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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Scheyer, Smith lead Duke back to Final Four

Ken Tysiac Charlotte Observer

HOUSTON – Duke senior guard Jon Scheyer fiddled absently Sunday evening with the loop he’d cut from the net at Reliant Stadium that represented a lifetime goal fulfilled.

A baseball cap that proclaimed Duke regional champions sat on Scheyer’s left knee as the last few reporters hung around the locker room. Scheyer and junior backcourt partner Nolan Smith had just shredded Baylor’s zone defense, combining for 49 points to lift Duke to a 78-71 win in the NCAA tournament’s South Regional final.

The win propelled top-seeded Duke (33-5) into its first Final Four in six years. The Blue Devils will meet West Virginia, the No. 2 seed out of the East Regional, on Saturday in the NCAA semifinals in Indianapolis.

“It’s a dream come true,” Scheyer said. “It just is. To get that win, we had to work our butts off for it, and it felt great.”

Smith and Scheyer carried the Blue Devils, combining for nine of Duke’s 11 3-point goals against a Baylor zone defense that held Duke to 11-for-38 shooting from two-point range.

With a career-high 29 points, Smith kept talented, No. 3 seed Baylor (28-8) from running away with the win early.

He also put Duke ahead to stay after going to the free throw line with the Bears leading by a point with 3 minutes, 36 seconds remaining.

Smith made the first free throw to tie the game, but missed the second. Teammate Lance Thomas tipped the rebound free and dug the ball off the floor. He passed quickly to Kyle Singler, who found Smith open in front of the Duke bench.

Coach Mike Krzyzewski immediately yelled for Smith to shoot it.

He did, sinking a 3-pointer that gave Duke the lead, and then shot Krzyzewski a smile.

On Duke’s next possession, Brian Zoubek passed out to Scheyer in the short corner opposite the Blue Devils’ bench. Scheyer, who’s struggled with his shooting for most of the postseason, drilled a 3-pointer and ran back down the court pumping his fist.

Duke led 67-61 with 2:38 remaining, and Indianapolis was coming into focus.

“That kind of took the wind out of them a little bit,” Zoubek said. “I think it was a little bit of a dagger.”

For much of the game it appeared that Baylor might put the dagger into Duke because of Blue Devils forward Singler’s struggles. Singler was held to five points – all on free throws – as he missed all 10 of his field goal attempts.

He spent much of the game chasing around shooting guard LaceDarius Dunn, who led Baylor with 22 points but missed six of his eight 3-point attempts against Singler, who’s 6-foot-8.

But Singler, who usually scores easily inside against smaller defenders, couldn’t get a shot to fall against a defense that started players measuring 7-foot, 6-10 and 6-10.

“It was frustrating,” Singler said. “But the good sign for our team was we played through it. … It didn’t bother us at all. We were able to keep playing, and it shows the closeness of our group.”

Dunn led Baylor with 22 points.

This will be Krzyzewski’s 11th Final Four trip in 30 seasons at Duke. It comes after four years of steady improvement in Duke’s win-loss record and NCAA tournament results over the careers of seniors Scheyer, Zoubek and Thomas.

“This team from the beginning of this tournament has been living in the moment, really enjoying every single game, and you know, just playing hard,” Smith said. “And it just feels great right now.”