88 - The Michigan Daify - SPORTSMonday -March 9, 1998 c" Me cgr ttilpand Pizza H 1998 NCAA M Free Pizzas for the best gediction 4 aroina pROl 8. UNC-Charlotte 4 t EE Hartford Civic Center 9. 11inoishica o Top Seed Hartford Conn North Carolina Mar 2 & 14 -5 nceto 133ACC, 33 overal 12. UNLV 4. Michan State Greensboro Coliseurn\ 13. Eastern Mc Greensboro, N.C. Sld Carolina March 19&-21 Big Ten team I 4 I I 4 0 The Contest During the doldrums of an other- wise boring March, The Michigan Daily and Pizza House offer you a wee bit of excitement. What You Win The most accurate prognosticator will receive 10 FREE pizzas, topped with anything you like, courtesy of Pizza House. All other contest entrants will receive nothing. What It Costs Very little. In fact, nothing. It's free. How To Play Here's where it gets a little tricki- er. Fill out the bracket as you would for any other pool. Be sure to write in a pick for every game, even if you're not sure of the cor- rect answer - there is no penalty for guessing. Also, please pick the total number of points for the two teams in the championship game, just in case we have to break any ties. Be sure to write your name and telephone number, somewhat legibly, in the top right corner of the bracket (failure to comply with this stipulation will disqualify you from the contest and will definitely Who Can Play finalist, eight for each regional make the sports editors very You need not be a finalist, 16 for each finalist and 32 angry). Anybody. for the national champion for a University student, faculty or staff total of 192 points. In the event of More Rules member. Employees of Thettal o nts.antsesteto Michigan Daily and Pizza House a tie, the contestant closest to When you've finished filling out and their immediate family, howev- the total number of points scored the bracket, cut it out and drop it er, are not eligible to win. The in the national championship game off at The Michigan Daily's Sports Michigan Daily reserves the right will be crowned the winner. desk on the second floor of the to disqualify a contestant in the As Student Publications Building at event of an illegal entry. Weysueon se 420 Maynard St. (just north of We sure hope not, 'cause we think the Student Activities Building). How to Score we explained it pretty well. But, in All entries must be received by You receive one point for each for case you do, call the Daily Sports 11 a.m. on Thursday, March 12. each correctly picked first-round department at 647-3336 any day Only one entry per person, winner two for each second-round after 4 p.m. Thanks for playing. please. winner, four for each regional semi- Florida State, Western Michigan among surprise teams . KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - While there was little doubt about the No. I seeds for the NCAA tournament - North Carolina, Duke, Kansas and Arizona - the field of 64 still offered some surprises. The top seeds were considered the four best teams in the country for most of the season, but a few of the 34 at- large teams didn't know their fate until yesterday. Among the surprise picks were Florida State, which lost seven of its last 10 games, including the play-in game of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament; Western Michigan, which had an RPI ranking of 59; and Miami, which split its last 10 games and had an RPI ranking of 48. "You have beauty marks and warts on all of those teams," Selection Committee chairman C.M. Newton said of the schools that were consid- ered for the final at-large berths. He cited the strength of schedule and quality wits for Florida State and Miami. Florida State beat Arizona and Connecticut, while Miami also beat Connecticut. The teams that certainly merited some attention from the nine-member selection committee but were not picked included Arizona State, Wake Forest, Hawaii and Vanderbilt. Five conferences are sending five teams each to the tournament - Atlantic Coast Conference, Atlantic 10, Big East, Big Ten and Southeastern Conference - while three are sending four each: Big 12, Pac-10 and Western Athletic Conference. The Midwestern Collegiate Conference and Conference USA each had three. Four schools - Illinois-Chicago, Prairie View, Northern Arizona and seeded UNLV, which won the Western Radford - are making their first tour- Athletic Conference tournament; and nament appearances. Prairie View, fourth-seeded Michigan State, the reg- which is 263rd of 306 Division I ular-season co-champions of the Big schools according to the RPI ratings, Ten, will face 13th-seeded Eastern has the lowest ranking of any team ever Michigan. to make the NCAA tournament. In the other East opening rounds, to Miami hasn't been to the NCAAs be played in Washington, D.C., second- since 1960, but the 38-year absence seeded Connecticut, the Big East regu- includes 15 years - 1971-85 - when lar-season and tournament champions, the school didn't have a team, plays 15th-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson. North Carolina extended its own The other games at the MCI Center fea- record with its 24th con- ture third-seeded South secutive appearance, T road to the Carolina against No. 14 while Arizona tied Richmond; No. 6 Xavier Georgetown for the sec- - _ against No. II ond-longest streak with Washington; and No. 7 its 14th consecutive Indiana, looking to break selection. Georgetown's a three-year first-round run was from 1979-92. losing streak, against No. North Carolina, which 10 