8B - The Michigan Daily -- SportsMonday -Monday, January 25, 1999 I Maryland survives OT scare CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - Maryland had always played tough at Clemson - and lost. This time, though, the Terps were prepared to come out winners. "We made it a big issue for us to get the win here," Maryland's Laron Profit said. "It's something we talked about all year" said Steve Francis, who scored 18 points as the fourth- ranked Terps defeated Clemson 81- 79 in overtime yesterday. "But we still tried to look at it as another game. The odds were against them because they were really trying to beat us." Francis made four free throws down the stretch in regulation to keep Maryland in position and Terence Morris had the Terps' final two baskets - including the game- winner with 14.4 seconds left. Morris remembers how Maryland tought back in last year's game at Clemson to tie the score at 65, then get shut out in overtime. "We knew we had to hit the shots, no matter who was going to do it," said Morris, who tied a career high with 26 points. "Fortunately, they called the plays for me." Morris's most important points came in the final minutes. He con- verted Terrell Stokes' 3-point miss to tie it at 79, then hit the winning jump shot for Maryland (6-1 Atlantic Coast Conference, 18-2 overall). Terrell McIntyre led Clemson with 25 points, but missed a 3- pointer and was stuffed on a drive after Morris' game-winner. Clemson (1-6, 12-8) has lost seven of eight. Francis gave Maryland the lead in the final minutes with a key steal and four free throws, the last two putting the Terps up 70-68 with 2:07 left. But all they managed the rest of regulation was Laron Profit's foul shot, and Clemson forced overtime on Andrius Jurkunas' fifth 3-point- er with 14.2 seconds left. Profit's long 3-pointer in the closing seconds failed to hit the rim. Duke wins wild one over Johnnies. NEW YORK (AP) - This was the best game he ever played in, and Elton Brand had to watch the last 10 seconds of regulation and all of over- time from the bench. No. 2 Duke beat No. 8 St. John's 92-88 yesterday in a game in which seven players fouled out and Bootsy Thornton of the Red Storm scored a career-high 40 points. "That was just unbelievable. You can't describe a game like that," Brand said, who had 16 points, 12 rebounds and seven blocks before fouling out. "That was the greatest game I was ever in and we won. When we went down in overtime I thought we might lose, but we still had guys who came through for us." Thornton, a 6-foot-4 junior guard, scored 23 of his team's final 36 points and finished with 12 rebounds for St. John's (16-4). "We didn't have anything to prove. This was just the next game for us," Thornton said, who was 14 of 24 from the field, including 7 of i1 from 3-point range. "We have noth- ing to prove to anybody." When Thornton said that, St. John's coach Mike Jarvis leaned over and added: "That's why he got 40." He got them in bunches. He scored the final eight points of the first half to cut Duke's 10-point lead to 39-37. He scored 14 straight for the Red Storm in one second-half stretch and he scored in overtime, getting six of the eight his team had in the extra five minutes. He is the first St. John's player to score 40 points since Malik Sealy had 43 against Central Connecticut State on Nov. 24, 1990. "He's tough coming off those screens," Duke's Trajan Langdon said. "He gets the shot off so quick and then he knows you're guarding for that and drives strong and gets to the line." The free throw line was where Duke (19-1) struggled until over- time. Thornton gave the Red Storm an 84-81 lead two minutes into over- time. But the Blue Devils made nine of 11 the rest of the way. The last three were by Chris Carrawell over the final 18 seconds after Thornton had pulled St. John's within 89-88 with his seventh 3-pointer. "We wanted to make sure Carrawell stayed in the game," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "We wanted him in at the end." A lot of players weren't around at the end because of fouls. Brand and point guard William Avery were AP PHOTO Freshman forward Corey Maggette and Duke held off a late St. John's comeback to claim a 92-88 overtime victory over the Red Storm in Madison Square Garden. Maryland guard Steve Francis, who is rumored to be leaving for the NBA after this season, scored 19 points in Maryland's 81-79 overtime victory over Clemson. The Tigers looked like they might pull off an upset, after McIntyre canned a 30-footer to go up 79-77 with 2:26 remaining in overtime. That's when Morris struck. "I felt pretty good shooting in warmups," he said. "I had the hot hand early and it just carried over." Maryland coach Gary Williams had visions of another Littlejohn stumble, where the Terps had lost nine of 10 coming in. But their defense and poise kept them close enough for Morris' winning plays. "I think that's one of the hardest things when you're playing on the road and get tied up waiting for the end of regulation there and have to come to the bench and regroup," Williams said. "That's where seniors really come in handy." Clemson turned to its own star senior, McIntyre, in closing moments. McIntyre thought he felt contact on the final play and was upset the referees didn't call any- thing. Tigers coach Larry Shyatt told McIntyre to attack the basket. "I thought it was admirable but (McIntyre) just didn't make the play," Shyatt said. "We left the play on the shoulders of the officials." Morris kept Maryland in it early with 15 points in the first half. But he was mostly quiet after the break. Francis' 3-pointer tied the score at 53, then Profit gave Maryland its first lead since early in the game. There were five ties and five lead changes in the final 11 min- utes of regulation. The Terps shot more than 60 per- cent (14-of-23), committed only seven turnovers, had Francis pull off two