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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Duke avoids upset, edges Virginia Tech 75-73 in Sweet 16

Duke guard Tre Jones  reacts after scoring against Virginia Tech during the second half Friday of  in Washington. (Patrick Semansky / AP)
By Howard Fendrich Associated Press

WASHINGTON – There was nothing Zion Williamson could do but watch. Once again, Williamson and Duke were at the mercy of an opponent’s last-second shot at the rim. Once again, the Blue Devils and their phenomenal freshmen marched on in March Madness when the ball didn’t drop through.

Williamson and No. 1 overall seed Duke moved into the Elite Eight by erasing a deficit and then holding on to edge No. 4-seeded Virginia Tech 75-73 on Friday night.

Narrow as could be.

The Hokies had their chances in the closing seconds, the final one coming on an inbounds play with 1.1 seconds left. The ball went to Ahmed Hill as he jumped to the basket, but his attempt to tie it somehow fell short from close-as-can-be.

“I’m not gonna lie to you,” Williamson said. “When he caught it, I said: ‘That’s it. We’re going to overtime.’ ”

Hill dropped to the court on his back.

“I just came up short,” he’d say later.

Williams – fittingly – grabbed the basketball and smiled broadly.

It was similar to the way two last-gasp shots went off the rim for Duke’s second-round opponent, UCF.

“The old thing: The operation was a success, but the patient died,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “Their play was a success, but it didn’t work.”

And so now Duke will take on No. 2 seed Michigan State on Sunday with a Final Four berth on the line.

That Coach K and his crew are moving on is thanks in part, of course, to Hill’s late flub, of which Virginia Tech’s Kerry Blackshear Jr. said: “Ahmed is the guy that we definitely want taking that shot. You wouldn’t want it any other way.”

Duke also got by because a pair of 3s by Virginia Tech went awry just before that final miss, one by Hill and the other by Ty Outlaw.

But give plenty of credit to Williamson, and his fellow first-year stars RJ Barrett and Tre Jones. Williamson scored 23 points, Barrett had 18 and a career-high 11 assists, and Jones added 22 points and eight assists.

Barrett made only one shot in the first half, which ended with Virginia Tech up 38-34. But he made five of his first six shots after the break.

“We’ve seen him take over games all year long,” Duke’s Javin DeLaurier said.

Williamson showed off his full repertoire, all of the sorts of skills that made people joke – well, actually, they might be dead serious – that NBA teams would be #NotTryinForZion, tanking away this season in order to get a better chance at taking him with the No. 1 overall pick in the draft.

At 6-foot-7 and 285 pounds but with the agility, speed and flair of a guard, Williamson scored seven of Duke’s first nine points, including one rise-above-it-all putback jam and, later, a 3-pointer. He flew from seemingly nowhere to swat a shot off the glass at the defensive end. He tapped in a no-look layup.

And then, when Duke used a 9-0 run to erase its last deficit and make it 60-52 with 10 minutes left, Williamson was a part of it, naturally.