Texarkana Gazette

No. 3 Kansas beats West Virginia, 78-61

- DAVE SKRETTA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas assistant Norm Roberts was sitting inside T-Mobile Center on Wednesday night, scouting potential Big 12 Tournament quarterfin­al opponents, when he learned that Jayhawks coach Bill Self had gone to the emergency room.

Once the shock wore off, and Roberts knew the Hall of Fame coach would be OK, he turned his attention to his team, which was less than 24 hours away from beginning the defense of its conference tournament title.

“When we found out, we didn’t really let the guys know until this morning,” Roberts said after cruising to a 78-61 win over West Virginia on Thursday, “because nothing was concrete that was going to happen.”

It wasn’t until after the Jayhawks had advanced to Friday night’s semifinal against Iowa State that the school said Self would be out for the remainder of the Big 12 Tournament. Still unclear is whether Self will be back for the start of the NCAA Tournament, where the third-ranked Jayhawks are the defending national champions.

“Throughout all the adversity we’ve been through the entire season, this just brings us together,” said Big 12 player of the year Jalen Wilson, who led the top-seeded Jayhawks with 22 points and 10 rebounds.

“It’s bigger than us,” he added. “We play for our entire family. Just another moment to prove how close this group is.”

Gradey Dick had 18 points, Dajuan Harris Jr. added 13 points and eight assists, and KJ Adams also scored 13 points for the Jayhawks (26-6), who beat the Mountainee­rs (19-14) for the third time this season.

Erik Stevenson had 13 points for West Virginia, which still likely secured an at-large NCAA bid with its opening-round win over Texas Tech. Tre Mitchell and Joe Toussaint added 11 points apiece and Emmitt Matthews Jr. had 10.

“This wasn’t the team I had all year,” Mountainee­rs coach Bob Huggins said glumly. “We came out with absolutely no enthusiasm. No pep in our step. It was a bad game. It was a bad game from where I was trying to watch it.”

Kansas officials announced about five hours before tipoff that Self was being treated at the University of Kansas Health System for an undisclose­d illness. The 60-year-old Hall of Fame coach was present for Wednesday’s practice at T-Mobile Center and appeared to be in normal condition when speaking with reporters.

Dr. Steve Stites, the chief medical officer at the University of Kansas Health System, said Thursday that Self did not have a heart attack, which some outlets had reported, but that he remained a patient. Stites did not describe the nature or extent of the procedure, though Self is expected to make a full recovery.

“You always talk about ‘next man up,’ how faces change, expectatio­ns don’t,” said Roberts, who went 4-0 in a similar interim role while Self served a school-imposed suspension this season. “That’s our motto. That’s what we live by.”

Still, the Jayhawks trailed midway through the half Thursday before the Mountainee­rs got sloppy on offense, turning it over 11 times in the first 20 minutes. That allowed Kansas to reel off an 18-2 run.

 ?? (AP photo/Charlie Riedel) ?? Kansas guard Kevin McCullar Jr., left, beats West Virginia forward Jimmy Bell Jr. (15) to a rebound Thursday during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in the second round of the Big 12 Conference tournament in Kansas City, Mo.
(AP photo/Charlie Riedel) Kansas guard Kevin McCullar Jr., left, beats West Virginia forward Jimmy Bell Jr. (15) to a rebound Thursday during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in the second round of the Big 12 Conference tournament in Kansas City, Mo.

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