The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Late jumper lifts Tar Heels to Final Four

- By Teresa M. Walker

Roy Williams went all Scarlett O’Hara when a player asked about his North Carolina Tar Heels making the last shot March 26 to edge Kentucky to the Final Four.

And the coincidenc­e that the Tar Heels have been on the other end of similar shots recently, like in the 2016 national championsh­ip and a wild December game against the Wildcats.

“Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a ...,” Williams said with a smile, responding without asking which game his player was rememberin­g as they went to the locker room. “I didn’t care what he was talking about.”

Luke Maye hit a jumper with 0.3 seconds left and top-seeded North Carolina held off Kentucky, 75-73, to earn the Tar Heels’ second straight trip to the Final Four, winning the South Regional.

The national semifinal will be the 20th for North Carolina, where the Tar Heels (31-7) will play Midwest champ Oregon on April 1 in Glendale, Arizona.

North Carolina took control with 12 straight points over the final 5 minutes, a run similar to what it used a week ago to beat Arkansas. The Tar Heels finished this game with a 16-9 run. Kentucky’s freshmen De’Aaron Fox hit a 3 and Malik Monk quickly added two more, one with 7.2 seconds left and defenders in his face to tie the game at 73.

“I probably should have called time out,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “It entered my mind, but they got that son of a B in so quick, I couldn’t get to anybody to do it. I needed to stop that right there.”

Theo Pinson drove enough toward the basket to pick off Maye’s defender, then passed back to Maye.

The sophomore from Huntersvil­le, North Carolina, knocked it down for the win with his feet on the 3-point line.

“I just kind of stepped back, and he gave me the ball and I just shot it, and luckily it went in,” Maye said. “It was a great feeling.”

Maye finished with a career-high 17 points off the bench for North Carolina. Justin Jackson scored 19 points, and Joel Berry II added 11 on a sprained left ankle.

The Wildcats had one last chance, but Derek Willis’ inbounds pass went out of bounds on the far end.

Kentucky (32-6) will miss out on the Final Four for the second straight year. Willis and sophomore Isaac Humphries left the court with towels over their heads, and Fox was the last to leave.

The Wildcats had hoped their talented freshmen would carry them. Bam Adebayo and Fox each had 13 points, and Monk, the Southeaste­rn Conference player of the year, finished with 12. Fox and Adebayo wept side by side in the locker room.

“That shot is just playing back and forth in my head,” Fox said. “It’s going to be difficult to get over.”

Never before had the NCAA Tournament pitted powerhouse programs that have so dominated March. This South final featured Kentucky with the most tournament wins all-time with 124 and North Carolina just behind with 120 (now 121).

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