San Antonio Express-News

A&m-corpus Christi earns shot at Bama

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DAYTON, Ohio — Isaac Mushila had 15 points and 12 rebounds as Texas A&m-corpus Christi held off Southeast Missouri State 75-71 on Tuesday night to earn the first NCAA Tournament win in program history.

Texas A&m-corpus Christi went 3 of 4 at the free-throw line in the final 15 seconds to ice the game and advance to play top-seeded Alabama in the South Region.

“To find a way to win, I couldn't be more excited and more proud for those guys, obviously for the city, for the university and all of the Islander fans that are across the country watching this game,” Texas A&m-corpus Christi coach Steve Lutz said. “They've got to be pretty excited.”

The 16th-seeded Islanders (24-10), winners of the Southland Conference, returned to the First Four for a second straight season and led for all but 23 seconds.

Southeast Missouri State (19-17) erased a 10-point deficit in the opening game of this NCAA Tournament and tied it at 64 when Chris Harris made both free throws with 3:07 left.

Trevian Tennyson scooped in a layup off the glass to give A&m-corpus Christi a 72-69 lead with 22 seconds left, but Phillip Russell drove for a layup on the other end to bring the Redhawks within one.

Jalen Jackson made two foul shots with 14 seconds remaining to extend the lead to 74-71, and Russell came up short on a good look at a 3-pointer with 1.5 seconds to go.

Mushila grabbed the rebound and sank one of two free throws for the final margin.

Jackson led the Islanders with 22 points, going 14 of 18 at the free-throw line.

Ross Williams added 13 points, Tennyson scored 12 and De'lazarus Keys pulled down 10 rebounds.

“It's a surreal moment,” Jackson said. “We were in this position last year, but on the other side.”

Harris scored 23 points before fouling out for No. 16 seed Southeast Missouri State, the Ohio Valley Conference tournament champion.

The Redhawks went only 9 of 20 from the free-throw line and shot 47 percent from the field.

“That's all these guys have done all season long is continue to fight and to claw and make timely shots and make big plays and get defensive stops, put yourself right back in position to maybe take the game,” Southeast Missouri State coach Brad Korn said. “Free throws and rebounding cost us that opportunit­y.”

Pitt holds off Mississipp­i State

Jamarius Burton made a go-ahead jumper with 10 seconds left and Pitt edged Mississipp­i State 60-59 in a backand-forth First Four game at Dayton that featured 21 lead changes — most in the NCAA Tournament in five years.

Mississipp­i State (21-13) had a great chance to win at the end, but Shakeel Moore missed a wide-open 3-pointer from the corner with two seconds remaining off an inbounds play.

D.J. Jeffries' tip-in attempt was off target just before the buzzer.

Nelly Cummings led Pitt with 15 points as the Panthers (23-11) won an NCAA Tournament game for the first time since 2014.

They slotted into the Midwest Region as the 11th seed and advanced to face No. 6 Iowa State on Friday in Greensboro, N.C.

Boston becomes 3-time All-american

Aliyah Boston is now a member of the elite three-timers club.

The South Carolina star was honored for the third straight year as an All-american by the Associated Press on Wednesday. She's just the 10th player to earn that honor three times.

Boston was joined on the first team by Iowa's Caitlin Clark, Villanova's Maddy Siegrist, LSU'S Angel Reese and Indiana's Mackenzie Holmes. Boston and Clark were unanimous choices by the 28-member national media panel that votes in the AP Top 25 each week.

It's the second consecutiv­e season that a player joined the club. Kentucky's Rhyne Howard did it last season.

South Carolina's A'ja Wilson, Baylor's Brittney Griner, Tennessee's Chamique Holdsclaw, Duke's Alana Beard, Oklahoma's Courtney Paris, Oregon's Sabrina Ionescu and Uconn's Breanna Stewart and Maya Moore are the only other players to earn first-team honors at least three times.

Paris and Moore did it four times.

 ?? Darron Cummings/associated Press ?? Texas A&M Corpus Christi's Trevian Tennyson (0) drives past Southeast Missouri State's Adam Larson during the Islanders' victory Tuesday, the first NCAA win in school history.
Darron Cummings/associated Press Texas A&M Corpus Christi's Trevian Tennyson (0) drives past Southeast Missouri State's Adam Larson during the Islanders' victory Tuesday, the first NCAA win in school history.

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