The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nevada's rally has South in chaos

Top 4 seeds are (like your bracket) gone after Cincinnati wilts.

- Mark Bradley

NASHVILLE — Nevada just sent the South Regional into history. The event that will convene at Philips Arena on Friday will feature none of the region’s top four seeds. That has never happened. But in the same regional that sawthe first-ever felling of a No. 1 by a No. 16, did you expect any less?

The Wolf Pack overrode a 22-point deficit over the final 11 minutes here Sunday to send No. 2 seed Cincinnati, which was utterly dominant up until the moment when it fell to pieces, to the same place where No. 1 Virginia, No. 3 Tennessee and No. 4 Arizona already resided — in yonder trash can, along with everybody’s bracket.

The Bearcats have made a habit of coming up small in the Big Dance, but they’d never pulled anything like this. They led 10-0 after 116 seconds, 18-4 before the first media timeout, by 12 at the half, by 22 with 11:37 remaining. They were outscored 32-8 thereafter. They lost 75-73.

Cody Martin, usually the lesser scorer among the twins who’d transferre­d to Reno from North Carolina State, made like Reggie Miller in Madison Square Garden, scoring 25

points to go with eight assists. His brother Caleb’s audacious

trey from the right corner with 54.1 seconds left tied the game at 73-73, which beggared belief.

A shaken Cincinnati — hey, who wouldn’t be? — couldn’t even muster a good shot. Jacob Evans III missed from the lane. Cody Martin finally missed, but Josh Hall powered the rebound home. With 9.1 seconds left, Nevada was ahead.

Another Cincy timeout yielded an even worse possession. Backup guard Cane Broome tried to drive but lost the ball. The game ended with Gary Clark, the American Conference player of the year, on the floor trying to grab the bouncing ball. He couldn’t. The buzzer sounded. The Nevada players ran toward the other end, scarcely believing what they’d wrought.

And what had they wrought? Only the second-biggest comeback – tied for second, actually – in NCAA tournament annals. Only the upset that ensures that the highest seed in Philips will be No. 5 Kentucky. To quote Al McGuire after another

astonishin­g Round 2 victory: Holy mackerel.

Gone are the South’s prospects of a threeprong­ed pilgrimage down I-75 – to Atlanta from Cincinnati, Lexington and Knoxville. No. 3 seed Tennessee was ousted by Loyola on Saturday. The possibilit­y of this regional being Tony Bennett’s arrival song crashed when UMBC became the first No. 16 seed to fell a No. 1. The chance to see Deandre Ayton, the nation’s

best player, in Philips before he’s drafted by the Hawks collapsed in a puddle of Arizona self-pity.

Amid the rubble stands Nevada, the No. 7 seed that overrode a 12-point deficit on Friday to beat Texas in overtime and topped that feat two days later.

“We were struggling so much and they were just dominating the backboard,” Wolf Pack coach Eric Musselman said. “The thing that’s incredible

about this game is that we played one of the best defensive teams in the country and had two turnovers. Our pace of play won out.”

Then: “Our locker room – I’ve never seen anything like that in my life. This is something we’ll remember forever.

On a day that had already seen Michigan State fall and North Carolina fall way behind, the Bearcats hit the floor at Bridgeston­e Arena as if propelled by individual jet packs. Musselman called two timeouts, just trying to keep his team close, but he didn’t really succeed. In the end, it didn’t really matter. Spotted 22 points, the No. 2 seed couldn’t hold off a spirited mid-major.

With one spot in the South still to be filled – UMBC was to meet No. 9 seed Kansas State in Charlotte later – Cincinnati was on the cusp of restoring a bit order. Now everything has gone ka-blooey. Kentucky, which was seen as among the nation’s most disappoint­ing teams a month ago, is coming to Atlanta as the favorite. It’s coming off an SEC tournament title, and it just beat Buffalo, which beat Arizona by 21, by 20.

In this crazy-quilt region, being the favorite mightn’t be the best thing. Nothing in the South has gone to form. UMBC beat Virginia by 20. Arizona lost to Buffalo. Loyola has hit two buzzer-beaters and has Sister Jean on its side. And here comes Nevada, improbable in and of itself. Though Caleb Martin did say: “Can we not start from ahead just once?”

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 ?? FREDERICK BREEDON/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Cincinnati’s Jarron Cumberland shoots over Nevada’s Josh Hallon Sunday at Bridgeston­e Arena in Nashville. The Wolf Pack overcame a 22-point deficit to win 75-73 over the second-seeded Bearcats.
FREDERICK BREEDON/ GETTY IMAGES Cincinnati’s Jarron Cumberland shoots over Nevada’s Josh Hallon Sunday at Bridgeston­e Arena in Nashville. The Wolf Pack overcame a 22-point deficit to win 75-73 over the second-seeded Bearcats.

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