Minggu, 07 April 2019

Police use tear gas as Texas Tech basketball victory sparks ‘fandemonium’ - Fox News

Lubbock, Texas, erupted in what the local newspaper called “fandemonium” on Saturday night after the hometown Texas Tech Red Raiders advanced to the championship final of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

No. 3-seeded Texas Tech upset the top-seeded Michigan State Spartans, 61-51, to earn a shot at playing Virginia for the crown in men’s college basketball.

In earlier March Madness action on Saturday, Virginia ousted Auburn, 63-62, in a game that some say was marred by controversial referee decisions.

LAST-SECOND FOUL LIFTS VIRGINIA OVER AUBURN; TEXAS TECH TOPS MICHIGAN STATE

Both games were played in Minneapolis, where Monday night’s final also will be held.

In Lubbock, a huge crowd soon gathered at the Texas Tech campus to celebrate the Red Raiders’ win.

“I’ve never seen anything like this in Lubbock,” Tim Hays, a senior at Texas Tech, told the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. “I’ve been to other rallies like this, but nothing compares to the electricity here.”

“I’ve never seen anything like this in Lubbock. I’ve been to other rallies like this, but nothing compares to the electricity here.”

— Tim Hays, a senior at Texas Tech

But what started with cheering and high-fives soon devolved into rowdiness and destruction, according to reports.

Witnesses reported seeing fires set ablaze, with at least one car being flipped over, KCBD-TV of Lubbock reported.

Other reports said as many as four cars were flipped.

Lubbock police – many seen wearing riot gear and wielding batons -- eventually used tear gas to try and convince people to leave the area, the station reported.

The Lubbock Police Department asked for the crowd's cooperation in a Facebook post:

"Alright folks, we are just as happy that Texas Tech WRECKED Michigan State," the message said, "but we are asking people to leave the Broadway area near University. We have multiple officers in the area clearing the scene.

"The large crowds are causing a safety concern. We are also encouraging drivers to avoid the area as some of the roads have been blocked."

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City officials issued a statement soon after midnight:

“After the Texas Tech Men’s Basketball team defeated Michigan State in a NCAA Championship Final Four game, hundreds of fans gathered on Broadway, near University. The crowd engaged in extremely dangerous, and disappointing, behavior including vandalizing property. We are proud, and excited, for Texas Tech, but behavior like this will not be tolerated. We want Red Raider fans to support the team and celebrate lawfully and responsibly. We are on the national stage so make Lubbock proud.”

There was no immediate information available about arrests, injuries or a cost assessment of property damage.

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https://www.foxnews.com/sports/police-use-tear-gas-as-texas-tech-basketball-victory-sparks-fandemonium

2019-04-07 07:22:38Z
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Missed double dribble looms large in Virginia’s comeback win over Auburn - The Washington Post


Virginia's Ty Jerome (11) picks up a loose ball late in a win against Auburn and Bryce Brown (2). (Bob Donnan/USA Today Sports)

Virginia’s comeback win over Auburn on Saturday in the Final Four was, in many ways, defined by a referee’s whistle, as Kyle Guy took advantage of a foul call on a three-point attempt with less than a second left and made all three free throws to give his Cavaliers a 63-62 win.

However, it was the whistle that wasn’t blown moments before, when Virginia’s Ty Jerome appeared to commit a double dribble, that loomed large over the result, which sent the Cavaliers to their first national championship game Monday night.

With Virginia down by two points with seven seconds left, Jerome got the ball and dribbled upcourt. However, before he reached midcourt, the junior guard lost control of the ball off his leg as he tried to go behind his back, and he grabbed it with both hands before resuming his dribble.

That should have resulted in a whistle for double dribble, especially as an official was watching the play from behind Jerome, just a few feet away. However, he and the rest of the officiating crew let the action continue, and instead of Auburn getting the ball back with three seconds left it intentionally fouled Jerome, setting up Guy’s desperation shot.

The referees weren’t the only ones who apparently did not notice the double dribble when it happened — CBS’s announcing team also missed it, and only after the game ended did Jim Nantz and his telecast partners engage in a discussion of the play.

