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Thursday, March 20 |
Illinois hangs
on against the Hilltoppers
By Greg
Taylor
[MARCH
21, 2003]
Illinois
won in the first round of the NCAA tourney for third straight time
in the Bill Self era Thursday night with a hard-fought 65-60 victory
over Western Kentucky. Neither team was ever able to put the other
team away, and the game was a one-possession contest with under 30
seconds to go. Brian Cook led the way for the Illini (25-6) with 17
points and 10 rebounds, and the three freshman each played enormous
roles in their first NCAA tournament games. Western jumped out to
leads of 15-9, 17-12 and finally 22-14, and Illini Nation was pretty
quiet in the partisan RCA Dome. However, Illinois responded with a
beautiful 13-0 run and looked in control with a 27-22 lead with
under three minutes to play in the half.
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Several things went Western's
way over the final three minutes, including two Illinois turnovers,
poor boxing out by the Illini on defense and Brian Cook's second
foul with 0.3 seconds left in the half. The score was 31-28 Illinois
at the break, and few in the media or the stands felt like Illinois
had played a great half. Nine first-half turnovers bore out this
point, and coach Self could not have been pleased with the game.
A.D. Ron Guenther, sitting just two seats away, definitely was
concerned, and this LDN writer wondered if Illinois might have just
20 minutes left in their season.
The second half was equally
close and exciting, as both teams jockeyed for control of the game.
Cook picked up his third foul early in the half (18:34 mark) and was
forced to sit for the next 6½ game minutes. During this period, the
Hilltoppers caught Illinois and everyone in attendance knew the
Illini were in for a dogfight. Illinois finally gained an
eight-point lead late, 63-55, with just under three minutes
remaining, but Western refused to quit.
[photo by Tom Seggelke]
Brian Cook and head coach Bill Self
Cook was called for two
really weak and questionable fouls in a span of two game seconds and
fouled out, and after a 5-0 Western run to get to the game to one
possession, panic was in the air. But, panic was not in the mind or
heart of freshman Dee Brown, who calmly handled the ball and drained
two pressure-packed free throws at the 22-second mark to seal the
game for Illinois.
Illinois moves on to face Notre
Dame in the second round Saturday here in Indy. The game is set for
12:10 p.m. Lincoln time and will be seen on CBS, unless war coverage
interrupts the game, in which case ESPN will pick up the game.
[to top of second column in this
article] |
Listed below are five
reasons Illinois turned back the Toppers and lived to see another
day:
1. The freshmen played
like veterans: How about 16 points, eight rebounds and seven assists
for Dee Brown in 38 minutes of action? Want more? How about
James Augustine scoring 10 points and grabbing nine
rebounds, including five huge offensive rebounds? Finally, the
unsung hero had to be Deron Williams, who hit for 11 points,
including 3-3 shooting in the shooting-unfriendly dome. Simply put,
if the freshman play like freshman, Illinois is in class on Friday
and I'm crying in my coffee.
2. Brian Cook
-- Despite some of the more ridiculous foul calls we've seen go
Brian's way this season, Cook still recorded a double-double and was
a very important 4-4 from the free-throw line in the second half.
3. Illinois made their
free throws, going 12-14 for the game, compared with an 8-13 showing
by Western Kentucky. Cook and Brown each went 4-4.
4. Illinois committed
just five turnovers after the break and did a much better job using
most of the shot clock during their possessions in the last 10
minutes. Self was very concerned with lack of execution in this area
last weekend in wins over Indiana and Ohio State, and it is obvious
his team learned and adjusted.
5. Defense, defense,
defense: Illinois held Western to just 12 points over the final 10
minutes of the game and came up huge on defense on several Western
possessions late. Self prides himself in being a defensive team
first, and Illinois was up to the challenge Thursday, especially
late in the game.
Illinois moves on and the LDN moves on with it. Illinois can go to
the Sweet Sixteen for the third straight year with a victory
Saturday -- GO ILLINI!
[Greg
Taylor] |
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NCAA first round
[MARCH
21, 2003]
INDIANAPOLIS
-- Greg Taylor reports on NCAA games played Thursday in the RCA
Dome:
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Game 1
Marquette
|
72 |
Holy Cross
|
68 |
The Golden Eagles of Marquette survived
another great first-round effort from Ralph Willard's Holy Cross
squad and move to Saturday's second-round game with a 72-68 victory.
