Grand Canyon: 2022-23 Western Athletic Men's Basketball Champions



LAS VEGAS — With a chance to break a 20-plus year drought of NCAA Tournament bids, Southern Utah's magic ran out late Friday night in front of a packed house in the desert.


Less than 24 hours after Tevian Jones' miraculous 4-point play capped off a 23-comeback win over in-state rival Utah Valley, there was no such strike for the upstart Thunderbirds in their first season in the Western Athletic Conference, and their first conference tournament title game since winning the 2001 Mid-Continent championship.


SUU trailed by as much as 18 in the second half — a stone's throw behind the 23-point deficit the Thunderbirds overcame a night earlier — but barely got within single digits in the second half in front of a raucous Orleans Arena crowd filled roughly two-thirds by purple-clad Lopes fans.


Ray Harrison had 31 points, eight rebounds and eight assists, and Gabe McGlothan scored 21 as Grand Canyon overwhelmed the Thunderbirds 84-66 to claim their second NCAA Tournament berth in program history.


Noah Baumann had 16 points and seven rebounds for the Lopes (24-11).


Jones led Southern Utah (22-10) with 17 points and three rebounds, and Maizen Fusett added 12 points and seven boards. Harrison Butler added 11 points, eight rebounds and four assists for the Thunderbirds.


Grit. Heart. Intensity. The Thunderbirds had plenty of it on Saturday night but fell victim to their Achilles' heel once again: guarding the 3-point line.


Utah Tech's Cam Gooden had a career-high 35 points against SUU in the first round of the WAC Tournament. Then came UVU's Trey Woodbury and the 29 points he scored in that come-from-ahead loss. Harrison, who shot 4-of-6 from 3-point range in the first half, was just the latest in a succession of career shooters.


SUU led for less than six minutes of game time as Grand Canyon dropped in 13 3-pointers and outrebounded the Thunderbirds 41-30.

Arizona: 2022-23 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Champions



LAS VEGAS—The revenge tour is complete.


Courtney Ramey drained the go-ahead 3-pointer with 16.8 seconds left to give Arizona its second straight Pac-12 title, beating top-seeded UCLA 61-59 on Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena.


The second-seeded Wildcats (28-6) improved to 9-0 in revenge games under Tommy Lloyd, getting payback for a regular-season loss for the third time in as many games during the conference tournament. Arizona has now won nine Pac-12 tourney titles.


UCLA (29-5) had a chance to win it at the buzzer, after Azuolas Tubelis missed the second of two free throws with 5.8 seconds to go, but Dylan Andrews’ 3-point try was off the rim. As soon as it bounced, the Arizona-heavy #McKaleNorth crowd erupted.


Tubelis finished with 19 points and 14 rebounds, making 9 of 11 free throws. He was 5 of 17 from the field, missing all seven of his field goal attempts, but was 6 of 7 from the line a night after the UA as a team was 5 of 12 on foul shots in the semifinal win over ASU.


Ramey’s 3 was his only make of the night, and it came after Tubelis was off on a 3-point try but Pelle Larsson tapped out the rebound to the 5th-year transfer guard at the top of the key. Larsson finished with 11 points, four rebounds and five assists.


Oumar Ballo, who joined Tubelis on the All-Tournament team, had 13 points and eight rebounds.


Arizona shot 36.5 percent from the field and 30 percent from 3 but held UCLA to 36.7 and 21.1 percent shooting. The Bruins were without two starters, as wing Jaylen Clark missed the Pac-12 tourney with a leg injury and center Adem Bona, the conference’s Freshman of the Year, did not play after injuring his shoulder in the semifinals against Oregon.


In addition to missing Bona, UCLA had big men Mac Etienne and Kenneth Nwuba foul out but Arizona couldn’t take advantage inside, getting outscored 24-22. The Wildcats did have a 37-32 edge on the boards and limited UCLA to six second-chance points.


UCLA got 19 points from Amari Bailey, including a jumper with 2:52 left that gave the Bruins their last lead at 58-56, while Tyger Campbell had 16 and Jaime Jaquez Jr. had 14.


Campbell and Jaquez, the Pac-12 Player of the Year, combined to go 10 of 32.


Down 34-33 at the half, Arizona scored on its first possession but then went empty for almost four minutes, while UCLA built an 8-point lead at 43-35. During the drought the calls all went against the Wildcats, both offensively and defensively.


The UA trailed 46-37 after a Bailey 3 with 14:18 to go when Kerr Kriisa hit a 3, then on the next two possessions Ballo drew the fourth fouls on both Nwuba and Etienne in a 27-second span.


Eitenne fouled out with 9:35 left, and Larsson hit a 3 not long after to put Arizona back in front 50-48 to complete an 8-0 run. The lead was short lived, as UCLA scored six in a row and had a chance to make it bigger but Arizona’s defense clamped down in the halfcourt.


Kriisa swished a 3 to put the Wildcats ahead 55-54 with 5:23 left, its last lead until Ramey’s winning shot. Arizona had two other chances to go ahead in the final two minutes but turned it over, with Kriisa fouling out on a moving screen and Jaquez stealing it from Tubelis.


