NCAA: Lots of green found in the stands at Reliant Stadium rooting on Baylor Bears

By Dave Skretta, AP
Friday, March 26, 2010

NCAA: Baylor, Saint Mary’s fans out in force

It sure looks like a bunch of folks made the 3-hour drive down Highway 6 from Waco to Houston for the South Regional semifinal game. There’s quite a bit of green sitting in the stands at Reliant Stadium rooting on the Bears.

Considering Saint Mary’s has an enrollment of a few thousand, it also has quite the booster section in red sitting behind the scorer’s table. Or perhaps it just looks substantial because those folks are getting a lot of face time on TV.

Apparently they couldn’t find a buzzer at the Edward Jones Dome, so a lady with an airhorn has been standing up and blaring it going into and coming out of every timeout.

Substitutions, too.

Tennessee is bumping Evan Turner just about every time he touches the ball, clearly aware that the Ohio State star had one of his worst shooting nights when UC Santa Barbara battered and bruised him in the opening round of the NCAA tournament.

Turner isn’t getting much help from the officials, either. He took the ball into the post moments ago and got bodychecked while getting the shot tipped away, with no call.

Meanwhile, Tennessee already has four offensive rebounds and the second-chance points have allowed the Vols to get within 13-10 with about 14 minutes left.

Forget about Evan Turner. Tennessee had better start worrying about William Buford.

The other guy in the Buckeyes’ backcourt has hit four of his first five shots, including a 3-pointer, and has nine points to stake No. 2 seed Ohio State to an early 13-7 lead.

The Buckeyes hit six of their first seven shots, the only miss coming from beyond the arc, and have shown terrific ball movement: Four of their six baskets have come off assists.

Too bad the display is being watched by a bunch of empty seats in the Edward Jones Dome.

The bottom level has filled in nicely, but it’s pretty thin in the upper ring of the home arena of the St. Louis Rams. No wonder CBS hasn’t shown many wide-angle shots early on.

Baylor and Saint Mary’s will be the second game to get going Friday night, one of the most intriguing matchups in the regional semifinals.

The Bears are only about seven years removed from a scandalous summer in which one player shot another, former coach Dave Bliss got tangled in a series of lies and financial misdeeds, and the program very nearly got hit with the same kind of NCAA sanctions that sunk the once-proud SMU football program in the 1980s.

Coach Scott Drew has rebuilt the program and the hopes of all its fans behind some stellar recruiting and a couple of high-profile stars in LaceDarius Dunn and Tweety Carter.

The Gaels, on the other hand, finally grew tired of playing second-best to Gonzaga in the West Coast Conference. Behind the inspired play of Omar Samhan, the big guy with the big crush on Taylor Swift, the tiny school from Moraga, Calif., beat the Zags in its league tournament and knocked out No. 2 seed Villanova to reach the round of 16.

No. 2 seed Ohio State and sixth-seeded Tennessee are about to tip off in the semifinals of the Midwest Regional, where the winner will face Northern Iowa or Michigan State on Sunday.

The last time these two teams met in the NCAA tournament, the Buckeyes had a couple guys named Greg Oden and Mike Conley leading the way to the national title game. Although almost everyone from that team is gone, Evan Turner and Co. certainly have proven their mettle.

The Vols, meanwhile, have weathered a rocky season on Rocky Top after Brian Williams and Cameron Tatum were arrested during a Jan. 1 traffic stop. Williams pleaded guilty to drug possession after marijuana was found in the car, and Tatum pleaded guilty to speeding.

Since then, all the attention has been on basketball, where Tennessee has beaten teams such as Kansas and Kentucky.

Also Friday night, No. 1 seed Duke will face Purdue in the South Regional, while Baylor will try to reach its first Final Four when it faces Saint Mary’s, the only double-digit seed left in a tournament that has been anything but short on longshots.

Already in the round of eight: Kansas State, Butler, Kentucky and West Virginia.

Let the games begin again.

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