The game looked early on like blow-out city, as the best team in the
cheese state raced out to a 28-16 lead three minutes before
halftime. However, the Crusaders closed the half on an 8-1 run to
cut the Marquette halftime lead to five.
The second half started off all Holy
Cross, as the 14th seed caught Marquette about halfway through the
second frame and actually led on four occasions in the second half,
including 58-57 with just under five minutes left. However, reserve
Joe Chapman nailed two huge 3-point baskets late, and super
sophomore point guard Travis Diener led all scorers with a game-high
29 points. All-American Dwayne Wade, held scoreless in the first
half, also chipped in 15 second-half points for the Golden Eagles.
Marquette
moves into the second game Saturday versus Missouri. Game time is
set for approximately 2:50 p.m.
Game 2
Missouri
|
72 |
Southern
Illinois |
71 |
In the second game of the day, the
Missouri Tigers defeated the underdog Southern Illinois Salukis
72-71 on a Rickey Paulding free throw with 4.1 seconds left in the
game. The contest was back and forth almost the entire way, with
neither team gaining more than a six-point lead. The first half
ended with the Tigers leading by one, 33-32, and the feeling in the
dome was the game would go all the way to the wire. The feeling
proved to be right. Arthur Johnson scored 10 points in the first
half to pace Mizzou, while Stetson Hairston scored eight in the
first 20 minutes to lead a balanced attack. SIU should have had a
decent lead at the break but made just four-of-11 free throws in the
half.
The second half saw more of the same,
as both teams tried to gain separation from the other with little
success. SIU appeared ready to seal the victory when two Kent
Williams free throws gave the Carbondale Kids a 64-58 lead with five
minutes and change remaining. But Missouri promptly went on an 11-0
run, highlighted by a Jimmy McKinney 3-pointer and inside domination
by Johnson. Southern caught Missouri at 71 on a layup by Jermaine
Dearman, but he was whistled for a very questionable foul at the 4.1
second mark, setting up the Paulding heroics. A 17-foot jumper by
Williams was no good at the buzzer, and the sixth-seeded Tigers live
to see another day.
[to top of second column in this
article] |
Johnson led
all scorers with 24 points, while Paulding scored 19. Dearman had 17
for SIU, and Williams helped out with 16. Missouri will face
Marquette Saturday in the second game of the day.
Game 3
Illinois |
65 |
Western Kentucky |
60 |
[Click
here for game story: "Illinois hangs on against the Hilltoppers."]
Game 4
Notre Dame |
70 |
Wisconsin-Milwaukee |
69 |
The final game featured the Fighting
Irish of Notre Dame and the Panthers of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The
fourth game in Indy on Thursday was just as close as the previous
three and again came down to the final possession. Notre Dame won by
one when UW-M's Dylan Page missed a point-blank layup and time
expired. The fifth-seeded Irish controlled much of the first half,
extending their lead to eight on a couple of occasions, but the
Bruce Pearl-led Panthers refused to quit and used a 7-0 run to the
end the half to catch the Irish at 29-all going into the break.
The second half was again more of the
same, as runs by the Irish were always answered by Panther rallies.
UW-M took the lead in the final 2½ minutes, but Notre Dame went up
one with 32.8 seconds to go on a rebound basket by Torin Francis.
UW-M decided not to call timeout and play for the win in front of
several thousand Irish and Illini fans. Maybe the Illini gods were
looking for Bruce Pearl revenge, as the Panthers missed several
chances to win this game.
Notre Dame
will face Illinois tomorrow at 12:10 p.m. in the only national game
of the day in the NCAA tourney. Sophomore guard Chris Thomas led the
Irish with 27 points and Francis helped out with 23. Ronnie Jones
and Clay Tucker each scored 18 for the Panthers, who were making
their first NCAA tournament appearance ever.
