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Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Early predictions for the 2021 Final Four - Are we destined for a Gonzaga vs. Baylor men's final? - ESPN

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The 2021 Final Four is here in men's college basketball, and it's dominated by heavyweights and historic programs. Even in an NCAA tournament in which Cinderellas received plenty of the spotlight, the penultimate and ultimate stages will feature two teams that were talked about all season long -- the Gonzaga Bulldogs and the Baylor Bears -- as well as Houston Cougars and UCLA Bruins squads that have had hoops greatness written into their DNA for decades.

As the game takes a breath before Saturday's Final Four, ESPN.com's panel of Myron Medcalf, Jeff Borzello, John Gasaway and Joe Lunardi discusses the seemingly inevitable matchup of destiny that has been Gonzaga vs. Baylor; the biggest obstacles in the path of the 2020-21 campaign's top two programs; the Final Four coach who has done the best job this season; and the oddities of an event played amid the realities of the coronavirus pandemic. Follow this link for Saturday's Final Four tip times, and visit here to check your March Madness bracket or second-chance March Madness bracket.


With apologies to Houston and UCLA, we've seemingly been trending toward a Gonzaga-Baylor national championship game since November and probably before. As you look at the Final Four matchups, what is the single biggest threat to a Zags-Bears meeting on Monday night?

Medcalf: I think history is the greatest threat for Gonzaga. Once the NCAA expanded the field in 1985 and put six games between a team and the national championship, no team has entered the event with a perfect record and left with one. The 1975-76 Indiana team's perfect season unfolded just a year after the field had been expanded to 32 teams. That was 45 years ago. Then Larry Bird ran into Magic Johnson in 1979. The 1990-91 UNLV squad had destroyed ranked teams that season before losing to Duke. The Runnin' Rebels seemed invincible. Wichita State had an uphill climb with Kentucky waiting for it in the second round in 2014. But the 2015 Kentucky squad was a juggernaut. All of them lost.

Tuesday's effort by Gonzaga suggests there might be a gap between the Bulldogs and the remaining teams, even Baylor, although the Bears have offered plenty of evidence they can win that game if it happens. Houston just keeps neutralizing opponents. And the UCLA run, capped by a win over Michigan in the Elite Eight? Wild. All three of these other teams can be dangerous. Over 45 years, however, others like Gonzaga have reached this point. And it just didn't happen. Gonzaga might be different. But the Bulldogs are fighting history -- and the teams standing in their way.

Borzello: I'd say Houston's offensive rebounding. The Cougars are the second-best offensive rebounding team in the country, and they absolutely destroyed Oregon State on the glass in the Elite Eight, getting second-chance opportunity after second-chance opportunity against the Beavers' zone defense. Baylor doesn't have too many weaknesses, but one of them is the Bears' defensive rebounding issues. They finished eighth in the Big 12 in defensive rebounding percentage, and they're in the bottom 100 nationally in that category. I don't think Houston is going to be intimidated by Baylor on Saturday night; the Cougars are physical and tough, and they don't expect to win pretty. If they can dominate the glass, they'll have a shot at ruining the Gonzaga-Baylor dream matchup.

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0:22

Mark Vital cleans up a miss with a putback flush as Baylor reaches the Final Four for the first time in 71 years.

Gasaway: The biggest threat to a Gonzaga-Baylor title game in my view is a Bears opponent that doesn't commit turnovers. Since we're down to just one possible BU opponent in between Scott Drew's team and the winner on the other side of the bracket, that burden falls to Houston. Baylor has forced the likes of Wisconsin, Villanova and Arkansas to commit many turnovers. That's impressive, because all three of those teams took excellent care of the ball during the regular season. If an opponent ever did shut off that valve, however, it would make a measurable difference for the Bears. On "effective" (turnover-less) tournament possessions, Baylor is outscoring its opponents by a much smaller margin.

