Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn round. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn round. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Sáu, 3 tháng 5, 2013

Warriors eliminate Denver with 92-88 win in Game 6, advance to second round vs. San Antonio

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    Golden State Warriors' Draymond Green (23) ceelbrates after scoring against the Denver Nuggets during the first half of Game 6 in a first-round NBA basketball playoff series, Thursday, May 2, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)The Associated Press

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    Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry, left, is fouled going to the basket by Denver Nuggets' Wilson Chandler (21) during the first half of Game 6 in a first-round NBA basketball playoff series in Oakland, Calif., Thursday, May 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)The Associated Press

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    Golden State Warriors' Andrew Bogut, top left, blocks a shot by Denver Nuggets' Andre Iguodala, center, as Warriors' Harrison Barnes, right, watches during the first half of Game 6 in a first-round NBA basketball playoff series in Oakland, Calif., Thursday, May 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)The Associated Press

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    Denver Nuggets' Andre Iguodala, right, dribbles past Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry during the first half of Game 6 in a first-round NBA basketball playoff series in Oakland, Calif., Thursday, May 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)The Associated Press

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    Golden State Warriors' Andrew Bogut shoots over Denver Nuggets' JaVale McGee during the first half of Game 6 in a first-round NBA basketball playoff series in Oakland, Calif., Thursday, May 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)The Associated Press

Stephen Curry scored 22 points to go with eight assists, Andrew Bogut broke out with the best performance of his injury-saddled season and the Golden State Warriors eliminated the Denver Nuggets with a 92-88 victory in Game 6 on Thursday.

Bogut had season-bests and career-playoff highs of 14 points and 21 rebounds, and rookie Draymond Green added a career-high 16 points and 10 rebounds to power Golden State into the second round for the first time in six years.

The Warriors went ahead by 18 points early in the fourth before holding off one final Nuggets flurry.

Andre Iguodala scored 24 points and Ty Lawson had 17 in another disappointed early exit for Denver, which has lost in the first round nine of the past 10 seasons.

The Nuggets won 23 of their final 26 regular season games to earn the Western Conference's third seed, then lost four of six to the hot-shooting Warriors.


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Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 3, 2013

Beilein: Reaching round of 16 was important for Michigan program

Now that Michigan has finally made it back to the second week of the NCAA tournament, coach John Beilein will admit that this was a pretty important step for the Wolverines.

Beilein says it was good for the program to reach the round of 16 for the first time since 1994.

Before the tournament, Beilein said Michigan would keep progressing no matter what happened. The Wolverines play several freshmen and have been recruiting well in recent years.

But for a team that was ranked No. 1 in the nation earlier this season, another early exit from this tournament would have been jarring.


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Thứ Sáu, 22 tháng 3, 2013

Crabbe, Cal edge UNLV in NCAA second round

California had just a 50-mile trek down from Berkeley to San Jose for its NCAA Tournament opener.

And the Golden Bears took advantage of their golden opportunity.

Pac-12 player of the year Allen Crabbe had 19 points, nine rebounds and four assists and Cal hung on for a 64-61 win over UNLV in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Justin Cobbs added 13 points and six helpers for the 12th-seeded Golden Bears (21-11), who escaped despite making just 4-of-12 from the free-throw line in the final minute.

UNLV was held without a basket for more than 11 minutes during the second half and Cal turned a tie game into a nine-point advantage during that stretch. The Golden Bears outscored UNLV 34-18 in the paint and will face Syracuse in the third round on Saturday.

Anthony Bennett tallied 15 points and 11 boards to lead UNLV (25-10), which dropped its NCAA Tournament opener for the fourth straight year.

Katin Reinhardt tied the contest at 37-37 with 16:32 left, but Cal countered with an 11-3 run to seize control of the contest. Cobbs, who had five points during the surge, capped it with a 3-pointer for a 48-40 advantage with 12:15 to go.

