Santa Fe New Mexican

No. 11 Loyola — the last double-digit seed in the men’s NCAA Tournament— breezes to Final Four

Sister Jean cheers on No. 11 seed’s pounding of Kansas State

- By Gene Wang

TATLANTA he last double-digit seed in an NCAA Tournament that long will be remembered for shattering chalk is headed to the Final Four.

No. 11 seed Loyola Chicago matched three other schools in becoming the lowest seed to reach the last weekend of the season with a 78-62 win over ninthseede­d Kansas State in the South Region final Saturday night.

The Ramblers (32-5), making their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1985, advanced to their first Final Four since winning the 1963 national championsh­ip. They moved on to San Antonio, where in a week they will play the winner of Saturday’s late game

between No. 3 seed Michigan and No. 9 seed Florida State.

The stunning run means the sporting world will be treated to the most famous nun in the land, 98-year-old Sister Jean DoloresSch­midt, who led the Ramblers in prayer, as usual, before tipoff in the locker room.

No divine interventi­on proved necessary at Philips Arena, where an announced crowd of 15,477 witnessed Loyola storm to a 54-33 lead with 13:23 left in the second half thanks to 14-4 surge that included a four-point play from guard Ben Richardson, who was fouled while sinking a fadeaway basket from beyond the arc.

Junior guard Clayton Custer also connected on a 3-pointer in the decisive rush, during which the only field goal for Kansas State (25-12) came via Xavier Sneed’s tip in.

The Wildcats threatened only modestly the rest of the way, getting within 61-48 on Kamau Stokes’s driving layup with 5:09 to play before Richardson’s 3-pointer

on the ensuing possession calmed the proceeding­s for Loyola, which made 12 of 15 free throws over the final three minutes.

Richardson scored 23 points, going 6 of 7 from beyond the arc, to lead the Ramblers, who presumably would have won by an even wider margin had it not been for a 28-2 deficit in points off turnovers.

But Loyola made up for that staggering imbalance with 57 percent shooting, making 9 of 18 3-pointers, and going 15 for 18 at the foul line.

For Kansas State, which got 16 points and six rebounds from Sneed, the South Region final marked the second time in this NCAA Tournament that it had been cast as the villain standing in the way of a far smaller program’s path to further glory.

During the round of 32 on March 18 in Charlotte, N.C., the Wildcats ended the season of Maryland Baltimore County, a nationally embraced underdog success story after it became the first No. 16 seed to beat a No. 1 by shocking ACC champion Virginia, 74-54.

The Cavaliers had entered the tournament as the top overall seed with only two losses amid a record-setting odyssey through the ACC.

The Retrievers’ victory underscore­d the chaotic nature of the South Region, which had its top four seeds bow out before the second weekend of the tournament.

Kansas State dispatched the highest remaining seed thereafter when it outlasted No. 5 Kentucky, 61-58, on Thursday, mucking up the proceeding­s with plenty of jostling throughout and dictating the tempo to its liking.

Loyola coaches and players remained in the arena to watch that game following their 69-68 win against No. 7 seed Nevada, which was labeled a cardiac bunch on the heels of erasing deficits of 14 and 22 points, respective­ly, in the second half to rally past No. 10 seed Texas in the round of 64 and second-seeded Cincinnati two days later.

Scouting Kansas State along with Ramblers coach Porter Moser and his staff was, per usual, Sister Jean, who not only serves as a spiritual good-luck charm but also as an honorary assistant. The longtime basketball aficionado — she played for her high school team in San Francisco from 1933-37 — compares notes with Moser, and the partnershi­p has yielded positive though nail-biting results.

Loyola’s three triumphs entering Saturday night’s region final came by a combined four points, and each thriller featured decisive baskets in the closing seconds, including Donte Ingram’s deep 3-pointer just before the final buzzer for a 64-62 victory over No. 6 seed Miami in the round of 64 in Dallas.

The drama continued for the Ramblers from virtually the moment they arrived in Atlanta.

An escort who was supposed to accompany them on the bus ride from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport to the hotel never showed and, according to Moser, it took roughly 40 minutes and any number of wrong turns before the team finally reached its intended destinatio­n.

“You know, I told our guys, ‘It’s our first thing to overcome,’ ” Moser said earlier in the week, “‘and it’s like getting a couple turnovers early. You’ve got to put it behind you and overcome.’ ”

The Ramblers committed three early turnovers in the regional final, but otherwise the first half began quite nicely for them thanks to 10 consecutiv­e points. Richardson made two 3-pointers, and Ingram added another during the flurry that produced Loyola’s first double-figure lead at 15-5.

A minor push drew Kansas State within seven until the Ramblers answered with consecutiv­e layups to bump the lead to 25-14 with 8:54 to go. The Wildcats. again without ailing top scorer and rebounder Dean Wade, closed within 27-22 several minutes later, but Loyola got consecutiv­e threepoint plays to move in front 33-22 with 2:19 to play.

The half ended with the Ramblers leading 36-24, courtesy of Richardson’s 3-pointer from the right corner. After that shot with 13 seconds remaining, the senior jogged down the sideline smiling confidentl­y toward Loyola fans as they chanted, “L-U-C! L-U-C! L-U-C!”

 ?? JOHN AMIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Loyola Chicago guard Marques Townes delivers an inbounds pass Saturday in the NCAA Tournament in Atlanta. The Ramblers (32-5) matched the lowest-seeded team ever to reach the Final Four, joining LSU (1986), George Mason (2006) and VCU (2011). Those...
JOHN AMIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Loyola Chicago guard Marques Townes delivers an inbounds pass Saturday in the NCAA Tournament in Atlanta. The Ramblers (32-5) matched the lowest-seeded team ever to reach the Final Four, joining LSU (1986), George Mason (2006) and VCU (2011). Those...
 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Loyola Chicago basketball chaplain Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt celebrates the Ramblers’ win with guard Ben Richardson.
DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Loyola Chicago basketball chaplain Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt celebrates the Ramblers’ win with guard Ben Richardson.
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