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Taco Bel Audio Video BCS 2 Cavender’s Boot City Cellular One CNC Photographies ITS Tours & Travel Aerofit Ladies & Lords Official KKYS Sign-Up Locations: (All three Bryan/College Station locations) Luvz Jewelry Star Tel Outfitters Soundwaves Shellenbergers Skaggs Alpha-Beta Pat Magee’s Special Effects Waterbeds The New 105 FM Page lOTThe Battalion/Wednesday, March 30, 1988 Arizona coach sticks up for ’Cats’ tourney success F J Nolan TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Coach Lute Olson is proud that his Arizona team is the representative of the Pa cific-10 Conference in the NCAA Fi nal Four, and he doesn’t mind tak ing potshots at those back East. “How many teams east of the Mis sissippi are in the Final Four?” Olsen asks, knowing full well that only Duke from the East will be joining Arizona, Kansas and Oklahoma in Saturday’s Final Four. In reaching its highest-ever bas ketball heights, Arizona has gone a long way toward shedding its image as a “yes-but” team. The “yes-but” stigma was all too prevalent this season, even amid the unprecedented media attention that the Wildcats drew. Their success — the team is currently 35-2 — has kept them ranked among the na tion’s top three teams since mid-De cember. It worked this way: • Yes, the Wildcats are good, but they play in the Pac-10. • Yes, they beat Michigan, Syra cuse, Iowa and Duke; but that was early in the season. • Yes, they’ve made ii into the NCAA tournament each year since 1985, but why did they lose in the first round of the big dance each time? They finally may have dispelled a lot of those questions on the way to their first-ever Final Four berth in Kansas City by dispatching North Carolina by 18 points on Sunday. The Wildcats came into the NCAA tournament with a Pac-10 Tournament championship in which they .were largely untested. But it undoubtedly was the beating admin istered to North Carolina's highly re spected . Far Heels, the epitome of Fast Coast establishment basketball, that dispelled what remaining doubters there have been to Arizo na’s season-long claim to legiti- as a top collegiate power. So far at the NCAA shindit Wildcats have played their danced their dance and kickedi all over the other guys. They have hit a record hep 35 wins accomplished by onH other teams in NCAA history 1 Olson vented his displeastj the West Regional at Seattle J continued “yes-buf sniping J team despite a schedule ibl eluded the Wildcats’ lO-poin: season win over the Soviet nd team. j But the Wildcats, led M America Sean Elliott, also! ihey’re not finished yet. Thei cats are setting their sightsoa £ and-gun Oklahoma team, ancj tin winner of the Kansas-DuteJ final in next Mono; c hampionship. lokies 1 Ir-hou Hough’s rse tar While nlem): ton s Ry st II pitd I Each | old plate methods I Rvun heat, Ho I; Rvan, in the o careful 1 in g his c; I lie is full-days or one o I I long eschews ■n pr»g |ach T n met House Sooners take everything in stride C( including Arizona’s powerful stats af' NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Arizona has compiled very impressive num bers enroute to its semifinal meeting with Oklahoma in the Final Four. The No. 3 Wildcats have played 37 games and won 35. In those victo ries, they have beaten their oppo nents by an average of nearly 22 points. They turn the ball over slighly more than 12 times a game, and their ball-handling guard, Steve Kerr, averages fewer than one turn over per game. The Wildcats protect the ball well, shoot well, play strong defense, and can get up and down the floor. All that seems to underwhelm < )k lahoma Coach Billy Tubbs, whose fourth-ranked Sooners play Arizona Saturday in Kansas City. “What that means is they do a great job of handling the ball,” said Tubbs. “We’ve run into teams like that. Some teams are harder to force into mistakes than other teams, and Arizona appears to be one ol those, but we’re just going to have to go out there and see.” Oklahoma has compiled a 34-3 re cord by using a suffocating, lull- court defense to force turnovers and quicken the pace of the game. Sooner opponents turned it over 893 times and had the ball stolen on 4ti5 occasions. “Remember, Louisville only made one turnover in the first half against BYU. They made 22 in two halves against us,” Tubbs said. “What happened in the last game or the rest of the games this year, you can throw that out the window. This is another game, and we’re going to test them and see il they can handle it. We’re not going to change our game plan,” Tubbs said. Tubbs has always said he does not concern himself with what other teams do — only with what his team does. However, he had to pay atten tion to what Villanova didu Sooners in the championshipn. Southeast Regional, whenwi cats milked the 45-second shot on every possession and wenti half with a seven-point lead. ()klahoma made adjustma intermission, began shooting Ii m the second half and puIWi in the final four minutes town thus earned a berth in the! Four. “Villanova is a living exampi if we can’t do it one way, well out another way to do it,"I said. Okla homa and Arizona ead outstanding balance, and eaci primal ilv with the starters.Oil ma s five first-trainers avengt minutes per game. andArizois ei age nearly 30. All five !