Lunardi: Ten years after VCU pulled its "First Four to the Final Four" heroics, UCLA has repeated the feat and will be the latest to challenge the Gonzaga juggernaut. The Bruins have absolutely no business knocking off the Zags and preventing a Bulldogs-Baylor championship game, but we'd have said the same thing before any of UCLA's five improbable wins in this tournament.


Mark Few, Scott Drew, Kelvin Sampson and Mick Cronin are your Final Four coaches. The debate on who has the best team might be too easy, so which of these four gentlemen has done the best job in 2020-21?

Borzello: Hard to go against Mick Cronin right now in terms of March performance. The Bruins lost Chris Smith, arguably their best player, to a torn ACL. Jalen Hill has been out for personal reasons. The Bruins looked lost over the final few weeks of the season, losing four in a row before the NCAA tournament. And then they were left for dead after being down by 13 in the first half to Michigan State in the First Four. The Bruins haven't lost since, and they've looked in control for most of the past 165 minutes of basketball.

Cronin had questions facing him when he took over the UCLA job: How would he, a Midwest guy through and through, adapt to Los Angeles? How would his brand of basketball -- physical, grueling, half-court basketball -- adapt to a fan base expecting fireworks and five-stars? He has answered those questions. Less than two years after being hired, Cronin has the Bruins in the Final Four.

Lunardi: Bobby Knight was the coach of the year in 1976 when Indiana completed the last undefeated national championship season. With or without that distinction in 2021, Gonzaga has dominated the sport unlike any team since UNLV in 1990-91. Mark Few built these Bulldogs, and he has them playing at a ridiculously high level. That screams "did the best job" to me in every way it can be said.

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0:24

Gonzaga's Drew Timme flushes a two-handed jam and gets his mustache in on the celebration.

Medcalf: Mark Few didn't reach his first Elite Eight until his 16th season as a head coach. Kelvin Sampson did it in his 15th season as a Division I head coach. Scott Drew pulled it off in his seventh season. It took Mick Cronin 18 seasons and three schools to achieve that feat. Now, Cronin has led UCLA back to the Final Four. This run has been nothing short of magical. If anyone doubted the initial start on this run, it's impossible for them to deny the value of wins over Alabama and Michigan, two teams that entered the NCAA tournament with legit Final Four aspirations. It doesn't matter what happens next. Cronin is certainly the most impressive coach in the mix right now. This is one of the most remarkable turnarounds we've seen in college basketball history.

Gasaway: I thought Juwan Howard was college basketball's coach of the year in 2020-21, and I was on his bandwagon from day one. I'm jumping off now, not just because Michigan isn't here but because I'm not sure we're fully comprehending just how well Gonzaga is playing.

As my colleague Mr. Borzello put it well during the regional final, USC was unable to so much as lay a glove on the Bulldogs. And we are talking about a Trojans team that beat Kansas by, what, 816 points, right? It's wild, and when a team is this close to doing something we haven't seen in 45 years, we run the risk of future archaeologists thinking we were inept when we didn't give Mark Few some form of recognition. Plus, the guy has built this program to the level where it is today. (Yes, Dan Monson, Mike Roth and Dan Fitzgerald all had a hand in this miracle too.) Few has my vote.


Apart from the basketball -- which has been pretty good! -- this has been an undeniably unusual tournament played under the most unique circumstances in the sport's history. What are you going to remember most about the pandemic tournament?

Medcalf: I'm going to remember how these reduced crowds at Lucas Oil Stadium, Bankers Life Fieldhouse and Hinkle Fieldhouse screamed for two hours to cheer their teams on. No, it has not sounded like a typical NCAA tournament crowd. But there was still an atmosphere. And college basketball has largely been missing that atmosphere for at least a year. After leading Houston to the Final Four on Monday, Kelvin Sampson saw some of his friends up in the stands and threw up his hands to acknowledge them. It was a cool moment in a tournament that has had a few odd moments. While we'll definitely appreciate more traditional arrangements in the coming years, everyone involved made this feel real in 2021. Different, yes. But still real. Not sure we could have imagined that a year ago.

