DUKE 63, MISSISSIPPI STATE 55
Duke 63, Mississippi State 55
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- With one of his most unlikely Duke teams, Mike Krzyzewski moved himself into the NCAA tournament record books and the Blue Devils into the round of 16. Daniel Ewing handled the offense and Shelden Williams took care of defense to lead the top-seeded Blue Devils to the win in the second round of the Austin Regional. The win was a record 66th tournament victory for Coach K, moving him ahead of Dean Smith at the top of the list. It also sent Duke (27-5) into the regional semifinals for the eighth consecutive year, the longest current streak in the nation. The Blue Devils will play fifth-seeded Michigan State. Lawrence Roberts had 17 points and 11 rebounds for ninth-seeded Mississippi State (23-11).
Michigan State 72, Vermont 61
WORCESTER, Mass. -- Maurice Ager scored 19 points and Paul Davis had 11 points and 14 rebounds for Michigan State. Largely ignored during the Big Ten season while Illinois took over the top of the national rankings, Michigan State (24-6) found itself the sentimental second choice again in Worcester when the 13th-seeded Catamounts (25-7) beat Syracuse -- the first NCAA win in Vermont history. The crowd was heavily tilted toward Vermont, and outgoing coach Tom Brennan's sense of humor won over many of the rest. But star Taylor Coppenrath went into a shooting slump -- making 5-of-23 shots for 16 points. T.J. Sorrentine scored 26 points but made just 6 of 15 shots from 3-point range. Michigan State coach Tom Izzo moved to 21-6 in the tournament -- a winning percentage second among active coaches to Krzyzewski.
Villanova 76, Florida 65
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Backup center Jason Fraser scored 21 points and grabbed 15 rebounds to help fifth-seeded Villanova (24-7) make the round of 16 for the first time since 1988. The Wildcats will play North Carolina. With leading scorer Allan Ray struggling and Curtis Sumpter sitting out much of the game with an injury, Fraser and guard Randy Foye took over. Foye had 18 points to help pick up the slack. The fourth-seeded Gators (24-8) were held to 38.5 shooting and got little offensive support for David Lee, who had 20 points, 10 rebounds, three blocks and three steals before fouling out. Matt Walsh finished with 12 points, but was 4-for-13. Anthony Roberson went 1-for-8 and finished with five points.
North Carolina 92, Iowa State 65
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Sean May had 24 points and 17 rebounds, and sixth man Marvin Williams finished with a career-high 15 rebounds and the top-seeded Tar Heels advanced past the first weekend for the first time in five seasons. Williams scored 20 points -- tying his season high for the second consecutive game -- and Rashad McCants added 17 for North Carolina (29-4), which went to the Final Four in 2000 before the tournament drought. Now, coach Roy Williams has the Tar Heels back in the regional semifinals in his second season, the 10th time he's made it that far in 17 NCAA tournament appearances. Jared Homan, playing in his final game, finished with 19 points and 20 rebounds for Iowa State (19-12).
Wisconsin 71, Bucknell 62
OKLAHOMA CITY -- Maybe Bucknell could have found a scheme to stop Wisconsin's Mike Wilkinson or Zach Morley. Handling both, however, was too much for the upstart Bison. The 6-foot-8 forwards consistently put themselves in all the right places, especially when things were tight in the second half, carrying the Badgers to victory in the second round of the Syracuse Regional and sending 14th-seeded Bucknell back to its Pennsylvania campus with plenty to be proud of nonetheless. Morley, who was shut out in 28 minutes of a first-round win over Northern Iowa, was 6-of-7 from the field with three 3-pointers and 15 points. His tap-in with 8:41 left put the Badgers (24-8) ahead for good, then he protected the lead with rebounds on the next two defensive stands. The Bison (24-9) were still within four points when Wilkinson showed why he's won more games than any player in school history. He personally went on a 7-2 run, capped by a three-point play to push the lead back to nine, virtually ending Bucknell's bid to become just the third No. 14 to reach the NCAA's round of 16. He finished with 23 points and nine rebounds.
Oklahoma State 85, Southern Illinois 77
OKLAHOMA CITY -- Ivan McFarlin scored a career-high 31 points to move Oklahoma State into the round of 16 in consecutive seasons for the first time since 1991-92. The second-seeded Cowboys (26-6) will play third-seeded Arizona (29-6) next weekend in a meeting of the two oldest coaches in the tournament. Arizona's Lute Olson is 70, and Eddie Sutton is 69. Jamaal Tatum led the Salukis (27-8) with 22 points. Seventh-seeded Southern Illinois got within 72-68 on Tatum's 3-pointer, but JamesOn Curry answered with a 3-pointer of his own. Oklahoma State hit all eight of its free throws down the stretch and McFarlin added a two-handed jam with 44.3 seconds left to keep his team ahead.
Louisville 76, Georgia Tech 54
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Francisco Garcia scored 18 of his 21 points in the first half and Taquan Dean stopped any hope Georgia Tech had for a rally with back-to-back 3-pointers, sealing a victory that sent Louisville to the regional semifinals for the first time since 1997. Dean finished with 14 points, all but two on 3-pointers, and also had six rebounds and two assists. Larry O'Bannon added 16 for the fourth-seeded Cardinals (31-4), who have won 20 of their last 21. Luke Schenscher led the Yellow Jackets with 13, but the rest of Georgia Tech's offense was largely ineffective. Jarrett Jack had 11 points, Will Bynum had eight and B.J. Elder was held to just three for Georgia Tech (20-12), which made a thrilling run to the title game last year.
Associated Press
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