UCLA couldn’t capitalize, missing its final four shots, and when Ramey was called for a foul on Campbell with 5.8 seconds left the senior point guard made the first but missed the second, with Tubelis grabbing the rebound and getting fouled.


Offense was in short supply the first six-plus minutes, with Arizona not scoring for the first 3:33 and not getting its first basket until more than five minutes in. The pace picked up after that, with the teams combining to make 7 of 8 shots as the lead changed hands 12 times in the first half.


Arizona had multiple 4-point leads and then got up 27-22 on a pair of Tubelis free throws with 5:11 left, but UCLA went back in front on a 3-point play from Jaquez—with Tubelis getting his second foul on the play—with 3:05 to go.


The Bruins took a 1-point lead into the half on a baseline drive from Bailey in the final minute, on a play where it looked like he traveled, right after Larsson was called for steps on the other end.


Arizona now waits to see what its seed is and where it will play in the NCAA Tournament. The 2023 field will be announced Sunday at 3 p.m. MST.

UC Santa Barbara: 2022-23 Big West Men's Basketball Champions



UC Santa Barbara punched its ticket to the Big Dance with a 72-62 victory over Cal State Fullerton for the Big West championship.


The Gauchos last made the NCAA Tournament in 2021, losing in the first round to No. 5 Creighton.


Sophomore guard Ajay Mitchell led all scorers with 20 points for UC Santa Barbara. Three other players scored in double figures for the Gauchos.


UC Santa Barbara shared the regular-season title with UC Irvine, who Cal State Fullerton eliminated from the Big West Tournament on Friday.

Duke: 2022-23 Atlantic Coast Men's Basketball Champions



GREENSBORO – Duke basketball found itself in a familiar place Saturday at the Greensboro Coliseum, cutting down nets in celebration of a 22nd ACC Tournament championship. 


No program in league history has won more tournament titles than the Blue Devils, who secured a wire-to-wire 59-49 victory against Virginia on Saturday for their first ACC championship since 2019. 


After a controversial loss at Virginia in February, the 21st-ranked Blue Devils (26-8) had ample motivation and never trailed against the 14th-ranked Cavaliers (25-7). It’s the ninth time Duke has raised a trophy in Greensboro.


First-year head coach Jon Scheyer is the third rookie coach to win the ACC Tournament, joining Duke’s Vic Bubas (1960) and UNC’s Bill Guthridge (1998). He’s the first person to win tournament MVP (2009) and coach a squad to a title. 


Kyle Filipowski, the ACC Rookie of the Year, had 20 points and 10 rebounds to pace the Blue Devils. Junior captain Jeremy Roach supplied 23 points. 


Kyle Filipowski was the best player on the floor in each of Duke’s three games at the ACC Tournament. On Saturday night, the 7-footer had as many points (7) as Virginia in the first 11 minutes. 


After a scoreless performance that included five turnovers in Duke’s OT loss at Virginia, Filipowski had 11 points and five rebounds in the first half. The freshman turned things up in Duke’s first two games in Greensboro. 


He hit 16 of his first 19 shots in the ACC Tournament, scoring 22 points against Pitt before adding 17 points, 11 rebounds and a career-high five assists against Miami. His 15 double-double performances leads all Division I freshmen


Duke’s interior defense

In its rout of Clemson, Virginia scored 40 points in the paint. Things didn’t come as easily for the Cavaliers against Duke, which limited the Cavaliers to six points in the paint in the first half. 


The Blue Devils made a point to keep Virginia from being comfortable on the interior, forcing the Hoos’ guards away from the rim and daring them to shoot over 7-foot-1 center Dereck Lively, who had two blocks in the first half after not recording a block in the loss at Virginia. 


By the end of the first half, the Cavaliers were shooting 27% (6 of 22) and Duke had a 24-17 lead. 

Florida Atlantic: 2022-23 Conference USA Men's Basketball Champions



Florida Atlantic is headed to its first March Madness appearance since 2002 after beating UAB 78-56 in the C-USA championship game.


The Owls scored 46 points in the first half. Sophomore guard Alijah Martin led all scorers with 30 points in the contest. Johnell Davis also contributed 18 points for FAU.


Florida Atlantic was ranked as high as 19th in the AP Top 25 poll this season.


UAB was the C-USA's representative in the Big Dance last season, losing to Houston in the first round.


FAU lost to Alabama in its lone appearance in March Madness during the first round of the 2002 NCAA Tournament.

Iona: 2022-23 Metro Atlantic Men's Basketball Champions



ATLANTIC CITY - There was a bit of a scare from a red-hot Marist Red Foxes team that hardly played like the bottom-seeded team of the bracket, but in the end, the Iona Gaels were able to halt Marist's momentum and recapture the MAAC Tournament title with a 76-55 win.


The Gaels returned to the top, winning their sixth MAAC Tournament in seven seasons and their first since 2021, which was coach Rick Pitino's first year at Iona.


Iona held a 35-26 lead at half and every time the Gaels seemed to pull away, Marist would close the gap.


The Red Foxes finally strung together a run, feeling re-energized after the halftime break, eventually tying it up at 46 with 10:25 to go in the game.


