Washington Evening Journal
111 North Marion Avenue
Washington, IA 52353
319-653-2191
Cyclones take out defending champion Connecticut
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) ? Jim Calhoun and Connecticut didn?t expect their season to end this way.
Their future is equally unpredictable.
?We?re talking about tonight?s game. We?re not talking about me,? Calhoun said after Iowa State stunned the defending national champions 77-64 in the NCAA tournament Thursday night. ?I?m going to get on the plane tomorrow, go home and do what I usually do and meet up with the team ...
N/A
Sep. 30, 2018 9:43 pm
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) ? Jim Calhoun and Connecticut didn?t expect their season to end this way.
Their future is equally unpredictable.
?We?re talking about tonight?s game. We?re not talking about me,? Calhoun said after Iowa State stunned the defending national champions 77-64 in the NCAA tournament Thursday night. ?I?m going to get on the plane tomorrow, go home and do what I usually do and meet up with the team on Monday. My own personal thing, I don?t think it has any relevance, to be honest with you.?
Chris Allen led four Cyclones in double figures with 20 points, and Iowa State scored its last 14 at the free-throw line to beat UConn, the first time since UCLA in 1996 that the defending champs have lost in the opening game. Calhoun didn?t even wait for the final buzzer, heading for halfcourt with about four seconds left to congratulate Iowa State coach Fred Hoiberg.
It is only the second loss in the opening game of the NCAA tournament for UConn under Calhoun.
?I?m surprised as anybody, clearly,? Calhoun said. ?I imagine our players are, too.?
For the eighth-seeded Cyclones, meanwhile, it?s their biggest victory in a season of them, having knocked off Kansas and Baylor during Big 12 play.
Royce White had a double-double with 15 points and 13 rebounds, and Scott Christopherson also had 15 for the Cyclones. Iowa State shot 48 percent from the floor and had a whopping 41-24 edge in rebounds.
?I feel like just we wanted it more,? Allen said. ?I felt like we was doing everything we needed to and played hard.?
Next up for Iowa State: Overall No. 1 seed Kentucky in the third round of the South Regional on Saturday. The Wildcats routed Western Kentucky earlier Thursday.
For the Huskies, the future is far less certain. This could be Connecticut?s last tournament until at least 2014, with the Huskies facing a ban on tournament play next year because of past academic problems. Although Calhoun insists he hasn?t made any retirement plans, he?s had a history of health problems ? he?s a three-time cancer survivor and missed a month this season with back pain ? and he turns 70 in May.
Shabazz Napier led the Huskies with 22, and Jeremy Lamb had 19. But Connecticut could never get into a rhythm and had no answer for the quicker, more aggressive Cyclones.
The Cyclones arrived in Louisville with no shortage of swagger, smirking when asked if they were intimidated by the defending national champions.
And they wasted no time backing up their big talk, jumping on the Huskies from the opening tip. It took Calhoun less than two minutes before he?d seen enough, jumping up to call a timeout.
?We wanted to attack the boards more and whatever 3s we got, we took,? Allen said. ?At the end of the day, we were trying to get it in, get rebounds and do all the little stuff.?
After leading by as much as 22 in the first half, Iowa State (23-10) withstood a UConn rally in the second half. Ryan Boatright went on a one-man tear, making three straight baskets to pull Connecticut within 58-52 with 8:24 to play.
But the Huskies (20-14) couldn?t get any closer, missing their next four shots and going scoreless for more than five-and-a-half minutes.

Daily Newsletters
Account