NCAA Tournament Best Games
By Avi Creditor, InsideHoops.com / Mar. 24, 2005
From 64 (well, 65) teams, we're now down to 16. The first two rounds of the 2005 NCAA Tournament are in the books. Below is a quick review of the teams that are still alive, followed by recaps of the best games that took place.
Who’s Still Alive:
Chicago Region: Illinois, Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Arizona, Oklahoma State
Albuquerque Region: Washington, Louisville, Texas Tech, West Virginia
Syracuse Region: North Carolina, Villanova, Wisconsin, North Carolina State
Austin Region: Duke, Michigan State, Utah, Kentucky
Best Games of First Two Rounds:
Wake Forest vs. West Virginia:
111-105. Two overtimes. A buzzer-beating block. Two
last-effort three-pointers to keep the game alive. Six
players fouling out. A seven beating a two. An NCAA
Tournament classic.
If you happened to miss Saturday night’s incredible
battle between the Demon Deacons and the Mountaineers, then
you missed the game of the tournament so far. Wake Forest led
by as much as 14 points in the first half, and by 13 at
halftime, as Justin Gray hit a three-pointer as time expired
in the first half to give Wake full momentum heading into the
locker room. The fact that West Virginia had the poise and
ability to stick around and chip away at the lead in the face
of what appeared to be a much stronger opponent makes their
comeback even more impressive.
At the end of regulation, after West Virginia took
the lead on a beautiful back-door lay-up, and then added free
throws to eventually take a three-point advantage into the
final seconds, Wake Forest senior guard Taron Downey hit a
clutch three-pointer while falling down to tie the game and
send it into overtime.
West Virginia played like the higher seeded team in
overtime, though, by not backing down against the Deacons.
Mountaineer junior Mike Gansey scored 10 points in the
overtime period to seemingly lead his team to the win. But
after West Virginia took a three-point advantage into the
last 15 seconds of overtime, Downey, again, hit a tremendous
three-pointer to tie the game. The senior truly left all he
had on the court. West Virginia had a chance to win it at the
buzzer, but they tried the same back-door play that got them
the lead at the end of regulation, and Wake center Eric
Williams was ready for it, and came up with a tremendous
block on the game-winning attempt.
In double overtime, with stars Chris Paul and Justin
Gray fouled out, Wake simply lacked the star power and
scoring ability to keep up with West Virginia and the white-
hot Gansey, who added nine more points in the second
overtime. Downey’s last-ditch efforts to lead his team came
up a little short, and the heroics of Gansey, Kevin
Pittsnoggle, and Joe Herber gave the Mountaineers the
unbelievable upset.
West Virginia vs. Creighton:
The West Virginia Mountaineers must be out on a
mission to have a full day of ESPN Classic dedicated to them.
Prior to their second-round shocker, they played another
incredible game with the Creighton Blue Jays. All tied up in
the waning seconds, the Mountaineer defense forced a long
three-point attempt that was partially blocked by Tyrone
Sally and fell way short and into the hands of Pittsnoggle.
He threw an outlet pass to Gansey who launched a pass the
remaining length of the court to a streaking Sally, who threw
down a dunk with about two seconds to go for the 63-61 win.
The game started out as a game of runs. Creighton
came blazing out of the gates, scoring the first 10 points of
the game. West Virginia took a timeout and responded with 10
of its own. Creighton threw down five straight points, and
then West Virginia answered with an 11-0 run. The playing
field became a little more level after that. In the last 6:21
of the game, neither team held more than a three-point
advantage. The slam-dunk finale was just a cherry at the top
of the sundae.
