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    Saturday, May 04, 2024

    Top 25 men's and women's basketball roundup

    North Carolina's Cameron Johnson defends while Virginia's Jay Huff shoots during the first half of Monday's game in Chapel Hill, N.C. Fourth-ranked Virginia beat the No. 8 Tar Heels, 69-61. (Gerry Broome/AP Photo)

    Men

    No. 4 Virginia 69, No. 8 North Carolina 61

    Virginia's halftime lead was gone. North Carolina was pushing further ahead. And the Cavaliers were committing so many turnovers that coach Tony Bennett's frustration bubbled over in the huddle.

    Yet Kyle Guy, Ty Jerome and the rest of the fourth-ranked Cavaliers handled everything — dwindling clock, angry coach, powerful opponent and hostile crowd — with veteran poise.

    Guy's back-to-back 3-pointers in the final two minutes helped the Cavaliers beat the eighth-ranked Tar Heels on Monday night, and Virginia remained near the top of the Atlantic Coast Conference standings after a weekend loss to No. 2 Duke.

    Guy and De'Andre Hunter each scored 20 points for the Cavaliers (21-2, 9-2), who had less than 48 hours to regroup from the loss to the Blue Devils before visiting a UNC team that hadn't lost in nearly a month.

    "Our guys knew what they had to do," Bennett said. "They responded. It wasn't perfect. I told them, 'This isn't about winning or losing.' I said, 'This is an important game to get back to what we need to do.'"

    The Cavs certainly looked like themselves: efficient on both ends of the floor. The offense hummed along by shooting 53 percent, including 11 of 20 on 3-pointers, and Virginia didn't turn it over in the final 12 minutes.

    The defense, aside from surrendering one fearsome second-half flurry, made the Tar Heels (19-5, 9-2) work for just about everything while keeping them out of transition. After allowing Duke to shoot 58 percent and make 13 of 21 3-pointers Saturday, Virginia held UNC to 35-percent shooting and just 9 of 30 (30 percent) from 3-point range.

    It all helped Virginia rally from seven down in the final eight minutes and avoid its first losing streak of any kind in two years.

    "There's no excuses," said Jerome, who had 15 points and 11 assists. "I told the team before the game, 'I don't care if we played Duke Saturday, I don't care if we're on the road today.' Every game we come out and we expect to win, no matter where we are and who we're playing against."

    Coby White scored 17 points to lead the Tar Heels, who were off to their best start in league play under 16th-year coach Roy Williams. North Carolina managed a 17-3 second-half run to turn an eight-point deficit into a 49-43 lead, which ultimately reached 53-46 near the 9-minute mark.

    But UNC, which has one of the nation's best offenses, missed 16 of 20 shots to close the game as Virginia's defense tightened.

    "Their defense was better than our offense," Williams said. "Their offense was better than our defense. We had a great run ... and after that, it got a lot more difficult. And you have to give them credit for making it a lot more difficult."

    The Cavaliers' home loss to the Blue Devils on Saturday gave them more league losses than all of last season, when they went 20-1 against ACC teams to sweep the regular-season and tournament titles. And Virginia hadn't lost consecutive games since dropping four straight in February 2017. Yet as they always seem to do, the Cavaliers stuck with their foundation: an unhurried offensive pace, stubborn defense and smart play.

    "They didn't do anything differently," UNC's Cameron Johnson said. "They kept playing the way they play."

    The Tar Heels had Michael Jordan in the house for this game and plenty of momentum with seven straight wins. But after managing to speed up Virginia in the second half to get out in transition, the Tar Heels sputtered down the stretch when they had a chance to seize control.

    Guy's shots deflated the Tar Heels and their crowd. First, he knocked one down from the right corner at the 1:55 mark for a 64-59 lead. Then he answered a UNC stickback by hitting another 3 while taking a whistle-drawing bump from Kenny Williams to make it 67-61 with 1:10 left. Jerome assisted on both scores.

    "It means the world to me when someone like Ty has more confidence in me than sometimes I do," Guy said. "That helps a lot."

    No. 14 Kansas 82, TCU 77

    Devon Dotson scored 25 points, including six free throws in the final 40 seconds of overtime, and Kansas beat TCU for its second win in a row while starting four freshmen.

    After blowing a 12-point lead in the second half, the Jayhawks (19-6, 8-4 Big 12) never trailed in overtime. They broke the final tie on K.J. Lawson's jumper with 1:09 left before Dotson sealed it at the free-throw line.

    Dotson also had 10 rebounds for one of the three double-doubles for Kansas. Ochai Agbaji had 20 points and 11 rebounds, while Dedric Lawson, a junior and the only non-freshman starter, had 14 points and 10 rebounds.

    Desmond Bane had 18 points for TCU (17-7, 5-6), and Kendric Davis scored 16.

    Women

    No. 17 Kentucky 68, Alabama 53

    Rhyne Howard scored 23 points with four 3-pointers, Maci Morris added 17 points and Kentucky beat Alabama.

    Howard, averaging 16.5 points and 6.8 rebounds, scored 20-plus for the eighth time this season while becoming just the fourth UK player to reach 400 points in her freshman season.

    The Wildcats (20-5, 7-4 Southeastern Conference) have won seven straight games against the Crimson Tide, including five straight in Tuscaloosa.

    Megan Abrams scored 16 points and Jasmine Walker had 12 points and 15 rebounds for Alabama (11-13, 3-8).

    No. 23 Michigan State 77, Indiana 61

    Shay Colley scored a career-high 32 points on 12-of-18 shooting to help Michigan State avenge a loss to the Hoosiers earlier this season.

    Taryn McCutcheon finished with 12 points and Nia Clouden scored 11 for Michigan State (17-5, 7-5 Big Ten).

    Jaelynn Penn scored 19 points for Indiana (17-8, 6-7 Big Ten), which beat the Spartans 68-64 at home on Jan. 6.

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