NCAA Finals

Men’s Final is today(04/05)

Georgia Tech and Connecticut are set to go head-to-head Monday night in the NCAA Championship game - the Yellow Jackets are looking for their first title - whereas UConn will try to win its 2nd in five years.

Women’s Final is on Tuesday(04/06)

For the second time in a row and fourth time in 10 years - Tennessee and Connecticut will play for the national title - Tennesse will seek revenge whereas Diana Taurasi led UConn will seek for its 3-peat!

from UConn - both Men’s and Women’s team qualified for the Finals - ah Duke couldn’t make it!

G-Tech vs. UConn Final Preview

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaab/preview?gid=200404050129

Connecticut showed what it can do Saturday with an effective Emeka Okafor.

Georgia Tech has already shown what can be done to the Huskies when Okafor is ineffective.

The play of Okafor could be the biggest key in Monday’s national championship game, when the Huskies try to win their second title in five years and prevent the Yellow Jackets from winning their first.

Georgia Tech handed Connecticut what was easily its worst loss of the season with a 77-61 victory on Nov. 26 in the semifinals of the Preseason NIT. That was the first loss for UConn, which was No. 1 in the nation at the time.

Okafor’s back injury, which became an on-again, off-again problem for the remainder of the season, flared up before that game, and the All-American center was held to just nine points on 2-of-10 shooting.

The struggles of Okafor seemed to affect the whole UConn team, as the Huskies shot just 37.9 percent from the field and were an embarrassing 10-for-30 from the foul line.

It seems like a lifetime ago,'' Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun said. I know we got hit pretty good. I know they ran us off the floor.

``I know we didn’t have Emeka Okafor. He was like 2-for-9, couldn’t play the rest of the game. He was hurt. That’s the first time we had problems with his back spasms. Rashad (Anderson) wasn’t playing anywhere near as much. Both teams have changed dramatically I think in a lot of ways. I don’t know if the November matchup was indicative. I hope it wasn’t.‘’

UConn is a different team – arguably the nation’s most talented one – when Okafor is at his best. Even though that was for only one half Saturday, it was enough to move the Huskies within one win of adding another title to the one they won in 1999.

After going scoreless while sitting most of the first half because of foul trouble, Okafor scored all of his 18 points in the final 20 minutes as the Huskies rallied to beat Duke 79-78.

Okafor keyed the Huskies’ comeback from eight points down with 3:28 to play. He scored five points in the final 1:18, including a follow of his own miss for the go-ahead basket with 25 seconds to play.

It was the first close game of the tournament for UConn. Georgia Tech, on the other hand, has played nothing but close games.

The Yellow Jackets got a layup from Will Bynum with 1.5 seconds left to beat Oklahoma State 67-65 in Saturday’s first semifinal. That gave Georgia Tech five wins by a total of 23 points and a berth in the championship game for the first time.

I'm enjoying the ride,'' coach Paul Hewitt said. I mean, I wish we could pull away and win the games because it’s been the same thing.

Just when we're about to put our opponent away, they come right back at you,'' he said. Maybe we tighten up a little bit.‘’

Besides 19 points and 12 rebounds from Luke Schenscher, Georgia Tech got its usual strong play from its backcourt, as guards Marvin Lewis, Jarrett Jack and Bynum were all in double figures.

The backcourt battle was dominated by the Yellow Jackets in the first meeting – and that was even before they had Bynum. The Yellow Jackets got a combined 64 points from B.J. Elder, Isma’il Muhammad, Jack and Lewis, while limiting UConn star Ben Gordon to nine shots and 13 points and Anderson to eight points on 4-of-13 shooting.

Perimeter play is what keeps them going. They run, they like to get out and break,'' UConn guard Taliek Brown said. They sub three perimeter guards at one time. People come off the bench (are) even good. We have to be ready. I think that’s going to be the real focus on us stopping them.‘’

Even though the Yellow Jackets play excellent defense on the perimeter, it is doubtful the guard matchup will be so one-sided again. Gordon continued his superb postseason with 18 points Saturday and is now the leading scorer in the NCAA tournament with 106 points (21.2 per game), while Anderson is tied for third with 86 points (17.2).

Georgia Tech won’t need as much production from its guards if Schenscher has a good game against Okafor. The 7-foot-1 junior from Australia shot 9-of-13 Saturday and is one of six Yellow Jackets averaging more than nine points.

