The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 20, 1998 Tar Heels our State S S t,., ig dram GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) --- All year long, ichigan State's Spartans made believers out of the ig Ten and the rest of the country by getting timely ontributions inside and outside. When one facet of the Spartans' game suffered, nother would help make up for it. The formula carried' ichigan State to a share of the conference regular- Cason title and into the NCAA tournament's round of BASKETBALL Hamilton's fall away'' crushes Washington Utah climbs over Mountaineers, 65-62 But in last night's game against top-ranked North ,,arolina, everything fell apart for the Spartans. They missed layup after layup. They were outhustled loose balls. They were dominated on the boards and itscored 40-12 in the paint. They attempted 10 3- >minters in the first half and missed them all. By the time the game was over, the Tar Heels had a 3-58 victory and the Spartans had plenty of questions it no answers. "I don't know if we were a little intimidated or a lit- le nervous or what it was," coach Tom Izzo said, shak- g his head. It was Michigan State's biggest game since 1979, "hen Magic Johnson directed the Spartans past Larry 3ird and Indiana State for the national title. Johnson sat in the stands last night at the Greensboro oliseum but was reduced to the role of a relatively edate spectator as the thousands of Tar Heel faithful atched their team roll to the lopsided victory. "I'm very proud of what we've done," said vAichigan State's Mateen Cleaves, the Big Ten player of he year. "We made the sweet 16, and we were picked o finish eighth in our conference." | Michigan State came in as the nation's fifth-best .bounding team. The Spartans had only been outre- (ounded seven times all season, and never by more han seven. The final numbers last night: North arolina 51 rebounds, Michigan State 33. "It was very frustrating," Michigan State forward *Antonio Smith said. "It just seemed like they were a tep quicker and came up with all the loose balls." North Carolina did most of its damage in the first 'alf, building a 38-24 lead by outscoring Michigan tate 24-6 in the paint and holding the Spartans to just ree offensive rebounds. Michigan State, which made a school-record 3- ointers this season, opened second-half scoring with a asket from beyond the arc, but by then, it was too late. he Spartans were unable to dig themselves out of their ' hole. North Carolina's Shammond Williams drew the assignment of spearheading the Tar Heels' defensive fforts on Cleaves, who had 18 points but missed 14 of Als 21 field-goal attempts. ti Cleaves' teammates didn't fare much better. The partans shot 31 percent, their worst outing since 7nuary. ' "I can't complain about a lot of the looks we had," 6,*Zzo said. "The ball just wouldn't go in the basket." GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Richard Hamilton had never made a buzzer-beater in his life, let alone in the NCAA tournament. Connecticut now has two this decade to get to the final eight. Hamilton's rebound jumper in the lane at the buzzer, Connecticut's third shot in the final eight seconds, gave the second-seeded Huskies a 75-74 victory over Washington in the East Regional semifinals yesterday. Connecticut (32-4) will play top- seeded and top-ranked North Carolina, which beat fourth-seeded Michigan State 73-58, in Saturday's regional final with a berth in the Final Four at stake. "It has been a season of buzzer-beaters and you can add our name to the list," Connecticut coach Jim + ' Calhoun said. "I guess we wanted to be included in everything." Washington (20-10), the 11th seed which had one of the tournament's more surprising runs, tok iots first lead at 74-73 with 33 seconds left on a 3-pointer by Donald Watts. Connecticut called a timeout with 29 seconds remaining. "When you go to the sidelines at a timeout you never think you're going to lose," Watts said. "I thought I put us over the top but they didn't give up and they won." Freshman point guard Khalid El- Amin dribbled the ball near midcourt until there were 10 seconds left. He drove toward the basket and passed the ball to center Jake Voskuhl, whose shot bounced off the rim. Hamilton got the rebound and shot, again with the ball coming back off the rim. After it was tipped from the other side, Hamilton grabbed the loose ball and hit a fadeaway jumper over 7-foot Patrick Femerling, the ball falling through the basket as the buzzer sounded. UTAH 65, W. VIRGINIA, 62 Jarrod West couldn't come up with another miracle for West Virginia, and this time, he even had three chances. Michael Doleac made two free throws with 6.5 