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No. 1 Baylor Holds Off No. 9 Wisconsin to Advance in 2021 NCAA Tournament

Mar 21, 2021
Baylor's Davion Mitchell (45) reacts as Jared Butler (12) gets a dunk against Wisconsin in the first half of a second-round game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
Baylor's Davion Mitchell (45) reacts as Jared Butler (12) gets a dunk against Wisconsin in the first half of a second-round game in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

No. 1 Baylor clinched its spot in the Sweet 16 with a 76-63 win over No. 9 Wisconsin in the second round of the 2021 NCAA men's basketball tournament's South Region.

Davion Mitchell had 16 points and eight assists for the Bears, who played a swarming defense to reach a regional semifinal for the first time since 2017.

Baylor turned a 13-point halftime lead into a 18-point advantage shortly into the second half while appearing ready to pull away for a blowout win. Wisconsin refused to make it that easy, hitting tough shots to stay within striking distance down the stretch.

The Badgers cut the margin to single digits several times, but Baylor never provided an opening for a comeback. Matthew Mayer's 17 points off the bench became key for the Big 12 regular-season champs to close out the victory.

It's the fifth Sweet 16 appearance for Scott Drew in his 18 years with the program. The team also avoided being the second No. 1 seed to be eliminated in this tourney after Loyola Chicago defeated Illinois on Saturday.

Wisconsin has now gone four years without reaching the second weekend of the NCAA tournament, the school's longest stretch since 1999.

      

Notable Performances

Jared Butler, G, BAY: 16 points, 4 rebounds, 2 assists

Davion Mitchell, G, BAY: 16 points, 8 assists, 2 steals

Matthew Mayer, G, BAY: 17 points, 6 rebounds, 2 steals

D'Mitrik Trice, G, WIS: 12 points, 4 assists, 5/17 FG

Micah Potter, F, WIS: 10 points, 10 rebounds, 3 blocks

Brad Davison, G, WIS: 8 points, 4 assists, 3 rebounds

     

Baylor Leans on Defense to Advance

Defense wins games in the NCAA tournament, and Baylor showed what it could do from the start. The intensity was apparent from the opening tip to make things extremely difficult for Wisconsin offensively:

Baylor ranked 36th in defensive efficiency entering the game, per KenPom.com, but the talent was there to be even better with Mitchell and Mark Vital. This game showed just how dominant the squad can be on that end of the court.

Their energy was also valuable offensively.

The quick transition play led to several easy baskets, plus an impressive buzzer-beater before halftime:

Elite athleticism helped Baylor send a message with some huge dunks:

When the game got closer in the second half, Baylor relied on its guard play as Mitchell and Jared Butler came up with big shots. Mitchell was key to the game with his effort on both ends, flawlessly running the offense while shutting opponents down defensively.

Matthew Mayer added 17 points off the bench to help the Bears pull away from a tough opponent.

     

Balanced Offense Not Enough for Wisconsin

The things Wisconsin usually does well did not work in this game.

Brad Davison was red-hot in Round 1, but the guard couldn't get this going against Baylor with just three points in the first half and eight all game.

The Badgers also struggled to hold onto the ball after limiting their turnovers had been a key to their offense all year long.

Wisconsin turned it over just 8.9 times per game entering the day but gave it up nine times in the first half alone and 14 times in the game.

The fight was still there in the second half with D'Mitrik Trice making clutch shots to keep the score close:

Even with few open looks, the team still shot a respectable 8-of-21 from three-point range. The Badgers shared the ball well and had four players in double figures and six with at least eight points.

That simply wasn't enough to keep up with Baylor as the Bears played to their ability from start to finish.

      

What's Next?

Baylor advances to the second weekend with a chance to make a deep run. The team will face the winner of No. 5 Villanova and No. 13 North Texas in the Sweet 16.

Cinderella No More: Loyola-Chicago Is a Final Four Threat Once Again

Mar 21, 2021
Loyola of Chicago players celebrate after beating Illinois in a college basketball game in the second round of the NCAA tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis Sunday, March 21, 2021. Loyola upset Illinois 71-58. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
Loyola of Chicago players celebrate after beating Illinois in a college basketball game in the second round of the NCAA tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis Sunday, March 21, 2021. Loyola upset Illinois 71-58. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

The 2020-21 Loyola of Chicago Ramblers had no business being a No. 8 seed.

