Kansas and the NCAA Tournament

 

 

 

Index

 

1971 Bracket

 

The Final Fours

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1952

1953

1957

1958

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1965
1971
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Special Years
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A Special Tribute
2011 NIT Champions

 

1971: Robisch and Hawks Challenge UCLA.

 

Midwest Regional Semifinal

 

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Kansas and Drake, after narrow Thursday night victories, will meet Saturday at 4:10 p.m. EST, in the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball playoff finals.

 

Fourth ranked Kansas, notching its 20th consecutive triumph, edged 14th rated Houston 78-77, and Drake, 19th ranked, surprised 12th ranked Notre Dame in overtime, 79-72.

 

Saturday's winner goes to Houston Thursday for the national semifinals.

 

A 29 point performance by Dave Robisch and Bud Stallworth's 25 point contribution gave Kansas its 26th decision in 27 games.

 

With Poo Welch, who bucketed 28 Houston points, pecking away with five straight baskets near the end, the Cougars came close, however, to ending the Jayhawks string of victories.

 

Robisch, second team All-American, dropped in Kansas' last seven points, all on free throws in the last two minutes. He also got 16 rebounds, blocked six shots and stole the ball four times.

 

Stallworth, who got only five points in the first half when Kansas trailed most of the way, made 9 points in the first seven minutes of the second half that opened up a 51-43 Kansas advantage.

 

Jayhawk Coach Ted Owens, despite the victory, was unhappy with the Kansas performance.

 

"We didn't penetrate their zone," he said. "We didn't play good on defense."

 

Guy Lewis, the Houston coach, said, "Kansas just had too many guns for us. It's an extremely physical team, and they just keep coming at you."

 

The Notre Dame-Drake game was tied 62-62 at the end of regulation play after Al Sakys sank a jumper with 4-seconds left to put Drake even.

 

Drake's Bobby Jones did a magnificent job on Austin Carr, the Irish All-American and Player of the Year. Carr got only 26 points, far below his 38-point average, and allowed the Notre Dame star only one field goal in the overtime.

 

 

 

Midwest Regional Final

 

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - It no longer appears that the Kansas Jayhawks are just a lucky basketball team.

 

The fourth-ranked Jayhawks have won too many games in the last few seconds for only luck to be involved.

 

Twice in the NCAA regional playoffs, Kansas broke ahead in the dying moments, first to beat Houston 78-77 Thursday and again to down Drake Saturday 73-71 for the title.

 

Kansas, its winning streak now at 21, nailed down its Big Eight Conference crown with similar performances in its final four games. Kansas' record is 27-1, the same as top-ranked UCLA, which Kansas faces in the semifinals at Houston Thursday night.

 

Kansas Coach Ted Owens said Sunday he doesn't know how his team will play UCLA.

 

"I've only seen UCLA on television," Owens said. "I believe UCLA is bigger and stronger than Drake."

 

Owens said Drake is "certainly equal to anyone we played this year. They have so much quickness."

 

Down 10 points against Drake in the second half, Kansas closed in on the shooting of Dave Robisch, who led all scorers with 27 points.

 

Robisch, voted the tourney's outstanding player, hit a jumper and free throw to tie the game 55-55 with 8:30 left. Twice Drake moved ahead before Roger Brown's layup and Robisch's three-point play put Kansas ahead to stay.

 

Owens said he told his team at the half not to be concerned with too many things.

 

"We told them to get the ball in to Robisch and if the shot was there to take it. If not, pass it off."

 

Drake Coach Maury John said the Bulldogs "got lousy breaks near the end.�

 

�It was a heart breaking loss against very muscular club. I am convinced the fact the two big Kansas men were able to root for position in there was a factor."

 

Houston outscored Notre Dame, 119-106, for consolation honors despite All-American Austin Carr's 47 points.

 

Carr and Robisch were named to the all-tournament team along with Poo Welch of Houston, Bud Stallworth of Kansas, Jeff Halliburton and Bobby Jones of Drake, Collis Jones of Notre Dame, Leon Huff of Drake, Dwight Davis of Houston and Tom Bush of Drake.