Gasaway: I will remember that there were zero complaints about where a team was playing because every team was playing in the same spot: Indiana, and, usually, Indianapolis. That was nice, and it was peaceful to see an entire vein of controversy simply disappear. The thing I did not like, conversely, was never knowing what day it was. To not have the round of 64 start on Thursday at noon ET and to not have the round of 32 start on Saturday confused me thoroughly in ways that extended outside basketball. I for one will be happy to return to the old familiar schedule, let us hope, in 2022.

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0:28

Max Abmas brings the ball up court for Oral Roberts and drains a step-back 3-pointer vs. Arkansas.

Borzello: Walking from one side of Lucas Oil Stadium to the other side and watching two different games separated by a curtain in the middle of the stadium. It's a weird deal, man. The unique logistics of this entire tournament -- from the single location to the change in tournament schedule to the standalone Sweet 16 games -- have been the most memorable aspect of the past three weeks. Of course, there's Max Abmas' performance and Alex Reese's shot and Gonzaga's general dominance, but the uniqueness of everything has really stood out to me.

Lunardi: Gonzaga's historic excellence, and the fact that there were no major complaints on Selection Sunday. Maybe we were just so doggone glad to have the tournament back that we didn't nitpick the 68-team field. Maybe the pandemic-altered season gave everyone some necessary perspective. Or maybe the men's basketball committee simply did a marvelous job under inconceivable circumstances. The committee, along with Dan Gavitt and the NCAA staff, should be remembered for a job well done in both believing that a tournament was possible and then pulling it off.

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Early predictions for the 2021 Final Four - Are we destined for a Gonzaga vs. Baylor men's final? - ESPN
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Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Michigan vs. UCLA score, takeaways: Bruins go from First Four to Final Four with upset of No. 1 Wolverines - CBSSports.com

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A UCLA team that needed overtime to advance out of the First Four is now headed to the Final Four. The No. 11 seed Bruins outlasted No. 1 seed Michigan 51-49 on Tuesday night to complete an improbable run through the East Regional and into a Saturday showdown with Gonzaga in the national semifinals.

The winner of that game will go to the national title game, but for now, the Bruins have a new accomplishment to add to their storied basketball lore. UCLA is just the second team ever to reach the Final Four after playing in the First Four, joining VCU's 2011 team.

Tuesday's victory over the Wolverines required every bit of fortitude the Bruins could muster. UCLA fell behind 13-6 in the opening minutes and looked lifeless offensively. But sophomore guard Johnny Juzang put the Bruins on his back, scoring 28 points in the game. 

The Kentucky transfer has emerged as a true star for the Bruins in the NCAA Tournament, and Tuesday's performance was his best yet. Juzang did miss a free throw with 6.3 seconds left that gave Michigan an opportunity to attempt a game-winner at the end of regulation. However, Michigan missed a pair of looks in the final seconds, and UCLA's unlikely run survived for another day.

Late chances

Michigan got two great looks in the final six seconds that could have won the game. First, guard Mike Smith pulled up on the left wing with three seconds left and attempted a relatively open 3-pointer that rimmed out. The rebound went out of bounds off UCLA's Jaylen Clark, which gave Michigan one more chance with 0.5 seconds left.

Again, the Wolverines got a quality look. Inbound passer Hunter Dickinson hit Franz Wagner in stride, but Wagner's 3-point shot from the left wing hit the backboard, the rim and then fell off.

Missing those last-second looks will haunt Michigan, but the Wolverines missed their last eight shots total, including a pair of attempts that would have given them the lead on their prior possession. With senior leader Isiah Livers out with a foot injury, it didn't feel like the Wolverines had an obvious go-to option when the game was on the line.

Magic Mick

Mick Cronin made nine straight NCAA Tournament appearances at Cincinnati but only advanced to the Sweet 16 once. Now in his first NCAA Tournament with UCLA, he's headed to the Final Four. For a team that lost its leading returning scorer, Chris Smith, after just eight games, this is nothing short of magical.

