dec. 18. But Bibby scored 13 of his 18 points in the final 7:16, getting the Wildcats into their sixth regional semifinal. Miles Simon led Arizona with 20 points, and A.J. Bramlett added 12 points and 15 rebounds. Stacy Harris scored a career-high 25 points for Charleston. Midwest IOwA ST. 67, CINCINNATI 66 Darnell Williams led Xavier (23-6) with 16 points, and Torraye Braggs added 15 before fouling out with 3:25 remaining. UCLA's decisive run started with Henderson's tap-in and ended when the forward broke free for a reverse layup with 12:08 remaining, giving the Bruins a 66-47 lead. ST. JOSEPH'S 81, BOSTON COLLEGE 77, OT Rashid Bey scored 10 of St. Joseph's 12 points in overtime, and the Hawks set a tournament record for long-range shooting to win their 10th straight game. Bey's 3-pointer with 52.5 seconds left in overtime gave St. Joe's a 75-71 lead and set a record for 3- pointers attempted by a tournament team with 43. He then made four three throws in the final sec- onds, including a pair with two seconds left that gave St. Joe's (26-6) its final margin. KENTUCKY 75, Iowa 69 Sophomores Scott Padgett, Wayne Turner and Nazr Mohammed helped defending national cham- pion Kentucky (32-4) beat Iowa (22-10). Andre Woolridge, who scored 29 points in his final game for Iowa, sank a 3-pointer with 49.2 sec- onds to play to cut Kentucky's lead-to 72-69. But Padgett, who had a crucial 3-pointer that put Kentucky up by six with 3 1/2 minutes to play, scored on a short jumper with 28 seconds left to give the Wildcats a 74-69 lead that Iowa couldn't over- Smith breaks win record, surpasses Rupp WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - They came from near and far to cheer their coach on his extraordinary day. Minutes after breaking the record as the winningest basket- ball coach in NCAA history, Dean Smith hurried off the court and ran a gauntlet of former players in the hallway outside the locker room. "I never dreamed they were all coming back." said Smith. "That walk down the hallway was so special. As any teacher knows when a former pupil comes back, it's special," he sai From former stars such as Sam Perkins Bobby Jones and Mitch Kupchak to players-turned-coaches like George Karl to walk-ons and managers, they all saw Smith make history when the top-seeded Tar Heels beat Colorado 73-56 Saturday in the second round of the NCAA tournament. Win No. 877 for Smith put North Carolina (26-6) in the round of 16 for the 21st time in his 36 seasons. He tied Adolph Rupp with 876 wins on Thursday with a 82-74 victory over Fairfield in the first round. "It had never been a goal at any point, I'm not that type of goal-oriented person," Smith said. "Wait. I'd like to win No.AD (this season). That's my goal." The 66-year-old Smith broke the record at Joel Coliseum with his adoring Carolina faithful filling most of the 14,600- seat building just 80 miles from Chapel Hill. Smith is 877-253 as a head coach, all at North Carolina, while Rupp, who retired in 1971 and died in 1977, was 876-