 

 

 

National Semifinal

 

By LOEL SCHRADER
Staff Writer

Long Beach Press-Telegram

 

HOUSTON-  "Miserable, horrible, atrocious," said John Wooden, somewhat testily.

 

The UCLA basketball coach wasn't speaking of the Astrodome, a miserable, horrible, atrocious place for the National Collegiate Athletic Assn. to hold its championship tournament.

 

Wooden was directing his attention to 24 turnovers committed by the Bruins Thursday night en route to a 68-60 victory over Kansas.

 

"You don't win many basketball games making that many errors," added Wooden.

 

But the Bruins defy logic. They have won 27 consecutive NCAA tournament games and will be trying for their fifth successive national title Saturday afternoon when they are paired with Villanova in the championship game. The Wildcats, who ended Penn's 28-game winning streak in the Mideast Regional last week, provided most of the excitement for the tournament record crowd of 31,428 with a 92-89 double-overtime victory over Western Kentucky in the other semifinal game.

 

Villanova a was 18th ranked going into NCAA championship competition and has brushed aside No. 7 Western Kentucky, No. 9 Fordham and No. 3 Penn to qualify for a shot at the Bruins.

 

" Bring on UCLA," roared Villanova forward Clarence Smith. "All I've heard for the last six years is UCLA, UCLA. If we play a great game, we can beat 'em."

 

However, UCLA was cast as eight-point favorites today. The Bruins always look beatable, even as they did Thursday night while dispatching Kansas with relative ease. They're a team with a sadistic bent, always holding out hope for an opponent, then subjecting them to the final torture of defeat.

 

They had Kansas groggy and reeling with four minutes remaining in the first half. But their 31-19 lead, built largely on the rebirth of Henry Bibby's jump shot, was wasted to seven, 32-25, by halftime in an extravagant display of nonchalance and boredom.

 

"Goodness gracious," said Wooden, reaching for the supreme expletive, "if we'd handled the ball well at all we could have had the game well in hand by halftime."

 

Not only did UCLA fritter away a comfortable lead, it permitted Kansas to tie the score at 33 when Jayhawk forward Dave Robisch hit the second of two baskets within 13 seconds (video).

 

Kansas coach Ted Owens believed an officiating call 30 seconds later might have turned the game around. Robisch broke free and hit a short jumper, but was called for traveling (video).

 

"Our kids were beginning to take heart," noted Owens. "But it was the officials' decision that Robisch traveled. If we get the lead who knows what might have happened?"

 

But Bibby, Curtis Rowe and Sidney Wicks went to work and the Bruins rolled inexorably beyond range of the Jayhawks, building up a 10-point lead in the next

five minutes.

 

Kansas used up the entire defensive manual against the Bruins, employing a 1-3-1 zone, man-to-man pressure, full-court zone pressure and a fullcourt man-to-man.

 

The Jayhawks, however, were no match for UCLA in quickness and their zone defense lacked the movement of the one employed by Cal State Long Beach in the Western Regional final last week.

 

Left free to measure his shots, Bibby made six of nine and added six free throws for an 18-point effort (video). Wicks had 21 and brought the ball upcourt against Kansas' press while Rowe had 15 rebounds and 16 points.

 

Kansas had 24 field goals to 23 for the Bruins, but the Jayhawks shot only 40 per cent from the field and 52.2 from the free throw line. UCLA, which had averaged 64.9 on free throws during the regular season, hit on 22 of 30, eight of nine in the first half.

 

"The game was won at the free throw line," said Owens. "UCLA capitalized on its opportunities and we didn't."

 

UCLA also has a 45-32 margin in rebounds, a rare deficit game for the muscular Kansas team.

 

Robisch, a 6-10 forward with good professional potential, was held to six rebounds but led the Jayhawks in scoring with 17 points.

 

Neither Villanova nor Western Kentucky won the opening game- Western Kentucky lost it.

 

Villanova had the ball and a 74-72 lead when forward Hank Siemiontkowski lost his poise and tried a 15-foot jump shot with 36 seconds remaining.

