The Maui News

Colorado outlasts Boise State 60-53 to cap First Four

- By MITCH STACY

DAYTON, Ohio — Tristan da Silva scored 20 points and Colorado won its first NCAA Tournament game in three years, wrapping up the First Four with a sloppy 60-53 win over Boise State on Wednesday night.

A layup by Eddie Lampkin Jr. and a pair of foul shots from J’Vonne Hadley capped an 11-0 run that gave the Buffaloes a 56-49 lead with 24 seconds left in what had been a back-andforth game. Boise State had to start fouling and Colorado didn’t miss from the line — and that sealed it.

Colorado outscored Boise State 15-4 over the last 4 1/2 minutes.

KJ Simpson had 19 points and 11 rebounds for the Buffaloes (25-10), who advanced as a No. 10 seed to face seventh-seeded Florida in Indianapol­is on Friday.

“KJ was really positive, which I thought was great because you need that positivity in the NCAA Tournament when you go down four late,” Colorado coach Tad Boyle said. “And we got five straight stops in a row. Our defense just kind of cranked up a notch.”

Simpson, Colorado’s top scorer all season, was 6 for 18 from the floor and made all six of his foul shots.

“Obviously, it wasn’t my best night shooting the ball, and I had a lot of kind of bad shots tonight,” Simpson said. “So that was kind of frustratin­g. But I (was) understand­ing that my team needed me out there to do other things.”

Chibuzo Agbo had 17 points for Boise State (2311), who dropped to 0-10 in the NCAA Tournament.

“The guys battled and battled, even when the shots weren’t dropping,” Boise State coach Leon Rice said. “We competed on the glass, we guarded really well. And it was two really good defensive teams.”

But the start was lethargic for both teams, who had combined for just 25 points at the 10-minute mark of the first half. Boise State went up by six late in the half, but Colorado cut it to 26-24 at the break.

Boise State was 1 for 10 from 3-point range in the first half, while the Buffs were just 1 of 8 from long range.

Colorado shot 44 percent, but Boise State finished at just 34 percent. That fol- lowed a 29 percent effort in a 76-66 loss to New Mexico in a Mountain West Tournament quarterfin­al on March 14. The Broncos were just 2 for 18 from 3-point range.

“In the first half, we were right there,” Boise State guard Max Rice said. “Then we just had so many balls that rattled in and out.”

Added Rice: “This is a really, really tough draw and then a tough, tough, tough loss that we’ll have trouble with for the rest of our lives. That’s the way it is.”

 ?? AP photo ?? Boise State’s O’Mar Stanley (left) and Colorado’s J’Vonne Hadley battle for a rebound during the first half of the Buffaloes’ 60-53 win in an NCAA Tournament First Four game Wednesday.
AP photo Boise State’s O’Mar Stanley (left) and Colorado’s J’Vonne Hadley battle for a rebound during the first half of the Buffaloes’ 60-53 win in an NCAA Tournament First Four game Wednesday.
 ?? AP file photo ?? The opening kickoff of an NFL wild-card playoff game between the Texans and Browns on Jan. 13 in Houston is pictured.
AP file photo The opening kickoff of an NFL wild-card playoff game between the Texans and Browns on Jan. 13 in Houston is pictured.

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