UCLA started out 8-9 last season during Cronin's first year, and it seemed clear why he wasn't the Bruins' top choice. But all he's done since that point is mold this program into a gritty, overachieving bunch. The Bruins battled back from their disastrous start last season to finish second in the Pac-12.

This season hit a speed bump, too. UCLA had lost four straight games entering the NCAA Tournament. Now, all of a sudden, the Bruins have won five straight, including two overtime games and a last-second thriller.

Johnny on the spot

What are Kentucky fans thinking as they watch Juzang evolve into a star? He could barely hold a place in the Wildcats' rotation as a freshman last season and is now the star of a Final Four team while Kentucky sits at home after a 9-16 season.

Juzang is from the Los Angeles suburbs and described his decision to transfer to UCLA as "coming home." Now, the 6-foot-6 wing will be a legend in his home city. His performance was even more heroic because it came as he battled through a right ankle injury in the second half. When Juzang limped off the floor with 17:17 left, UCLA led by nine points. Michigan went on a quick 4-0 run while Juzang was out.

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2021 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship Final Four Tips Off Saturday, April 3, on CBS - NCAA.com

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2021 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship Final Four Tips Off Saturday, April 3, on CBS | NCAA.com

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Preseason Friendlies, Seattle Sounders FC vs. Portland Timbers: Four Takeaways - SoundersFC.com

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Seattle Sounders FC hosted a pair of preseason matches on their practice field at Starfire Sports on Tuesday, signaling the club’s first competition in 2021. The first contest featured Sounders FC’s First Team for the opening 75 minutes, followed by 15 minutes of Tacoma Defiance players while Portland fielded the same lineup for the full 90 minutes. Fredy Montero opened the scoring in the 62nd minute before Portland’s Dairon Asprilla knocked home a late equalizer.

There weren’t too many other threats on goal, with a defensive highlight coming from Nouhou when he stopped Portland’s vaunted counterattack as the backtracking defender following a free kick.

A few other tidbits:

1. Two Forwards

The lineup featured both Will Bruin and Fredy Montero, a different approach than the usual lone forward system deployed by Head Coach Brian Schmetzer. Both seasoned veterans, Bruin and Montero were able to show their strengths — Bruin bodied defenders and kept possession, while Montero’s poaching ability came clutch when he pounced on a loose ball to give Seattle the 1-0 lead.

2. Nico the Engine

Captain Nico Lodeiro was flying around all over the pitch, treating this match no different than any other. A particular bright spot came from long balls to Montero, and although none of them materialized into chances, it’s something to look forward to as the season gets underway next month.

3. Always a Rivalry

Preseason or not, it’s still a Cascadia match. The tenacity and physical nature of the rivalry was on full display on Tuesday, with more than a few tough tackles and challenges from both sides.

Will Bruin: “It’s nice to play fresh blood. I think everyone here heard the competitiveness that was in the game… It’s fun, these preseason games are always fun, especially when you play your rival. There is always a competitive edge.”


Forward Will Bruin battles for a ball during Tuesday's scrimmage against Portland at Starfire Sports. | Lindsey Wasson

4. The Youth

Following the First Team match, a second friendly featured mostly younger Sounders FC players and the Defiance players who have participated in preseason camp. Yeimar, Jimmy Medranda and Jordy Delem provided experience for the group, which played to a scoreless draw against a young Portland side.

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Gonzaga Makes Final Four With Another (Expected) Rout - The New York Times

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The Zags’ pursuit of an undefeated season has often come on the undercard for other games during this N.C.A.A. men’s tournament.

INDIANAPOLIS — The warm, fuzzy story line of this N.C.A.A. men’s basketball tournament is Gonzaga’s pursuit of an undefeated season. The Zags, tucked away on the dry, desolate side of the Cascade Range, have long since grown out of their glass slippers — they travel by charter, produce a pipeline of N.B.A. talent and have won more N.C.A.A. tournament games than anyone in the country since 2015.

