(15) Texas 98, (6) Texas A&M 96. On a night when Kevin Durant had 30 and 16, and Texas won a classic ... the fact that Acie Law's name is even being brought is up is a testament to how special a player he is. The things he did at the end of regulation and the first overtime were the stuff of legend. I don't mean to short Durant, he deserves every accolade he's getting, but ... Law has a chance to be a special player, too. Stat of the night: Three of Texas's starting five (James, Augustin, and Durant) had 22 or more points.Maryland 85, (14) Duke 77. The fact that Duke was ranked 14th and Maryland was unranked seems a bit ridiculous now, doesn't it? Maryland went into Cameron and put away the Blue Devils, getting 25 from Mike Jones in the process. If Maryland keeps their confidence up, and keeps things rolling ... they're going to make some high-seeded tournaments team's draw much rougher than it should be.
Texas Tech 85, Baylor 74. I've gotta think that Texas Tech's tournament resume is looking pretty good. Not that a win over Baylor is anything special (a win they had to struggle to get), but they're over .500 in a very tough conference, and they've got three wins against top ten teams. That should do it, right?
Penn State 74, Iowa 72. Meanwhile, Iowa's bubble wasn't just popped ... it was obliterated with the force of a thousand sledgehammers. Penn State ... really, Penn State? You want the world to believe you're a tournament team, and you're losing to Penn State? I'm chuckling right now. I am audibly chuckling at the Iowa Hawkeyes.
UMass 102, La Salle 63. UMass pushes their record to 22-7, violating LaSalle and strengthening their cause for a tournament bid. I have a nagging feeling that the relative lack of strength in the A-10 is going to be held against them ... I'd still recommend winning the tournament.
Tennessee 86, (4) Florida 76. You'd have expected a little more from the Gators after their coach outright accused them of not caring about winning their last game ... of course, I suppose it's hard to compete with any team that's getting a pregame peptalk from Peyton Manning and a cheerleading performance from Pat Summitt. By the way, I guess I have to be the one to say it, so fine ... for a 55-year-old woman, Pat Summitt's got a decent pair of legs. Chris Lofton led Tennessee with 21.
(3) Kansas 67, Oklahoma 65. Oklahoma led by fourteen at the half, before the Sooners stormed back to make it close ... I tend to think that the first twenty minutes of the game are more indicative of the real Jayhawks than the last twenty. They've been blowing everyone out recently. They jumped out to the lead against Oklahoma, and let their foot of the gas pedal a little bit. It happens.
(24) Oregon 64, (11) Washington State 59. If they weren't already in the tournament (and I'd think they'd have to be), this should seal the deal for Oregon. They came back from a massive first-half deficit, got it rolling in the second half, and Aaron Brooks put the Ducks ahead by three with 12.9 seconds left. Tajuan Porter had 21 big points for Oregon on just 9 shots.
(1) Ohio State 68, Penn State 60. A win's a win, I suppose, but ... beating Penn State by single digits at home is a cry for help. I guess I should congratulate Penn State for their incredible ability to drag other teams down to their level. Jamar Butler had 18, and Greg Oden had 17 and 14.
Michigan State 64, (2) Wisconsin 55. That's a pretty nice little resume builder, no? The bubble-bound Spartans might've done enough last night to get themselves on the good side of the bubble, knocking off the #2 (or #1, depending on who you believe) team in all of college basketball. Drew Neitzel was incredible all night long, making plays, willing the ball into the bucket, and willing his team to victory. Neitzel had 28, and it left Tom Izzo on the brink of tears. Which I didn't really need to see.
(6) Kansas 71, Kansas State 62. They might as well just go ahead and paint a big Jayhawk in the middle of K-State's home court. This one was a big deal for the Wildcats ... Huggy targeted it as the day they'd finally beat Kansas, and the fans collaborated to all wear black (it's slimming), but unfortunately, none of that means that the Wildcats can compete with the Jayhawks just yet. 17 for Mario Chalmers and 20 on 8-of-11 shooting from Sherron Collins.
(7) UCLA 67, Arizona State 21. "We were fortunate tonight, frankly, to get out of here with the win," UCLA coach Ben Howland said. "But we played well down the stretch and made free throws when we needed them." Translation: "Thank God Arizona State sucks that bad." UCLA needed to come back from 10 down with 11 minutes to play to beat the 0-14 in the conference Sun Devils.
Duke 78, (21) Boston College 70. It would probably be excessively mean to call Duke the Boston Celtics of the NCAA, but ... much like the Celtics did last night, Duke also snapped a losing streak. They did it by beating the stuffing out of the ACC-leading Boston College Eagles. The final margin of victory was 8, but that's deceiving ... Duke led by as many as 24 in the second half.
Texas Tech 77, (6) Texas A&M 75. It's always been Bob Knight's policy to not call timeouts and set up plays at the end of games. His thinking is that his team should be better prepared for that situation than the other team, so don't give the other guys a chance to stop, reset, and think about what they're going to do. He trusts that his guys will know what to do, and it will give them an advantage. With six seconds left to play, A&M's Acie Law came off a ball screen to bury a jumper at the top of the key, and Knight opted against the timeout. Jarius Jackson took it the length of the court and pulled up for a short jumper. Perfectly calm and composed, he stuck it. Tech wins a great game between two very good teams.
























