Ohio, Cincy advance from Nashville to Sweet 16

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Ohio guard Walter Offutt
celebrates after Ohio’s 62-56 win over South Florida in a third-round NCAA college basketball tournament
game on Sunday, March 18, 2012, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Donn Jones)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Consider it a good weekend for teams hailing from Ohio.
Four
teams from the state are heading to the regional semifinals, with the
13th-seeded Ohio Bobcats leading the way after getting 21 points from
Walter Offutt in a 62-56 upset of South Florida on Sunday night.
Ohio
advanced to the regional semifinals for the first time since 1964,
earning a matchup against top-seeded North Carolina in the Midwest
Regional on Friday.
Offutt, who hit two free throws with 6.8
seconds left to preserve a 65-60 upset of Michigan on Friday night,
knows the encounter with the Tar Heels isn’t going to be anything like
the last time he faced them — when he was a bench player for Ohio State.
"It’s
going to be different knowing that I’m going into the game and I have
to contribute for our team to possibly win the game," said Offutt, who
transferred from Ohio State to Ohio with a brief stop at Wright State in
between.
Ohio is the seventh team seeded No. 13 or higher to
advance to the regional semifinals and the first since No. 13 Bradley
did it in 2006.
In Nashville’s other third-round game,
sixth-seeded Cincinnati edged Florida State 62-59 to reach its first
regional semifinal since 2011. The Bearcats will play No. 2 seed Ohio
State in Boston on Thursday night.
A fourth team from Ohio,
Cincinnati’s crosstown rival Xavier, beat Lehigh 70-58 on Sunday in
Greensboro, N.C., to advance to the round of 16 for the fourth time in
five years.
Cincinnati guard Sean Kilpatrick had no idea his team was the fourth from the Buckeye State to advance.

"We
were just so amped about being in the Sweet 16," he said. "I’ll just
say we’re quite worried about Cincinnati on what we’ve got to do and
what we’ve got to focus on to win the next game."
The Bobcats and the Bearcats had far closer calls than their counterparts in their third-round games.
Although
the Bulls managed to keep the Bobcats away from the rim, they couldn’t
stop them at the perimeter. Half of Ohio’s second-half buckets were 3s,
and the Bobcats finished 9 of 18 from long range.
South Florida’s
Jawanza Poland was called for a technical foul after hanging on the rim
following a dunk. Nick Kellogg sank both free throws and a 3-pointer
that tied the game at 42 with 9:23 to play.
Ohio trailed by two
when Offutt swished a 3-pointer, launching a 10-0 run for the Bobcats. A
pair of free throws by D.J. Cooper made it 54-46 with 3:28 left.
The
Bobcats had a 59-53 lead when Toarlyn Fitzpatrick connected for South
Florida’s first 3-pointer of the half. But Cooper went 3 for 4 from the
line while the Bulls missed three shots in the final 36 seconds.
"Success
breeds success," said Ohio coach John Groce, who has led the Bobcats to
their second NCAA tournament in four years. "It builds more
confidence."
Cincinnati and Florida State traded the lead 19 times
and were tied 11, and neither team led by more than three in the second
half until the Bearcats scored seven straight points.
Sean
Kilpatrick hit a free throw tying it up at 50 points, and then Dion
Dixon stole the ball from Luke Loucks in front of the Cincinnati bench
as Florida State tried to bring the ball up against the Bearcats’ press.
Dixon took off and dunked to put Cincinnati ahead for good with 1:32
left.
Cashmere Wright hit a jumper, and Yancy Gates added two free
throws for 56-50 lead with 35.3 seconds left. The Bearcats sealed it by
hitting all eight free throws in the final 35.3 seconds.
The
Seminoles led 29-28 at halftime and were up by five in the first half.
But the Bearcats hit 11 of 21 (52.4 percent) overall and 12 of 13 at the
free throw line. Cincinnati had a big edge at the line (19 of 23)
overall compared to Florida State (12 of 15).
"We’re thinking way better than that. We’re trying to get past the
Sweet 16 and do bigger and better things," Cincinnati guard JaQuon
Parker said.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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