Still, the spotlight doesn’t always find its way to the boys from Spokane.

Even on the cusp of a landmark run, the Zags found themselves on the undercard Tuesday night, relegated to the opening act for a pair of blue bloods, U.C.L.A. and Michigan.

No matter, Gonzaga quickly carved up what had been a flaming-hot Southern California team, 85-66, to win the West regional final at Lucas Oil Stadium. The Zags (30-0) will advance to play either Michigan, the No. 1 seed in the East region, or 11th-seeded U.C.L.A., which is trying to become the second team to reach the Final Four while coming out of the First Four as one of the last at-large selections in the 68-team field.

For all of Gonzaga’s success since it burst onto the college basketball scene with a run to the round of 8 in 1999, this is just the second time it has reached the Final Four. The Zags lost in the title game to North Carolina in 2017. They were agonizingly close in 2015 and 2019, losing in a regional final. And another opportunity was lost to the pandemic last season, which the Zags concluded with a 31-2 record and a No. 2 ranking in the final Associated Press Top 25 poll.

Much as Gonzaga Coach Mark Few has tried to keep his players on assignments and responsibilities that come with each game plan — something they have largely adhered to — freshman Jalen Suggs admitted that with two games left, his team has eyes on the possibility of an undefeated season, which has not been accomplished since Indiana in 1976.

“It’s hard not to think about it,” Suggs said. “We try to keep our minds off of it and keep focused on the task at hand.”

On this night, though, it all came so easily — just as it has throughout the tournament.

Gonzaga, which has had one game closer than double digits all season, has cruised past Norfolk State, Oklahoma, Creighton and U.S.C. with no game closer than 16 points.

The Zags were so unencumbered on Tuesday that Drew Timme, the mustachioed, headband-wearing sophomore center from Dallas, seemed to go through his entire catalog of flexes after scoring — showing off a bicep, twirling his finger or shaking his head after tossing in a jump hook over Evan Mobley, suggesting that the Trojans’ lithe 7-foot freshman could not guard him.

For one night, he was not wrong. Mobley is likely to be one of the first players picked in the 2021 N.B.A. draft but he had little success trying to thwart Timme, who plays with patience and a surfeit of post moves.

Timme set the tone for the thumping just moments into the game, when he stripped U.S.C. point guard Tahj Eaddy of the ball at one end and drew a foul from Mobley at the other after pump faking him into the air. He scored 13 of Gonzaga’s first 23 points. In all, Timme finished with 23 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists and 3 steals.

“It set the tone that, hey, we’re going to be aggressive,” Few said of Timme’s steal. “This thing’s going to start with defense.”

The only moment the Zags’ momentum was slowed was a sobering one. Referee Bert Smith collapsed in front of the Gonzaga bench after he had run down the court. He pivoted in the corner and then keeled over, his head hitting the floor with a thud.

Paramedics rushed to attend to Smith, who remained breathing while lying on his back. As Few huddled his players to the side of the court, guard Joel Ayayi and assistant coach Tommy Lloyd peeked over to check on Smith, who was eventually carried off on a stretcher. He was alert and stable and was not taken to a hospital, an N.C.A.A. spokesman said. He was replaced by an alternate referee.

When play resumed — with the score 11-4 in favor of Gonzaga — so did the beat down.

The game had seemed to promise some intrigue: pitting the most proficient scoring team inside the 3-point arc against the team most adept at defending within it.

U.S.C. is one of the tallest teams in the country with the Mobley brothers, Evan and Isaiah, standing 7-foot and 6-foot-10 being flanked by 6-foot-8 Drew Peterson and 6-foot-7 Isaiah White. The Trojans’ zone defense all but forms a picket fence around the basket. But for all their height, the Trojans do not handle the basketball particularly well and Gonzaga repeatedly doubled Evan Mobley and stripped other Trojans of the ball.