Iona buckled down from there, never relinquishing its lead and responding with big plays on both ends of the court to regain separation. The Red Foxes never recovered from there, as the Gaels closed the game on a 19-2 run over the final 4:42 to secure the title.


Daniss Jenkins led the Gaels with a game-high 27 points, including a 6-of-9 shooting clip from long range. Walter Clayton Jr. had 17 points, six rebounds and four assists. Nelly Junior Joseph added nine points, 11 rebounds, two steals and four blocks.


For Marist, Patrick Gardner tallied 23 points and seven rebounds. Kam Farris had 12 points off the bench.


The Gaels improve to 27-7 and will await their NCAA Tournament draw on Selection Sunday.

Kent State: 2022-23: Mid-American Men's Basketball Champions



CLEVELAND (AP) — Sincere Carry scored 26 points and Malique Jacobs added 18 as Kent State won the Mid-American Conference championship Saturday night, 93-78 over top-seeded Toledo, which had its winning streak stopped at 17 and will likely miss the NCAA Tournament for the 43rd straight year.


The second-seeded Golden Flashes (28-6) won their first tourney title since 2017 along with the conference's automatic NCAA bid.


It's more heartbreak for the top-seeded Rockets (27-7), who have to hope the NCAA selection committee looks at their entire body of work. However, history won't be on their side as the MAC hasn't had two teams in the 68-team field since 1999.


Toledo fell to 0-6 in MAC title games since last winning in 1980.


RayJ Dennis, the conference player of the year, scored 25 for the Rockets. Setric Millner Jr. added 25 and 10 rebounds for Toledo, which reeled off 17 straight wins since losing to Kent State on Jan. 10.


But with a chance to end one of the nation's longest NCAA droughts, the Rockets couldn't finish the job.


Jacobs added 13 rebounds and six assists while atoning for a mistake last year, when he was suspended for the first half of the title game along with three teammates after they posted a profane video on social media following the semifinals.


Toledo was still within 71-67 when the Golden Flashes went on a 10-3 run capped by Curry's long 3-pointer as the 30-second shot expired. The 6-foot-1 senior from the Cleveland area was named the tournament's most outstanding player.


The Rockets couldn't catch up in the final minutes as Kent State put it away at the foul line in the final minute. Appropriately, Jacobs grabbed Toledo's last miss before celebrating with his teammates.


Toledo came in averaging 85.8 points per game — second nationally to Gonzaga — and these high-powered Rockets had scored over 100 points six times this season. But the Golden Flashes held them to a season-low 63 on Jan. 19, and Kent State's defense was up to the task early.


Getting defensive stops, the Golden Flashes reeled off 11 points in a row to take a 27-16 lead.


With Dennis unable to get going on offense, Millner picked up the slack by scoring 11 straight points and Toledo went on an 18-6 run to briefly take the lead before Jacobs' lay-in at the horn gave Kent State a 35-34 halftime lead.


Toledo's NCAA dry spell has weighed heavily on the program, to the point that coach Tod Kowalczyk, who has been at the school for 13 years, felt it had become an unfair talking point.


“Everybody wants to make a big deal about 1980," he said following Friday's semifinals. “That’s not this team’s problem.”


Unfortunately, it hasn't gone away.

Marquette: 2022-23 Big East Men's Basketball Champions



NEW YORK (AP) — Tyler Kolek and No. 6 Marquette raced out to a hefty lead and never looked back, beating No. 15 Xavier 65-51 on Saturday night to win the Big East Tournament for the first time.


Kolek, the Big East Player of the Year, had 20 points and eight rebounds as the top-seeded Golden Eagles (28-6) dominated a Big East final that brought a Midwestern flavor to Madison Square Garden.


Coach Shaka Smart’s surprising team will head into the NCAA Tournament with a nine-game winning streak after Marquette’s first appearance in the Big East championship game resulted in one of its best performances of a scintillating season.


Kolek’s steal and layup made it 51-27 with 14:12 left. Less than a minute later, after two offensive rebounds by the Golden Eagles, David Joplin made a corner 3 to double up second-seeded Xavier (25-9).


Joplin finished with 12 points. Kolek was selected the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player.


Adam Kunkel scored 12 points to lead the Musketeers, who had a five-game winning streak snapped.


This was the first Big East title game since the conference dropped football in 2013 to not feature any of its longstanding Northeast members.


Still, the Milwaukee school (Marquette, which joined in 2005) and the Cincinnati school (Xavier, which joined in 2013) filled The Garden for the first 1 vs. 2 seed Big East Tournament final in 19 years.


It looked more like a 1-16 NCAA Tournament game for a while.


Marquette jumped out to a 21-4 lead, and never relented.


During a particularly splendid 2 1/2 minutes, Stevie Mitchell swished a corner 3, Kolek came off a screen to make another 3, Kam Jones got free for a reverse layup after a nifty hesitation move on the baseline and Kolek converted a layup off a give-and-go with Oso Ighodaro.


At that point, Marquette was up 33-10 with 7:02 left in the first half and the Golden Eagles had not yet committed a turnover.


