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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Inside the games

The Spokesman-Review

Tournament leaders

Scoring

G.Johnson, C. Florida vs. UConn29
R.Marshall, Oakland vs. Ala. A&M29
R.Ross, Texas Tech vs. UCLA28
F.Garcia, Louisville vs. La.-Lafayette27
C.Krauser, Pittsburgh vs. Pacific27
A.Morrison, Gonzaga vs. Winthrop27

Rebounding

J.Augustine, Ill. vs. Fair. Dickinson15
J.Mendez, Niagara vs. Oklahoma15
A.Hird, E. Kentucky vs. Kentucky14
L.Roberts, Miss. St. vs. Stanford14
N.Fazekas, Nevada vs. Texas13
T.Gray, Oklahoma vs. Niagara13
J.Homan, Iowa St. vs. Minnesota13
C.Smith, Boston Coll. vs. Penn13
R.Turiaf, Gonzaga vs. Winthrop13

Assists

A.Badmus, Bucknell vs. Kansas11
J.Hodge, N.C. State vs. Charlotte9
C.Elliott, Geo. Wash. vs. Ga. Tech8
C.Gaynor, Winthrop vs. Gonzaga8
R.Steele, Alabama vs. Wis.-Milw.8

Start of something good?

Florida found a way to avoid another first-round failure. Now the Gators have to hope this escape will again be the start to a successful NCAA Tournament.

The fourth-seeded Gators blew a 20-point, second-half lead before pulling out a 67-62 victory over Ohio University on Friday.

The last time Florida found a way to scramble out of the first round was in 2000. The Gators beat Butler 69-68 in overtime in the first round that year as a No. 5 seed, and they went on to the national championship game, losing to Michigan State 89-76.

The last three years saw Florida sandwich first-round losses around a blowout win over Sam Houston State in 2003. There was the 83-82 overtime loss to Creighton in 2002 and a 75-60 loss to Manhattan last year, both with the Gators seeded fifth.

Ohio tied the game at 60 with a 25-5 run over a 9:48 span. The Bobcats got into the field of 65 by overcoming a 19-point second-half deficit to beat Buffalo in overtime in the Mid-American Conference championship game.

The Gators closed with a 7-2 run, so instead of two straight comebacks wins for Ohio, it’s a new life for Florida.

Intrastate collisions

There were only two first-round matchups involving teams from the same state.

On Thursday, second-seeded Kentucky beat No. 15 Eastern Kentucky 72-64. On Friday, 10th-seeded North Carolina State defeated No. 7 Charlotte 75-63.

North Carolina State looked to be in real trouble against the 49ers, trailing 36-29 at halftime after Charlotte’s Brendan Plavich went 5 for 7 from 3-point range.

The Wolf Pack put Cameron Bennerman on Plavich in the second half and the senior guard missed his three 3-point attempts in the final 20 minutes.

“I couldn’t breathe out there,” Plavich said. “He did a great job of doing whatever he had to do to keep me from making shots.”

Oakland had its moment

Oakland, which beat Alabama A&M in the opening-round game to reach the main bracket, was the only team in the field with a sub-.500 record.

The Golden Grizzlies (13-19), the champions of the Mid-Continent Conference, lost 96-68 to top-seeded North Carolina on Friday, leaving Bradley from 50 years ago as the only team with a losing record to win a first-round game.

In 1955, Bradley not only beat Oklahoma City in the first round, it defeated Southern Methodist in the second before losing 93-81 to Colorado in the Final Four. The Braves finished the season at 9-20.

The only team in last year’s field with a losing record was Florida A&M, and the Rattlers lost 96-76 to Kentucky in the first round.

Tar Heels play the part

Top seeds Washington and Illinois won their first-round games Thursday by 11 and 12 points, respectively. Duke beat Delaware State by 11 on Friday.

Only North Carolina posted a win that looked more like the scores No. 1 seeds usually put up in the first round.

The Tar Heels on Friday beat Oakland 96-68, a win that improved coach Roy Williams to 16-0 in the first round of the tournament.

Could be bad omen

Connecticut has to hope its closer-than-expected 77-71 first-round win over Central Florida isn’t a sign of what happened last time the Huskies were defending national champions.

In 2000, Connecticut beat Utah State 75-67 in the first round then were eliminated 65-61 in the second round by Tennessee.

The Huskies will play North Carolina State on Sunday in the second round.

“I thought we lost the lead and control of the game because we lost that joy of playing,” Huskies coach Jim Calhoun said. “We talked about enjoying this whole experience. This is our 13th straight opening-round victory, some have been good, some have been awful. I’d say today was an OK performance. We’ll talk about the opportunity that is ahead of us tonight when we meet.”