CBS had a former NCAA and NFL referee, Gene Steratore, on hand to analyze just such situations, and he confirmed that, at least in his view, Auburn should have gotten the ball after Jerome’s gaffe. In that scenario, the Tigers would have been in excellent position to win the game, up by two and in possession with approximately three seconds left, but Auburn was left to ponder an extraordinarily painful defeat.

For his part, Auburn Coach Bruce Pearl, who was visibly outraged at the foul call that sent Guy to the line, took the high road when asked later about that and the no-call on Jerome. “Auburn is going to handle this defeat with class, just like we would have handled it in victory,” he told CBS’s Tracy Wolfson shortly after the game. “Virginia’s a great team and, you know, it’s a 40-minute game, and so we’ll look at a lot of other plays we could have made to turn the outcome.”

Pearl went on to note that his Tigers were down by 10 points with just over five minutes left before storming back to take a lead, and he said, “I’m very proud of this basketball team.” Others, though, were less diplomatic, including ESPN’s Dick Vitale, who tweeted that an “obvious” double dribble call “was missed,” adding, “What a gut-wrenching way to lose for Auburn.”

At the same time, all the slow-motion videos of Jerome’s double dribble that spread around the Internet Saturday allowed more than a few observers to point out that, just before the Cavaliers guard lost control of the ball, he was arguably fouled when Auburn’s Bryce Brown grabbed his jersey. Had a whistle been blown at that moment, there would not have been a double dribble to miss.

That certainly was the opinion of Jerome, who said after the game, “I think the ref missed a foul call. They [the Tigers] were giving fouls on purpose, and [Brown] grabbed me. I lost the ball. The ref let that foul go, so how’s he going to call double dribble?”

Brown was initially blunt in his assessment of the loss, yelling as his team headed toward the locker room, “NCAA needs to get some new refs!” Later, as he sat at his locker, he expressed regret for that assertion, telling reporters, “I was caught up in the moment. I just didn’t agree with that one call.”

Brown was referring to the foul that benefited Guy, which was called on Auburn’s Samir Doughty, about whom the NCAA declared that the Tigers player “moved into the airborne shooter, making contact with Guy while taking away his landing spot.”

That call also sparked plenty of back-and-forth online, with some saying that it was the right call while others argued that even if that were technically the case, it shouldn’t have been made in that situation, particularly at the end of a game in which officials had allowed physical defense throughout.

The NCAA did not offer a similar comment on the lack of a whistle for Jerome’s double dribble, leaving it for everyone else to discuss. The general controversy over the officiating overshadowed, to some degree, not only Guy’s heroics, including a crucial three-pointer with under nine seconds left and his team down four, but those of Jerome.

Before his dribbling error, Jerome posted 21 points, which led all players, and added nine rebounds, six assists and a block. The 6-5 player from New Rochelle, N.Y., had a hugely positive overall impact for Virginia, and he boosted his stock as a possible first-round pick in June’s NBA draft.

As to why no one seemed to notice the double dribble when it happened, Steratore said on CBS’s postgame show (via Awful Announcing), “It’s very unusual. I think what happens most times, when you have a deflection off a back heel or something, that basketball goes a lot further than just a bounce or two away from your body. So I think for that reason, and as we watched it in live action, it didn’t jump off the screen at any of us."

“That’s such a bang-bang play, how’s the referee supposed to see that he kicked the ball, instead of our guy touching it?” Auburn assistant coach Steven Pearl, Bruce Pearl’s son, said after the game. “So that’s a tough one. … It’s just one of those things you’ve got to deal with.”

Pearl also pointed to other plays his team could have made before that sequence, including a missed free throw with seven seconds left, that might have altered the outcome and continued Auburn’s impressive run through the NCAA tournament, which featured wins over Kansas, North Carolina and Kentucky and the program’s first Final Four appearance.

Virginia, meanwhile, moves on to face Texas Tech for what would be either school’s first national title in men’s basketball. The Red Raiders ousted Michigan State, 61-51, in Saturday’s other, less controversial, national semifinal.

