8B -The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 22, 1999 A Sparty Final Four party There's no tying in 0 ST. LOUIS (AP) - Call Michigan State ugly or blue-collar if you like. The Spartans also have plen- ty of heart and more than a few players, and because of that they're headed to the Final Four. The top-seeded Spartans, who twice trailed by 13 points early in the game, came back to beat No. 3 seed Kentucky 73-66 yesterday and earn their first trip to the Final Four in 20 years. Michigan State plays Duke next Saturday in the Final Four at St. Petersburg, Fla., while Connecticut plays Ohio State in the other national semifinal. Morris Peterson scored 19 points, including six free throws in the final 30 seconds, and had 10 rebounds. Mateen Cleaves had 1 I assists and 10 points. A.J. Granger and Andre Hutson scored 14 each in Michigan State's 22nd straight victory. And everyone hit the boards to help the Spartans (33-4) outrebound a Kentucky team that once had a big edge in that department. It looked early as though Kentucky (28-9) would be going to its fourth straight Final Four. But the shots stopped falling after the defending champi- ons took leads of 17-4 and 19-6. Scott Padgett, who had averaged 19 points in the first three tournament games, was a nonfactor until hitting two late 3-pointers. And Heshimu Evans went scoreless after getting 12 points in the first 10 minutes. Michigan State's first lead, 43-42, didn't come until Cleaves hit a jumper with 15:45 remaining in the game. The Spartans trailed 50-46 with just over -I1 minutes to Play, then held Kentucky to one field goal in the next six minutes to take a 60-54 lead. They led by seven twice, the final time 67-60, and Kentucky got no closer than 69-66 on a Padgett 3-pointer with 18.8 seconds to play. Peterson then hit both ends of a one-and-one to seal the victory, and added two more with 5 seconds remaining. Evans scored nine of Kentucky's first 13 points, helping the Wildcats run their way to the 17-4 lead with just over seven minutes played. But he only had one basket the rest of the half and watched the final 5:36 after picking up his second foul. He got his third foul three minutes into the sec- ond half and his fourth with 6:25 remaining. Michigan State used 3-point shooting and better rebounding to right itself after Kentucky's blitz. The Spartans, who came in averaging four 3-point- ers per game, were 5-of-11 in the half including three by Granger. They wound up 7-of-17 from behind the arc. Granger, Jason Klein and Cleaves hit consecu- tive 3s in the final 1:21 to make it a one-point deficit at halftime. Michigan State missed 12 of its first 15 shots but went 10-for-13 after that. The Spartans also stayed even on the backboards in the final eight minutes of the half after falling behind 15-7 in that category., They finished with a 33-29 advantage. Michigan State's bench contributed 18 first-half points. Granger had nine - all on 3-pointers - and Peterson and scored seven. Kentucky's biggest contributor off the bench was freshman Tayshaun Prince, who scored a dozen - three more than his total for the tournament. The crowd of 42,519 was a record for an NCAA regional. softball By Stephanie Offen Daily Sports Writer Two hours and 20 minutes into the game, it was time to leave. There was no finale, no tournament winner, just a plane to catch. The Michigan softball team (21-5-1) won their second straight tournament yesterday. Well, sort of. After the eighth inning of the Capitol Classic in Sacramento, the tenth- ranked Wolverines and their final- game opponents, No. 21 Iowa, decided to call it quits and claim a co-champi- onship with a, 2-2, tie. Michigan started off the scoring with a run in the first inning. Senior Catherine Davie - who was named to the all-tournament team - walked with two out and then stole second. She was driven home on a double by fresh- man Stefanie Volpe. The Hawkeyes tied it up in the third and took the lead in the top of the sev- enth. But the Wolverines tied it up at 2- 2 when senior Tracy Conrad hit a sacri- fice fly with one out to score sopho- more Kim Bugel. P PHOTO That score held up for one more mile inning sending the two teams home co- champions. But Michigan already had a chance to show their Big Ten foe who the top team in the conference was. The Wolverines played Iowa Saturday night in the semifinals of the is there? Classic and junior Jamie Gillies recorded a shutout with the 2-0 victory. Gillies only gave up four hits against the Hawkeyes, who had to work their way back through the losers bracket to get the chance for the second meeti4 with the Wolverines. "We showed a lot of improvement over the weekend," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "Our defense was shaky the first day, but we made adjust- ments and played good softball the rest of the way." Michigan started their run through the championship bracket with an 8-0 victory over Indiana State on Friday night. Marie Barda improved her record to 7-1 by pitching her seco career one-hitter. The Wolverines then went on to defeat No. 16 Oregon, 7-3, in the quar- terfinals. Led by Pam Kosanke, Davie