Gonzaga’s defense created several turnovers in the first half.
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Those steals, six in the first half, sent the Zags off and running, leaving U.S.C. Coach Andy Enfield fuming at his players and then the referees, wondering what became of the team that had routed Drake, Kansas and Oregon on its way to a regional final for the first time in 20 years. Gonzaga led 49-30 at halftime.

The second half was spent largely running out the clock, which expired just as fans on the West Coast were sitting down to eat dinner.

The schedule is made largely by the networks that broadcast the games, CBS and TBS. Tuesday’s games were broadcast on the cable network. TBS spokesman Jay Moskowitz declined to explain why the Zags were put in the early game, which began when much of the country — including the entire West Coast — was still at work.

Both games featured a team from the Los Angeles market, but the networks often prefer to put U.C.L.A. in prime slots — as they have in all five games the Bruins have played. And with a No. 1 seed like Michigan, which has a national following, it may have been a predictable decision.

Not that it bothered Few. He said, simply and seemingly without irony, that Gonzaga fans had their priorities in order.

“Trust me, our fans, they’re not at work,” he said. “If you think they’re at work, you don’t know the Zag fans. Everything’s shut down, and everybody was watching.”

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South Carolina Rolls Past Texas Into the Final Four - The New York Times

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Texas was held scoreless in the fourth quarter as the Gamecocks started their celebration early.

SAN ANTONIO — Sixth-seeded Texas went cold at the worst possible moment, failing to muster a credible threat to South Carolina as the No. 1-seeded Gamecocks sailed into the Final Four of the N.C.A.A. women’s tournament on Monday night with a 62-34 win.

In the ultimate sign of futility after a run that included upsets of U.C.L.A. and Maryland, Texas scored 0 points in the fourth quarter — missing all 15 of its shots. The Longhorns shot 23 percent for the game.

The Gamecocks dominated from the start to earn their third trip to the national semifinals and their first since winning a national title in 2017.

“When we got knocked down four times this season, they got back up stronger,” South Carolina Coach Dawn Staley told ESPN after the game, referring to the Gamecocks’ four losses this year. “And that’s the mark of a true champion.”

Zia Cooke and Destanni Henderson repeatedly fed Victaria Saxton in the paint, weaving through Texas’ notorious defense with ease. Cooke led with 16 points, and added 6 rebounds and 3 assists. Henderson had 12 points and 7 assists, while Saxton had 12 points and 8 rebounds.

The Longhorns got into gear briefly in the third quarter as more and more Texas fans trickled into the audience after work hours, bolstering the cheers and outcries that bounced around the cavernous stadium walls at the Alamodome.

Audrey Warren, who led Texas with 13 points, scored two of her — and the team’s — three 3-pointers in the third quarter. And at one point, Texas came within 10 points of South Carolina on a second-chance layup by Lauren Ebo.

But that was as close as the Longhorns got after South Carolina took an early 15-point lead and scored 14 points off Texas turnovers. Looking exhausted and downtrodden after Warren scored their final points in the third quarter, the Longhorns let South Carolina celebrate early with a big run while they continued to watch their shots bounce off the rim, not adding a single point to their score in the final 10-minute period.

The Longhorns and Gamecocks had not previously met since 2016, however Texas Coach Vic Schaefer and Staley have — including for the national title in Dallas in 2017, when Schaefer was coaching Mississippi State. The Bulldogs ended UConn’s 111-game winning streak to get there, but South Carolina came out on top for its only championship. Staley beat Schaefer in 12 out of their 15 meetings while they were Southeastern Conference foes.

“I always look forward to playing Vic because of what he puts into his scouting reports, his game-planning and his scheming,” Staley told reporters on Monday.

South Carolina limited Charli Collier, right, the projected No. 1 overall pick in the W.N.B.A. draft, to 4 points and held Texas scoreless in the fourth quarter.
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Even without the pandemic, Texas went through significant transition this summer when Schaefer took over for longtime coach Karen Aston. Players recalled struggling to get to know each other and their coaches during video calls and limited practices, and said that has helped them bond and peak at the right time within the controlled environment set up for the tournament.

