The Day

Duke, Clemson, Syracuse give Midwest an ACC flavor

- By ERIC OLSON AP Sports Writer

Omaha, Neb. — The ACC is looming large in downtown Omaha earlier than usual this year.

The Atlantic Coast Conference regularly sends a couple baseball teams to the College World Series each June. But the field for the NCAA Midwest Region semifinals at CenturyLin­k Center, across the street from where the CWS is played, is an anomaly.

Duke, Clemson and Syracuse making it past the first weekend of the tournament means three teams from the same conference will be playing at the same regional site for only the second time since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985. The other occasion was in 1986, when the Southeaste­rn Conference had three teams in Atlanta.

“We obviously always have our blue-blood powerhouse­s,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said, “but if you can get into the tournament, as competitiv­e as our league is, you're going to have a chance to advance. It's just the type of teams we play, the quality of coaching, the quality of play. The different styles of play that are in our league make it unique, or more unique than some of the other leagues where I think a lot of the teams play almost the same. All of those things help the teams in our league do well in this tournament.”

No. 2 seed Duke (28-7) advanced after blowing out Iona and Rhode Island. No. 11 seed Syracuse (2313), the Blue Devils' opponent Friday night, survived against Arizona State in the First Four before upsetting sixth-seeded TCU and third-seeded Michigan State.

No. 5 seed Clemson (25-9), which plays top-seeded Kansas (29-7) of the Big 12 in the early game today, won over New Mexico State before hammering fourth-seeded Auburn by 31 points.

Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said he never likes to play an opponent in the NCAA tournament that he had already faced in the regular season — which was the case in 2016 when the Orange beat Virginia to get to the Final Four.

Syracuse will be playing Duke for the second time in a month. The Blue Devils won the first game 6044 in Durham, North Carolina.

Boeheim said he talked to members of the NCAA selection committee on Thursday about the quirkiness of the regional. He added that with his team being the last to receive an at-large bid, he didn't voice any complaints.

“Trust me, when I got in I didn't care where we were going or who we were playing or what day it was,” Boeheim said. “We were happy to be in the tournament this year.”

Duke is one of the top scoring teams in the nation at 85 points a game. Senior Grayson Allen, who played on Duke's 2015 national championsh­ip team, leads a lineup that starts four freshmen, including projected high-first round NBA draft picks in big men Marvin Bagley III and Wendell Carter.

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