[Greg
Taylor] |
|
|
Articles from the past week |
Thursday:
-
Heartbreaker takes Lynx to consolation round
Wednesday:
Tuesday:
-
Illini take Ohio State
(pictures posted Monday afternoon) -
Congrats to Lincoln College Lynx on their way to national
basketball tourney -
Former Illini Bradford named to
all-rookie team
|
Monday:
Saturday:
-
High
school basketball -
Lincoln
game ticket information -
Illinois blows away
Northwestern -
Big Ten tournament Friday notes -
Saturday's Big Ten tourney schedule -
The Big
Ten is at it again
Friday:
- Big Ten tournament Thursday notes
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Cook's NCAA double-double
leads Illini to victory
Illini survive Western Kentucky 65-60
By LDN staff
[MARCH
21, 2003]
Survived,
escaped, Houdini act, were lucky, were fortunate, were blessed, were
opportunistic, squeaked by, close call, made it by this much, saved
our bacon, weathered the storm, eluded defeat, staved off, snatched
victory from the jaws of defeat, wriggled out of, abided, outlived,
outlasted, and endured. Those are just a few of the words and
phrases that might come to mind when describing Illinois' narrow
65-60 victory over Western Kentucky in the opening round of the NCAA
tournament in Indianapolis.
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Lincoln's Brian Cook became the 15th
player in Illini history to record an NCAA tourney double-double.
However, if not for the freshmen, Cook's and the Illini's season
would have been over. James Augustine, Deron Williams and Dee Brown
united for 37 points, 16 boards and 13 dishes to seal the
Hilltoppers' fate.
WKU was everything they were advertised
to be and more. We're not so sure that they were the best No. 13
seed out there, although a strong case could be made for Tulsa.
It may be that there is so much parity
in today's game that there really are no longer ANY upsets in the
NCAA tournament -- just teams who either played well or didn't. Why
do you think the NBA plays a series of games for their postseason
play? Did you think it was only for the money? One and done changes
everything!
We don't think that WKU got the memo
before the game: "They don't know that this is an exhibition; they
think it's a stinkin' fight!" And for some reason they felt that
Illinois was the enemy. They came roaring out of their locker room
and may have even put some markers on the tote board before the
opening tip, judging by their 20-14 lead by the second television
timeout.
Luckily, by then, the Illini had waked
up and took it home from there. They survived and moved on, and
that's the best you can hope for on any day at the NCAAs!
Stray
arrows
--Brian Cook is now only six points
away from third place on the Illini's all-time scoring list, and
with his 10 boards he now has claimed sixth place on the all-time
rebounding chart.
--Cook also handled reporters'
questions on the officiating with style and grace.
--If Dennis Felton is not one of the
best young coaches in America, we don't know who is.
[to top of second column in this
article] |
[photos by Tom Seggelke]
--How 'bout Illini nation? Our fans are
just totally awesome. Showing the creativity that you would expect
from the Orange and Blue backers, they were found in every section
of the United Center Sunday as the Illinois outlasted Ohio State.
Thursday's opening round game in
Indiana was no different. It was a sea of orange, and it really
helped propel the Illini to victory, especially in the second half.
Illinois needs another strong fan
showing Saturday to even hope to fend off the Irish!
--How many of your brackets are already
busted? We were feeling good with our upset special of Tulsa over
Dayton but then got mauled in the No. 8-No. 9 games. We hate those
8-9 matchups!
--The RCA Dome is just not the best
place to hold a basketball game. Why not move the games to the
beautiful Conseco Fieldhouse and have the sponsors just kick in a
little more loot to offset the difference? You wouldn't see nearly
as much bad perimeter shooting as you see in dome games.
Not only that, but it makes
perimeter-oriented teams play totally differently than they have
played all season. In domes, there is a premium on shot selection.
Being the smart, knowledgeable, loyal LDN fans that you are, you're
saying -- how is that different from any other game during the
season? Great question.
The LDN response would be this: IF you
don't get a lot of points in the paint, and if you don't attack the
basket and get to the line, and if you don't hit your free throws,
you're going to get an early spring vacation. How do we know this?
Just ask Holy Cross or Southern Illinois.
Next up for
the Illini: A Saturday date with the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.
[LDN sports] |
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Announcements
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Lincoln PONY sign-ups
run through March 29 |
[MARCH
6, 2003]
The Lincoln PONY Association
will have its annual spring sign-up this year beginning March 9 and
running until March 29. Sign-up sheets can be obtained at the front
desk of the Lincoln Rec Center. On Saturday, March 29,
representatives of Lincoln PONY will be on hand to assist with
signups.
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Lincoln PONY ball is for both boys
baseball and girls softball, ages 8 through 14.
Additional
information can be obtained at the Lincoln PONY
website and
at http://www.pony.org/.
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