It's going to be a great matchup. He's going to have to play one of his better games,'' Hewitt said, referring to Schenscher. If we can keep him out of foul trouble, it’s going to be a great, great matchup.‘’

Though the Yellow Jackets may not have as many weapons as the Huskies, they seldom need them when their defense is on. Georgia Tech is 23-0 when holding its opponents below 70 points and 21-1 when holding them to under 40 percent shooting.

The teams had never met before this season.

**PROBABLE STARTERS:

Georgia Tech:** F Elder (15.0 ppg, 2.7 rpg), F Anthony McHenry (3.4 ppg, 3.2 rpg), C Schenscher (9.2 ppg, 6.5 rpg), G Jack (12.6 ppg, 5.7 apg), G Lewis (11.1 ppg, 2.9 rpg).

Connecticut: F Josh Boone (5.9 ppg, 5.8 rpg), F Anderson (11.1 ppg, 2.8 rpg), C Okafor (17.5 ppg, 11.4 rpg), G Brown (6.2 ppg, 6.6 apg), G Gordon (18.5 ppg, 4.6 apg).

**HOW THEY GOT HERE: **

**Georgia Tech: **- At-large berth; beat No. 14 Northern Iowa 65-60, first round; beat No. 6 Boston College 57-54, second round; beat No. 10 Nevada 72-67, St. Louis Regional semifinals; beat No. 4 Kansas 79-71, OT, regional final; beat No. 2 Oklahoma State 67-65, national semifinal.

Connecticut: Automatic bid, Big East champion; beat No. 15 Vermont 70-53, first round; beat No. 7 DePaul 72-55, second round; beat No. 6 Vanderbilt 73-53, Phoenix Regional semifinals; beat No. 8 Alabama 87-71, regional final; beat No. 1 Duke 79-78, national semifinals.

ALL-TIME TOURNAMENT RECORDS: Georgia Tech - 21-12, 13 years. Connecticut - 35-23, 25 years

lets go UCONN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

15 points lead at the half time..lets see if GT can make a come back

FINAL SCORE - UConn 82 vs. Georgia Tech 73

UConn was awesome - they were too much for GT - GT came a along way this season - Predicted to finish 7th in the ACC and end up going to the NCAA championship game.

It's too bad GT missed so many open jumpshots in the first half - especially Marvin Lewis (who was just horrible, unfortunately in his last game) and BJ Elder - who are both tremendous shooters - if you had told me they would hold Gordon to something like 4-15 shooting and turn him over 4 times - I'd have taken it in a heartbeat - but GT tonight couldn't have hit the backside of a barn with a baseball bat.

It's to bad Elder got hurt this tournament - and people didn't get to see just how explosive an offense Tech had - remember that he was a guy who scored 30 or more several times this season - and it would have been cool to see him and Gordon go at it again.

Oh well - great season in Atlanta - only one team won more games in the tournament - and they will return a great squad next year!

congrats to UConn - they were definitely the best team this season.

UConn vs. Georgia Photos

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Georgia Tech players Marvin Lewis (24); Luke Schenscher (12) Isma'il Muhammad (2) and Anthony McHenry (55) look on in disbelief as they fell short in the NCAA Final

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Emeka Okafor of the Connecticut Huskies (R) and teammate Ben Gordon celebrate after defeating the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 82-73, to win the Men's NCAA national championship in San Antonio, Texas April 5, 2004. Okafor finished the game with 24 points and was named Most Outstanding Player

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Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun is congratulated by fans after UConn defeated Georgia Tech 82-73 in the NCAA Final Four Championship game Monday, April 5, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas

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Connecticut's Hilton Armstrong, left, and Ben Gordon celebrate with the trophy and newspaper headline after the Huskies won the national championship with an 82-73 win over Georgia Tech at the NCAA Final Four tournament Monday, April 5, 2004, in San Antonio.

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*Connecticut's Rashad Andeson, left, and Ben Gordon celebrate with the trophy after winning the national championship with an 82-73 win over Georgia Tech at the NCAA Final Four (news - web sites) tournament Monday, April 5, 2004, in San Antonio. *

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Connecticut Huskies head coach Jim Calhoun holds the trophy after defeating the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets to win the NCAA national championship in San Antonio, Texas, April 5, 2004. Connecticut defeated Georgia Tech 82-73 to win the title. It was Calhoun's second national title victory.