Later, Robert Thurman, who had 12 points, had eight straight Cal points and his dunk with 4:04 left gave the Bears a 56-48 lead, but back-to-back buckets by Mike Moser and Bennett trimmed the deficit to four.

A little over a minute later, Bryce Dejean-Jones stole the ball from Allen Crabbe and was fouled hard by Cobbs, who was called for a Flagrant 1 foul. But UNLV was unable to take advantage as Dejean-Jones split the pair from the line and Bennett missed a short fadeaway jumper in the paint. At the other end, Richard Solomon's dunk put Cal up 60-53 with 47 ticks to go.

A Moser layup and Bennett three-point play, sandwiched around two missed Tyrone Wallace free throws pulled UNLV within 60-58 with 14 seconds on the clock. Cobbs then split a pair of foul shots to keep it a one-possession game the head coach Mike Montgomery elected to foul the Rebels instead of playing out the possession. Anthony Marshall missed the first foul shot and made the second to make it a two-point game.

Cobbs then went 1-of-2 again and Marshall sunk a pair at the other end to make it 62-61 with six seconds left. Cal ran the next five ticks off the clock before Crabbe was fouled and he made two from the stripe. Dejean-Jones' out- of-bounds baseball pass was intercepted by Richard Solomon, who missed two free throws, but Bennett's heave at the horn was well off the mark.

Earlier, Cal netted the first seven points of the game before UNLV countered with a 12-2 swing to take a 12-9 edge. Neither team led by more than four the rest of the opening half as the game was knotted at 28-28 heading into the break.

Game Notes

UNLV was 1-of-9 from beyond the arc in the second half ... Cal was 7-of-16 from the foul line ... The Golden Bears became the second 12th seed from the Pac-12 to win on Thursday. Oregon beat Oklahoma State earlier during the day.


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Thứ Năm, 21 tháng 3, 2013

Memphis holds off Saint Mary's, advances to third round

Joe Jackson scored 14 points and Memphis warded off a furious late comeback attempt from Saint Mary's to record a 54-52 victory in an NCAA Tournament Midwest Region second round clash.

Jackson added seven assists and six rebounds to lead the sixth-seeded Tigers (31-4) into a matchup with No. 3 seed Michigan State on Saturday. The Spartans advanced with a 65-54 decision over Valparaiso earlier in the day.

Tarik Black and Adonis Thomas each contributed 12 points for the Conference USA champion Tigers, who built a 15-point first-half lead they nearly squandered after the Gaels' Eividas Petrulis buried a 3-pointer with two seconds left for a 54-52 game.

Saint Mary's then forced a turnover on the ensuing inbounds play, but Matthew Dellavedova's long-range attempt at the buzzer clanged off the rim.

"As soon as Delli got the ball in the corner, we all thought it was going to go in," said Gaels center Brad Waldow. "We knew it was going to go in, but it just didn't fall."

Missed shots were a common theme for 11th-seeded Saint Mary's (29-6) throughout the game. Memphis held the Gaels to a 32.8 success rate from the field, with Petrulis' make only the team's third in 15 tries from beyond the arc.

Saint Mary's, which reached the second round via a 67-54 win over Middle Tennessee State Tuesday in Dayton, came into the contest averaging better than 75 points per game. Dellavedova, the Gaels' top scorer on the season, mustered just 10 points on 3-of-13 shooting.

Waldow did make good on 7-of-11 shot attempts to pace Saint Mary's with 17 points.

The Tigers appeared in excellent shape after taking a 51-44 advantage into the final minute, but poor execution down the stretch enabled Saint Mary's to place the outcome back in doubt.

Memphis made just three of its seven foul shots in the waning stages, and Waldow's tip-in of Petrulis' missed 3-pointer with 17.9 seconds remaining brought the Gaels within 53-49.

The Tigers' D.J. Stephens did sink his first free-throw try after being fouled after Waldow's bucket, but missed the second. Saint Mary's quickly got down the court and got the ball in the hands of Petrulis, who didn't misfire this time to create a two-point differential with two seconds showing.

