Originally published Monday, March 31, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Midwest Regional | Davidson gets within one shot of Final Four
Stephen Curry darted this way, faked that way. Nothing open, and the bright red numbers on the clock getting close to zero. He was the right...
The Associated Press
GARY MALERBA / AP
Davidson's Boris Meno, left, and William Archambault sit in the locker room after their 59-57 loss to Kansas on Sunday in Detroit.
TRAVIS HEYING / MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS
The Kansas Jayhawks celebrate their victory Sunday. Kansas (35-3) moves on to play overall No. 1 seed North Carolina — and former coach Roy Williams — on Saturday in San Antonio. This is Kansas' 13th trip to the Final Four, but first since 2003 — Williams' final season.
Finally, 4 for Four
For the first time since the NCAA tournament expanded to 64 teams (now 65) in 1985, all four No. 1 regional seeds have reached the Final Four. The breakdown since 1985:
4
Once
(2008)
3
3 times
(1993, '97, '99)
2
10 times
(Last: 2007)
1
9 times
(Last: 2004)
0
Once
(2006)
DETROIT — Stephen Curry darted this way, faked that way. Nothing open, and the bright red numbers on the clock getting close to zero.
He was the right guy — the only guy — to take the biggest shot of the NCAA tournament.
But there wasn't one. All he could do was pass the ball and watch as Jason Richards' desperation try thudded off the backboard.
Davidson was done. Kansas was in.
"It hurts a lot to get this far, be so close to get to the Final Four," Curry said after top-seeded Kansas held off little Davidson 59-57 Sunday.
The Jayhawks' win in the Midwest Regional final sent all four No. 1 seeds to the Final Four for the first time.
"I'm definitely proud of what we've accomplished and what we're about and what we've just proven all year," Curry said. "... But it's going to hurt. This game's going to hurt a lot for the next however long."
Curry, the son of former NBA sharpshooter Dell Curry, had made the tournament his own little party, scoring at will with his silky-smooth shot and carrying Davidson to one improbable victory after another. He looked as if he might do it again, drilling a three-pointer from NBA range to cut Kansas' lead to 59-57 with 54 seconds left.
After Kansas' Sherron Collins missed with 21 seconds left, the 10th-seeded Wildcats got one last chance.
And of course they gave the ball to Curry.
"Kansas had four guards out there and they just switched. It kind of defeated the purpose of the play," he said. "I gave them a pump fake to try to get a look, but I was off-balance when he fell down. So I saw Jay open at the top of the key, so I swung it to him."
But Richards was off-balance a bit — just enough to make it clang rather than swish.
"I kind of had a feeling in my heart that it wasn't going in because the way he shot it. It looked like he was leaning to the left a little bit," Kansas guard Mario Chalmers said. "When I turned back, I saw it hit the backboard. I was just relieved."
Richards dropped to his back at midcourt while the Jayhawks celebrated with a measure of relief.
"Trust me, I was on both knees," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "You picture the way you win a big game like that, it would be: you make a shot, you celebrate or something happens and you're able to go congratulate all your coaches and players. This was not one of those deals. I just wanted to make sure that I hurried up and shook hands and the officials left the court so they couldn't put any time back on the clock."
Kansas (35-3) moved on to play overall No. 1 seed North Carolina — and former coach Roy Williams — on Saturday, and UCLA and Memphis will round out the party at the Alamodome in San Antonio.
Curry, who became only the fourth player to hit the 30-point mark in his first four NCAA tournament games, finished with 25 on 9-of-25 shooting and was named most outstanding player of the Midwest Regional. His roommate, Bryant Barr, was the only other Davidson player in double figures, scoring all 11 of his points in the second half.
The loss snapped Davidson's 25-game winning streak, longest in the nation.
"The agony of this is that we came so far," Davidson coach Bob McKillop said. "We've seen and touched our dream, and we missed. We came two points away from the Final Four with a 1,700-student school in the Southern Conference."
Sasha Kaun came up with big baskets down the stretch whenever the Jayhawks needed them, and he and Chalmers scored 13 for Kansas, which ended the feel-good story of the tournament. Tiny Davidson, trying to become only the third double-digit to make the Final Four, simply ran out of gas in the stretch.
"Fatigue was definitely a factor," Curry said. "That four-guard rotation they had really took a toll."
Not that the Wildcats didn't put up a valiant fight. Curry looked exhausted much of the second half — with good reason, after leading the Wildcats to upsets of Gonzaga, Georgetown and Wisconsin. But he showed the same moxie he's had all tournament, drilling an NBA-range three-pointer with 54 seconds left that cut Kansas' lead to 59-57.
But after making improbable shots all tournament, Davidson could not get the one it needed most.
"They had a lot of bodies and a lot of athletic guys who could chase me," Curry said. "They did make me work hard, and I had good looks at the end, but they weren't falling like they did all tournament. We can't hang our heads. We had opportunities. We just didn't execute."
The Wildcats (29-3) hung with the toughest teams in the nation — Georgetown and Wisconsin had two of the stingiest defenses in the country — and gave little Davidson something to be known for besides providing free laundry to its students. The Wildcats left the floor to applause from a fan club that's gotten a lot bigger over the last two weeks.
"This is about as tough a loss as it can get," guard Max Paulhus Gosselin said. "We all played as hard as we could for the whole duration of the game. Now it's over."
For the Kansas' Jayhawks, it's just starting.
This is their 13th trip to the Final Four, but first since 2003 — Williams' final season. He took the Jayhawks to the championship game — they lost to Syracuse — then bolted for his alma mater.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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