USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Purdue leads parade, Michigan straggling

- Eddie Timanus USA TODAY

The event officially known as March Madness won’t get underway until March 14. But the array of wild finishes and buzzer beaters around men’s college basketball on March 5 left little doubt that it is, in fact, March, and the madness just comes with the territory.

Top-ranked Houston provided one of the day’s biggest highlights as Jamal Shead’s last-second jumper gave the Cougars a 69-67 victory at Memphis. Houston completed the regular-season sweep of the Tigers despite the best efforts of Kendric Davis, who scored 26 points including the bucket that had tied the score just seconds before Shead’s game-winner.

Houston already had the top seed in the upcoming American Athletic Conference tournament locked up, but this high-end road triumph likely ensures the Cougars of a No. 1 regional seed regardless of outcome in the league tournament. The only question is whether they could be the top team overall in the NCAA Tournament given losses by Alabama and Kansas during the weekend.

Here are some other winners and losers from March 5.

WINNERS Purdue

Having witnessed a number of failures to close out games, fans of the Boilermake­rs had to be nervous once again as they watched a 10-point lead against Illinois melt away in the final six minutes. But Zach Edey provided a go-ahead basket in the last minute, and a key steal by Ethan Morton enabled Purdue to seal the 76-71 win from the free throw line. The win at least keeps the Boilermake­rs in the conversati­on for a No. 1 seed, as March 4 losses by Alabama and Kansas might have left the door ajar.

Penn State

Trailing Maryland at home by 16 points as the first-half clock ticked toward 0, the Nittany Lions appeared to be on life support as to the NCAA bubble. But a Jalen Pickett 3-pointer from just inside the half-court line as the half expired was the spark Penn State needed. Cam Wynter’s last-second putback completed the second-half rally for the 65-64 win. The Nittany Lions still might need a win or two in the Big Ten Tournament to* feel secure, but with virtually no distinctio­n between seeds 2 and 12, nothing can be ruled out.

North Carolina-Asheville

Three more NCAA bids were officially handed out March 5, starting in the Big South. The top-seeded Bulldogs overcame a 14-point deficit in the second half to outlast Campbell 77-73. Drew Pember scored 29 and Tajeon Jones added 24 for UNCA, which will be making its fifth NCAA Tournament appearance.

Drake

These Bulldogs didn’t need a comeback. Drake and Bradley had split their regular-season meetings and shared the top spot in the Missouri Valley Conference. But the Bulldogs took charge from the outset, building a 20-point halftime cushion and coasting to a 77-51 victory over the Braves to close out Arch Madness in St. Louis. Tucker DeVries led the way for Drake with 22 points.

Kennesaw State

The last of Terrell Burden’s team-high 19 points was the biggest, a go-ahead free throw with a second to go as the Owls defeated Liberty 67-66 to claim the Atlantic

Sun title. It is the first trip to the Big Dance in program history for Kennesaw State.

LOSERS Michigan

In the span of four days, the Wolverines played two games on the road that included three overtimes. First, they fell short in two extra periods March 2 at Illinois after blowing a lead in the first overtime. Then Indiana rallied in the second half against Michigan to extend the game and the Hoosiers prevailed. The two near-misses of Quad 1 opportunit­ies left the Wolverines with some serious work to do in the Big Ten Tournament. At 17-14, they’ll need at least a couple of wins in Chicago to reach the field of 68, and even that might not be enough.

Memphis

A two-point loss to the nation’s No. 1 team isn’t damaging to an NCAA at-large résumé on its face. But the Tigers entered the last day of the regular season with just two quadrant-one wins to their credit. Despite ice-cold perimeter shooting before intermissi­on, they briefly held a five-point lead in the second half but couldn’t close the deal, representi­ng a huge missed opportunit­y and possibly leaving some work to do in the AAC Tournament.

Iowa

You’d be hard-pressed to find a more puzzling team than the Hawkeyes, who shot the lights out at Indiana’s Assembly Hall earlier last week but were outscored by Nebraska at home on March 5. It was a season sweep for the Cornhusker­s against Iowa, which saw its eight-game winning streak at Carver-Hawkeye Arena snapped.

Maryland

The loss at Penn State cost Maryland any shot at a top-four seed and accompanyi­ng bye to the quarterfinal round of the Big Ten Tournament. The Terrapins are not in bubble trouble by any stretch, but their lack of success away from College Park is a major concern.

 ?? TREVOR RUSZKOWSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Michigan coach Juwan Howard leads his players off the court after losing in overtime against Indiana at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.
TREVOR RUSZKOWSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS Michigan coach Juwan Howard leads his players off the court after losing in overtime against Indiana at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.

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