Read more from The Post:

Brewer: A Final Four game’s messy finish could set up a perfect ending for Virginia

Notre Dame’s Arike Ogunbowale sparkles again, putting Fighting Irish back in title game

The WWE has racial skeletons in its past. Can Kofi Kingston change its future?

Bullpen blunders doom Nationals again: Mets rally in eighth inning for a 6-5 win

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2019/04/07/missed-double-dribble-looms-large-virginias-comeback-win-over-auburn/

2019-04-07 06:26:05Z
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Sabtu, 06 April 2019

Texas Tech's historic national title shot, courtesy of hero Matt Mooney - ESPN

MINNEAPOLIS -- With Lil Nas X's "Old Town Road" blaring from the speakers, Texas Tech's players walked quietly from the court to the locker room after their 61-51 win over Michigan State on Saturday night.

No jumping around, no celebrating.

"We came down to play 80 minutes, not 40," said Red Raiders sophomore guard Jarrett Culver.

For Texas Tech, it's 40 minutes from program -- nay, athletic department -- history. The Red Raiders have never won a national championship in men's basketball. And they have won just one NCAA championship in a team sport in the history of the school: a women's basketball title in 1993, led by Sheryl Swoopes. (Virginia -- the Red Raiders' opponent in Monday night's NCAA tournament final -- also is looking for its first men's basketball title, but the Cavaliers have had plenty of success in other sports.)

This is a chance for Texas Tech to become the story in college basketball, an ultra-rare opportunity for the Red Raiders to be the talk of the sports world.

"It would mean everything," said Culver, a Lubbock native. "I never would've thought Tech would get to this point, just growing up in Lubbock. But now that I'm here at Tech, just being a part of it is so special to me."

To make history, Texas Tech will have to get more from Culver, who was uncharacteristically quiet for the first 38 minutes of Saturday's game -- before hitting big shots late, including a dagger 3-pointer from the top of the key with 58 seconds left to give the Red Raiders a seven-point lead. They'll need more from Davide Moretti, who was the hero against Gonzaga in the Elite Eight but had just five points against Michigan State.

Fortunately for coach Chris Beard and the Red Raiders, graduate transfer Matt Mooney was ready for the big stage. Mooney, who transferred from South Dakota last spring, finished with 22 points and four 3-pointers. Midway through the second half, Mooney hit three 3-pointers in a two-minute, 35-second span that extended Texas Tech's lead from six points to 12.

"I had a great shootaround today, and the basket just got big for me," Mooney said. "I felt [God] was out there playing with us on the floor. The basket just got big, and my teammates found me."

Down the stretch, Mooney also guarded Michigan State star Cassius Winston, arguably the best point guard in the country. And Winston ended up with one of his poorest performances of the season, shooting 4-for-16 from the field, with just two assists to four turnovers.

All season, Winston had hit big shots late in the game to keep the Spartans alive; on Saturday, Mooney made sure he didn't have that chance.

"He's obviously very, very talented, but the thing that really impressed me tonight was just his courage, just to be able to make those big plays and want to be in those moments," Beard said of Mooney. "When Culver was -- I'm not going to say struggling a little bit, I think when Michigan State was focused on Culver so much, Matt had the courage to step up and take those shots. He's making plays on both ends. I loved his poise tonight. He's a special player."

Red Raiders senior guard Brandone Francis agreed.

"On the defensive end, he was going to play hard," Francis said. "When he came down to Tech, I had no clue he could play defense that well. ... We're just glad he was able to have a great night."

Virginia poses perhaps the toughest test of Texas Tech's season thus far. The Cavaliers play defense as well as anyone in the country, and they control the tempo and pace of the game. It's going to be a defensive slugfest, one that features the lowest over/under (120) for a national championship game in the past 20 seasons (eight points lower than the previous low, 128 for the 2006 Florida-UCLA matchup).

Virginia is favored, but that's nothing new for the Red Raiders. They were picked seventh in the preseason Big 12 poll and have been underdogs in three straight games.