Within moments of the final buzzer sounding on a dominant 71-58 victory over No. 1 seed Illinois, the word "Cinderella" had already been uttered multiple times by announcers and studio analysts alike.

But this time around, the glass slipper simply doesn't fit.

The Ramblers went 21-4 during the regular season, steamrolling their way through the Missouri Valley Conference and winning their three conference tournament games by a combined 50 points to secure an automatic bid.

The most recent AP poll, released on March 15, shows Loyola-Chicago at No. 17 ahead of the likes of Villanova, Creighton, Purdue, Texas Tech, Colorado, BYU, USC and Virginia Tech.

All of those teams were seeded higher than the Ramblers—some by as many as four seed lines.

Simple math says the No. 17 team in the nation should be a No. 5 seed in the NCAA tournament, and while the selection committee does not adhere to the AP poll by any means, a disparity of three seed lines is still a bit of a head-scratcher.

The KenPom rankings paint an even clearer picture of just how good this Ramblers team has been.

They rank No. 7 overall, behind only Gonzaga, Michigan, Houston, Baylor, Illinois and Iowa, and lay claim to the No. 1 ranking in adjusted defensive efficiency.

That pesky defense was on full display Sunday.

The Illini turned the ball over 17 times, six of which came from All-American guard Ayo Dosunmu, and they never found any sort of rhythm aside from a solid two-minute stretch to close out the first half. The 58 points scored by Illinois were its lowest point total of the season.

Meanwhile, with a patient half-court attack and the versatility of big man Cameron Krutwig, the Ramblers put on a clinic on the offensive end.

They shot 51 percent from the floor, a mark exceeded by only three teams against the Illini defense this season, and they found easy basket after easy basket late in the shot clock.

It all starts with Krutwig.

Cameron Krutwig
Cameron Krutwig

The Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year and a holdover from the 2018 Final Four team when he started as a true freshman, he filled up the box score with 19 points, 12 rebounds and five assists. Beyond the counting stats, his ability to play on the perimeter and run the offense pulled Kofi Cockburn out of the paint, opening things up underneath offensively.

And while the 6'9" senior center was the focal point Sunday, this is far from a one-dimensional attack.

Senior guard Lucas Williamson averages a modest 8.6 points per game, but he dropped a season-high 21 on 8-of-13 shooting against Georgia Tech in their opening-round win. The MVC Defensive Player of the Year is another holdover from the 2018 squad.

Guards Braden Norris (8.4 PPG, 52 3PT, 40.9 3PT%) and Keith Clemons (38 3PT, 45.8 3PT%) are both knockdown shooters from the outside, and Norris leads the team with 3.1 assists per game as the starting point guard.

Even when Krutwig needs a breather, the team can turn to 6'10" freshman Jacob Hutson, who has played his way into the rotation as the season has progressed. He tallied five points, two rebounds and one block in seven minutes of action Sunday.

There is no future lottery pick or 5-star recruit on this roster.

It's just a deep, talented, fundamentally sound team that has fully bought into the philosophy of head coach Porter Moser. They executed a well-crafted game plan to a T on Sunday to send a really good Illinois team packing in lopsided fashion.

So save the Cinderella talk for teams like North Texas and Oral Roberts.

This Loyola-Chicago squad is a bona fide Final Four threat, and it has been since before the NCAA tournament ever began.

     

All stats courtesy of Sports Reference.

No. 8 Loyola-Chicago Stuns Ayo Dosunmu, No. 1 Illinois in March Madness Upset

Mar 21, 2021
Illinois guard Ayo Dosunmu (11) drives on Loyola Chicago guard Tate Hall (24) during the first half of a men's college basketball game in the second round of the NCAA tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Illinois guard Ayo Dosunmu (11) drives on Loyola Chicago guard Tate Hall (24) during the first half of a men's college basketball game in the second round of the NCAA tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Three years after making a magical journey to the Final Four, Loyola of Chicago is in the midst of another Cinderella run as the eighth-seeded Ramblers upset the No. 1 Illinois Fighting Illini 71-58 in the second round of the 2021 NCAA men's basketball tournament Sunday.

With Loyola-Chicago 101-year-old superfan and team chaplain Sister Jean Delores Schmidt looking on from the crowd at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, the Ramblers made the Illini the first No. 1 seed to be sent packing from this year's tournament and advanced to the Sweet 16.

Loyola-Chicago put its in-state rival in an early hole, surging to a 19-9 lead in the first half and leading by as much as 14 thanks to putting the clamps on Illinois defensively.