The Musketeers responded with a 14-5 run to end the period, but with their fans chanting “We are, Mar-quette!” the Golden Eagles went into the break up 39-24.


Marquette’s only previous league tournament title was as a member of Conference USA in 1997.


Twenty-six years later, the Golden Eagles were able to clear the bench in the final minute of the Big East championship game and their fans were finally able to make Madison Square Garden feel like home.


BIG PICTURE


Xavier: The Musketeers played what coach Sean Miller called one of their best two-way games of the season in the semifinals Friday night against Creighton. Less than 24 hours later, they did almost nothing well. Xavier shot 34% from the field, forced only four turnovers and was held 12 points under its previous season low. The Musketeers fell to 0-2 in Big East championship games.


Marquette: Smart, who took VCU to a Final Four but never could find that consistent winning formula at Texas, guided a team picked to finish ninth in the Big East in the preseason coaches’ poll to maybe its best season since Dwyane Wade led Marquette to a Final Four in 2003.


UP NEXT


Xavier: Miller will have the Musketeers back in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2018.


Marquette: The Golden Eagles will be making their second straight trip to the NCAA Tournament and figure to earn perhaps a No. 2 seed.

San Diego State: 2022-23 Mountain West Men's Basketball Champions



LAS VEGAS (AP) — Jaedon LeDee scored 15 points and Matt Bradley added 14 to lead No. 20 San Diego State to a 62-57 victory over Utah State in Saturday's Mountain West Tournament championship game.


The Aztecs (27-6) claimed their seventh tournament title, and second in three years. This also was their conference-record 15th appearance in the title game.


San Diego State clinched the conference's bid to the NCAA Tournament, though it was never in doubt the Aztecs would be selected. What kind of seed San Diego State receives remains to be seen.


Utah State (26-8) also figures to be headed to the tournament when the selections are announced Sunday.


This was the fourth time in the last five years the teams have played each other in the Mountain West championship game. Utah State won the 2019 and 2020 title games, and San Diego State went home with the 2021 trophy. Boise State temporarily ended the monopoly last season by beating the Aztecs 53-52.


Neither team shot well Saturday, with San Diego State making 33.3% of its shots compared to 37.1% for the Aggies.


No San Diego State players reached double-figure scoring other than Ledee and Mitchell. For Utah State, Steven Ashworth scored 13 points and Trevin Dorius 12.


The Aggies were hot early, however, going on a 12-2 run in the first half to take a 26-15 lead with 6:57 left, but then went cold. They failed to make another field goal until 1:43 into the second half, but somehow didn't fall behind during that stretch.


But the Aztecs got close, and eventually went back and forth with Utah State in the second half. San Diego State nearly put away the game by going up 53-46 with 3:03 left, but the Aggies got back to within three points with 48 seconds remaining and two points with 30.3 seconds to go.


San Diego State closed out the game at the free throw line by making 9 of 10 free throws in the final 43 seconds.


THE BIG PICTURE


Utah State: The Aggies entered the game fourth nationally in 3-point percentage at 40.1, but struggled badly against San Diego State's long, athletic defense. Utah State made just 4 of 24 3-point attempts.


San Diego State: The Aztecs come in waves. Nine players were in the game, and each was on the floor for at least 16 minutes and eight at least 19. All nine scored and collected rebounds.


UP NEXT


Utah State: The Aggies have a NET ranking of No. 18, so it would be quite a surprise if they aren't selected to the NCAA Tournament.


San Diego State: A potential six seed could be coming San Diego State's way, but the Aztecs also might have worked their way into a No. 5.


___


AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25

Vermont: 2022-23 America East Men's Basketball Champions



A second-half comeback led top-seeded Vermont (23-10, 14-2 AE) to its league-best 10th America East title, defeating No. 2 UMass Lowell (26-8, 11-5 AE) 72-59 in the 2023 Jersey Mike's America East Championship Game on Saturday at Patrick Gym.


HOW IT HAPPENED


The Catamounts and River Hawks combined for only one miss from the floor in the first 2:36 of the game, with UML taking a 7-6 lead. Abdoul Karim Coulibaly scored all of UMass Lowell's points in the opening minutes. Dylan Penn had four points for Vermont.

Penn put Vermont in front when his layup was goaltended by UML's Max Brooks, giving the Cats an 8-7 lead. Finn Sullivan cashed in his first three-pointer of the game on the following possession to extend the lead to 11-7 with 14:38 left in the first half.

The Catamounts held the River Hawks scoreless for 4:30 after an Allin Blunt layup with 13:43 remaining. Vermont's lead would grow to 16-9 during that stretch, until a layup by Cam Morris III with 9:12 left in the half.

Morris' basket sparked a 20-5 run for UMass Lowell as the River Hawks made eight of their next 11 field goals to take a 29-21 lead with 1:21 remaining in the opening frame. The sophomore had six points to lead the UML run.

Finn Sullivan knocked down a free throw in the final minute, and Aaron Deloney sank a deep three-pointer on Vermont's final possession to cut the deficit to 29-25 before the break.

Penn scored the first four points of the second half to tie the game at 29-29 with 18:27 left on the clock. The fifth-year senior posted up a UMass Lowell defender and cashed in the hook shot. Penn knocked down a pair of free throws shortly after to draw even with the River Hawks.