It was a relatively quiet night for South Carolina sophomore forward Aliyah Boston and Texas junior center Charli Collier, who had both averaged double-doubles this tournament and went head-to-head on Tuesday night. Boston, who is up for a few player-of-the-year awards, had 10 points and 8 rebounds; Collier, who is projected to be the No. 1 pick in the W.N.B.A. draft, was held to 4 points after missing 8 of 10 shots.

Boston also had a slow start during South Carolina’s round-of-16 game against Georgia Tech but picked it up in the second half where she scored all 9 points. But in that game her teammates stepped in, led by Cooke on the perimeter with 17 points in a 76-65 win.

With its powerhouse defense, Texas was also able to hold No. 2 seed Maryland to its lowest score of the season in a 64-61 upset to advance to the round of 8 by limiting the Terrapins’ possessions and forcing 11 turnovers.

The fans helped too, Schaefer said. The university, located in Austin, is about 80 miles from San Antonio, the hub for the tournament where most of its games have been staged. “I thought our fans provided a great environment for both teams,” Schaefer said Monday.

South Carolina will play either top-seeded Stanford or Louisville, a No. 2 seed, in the Final Four. The Cardinal (a singular reference to Stanford’s red color) and the Cardinals (pluralized for Louisville’s bird mascot) were scheduled to play Tuesday night for the last spot in the national semifinals. On Monday night, No. 1-seeded UConn and No. 3-seeded Arizona squeezed past their opponents to set up one semifinal. Both semifinals are scheduled for Friday night.

Stanford and Louisville had only met once before, when Louisville knocked the Cardinal out of the 2018 N.C.A.A. tournament in the round of 16.

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South Carolina Rolls Past Texas Into the Final Four - The New York Times
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Houston is back in the Final Four, primed to end a streak of truly bad luck - NCAA.com

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INDIANAPOLIS — They danced, they laughed, Kelvin Sampson gave his kids hugs. Houston was one band of happy Cougars to be back in the Final Four this week. Of course, the program has been there before, quite some time ago.

It didn’t end well.

Five times it didn’t end well. In fact, you could make the case that few programs have had a more star-crossed Final Four history than Houston, which now has a chance to vastly improve on that situation. Illinois and Oklahoma are the only other schools who have been to as many as five Final Fours and are yet to win a title. If the current Cougars lose next weekend, they will stand alone at six.

And it’s just not the record, but how it's happened. They have had meaty roles for two of the most famous Final Four games in history — as the victims. In their five past trips they somehow managed to run into Kareem Abdul-Jabbar . . . and Michael Jordan . . . and Patrick Ewing. A wall of Hall of Famers for Houston to beat its collective heads against.

But let’s start at the beginning.

1967 — Timing is everything, and the Cougars didn’t have it. They advanced to their first Final Four and who should be waiting for them but one of the greatest teams in history; unbeaten UCLA with Lew Alcindor – later Abdul-Jabbar -- in his first season of steamrolling college basketball.

The Houston players had an idea of what they were in for the day prior to the game, when they were sitting in their hotel lobby pretty much to themselves and in strolled the Bruins, surrounded by a gaggle of fans and media. UCLA arrived like rock stars, while the Cougars, Don Chaney would say years later, “felt like country bumpkins.”

The next day, Alcindor had 19 points and 20 rebounds and UCLA breezed to a 15-point victory.

1968 — Houston ended UCLA’s 47-game winning streak by two points in the Astrodome in a made-for-TV January spectacular that was instantly billed The Game of the Century. Two months later they were together again in the Final Four in Los Angeles, with the Cougars unbeaten and No. 1 and the Bruins with only that one loss. It was the rematch everyone wanted, and the nation settled back to watch college basketball’s version of Frazier vs. Ali.

What the nation got was more like an accountant vs. Ali. The first bad sign for Houston was when its student manager – selling leftover tickets from the team allotment outside the arena as coach Guy Lewis had requested – was arrested by LA police, taken to jail and charged with scalping.