The Ramblers shot 51.0 percent from the field and 40.0 percent from beyond the arc while holding the Fighting Illini to 44.9 percent from the floor and 28.6 percent from deep.

Loyola-Chicago also forced Illinois into some uncharacteristic mistakes in the upset, as head coach Brad Underwood's team committed 17 turnovers.

     

Notable Stats

Cameron Krutwig, C, LUC: 19 PTS (9/18 FG), 12 REB, 5 AST, 3 STL

Marquise Kennedy, G, LUC: 14 PTS (4/6 FG), 3 REB

Kofi Cockburn, C, ILL: 21 PTS (7/12 FG), 9 REB

Ayo Dosunmu, G, ILL: 9 PTS (4/10 FG), 2 REB, 2 AST

     

Loyola-Chicago Dominates with Defense, Half-Court Offense

Sunday's game was a battle of polar opposites, as Loyola-Chicago is the No. 1 defensive team in the nation, while Illinois ranked 14th in the country in scoring 81.3 points per game.

Defense won out in a big way, as the Ramblers frustrated Illinois all game long and held Naismith College Player of the Year finalist Ayo Dosunmu to just nine points on 4-of-10 shooting to go along with six turnovers.

SBNation's Ricky O'Donnell marveled at how Loyola-Chicago was able to lock down one of the most talented and explosive teams in college basketball:

Another impressive aspect of Loyola's game Sunday was its ability to turn defense into offense, such as this steal that led to a three on the other end by Braden Norris:

In addition to their defense, the Ramblers controlled the game with their half-court offense, which allowed them to slow the pace and prevent the athletic Illini from getting out and running.

Among the highlights Loyola-Chicago produced out of the half court was this four-point play from Marquise Kennedy:

Also, center Cameron Krutwig picked apart Illinois with some unexpectedly great passing in half-court sets:

Loyola-Chicago essentially dominated the game from start to finish, as Illinois never truly threatened to make a comeback.

The overall numbers favored the Ramblers, which came as no surprise to Sister Jean, as evidenced by her pregame prayer:

Sister Jean was witness to one of the most unexpected runs in NCAA tournament history in 2018, and the Ramblers appear poised for another deep run this year.

The difference this time around is that Loyola-Chicago isn't sneaking up on anyone, but that didn't seem to matter in Sunday's decimation of top-seeded Illinois.

     

Illinois the Victim of Unfavorable Seeding?

Illinois largely played poorly Sunday and would have lost to many teams in the tournament with similar execution or lack thereof, but it is fair to wonder if the selection committee did the Illini a disservice.

Loyola-Chicago lost just four games this season and dominated the Missouri Valley Conference. It also ranked first in Division I college basketball, allowing just 55.7 points per game.

That gave the Ramblers a No. 9 overall ranking in respected college basketball statistician Ken Pomeroy's rankings. Loyola-Chicago and Wisconsin are the only teams in Pomeroy's top 20 that were seeded eighth or worse in the NCAA tournament.

The disparity between the KenPom ranking and the seed led to plenty of chatter Sunday regarding whether the Illini were treated fairly.

Rodger Sherman of The Ringer, Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports and ESPN's Scott Van Pelt all criticized the selection committee for Loyola-Chicago's seeding:

The Ramblers may have been a tough team to evaluate given their low level of competition in the MVC, but recent history should have told the committee that a Porter Moser-coached team playing this well was going to be very dangerous.

Illinois learned that the hard way against a team that the KenPom rankings suggest it shouldn't have had to face until the Elite Eight at the earliest.

At the same time, Loyola-Chicago had every reason to complain and get down about having to face KenPom's No. 2 overall team in Illinois so early in the tournament, but the Ramblers played incredible basketball and won instead.

     

What's Next?

Loyola-Chicago will look to keep its magical run going when it faces the winner of No. 4 Oklahoma State vs. No. 12 Oregon State in the Sweet 16 later this week.

NCAA Scores 2021: Odds, Spread Predictions, Betting Advice for Latest Bracket

Mar 21, 2021
Illinois center Kofi Cockburn shoots a free throw during the first half of a first round NCAA college basketball tournament game Friday, against Drexel March 19, 2021, at the Indiana Farmers Coliseum in Indianapolis .(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Illinois center Kofi Cockburn shoots a free throw during the first half of a first round NCAA college basketball tournament game Friday, against Drexel March 19, 2021, at the Indiana Farmers Coliseum in Indianapolis .(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

The second round of the NCAA men's basketball tournament has a high standard to live up to after the chaos that erupted in the first round.