Finn Sullivan briefly put Vermont ahead with a free throw that made the score 30-29, but Allin Blunt knocked down a trio of free throws on the following possession to give UMass Lowell a 32-30 lead with 17:42 left.

Matt Veretto's first three-pointer of the day was timely, sinking a corner three on a skip pass from Robin Duncan to put the Catamounts back in front, up 33-32. Deloney made an acrobatic jumper minutes later to give Vermont a 35-32 lead with 15:13 remaining.

A layup from Morris and a three-pointer from Everette Hammond put UMass Lowell ahead 37-35 with 13:09 left on the clock.

Deloney countered with a triple from the wing at the end of the shot clock to put Vermont back in front, up 38-37 with 12:16 remaining. The senior's three-pointer sparked a 9-2 run for the Catamounts that included a trey from Penn and trio of free throws from Gibson.

Veretto scored nine points in a span of 1:52 to extend the UVM lead to 53-46 with 7:53 to play. The graduate student sank a trio of free throws to begin his run, followed up by back-to-back three-pointers. Veretto also forced a turnover on the defensive end during that stretch.

Penn gave the Catamounts their first double-digit lead of the afternoon, when he sank a hook shot coming out of the post to go up 57-46 with 6:13 left.

Sullivan sank the dagger with 2:10 remaining when he drilled a three-pointer from the right wing while drawing a foul. The 2023 America East Player of the Year knocked down his free throw to put Vermont up 63-50.

The Catamounts maintained their double-digit cushion over the River Hawks for the remainder of the game. ­­

INSIDE THE BOX SCORE


The Catamounts secure their 10th America East title in the last 20 seasons, and their sixth in 12 seasons under Becker.

Vermont's come-from-behind victory marked the first time that the Catamounts have won a game while trailing at the half this season. UVM entered the game 0-8 when behind at the break.

Penn was named the Reggie Lewis Most Outstanding Player, pouring a game-high 21 points on 8-for-12 shooting. The guard averaged 23.3 points and a 67.4% field goal percentage in Vermont's three playoff victories.

Veretto and Deloney were named to the America East All-Championship Team. Veretto tallied 15 points on 4-for-9 shooting, which included a 3-for-6 clip from long range. Deloney had 10 points on 4-for-9 shooting, with a pair of triples.

Sullivan also reached double figures, scoring 15 points. The fifth-year senior had a team-high seven rebounds, and recorded four steals.

Nick Fiorillo received the America East Elite 18 Award for demonstrating excellence on the court and the classroom.

With the win, Vermont Mutual Insurance Group will donate $100 to King Street Center as part of the Cats Win, Community Wins initiative. Since its inauguration in 2017, Vermont Mutual Insurance Group has donated over $80,000 to local non-profits through the Cats Win, Community Wins initiative.  

UP NEXT

The Catamounts have punched their ticket to the 2023 NCAA Tournament. Vermont will learn its opponent and location on Selection Sunday, which will air live on CBS at 6 p.m. ET.

Texas Southern: 2022-23 Southwestern Athletic Men's Basketball Champions



Texas Southern has that championship DNA.


When it comes to the SWAC basketball tournament, it’s time to shine for the Tigers.


On Saturday night, TSU won the conference tournament for the third straight season, earning their third straight NCAA tournament automatic berth in the process. It was a rousing three-game run at Bartow Arena in Birmingham, Alabama for the Tigers.


Victory wasn’t easy after a fast start. The Tigers led consistently but were defeated by Grambling State 61-58 and denied GSU their first NCAA tournament.


The Tigers (14-20) led by as much as 17 points – 22-5 – and were only tied once late 43-43 with 7:15 remaining in the game. But TSU derailed GSU’s comeback attempt in a Tigers meeting.


Losing their last three games of the regular season, TSU turned up the heat in Birmingham under coach Johnny Jones.


And Tigers guard PJ Henry turned it on late in a game he was struggling with shooting. After starting 1-of-13 from the field, TSU’s spark hit two late 3-pointers and scored seven crucial points in the remaining three minutes and 18 seconds.


TSU won its 11th conference tournament championship in its sixth straight title game appearance. The 2020 championship game was not played due to COVID-19. The Tigers are 11-7 in SWAC championship games.


Grambling missed 11 of his first 12 field goals and had to make up the rest of the game.


Second-place Grambling (24-9) set a program record for most wins in a season. The G-Men have had victories over Vanderbilt (64-62) and Colorado (83-74) this season.


Henry was 5-of-18 off the field. But when the Tigers needed him most, he delivered. The 5-10 point guard made four of his last five field goal attempts, ending with 19 points.


John Walker III added 14 points and Von Barnes amassed 13 points and eight rebounds for the Tigers, who overtook their opponent 46-35 and led 31-18 at halftime.


Jonathan Aku accumulated 11 points and 10 rebounds for Grambling.


Selected to finish first in SWAC last season, eighth-seeded TSU defeated Alcorn State (66-62) and Alabama A&M (74-61) to reach the tournament finals. TSU is 10-2 against Grambling in the postseason, with GSU’s last tournament win coming over the Tigers in 1988.


