2001 NCAA Men's Tourney
CNNSI.com

Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Free e-mail Travel Subscribe SI About Us
  CNNSI.com
  Men's Home
Women's Home
More Men's Hoops News
Scoreboard
Daily Schedule
Main Bracket
Stats Matchups
Team Pages
Almanac
SI's History of The Final Four
Region Homes
 East
 • Bracket | Chart
 Midwest
 • Bracket | Chart
 South
 • Bracket | Chart
 West
 • Bracket | Chart

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Video Plus
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

 

Pac-10 pride

Arizona handles Ole Miss to join rivals in Elite Eight

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Friday March 23, 2001 10:26 PM
Updated: Saturday March 24, 2001 3:00 AM

  Aaron Harper, Michael Wright Arizona's Michael Wright gets a piece of a shot by Mississippi's Aaron Harper during the first half. Ronald Martinez/Allsport

SAN ANTONIO (AP) -- Loren Woods and the Arizona Wildcats went out of their way to stop Mississippi's Rahim Lockhart.

Woods, towering over Lockhart at 7-foot-1, helped contain Mississippi's wide-body center and send the second-seeded Wildcats to a 66-56 victory Friday night in the Midwest semifinals.

"It was a huge part of our game plan to double-team Lockhart," said Woods, who had 16 points and three blocks to 11 points and one block for Lockhart.

"We definitely wanted to try to get the ball out of his hands as much as possible, or if he did take a shot make sure there were a lot of guys around him."

Arizona (26-7) survived a 16-0 first-half punch to trail by only one point at the half, then took the lead for good early in the second half.

Despite a year of sorrow and tumult that included player suspensions and the death of Bobbi Olson, wife of coach Lute Olson, the Wildcats are headed for their first regional final since 1997.

Since their coach returned following the loss of his wife, they have been as hot as any team in the country, going 16-2 and winning their first three tournament games by a total of 56 points.

The Wildcats also will be joined in the final eight by two other members of the Pac-10, Stanford in the West and Southern California in the East.

Power conferences
Conferences with three schools in the Elite Eight
Yr.  Conference  Schools 
1982  Big East  Boston College, GEORGETOWN, Villanova 
1983  Atlantic Coast  North Carolina, x-N.C. STATE, Virginia 
1985  Big East  GEORGETOWN, ST. JOHN'S, x-VILLANOVA 
1986  Southeastern  Auburn, Kentucky, LSU 
1987  Big East  Georgetown, SYRACUSE, PROVIDENCE 
1988  Big Eight  x-KANSAS, Kansas State, OKLAHOMA 
1989  Big East  Georgetown, SETON HALL, Syracuse 
1992  Big Ten  INDIANA, MICHIGAN, Ohio State 
2000  Big Ten  x-MICHIGAN STATE, Purdue, WISCONSIN 
2001  Pac-10  Arizona, Southern California, Stanford 
(ALL CAPS reached Final Four; x-won national championship)
 
 

Lockhart, who had 24 points against Notre Dame last week as the Rebels (27-8) won their first second-round game ever, was constantly harassed down low and just 1-of-5 in the first half.

"They came out with a great game plan to double-team me," he said. "In the first half, I was very tentative and I let them attack me. In the second half, I started to attack. But they have a really good defense."

Richard Jefferson had 15 points for the Wildcats, who went ice-cold early in the first half when the third-seeded Rebels wnt on a 16-0 spree, taking an 18-6 lead on Jason Holmes' 3-pointer with 10:11 to go.

The Wildcats had four turnovers in a dry spell of 7:11 that did not end until Richard Jefferson banked in a 4-footer with 9:50 to go, cutting the lead to 18-8.

But then the Rebels went cold and scored only six points in the final 10:11 while Arizona staged runs of 7-0 and 8-0 and trailed at halftime by only one point despite going 0-for-6 from 3-point range.

"I thought we had an opportunity to go up by 20," Ole Miss coach Rod Barnes said. "They missed some shots and then we missed some shots. They're a sound defensive team and they sustained their defensive intensity."

The Wildcats, after making only five of their first 21 shots, hit 19 of their final 36 against the rugged Ole Miss defense, which held them to their second-lowest total of the season.

"Their reputation preceded it," said Woods. "It was probably the best defense I've ever seen."

The Wildcats had just three assists in the game and were 0-of-8 behind the 3-point line.

Justin Reed had 16 points for Mississippi, which won the SEC West despite being picked to finish last.

The Wildcats got their lead up to 11 points when Woods dropped in a pair of free throws to make it 48-37 with 8:59 to go. Aaron Harper's bucket cut the lead to 56-52 with 4:03 left, then Woods, when Lockhart picked up his fourth foul, hit a pair of free throws at the 3:48 mark for a 58-52 lead.

Arizona will play the winner of the Kansas-Illinois game in the regional finals on Sunday.


 
Related information
Stats
Ole Miss-Arizona Game Summary
Multimedia
Ole Miss coach Rod Barnes is already looking forward to next season. (129 K)
Arizona's Jason Gardner thinks the second half was the key to the Wildcats' win. (96 K)
Arizona coach Lute Olson knows that defense wins games. (91 K)
Arizona's Loren Woods thinks he faced the toughest defense this year in Ole Miss. (255 K)
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day
Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 

   
CNNSI   Copyright © 2001 CNN/Sports Illustrated. An AOL Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines.