- Final014
3VALP
MSU54
6554
65 - Final111
6BUCK
BUT56
6856
68 - Final29
8WICH
PITT73
5573
55 - Final313
4NMSU
SLU44
6444
64 - Final411
6SMC
MEM52
5452
54 - Final514
3DAV
MARQ58
5958
59 - Final616
1SOU
GONZ58
6458
64 - Final712
5ORE
OKST68
5568
55 - Final816
1NCAT
LOU48
7948
79 - Final913
4SDST
MICH56
7156
71 - Final1011
6BEL
ARIZ64
8164
81 - Final1112
5CAL
UNLV64
6164
61 - Final129
8MIZZ
CSU72
8472
84 - Final1312
5AKR
VCU42
8842
88 - Final1414
3HARV
UNM68
6268
62 - Final1513
4MONT
SYR34
8134
81
Final
Coverage: TNT
7:30 PM ET, March 21, 2013
EnergySolutions Arena, Salt Lake City, UT
SALT LAKE CITY -- Arizona coach Sean Miller can understand why Belmont was the trendy pick to upset his sixth-seeded Wildcats.
"Their style is such a nightmare," Miller said of a great backcourt that has the ability to hit the 3 and make a lot of steals.Instead, the Wildcats proved a major headache for the Bruins and coach Rick Byrd.Mark Lyons scored 23 points and Arizona used its size to dominate in an 81-64 second-round NCAA tournament victory on Thursday night."I was more impressed with team I saw tonight than I was scouting them," Byrd acknowledged afterward. "I thought they were more engaged and focused and I think if they play that way, they can beat a lot of people."Arizona moves on to face 14th-seeded Harvard, which upset New Mexico.The Wildcats (26-7) held a 44-18 edge on the boards, outscored Belmont 36-18 in the paint, blocked five shots and outshot the Bruins from 3-point range. Arizona made 9-of-17 3-pointers, including a critical one from Solomon Hill with 4:40 remaining to stop an 11-2 Belmont run, and shot 57 percent overall.Hill ended up making as many 3s as Ian Clark, who entered the game shooting better than 46 percent for Belmont but was 3 of 8 from beyond the arc.Credit goes to Nick Johnson and Jordin Mayes, who made Clark earn every one of his 21 points on 8-of-14 shooting. Kerron Johnson led Belmont with 22 points."I don't think it was nerves," said Clark, who started 1 of 4 from 3-point range while the Bruins were 2 of 13 from beyond the arc in the first half and 8 of 27 overall. "We've always talked about being ready, being focused mentally. Shots weren't falling early. When that happens early and they're making shots, it's human nature to get down, team-wise. We tried to pick it back up, but to their credit, they were making shots and their guys were making plays."While Clark's numbers were off-the-charts before the game, Arizona's rebounding edge was head-turning.Miller isn't sure he's seen Arizona dominate so thoroughly in that category, with Kaleb Tarczewski and Kevin Parrom grabbing eight boards apiece, Brandon Ashley hauling in seven and Grant Jarrett six."The one thing about our team that's deceptive is we're bigger and more physical than we get credit for," Miller said. "Kaleb Tarczewski has developed. He's not the same player in March as he once was. And we're physical on the wings with Solomon Hill and Kevin Parrom. Those guys not only are 6-6 but they are physical strong (seniors)."Add in 6-foot-10 freshman Jarrett and 6-8 freshman Ashley, and the Wildcats are a load."The key for us is to utilize that length where we have an advantage rebounding and defensively on offense where we can get in and around the rim tonight and get fouls and score," Miller said.Byrd, meanwhile, took some of the blame for not being able to adjust.He said he expected Tarczewski (5 of 5 for 12 points) to struggle going back to cover a 3-point shooter such as Trevor Noack after helping on a ball screen. But Miller chose not to make Tarczewski do that."Instead he guarded Blake (Jenkins) and then we really couldn't get the offense that I thought we could," Byrd said. "It took me too darn long to find something that would work."Nothing seemingly worked on senior guard Lyons, who drove the lane, hit 3s, and put an exclamation point on his night with a put-back dunk that gave Arizona an 80-64 lead with 1:22 left."I think Belmont's strategy was to pressure our perimeter, probably to prevent us from throwing it inside and they really got extended," Miller said. "We tried to put Mark in position to use the ball screen with the court wide open and he took advantage of it."Arizona led by as many as 21 points, 64-43, with 7:45 remaining before Belmont went on a 10-0 run, capped by back-to-back 3-pointers by Clark and J.J. Mann. The 3s came just seven seconds apart as Mann stole the inbounds pass.But Parrom (12 points) countered with a driving layup and Hill hit another 3-pointer -Arizona's eighth -- to bump the Wildcats' lead back to 15 points, 69-54, with 4:29 left.The breakthrough so many thought would happen for Belmont didn't, and the Bruins (26-7) fell to 0-6 in tourney games.Miller wouldn't call it a sense of relief."We have high expectations and when you're ranked from start to finish like we've been and sometimes you lose games, people on the outside can get down on you," Miller said. "Some of the best teams in Arizona's history got hot right now. ... But going from the second round to the Sweet 16 is a whole new level. It's much more difficult."SPONSORED HEADLINES
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SALT LAKE CITY, UT - MARCH 21: Kaleb Tarczewski #35 of the Arizona Wildcats shoots over Blake Jenkins #2 of the...
(Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)Around Champ Week
MVP: Mark Lyons was the leader of a Wildcats team that needed him to play that role. The veteran guard scored 23 points (8-for-15).
X factor: Belmont just couldn't close the gap against the Wildcats, mostly because Arizona didn't miss many from beyond the arc, going 9-for-17 from the 3-point line.
That was ... experience: Belmont is a solid team, but Arizona held off every Bruins rally because the Wildcats are an experienced team that doesn't panic easily.
Team Stat Comparison
BEL | ARIZ | |
|---|---|---|
| Points | 64 | 81 |
| FG Made-Attempted | 20-51 (.392) | 29-51 (.569) |
| 3P Made-Attempted | 8-27 (.296) | 9-17 (.529) |
| FT Made-Attempted | 16-23 (.696) | 14-20 (.700) |
| Fouls (Tech/Flagrant) | 20 (0/0) | 21 (1/0) |
| Largest Lead | 0 | 21 |
Game Leaders
| BEL | ARIZ | |
|---|---|---|
| Points | ||
| Rebounds | ||
| Assists | ||
| Steals | ||
| Team Stats: Belmont | Arizona | ||
Series
| DATE | GAME | LINKS |
|---|---|---|
| » Mar 21, 2013 | @ARIZ 81, BEL 64 | Recap |
Research Notes
Arizona scored 17 second-chance points Thursday, its most since scoring 17 on Jan. 26 against USC. The Wildcats outscored Belmont by 16 points on second-chance opportunities, their highest differential in a game this season. [+]2nd-chance Opportunities
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