Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Foes want shinier finish

Tough endings stick with Ducks, Heels

- EDDIE PELLS

GLENDALE, Ariz. - Roy Williams could hear his own footsteps as he padded through the near-silent locker room, still trying to wrap his mind around a question that couldn’t be answered: What do you say to a group of players who did nothing wrong, but lost anyway?

In some form or other, that question has lingered at North Carolina all season. With a win over Oregon in the Final Four on Saturday, the Tar Heels (31-7) will be back to the title game, where, last year, Villanova unraveled their dreams with one dagger of a shot — a game-winning threepoint­er with the buzzer sounding.

“The most inadequate feeling I’ve ever had in my life,” Williams called the aftermath of the game. “What I did is, I tried to tell them, let’s focus on using this feeling as fuel, as motivation, to work extremely hard in the off-season.”

Most of the key players from last year’s Tar Heels — among them, Joel Berry II, Isaiah Hicks and Justin Jackson — are back. They have a group-texting channel named, simply, “Redemption.”

The North Carolina players have walked the fine line this season between the natural inclinatio­n to dwell on the painful loss, and the impossible task of forgetting it.

“A dream was to get here,” Jackson said. “It wasn’t necessaril­y to get back here and get back what we thought we won last year.”

Oregon (33-5) had title dreams last year, too.

The Ducks were a No. 1 seed, but in an NCAA Tournament that veered off the rails, guard Dillon Brooks got upbraided by the losing coach in the Sweet 16, Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski, who lectured him in the handshake line for jacking up (and making) an unconteste­d three-pointer while the teams were running out the clock. Then, the top-seeded Ducks ran into Buddy Hield in the Elite Eight .

They looked primed for another run this season, then big man Chris Boucher went down with a torn-up knee in the Pac-12 tournament, and thoughts of Oregon repeating as a 1 seed went out the window.

Instead, the Ducks were seeded third and largely overlooked coming into this year’s tournament. But now, they’re two wins away from the team’s second championsh­ip. The first came in 1939, the first year of the tournament.

“It was stunning when we found out that day that Chris was not going to be with us,” Ducks coach Dana Altman said. “We just had each of our guys step up and try to do a little more.”

Other things to watch when the Ducks meet the Tar Heels in Saturday night’s semifinal:

Maye Day: Could sophomore Luke Maye be North Carolina’s new go-to guy? Maye hit the gamewinner with three-tenths of a second left against Kentucky in the regional final last weekend. It marked the first time a North Carolina player made a game-winning shot in the last 10 seconds of an NCAA Tournament game since 1990 (Rick Fox vs. Oklahoma). That game-winner came two days after Maye had 16 points and 12 rebounds — his first career doubledoub­le — in a win over Butler.

Hot shot: Oregon’s Tyler Dorsey is shooting 65% (17 for 26) from three-point range in the tournament. He said teams haven’t been stepping out to challenge his shot as much in the tournament, and that’s even more the case as he’s extended his range over the last few weeks. The key to keeping a hot hand? “Nothing to figure out, really,” he said. “I’m just getting a lot of shots.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? North Carolina has most of its key players back, including Justin Jackson. The Tar Heels lost the NCAA title game in heartbreak­ing fashion to Villanova last year.
ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina has most of its key players back, including Justin Jackson. The Tar Heels lost the NCAA title game in heartbreak­ing fashion to Villanova last year.

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