 

Clarence Glover tied the score 15 seconds later and Jerry Dunn of the Hilltoppers was fouled in a wild scramble at midcourt with four seconds left. Dunn missed his free throw, however, sending the game' into overtime.

 

Western Kentucky had an 85-83 lead in the first overtime and was trying to run out the clock when Glover broke free under the basket for a lay-in. His hurried shot bounced off the rim and the "Geezer" of Villanova, Howard Porter, made a 15-footer with 12 seconds remaining to bring on another extra period.

 

The Kentuckians' last hope was ended when their 7-foot forward, Jim McDaniels, 'fouled out with 2:31 to go in the second overtime.

 

 

 

 

 

National Consolation Game
 

HOUSTON (UPI)- Jerry Dunn, who missed the free throw with four seconds remaining which would have put Western Kentucky in the championship game, sank two with 12 seconds left Saturday to give the Hilltoppers a 77-75 victory over Kansas and third place in the NCAA national tournament.

Dunn, a 6-5 junior, was fouled by Kansas' Bud Stallworth in a scramble for a rebound under the Kansas basket with Western Kentucky ahead 75-73.

His first free throw bounced twice on the rim before falling through and the second was a clean swish to give the Hilltoppers a 77-73 margin.

Dave Robisch, who led Kansas with 23 points, made a basket with four seconds to go. Pierre Russell of the Jayhawks intercepted the ensuing inbounds pass and flung it from beyond midcourt, but it was about six feet short of the backboard.

The victory gave Western Kentucky a 24-6 record and its highest finish in its NCAA history, surpassing third place finishes in regional competition in 1960 and 1966.

Kansas, 27-3, achieved its highest finish since 1957 when a Wilt Chamberlain-led team lost its triple overtime to North Carolina in the NCAA championship game.

Jim McDaniel, Western Kentucky's 7-foot center, put the Hilltoppers ahead at 75-73 with a jumpshot from the corner with 46 seconds remaining. The basket brought his total to 35 points and his tournament total to 147.

McDnniel scored 12 quick points to open the game as Western Kentucky forged a 20-12 lead, the largest by either team, with 12:31 remaining in the first half.

Kansas, with Robisch, Stallworth and Aubrey Nash leading the way, came back to tie it at 35-all with 1:11 remaining. Jim Rose's free throw after time ran out gave Western Kentucky a 38-37 lead.

The game was close most of the last half with a 6-point lead by Kansas at 63-57 with 8:01 to go, the biggest margin by either team.

Kansas had a rebound edge, 60-52, but Western Kentucky had the better shooting percentage, 36.6 to 35.7 for Kansas, and Western Kentucky had less turnovers, 19, to 24 for Kansas.

 

 

 

National Championship Game

 

Sports Illustrated

April 05, 1971
Joe Jares

 

When the UCLA basketball team arrived in Houston for the NCAA championships, Coach John Wooden made one of his typically startling forecasts. "I think we have as good a chance as any team here," he said. There was that rascal going out on a limb again.

So, having been forewarned by Wooden- and the fact that UCLA hasn't lost a playoff game since smog was invented- absolutely nobody was astonished when the Bruins beat Kansas 68-60 in the semifinals Thursday night with their usual workmanlike precision, then subdued inspired Villanova 68-62 in the finals on Saturday. The fact that UCLA's lone candidate for superstardom, fashion plate Sidney Wicks, had to play with a sore big toe might have worried some people. Not UCLA. The school tabloid, The Daily Bruin, already had made the necessary allowances in the budget for an eight-page color supplement celebrating the championship.

For the benefit of those whose subscriptions to The Daily Bruin have expired, UCLA now has won five straight NCAA championships ("Gimme five," the UCLA buttons said) and seven of the last eight. The team's record for the past five seasons is 145-5 and it has won 28 straight NCAA tournament games. Opposing schools are going to make up buttons saying, "Givus help!"