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Connecticut group photo

the final game was a pretty lopsided one, tho i enjoyed the uconn-duke matching in semi's :>

I liked the quarters and semis more than the finals. uconn played very well.

Reddick didn't stick to his game - he was constantly driving to the basket and trying to take guys one on one - not very good decision making by him.

overall Duke vs. UConn was the worst officiated game i have ever seen in the NCAA - i heard somebody say on the radio yesterday that the officials choked - however you explain it - they bleeped the game up - luckily - i think the better team managed to win once the refs finally backed off at the end.

Tennessee vs. UConn Preview - Here We Go Again

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaw/preview?gid=200404060580

Everyone, it seems, has a spin on this latest national championship game between Connecticut and Tennessee. Jessica Moore’s is unique.
When Connecticut goes for its third straight NCAA title in women’s basketball Tuesday night, the last obstacle for the Huskies is the only school that has won three in a row.

I was comparing it to Miss America,'' said Moore, UConn's 6-foot-3 center. After she is done reigning, she passes the crown down to someone else. It’s like if we win it (Tuesday) night, then they will be passing the crown down to us.‘’

Actually, that crown or torch or whatever you want to call it already has been passed. With its two straight championships and three in the past four years, Connecticut clearly has supplanted Tennessee as the nation’s pre-eminent program in the women’s game.

Tennessee has won six titles, but none since 1998. Even Tennessee’s Shanna Zolman said this is ``Geno’s era,‘’ a reference to UConn’s brash, successful coach, Geno Auriemma.

That’s what gives this rivalry a buzz, no matter how many times they meet in the finals. This will be the second straight year the schools have played in the women’s championship game and the fourth such meeting since 1995. Connecticut won the three previous games and beat the Lady Vols in the semifinals en route to the 2002 championship.

Yes, there’s a pattern here. And after all the talk this season about parity and balance in women’s basketball, the two giants again are the last ones standing.

That's just the way it seems to work out, doesn't it?'' Auriemma said. I feel real good that three out of the four (championship games), we have beat the team that everybody associates with the best team, the best program over the last 20-some years.

``So it’s only fitting that if you want to win, that’s who you’ve got to beat. And if they want to win, they’ve got to beat us.‘’

The Lady Vols are looking to do just that. They’ve got some turf to protect, after all. They like being the only program with three straight titles, which Tennessee accomplished from 1996 to 1998.

We don't want UConn at all up there in the ranks with us,'' Zolman said. We would love nothing more than to be able to not only get a ring ourselves, but also not allow them to get three in a row. We’re going to be working hard for that, I guarantee it.‘’

Connecticut kept its title hopes alive with a 67-58 victory over Minnesota on Sunday night, giving the school two teams in championship games. The UConn men played Georgia Tech in San Antonio on Monday night.

Tennessee beat LSU 52-50, its third straight two-point victory decided in the final two seconds.

But whatever the circumstances when these two teams get together, the subject of Auriemma’s relationship with Tennessee coach Pat Summitt is bound to surface. That’s about all that was discussed before last year’s game, played after Auriemma’s crack that Tennessee was the ``Evil Empire.‘’

We really don't have a relationship,'' Summitt said. I don’t have his cell number. We don’t talk. We speak before and after the games. That’s it.

``But that’s the relationship that Geno worked very hard to create. At one time, I thought we had a pretty good relationship. So I don’t know why it went south, but that’s the way it is.‘’

Summitt finds it all the more puzzling because Connecticut has dominated her team recently. The Huskies have won five straight against the Lady Vols and seven of the last eight, including an 81-67 victory in Knoxville this season.

``You would think as many times as he has beaten us, he would feel sorry for me and talk to me,‘’ Summitt said.

Auriemma seemed tired of the whole thing.

That's irrelevant,'' he snapped. Only thing that exists is UConn plays Tennessee, five on five in basketball.‘’

As for those who were looking for something a little different on this final night, well, they’ll have to wait a year.

Everybody wants to see two different teams, but there's that saying the cream always rises to the top. And these two programs are that,'' Connecticut's Maria Conlon said. That’s the way it’s been and that’s the way it’s going to remain until someone else comes in says they’re it.‘’

**PROBABLE STARTERS:

Connecticut:** F Diana Taurasi (16.2 ppg, 5.0 apg), F Barbara Turner (13.9 ppg, 4.7 rpg), C Moore (9.5 ppg, 7.0 rpg), G Conlon (5.8 ppg, 2.8 apg), G Ann Strother (10.9 ppg, 4.4 rpg).