highlight film plays and still trailed 38-36 at halftime. Earlier Sunday, ESPN reported that Francis will forego his senior season and enter the NBA draft at the conclusion of this season. gone for Duke, while Ron Artest was among the four St. John's players who fouled out, leaving the game in the hands of the supporting cast, "We won without having our inside presence and our ballhandler in the overtime," Langdon said. "I thought we played good defense but at time we got sloppy. This was a big game for us and we'll get better as we go on." The win was Duke's 14th straight and it was the closest of the streak, with only two of those games less than 20-point victories. St. John's was playing without its leading rebounder, Tyrone Grant, who is sidelined indefinitely with a broken right wrist, and nearly the entire team was in foul trouble in the second half. Still, the Red Storm stayed close. They took a 76-75 lead with 1:37 left in regulation on a three-point play by Artest, who sat out eight minutes after getting his fourth foul. Two free throws by Nate James with 9.3 seconds left gave Duke an 81-78 lead. But Artest, who had missed most of the second half with four fouls, hit a 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds left to force overtime. "Great players do that," Jarvis saiq of Artest's heroics late in regulation. "On the bench he was cheering and coaching but he wanted to go back in. I told him we'd stay close and give him a chance to win it when he got in." Carrawell had 17 points to lead six Blue Devils in double figures. Langdon finished with 15 points and was 7-for-8 from the line as the Blue Devils finished 24-for-37. Artest finished with 22 points, and Erick Barkley had 12 points and 11 assists for the Red Storm. The loss snapped St. John's four- game winning streak and was the fifth straight time it has lost to Duke. The crowd of 19,528 was the first sellout for a college regular-season game at Madison Square Garden since Connecticut-St. John's in 1996. "Coach had told us this would b like a regional final with the atmos- phere and the competition," Langdon said. "He was right." 1. Mizzou snaps Kansas home winning streak AP PHOTO Kansas guard Kenny Gregory has his shot blocked by Missouri's Jeff Hafer. The Tigers upset the 19th-ranked Jayhawks, 7143, and former Wolverine Albert White added 15 points for Missouri. Chun-Ma Taekwondo . Kickboxing Acadamy (734)[994-0400 LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) - Missouri seems to be the only team that knows how to win at Kansas. Brian Grawer scored 16 points and Albert White had 15 as Missouri beat the 19th-ranked Jayhawks 71-63 yester- day, the first win by a league opponent on the Jayhawks' homecourt since the Tigers did it in 1994. "The last couple of years we're the only ones to beat them," Missouri coach Norm Stewart said. "This morn- ing coming over on the bus, I thought, 'If we can't beat them, who's going to?"' But Stewart, the dean of league coaches in his 32nd year, refused to put any special significance in winning at Kansas. 'Twenty years ago, 10 years ago, I might have reacted," Stewart said. "But we're talking about 18-year-old, 19- year-old kids. I'm just really pleased for them. Other than that, my feelings ... It really doesn't matter. As a coach, we look at the schedule as 16 pods. This is one of the pods. You play that one. You try not to let that one affect the next one." Kansas (5-1 Big 12, 13-5 overall) had won 35 straight conference games since an 81-74 loss to Missouri on Feb. 20, 1994. The Tigers (4-2, 13-4) are the only conference team to beat Kansas since the Big 12 was formed, winning once each in 1997 and 1998 at Columbia. Iowa had broken Kansas' overall home winning streak at 62 games, then the longest in the nation, on Dec. 8, winning 85-81. Grawer found White open under the basket for a dunk with 54 seconds left to give the Tigers a 66-61 lead. Kansas apparently was trying to trap at half- court but got its defense mixed up. "We lost Brian a couple of times," Kansas guard Ryan Robertson said, a St. Charles, Mo., native who earned the ire of Missouri fans for choosing the Jayhawks over the Tigers. "He was making some threes and I wasn't mak- ing mine. It is personally disappointing to me. I feel badly like I let my team down. It was my shots at the end that I didn't make that might have made a dif- ference. I've got to think on a different night, I make those shots" Nick Bradford had pulled Kansas to 62-61 with 1:59 to play, but Jeff Hafer scored on a pass from White with 1:29 left, and White made an open shot after Jeff Boschee missed a 3-pointer for Kansas. "It's a huge win for us. We had great defense,' Hafer said. "We worked on it all week. It was one of those things where hard work paid off We had blocks, steals - those things are going to happen when you work hard at it." Kansas scored the first basket, but Missouri led the rest of the way in averting a sweep of the season series. Kansas won in 73-61 at Columbia on Jan. 11, when the Tigers shot 16 percent in the first half. Missouri then lost at Colorado on Saturday before coming back to beat the Jayhawks. T.J. Pugh matched his career-high with 13 points, but had only two in the second half. Eric Chenowith also had 13 points and 13 rebounds. Consecutive 3-pointers by Boschee and Kenny Gregory pulled Kansas to 57-55 with 5:20 remaining. The Tigers led 61-57 with 3:43 left when Keyon Dooling made an arching jumper over the 7-foot Chenowith, but Robertson put back a missed shot at the other en and Kansas closed to 61-59 with 3:08w remaining. t x* + r r s ,,,ae+....... .v,- Receive instruction in: Taekwondo Kickboxing Hapkido Judo Our Cardio-Fit Kickboxing pro- gram takes the music, excitement and energy of aerobics but adds important self-defense techniques like abbing, kicking, punching and oc in You learnwhile you burn at 800 calories per hour! U I Wart d m I