Grambling, who shared the regular season title with Alcorn State, won the season series with the Tigers, winning 85-72 at the H&PE Arena and 65-46 at Grambling. The G-Men defeated Bethune-Cookman (87-72) and Jackson State (78-69) to advance to the finals.


TSU had the benefit of the extra rest. The Tigers finished their semifinal game at 2:30 p.m. on Friday. Grambling’s semifinal game didn’t start until six hours later.


In his fifth season at TSU, Jones has a 26-8 record in games played in March. Donte’ Jackson was aiming for his 100th coaching win at Grambling.


Though Henry missed 11 of 12 shots in the first half, TSU led 31-18 at the break and passed GSU 28-13 in the first 20 minutes.


TSU started quickly, taking advantage of Grambling’s bad shooting and bad troubles. After less than three minutes, the Tigers were 8-1 up with Walker scoring six of the points.


Shortly thereafter, the Tigers had their largest lead at 17 points. Conference Player of the Year Cameron Christon conceded his third foul at 9:29 before halftime. A couple of free throws from Henry gave TSU a 22-5 lead at the 9:29 mark.


Christon was on the bench for a full nine minutes of the half and only scored four points. Christon scored his team’s first field goal at 13:23, giving it a 13-4 score. Aku, a 6-11 post, was called out for his second foul less than four minutes into the contest. Joshua Phillips, who started as a forward, also faced early fouls, amassing three in the first half.

Howard: 2022-23 Mid-Eastern Men's Basketball Champions



NORFOLK — Kenny Blakeney couldn’t stop crying. It was 3:30 on Saturday afternoon at Scope Arena, Howard had just ended a 31-year NCAA tournament drought with a heart-stopping 65-64 victory over Norfolk State in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tournament final, and the tears were flowing everywhere.


But Blakeney was the leader in waterworks.


Each new hug produced another torrent of tears. When freshman Shy Odom, the MVP of the MEAC tournament, wrapped him up, screaming, “Coach, I love you, I love you!” Blakeney couldn’t even respond. A moment later, when Howard President Wayne A.I. Frederick came over, it took Blakeney a few seconds to stand up. When he did, he wept on Frederick’s shoulder and said, “Thank, you, thank you, thank you.”


It was Frederick who told Athletic Director Kery Davis to hire Blakeney four springs ago, even though Blakeney had never been a head coach. “As soon as I met him, I said, ‘Hire him,’ ” Frederick said. “I knew he was our guy the minute he walked in the door.”


Saturday was a long time coming for Blakeney and for Howard. The Bison were 4-29 his first season and only got to play five games in the coronavirus-plagued 2020-21 season. But Blakeney’s recruiting began to kick in a year ago, and Howard went 16-13. This season has produced 22 wins, a MEAC regular season title and now — finally — the tournament title and the first trip to the NCAA tournament since Butch Beard was Howard’s coach in 1992.


“Wow,” Blakeney said softly standing in front of his team, the net around his neck and the MEAC trophy next to him. He paused and started to choke up again. “Just wow. I mean, holy s---. Everything you’ve gone through, the 6 a.m. practices, getting thrown out of the locker room — all of it — was for this.”


This was an extraordinary basketball game. Norfolk State had won the past two MEAC titles and has been the class of the conference along with North Carolina Central for most of Coach Robert Jones’s 10 seasons at the school. Howard went into halftime with a 33-27 lead, but the Spartans scored the first five points of the second half and neither team led by more than four the rest of the way.


In the final 20 minutes, there were six ties and 11 lead changes. Two straight baskets were as close to a run as anyone came.


“It was everything we expected,” Howard’s Jelani Williams said. “It was what a championship game is supposed to be.”


Williams and Odom were the final pieces Blakeney added this season. Williams came to Howard as a graduate student after four years at Pennsylvania. Earlier this season, Williams said he decided to play at Howard because he wanted to be the leader on a team that had a chance to win a championship.


That dream became real Saturday, although it looked for a while as though the Bison would come up just short. Two free throws by Norfolk State’s Joe Bryant Jr. with 23.7 seconds left gave the Spartans a 64-60 lead. But Marcus Dockery drained a three-pointer — Howard’s only three-pointer of the second half — with 13.2 seconds left, and Blakeney called his final timeout.


The Bison came out in their “41” defense, meaning they were trying to deny any inbounds pass. It worked. The Spartans had a miscommunication, and the inbounds pass ended up going past everyone and out of bounds.


The clock never moved. When Howard inbounded, there was no doubt where the ball was going: to Williams. He already had 18 points — the only Howard player in double figures — and he had been the Bison’s rock down the stretch.


“I’m supposed to be the tough guy, especially in close games,” he said. “I understand that role, and I want that role.”


Williams caught the ball at the top of the key and drove into the teeth of the Norfolk State defense. As the Spartans collapsed on him, he twisted his body and drew a foul. The Spartans had complained about fouls early and often, but this time there was no arguing.


Williams drained the first shot to tie the score at 64. Jones called a timeout to make him think about the second one.


