RECAP
SAN ANTONIO (AP) Bodies were banging and fouls were piling up.
At practically every whistle, Illinois coach Bill Self was sending
in another player or two to replenish the troops.
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Fri, March 23
Illinois made it a perfect 4-for-4, as all four No. 1 seeds advanced to the
Elite Eight. It wasn't easy, but the Illini got it done against Kansas with
depth, offensive rebounding and a solid performance by Frank Williams. The
bench scoring was a huge factor, as Lucas Johnson and Damir Krupalija were
important keys for the Illini success. They prevailed despite a rough outing
for Cory Bradford.
The final score was not indicative of this game, as Roy Williams' Kansas
team gave Illinois a real battle. In the regional final, it will be round
three for Illinois and Arizona. They split their previous two matchups in
the regular season, so Sunday's game should be a real thriller to see who
marches on to Minneapolis!
More ...
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It took 12 guys, but it worked. The Fighting Illini's depth and
a career-best 30 points from Frank Williams carried the Midwest
Region's top-seeded team to an 80-64 victory over Kansas on Friday
night.
"We felt like it had to be an ugly game," said Self, who
became the first coach to take different teams to the Elite Eight
in consecutive years. He guided Tulsa to the Midwest final last
year, then took over the Illini in June after Lon Kruger went to
the NBA's Atlanta Hawks.
"We knew if it got physical, we could win it with our bench."
Illinois (27-7) will play Arizona, the No. 2 seed, Sunday in the
Midwest Regional final. It'll be their third meeting of the season,
with each team having won once. The Wildcats advanced by beating
Mississippi 66-56 Friday night.
Kansas (26-7) ended its longest tournament run since '97. After
trailing by 14 early in the second half, the fourth-seeded Jayhawks
got within five twice then were outscored 10-0 during the final
1:24 to make the game look more lopsided than it really was. Still,
the 16-point loss is the worst tournament defeat for Kansas coach
Roy Williams in 37 games over 12 seasons.
"We weren't able to get offensive rebounds, which has been a
big part of our offense all year," said Williams, whose season
began with his decision to stay in Lawrence instead of going to
coach his alma mater, North Carolina.
"Their physical size and rebounding ability took us out of our
game plan. Illinois made us play less than a perfect game, to say
the least."
| | Eric Chenowith, right, goes up for a shot as he is fouled by Robert Archibald; Sergio McClain goes for the block. |
Illinois, which last weekend beat Northwestern State by 42 and
Charlotte by 18, knew it had the bulky frontcourt players and
speedy guards to match up with Kansas. The Illini's extra weapon
was a deep bench.
The strengths came together perfectly as Illinois' smothering
defense and quick hands forced the Jayhawks into nine turnovers in
the game's first seven minutes. The Illini used that for an 11-0
run that put them ahead for good.
The Jayhawks scratched to within 23-21 about five minutes before
halftime, but Williams answered with two 3-pointers and the Illini
pulled out to a 41-29 lead at the break.
Kansas kept its deficit in single digits most of the second
half, but with Kirk Hinrich and Drew Gooden in foul trouble, the
Jayhawks lacked the firepower to mount a serious run.
Although Illinois wasn't shooting much better, the Illini's
rotating door of reserves kept pumping life into their game. Their
bench outscored Kansas' 28-0, with Luke Johnson scoring 15 of the
points.
The extra bodies gave the Illini more fouls to use. With Kansas
making only 18 of 35 free throws, there was no reason not to whack
any Jayhawk with an open shot or even the possibility of one.
"I think unquestionably our bench was the difference in the
game," said starting center Marcus Griffin, who fouled out with
just two points. "We had several guys in foul trouble all night
long. If our bench didn't play like it did, I think we'd be on our
way home right now."
Illinois is enjoying its best run in the tournament since
reaching the Final Four in 1989, the only other time the school was
seeded first. The Illini and Michigan State give the Big Ten two
teams among the final eight.
Williams, the Big Ten player of the year, hit 11 of 24 shots,
including 3-of-7 on 3-pointers, and all five free throws he tried.
His previous high was 27 against next-round opponent Arizona.
"It all came down to my teammates giving me the confidence to
go out and gamble on offense," Williams said.
The Illini needed his big night to offset Cory Bradford going
1-of-13, including 1-of-9 on 3-pointers. Sergio McLain had 10
points and 10 rebounds.
Nick Collison led Kansas with 23 points, but he hurt the
Jayhawks down the stretch by missing five straight free throws. He
was 6-of-14 at the line.
Gooden, who averaged 18.5 points in the first two rounds, had 13
points and nine rebounds. Hinrich, his game thrown off by chasing
Williams, fouled out with 13 points and six rebounds.
"They were pretty tough out there," said guard Jeff Boschee,
who had three points on 1-of-7 shooting, all 3-point attempts. "We
were pretty tired out there, but you have to be mentally tough.
It's as good of a man defense as we've played."
The worn-out Jayhawks also were outrebounded 45-33 after
averaging 27 more boards than their opponents last weekend.
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ALSO SEE
Men's College Basketball Scoreboard
Kansas Clubhouse
Illinois Clubhouse
AUDIO/VIDEO
Bill Self was happy to win a hard fought game with Kansas. (Courtesy: NCAA Prod.)
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