If the story of this year's NCAA showdown was familiar, the setting at least was different. The court was a four-foot-high platform squatting out in the middle of the Astrodome's acreage, with an 80-foot-high NBC camera crane poised above it at one end like a creature feature predator ready to pounce. The spectators at ground level needed periscopes; the spectators in the stands needed telescopes. Photographers sitting cross-legged at either end of the floor were threatened with decapitation by people sitting behind and below them as the Astrodome set a new two-day, U.S.-arena record for "down in fronts." But worse was yet to come. The customers not only were unable to see the games, they couldn't see those nubile UCLA pompon girls doing a quick costume change and coming out in homemade hot pants. "Givus help!"

The NCAA knew all along that the Astrodome was far more suitable for feeding Christians to lions than for basketball, but the potential payoff was too much to resist. The two sessions drew 63,193 people, which is a lot of sweetening for a tournament pot. One official estimated that each of the four semifinalists would cart home about $60,000, much more than teams had before.

For the players, there was a problem, too: not the lights, as some expected, but the short distance between the sidelines and the edges of the raised floor- only about 10 feet. A man chasing a loose ball toward the side felt like a Navy pilot overshooting an aircraft carrier. When Western Kentucky Coach Johnny Oldham stepped up on the court for a practice session, he said:

"Here's my first prediction. Clarence Glover goes over the side."

"I'll go after the ball," said Western's Rex Bailey. "I may not want to, but when you're playing for the national championship you don't hold back. Of course, I'll land on somebody's head."

Several players did overshoot the runway in the four games (Glover not among them, despite his usual hustling performance), but miraculously nobody got hurt. Outside the Dome, however, a Western Kentucky student was killed trying to jump from a motel balcony into a swimming pool.

The first semifinal game was between East Regional champion Villanova, playing in its 10th postseason tournament in Jack Kraft's 10 years as coach, and the Mideast's Western Kentucky. To cynics it looked like a preview of next season's ABA playoffs; two newsmen with good eyesight reported seeing ABA contracts signed by Villanova's 6'8" Howard Porter and Western's 7-foot Jim McDaniels. Both players signed affidavits for the NCAA, swearing they were still untainted, but early on Monday the Pittsburgh Condors announced they had signed Porter.

McDaniels did not seem bothered by an insulting banner- "Big Mac is a hamburger"- and had an ABA-type night shooting and rebounding, but his extremely amateurish job of defense against Villanova's Hank Siemiontkowski- along with a missed free throw by Jerry Dunn with four seconds to go- probably cost Western the game. Western had 32 more shots and 11 more rebounds than Villanova but still lost in double overtime 92-89.

UCLA took out Kansas in a tough but not particularly hair-raising fashion. The Bruins led at 32-25, then K.U. made a run early in the second half. Kansas Coach Ted Owens felt that his team lost momentum and never regained it when 6'10" Dave Robisch put in a jump shot to tie the game at 39-all, only to have the goal nullified because he had taken steps. UCLA moved steadily out into the lead, went ahead by as much as 15 points and won by eight.

For the Bruins, it was the work of an expertly programmed machine grinding down an opponent, but below stairs- in other arenas one would say "on the sideline"- things were a bit more confusing than observers of UCLA's cold efficiency would ever guess. Master technician Wooden and one of his assistants, Denny Crum, spent part of the time bickering with each other. At one point Crum wanted to send in Guard Terry Schofield. Wooden said no and Crum beckoned for Schofield anyway. Wooden threatened to banish Crum to the end of the bench and Crum said he would not sit there. Henry Bibby, a regular guard, tried to cool them off.

After another strategy disagreement, Wooden said: "I'm the coach of this team, and don't tell me how to coach my team."

Wooden always has said he likes "high-spirited" players, and, while Crum no doubt went too far, the head coach likes the same quality in his aides. He has never had yes-men around him. One of the secrets to his success, in fact, is that after considerable prodding and debate an aide can sometimes get Wooden to accept new ideas. For instance, ex-Assistant Jerry Norman convinced him to use the diamond-and-one defense that helped stop Houston's Elvin Hayes in the 1968 semifinals.