Five of Sunday's eight round-of-32 matchups involve double-digit seeds, but there is no guarantee any of them will advance. The South and Midwest Regions could revert to chalk or more unpredictable results could occur across the Indianapolis area.

The West Virginia Mountaineers and Villanova Wildcats are among the established programs that will try to avoid upsets to move on to the Sweet 16.

Villanova was impressive Thursday in dealing with the upset threat posed by the Winthrop Eagles. Jay Wright's team appears to be fine without Collin Gillespie, and it has a chance to prove that again in a clash with the North Texas Mean Green.

The Illinois Fighting Illini will not face a double-digit seed, but they could take on the toughest matchup of any top seed in the second round. Brad Underwood's team faces the No. 8 Loyola-Chicago Ramblers, who may be able to neutralize some of Illinois' strength and have recent Final Four experience.

                   

Sunday NCAA Tournament 2nd-Round Schedule

No. 1 Illinois (-7.5) vs. No. 8 Loyola-Chicago (12:10 p.m. ET, CBS)

No. 1 Baylor (-6.5) vs. No. 9 Wisconsin (2:40 p.m. ET, CBS)

No. 3 West Virginia (-3.5) vs. No. 11 Syracuse (5:15 p.m. ET, CBS)

No. 3 Arkansas vs. No. 6 Texas Tech (-2) (6:10 p.m. ET, TNT) 

No. 2 Houston (-7.5) vs. No. 10 Rutgers (7:10 p.m. ET, TBS)

No. 7 Florida (-8.5) vs. No. 15 Oral Roberts (7:45 p.m. ET, truTV)

No. 5 Villanova (-5) vs. No. 13 North Texas (8:45 p.m. ET, TNT)

No. 4 Oklahoma State (-6.5) vs. No. 12 Oregon State (9:40 p.m. ET, TBS)

Predictions against the spread in bold.

Odds via DraftKings Sportsbook.

            

Betting Advice

Loyola-Chicago (+7.5) vs. Illinois

Illinois deserves to be a 7.5-point favorite because it topped what we thought was the most difficult conference in the country. Loyola-Chicago comes from the Missouri Valley Conference and played a schedule that paled in comparison to Illinois'.

Despite those differences, the Ramblers should keep their in-state battle with Illinois close for 40 minutes thanks to their defense and the paint presence of Cameron Krutwig.

Porter Moser's team is known for its defense, which limited the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets to 60 points on Friday. That total is on the high end of concessions for the eighth-seeded team. It held 17 consecutive opponents under 60 points from January 11-March 6.

The Ramblers could take Illinois out of its rhythm by using Krutwig to contain Kofi Cockburn in the paint. Krutwig averages 14.9 points and 6.7 rebounds per game, but his most important attribute could be the experience he gained on Loyola's Final Four run in 2018.

The senior big man should not be intimidated by the challenge presented by the towering Cockburn, who had at least 16 points in each of his past four games. If Krutwig makes life difficult in the paint or gets Cockburn in early foul trouble, the rest of Loyola's defenders can focus on containing Ayo Dosunmu and Illinois' guards.

While Loyola can keep the game close with its defense, it may not have the offensive firepower to finish off the contest.

The Ramblers have a single player that averages more than 10 points per game, while Illinois has three. The Illini are also deeper at guard with Andre Curbelo, Trent Frazier and Adam Miller thriving in supporting roles of late.

In the first-round win over the Drexel Dragons, Frazier and Miller joined Cockburn and Dosunmu in double figures. If Illinois spreads the ball around well once more, it should get into the Sweet 16, but it may not cover if Loyola plays tough defense for long stretches.

                  

Villanova (-5) vs. North Texas 

Villanova went from the most vulnerable No. 5 seed to a potential Sweet 16 side in a matter of days.

The Wildcats appeared to be susceptible to an upset since they struggled in their first two games without Gillespie, who leads the team in assists and is second in scoring. But on Friday, the Big East regular-season champion proved it could play just fine without its top distributor, beating Winthrop by 10.

Jeremiah Robinson-Earl will once again be the best player on the floor Sunday, and he could be the key to get Villanova to the second week of the tournament. Robinson-Earl finished with 22 points, 11 rebounds and six assists Friday.

Justin Moore, Jermaine Samuels and Caleb Daniels all reached double digits as well to make the Gillespie loss feel less painful than it was against the Providence Friars and Georgetown Hoyas.