Tennessee: F LaToya Davis (5.0 ppg, 3.2 rpg), F Shyra Ely (15.0 ppg, 8.0 rpg), C Ashley Robinson (8.1 ppg, 6.4 rpg, 2.1 bpg), G Tasha Butts (10.4 ppg, 5.2 rpg, 2.9 apg), G Zolman (12.1 ppg, 2.6 rpg).

**HOW THEY GOT HERE:

Connecticut:** At-large berth; beat No. 15 Pennsylvania 91-55, first round; beat No. 7 Auburn 79-53, second round; beat No. 11 UC Santa Barbara 63-55, East Regional semifinals; beat No. 1 Penn State 66-49, regional final; beat No. 7 Minnesota 67-58, national semifinals.

Tennessee: At-large berth; beat No. 16 Colgate 77-54, first round; beat No. 9 DePaul 79-59, second round; beat No. 4 Baylor 71-69, Midwest Regional semifinals; beat No. 6 Stanford 62-60, regional final; beat No. 4 LSU 52-50, national semifinals.

ALL-TIME TOURNAMENT RECORD: 52-11, 16 years. Tennessee - 85-16, 23 years

Key matchup to watch: Diana Taurasi vs. Tasha Butts

UCONN women wins 3rd straight championship

first time in the college basketball division 1 history that the same university won both the mens and womens championship..can you believe it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Lets go Connecticut..college basketball heaven :biggthumb

It's been a heck of a run for UConn fans - but the "Dianasty" will come to an end now - it'll be a tough four-peat run without Diana - next year should be wide open.

Tennessee's incoming class looks scary - but we'll see what happens.

It would be great if Minnesota and LSU can keep making noise like they did this year.

Tennessee vs. UConn Photos

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*Tennessee players including Brittany Jackson (25), Tasha Butts (3) and Tye'Sha Fluker (50) walk off the court after their 70-61 loss to Connecticut at the NCAA Division I Women's Championship, Tuesday, April 6, 2004 in New Orleans.
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*Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma, right, and star Diana Taurasi, center, greets fans after UConn won its third straight NCAA Division 1 Women's championship with a 70-61 over Tennessee Tuesday, April 6, 2004, in New Orleans.
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*Connecticut star Diana Taurasi greets fans after the Huskies won the NCAA Division 1 Women's championship 70-61 over Tennessee Tuesday, April 6, 2004, in New Orleans.
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*Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma hoists the championship trophy after UConn beat Tennessee 70-61 in the NCAA Division 1 Women's championship game Tuesday, April 6, 2004, in New Orleans.
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*Connecitcut Fans cheer as they viewewd a telecast of the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship championship *

[QUOTE]
Originally posted by Talha: *
**Tennessee vs. UConn Photos
*

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*Tennessee players including Brittany Jackson (25), Tasha Butts (3) and Tye'Sha Fluker (50) walk off the court after their 70-61 loss to Connecticut at the NCAA Division I Women's Championship, Tuesday, April 6, 2004 in New Orleans.
*

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*Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma, right, and star Diana Taurasi, center, greets fans after UConn won its third straight NCAA Division 1 Women's championship with a 70-61 over Tennessee Tuesday, April 6, 2004, in New Orleans.
*

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*Connecticut star Diana Taurasi greets fans after the Huskies won the NCAA Division 1 Women's championship 70-61 over Tennessee Tuesday, April 6, 2004, in New Orleans.
*

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*Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma hoists the championship trophy after UConn beat Tennessee 70-61 in the NCAA Division 1 Women's championship game Tuesday, April 6, 2004, in New Orleans.
*

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*Connecitcut Fans cheer as they viewewd a telecast of the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship championship *
[/QUOTE]

talha, great signature at the bottom. I completely agree with you. How that idiot stephen A. smith can be called an expert is beyond me. I guess he still hasn't recovered from being a slave for 300 years. Still has some african "junglee" attitude.

NO - you totally misunderstood my signature Atlanta - even tho i don't like Stephen A. Smith but i think he is one of few ESPN reporters who ain't biased with their views.

if you would ask one flaw in Stephen - it's his loud voice - i mean COME ON - you don't need to argue by raising your voice up - however with all the idiots ESPN has - it's fairly for me to say he is alright.