The Arizona Republic

Webber’s TO among iconic March Madness moments

- Dave Skretta PHOTO AP FILE

The most famous timeout called in the history of the NCAA Tournament has been variously called the biggest mistake, the biggest choke, the most embarrassi­ng gaffe, all because that timeout didn’t actually exist.

Eric Montross calls it a perfectly executed defensive strategy.

It was the waning seconds of the 1993 title game, and Michigan star Chris Webber had just pulled down a rebound off a missed foul shot by North Carolina with 20 seconds left. He appeared to travel and signal for timeout, then ultimately dribbled up the floor with all the grace of a baby giraffe before whirling around amid a double-team and calling again for timeout.

Fans tend to remember that much. They also remember the incredulou­s voices of CBS broadcaste­rs Jim Nantz and Billy Packer exclaiming that the Wolverines had no timeouts, and the ensuing technical foul effectivel­y ended the game.

“To me,” said Montross, the Tar Heels’ star center, “this is what we practiced all the time, which is you want to put the other team if you can trap them in the corner, you trap them in the corner. We did that all season long.”

Fans don’t seem to remember that part of the equation. And when the Tar Heels went on to beat Michigan and its Fab Five, 77-71, the Webber timeout went down in history as one of the tournament’s key plays.

“It wasn’t Michigan or national championsh­ip-dependent,” Montross told The Associated Press. “It was, ‘If we were going to trap somebody in the backcourt, as we did with Chris before on the other end of the court, who do we want to trap?’ We wanted to trap him with Derrick Phelps and with George Lynch, our two very best defensive players. And that’s who did it there, too. So I think if you look at the setup and the lead-up to this, it became a decisive mistake.”

For the Wolverines, at least. For the Tar Heels, it was perfectly played defense in crunch time.

Every year there are crucial plays during the NCAA Tournament – except this one, of course, with the event called off due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Some go down in history because of player or circumstan­ce. Some are instantly recognizab­le and others go largely unnoticed. All tend to shape who ultimately hoists the trophy at the end.

Here is a look at some other key calls over the years:

MAJERUS’ MOVE

Nobody expected Utah to wallop reigning national champion and No. 1 seed Arizona when they met in the Elite Eight of the 1998 tournament. But it happened because nobody from the

Wildcats expected Utes coach Rick Majerus to unveil what he called the “66 defense,” or what is more commonly known as a triangle-and-two zone.

The Utes, who had struggled to survive the previous two rounds, slapped it on a team that returned its top six players from the year before. And by the end of the game, Arizona stars Mike Bibby, Michael Dickerson and Miles Simon were a combined 6 of 36 from the field, and the Utes continued their march to the title game, where they finally lost to Kentucky.

OH, THOSE ZONES

First Four games can be wildly unpredicta­ble, but Iona and BYU took that notion to another level in 2012. The Gaels raced to a 25-point lead and were on their way to an easy victory when everything suddenly unraveled.

Sure, the Cougars’ Brandon Davies and Noah Hartsock were spectacula­r in the waning minutes of the first half, when BYU ripped off nine straight points, and the second, when it outscored the Iona 38-17. But it was the Cougars’ decision to ditch a man-toman defense in favor of a half-court zone, slowing down the tempo and stopping the Gaels dead in their tracks.

It remains the biggest comeback in NCAA Tournament history.

 ??  ?? Michigan's Chris Webber (4) stands by as North Carolina's Eric Montross celebrates during North Carolina's technical foul shots in the final seconds of the 1993 NCAA championsh­ip game at the Superdome in New Orleans.
Michigan's Chris Webber (4) stands by as North Carolina's Eric Montross celebrates during North Carolina's technical foul shots in the final seconds of the 1993 NCAA championsh­ip game at the Superdome in New Orleans.

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