Villanova may face a tricky test against a stingy North Texas team that is known for its defense, but it may have too many offensive weapons for the Conference USA tournament champion to stop.

North Texas found success against the Purdue Boilermakers because it controlled the impact of Trevion Williams in the paint. The Mean Green also won the guard battle against Jaden Ivey. Villanova will not let that happen so easily, as it boasts experience across the floor and could shut down Javion Hamlet.

Hamlet has three 20-point outings in his past five games, but his impact could be limited by Samuels or Daniels, both of whom are upperclassmen. Villanova could also put Robinson-Earl, the best NBA-caliber talent on its roster, on Hamlet to decrease his outage.

If the Wildcats do that and continue to spread the ball around offensively, they should cruise to a berth in the Sweet 16.

                

Follow Joe on Twitter, @JTansey90Statistics obtained from ESPN.com.

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Abilene Christian HC Joe Golding Says Texas Upset 'Is What March Is All About'

Mar 21, 2021
Abilene Christian players celebrate their 53-52 upset win over Texas in a college basketball game in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
Abilene Christian players celebrate their 53-52 upset win over Texas in a college basketball game in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

Abilene Christian men's basketball head coach Joe Golding put things into perspective early Sunday morning after his 14-seeded Wildcats beat the No. 3 Texas Longhorns in the first round of the NCAA tournament Saturday night.

According to Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports, Golding said: "We just beat the University of Texas, little old Abilene Christian out in West Texas. It's an incredible story. It's what March is all about."

In the last game of the tourney's first round, Abilene Christian prevailed 53-52 on the strength of two made free throws by Joe Pleasant with just 1.2 seconds remaining.

Texas led 28-23 at halftime, but it was clear that Abilene Christian was giving the Big 12 tournament champions all they could handle.

That manifested itself in the Wildcats' second-half comeback, which was spurred on largely by their swarming defensive style.

Abilene Christian shot only 29.9 percent from the field and 16.7 percent from beyond the arc, but it didn't matter because they threw up 27 more attempts from the field than Texas did.

The Wildcats forced Texas to turn over the ball a remarkable 23 times, and they also destroyed the Longhorns on the offensive glass, grabbing 18 offensive rebounds to only five for the Longhorns.

Texas is by far the more talented team, but Golding's squad played fundamentally sound basketball and pulled off one of the biggest upsets of the 2021 NCAA men's basketball tournament because of it.

This year's first round was one of the wildest in recent memory, with a No. 15 seed in Oral Roberts, a No. 14 seed in Abilene Christian and two No. 13 seeds in North Texas and Ohio all advancing to the round of 32.

Abilene Christian's win was extra special, though, since the small school knocked off the dominant university in its state on the biggest stage in college basketball.

Saturday marked the first men's NCAA tournament win in Abilene Christian history in only its second appearance, but Golding could have the Wildcats on the road to becoming a perennial tournament team.

They have reached the tourney in two of the past three years and won at least 20 games in three consecutive campaigns, which is no small feat for a team that finished .500 or worse in each of Golding's first five seasons at the helm.

The Southland Conference tournament champs will look to entrench themselves even more when they go on to face the 11th-seeded UCLA Bruins out of the Pac-12 in the next round.

Kai Jones, No. 3 Texas Upset by No. 14 Abilene Christian in 2021 NCAA Tournament

Mar 21, 2021
Texas' Kai Jones (22) passes the ball over Abilene Christian's Clay Gayman (42) during the first half of a college basketball game in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis Saturday, March 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
Texas' Kai Jones (22) passes the ball over Abilene Christian's Clay Gayman (42) during the first half of a college basketball game in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis Saturday, March 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

After Saturday night's No. 3-No. 14 East Regional game, a Texas team is moving on. But it's not the third-seeded Texas Longhorns.

No. 14 Abilene Christian shocked the Longhorns, 53-52, to set up a second-round matchup with No. 11 UCLA, which surprised No. 6 BYU earlier Saturday.

Texas star Kai Jones dropped 11 points and Jericho Sims recorded a double-double by way of 10 points and 11 rebounds, but it wasn't enough for Texas to overcome the balanced effort from the Wildcats.

Abilene Christian is the first No. 14 seed to win in the first round since 2016, when Stephen F. Austin upended No. 3 West Virginia, 70-56.

