NCAA Tournament 2001 - Whistles worry Montgomery vs. Cincy


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Whistles worry Montgomery vs. Cincy

Associated Press

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- The one thing Stanford coach Mike Montgomery worries about not being able to control in the NCAA tournament is foul trouble.

The Cardinal (30-2) found out just how much they could miss one of their starters when point guard Michael McDonald sat down with four fouls in the second half against St. Joseph's.

Without McDonald to run the offense, the Hawks erased a double-digit deficit and took the lead, giving the West Regional's top-seeded team a huge scare. So desperate was Stanford that Montgomery had to put McDonald back in, and the Cardinal went on to a 90-83 second-round victory.

"We've never really not had Mike as the result of foul trouble," Montgomery said. "Sometimes you get into circumstances that only happen very rarely and that can be enough to skew the outcome of a game."

Fifth-seeded Cincinnati (25-9) hopes its emphasis on defense and rebounding will produce a victory in Thursday night's regional semifinal that few believe the inexperienced Bearcats can pull off.

"Nobody's expecting us to win but ourselves," guard Kenny Satterfield said. "We feel we can, in your eyes, make it an upset."

His backcourt mate, Steve Logan, added, "The underdog is fine with us. We don't put pressure on ourselves because we feel as though we're a big-time team just like they are. We have to go out there with the same intensity and the same confidence that they have."

The job of guarding Stanford's top shooter, Casey Jacobsen, will likely fall to Immanuel McElroy, a junior averaging seven points to Jacobsen's 18.

"Mac is a pretty good defender, but we have to be there to stop the twins down low. They're so tough," Logan said. "We have to go out there and play team defense."

The twins are 7-footers Jarron and Jason Collins, who've posted impressive numbers in Stanford's first two tournament wins. Jarron combined for 23 points and 12 rebounds, while Jason had 47 points and 17 rebounds in the two games.

Keeping them off the boards will be a challenge for the Bearcats, who were outrebounded by 16 of their 34 opponents, including three of their four Conference USA tournament games.

"They play very well together as far as playing high-low and feeding each other in the post," Satterfield said. "If we pressure them, it makes it real hard for them to get the ball down low."

When the Collins twins get near the basket, they'll see B.J. Grove, who at 6-11 is Cincinnati's tallest player, along with reserve center Donald Little.

"I never know what to expect from them," Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins said of his big men. "They continually surprise me. We've got to somehow find a way to stay close on the glass."

Huggins hopes Stanford's big men are occupied helping chase Logan and Satterfield, leaving Grove and Little free to grab some rebounds.

Huggins sounded downright depressed when comparing his team to Stanford. The Cardinal shoots 51 percent from the field, averages 37 rebounds, and scores 83 points a game. The Bearcats shoot 44 percent, average 35 rebounds, and average 74 points.

"Trying to figure out which hurts us the least, I haven't figured that out yet," he said. "I'm running out of time."

These Bearcats are the youngest and least experienced players in Huggins' 12 years at Cincinnati. But they surprised him by winning the school's sixth Conference USA title, and reaching the final 16 for the first time in five years.

"They had opportunities where they could have settled for where they were, and they haven't," Huggins said. "It's one thing to talk about it, and it's another to really do it. We're not near as athletic as what we used to be, and we're not near as skilled as what we were the last couple of years. But they've compensated for it by really playing very well together, very unselfishly."

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