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Badgers, Golden Eagles Advance in Tourney

Badgers, Golden Eagles Advance in Tourney

Wisconsin, Marquette Move on to Round 2

Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- The bigger Big Ten team won, but not before little ol' Cal State Fullerton gave the Badgers a scare.

Wisconsin couldn't shake the 14th-seeded Titans until deep into the second half in Omaha tonight before winning 71-56 in the first round of the NCAA men's basketball tournament.

The Badgers move on to a Saturday game against Kansas State in the second round of the Midwest Regional.

The Badgers shot 42 percent and committed 17 turnovers, but they blocked seven shots and outrebounded the Titans 50-27.

That was enough to overcome a career-high 31-point night by Fullerton's Josh Akognon, whose five 3-pointers always seemed to come just when it looked as if the Badgers were about to pull away.

Brian Butch scored 14 points and Joe Krabbenhoft and Jason Bohannon 13 apiece for the Badgers (29-4), who won for the 24th time in 26 games.

Frank Robinson added 11 points for the Titans (24-9).

Meanwhile, in Anaheim, California, Marquette's recent history of futility in March Madness finally came to an end.

Jerel McNeal scored 20 points and Wesley Matthews hit eight free throws in the final 31 seconds to help the Golden Eagles beat the Wildcats 74-66 in the first round of the South Regional on Thursday.

Marquette overcame 35 points by Kentucky senior Joe Crawford, who matched a career high before fouling out. Ramel Bradley added 19 for the Wildcats.

Sixth-seeded Marquette (25-9) earned its first NCAA tournament victory since 2003, when it beat Kentucky in the regional final to go to the Final Four.

Marquette had too many weapons against the outmanned Wildcats (18-13), who played without leading rebounder and No. 2 scorer Patrick Patterson. Kentucky went 2-3 after losing the star freshman to a season-ending ankle injury.

As it turned out, Crawford was almost enough for the Wildcats.

Kentucky cut it to 66-63 on Crawford's 3-pointer from the top of the key with 38 seconds left.

After Matthews hit two free throws, Bradley hit a 3-pointer from the corner to get the Wildcats within two with 22 seconds remaining.

Matthews made two more free throws, then stole the ball and hit two more from the line to ice the game.

Crawford hit 13 of 22 shots from the floor while his teammates went 10-for-26. He hit 5-of-8 from beyond the arc and 4-of-8 at the line.

Kentucky trailed 33-29 at halftime, but Crawford opened the second half by scoring the Wildcats' first seven points, on a 3-pointer, a putback and a layup to tie it at 36-36.

That's when the Golden Eagles awoke.

They went on a 9-2 run, sparked by Lazar Hayward's thunderous dunk off a feed from McNeal.

Six minutes into the half, Marquette took its biggest lead -- 45-38 -- when McNeal scooped up a blocked shot and raced the length of the court for a layup.

Kentucky trailed 54-43 midway through the second half when Crawford went on a personal 6-0 run, scoring on a three-point play and then hitting from beyond the arc to pull the Wildcats within five points.

The Wildcats and Golden Eagles met for the 10th time in the NCAA tourney's most-played matchup. Marquette is 6-4 in the series.

Both tradition-laden teams were hitting their stride as the postseason began.

Marquette opened 6-5 in the Big East but went 8-3 overall down the stretch, losing to eventual champion Pittsburgh in the Big East semifinals. Kentucky overcame a 7-9 start, including a loss to Gardner-Webb, and won 11 of its last 14 to slip into the bracket.

Bradley and Crawford combined to score 21 of Kentucky's 29 first-half points.

Patterson's loss was most evident under the boards. He led Kentucky in rebounding, and Marquette exploited his absence, outrebounding Kentucky 21-15 in the first half.

Marquette attacked the basket from the start, scoring 14 of its first 17 points in the paint.

Marquette went on a 12-0 run midway through the first half to take a 16-10 lead. But the Wildcats rallied to tie it at 23 on a fastbreak dunk by Crawford off an alley-oop pass from Bradley.

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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