The Maui News

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

- By RALPH D. RUSSO

Saturday’s Results

MEN

NCAA TOURNAMENT

(Note: Seeds in parenthese­s) Regional finals

EAST REGIONAL

(9) FAU 79, (3) Kansas St. 76

WEST REGIONAL

(4) UConn 82, (3) Gonzaga 54

WOMEN

NCAA TOURNAMENT

(Note: Seeds in parenthese­s) Regionals semifinals SEATTLE 3

(1) Virginia Tech 73, (4) Tennessee 64 (3) Ohio St. 73, (2) UConn 61

GREENVILLE 1

(1) South Carolina 59, (4) UCLA 43 (2) Maryland 76, (3) Notre Dame 59

Sunday’s Results

MEN

NCAA TOURNAMENT

(Note: Seeds in parenthese­s) Regional finals

SOUTH REGIONAL

(5) San Diego St. 57, (6) Creighton 56

MIDWEST REGIONAL

(5) Miami 88, (2) Texas 81

WOMEN

NCAA TOURNAMENT

(Note: Seeds in parenthese­s) Regionals finals

SEATTLE 4

(2) Iowa 97, (5) Louisville 83

GREENVILLE 2

(3) LSU 54, (9) Miami 42

WNIT

Quarterfin­als

Kansas 78, Arkansas 64

Columbia 77, Harvard 71 Washington 63, Oregon 59

NEW YORK — Alijah Martin sent a message early for upstart Florida Atlantic, soaring to the basket for a one-handed jam and chirping with the Kansas State players about his poster moment at Madison Square Garden.

“They’re going to label us whatever, but we’re some pit bulls and Rottweiler­s,” Martin said.

Now they can call the ninth-seeded Owls a Final Four team.

Martin and FAU withstood another huge game by Kansas State’s Markquis Nowell and brushed off a deficit in the final eight minutes to beat the Wildcats 7976 on Saturday night.

FAU (35-3), making just its second appearance in the NCAA Tournament and first since 2002, won the East Region and will head to Houston to play South Region champion San Diego State.

“I expect the prognostic­ators to pick us fifth in the Final Four,” fifth-year FAU coach Dusty May said.

In one of the most unpredicta­ble NCAA Tournament­s ever — all four No. 1 seeds were out by the Elite Eight — the Owls from Conference USA typify the madness.

The winningest team in Division I this season had never won an NCAA Tournament game before ripping off four straight, all by single digits, to become the first No. 9 seed to reach the Final Four since Wichita State in 2013. The Owls are the third No. 9 to get that far since seeding began in 1979.

“Honestly, all the things people say just fuels us to go out there and play even harder,” said Bryan Greenlee, who scored 16 points before fouling out. “They can say whatever they want, say we’re a Cinderella team, say we don’t belong, but we’ve constantly proven people wrong all season.”

Nowell, the 5-foot-8 native New Yorker, was incredible again at Madison Square Garden, with 30 points, 12 assists and five steals. In the Sweet 16, Nowell set the NCAA Tournament record with 19 assists in an overtime win against Michigan State. He didn’t get enough help this time.

Nae’Qwan Tomlin was the only other player in double figures for Kansas State (26-10) with 14 points. Keyontae Johnson, the Wildcats’ leading scorer, fouled out with nine points.

“Keyontae played 18 minutes, and that’s why he was neutralize­d,” said first-year Kansas State coach Jerome Tang, who took over a team that went 14-17 last season.

Martin scored 17 points, including a huge 3 down the stretch, the 7-foot-1 Vladislav Goldin had 14 points and 13 rebounds, and Michael Forrest made four clutch free throws in the final 20 seconds for the Owls, who held steady as the Wildcats made one last push.

Cam Carter made a 3 from the wing with 22.8 seconds left to cut FAU’s lead to 75-74 and Kansas State sent Forrest to the line with 17.9 seconds left. The senior made both to make it a three-point game.

Nowell found Tomlin inside for a layup with 8.6 seconds left to cut the lead to one again, and again K-State sent Forrest to the line. With 6.9 remaining, he made them both.

With no timeouts left, Nowell rushed down the court, gave up the ball to Ismael Massoud outside the 3-point line — and never got it back. FAU’s Johnell Davis swiped it away and time ran out.

“I was trying to get Ish a shot,” Nowell said. “Coach wanted Ish to set the screen, and I waved it off because I felt like on the right side of the court, that’s where Ish hits most of his shots. And they closed out hard to him, and he didn’t get his shot off.”

Nowell was named the most outstandin­g player of the region after his final collegiate game, but FAU turned out to be the best team.

“I gave my heart and soul to this university, to this team,” Nowell said. “I maximized everything I had inside of me to see these guys happy.”

 ?? AP photo ?? Florida Atlantic’s Alijah Martin dunks over Kansas State’s David N’Guessan in the first half of the Owls’ Elite Eight win over the Wildcats on Saturday.
AP photo Florida Atlantic’s Alijah Martin dunks over Kansas State’s David N’Guessan in the first half of the Owls’ Elite Eight win over the Wildcats on Saturday.
 ?? AP photo ?? UConn head coach Dan Hurley celebrates after cutting down the netting after the Huskies’ Elite Eight win over Gonzaga on Saturday.
AP photo UConn head coach Dan Hurley celebrates after cutting down the netting after the Huskies’ Elite Eight win over Gonzaga on Saturday.

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