Iowa State forward Georges Niang (31) and guard Korie Lucious, top, struggle with Ohio State guard Aaron Craft for a loose ball in the first half of a third-round game of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday March 24, 2013, in Dayton, Ohio. |
DAYTON, Ohio
(AP) -- Aaron Craft dribbled in place at the top of the arc, watching to
see if any of his Ohio State teammates were getting open near the
basket for a game-winning shot.
Nothing there.
The
point guard had a clear look at the clock as it raced toward zero atop
the backboard. He realized what he had to do - take a little Ohio State
tournament history into his hands.
Craft held
the ball until he had no other choice, then swished a 3-pointer with a
half-second left Sunday for a 78-75 victory over Iowa State, sending the
Buckeyes to a school-record fourth straight trip to the round of 16.
No. 2 Ohio State had managed to escape as the lone high seed left in the NCAA tournament's most-busted bracket.
"The
moment's a lot bigger than me," said Craft, who had allowed Iowa State
to catch up with missed free throws and an errant jumper. "It just
happened to be in my hands at the end."
Ohio
State (28-7) needed Craft's fearless shot - over 6-foot-7 defender
Georges Niang - to avoid yet another upset in the oh-so-wild West
Regional. Four of the top five seeds fell fast and hard in the first
weekend.
The Buckeyes' 10th straight win sent them to Los Angeles for a game on Thursday against sixth-seeded Arizona.
"With
all that's gone on in college basketball, anything's possible," Craft
said. "You can see it with what's gone on in our bracket right now."
Tenth-seeded
Iowa State (23-12) overcame a late 13-point deficit by hitting 3s - the
Cyclones' specialty - but wound up beaten by one, a tough way to have
their upset bid end.
"We played our hearts
out," said Will Clyburn, who scored 17 points. "It was a tough game and
he made a tough shot. He made a great play."
Craft's
missed free throws helped Iowa State catch up. He missed the front end
of a pair of one-and-one chances and was off on a jumper from just
inside the arc with 29.2 seconds left and the score tied.
The
Cyclones knocked the ball out of bounds while trying for the rebound,
setting up the final chance. Coach Thad Matta called a timeout and went
over the options.
"I told 'em, `Hey, let's get the last shot; let's play for the win here,'" Matta said.
When
the Cyclones switched coverages to take away leading scorer Deshaun
Thomas and put their tall freshman on Craft, the point guard decided to
take it himself.
Not a bad outcome, Iowa State thought.
"He had a tough shot," said Korie Lucious, who led Iowa State with 19 points. "He hadn't hit a 3 all game."
The
officials reviewed the play to confirm that Craft's foot was behind the
arc when he shot. Lucious didn't come close on a long heave as the
final half-second ran off.
Lucious stood on
the court after the buzzer sounded, stung by the final half-second.
Coach Fred Hoiberg was unable to make an opening comment during the
postgame news conference, the pain etched all over his face.
Thomas
led Ohio State with 22 points, and Craft had 18. LaQuinton Ross scored
10 straight for the Buckeyes as they built that second-half lead.
The
Buckeyes escaped Dayton - the scene of a couple of recent NCAA
tournament disappointments - as the lone high seed left in the West.
No.
3 New Mexico, No. 4 Kansas State and No. 5 Wisconsin were knocked out
right away, losing their openers. No. 1 Gonzaga joined them Saturday
night, shocked by ninth-seeded Wichita State 76-70.
The
Buckeyes had opened the tournament in Dayton twice previously under
Matta and lost despite thousands of fans providing a home-court feeling.
Perhaps it was fitting that this one was decided by a 3.
The
Cyclones lead the nation in 3-pointers, with nearly 44 percent of their
attempts coming from behind the arc. Defense has been Ohio State's
foundation during its late winning streak, which included the Big Ten
tournament title.
With Craft anchoring Ohio
State's perimeter defense, the Cyclones had trouble getting open shots
and missed eight of their first 12 from behind the arc. They finished 12
of 25 on 3-pointers.
The Cyclones also lost
one of their best perimeter defenders and their second-best 3-point
shooter late in the first half. Guard Chris Babb got treatment on his
left leg in the final minute of the half and went to the locker room
early. Babb sat on the bench for the rest of the game.
The
Buckeyes pushed the lead to six points at the start of the second half,
but Melvin Ejim's putback cut it to 52-51. He and Craft bumped into
each other and traded words heading into a timeout with 11:43 left.
Neither side was budging.
Coming
out of the timeout, the Buckeyes put together their best run of the
game. Ross hit a pair of 3s, a layup off a steal and two free throws for
a 65-53 lead with 8:18 to go.
The Cyclones
turned to the 3 - both versions - to pull even. Lucious' three-point
play tied it 69-all with 3:53 left, completing a 13-0 run. Craft missed
the front end of a pair of one-and-one chances during that spurt.
Craft
tried not to think about his previous misses as he watched the white
numbers on the clock tick down and squared up to decide the game.
"If I miss, we still have overtime," he said. "So it's not as big of a pressure situation."