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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Louisville knocks out top-seeded Michigan State

Louisville’s Chane Behanan, center, dunks against Michigan State’s Derrick Nix and Austin Thornton. (Associated Press)
Chris Dufresne Los Angeles Times

PHOENIX – Magic Johnson came to cheer for Michigan State and Muhammad Ali sat in Louisville’s section.

Tony La Russa and Albert Pujols asked for seats behind home plate but settled for two near courtside.

There was plenty of buzz in advance of Thursday’s NCAA West Regional semifinal game at US Airways Center.

In the end, though, taking Louisville’s best jab was just too tall an order.

Led by 6-foot-11 center Gorgui Dieng’s inside presence and seven blocked shots, No. 4 Louisville ran away with a 57-44 victory over top-seeded Michigan State.

Louisville (29-9) advances to face Florida on Saturday for a spot in next weekend’s Final Four in New Orleans. Michigan State ends the season at 29-8.

“It was a bad matchup for us,” Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said.

Dieng didn’t just block seven shots – he affected several others as Michigan State made only 14 of 49 attempts (28.6 percent).

Izzo knew it might be a long night when Dieng, with the shot clock winding down in the first half, made his first 3-point shot of the season.

How many had he attempted?

Answer: one.

“I was wide open and I took it and it went in,” the sophomore from Senegal said.

Last week at practice, Dieng asked coach Rick Pitino if he could take 3-point shots in a game.

“No problem,” Pitino, now 10-0 in the Sweet 16, said he told his center. “As long as you make them.”

After a brutally ugly first half, in which Louisville led 23-18, the Cardinals took control and found some offensive rhythm.

Louisville doubled its halftime lead at 35-25, although Michigan State had one last spurt left. The Spartans answered with a 6-0 run capped by Draymond Green’s emphatic dunk at the 11-minute mark.

Louisville, though, quickly responded with a seven-point run that chased the lead back to 11.

The Cardinals built the lead to 13 with 6:10 left on a Peyton Siva jump shot. Kyle Kuric’s 3-pointer, with 1:08 remaining, pushed the margin to 15 and put an exclamation point on the night.

“We ran out of gas a little bit, emotionally, mentally and physically,” Izzo said. “And Louisville had the gas.”

Chane Behanan led Louisville with 15 points. The Cardinals shot only 38 percent for the game (21 of 55) but made 9 of 23 3-point attempts.

Brandon Wood led Michigan State with 14 points, and Green had 13 points and 16 rebounds.

The second half was a lot easier to watch than the grind-it-out first.

This wasn’t Michigan State’s first NCAA wrestling match. In the 2000 national semifinals, Michigan State led Wisconsin 19-17 at the half.

The difference: Michigan State slugged out a victory that night and, two nights later, beat Florida to win the national title.

Thursday’s game was 5-3 at the under 12-minute television timeout.

Green, the only player to record two tournament triple-doubles since the NCAA started recording assists, clanked his first three shots before hitting a jumper.

Both schools entered with defensive reputations. Louisville gave up 61.1 points a game, while MSU yielded 59.4.

The game was a matchup of NCAA coaching superstars. Pitino won a national title with Kentucky in 1996 and entered with an NCAA tournament record of 38-15. Izzo won his NCAA title in 2000, has been to six Final Fours, and owned a tournament record of 35-13.

Florida 68, Marquette 58: Bradley Beal scored 21 points to lift the Gators (26-10) to a victory over the Golden Eagles (27-8) and set up Gators coach Billy Donovan with a meeting against his old boss, Pitino, in the West Regional final.

The seventh-seeded Gators expanded a six-point halftime lead to double digits, then held off third-seeded Marquette to take their second straight trip to the regional final. Last year, they lost to Butler. This time, they meet Louisville and Pitino.

Beal, a freshman who has NBA written all over him, shot 8 for 10 and had six rebounds and four assists.

Marquette got 15 points from Jae Crowder and 14 from fellow senior Darius Johnson-Odom, but Marquette exited the tournament in the round of 16 for the second straight year.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.