The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Not rusty: Oregon soars past Iowa 95-80 into Sweet 16

- By John Marshall

INDIANAPOL­IS (AP) » Oregon wove its way through a pandemic-altered season filled with injuries, pauses and uncertaint­y to win a conference title.

When another kink surfaced in the NCAA Tournament, the resilient, adaptable Ducks shook it off and soared.

Off to another Sweet 16. Chris Duarte scored 23 points and Oregon showed no signs of rust after a long layoff, beating No. 2 seed Iowa 95-80 on Monday to reach the Sweet 16 for the fourth time in the past five NCAA Tournament­s.

“The guys fought through it, they stayed together,” Oregon coach Dana Altman said. “I’m proud of the way they responded.”

The seventh-seeded Ducks (21-6) were put in an unpreceden­ted spot, advancing to the West Region’s second round without playing a game. Virginia Commonweal­th’s multiple positive COVID-19 tests took care of that, leaving Oregon with a nine-day break since losing in the Pac-12 Tournament semifinals.

Oregon’s offense hummed like it was fresh off the line once the ball went up, kicking off the NCAA Tournament’s first Monday of second-round games with a masterpiec­e.

The Ducks flowed on the floor and glowed on the scoresheet, shooting 56% and hitting 11 3-pointers. LJ Figueroa hit five 3s while scoring 21 points and Will Richardson added 19 points in an offensive domination.

Oregon moves on to face either Kansas or Southern

Cal in the Sweet 16.

“We just said keep our foot on the gas,” Duarte said. “We did and it was a lot of fun.”

The Ducks’ sweet offensive movements left the Hawkeyes (22-9) flailing, one game short of the Sweet 16 for the fourth time under Fran McCaffery.

Luka Garza played like a two-time All-American, bulling in for threepoint plays, hitting midrange jumpers and dropping in the occasional 3. He capped his stellar college career by tying the Iowa NCAA Tournament record with 36 points and grabbing nine rebounds before receiving a nice ovation from the limited crowd allowed in Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

Joe Wieskamp added 17 points, but the rest of the Hawkeyes weren’t of much help to the big fella, sending them out of the bracket early with other top seeds Illinois, Ohio State and Texas.

“It’s heartbreak­ing, so surreal, it kind of hit me all at once that this is the last

time I’ll put on this jersey and that hurts a lot,” Garza said. “I feel bad that I wasn’t able to lead this team to where it needs to go.”

The Ducks managed to navigate a difficult season full of pauses and injuries to win their second straight Pac-12 regular-season title.

Oregon earned a No. 7 seed in Indianapol­is and faced what was expected to be a difficult opener against VCU and its Havoc defense. But the Ducks learned during their pregame meal that they would advance without playing a game, leaving them with a huge break before facing the No. 2 team in the region.

Nerves? Rusty? Nope. The Ducks went on the attack from Richardson’s opening layup and used quick ball movement to set up open looks throughout the first half.

Oregon hit seven 3s — two by Figueroa late — made 22 of 37 shots and used a 10-0 run to lead 5646 at halftime despite having three players in foul trouble.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oregon guard Chris Duarte (5) drives on Iowa forward Keegan Murray (15) during an NCAA Tournament secondroun­d game Monday in Indianapol­is.
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon guard Chris Duarte (5) drives on Iowa forward Keegan Murray (15) during an NCAA Tournament secondroun­d game Monday in Indianapol­is.

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