and Melissa Taylor, Michigan recorded double digits in the hit column for the third straight game. The tournament poll pitted the Wolverines against Baylor, Southern Illinois and Portland State in the first rounds. Davie's solo homerun provided the only score in the Wolverines' 1-0 victo- ry over Baylor. Davie was also the force behind the 5-4, extra inning win over Portland State. Next weekend the Wolverines head to the Boilermaker Invitational. AP Michigan State guard Mateen Cleaves gives a relieved s after Michigan State beat defending champion Kentucky U~~ mUU0EU Blue falls short in Texas tourney U- I T-SHIRT PRINTING * LOWESTPRICES! HIGHEST QUALITY! FASTEST SERVICE! S * 1002 PONTIAC TR. g 994-1367 E ...,, U i By Geoff Gagnon Daily Sports Writer Looking for a bit of redemption this weekend after its winning streak was snapped a week ago by Southern Illinois, the Michigan baseball team traveled to the Lone Star State to begin action at the Texas A&M Classic. But with its play on Friday and Saturday, the Wolverines were left see- ing stars - as well as a new losing skid. In dropping its eighth game in ten tries on Saturday, Michigan's record dipped to 5-9 on the year, with Big Ten conference play set week. to open later this Michigan managed to make it tough for Texas A&M Saturday evening, as the game went to 11 innings before a two-run homer by the Aggies' Steve Scarborough gave Michigan its third loss of the tournament. After a four-run third inning, the Aggies were answered by a similar Michigan outburst in the sixth, as the Wolverines knotted things up at four runs apiece. Bobby Scales, Jason Alcaraz, Brian Besco and Brian Bush all scored on three Michigan hits RICHARDSON'S OP T I C A L Student discounts on eye exams and eyeglasses Great Brands Polo TommyHilfiger Calvin Klein 320 S. State St- (lower level .fDecker Drugs) before strong defense silenced the scor- ing until the game's second extra inning. Michigan's Bobby Korecky got the start for the Wolverines in Saturday's nightcap against Texas A&M and saw his record slip to 1-2 on the season. On the strength of a 14-hit showing, the Aggies were able to tally six runs behind starting pitcher Chance Caple, who managed to strike out seven en route to a 6-4 Michigan loss. The game came on the heels of 6.-2 loss to Nevada-Las Vegaas earlier in the day, as the Runnin' Rebels posted 10 hits to Michigan's five before handing starter J.J. Putz his first loss of the year. Michigan jumped out to an early 2-0 lead, when Scales and Mike Cervenak advanced on a stolen base and a wild pitch, respectively, before scoring in the first. But Michigan's offense would be thwarted on every subsequent turn, as the Rebels used seven hits to collect all six runs in the game's final inning. Michigan's chance to come back came up short in its half of the inning as Cervanek flied out to rightfield, leaving the bases jammed. The win gave the Rebels their second of the five-game event, moving them to 13-16 on the year. UNLV will look to take another from-Michigan as the two teams square off today in the tourna- ment's final round. AP PHOO Duke guard Chris Caraweil and coach Mike Krzyzewskl celebrate after the Blue Devils clinch their first trip to the Final Four since 1994. Blue Devils top Temple [:~ KstzAl migahTf1 u- M I hI A Chun-Ma Taekwondo 9 Kickboxing Acadamy (734) 994-0400 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) - Duke is where everybody expected it to be this season, and where the Blue Devils haven't been since 1994 - the Final Four. "It's great to be at the level Duke has been and we're back there again," sopho- more center Elton Brand said yesterday after the 85-64 victory over sixth-seeded Temple in the East Regional final. The nation's top-ranked team is clos- ing the decade where it was almost every year at the start of the 90s. The Blue Devils (36-1) extended their school-record winning streak to 31 games and will be making their 12th Final Four appearance - the eighth under coach Mike Krzyzewski. On Saturday, in St. Petersburg, Fla., Duke plays Michigan State, which beat Kentucky 73-66 to win the Midwest Regional. The Blue Devils beat the Spartans 73-67 in December. Duke was in the Final Four from 1990-92 and again in 1994, winning the national championship in 1991 anj 1992. "It's been a long time coming and it's something I haven't experienced," fifth-, year senior Trajan Langdon said. "Coming into this game I knew it was my last chance to go to the Final Four." Langdon, a second-team All- America, did something about it with an impressive shooting display against Temple's famed matchup zone defense, going 5-for-6 from 3-point range and finishing with 23 points. '1_:j 1 4 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 jabbing, kicking, punching and blocking. You learn-while you burn at 800 calories per hour! ..i r w. ^ i::E:t STOP GAMBUNG AND START INVESTING 888-(686-8257) @ALL FOR FREE TIALOFFER * MN'? WINUINT PATII U U Join us at UCLA Summer Sessions! REGISTER ONLINE More than 500 courses, including lower division, upper division, and graduate level study. 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