Joe Pleasant, the worst free-throw shooter on the team with just 58.8 percent completion on at least 10 shots from the line, got the ball with two seconds left and the Wildcats trailing by one. He hit both shots to give his team the one-point advantage over the Longhorns and then stole the ball to seal the first-ever Abilene Christian tournament victory.

The Wildcats trailed by five at the break and posted a 30-point second half to beat the Longhorns. Abilene Christian hit 20 of its 67 attempts from the field and went 83.3 percent from the line.

The biggest difference came on the glass, as the Wildcats didn't give up on their end. They grabbed 18 offensive rebounds compared to five from Texas. Their defense forced 23 turnovers on Texas, the most for the Longhorns since Nov. 12, 2012, according to ESPN Stats & Info.

Matt Coleman, who averaged 13.3 points per game, had nine points and seven of those lost possessions, while Courtney Ramey (12.6 points per game) went just 1-of-7 with four turnovers.

Abilene Christian's defense stole the ball 11 times while limiting a Texas offense that averaged 75 points per game to just 52 when it mattered most.

The Wildcats will play No. 11 UCLA on Monday at 5:15 p.m. ET.

No. 13 Ohio Upsets No. 4 Virginia in 1st Round of 2021 Men's NCAA Tournament

Mar 20, 2021
Ohio's Ben Roderick, right, hugs Jason Preston after Ohio defeated Buffalo 84-69 in an NCAA college basketball game in the championship of the Mid-American Conference tournament, Saturday, March 13, 2021, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)
Ohio's Ben Roderick, right, hugs Jason Preston after Ohio defeated Buffalo 84-69 in an NCAA college basketball game in the championship of the Mid-American Conference tournament, Saturday, March 13, 2021, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)

Ben Vander Plas scored a game-high 17 points and Jason Preston added 11 points, 13 rebounds and eight assists as No. 13 Ohio upset the No. 4 Virginia Cavaliers 62-58 on Saturday in the first round of the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.

Bobcats guard Ben Roderick added 15 points, including a layup and a three-pointer down the stretch to turn a 51-49 Ohio lead into a 56-49 edge with 1:09 remaining.

Virginia clawed back, however, and even cut the lead to 58-55 following a Reece Beekman steal (and ensuing Jay Huff layup) with 13 seconds left.

Ohio's Mark Sears then nailed two free throws, but Virginia's Trey Murphy III hit a three-pointer with eight seconds left to slash the Bobcats' lead to 60-58.

The Bobcats stayed on fire from the free-throw line, though, as Lunden McDay sealed the win with two more from the charity stripe to put the game away. Ohio went 13-of-14 from the line on the night.

Ohio's 16-2 run in the middle of the second half proved to be the difference. Virginia led 38-31 with 14:35 left after a Kihei Clark layup, but the Bobcats proceeded to hold the Cavaliers without a field goal for 10:08. A pair of Sam Hauser free throws were the only Cavalier points during that span.

Vander Plas capped that stretch by going on his own personal 8-0 run to put Ohio up 47-40 with 4:43 remaining.

Hauser, who paced the Cavaliers with 16 points per game this year, led UVA with 15 points (4-of-16 shooting) and nine rebounds. He and the rest of the Cavaliers struggled from the field, though, shooting 35 percent overall and making eight of 31 three-pointers.

This contest marked the Cavaliers' first game since March 11, when they defeated Syracuse 72-69 in the ACC tournament quarterfinals. A positive test and subsequent contact tracing and quarantining forced UVA to bow out for the remainder of the conference competition, however.

The Cavaliers' first practice following that news occurred Friday morning, and they arrived in Indianapolis for the tournament later that day. Most of the team was also in quarantine this week.

UVA certainly faced significant obstacles leading into its tournament defeat, but Ohio still played an excellent game as it donned the Cinderella slippers once again. Tremendous defense, clutch shooting and late-game heroics helped Ohio survive and advance.

The Bobcats have now earned first-round upsets three times in the last 12 seasons.

The No. 14 Bobcats upset the No. 3 Georgetown Hoyas in the first round in 2010. Two years later, the No. 13 Bobcats defeated No. 4 Michigan and No. 12 South Florida in the first two rounds before losing to the No. 1 North Carolina Tar Heels 73-65 in overtime.

Ohio will now face off against No. 5 Creighton in the second round Monday. The Bluejays held off an upset bid from No. 12 UCSB to win 63-62 on Friday.

Virginia, which won the last men's college hoops title in 2019, ends its season with an 18-7 overall record.