Syracuse vs. Vermont:
In hindsight, it really couldn’t have happened any
other way for the Vermont Catamounts. The squad entered the
final season for long-time coach Tom Brennan, and senior
stars Taylor Coppenrath and T.J. Sorrentine, without an NCAA
Tournament win in the school’s history. If Vermont was ever
going to grab that elusive tournament victory it was going to
be with this squad, and they did so in impressive, overtime
fashion, with a 60-57 win over the heavily favored Syracuse
Orange. The fierce Catamount defense kept Syracuse out of
rhythm, forcing 24 turnovers, and sharp-shooting Gerry
McNamara had one of his worst games, shooting 4-18 from the
field for only 11 points. Hakim Warrick played well, scoring
21 points and grabbing 12 rebounds, but the Syracuse senior
could not lift his team the way the two Vermont senior stars
and virtually unknown senior Germain Mopa Njila did, as he
led Vermont with 20 points. As insane as it sounds, the
senior trio of Coppenrath, Sorrentine, and Mopa Njila along
with sophomore forward Martin Klimes accounted for all of the
60 points, and all but three of the team’s shots.
The signature play in the game came in overtime, as
Sorrentine dribbled the ball about seven feet behind the
three-point line at a point straightaway from the basket with
just over a minute remaining in the extra session. When it
seemed like he would call a play or set up the offense,
Sorrentine lived up to his reputation as a shoot-it-from-
anywhere guy, and swished the preposterous 25-footer to give
Vermont a four-point lead and kill the Orange’s spirits (and
a boatload of office pool brackets).
Boston College vs. Wisconsin-Milwaukee:
This was the NCAA’s version of WWE’s Hell In A Cell
match. There were countless elbows to the face, players
diving all over the place, even a crotch-shot, and two
rosters full of battered, drained bodies. All that was
missing was Stone Cold Steve Austin running out onto the
court, flicking off Craig Smith, and then delivering a Stone
Cold Stunner.
B.C. jumped out to an 11-0 lead, and it looked like
UWM’s win over Alabama was a fluke. Then the Panthers busted
out with a ferocious pressing defense that caused B.C. to
turn the ball over 23 times, and completely turned the game
around. Joah Tucker scored 23 points for the Panthers and Ed
McCants added 18, as the Panthers advanced to the Sweet
Sixteen for the first time in school history.
This game was as physical as it gets, with kids
risking their bodies for the chance to add points to the
scoreboard. B.C.’s Jared Dudley went to the free throw line
21 times. UWM, as a team, went to the free throw line 22
times. Even when B.C. rallied late and took a five-point lead
with just under two minutes remaining, part of you knew that
UWM had it all the way. There was no lack of hustle in B.C.,
but the Panthers ran faster and dove farther for all the
loose balls, and just wanted it more all game long. Looks
like the Cinderella stagecoach has taken a detour to
Milwaukee.
Kansas vs. Bucknell:
This one had a little bit of history attached to it.
Kansas’ first first-round loss since 1978. Bucknell’s first-
ever tournament win. The first 14 seed to win a game since
1999. Shock value? Plenty.
Few people gave the Bucknell Bison a chance in their
first-round match-up against the mighty Jayhawks. To be fair,
the Bison had already won tough road games at Pittsburgh and
at St. Joseph’s this season, and were not going to back down
from the challenge. The trio of juniors Kevin Bettencourt and
Charles Lee, and sophomore Chris McNaughton scored 19, 15,
and 14 points, respectively, to lead the Bison in the bracket-
busting shocker.
This game was very close throughout, with Kansas
holding a three-point edge at halftime. The Bison seized the
lead with about 14 minutes remaining in the game, and held
that lead until there was about a minute remaining with the
team up by five. Kansas hit six free-throws in a row, though,
the last two hit by senior Keith Langford, to give Kansas the
lead with 30 seconds to go. However, McNaughton banked in a
jump-hook with about 10 seconds to go to give Bucknell a 64-
63 lead. Wayne Simien, who played like a star for the
Jayhawks, scoring 24 points and grabbing 10 rebounds, had a
final shot to give Kansas the win. He caught a full-court
inbounds pass from Michael Lee, turned at the free throw
line, and shot the ball, a play eerily similar to Christian
Laettner’s famous 1992 game-winner. Unlike Laettner’s
attempt, though, Simien’s hit off the right side of the rim
as the buzzer sounded, sealing the most shocking game in the
tournament so far.
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