"Why not us? We've got good players. We've got a great university. We play in arguably the best league in the country," Beard said. "We won the Big 12 regular-season title. We're a good team. We've got good players. Yeah, I think we deserve to be here, as do a lot of other teams. You've got to get fortunate, but we did. I'm looking forward to coaching these guys on Monday night."

In just three seasons under Beard, the Texas Tech basketball program already has made history. The Red Raiders made their first Elite Eight last season, then followed it up with their first Final Four this season. But it's not a common occurrence for Tech to be the headlining story. Among the big public schools in Texas, they're significantly behind Texas and Texas A&M in operating revenues.

Athletic success -- especially in basketball -- is not an every-year event in Lubbock.

"It's been a long journey for our program," Red Raiders senior big man Norense Odiase said. "I'm happy that we're here. ... When we look back after this season and people look at our program and see what we've done in so little time, it's special. It's really special."

But there's still one more task. And if it happens, that postgame walk to the locker room will be a little louder.

"I feel like this team's on a mission," Culver said. "One more game until the national championship."

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http://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/story/_/id/26460513/texas-tech-historic-national-title-shot-courtesy-hero-matt-mooney

2019-04-07 05:19:57Z
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Last-second foul lifts Virginia over Auburn; Texas Tech tops Michigan State - Fox News

An apparent no-call double dribble, a last-second whistle and three free throws led to a wild finish as Virginia beat Auburn 63-62 Saturday night in Minneapolis, placing the spotlight on the refs of the NCAA Tournament national semifinal game.

Official James Breeding whistled the Tigers' Samir Doughty for a bump on Kyle Guy’s last-ditch three-point shot with 0.6 seconds remaining. Doughty's torso made contact with Guy's right thigh as Guy went up for the shot, even as Doughty tried to avoid contact.

VIRGINIA MEN'S BASKETBALL STAR KYLE GUY TOLD WEDDING REGISTRY WAS RULES VIOLATION -- BUT NCAA MAY NOT BE TO BLAME

Guy calmly sank all three free throws, lifting the Cavaliers to the final and stunning Auburn.

"NCAA needs to get some new refs,” Auburn guard Bryce Brown said as the team headed to the locker room.

Irate fans hurled obscene gestures and insults at the officials as they scurried to exit through a tunnel. Police led away a few of the most unruly fans; others walked away from floor seats in tears.

Double dribble?

But there was another officiating decision that turned Auburn fans furious. Moments before the fateful play, the Cavalier’s Ty Jerome appeared guilty of a no-call double dribble on his way up the court. But replays also showed Brown as the defender snagging Jerome's jersey to try to foul and disrupt Virginia's offense.

The NCAA said in a statement after the game that the correct call was made on the foul. Breeding had ruled that Doughty moved into an airborne shooter while crowding into his landing spot to violate a rule governing "verticality." But the organization declined to comment on whether a double dribble should have been called.

CLICK HERE FOR ALL MARCH MADNESS COVERAGE

"They missed some calls and they made some calls, but like I said, that's why they're reffing the Final Four because they're the best of the best," Doughty said. "You've got to trust their decision that they make on that floor."

"They missed some calls and they made some calls, but like I said, that's why they're reffing the Final Four because they're the best of the best."

— Samir Doughty, Auburn player
Virginia's Kyle Guy (5) takes a shot as Auburn's Samir Doughty (10) was called for a foul with 0.6 seconds left in the semi-final. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Virginia's Kyle Guy (5) takes a shot as Auburn's Samir Doughty (10) was called for a foul with 0.6 seconds left in the semi-final. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

NFL WILL DISCUSS BROADER USE OF INSTANT REPLAY AFTER RAMS-SAINTS NO-CALL, GOODELL SAYS

'A memorable game'

But Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl told reporters after the game that he wanted the semifinal to be remembered as a great game with a lot of plays, not just by the crucial call at the end.

“I thought that we looked like we belonged,” Pearl told SportingNews. “We weren't supposed to be here. We weren't supposed to have a chance to win — or maybe had a chance to win, but unlikely. I thought our kids made a lot of plays, a lot of plays to be able to win the game.

“So, this will be a memorable game, and I'd like it to be remembered for a great game. Let's not remember this game because of just how it ended.”