seconds remaining and West missed a 3-pointer as time expired as Utah held off the Mountaineers 65-62 in the W Regional semifinals last night. "I had good looks at them, they just didn't fall down for me," said a tear- ful West, whose final 3-pointer would have forced overtime. "I thought he made it," Doleac said. "It hit the front rim. Thank God the clock ran out, their pressure gets to you." Andre Miller, guarding West on the final play, said his main concern was to not commit a foul. "If he makes it, it's OK," Miller said. "If it did go into over- time, we probably would have won." Utah, seeded third, faces top-seeded Arizona tomor- row with a spot in the Final Four at stake. The Sun o Devils beat Maryland 87-79 in the other regional semi nal. ARIZONA 87, MARYLAND 79 There's no stopping Arizona's scor- ing spurts. Playing their closest game yet in the NCAA tournament, the top-seed- ed Wildcats turned their scoring on and off at will, getting a flurry of points when they needed them. And they did against Maryland. Mike Bibby scored 18 of his 26 points in the first half as defendi champion Arizona defeated t fourth-seeded Terrapins 87-79 Thursday night to advance to the Wesi Regional final. The Wildcats (30-4) will play No. 3 Utah tomorrow y. The Utes were 65- 62 winners over 10th-seeded Wesi Virginia. The Terrapins (21-11) were the only team in the field to beat two of the top seeds during the regular sg son, but victories over North Carolina and Kansas couldn't prepare them fox Arizona's lethal transition game. After trailing by 14 early in the sec- ond half, Maryland closed within one with 10:32 remaining. Arizona simply kicked in its speedy offensive game. reeling off nine straight points to put down the Terps' threat. Michael Dickerson had five points in the run that increased Arizo ' lead to 66-56. The Terps never closer than five the rest of the way. AP PHOTO Although Ed Cota took his eye off the bail he and his teammates had little trouble dispatching the Spartans in last night's East Region semifinal. 73-58. Congratulations! The following students will be among those recognized during e Honors Convocation program on Sunday, March 22, 1998. These individuals have demonstrated the highest level of undergraduate academic success by achieving seven or more consecutive terms of all A's and earning the designation of Angell Scholar. The University of Michigan congratulates these students on their superior scholastic achievement and wishes them continued success. Seven Term Angell Scholars Charitha Felix Amerasinghe Gregory Harold Benz Lynne Melissa Blaszak Naomi R. Brenner Kelly R. Brown Kimberly Ann Candido Randall R. Defauw Douglas Frederick Domke* Tammy Marie Durant Steven Allen Gray Ethan David Handelman* Charles Scott Innes John Anthony Kinahan Emily Susan Kniebes Harry Lee* Frederick Allen Link Jesseca Rae Long Jennifer Ann Meddings Nicole Marie Okeley* Lukasz M. Paszek David Alan Peterson* College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Engineering College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters, U-M Dearborn College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Inteflex Program College of Engineering, U-M Dearborn College of Engineering College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Engineering College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Engineering School of Business Administration College of Pharmacy College of Engineering College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Inteflex Program College of Literature, Science, and the Arts School of Business Administration College of Literature, Science, Eight Term Angell Scholars Aaron Elvis Andrus* Joshua Martin Drucker Nicole M.,Freeman Ellen Davina Haskell* Harry Albert Kemp* Kristin Louise Laberteaux* Daniel Jason Levin* Robert Allen Michniak* David James Najarian* Dipak Ratilal Patel* William Robert Prucka* Maria Lynne Sampen* Jennifer Anne Thompson* Elaine Bon-Wen Yu Nine Term Angell Scholars College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters, U-M Dearborn College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters, U-M Dearborn College of Literature, Science, and the Arts School of Business Administration School of Art and Design College of Literature, Science, 6 and the Arts College of Literature, and the Arts College of Literature, and the Arts Science, Science, College of Engineering College of Engineering School of Music School of Music College of Pharmacy Andrew Marc Haidle Scott Travis Lefurgy Shane Paddy Malone* College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and School of Music : College of Engineering ff I ,I I - . 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