It wasn’t any more pleasant inside the building for the players. Alcindor had a scratched cornea in the January meeting but was at full speed for the rematch, and he and the rest of the Bruins had a message to send. It ended 101-69. Houston star Elvin Hayes, who had vexed the Bruins with 39 points in January, was held to 10, nearly 28 points under his average.

Lewis called it then “the greatest exhibition of basketball I have ever seen in my life.” A lot of people could say that.

1982 — More than 61,000 people were in the Superdome audience when Houston took on North Carolina, which included stars such as Sam Perkins and James Worthy, and a freshman named Jordan. As was their custom back then, the Tar Heels got the lead and then four-cornered the Cougars into oblivion, 68-63.

1983 — The one that haunts the most. Phi Slama Jama was all the rage, as the high-flying Cougars soared into the national championship game by beating Louisville in a 94-81 dunkathon in the semifinals. The media immediately dubbed that game 21st century basketball, and all that was left for No. 1 Houston was to finish off a 10-loss team from North Carolina State that barely eked into the tournament.

FOLLOW: Listen to every tournament game on Westwood One

The Wolfpack dictated a slow tempo in this pre-shot clock era, but the Cougars put together a 17-2 run for a late seven-point lead. Then Houston started missing free throws, North Carolina State rallied and had the ball in the final seconds in a 52-52 tie. Guard Dereck Whittenburg put up a desperation 30-foot shot with four seconds left that was way short and . . . you might know the rest. They do in Houston. Lorenzo Charles was waiting under the basket to grab the errant shot and slammed it home with one second left. Phi Slama Jama had lived by the dunk, and died by the dunk. The scene of North Carolina State coach Jim Valvano running wildly around the court gets replayed every spring as an iconic and wonderful tournament moment – except for the team he had just beaten.

For hollow consolation, Houston’s Akeem later-to-be-Hakeem Olajuwon was named Most Outstanding Player, and 38 years later, is still the last member of a losing team to be so.

1984 — There was enough left over of Phi Slama Jama — especially Olajuwon — that Houston returned to the national title game. But the Cougars ran into Ewing and Georgetown’s defense and lost 84-75. The golden days were over. Houston would not win another NCAA tournament game for 34 years.

The Cougars’ special brand of Final Four pain can be measured with numbers. They are one of only four programs to go to three consecutive Final Fours and not win any of them. UCLA, Ohio State and North Carolina are also in that club, but those three all have national championships from other years. Houston is also one of four programs to lose consecutive title games — with Cincinnati, Michigan and Butler.

But maybe another number explains how tough it has been for the Cougars, because the opponent has a lot to do with fate. Take away the North Carolina State fairy tale, and the four other teams Houston lost to in the Final Four had a combined record of 118-6 when they met.

Watch all 11 Houston 3-pointers in Elite Eight win

So now here the Cougars are again 37 years later, and Sampson is telling stories about how much he wishes his parents were alive to see this. And about the Sweet 16 in 2002 when he was coaching at Oklahoma, and how he was in the hospital until 4 a.m. the day of the game waiting for his father to come out of surgery with a brain aneurysm. Those Sooners would eventually get to the Final Four. And how his old boss at Oklahoma, athletics director Joe Castiglione sent Sampson a big package when he got the job at Houston. Inside the package was a ladder to both symbolize Sampson’s career climb and the hope he would be needing it to cut down nets in the future.

Final Four: Here's what the world was like last time Baylor made it

This Houston team has nothing like the glamour of Phi Slama Jama or the Elvin Hayes bunch that took down UCLA in the middle of the Astrodome. "We may not have the brightest lights," Sampson said, "but our lights shine as bright as anybody else's."

These Cougars now have a chance to do what those Houston teams could not. And if it doesn’t turn out, if there is defeat at the end for a sixth time?

Well, it’s not a bad legacy for a program to have, losing lots of Final Four games.

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