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TEXAS TECH 61, MICHIGAN STATE 51

In the night’s second semifinal game, No. 3 seed Texas Tech toppled second-seeded Michigan State, 61-51. Matt Mooney matched his season-high of 22 points to lead the Red Raiders to victory.

Texas Tech will face off against Virginia in the championship Monday night in Minneapolis.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/sports/last-second-foul-lifts-virginia-over-auburn-puts-spotlight-on-refs

2019-04-07 04:36:14Z
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Virginia Holds Off Miraculous Auburn Comeback In Final Seconds to Reach Championship | WILD Ending - Bleacher Report

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QvO-6f8uwc

2019-04-07 00:50:24Z
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Virginia vs. Auburn score, highlights: Cavaliers survive late run from Tigers to make first national title game - CBS Sports

MINNEAPOLIS -- Virginia, the only No. 1 seed to make the Final Four, advanced on Saturday night with a 63-62 win against Auburn at M&T Bank Stadium.

The game was played at Virginia's pace, with patient possessions for the Wahoos on offense and limited fast break opportunities for the usually up-tempo Tigers. Ty Jerome had one of his best games of the 2019 NCAA Tournament, connecting on a few jump shots early and finishing with 21 points on 8-for-16 shooting. 

Auburn pushed late with a 9-0 run in the game's final minutes, cutting Virginia's lead to one with 2:17 left and eventually taking the lead. Virginia ultimately scored the final six points of the game thanks to a last-second foul of Kyle Guy on a 3-point attempt. 

Guy, an 81.8 percent free throw shooter on the season, knocked down two of the three free throws before Auburn took a timeout. After the break, Guy sank the last free throw. 

"It was a great draw-up by coach. We've ran it all year. I've gotten a lot of great shots from that corner," Guy said of the play that led to the foul. "I had confidence in myself [at the line]. It's what we dream of." 

When asked about the game, Tony Bennett joked that his father, legendary coach Dick Bennett, would be frustrated with the way that Virginia defended, but hoped that the last foul call on guy was the right one. After the game, any controversy surrounding the 3-point foul was further sparked by a CBS review of what appeared to be a double-dribble by Ty Jerome in the final seconds prior to an Auburn foul on the floor. 

The result is sure to be debated, but the result is final. Guy knocked down all three free throws and now Virginia will play for a national championship for the first time. Tony Bennett and the Wahoos will face either Michigan State or Texas Tech on Monday night on CBS. 

CBS Sports was with you for complete coverage of Saturday night's game from Minneapolis, Minnesota, with our live blog below. If you are having trouble viewing the blog, please click here.

Virginia vs. Auburn commentary

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https://www.cbssports.com/college-basketball/news/virginia-vs-auburn-score-live-final-four-updates-2019-ncaa-tournament-highlights-stream-tv-info/

2019-04-07 00:28:00Z
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Virginia vs. Auburn score: Live Final Four updates, 2019 NCAA Tournament highlights, stream, TV info - CBS Sports

MINNEAPOLIS -- Auburn overcame early shooting woes against Virginia in the first of two semifinals on Saturday night, hitting a few big shots and coming up with stops at the end of the first half to take a 31-28 lead into halftime. The Tigers rallied with a 16-4 run at the end of the half against a Virginia team that had largely relied on its defensive effort so far in the game, with Ty Jerome's game-high 13 points on 5-of-9 shooting leading the way. 

Auburn has hit just 3-of-14 3-pointers so far, but the momentum it carried into halftime suggests that even the misses won't be able to hold back a Tigers team that has been one of the hottest squads in college basketball for the last month.  CBS Sports will be with you for complete coverage of Saturday night's game from Minneapolis, Minnesota, with our live blog below. If you are having trouble viewing the blog, please click here.

Viewing information 

  • When: Saturday at 6:09 p.m. ET
  • Where: M&T Bank Stadium -- Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • TV: CBS 
  • Live stream: March Madness Live and fuboTV (try for free)

Virginia vs. Auburn live updates

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2019-04-06 23:02:00Z
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