He did. “I thought, ‘This is why I came to Howard,’ ” Williams said, still clutching the ball he made the shots with. “I’ve waited all my life for a moment like this. I’m never letting go of this ball. I knew this was my last chance to go to the NCAAs, and I was going to make it happen.”


He made the free throw for a 65-64 lead with 6.1 seconds left. NSU got the ball to midcourt and called its final timeout with 4.3 seconds to go. The inbounds came to Kris Bankston, and he drove the baseline. But the Bison defense came to meet him, and his shot hit the bottom of the rim as time ran out.


Heartbreak for the Spartans. Euphoria for the Bison. It took several minutes for the Norfolk State players to find their legs to walk to the locker room. The Howard celebration was well underway by then. Former Howard players flooded the floor. Former coach A.B. Williamson, who guided Howard to its first NCAA tournament bid in 1981, stood and watched as the nets came down.


“I remember Kenny at DeMatha when he played for Morgan [Wootten],” he said with a smile. “Then he went to Duke and played for [Mike Krzyzewski]. I guess he learned a few lessons from those two.”


Even 30 minutes after the final buzzer, standing in front of his players with the net draped around his neck — “My new necklace,” he said — Blakeney was having trouble drinking it all in.


“It’s surreal, isn’t it guys?” he said. “It’s one thing to dream about doing something like this. It’s another thing to actually do it. I mean, it’s real. We really did it.”


It is entirely possible Howard, with a 22-12 record, will be sent to Dayton, Ohio, as a No. 16 seed for a play-in game. Blakeney could not care less. “Wherever they tell us to go, we’ll just get on the bus and go,” he said.


Wherever the Bison go, it won’t be by bus. When you make the NCAA tournament, you travel by charter plane. The last time Blakeney did that was 1994, when he was a Duke junior. He’s 51 now and, like his school, has been down a lot of roads to get back to where he was Saturday.


“I’m speechless,” Blakeney said to his players, who laughed because he is almost never speechless. “What a run.”


And what an ending.

Texas: 2022-23 Big 12 Men's Basketball Champions



KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- — Dylan Disu overcame early foul trouble to score 18 points, Marcus Carr and Sir'Jabari Rice added 17 apiece, and seventh-ranked Texas silenced a heavily pro-Kansas crowd with a 76-56 romp over the third-ranked Jayhawks in the Big 12 Tournament title game Saturday night.


After going more than two decades without a Big 12 tourney championship, the Longhorns (26-8) have won two of the past three, and likely wrapped up a No. 2 seed in next week's NCAA Tournament with their performance in Kansas City.


With interim coach Rodney Terry leading the way, the Longhorns built a 39-33 lead by halftime, extended it to 20 down the stretch and coasted toward a shower of confetti during a net-cutting celebration.


Jalen Wilson scored 24 points and Joseph Yesufu, pressed into the starting lineup due to injuries, finished with 11 for the Jayhawks (27-7), who had won 13 of their previous 16 trips to the Big 12 finals.


The question now is whether the defending national champs did enough before Saturday night to earn the overall No. 1 seed for the NCAA Tournament, and with it a favorable road through Kansas City in the regional round.


Kansas was once again without Hall of Fame coach Bill Self, who went to the emergency room on the eve of its quarterfinal for an undisclosed medical procedure. Self's longtime assistant and acting coach, Norm Roberts, once again called the shots from the sideline for the championship game.


On the other side stood Terry, who certainly didn't expect to be pulling the strings for Texas. But when Chris Beard was fired for an off-the-court incident early in the season, the former Fresno State and UTEP coach not only kept his talented team together but guided it to a second-place finish in the regular season.


Right behind the Jayhawks, who also happened to be defending Big 12 Tournament champs.


Both teams were missing starters Saturday night due to injuries — Kevin McCullar Jr. for the Jayhawks, Timmy Allen for the Longhorns — yet there was still plenty of star power on display inside the T-Mobile Center.


Wilson, the league's player of the year, kept the Jayhawks afloat during a scattershot first half. He scored 17 points, more than half their total, while pounding the glass and even picking up a steal.


Texas, meanwhile, relied on depth and balance in forging a 39-33 halftime lead. It had to after losing Disu, who already had been a revelation the previous two rounds, to a pair of fouls less than eight minutes into the game.

Montana State: 2022-23 Big Sky Men's Basketball Champions



BOISE, Idaho -- — RaeQuan Battle scored 25 points and Montana State beat Northern Arizona 85-78 Wednesday night to clinch its second consecutive Big Sky Conference title and an automatic bid to the 2023 NCAA Tournament.


Darius Brown II added 11 of his 15 points in the second half and Jubrile Belo scored 14 points for No. 2 seed Montana State (25-9), which has won eight consecutive games and 13 of its last 14. Caleb Fuller made 4 of 6 from the field and finished with 12 points and eight rebounds.


The Bobcats, who lost 97-62 to Texas Tech in the first round last year, are 0-4 all time in the NCAA Tournament.


Jalen Cone converted a three-point play to cap a 12-6 spurt and pull the Lumberjacks within five points — as close as they had been since late in the first half — 70-65 with 4:50 to play but Battle was fouled as he hit a 3-pointer from the right corner 24 seconds later, made the and-1 free throw and Northern Arizona got no closer.