Jackson then had the inbounds pass from Thomas go off his hands and out of bounds under a heavy Saint Mary's press, giving the Gaels one last try for a win or tie.

"It was my fault, but I just wanted to get it in to one of our best free throw shooters," Thomas said of the play. "It was on me. I should've called a timeout at the end, but the game was going so fast."

The Tigers were able to get a hand in Dellavedova's face as he fired up a 23- footer from the right wing, however, and the standout point guard's shot bounced off the iron to allow Memphis to move on.

"[I] couldn't be more proud of a team," Gaels head coach Randy Bennett said afterward. "They put everything they had into that game. We didn't shoot the ball great. Some of that has to do with their defense, but I couldn't be more proud of a team."

The Tigers trailed by an 11-9 score nearing the midway mark of the first half, but seized control via a 19-2 run over the next seven-plus minutes. Jackson dropped in eight points during the pivotal burst, while Memphis' pressure defense continually rendered the normally sharp-shooting Gaels into a flurry of missed shots and turnovers.

During that sequence, Saint Mary's went just 1-of-10 from the field and committed three giveaways, the last of which Black converted into a 3-point play that staked the Tigers to a 28-13 lead with 2:54 to go before intermission.

"We knew that Dellavedova was the floor general for this team," said Stephens, who came up with a career-high eight blocks to spearhead Memphis' defensive charge. "The plan for the game was to pretty much keep the ball out of his hands as much as we could, make somebody else have to initiate the offense. And we were pressing, making sure he couldn't get the ball and bring it up the floor, and it kind of threw them out of rhythm a little bit."

The Gaels managed to cut into the deficit by the conclusion of the period, scoring nine of the final 13 points to get within 32-22 at the half despite shooting just 31 percent as a team.

Memphis went cold after the break, however, hitting on a poor 29.2 percent of its field goal tries in the second half to enable Saint Mary's to close the gap further.

Dellavedova knocked down a triple to open the frame and Waldow followed with a layup shortly after to trim the Tigers' edge to 32-27, and it was a 3-point game with 11 minutes left before Memphis put together a brief 5-0 spurt to go ahead by a 41-33 count.

Game Notes

Stephens' eight blocks were two above his previous career best of six set twice previously ... Memphis is now 4-0 in its first NCAA Tournament game when seeded sixth in its respective region, also prevailing as a No. 6 in the 1984, 1992 and 1995 editions ... The Tigers lost in the second round in each of the last two years, falling to Saint Louis as an eighth seed in 2012 and to Arizona as a No. 12 the previous year ... Saint Mary's, which fell to Purdue as a No. 7 seed in Columbus in last year's tournament, is now 4-8 all-time in NCAA Tournament play ... Dellavedova finishes his career as the Gaels' all-time leader in points (1,933) and assists (768).


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Thứ Tư, 20 tháng 2, 2013

After a round with Obama, Tiger Woods tries to win a match that matters

Tiger Woods should not expect his next match to be as easy as his last one.

For starters, President Barack Obama was his partner three days ago at The Floridian, which is not to suggest the president had to carry the 14-time major champion. Secondly, Woods won't be competing against a Houston businessman (Jim Crane) and outgoing U.S. Trade Representative (Ron Kirk), but Charles Howell III, who gave Woods fits as a teenager in the 1996 U.S. Amateur.

Woods is a three-time winner of the Match Play Championship who has a 33-9 record in this tournament alone.

And even he knows it won't be easy.

"The whole idea is just to beat one guy at a time," Woods said. "That's the thing. There are times where I've played well in matches and I've lost, and other times where I've played poorly and advanced. It's pot luck in these 18-hole sprints like this. As I said, it's imperative to get off to a quick start and get up on your opponent early. It's just so hard to come back in 18-hole matches, and hopefully, I can do that conceivably for all six."