On Saturday, Villanova was hoping to become the second team in history with six losses on its record to win the NCAA tournament (Kentucky's "Fiddling Five" did it in 1958). The Wildcats had only nine players, so they were practicing with "the publicity man from the school paper, an injured player and two managers," said Kraft. "We only can play five men at a time, so we're not worried about it."

Villanova had shocked everyone by murdering strong Penn by 43 points in the East Regional. After the Wildcats beat Western Kentucky Thursday, a group of Villanova students marched about 11 miles to the Penn campus to crow some more, and on Friday Kraft was named university division Coach of the Year by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. The season already was a huge success, but Villanova did not intend to stop playing basketball just yet.

"The whole East Coast will go up in flames if we win," said Siemiontkowski. "The school would be unbelievable. They'd burn it."

Villanova cheerleader Tim Halloran, nicknamed "Rootie Kazootie," had no fear of the Bruin pompon girls, either.

"I'm really psyched up," he said. "This is my last game."

Well, UCLA saved the East from firebugs, but Rootie Kazootie's last game was plenty exciting.

Villanova opened in a two-three zone, the sort that had given UCLA so much trouble in the West Regional game against Long Beach State. The Pennsylvanians held Wicks and Curtis Rowe in check fairly well, but 6'9" Center Steve Patterson (see cover) made nine of 13 shots, inside and out, and had 20 points at the half. (Patterson turned down two pro offers to forgo his senior year at UCLA. "I know I'm not a famous entity," he said, "but I might have been infamous if I had left and UCLA lost a national championship because of that.")

With five minutes to go in the first half and UCLA holding a 39-32 lead by virtue of its furious pressing defense and some hot long-range shooting, the Bruins went into a stall to force Villanova out of its zone. Villanova obliged, just slightly, but that was enough for UCLA to move ahead by 11 points.

In the second half, UCLA spread out again. Wooden was afraid the long shots, so necessary against the zone, would stop dropping and he was certain his team could score on Villanova's seldom seen man-to-man. He was wrong. Villanova played man-to-man as if it had just discovered a new toy and the game turned into a battle to the end. When UCLA called a time out with 4:53 remaining, the Wildcats were only four points behind. Their man-to-man had held the Bruins to just three field goals- all layups. And the fans who could see at all were being treated to a superb show, a duel between All-America Wicks and All-America Howard Porter.

Twice Porter's jump shots closed the margin to three points, but three points were as close as Villanova would come. When Patterson's layup, aided by a goal tending call, made it 66-60 with 38 seconds left, Wicks went into his mugging act. He was justified. He had his third national championship.

Patterson finished his Saturday chores with 29 points, a career high. Porter, who scored 25 points, was voted the tournament's outstanding player. And Wicks had the game ball in his clutches. "Lew said he came to win three," Wicks said. "And I did, too."

To the credit of Villanova, this was the first time in years UCLA had had to work up a sweat in an NCAA-final game. Indeed, during the Lew Alcindor era it often seemed there were no final games- just passionless exhibitions. But this season's Wicks team, which was not up to its immediate predecessors, had grown used to close calls. The Bruins even lost once, to Notre Dame by seven points. They beat Stanford by only five points. They beat USC, after trailing by nine points with only 9 minutes to go. They trailed Oregon by one point with less than a minute to go when Bibby stole the ball and drove in for the winning basket. Wicks hit a 20-foot jump shot in the final seconds to beat Oregon State. Two foul shots with seven seconds to go were the margin over Washington State. Rowe's jump shot with less than a minute left beat Washington. And UCLA squeezed past Long Beach State by two points.

"At times it looked bad," said Wooden. "But somehow we stuck in there. Except for the Notre Dame game, we always ended up where we wanted to be at the end."

Afterward, as Wooden stood where he wanted to be, with his seventh NCAA championship wristwatch in his hand and interviewers and well-wishers surrounding him, it was easy to recall the brief clipping he had produced at the coaches' convention the day before.

It was one of those 25-years-ago-to-day features from an Elkhart, Ind. newspaper and it told how, in 1946, Coach John Wooden of South Bend Central High, a recent service returnee, came to speak at a winter sports banquet. "They had hoped to line up some prominent college coach," the paper said.