Colgate: 2022-23 Patriot Men's Basketball Champions



HAMILTON, N.Y. -- — Keegan Records scored 21 points, Tucker Richardson had a triple-double and top-seeded Colgate won its third consecutive Patriot League Tournament championship with a 79-61 victory over six-seeded Lafayette on Wednesday.


The three-peat is the first in the league since Holy Cross accomplished the feat (2000-03). The Raiders were in their sixth straight title game.


The Raiders (26-8) beat the Leopards (11-23) for the third time this season, winning their ninth straight game. The first two wins came on 12- and four-point margins. But the third time around Colgate had a 17-point lead by halftime that reached as many as 24 in the second half.


“I just feel like once we get a lead, we’re just so hard for teams to come back on us because we’ve been in so many big games over the years,” Richardson said in a postgame TV interview.


Records finished 9-of-10 shooting and blocked five shots. League player of the year Richardson, who had double-doubles in the first two tournament games, finished with 14 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists — the first Colgate triple-double since 1997.

Texas A&M-Corpus Christi: 2022-23 Southland Men's Basketball Champions



LAKE CHARLES, La. — The Texas A&M-Corpus Christi men's basketball team had as bad of a start as it could in Wednesday's Southland Conference Tournament championship game.


But it only made the ending sweeter.


The Islanders shook off a 16-point first-half deficit and an injury to Southland Conference Defensive Player of the Year Terrion Murdix in the game's opening minutes to rally for a 75-71 win against Northwestern State to claim the school's second straight NCAA Tournament berth.


Trailing 26-10 in the moments after Murdix had to be carried off the floor after slipping, head coach Steve Lutz said the Islanders were "shell shocked."


Responding to adversity

Redshirt freshman Owen Dease spurred a comeback with a career-best 16 points, helping the team close the first half on a 21-5 spurt to pull even at 31.


"They were all shell shocked. I was shell shocked," Texas A&M-Corpus Christi coach Steve Lutz said. "It took everything to not cry on the sideline for that kid, because he has given us everything he has. These guys are human. Terrion is best friends with half of them. He is that guy.


"You see him go down and it takes a good while to regroup. When you have good people and guys that care, they are usually going to get themselves out of that little funk, and to their credit, they did."


Dease had a dunk and two 3-pointers, aided by Northwestern State's commitment to shut down Trevian Tennyson as part of the closing run that pulled the Islanders even at half.


Jalen Jackson took over in the second half, assuming more of the primary ball handling with Murdix out, scored 13 of his team-best 17 points adding five assists after the break to grab tournament MVP honors.


"It means a lot knowing that I could do whatever I could to help my team get the win so we could get back to the tournament," Jackson said. "We started off slow but my guys were there to help me go. In the second half it was my time. I didn't want to lose and I stepped up.


"We knew we were going to make shots. Terrion going down shocked us. After that we regrouped a little bit. Owen gave us a spark. He got us going and got us going defensively. At halftime it was a new game when we got it to 31-31."


Locking down the Demons

Defensively the Islanders enabled the first half comeback by holding Northwestern State scoreless for nearly seven minutes bridging the two halves after Demarcus Sharp and the Demons opened the game on fire, hitting 8 of their first 12 shots including four 3-pointers.


Sharp, the Southland Conference Player of the Year finished with 32 points on 15-of-31 shooting, taking as many shot attempts as the rest of his team, but the Islanders momentum from closing the first half well carried over.


The Demons had one final run after the Islanders built it to eight with 1:36 to play, but De'Lazarus Keys had a key offensive rebound that set up Tennyson for a bucket to stretch the game back to three points and Jackson's free throws sealed the game.


Redshirt freshman steps up

Lutz said the team had faith in Dease, a 6-foot-8 forward from Evansville, Indiana, who shoots more than 40% from 3-point range in practice, and he stepped up when the team needed him.


"For him to be shooting 12% in games, you knew the numbers were going to level up," Lutz said. "To Owen's credit he never lost confidence. He never stopped working. There have been games where he came in and hit big 3s. Tonight was one of those."


Dease said his first attempt was short but on target and he knew his shot was there.


"My shot was going to be there, so I decided to get to the rim the next time and got a layup," Dease said. "We got a stop and just kept competing hard. After I hit the first two 3s they had Sharp try to come and deny the ball. It was beneficial, because we were moving the ball well and playing hard."


Back to the Dance

After a season where Texas A&M-Corpus Christi returned every player with eligibility remaining, the Islanders ended the season where they began it when they were installed as Southland Conference favorites: at the top.


For the second straight season and third time in program history the team will gather Sunday to find where they are slotted in the field of 68.


Jackson, who will advance to the tournament for the fourth consecutive year after two trips with North Texas, said the Islanders will not be content just getting there.


"I think our experience will help us, but you never know. It is the NCAA Tournament," Lutz said. "That is the great thing about college basketball, the NCAA Tournament. Whether we are in Dayton in the play-in game or we are a 15 or 16-seed, it doesn't matter.


"We are going."