‘Fools gold’ stumps Marquette

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Friday, March 19, 2010
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Marquette forward Lazar Hayward drops to the floor at the end of their NCAA first-round college basketball game against Washington in San Jose, Calif., Thursday, March 18, 2010. Washington won the game 80-78.

— With his team up by 15 points with 13½ minutes left in the game, Marquette coach Buzz Williams should have been feeling comfortable about his team’s chances against Washington.

He wasn’t, and the end result proved him right.

The Huskies’ Quincy Pondexter drove for a short bank shot with 1.7 seconds left, and 11th-seeded Washington extended its late-season rally right into the NCAA tournament with an 80-78 victory over Marquette in the first round of the East Regional on Thursday night.

Lazar Hayward missed a half-court heave at the buzzer for the sixth-seeded Golden Eagles (23-11), who didn’t manage a field goal in the final 4:33. After playing most of the game at the Huskies’ favored up-tempo pace, Marquette’s unlikely late-season surge ended with an offensive stall.

“Coach was drawing up a play, and I told him I wanted the ball,” Hayward said. “It felt good coming off my hand. It was just a little long. I felt like we could have some of the March Madness luck, but we didn’t.”

For most of the second half, it didn’t appear the Golden Eagles would need any luck.

Even when Marquette was up 15 while racing up and down, coach Buzz Williams knew his team wasn’t safe.

“It was fool’s gold for us,” Williams said. “We weren’t doing what we needed to do defensively, and that was because the game was going too fast. (We) had to play our five best players too many minutes in the second half. With the game going that fast, it wears us down. That’s why it’s fool’s gold.”

Hayward scored 15 of his 20 points after halftime, but lost his duel with fellow senior forward Pondexter—his dorm mate on a World University Games team in Serbia last summer. Hayward crumpled at midcourt after his final miss. but his teammates gathered around and raised him up for final handshakes.

Darius Johnson-Odom had 19 points, and David Cubillan added 14 for the Eagles, who also finished strong in the regular season to earn a surprisingly high seed.

The Big East’s top three-point shooting team went 12 for 19, but lost for the eighth time in an astonishing 16 games decided by four points or fewer this season.

Marquette jumped ahead with a 15-1 run shortly after halftime, getting eight points from Hayward while taking a 60-45 lead. Washington answered with a 13-2 run in less than three minutes, and eventually took a 72-71 lead on Turner’s three-pointer with 5:20 left.

Marquette went back ahead on Cubillan’s 3-pointer moments later—but it was the Eagles’ final field goal. Hayward didn’t score in the final six minutes.

Pondexter scored 18 points in his school-record 134th game, and Isaiah Thomas had 19 as the Huskies (25-9) won their eighth straight in dramatic fashion.

Washington made two late defensive stops before Pondexter drove by Jimmy Butler from the perimeter and scored the winner with apparent ease.

“The fear of it being my last collegiate game ever is what propelled me to play well in the second half,” said Pondexter, who had 14 points after halftime. “I had to step up. … It’s one of those storybook shots. I’m just so happy right now, I don’t even know what to say.”

Washington will face the winner of third-seeded New Mexico’s late game against Montana at the Shark Tank, which was filled with Huskies fans. The Huskies led for less than a minute of the entire second half before Pondexter’s final bucket.

“I totally felt comfortable with him with the basketball, thinking he would make the right decision,” Romar said. “To finish that way, and to beat a team that has done so well in those types of games, it speaks volumes about our team, but also where our team is now, as opposed to 6-7 weeks ago.”

Elston Turner had another strong second half for the Huskies, scoring 11 of his 14 points while they rallied. Pondexter also had 11 rebounds while breaking Justin Dentmon’s Huskies record for appearances.

Pondexter’s passion was evident in his five offensive rebounds, including three in the final minutes. He even got a rare technical foul for exchanging words and pushes with Cubillan with 6:43 left.

Washington’s win was a welcome development for the beleaguered Pac-10, which got just two teams into the NCAAs after a down season for the league.

Sporting new haircuts featuring patterns and uniform numbers etched in the left sides of their heads, the Eagles kept pace with the Huskies, but couldn’t execute their deliberate offense late.

“I’ve always told my teammates to keep faith, and anything can happen,” said Thomas, who’s playing through pain in his injured left hand. “I’m in my teammates’ ears all through the game. We’re never out of it. Play defense, and we can come out of it with wins like this.”

reader COMMENTS
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jvldss
Mar 19, 2010 at 11:06 a.m.
Suggest removal

So much for the Big Least being a "power conference".
MU loses to a Pac-10 school after leading by 15.
The Hoyas were a complete joke losing to the 9th place team from the MAC conference.
The Irish were bounced out before their fans even sobered up from St Patty's Day.
And it took Villanova overtime to beat the 15th seed they were playing.
Rather than expanding the field, maybe the NCAA should just leave half the Big Least teams home and award slots to teams that will show up and play.

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