Oklahoma. won its rubber game Arizona (27-4), which with top-ranked Duke in has the top eight players yesterday's ACC cham- back from last year's pionship, was given the ^ " d championship team, will top seed in the East play 16th-seeded region. The Tar Heels would play the Nicholls State on Thursday in regional semifinals and finals in Sacramento, Calif. The other matchups Greensboro, N.C., if they win their first are: No. 8 Tennessee against No. 9 two games. Illinois State; No. 5 Illinois, which tied Duke was put at the top of the South Michigan State for the Big Ten regu- region, while Kansas, the only one of lar-season title, against No. 12 South the top four seeds not to be ranked No. Alabama; and No. 4 Maryland against I at some point this season, was placed No. 13 Utah State. in the Midwest and defending champi- In the West's other opening-round on Arizona was placed No. I in the games, in Boise, Idaho, on Thursday, West region. second-seeded Cincinnati faces No. 15 North Carolina (30-3) will open Northern Arizona. Sixth-seeded against Patriot League champion Navy Arkansas will play No. I1 Nebraska, on Thursday in Hartford, Conn. The No. 3 Utah faces No. 14 San Francisco, other games at that site are: eighth- and seventh-seeded Temple plays No. seeded North Carolina Charlotte 10 West Virginia. against ninth-seeded Illinois-Chicago; Kansas (34-3) opens in Oklahoma fifth-seeded Princeton will play 12th- City on Friday against 16th-seeded Prairie View, the Southwestern Athletic Conference champions and at 13-16 the only sub-.500 in the tournament. In the other games in Oklahoma City, No. 8 Rhode Island plays No. 9 Murray State; No. 5 Texas Christian faces No. 12 Florida State, the lowest seeded of the 34 at-large teams; and No. 4 Mississippi plays No. 13 Valparaiso. The Midwest's other first- and sec- ond-round games will be Friday and yesterday at Chicago's United Center. Second-seeded Purdue faces No. 15 Delaware; No. 6 Clemson plays No. 11 Western Michigan; No. 3 Stanford faces No. 14 College of Charleston; and No. 7 St. John's goes up against No. 10 Detroit. Duke (29-3) heads the South region and will open against No. 16 Radford in Lexington, Ky., on Friday. The other games at Rupp Arena feature No. 8 Oklahoma State against No. 9 George Washington; No. 5 Syracuse against No. 12 Iona in an all-New York state matchup; and No. 4 New Mexico against No. 13 Butler. Games Friday at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta feature No. 2 Kentucky against No. 15 South Carolina State; No. 6 UCLA against No. 1I Miami; No. 3 Michigan, which won the inau- gural Big Ten tournament on Sunday, against No. 14 Davidson; and No. 7 Massachusetts against No. 10 Saint Louis. The East regional will be played in Greensboro, the West in Anaheim, Calif., the Midwest in St. Louis and the South in St. Petersburg, Fla. The Final Four is March 28 and 30 at San Antonio with the semifinal matchups East against West and Midwest against South. No. 2 North Carolina captures ACC title, overturns No. 1 D 83-68 GREENSBORO, N.C.(AP)-The Tar Heels (30-3) won their 15th Atlantic Coast Conference tournament yesterday by beating No. I Duke 83- 68, capping a three-day run in which they defeated all three teams they-lost to during the regular season. Antawn Jamison, playing with a painful groin injury, was the hero as he has been all season for his team, scoring 22 points and grabbing a sea- son-high 18 rebounds. Shammond Williams, who scored 25 points in North Carolina's semnifi- nal overtime victory against Maryland, added 19 points as the Tar Heels defended their ACC title. Roshown McLeod led Duke (29-3) with 24 points and Chris Carrawell had 18, but the Blue Devils had anoth- er horrid shooting day - its third straight in the ACC postseason. Duke shot 33 percent and was only I I-of-32 on 3-pointers. No. 7 KENTUCKY 86, No. 15 Sou M CAROLINA 56 No. 7 Kentucky won the Southeastern Conference tournament for-the sixth time in seven years yes- terday, rolling to an 86-56 victory over No. 15 South Carolina. Tournament MVP Wayne Turner scored 18 points and Allen Edwards, who missed the semifinal while attending his mother's funeral, returned to add 15 as Kentucky (29-4) added another SEC championship to its already bountiful collection. The Wildcats won their three tour- nament games by an average of 22 points, the biggest blowout coming against Eastern Division runner-up South Carolina (23-7). The Wildcats gave Tubby Smith a title in his first season. It was Kentucky's 21st tournament champi- onship overall, 15 more than any other school. "Tubby! Tubby! Tubby!" the pro- Kentucky crowd at the Georgia Dome chanted as Smith accepted the cham- pionship trophy. No. 3 KANsAs 72, OKLAHomA 58 Paul Pierce, a likely hero, and unlikely ones Ryan Robertson and T.J. Pugh helped No. 3 Kansas finally solve Oklahoma's collapsing zone defense and beat the Sooners 72-58 Sunday in the Big 12 tournament championship game. With 3-point specialist Billy Thomas sitting out for a third straight game with a groin injury, the Sooners' zone collapsed on All-American cen- ter Raef LaFrentz, holding him to two points in the first half. But Pierce scored 26 points and took charge in the second half to lead a 23-6 run that gave Kansas (34-3) its second straight Big 12 tournament title and the league's automatic NCAA tournament bid. The second-half explosion kept the Sooners (22-10) from avenging the 1988 NCAA title game loss to Kansas on the same Kemper Arena floor.