Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ivy League magic wipes out Auburn

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YALE 78, AUBURN 76

SPOKANE, Wash. — A year ago, Yale’s John Poulakidas and August Mahoney were stuck at home watching the Ivy League champion make a magical NCAA Tournament run.

The two Bulldogs wanted a taste of what that was like. Given the opportunit­y on Friday, they helped Yale become the latest Ivy League champion to bust some March Madness brackets.

Poulakidas scored 28 points, Samson Aletan made a key block during a wild scramble in the final seconds, and 13th-seeded Yale rallied in the final five minutes to take down No. 4 seed Auburn 7876 in the first round on Friday.

For the second consecutiv­e year, the Ivy League Tournament champion took down one of the pre-tournament favorites. Last year it was Princeton toppling Arizona.

This time, it was Yale’s turn.

“Princeton made the Sweet 16 last year and we were at home, they beat us in the championsh­ip, and each and every one of the guys in the locker room were just itching to get our opportunit­y,” Mahoney said. “Our opportunit­y presented itself. We know how good we are, so we believed.”

The Bulldogs (23-9) won an NCAA Tournament game for the second time in school history, rallying from a 10-point deficit midway through the second half. After the final seconds ticked off, the players celebrated on the scorer’s table in front of their fans.

“It’s a great opportunit­y to be here. I think after I hit my first couple shots, obviously the flood gates opened,” Poulakidas said. “But I’m just so glad that we had this opportunit­y first and could capitalize on it tonight.”

Poulakidas hit big shot after big shot. His step-back three-pointer with 2:10 left gave the Bulldogs a 73-72 lead. Yale never trailed again, despite a chaotic final stretch that included Auburn getting off two shots in the closing seconds following a missed free throw, one of which was rejected by Aletan.

Auburn’s K.D. Johnson had a contested look for a winning three-pointer at the buzzer that was offline.

Johni Broome led Auburn (27-8) with 24 points and 13 rebounds, but he was crumpled on the court after the loss. It looked as if he might have injured his right knee in the final scrum. Auburn Coach Bruce Pearl was uncertain when asked about the severity of the injury.

Auburn also played most of the game without starting wing Chad Baker-Mazara after he was ejected for a Flagrant 2 foul in the opening minutes. Pearl agreed it was a flagrant, but didn’t believe it should have been raised to the level of an ejection.

“It was inappropri­ate. Clearly a Flagrant 1. The fact that it was elevated to a Flagrant 2 was a decision that the official had to make, but it obviously had tremendous impact on the outcome,” Pearl said.

Auburn rolled through the SEC Tournament last week and became a favored pick as a team that could take down No. 1 overall seed UConn should the pair end up clashing in the Sweet 16.

But the Tigers failed to get out the first round and joined fellow SEC schools South Carolina, Kentucky, Florida and Mississipp­i State amid the early departures from March Madness.

SAN DIEGO STATE 69, ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM 65

SPOKANE, Wash. — Jaedon LeDee dominated inside on the way to 32 points, Lamont Butler added 15 and No. 5 seed San Diego State held off 12th-seeded Alabama-Birmingham.

A year after marching to the national title game, also as a No. 5 seed, the Aztecs saw a 12-point second-half lead disappear before putting together a late surge on the strength of their star 6-9 forward to avoid a March Madness surprise in the East Region.

Quiet for most of the second half, LeDee scored on three consecutiv­e possession­s for the Aztecs (25-10) after UAB took a 56-53 lead. Butler hit a difficult fallaway, and LeDee climbed for an offensive rebound and was fouled with 1:01 left. LeDee hit both free throws to give SDSU a 66-63 lead, and he added two more with 20 seconds left.

UCONN 91, STETSON 52

NEW YORK — Donovan Clingan scored 19 points and Cam Spencer added 15 as top-seeded UConn began defense of its national championsh­ip by cruising past 16th-seeded Stetson.

The top-ranked Huskies (32-3) will face ninth-seeded Northweste­rn on Sunday in the second round of the East Region at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

Stephan Swenson scored 20 points for the Hatters (22-13), the ASun champions who were making their first appearance in the NCAA Tournament. They never had a chance against UConn, which scored the first eight points and went on to its most lopsided NCAA victory since beating Tennessee-Chattanoog­a by 56 in the first round of the 2009 tournament.

NORTHWESTE­RN 77, FLORIDA ATLANTIC 65, OT

NEW YORK — Ryan Langborg scored 12 of his career-high 27 points in overtime, and ninth-seeded Northweste­rn finally put away No. 8 seed Florida Atlantic.

The injury-depleted Wildcats recovered after squanderin­g a nine-point lead late in the second half. Brooks Barnhizer’s driving layup tied it with nine seconds left.

Boo Buie had 19 of his 22 points after a quiet first half. Barnhizer added 13 points and 10 rebounds for Northweste­rn.

Vlad Goldin had 19 points and nine rebounds for the Owls (25-9).

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