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Saturday, Mar. 10 10:00pm ET
Tulsa will likely have to settle for NIT bid RECAP | BOX SCORE
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TULSA, Okla. (AP) Hawaii is riding the wave of its recent hot
streak right into the NCAA Tournament.
The Warriors got a career night from freshman Carl English to
beat Tulsa 78-72 in overtime Saturday night in the championship of
the Western Athletic Conference tournament.
The victory, Hawaii's seventh in the past eight games, sends the
Warriors (17-13) to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since
1994 and just the third time in school history.
"We stayed together and executed and made big baskets. They did
everything right," coach Riley Wallace said of Tulsa. "We just
made the big plays when we had to."
English scored 25 points on 7-of-12 shooting, including 4-of-7
from 3-point range. His leaner in close with 1.8 seconds left in
regulation forced overtime, then he scored seven in the extra
period.
"My confidence has been high the last 10 games," said English,
who averaged 3.9 points during the regular season. "If I make a
couple, my confidence gets high and I don't mind taking them."
English had three of his 3s and 14 of his points at halftime.
His first basket of the second half didn't come until 3:44 left in
regulation, but it brought the Warriors within 64-63.
The next basket by either team was Dante Swanson's shot in the
lane with 36 seconds left that gave Tulsa (21-11) a 66-63 lead.
English sank two free throws with 18.9 seconds remaining, then
David Shelton made one of two free throws for Tulsa with 14.8 to
go.
Hawaii then drew up a play for its best player, Predrag Savovic,
who was hindered by foul trouble all night. The play broke down and
English took the ball inside and scored the tying basket with 1.8
seconds remaining.
"I just drove and put it up there and luckily it went in.
That's about it," English said.
"I was just so happy, because if he doesn't make it, it's
over," Wallace said. "We called something, it wasn't there and he
created, and that's what you've got to do."
Swanson scored early in overtime to give Tulsa the lead, but
Nerijus Puida and English then sank back-to-back 3-pointers to
start an 8-0 run that gave Hawaii the lead for good.
Antonio Reed, who scored a career-high 19 for Tulsa, hit a 3
with 1:40 left to get the Golden Hurricane within 75-72, but
English made four free throws down the stretch to seal the victory.
English and Mike McIntyre, who made five 3-pointers and scored
19, made up for subpar nights from Savovic and Troy Ostler. Ostler
injured an ankle in the first half and had four points in 20
minutes. Savovic finished with seven points, 11 below his average.
"When those two are doing it and we're really keying on Savovic
and Ostler and Puida, they're a very tough team to stop," Tulsa
coach Buzz Peterson said.
Tulsa was seeking its sixth NCAA Tournament berth since 1994,
but instead is likely headed to the NIT.
Shelton had 15 points, Swanson 13, and Kevin Johnson had 10
points and 10 rebounds for Tulsa.
Hawaii led 59-51 midway through the second half before Tulsa put
together an 11-0 run to take the lead with five minutes left. The
Hurricane held the lead the rest of the way until English's big
shot in the closing seconds.
"Hawaii is playing as well as anyone in this league right now
and they'll be a fine representative of our league going into the
tournament," Peterson said.
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