It all starts Wednesday at Dove Mountain, the first World Golf Championship of the year.

Rory McIlroy is the No. 1 seed and will play Shane Lowry, a longtime friend and former partner on the Irish team that won the European Team Championships in 2007. In a similar match, former U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell (Northern Ireland) plays three-time major champion Padraig Harrington (Ireland).

The toughest challenge might be the weather, with a front expected to move across the high desert overnight and bringing temperatures so low that light snow is possible. At best, it figures to be frigid for the morning matches as the sun is beginning to climb over The Ritz-Carlton Club at Dove Mountain.

"No one likes to play in adverse weather," said Ian Poulter, playing for first time since Hawaii, when the tournament took four days to start because of 40 mph wind.

Woods said he would be used to the wind and cold because that's what he dealt with in Florida with the president.

It was the second time Woods has played with a sitting U.S. president — he once played with former President Bill Clinton at The Alotian Club in Arkansas.

"Playing with Mr. President was pretty cool," he said. "He's just a wonderful person to be around."

Woods doesn't use "Mr." with hardly anyone. In fact, he has a nickname for most people in golf. He'll shorten the surname ("Poults" for Poulter, "Stricks" for Steve Stricker) or simply add a "y'' to their name ("Rosey" for Justin Rose). And what name did he use for the leader of the free world?

"Partner," Woods said with a smile.

He sounded surprised to learn that Obama played left-handed, and when asked to describe the president's best shot, Woods said that "he hit a few."

"He's a pretty good athlete, and we all know he played a lot of hoops," Woods said. "He's a lefty, but to see him out there hitting shots ... he hit it well, and we didn't play under the easiest conditions. It was blowing harder than this, and it was a little bit cooler than this. So we played under some tough conditions, and as I said, he hit the ball well. He's got amazing touch. He can certainly chip and putt."

That's the key for anyone in match play.

Luke Donald has one of the best short games in golf, which explains why he won two years ago in the most dominant performance in the 14-year history of this event. Donald is the only player to have never reached the 18th hole in any of his matches.

As for the fickle nature of match play?

Donald didn't even make it out of the first round last year against Ernie Els.

Woods is coming off a four-shot win at Torrey Pines three weeks ago, after opening his 2013 season by missing the cut in Abu Dhabi.

He took an entire week off from golf, and then resumed practicing to get ready for a busy part of his schedule leading up to the Masters. This is the first of three straight tournaments for Woods, a stretch in which he would have a mathematical chance of going back to No. 1.

All 64 players in the field are so close in ability that there is no such thing as an upset in this event, not like a Grand Slam tennis event or the NCAA basketball tournament.

Howell is the No. 63 seed, though his stock has been improving. He began the year with three straight finishes in the top 10, which enabled him to go from outside the top 100 in the world and qualify for this elite tournament.

Woods and Howell were partners at the Presidents Cup for all four matches in 2003, and Woods used to practice with him when he lived in Orlando, Fla. They first squared off in the quarterfinals of the 1996 U.S. Amateur, which Woods won on his way to a record third straight title. Howell has made a lasting impression over the years.

"You'd see him out there on the range and the putting green just grinding away," Woods said. "His work ethic has never changed, never waned. He's out there working all the time. He's trying to get better. I admire guys who put in that kind of work. It's not easy to do, and he's implemented some swing changes over the years, but his tireless work ethic is something we all look up to."

No one has played fewer rounds this year than McIlroy and McDowell.

Wednesday will be only the third competitive round in three months for McIlroy, who missed the cut in Abu Dhabi and has not played since then. McDowell returned from his long winter break last week at Riviera and missed the cut by one shot.

"I don't feel like I'm a guy that needs to play his way into form," McIlroy said. "I think I just practice, and if I feel like I'm confident on the range and hitting it well and playing well in practice rounds, then that'll translate into shooting good scores on the course."

Scores aren't necessarily important at Dove Mountain. This week is only about having a better score than the opponent.


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