# starte rs score in double figure: of Arizona’s do. Manning not only player Devils are worried about DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — One would think Duke’s practice Tues day would focus on trying to stop Kansas All-American Danny Man ning, but Coach Mike Krzyzewski said it’s the Jayhawks four other starters the Blue Devils must worry about. Krzyzewski said the Blue Devils didn’t stop Manning when the 6- foot-11 senior scored 31 points and f rabbed 12 rebounds in Duke’s 74 0 overtime victory in February, so there’s no reason to think they can stop him in the NCAA Tournament semifinal game Saturday in Kansas City, Mo. “You can’t ever say to a great player, ‘Let him have what he’s going to have,’ ” Krzyzewski said. “A great player thinks that he can have everything — and rightfully so. “I think you have to make Man ning earn everything and not let him have everything. “And when you're making him earn everything not to loose track of the other guys.” One of those other guys is 6-2 ju nior Scooter Barry, son of NBA Ilall of Famer Rick Barry. Averaging only 3.4 points, the guard hit foi 15 against Kansas State in the Midwest Regional finals. “What a great performance,” Krzyzewski said about Barry’s effort against Kansas State. “It s there, are you going to step forward to shoot it? Are you going to step forward and shoot it and make it? He did both of those things.” The Duke coach also mentioned 6-4 junior Milt Newton and 6-3 sophomore Kevin Pritchard as “ca pable players . . . scoring-wise.” Manning, averaging 24.6 points PLA icket t ias tin he bi; lave C He ast sui lake tl spring i Reds hum. He Bernie remint: he Rec “I th ill,” he Whe hat G< hey st aringir where I “Om laid. The aleasec Colli ieds’ itting leds’ I half ol overall Colli early r< land u and 8.7 rebounds, has scored! more points 10 times (hisses 1 leading the Jayhawks toa25H cord. Duke is 28-6 largely duen f ense and a deep bench. However, Krzyzewski said B concerned about not havingd-'HNORN serve center John Smith toBst time guard Manning. Smith missd|son's nan Ne Femple game with a brokenBnia !o< and is lost for the Final Four. BI Reer Danny Ferry, a 6-10 second Hues’an All-A mei ican, 6-10 reserve AlaH Those drln.dn and 6-5 startingcenwHiher o ert Brie key all will be guarding s 0etdies ning at different times, KrwD 0l »ners said. Hst Hire fhational < “I think it’s an evenly wBLve / game,” Krzyzewski said, “hfen s eh (Brown’s) philosophy and niinBdahoin pretty similar. ning gets Kodak er-of-year honors KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — T he kid was tall and gangly, but remark ably quick and well coordinated for his age. said retired Kansas State Coach Jack Hartman, who presented the Eastman Award. At 10, he overmatched every other youngster on the playground and was getting, naturally, a rather inflated opinion of his himself. That’s when Darnelle Manning stepped in. “Danny,” she said, “the world does not revolve around you. You’re just part of a revolving world.” The kid listened to his mom. It was a philosophy that was practiced in the Manning household, not just preached. Manning was a member of the 1986 Kansas team that lost to Duke in an opning Final Four game. Duke then lost to Louisville for the na tional championship. Manning enters the 50th Final Four as the seventh all-time leading scorer in NCAA history with 2,895 points. And it became a part of the fabric of his personality. Tuesday afternoon, Danny Man ning accepted the Eastman Kodak trophy as college basketball player of the year. He’s scored in double figures in 52 straight games. In leading his injury-weakened team to this improbable plateau, he’s averaging 26.8 points and seven re bounds a game. As this latest award was given to the Big Eight’s all-time scoring leader, speakers praised his athletic ability and unselfish attitude on the court, and Darnelle Manning stood nearby wearing a proud smile. As Kansas prepares to meet Duke Saturday in the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament — Manning’s second Final Four appearance in a brilliant four-year career at Kansas — that same unselfish attitude fig ures to be one of the best things going for the Jayhawks. His list of achievements and ac complishments stretch on and on. But the lessons he learned as a youngstei have taken deep root. “People talk about basketball play ers being unselfish and being willing to give up the ball if somebody else has a better shot, but that really does describe Danny,” said Archie Mar shall, Manning’s closest friend on the team and a victim of a career ending knee injury at mid-season. “Danny really does care about other people. He’s never been hung up on myself.” “Danny Manning makes other players around him better players,” Many experts predict Manning will be the first player chosen in the next NBA draft. Everyone agrees that a long, suc cessful career as a professional awaits the versatile athlete. Hawks beat Mavericks 120-106 L m one ollenses bis from Ipe past t ■ “For tl Iposi the < Bd the never cl IMerv Jo Here's c ;'hat'll al change Ii ■ “b’s g< Pfithusias ATLANTA (AP) - D .olvoung ique Wilkins scored 40 points® eluding six in a second-qinB run that gave Atlanta cont^r the game, and the Hawks j feated the Dallas Mavericks 106 Tuesday night. Wilkins scored his six points and Antoine Carr p six as Atlanta outscored D* 20-7 to turn a 31-28 lead* 10:36 remaining in the sed period into a 51-35 lead I the period. The Mavericksnf 1 got closer than seven points rest of the way. It was the 14th time this5$ Wilkins scored 40 or niore|X ,t It had been 131 games, thek : est such streak in the NBA,s' an opponent scored 40 on 1 * against the Mavericks. Thel< ! do it was Sleepy Floyd, then' Golden Slate, who scored points on Dec. 6, 1986. Mavericks Coach John Leod was ejected in the set 1 ' period after getting his set* technical when he protested vigorously on what he thof. should have been a goalterf call. Macleod hadn’t been eji since 1979, when he coacW Phoenix, and had only two technicals this season. Derek Harper led Dallas 25 points and Rolando Black added 22. T\